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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-01-08 - Orange Coast PilotL ' . , . .. '~.: , Irvine· Man Who Tricked Ills Returns T-oys • · mtehhiking Girl Mt•rdered, J.lap .. On Way to Laguna . .. / DAI l Y Pl LQJ .. air esa * * * 1oc * * * I • omanm THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 8, 1976 YOL.. "·NO. e, J SECTIONS, n PAGES Not Dis Day 'Mistakes' Undo Texan Transient T~i.in It. Yellllg•t ttrat mistake Wednesday nigbt.-ornge County Sher:iff's officers commented today,~ tQ tak~.sevetal drinks t90 many before he left a Safl~Ana bar and -got into his ·car. YOUNG'S SECOND MISTAKE, they explained was to drive the vehicle in a weaving pattern through do~ntown traffic and park it 1n a lot between 4th and 5th streets. That area comprises the parkihg lot for the county jail, they told Young. And they helped the 52-year-.old Texan to negotiate the few .steps between his car and the jail where he was booked for drunken driving. BUT YOUNG, OFFICERS said, made a third mistake. And that, they explained, was to be behind the wheel of a car that was listed as stolen earlier in the day by Los Angeles County authorities. Brother Shot Vkii•1 Hitching Girl, 16, Murdered ·Her destination was L~a Beach bot a 16-year-old Santa Monica girl's hitchhiking trip ended in death, her semi-nude body . found sprawled on a South-Central Los Angeles sidewalk Wednesday. Detectives at the Los Angeles Police Department's 77tb Division labored through the night on the case. An autopsy is scheduled today to determine the exact ca use of Wendy . Blanchard's death and whether P I• p b F d she bad been sexually attacked. 0 lee ro e ell · . The girl bad left her Santa Monica home Tuesday, packing · her belongings and telling her Af BB SI mother that she intended to ter . aymg• hitchhiketoLagunaBeacb. Laguna Beach Det. Gene Brooks said the local department By AR1'HUR R. VINSEL OftMDallyl'I ....... A minute search for hundreds of tiny lead fragments in the body of Huntington Beach mushroom farm heir Nicholas DiStefano. continued today, to determine if he was possibly wounded by his enraced brother befor~ police responding to a gun battle at the family booie s hotgunned the youth fleeing the family home. Orange County Coroner's deputJes said today they have no Inmates Want 'Porn' Righu VISALIA (AP). -Sixteen. inmates at the Tulare County jail are auin& to be allowed to read such magazines as Playboy, but a jailer ls offering proof the prisoners already have that rt1ht. A bearing ls scheduled in Superior Court Friday on alle1atlon1 that the inmates aren't allowed to receive m.cutnes featuring photos of nude women 1ucb as Playboy, Oul and Penthouse or the detective monthly True Detectlv•. Lt .• Grant Matherly, co111mander of the jail, rHponded Wednesday that JDmatee can read anythlnt they waat except articles delcribin& bo" to make explotlvea or ,......., and 11ld aome lockup w8"1are decorated with ct1Urf1.>ldl. formal findings yet in ihe tragic case of a family feud that left Nicbo1as, 23, dead and his' brother Arthur, 35, facing murcher charges. No certain ruling will be released until various tests are completed, they said, adding that all tbese details will also only come from police or district attorney's ~vestlgators. Tiley would include the number of times Nicholas w~ hit by either .22-callber fire or shotgun pellets when slain at 18196 Golden West St., site of the family's Ocean View Mushroom Groers Inc., where be and his wlfe of four months lived. One official said, ~ever, that be was definitely wounded several tlmea as be fied the alleged murder attempt by his brother. District attorney's investigator Tomas Avdeef said eight memben of the lamlly wbo were present at tbe time of the tragedy were being reinterview911 today about the circuma~ leadini up to tbe Wednesday 1laytnC. No 1pedflc moUve has been offered but it i• known that Art.mar recenUy returned to the family farm to work and a dllpute reportedly developed over farm duUe1 between the eldest ton and Nicholas, next to youngest who was destined to take over the operalloo. Arthur R. DiSt.t.no of 6232 Chinook Ave., Westminster remained tn jail today 1n Heu or $250t000 bail as police put toaetner P.aper work to submit to the district attorney aeeklng (See PROBE, Pace A2) has ncn been brought into ·the investigati'on yet, but will cooperate with Los Angeles PD if requested. It is unknown wby the tirl was coming to Laguna. Miss Blanchard's bod y was found by three boys on their way to school at 7 a.m. on a sidewalk in front of a house on W. Colden Avenue. Her coat with what appeared to be a blood-stained fUr collar had been found four hours earlier in a deserted Compton-Carson industr ial section by two Compton·patrolmen. The officers were on routine patrol when they beard cries for <See SLAIN, Page AZ) Doctor F~ces Rape C·harge Orange County Sheriff's officen are today investigating an alle1ation by a 22-year-old South Laguna woman that she was raped by ber doctar in his office Wednesday while UDdtr tbe influence of dru11 be admlniatered. lnvestiaators refused to iclentifJ tbe loeal pbyskian antil they had uamlDed the stlltemet they intend to ta" from him tod•T· ~ Officers said tbe woman reported the alleced rape to offlclall at South Coaat Community He>1pltal after lbe left the doctor'• omce. She 1'a• otherwlle unharmed, 4epu.tift said. HELPED SAVE WOMAN Marine Montellano 'Trieked' IRS JUMPED tNTO WATER Anaheim Officer Robles Irvine Merchant Called 'Brilliant' By DOUG FRl17.SCllE OftMDellyl'lletSWf David G Jen Robinson cut a broad, lavish and expensive path through the Orange Coast for the past six months while he dispersed $565 ,000 -the· largest fraudulent tax refund in the history of the Internal Revenue Service. Today, Robinson is in federal custody and the IRS has confiscated $300,000 in sligbUy used goods and ts scrabbling after as much of the rest as it can recover. This week, Robinson pleaded guilty to three counts of malling false statements on tax documents that sbook'tbe money loose frotn the IRS. He agreed to a five-year prison term. three years probation and to help authorities get as much of the money back as tbey can - penalties even bis prosecutor agrees are "stiff." . Mike Moore, a pilot who was an 8llOCiate in Roblnaon's Irvine business, described bis former boa u .. ablolutelJ briMialt." 1bat assessment appmrentlJ ls abared by A11i1tant U .S. Attorney Howard Mall. wbo proncuted the case. Mats, althou1h m aintainlng that cban1es have been made so Robimon's fiscal feat cannot be dur.H.:•ted, refuse• to alve de on bow it waa carried out. ) Orange Coast dealers of luxury merchandise recall Robinson with a mixture of mirth and chagrin. One secretary, on le.arning the subject of the call, just snickered for a moment, then said, "I'll get tt.e manager.'' .. He was a flamboyant person,.. said Bill Gremp, vice presideilt of Mission Beechcraft. Gremp sold Robi~ a $150,000 'Baron airpJane. Robinson paid • with a check that was confirmed with the bank before it was deposited. Bot, as Qremp pointed out, it's hard to miss a guy who has a car for every day of the week. Not just any cars either. The inventory included two Lamborgbinis, three Jaguars, a <See ~EFUND, Page A2) WARM SMILE- IJll'l' NO KISSIS WASHINOTON (UPI) - Snwal women ln a cbeering haltwa1 crowd tried to kiss Prwldent Ford when be emer•ed from his presidential campaign be8dQuarten ln a Washincton office building. Ford smiled, but Secret ·Servtce bod;ypards intervened. Wednesday. ea Officer, Marine · In Rescue By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tM D•llY PllOt SUH An off-duty ·Anaheim police officer and a Marine from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station were credited by police today with saving the life of a Costa Mesa woman who fell off the Newport Pier Wednes day evening. Officers said Hector Robles. 32, and Guadalupe Montellano. 22, jumped into the 55-degree water and held up Christina Robinson, 25, for 30 minutes while firemen and harbor patrolmen worked to get her out of the water. Miss Robinson, 2182 Rural Lane, w as taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital where she was treated for exposure and shock. She was then transferred to Orange County Medical Center where she was treated and released. Robles, the policeman, and Montellano, the Marine, were both treated for cots and bruises at Hoag and released. Police said Miss Robinson was climbing along a loading r amp <See RESCUE, Page A2) Coast Weather Sunny Friday but with increasing fog and low clouds Friday morning. It will be a little cooler, with highs in the 60s. Lows tonight 38 to 48. INSIDE TODAY Ntwport Btach building deportmnt of ficiall aoy they have .o 'thrtt·prong attack' plan to prewnt .another fire like tht one that took au livu in tht cft11 r«mtly. See lt"'l/ &. J ( ' t. .. -• I 2 DAILY PILOT s • Thursday. JanuatX !, 1971!1 ) ~OJDputer · E'oUlup Stirs llideli-~y Issue b 8 I b I I d h c i I li CHICAGO (AP) -Hund.reds of ~rp r is ed s p o uses found t•emselves wlth some explaining 'O do alter a mailing foulup by a ~mputer t1rm sent them letters· 1,han kin g t h e m for stayJng :rycently at a downtown hotel. ' A letter intended for regular 'uests of the Oxford House, a Chk ago hotel, was sent in error to about 4,000 city and suburban· residents because the wrong computer tape was used t o produce lbe letters. lt wasn 't long before the ewitchboat'd @t the OXford House lip up with about 500 phone calls fro m hus b a nds a nd w ives s uspiciou s o r extra ·marita l activity. "One woman whose name was on the letter bad three cblldren and was pregnant with a fourth, .. 1aid Jerome Belaneer. hotel vice president and general manager. "She said her husband wu mad and doubted tbe child wuhls." The· l e tter, announcing renovatlons at the hotel, included each r ecipient's name in the ' I Gallup Dissected ~ Ford, Reagan CitePollResults r t E s c; ( ~ 1 t By The Associated Press Pres ident Ford 's campaign e((iC'ials say a poll showing a tt>ven percent drop in Ford's popul a r it y is a te mporary setback res ulting from voter apathy. Rut a s pokesman for Ronald Reagan indicated he th ought the fi gures mean the coun try is looking focleadership. (CAMPAIGN '76 J Ford, who has yet to make his first 1976 political trip, went by motorcade Wednesday from the White House to his campaign headquarters six blocks away. He met a bout 130 campaign Arms Arrest Man Even Had a Cailnon '.'IO RCO <AP > -Federal agents say they have arrested a '.'lorco man and seized a number of illegal weapons . cxplosi\'CS and ammunition in a r aid capping a six -month investigation. A s pokesman for the Treasury Department's Bureau of Al cohol, Tobacco and Firearms said Albert Howard , 40, wus arrested. Wednesda y and arraigned on ch ar ges of possessing unregistered firearms, possession of destructive devices and illega l storage of explos ives. The s pokes man s aid agen ts confi s cated a fully-automatic M16 rifle, an M4 survival rifle wi th an illegall y short barrel, two .55-caliber Boise a ntitank rines and a .20 mm Laiti r ecoilless ca nnon. In addition. 100 pounds of TNT and C4 plastic explosive were confiscated. Several thousand rounds of armor-piercing a nd incendiary ammunition wer e confiscated as well, the spokesman said. Rivers id e Count y sheriff's deputies took part in the raid and said they took nin'e rifles a nd s hotguns and 10 pistols into custody for safekeeping. ~ Fro• Page A·J $565,000 REFUND • • • Ferrari and a Mer cedes. Some of the cars were sold to Robinson by Frank Marino of J im Marino Imports in Newport BeaC'h, who recalls Robinson as a "'screwball. .. Ma r in o s o l d hi m a new La mborghini worth S22.800, a used one valued at Sl9.500 and a Me r ced e s w or t h $18.00 0 . Robinson m adc the purchases with "large down payments and he financed the rest," said Marino. Robinson had a suite of four offices in the Century 21 bui lding, one room filled with law books he made a vailable to attorneys in the area. According to Moore. Robinson had an office staff that at one time tot aled 12. "I really don't know what lhC'y did." said Moore. The Irvine bus inesses went under the names of Robinson. J.D.: Ttie Robinson Group, Inc.; and Robinson Ai r Taxi. The air taxi service never came to be .. said Moore, but Robinson and the office workers went on almost daily fli ghts in t he Raron and a sma lle r t w in -seater t hat repla ced it when money got 1Jiort. The flights were "all over," 1aid Moore, but mainly in the western United States. Wh en Robinson began his spending spree about six months ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed Pr~ .. oen1 •nd l'ull41\..,.1 Jack R. Curley V1U f)f(',lejenl enCI GfN't~I MoMQ' t Thomas Keevll Ed•lor ihOmas A . Murptilne M.lfltOlll<J [di .... Q\arle& H . Loos Richard P. Nall '""" .... ,.,. ....... "" '°'*' ago, he initially passed himself of( as an attorney . according to Gremp. who r ecalls Robinson as something of a braggart. But when the businesses were set up , Moore recalls, they centered on non-legal aspects of d ivorce and ba nkruptcy and, understandably, tax consulting. Robinson had the background for it. He worked fo r the I RS during 1969 and 1970 as a tax collector. He resigned and went to live in Austr alia, but was extradited back to the U.S. atter he was indicted for embezzling funds he had collected for the IRS. He pleaded guilty in 1973 and was sentenced to a year in jail and fi ve years probation in addition to r epaying $4,800. After serving the jail term, he was released on probation. Last spring, Robinson filed for ta.'< refunds for the years 1971 through 1974 totaling $652,779. He used the name J ohn D. Robinson and a phony ma iling address according to the U.S. attorney prosecuting the case. He claimed he was working for a firm in Houston, Tex., du ring that period and that the firm had withheld $652, 779 ror taxes. He also claimed to have sustained $1.4 m illion in losses a s a beneficiary of an estate. The IRS responded in June with checks totaling $565,340.31. That's when Robinson began to live it up. "I wondered about him all the time," said Marino ... He wasn't real. When I first met him, be whipped this financial statement on me that said he was worth $76 million. He bad W ·2's that s aid he made a million dollars last year. "It was all phony, but I guess the bank bought it. That's where be got the loan," said Marino. At one point. Marino went to Robinson's home in Pasadena-a house Robins on bought for $84.000 cash-to collect an $11.000 down payment on a car. The hou s e was b ~in g extens ively and expensWely r emodeled, said Marino. He added that while he was in the home. Robinson was working out an agreement with an art dealer for several thousand dollars worth or paintings. "There were patntlngs everywhere already," Mar1no said. "But l beard the ~ aay it wa1 okay, if Robinson took 90 day• to pay. That was In December, 10 J fuesa he got stuck." Marino fears that by lbe time It is all over, he may aet stuck too. · Gremp describec:t Robinson as "a 1ood brafJart ... prone to lalk about hh boldin11 ln New Z.aland and elsewhere. wor ke r s a nd expres sed continued confidence in his campaign manager, Howard H. Callaway. But a s hort time lat er , a campaign spokesman said the Ford election Committee had been told the results of a new Gatlup poll showing a decline in Ford's popularity to 39 percent, only two points above his all-time low Gallup rating. As For d was m aking his fi rst vis it to his o wn campaign headquarters, Reagan, his rival for the Republican presidential nomination, ended three days of campaigning in New Hamp.5hire and flew to North Carolina. A Ford aide said the campaign committee was "obvious ly concerned" a bout the poll but a dded. "As we get near the prim a ry d ates, s upport will harden and we think it will swing back to the President as his policies and programs become known. Such size able shifts of support for candidates are not surprising at this stage of the campaign." In a st at e me nt, the For d s pokesman sa id polls made fo r F ord s ho w "softness of s upport for a ll candidates because of voter apathy and a lack of infor mation on any of the candidates and what they stand for." But a s pokesman for Reagan said, ''We've known all along that the country has been looking for some leadership -somebody who would try to get Washington oft their back. We've looked at this -the mood of the country as reflected in polls -and it doesn't change anything we're trying to do. It's a fong way from here to the convention." The Harris poll reported Wednesday that initial public reaction to the former California governor has been positive. Harris s aid a 45 to 25 percent. plurality believes Reagan "is no ordinary politician because he wants to cut federal spending and c ut back the federal bureaucrac y " and 44 to 25 percent agreed with Reagan's hard-line stand toward Russia. The Harris organization also s a i d its s ampling showed disagreement with statements that Reagan is too close to big • business. would start the Cold War anew and that he "would be against the working man, the minorities and the poor." From Page Al SLAIN ••• help. They searched. the area, and found no one but chanced upon the coat and a beach bag containing other clothing and an address book with Miss Blanchard's name and address. A search by more than a score of s heriff's deputies. and Compton police officers ·continued through the neighborhood of oil derricks and vacant lots until the body was found in Los Angeles. The murder is the latest in a series of rapes and attacks made on female hitchhikers . F,....r.,,eAl . PROBE ••• complaints charging murder and assault to commit murder. The elder brother was fonnerb' a tong haul truck driver. Crucial to the case are examination of lead that riddled Nlcbolu' body and whether lt m11ht include bits ot' .22--caliber ammunition from a platol believed wielded by Art.bur. (:orpeee Found ~EW YORK <UPJ> -Two junk dealers acavenalftl in an abandoned Queens po9t olflce baH round the bodies of • 10• year-old boy and a 11.,...-old babysitter who had beeD mbllng alnce lbe murder of the bot'• •ls· la'. ( I ireetlnr and in one paragraph. 11M message, which arrived with Wedneaday's mail, began. ••eetng 1>rivUeged in having you u our recent guest .•• " Belanger s aid one woman called in tears and begged , .. Please explain to my busbahd that I was not a guest there." "I was amazed at some of the c~,'' Belancer sald. computer firm . Compuletter Inc. Gary R o s s , com pa n y One woman who bad beiW\ president, said a random tape for 1 divorce proceedjngs was up!set to sample m ailin gs to a r e a s findthe letterwas amistake. southwes t of t he Loop was "She sald she had hoped to wse inadvertently fed through the the letter a'8inat her husband," co~:f~~rgs~r said t h e whole Belanger said. AU who r eceived the Oxford !~cident just may go t~ s how House lette r will be m a iled husbands and wives don t ~,rust r et rac t ion noti ces by t he· .. each other much these days. Signing Off in San Fronrisro After 22 years , the goblet sign on the Hamm's Bre w e ry building in San Francisco is being removed. It was first ins t a lled .whe n Ha mm 's boug ht the Brewery in 1954. One of the largest neon signs west of the Mississippi. it meas ured 30 feel high a nd 15 feet at its widest point. Doctor Tells Tale Of C·hild' s Death By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL OftM O.lly P'ileitsa.H The tragic portrait of a child ·who had been left malnouris hed, sick and battered was painted Wednesday at a preliminary bearing tor a San Clemente couple accused in the murder of their 5-year-old daughter. The hearing betore South ·Orange County Municipal Court Judge Blair Barnette opened with testimony from Dr. Frances Duda, a San Clemente pedetriclan. Dr. Duda had direc ted attempts to save Laura Cruz from death Nov. 22 at San Clemente General Hospital. Dr. Duda testified that severe malnutrition over a period of at least six months left the child with a perilously low blood cell count. The severe anemia, the doctor .testified , cont r but e d to pneumonia which led to the · cblld·s death. . Jose Molina, 21, and his wife. Yolanda, 23, or 2723 S. El Camino Real, have been charged with murder of the child, born to Mrs. Molina through a former marriage. Molina is a Camp Pendleton marine. Molina, wearing blue jeans and a short sleeve sweatshirt, sat s ton e -f a c ed a s Dr . Duda described the child's physical condition. Mrs. Molina, clad in a white s weater a nd y ellow s lacks, looked toward t he fl oor and slowly shook her head. Both were handcuffed. . . • I t l J· The prehminal'y h:e~dng. was expected to conclude tOday with a decision by Judge Bamef~~ on whether the couple should be. ordered to stand trial on murde r charges in Superior Court. Dr. Duda testified that burn marks wer e found over various part s of the c hild's body, including the feet~ back and buttocks . Cha rred skin tissue indicated some of the bums were ~aused by an open name, the doctor testified. Exa mination of the child also located three old fractures in the right arm, rib cage and pelvis, and atrophy or muscles in· the right leg from lack of use, Dr . Duda told the court. The doctor t estified the child essentially was dead on arrival at San Cleme nte General Hospital, but was r evived through cardiac massage and resuscitation. The child lived for another seven hours before final death. One D~seription Shooting Victim A 'Very Good Kid' Nick DiStef ano wore No. a> for the red and gray-clad Mater Dei Monarchs as a guard before he had to alt out bia 1971 senior year due to a football injury. "Nick waa a very, very good kid,'' 11ya Assistant Principal John Merino ... He was really a good kid." Melino remembers the young man who was killed by a police ahotaun blast in Huntiqgton Beach early Wednesday as a typical kid. -biitefano enrolled at Orange Cout Colle1e ln the fall of 1972 as· a 1eneral interest major and attended two semesters. According to a campus •Poketman at OCC, DiSt.erano took counes in busineu law and •llicaltul'e ln pnparation for em.int the I am Uy mushroom farminl bullneu ha the Talbert Valley of Huntlnstoa Beach. The 1bo0Uu1 victim was married Jmt four mom.bl afo in the DIW HDctuUJ ot SD. Simon and Jude Church, one or HunUn1ton Beach's oldes t aiqre1atton1. A few hour• after «ivina Nick DiStefano the lut rtles. Pather TbomH Schroeder broke the new1 of hls death to the .. .,..aatton at early morning MUI. Dltlly .......... VICTIM IN PLAYING DAYS NJck OtStehlno Gasps or horror and disbelief filled the aanctuary and then Father Schr oeder led tbe D1Starano1' long.t i m e rongegaUon in prayer. Prime Rate Drops to 7 NEW YORK (U PI> Chase Ma nhattan Bank, the nation's third largest. today lowered its pri me interest rate to 7 percent fro m 7 1.i pe rcent •n response to the easier monetary policy of the Federal Rese rve Board. Chase's reduction in the key interest rate followed lly a day a similar move by ,:~Je-vieWlnd Trust Co., a ·; !fWli<tl!Phio Bank. ... Jt..,was expected that Eirst !'lational City Bank. Uie nation's second largest bfmk. .and a trendsetter on "inler.e.t rates, also would r educe its prime by a quart~r. of a point to 7 percept Frid ay. Fro• Page Al 'RESCUE ••• underneath the pier, apparently searching for starfis h when she tumbled into the chilly waters at about6p.m . Robles, who was fishing with his family on the pier, heard her scream s and jumped into the water after her. Montellano, who was also fishing with his family, called the fire department and then jumped into the water to help Robles who police said was having trouble holding the struggling woman. The three people were battered against the barnacle·covered pier pilings by waves, authorities said. Firemen arrived and tried to lower a line from the top of the pier and hoist the woman over the side, but they were unable to do so because she had lapsed into unconsciousness. The fir e m e n called for assistance from the Harbor Patrol which sent out a boat piloted by Officer Ken Doesburg. When the boat arrived at the pier, fire Capt. Ray Toggweiler also jumped into the water to help hoist the unconscious woman into the boat. The small craft was driven into the shallow wate r next to the pier, and the Cireman and the victim were taken ashore through the surf. Robles and Montellano were hauled over the side of the pier by ure lines manned by firemen. One firem a n , Bill Trinkl. suffered a back injury in the rescue of the two men. He was alao treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital and released. • I l 1 Money Matt~ 1 KINGSTON, Jamaica (UPI)-I Finance inln11tua attending a two-day meetin1 ot the In · t611allontl Monetary Fund uid today they had made progress towaJ'd aolving two oflbe world's most pressln1 fiscal problems - C\lrrency ex~hange rerorm and the tole of gold. I r &~ W@lYl[f ®®l?WD©@ The column appears · daUy except Satarday1 and Moodays. ot o problem? 1'f1t•n wnte Pat Dunn. Pot will cut Tf>d tape. get the ans~rs and ac· I Ion you 11eed to solve Inequities in government and business. Mail 11011r question~ lo Pat Dunn 'At . Your Seruice. 0 ro nge Coast Doily Pilot. P.O. ·' 8or 1560. Costa Muo. CA 92626. Include your telepl1one 1H11n bE>r, Cat /ff agazltte DEAR PAT: I subscribed to Cat Magazine from a representative of Par Service Co. Inc. of Orange on July 1, 1975. I · wrote a check for $7.95 and after waiting for months, I contacted the firm in December, sending copies of my canceled check and my receipt. I have not heard from the company, nor has my magazine arrived. W.8 ., LagwiaBeach Par Service Co. will contact the publisher o( Cat Magazine re· guding your subscripUon, which it claims "was entered and paid for a long time ago." Par Service Co. ls affUlated with Publishers Certified Service Co., Orlando, f1a. This firm Is the same as Publishers Service Co., about which many ·A YS complaints have been received. It also has a "not favorable" rating by the Orlando Better Business Bureau. You and others who deal with door·to·door magazine salesmen should be aware that the usual request for half payment is the salesman's commission, and that no magazine orders are placed with publishers until the full sub· scription fee is received by the firm taking the order. After that, up to three months' further delay can be expected before magazine delivery begins. At Your Service recently re·· ceived information from Publishers Clearing House that its free Maguine Action Line consumer service solved more than 13,000 magazine s ub· scription complaints during 1974. "Action Line" editors throug.bout the country submit their readers' magazine problems to this PCH service and readers themselves are urged to avail themselves of Magazine Action Line's problem· solving program. MAL asks that consumers first try to settle the problem directly with the com· pany where the magalble ·was originally ordered. If that falls, a note to MAL describing the pro· blem is all that's necessary. Include pertinent data, e5pecfaJ. Jy date of purchase and any order or receipt numbers. Write to Magazine Action Line at Publishers Clearing House, 382 Channel Drive, Port Washington, NY 11050. Credit Card DEAR PAT: I 'm a married woman and a fairly new California resident. Someone told me that I can apply for a credit card in my maiden name here in California. Is that true? · J.C., Newport Beach If a married woman requests a credit card to be issued under her maiden name, state law (582163) provides that the card issuer may reqpire the woman to open a new account in that name. However, the federal Equal Credit Opportunity Act prohibits a creditor from refusing to grant separate credit accounts solely for reasons of sex or marital status. If the card is authorized, the married woman has the right to request that It bear either her maiden or her married name. Th\irsday, January 8. 1978 DAILY PILOT ( Pilot Logb~ J Freedom Train True 'Happening' By LAURIE KASPER Ol IM o.lly l'tllC Staff SOMETIME DURING mE HOUR and forty-five minutes we wailed in line, someone sa.id, "It's not history, it ·s a happening." That seems to be the best description of the American Freedom Train as it was presented In Long Beach this week. This reporter was assigned to view. and then review, the train before it comes to Anaheim on Friday and San Juan Capistrano on Monday.Jan. 19. The experien ce included s ome disappointment and discomfort. Nonetheless. the reporter's group (three adults and one 12-year-old) wished they could see it again. What prevented a repeat boarding was KASll"U not the cost. No one seemed to mind the two-dollar ticket tab. Nixon Revisited · RATHER. WHAT DETERED us was the fact that it had gotten colder out by the Queen Mary and the line was longer than it had been when we arrived at the tracks a little more than two hours before. Mona Hardee of Coronado examines a bust of former president Richard Nixon at the San Clemente Inn. The exhibit is to be on permanent display near the main entrance to the inn. It cronicles both the high and l ow points of the San Clementean 's pres idency. The Nixon home, La Casa Pacifica, isneartheinn. The line is the discomforting part of the American Freedom Train experience. The 12-year·old among us complained while we waited that "everything 's bored." Still, the crowd appeared patient, much more so than the people who are typically waiting for the bobsleds al Disneyland. Fete Slated For Nixon's Birthday WASHINGTON (U PI> Former President Richard M. Nixon will celebrate his 63rd birthday Friday at his San Clemente estate with a number of his former White House aides. a close friend and supporter said today. Rabbi Baruch Korff sajd that he expected the gathering to in· elude John J . McLaughlin, who was Nixon's Jesuit pries t speechwri ter, and Gerald R. Warren, who served as deputy press secretary and is now editor of the San Diego Union. Korff, who sees Nixon often, described the former president as "quite confident .. and believ· ing that there will be "a change in the assessment o f his administration with all the. re· velations (of the Kennedy era) by comparison of what he's done." AsseSsor to End Disappointment. caused by the walkways that move visitors through the train in about 22 minutes, was harder to accept. Assistant's Post It seemed everyone commented that it moved too fast. THERE JUST IS NOT ample tim& to read the labels explaining each of the items displayed m the 10 exhibit cars. It's even more difCicult for the parent with a child who can't read. Newly appointed Orange Coun- ty Assessor Bradley Jacobs came up with his ownJ?lan for re- organi::!.ation of the Assessor's Qf. fice Wednesday and. in the pro· cess, eliminated the post of assis- tant assessor. Jacobs' plans for an overhaul or the office will go before the County Board of Supervisors next week for review. What the supervisors will be looking at is a proposed or· ganization chart that calls for five operational managers to re-· port directly to the assessor. Sandwiched between the five managers and the assessor would be a management services manager who would also report to the assessor and provide administrative support to the managers. Jn hls report to the supervisors. Jacobs said the goal or the re- organization plan he and an out- side consultant prepared is to provide the method for planning and administering the tasks re· quired to produce the county as- sessment roll. To that end. he proposed separate managers be assigned to the unsecured assessment roll. s ecured assessment roll and what he termed roll support. Additionally, he proposed a standards manager who would oversee appraisal practic~ and make certain they comply with state regulations. The fifth manager under Jacobs' reorganization p~an is assigned to computer systems. a geature. the assessor said, that reflects the need to expand use of computer system technology. Whi le the management services manager stands apart There·s just no time for explanation. Added to this is the fact that sometimes the audio and visual techniques are confusing and disrupting. While one finds on this tram no new knowledge of the nation's history, there is something else, which can't be explained in a recitation of names, dates, places and events, to be gained. IT'S A NEW OR RENEWED sense, just a good feeling. for the ootion 's history. . It's an'lawareness that this nation's heritage is of people with differing origins, occupations , interests and intellects. Since that, in the mind of this reporter, is what this year's bicentennial celebration should be all about, the train should be declared a worthy thing to see. But there's another aspect which makes it a fun experience. from the five functional THETRAIN,OFCOURSE.isJuslathingwhichcarries managers, the proposed over· other wood. metal, plastic, paper things. But these things, haul gives him no special artifacts ranging from the Lunar Roving Vehicle to Bing authority over them except to act Crosby's gold record for White Christmas to Martin Luther as the assessor in the assessor's Kin~ Jr.'s Bible. easily spark memories, thoughts and absence. feelings in each individual visitor. Jacobs' plan differs from a re· It's a kaleidoscope or sights and sounds wh1ch prompt a organization scheme suggested mixed bag of historical recollections and personal by County Administrative Of-memories. ficer Robert Thomas shortly And what visitors bring off the train is determined by what , I ~ • 'Tm not an abstentist...still the situation with (John 1''.) Kennedy appalled me," he said. Korff referred· to reports that Kennedy was seeing Judith Exner Campbell during his White House days. "There are so many women," he said. "Why does he have to share one with two gangsters." <Related story Page A7). before the board selected Jacobs they take in with them. Laguna Beach 1t~o~re~prnla~c~eLJ_a_c_k_v_a_u_er~g~a-la_t_e_las~t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .-November. Korff heads the President Nix· on Justice Fund, whlch sent the former president the following telegram : "May your 63rd birthday have a new beginning of a new career as a custodian or America's future heritage and may your future be as bright as our un · daunted faith in you. Happy birthday, Mr. President." Korff still refers to Nixon. who resigned Aug. 9, 1974, as a result of the Watergate scandal. as ''the president.·' So far he has raised $270,000 to pay a $518,000 bill for Nixon's team of lawyers, headed by Herbert Miller. which is fighting for him to have custody of his White House tapes and docu- ments. A three-judge appeals court ruled against Nixon's claim Wednesday. He was ex· pected to appeal to the Supreme Court. Fifty Miler Signups Set The Annual Laguna Beach , Search and Rescue Post 717 50-Mile Bike-Hike-Run will be held Jan. 17. Registration is now open. Registration information is available by calling post president Todd Jackson at 494-8862 or post secretary George Wyman at 494·6608. Registration may be made at the time of the event. The fee is $1.50 for those who sign up ahead of the starting day and $2 if the participant registers the day of the event. For groups of 10 or more, the fee is $1 per individual. Funds will be used to purchase equipment for the post. Participants will start in Laguna Beach at the parking lot of Andrus Plumbing, 855 Glenneyre St. The route will take participants to Laguna Niguel. Mission Viejo, El Toro and back to Laguna Beach. The course must be run twice. H.J. GAI\l\E[ Announces exciting savings during our inter eot Drexel t-jeritage r l Board Nixes Eatery rn ure ~UF20% Dana Point Property <JuJtwr's Plan Denied Ralph Marsden, a Dana Point property owner who bas been try- ing for nearly five years to do something with his harbor view vacant lot, was thwarted again Wednesday by Orange County supervisors. lfbe board told Marsden his latest plan for a 7 ,iOO square-foot restaurant on the blufftop site wu unsatisfactory and he'd have to spend the next month re· vising it or have it rejected out or band. By now. Marsden is used to such rebuffs and indicated. h~'" try to come up with som~g that would please supe1"V1SOfS and adjacent property owners wbo HY they'll lose their views of Dana Point Harbor. He 1tarted out tryinl to use bJs Janel, located near the corner of Street of the Grffn Lantern and CoY• RNd for condomlnlum de· veJopment. That wu ID J9'71. . Smee the land was zoned re· 1\dentlal, Marsden'• plan sailed lhroaCb -at flnt. Then came new requhementl fo r envlronmental tmpact repc>ru ud \be proJKt tell down. Marsden said "13 different alternatives" were discussed and finally, several years ago, the planning commission de· termined the land would be best tuited for a restaurant like the Quiet Cannon, located just 200 feet down the road. Plans were drafted and redrafted each time flaws were discovered by the county plan· ning staff and Marsden finally presented a proposal to the com- mission last year. The com· mission rejected it again. Murray Storm, assistant director or the coun ty Environmental Management Agency, said that altbouih the planning staff liked the plan and endorsed the. e nvironmental im· pact rePol't, the commission wasn't satisfied. The commission also said Manden was about six. parking spaen short of the minimum 86 spaces needed to mee-t county codts for such~staurant.s. Marsden appealed t he com· ml!slon actlon, resulting tn Wed· nesd ay's h earin8 before supervisors. ...... I He appealed lo supervisors not to "make me go back to ground zero and start all over again.'' During the hearing, Frank Persides of Dana Point, who lives across the street from Marsden's land, said tpe project that bas been proposed is too massive. •'If somebody developed the land between this lot and the quiet Cannon in the same fashion, you'd have a Chinese Wall etfect along that entire bluff," Persides said. "There are no view corridors and no way to the easement along the bluffs except through the restaurant." Persides also $aid the restaurant would set a ~ent for the type of development al· lowed in the new "tourist, recreation and commercial" ior\t created bY. the ~ty last year for restaurants and other racilities. Supervlsors Thomas RJley and Ralph Diedrich a.greed, saytna the project pr'Opos.ed by Marsden ls not ln character with the area because or its abe and stYle.. ' .. . .... -.. " Also -Storewide Sale i11 Progress Listed here are some of the money saving items offered. "Large Selection of Area Rugs -........... 1/2 Off Table Lamps & Floor Lamps ............ 15o/o Off Sofas, Love Seats & Chairs ...... 15o/o to 25% Off Bed Spreads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......... 20 o/o Off Leather Sofa & Chairs . . . . ...... 20% Off PROFESSIONAL INTEIHOR DESIGNERS Opon Mon., Thur$. & fri. Eves. 221~ HARBOR BLVD COST A MESA, CALIF. l ' f . ( A4 OAILYPILOT Jot ,,. ··\'.~.. wltla . To• arplaiae LONG GONE DEPT. -Once upon a time, youngsters along this coastline depended heavily o n their own e nterprise for entertainment. Commercial intrusion. however, may be killing a lot of this youthful initiative. You can reflect on this by simply observing how kids get downhill nowdays. A quick survey of our coastal terrain will confirm for you that we have both hills and flats. In Huntington Beach. for example, there are mos tly flats. In Newport, you have hills and flats. Jn Laguna. hills and potholes in the streets. So it goes. FOR YOUNGSTERS, the hmy places are probably the most fun because when you are standing at the top of a hill, there is always the temptation to figure a way to get to the bottom very fast. Over the years, kids have been fairly inventive about this. Give a young person a grassy hill slope and he might slide down it on the seat of his pants. The next kid will go him one better, scooting down faster on a big chunk of cardboard. Pretty soon another youngster comes along and does 1t even faster on a piece of ~heet metal. Thus one kid was always trying to eclipse another with unique m\'entions for speeding from the top of a hill to the bottom. SAME THING WAS true on steep roads. The first young ~rson comes along and tacks some old skate wheels to a board and whips down a hill al a pretty fair clip. Some other kid figures he can beat that speed and the next thing you know, he has swiped the wheels from his mother's shopping cart and is hard at work building the secret s peed weapon. Then a third youngster s hows up with a r eal juggernaut fashioned from an old water heater wit h bicycle wheels. All this competitive drive to build something yourself that goes faster than the other fellow seems to be vanishing from our Thunday.January 811m • CIA Denies Italy Fun South Africans Use U.S. C141s? GARDEN CITY, N.Y. CUP{) -South Africa is using transport aircraft bought from the U.S. to ferry troops and equipment Into Angola, intelligence sources said in an article today in Newsday, the Long Island newspaper. Such use of the American-built planes would' violate terms of the agreement under '\tbich the planes were sold to South Africa. The sources told Newsday· the South Africans are using four Cl41 Starlifter transport planes sold to them by the U.S. in the past two years to ferry troops and materials to at least three sites in Angola, where an estimated 2,000 South Africans . reportedly are fighting beside two western supported factions in the country's civil war. THE TRANSPORT planes. the sources said, operate out of Grootfontein, in South West Fire, Blast Kill 3, Hurt 40 at 2 Sites Africa, a key South African military staging base, and fly to Luso in the east, where there bas been heavy fighting against the Marxist faction. A State Department spokesman said he "had no information" on the use of CI4ls by South Africa, but added that several Cl30 Hercules transport planes were sold to South Africa before a United Nations arms e mbargo took. effect in 1963. Since 1963, h e said, an undetermined number of what he described a s "civilianized versions" of CI30s were sold to South Africa by the U.S. with the proviso that none of them be used for_" military purposes." THE SPOKESMAN added he did not know if any of the Cl30s sold since 1963 have been used to support South African military operations in Angola . ~ Nervous, A re Y eu? UPI Ttie,"°'o Babs Beckwith, an assistant in the press office at Presi· dent Ford's campaign headquarters, appears excited as she pins a campaign button on the Chief Executive dur· ing a visit Ford made to the Washington office. By United Press International A fire at a natural gas com- pressor station in Mooreland, Okla., Wednesday killed three workers and injured four others, and a series of explosions ana fire in an aerosol can factory in Elkhart , Ind ., injured 36 workers. One man was missing. 'Dead'· Woman Revives Authorities believe a heater be- ing used by workers at the com· pressor station ignited leaking gas and set off a flash fire. . The kill e d and injured workmen were installing new equipment in a ditch, Sheriff A. C. Gaston said. "It was real cold out here, about zero." Gaston said. ··and the chill factor was about 30 below. They had a heater down in the hole with them." Body Temperature 28 Degrees Below Normal TUJ.SA, Okla. CAP) -A 27· ye•r :P.ld Tulsa woman is re- cov.ering in a hospital today. hours after a state medical ex- . aminer and four police officers decided she was dead. Hospital officials said Linda C lark w as treated for hypothe rmia. or low body tem - perature. They listed her in serious condition. awaken her ·by beating on the windows. She was still motion· less when homicide detectives arrived. The detectives decided not to pry open the car doors, fearing that high winds might blow away evidence that mtght help de- termine the cause of death. Instead, they broke out the back window a nd a detective crawled inside to check for signs of life. She was checked for pulse, breath and other signs of life, but none was found and she was presumed to be dead. "Despite the le ngth of time since we had found her, the skin seemed to become more flexible at the garage. It made me sus- picious, so I uncovered her head. felt for a pulse and got one," he said. ':I hollered to the guys from the funeral home . They loaded her up and flew to the hospital." II But Mum On Plans To C·ome WASHINGTON (AP) -CIA Director William E . Colby said today the agency bas "not spent a nickel in Italy in the past few months,'' but be stopped short of denying reports that the CIA has begun to funnel $6 million to anti- Communist elements in Italy. Asked in an interview on NBC- TV's "Today" show wb~er the CIA planned to spend money In Italy, Colby replied: "I am not at liberty to discuss details." DURING THE interview, one day after public reports of covert CIA funding in Italy, Colby blamed memberE; of Congress for leaking intelligence secrets. "We have to insist that Qur members of Congress .•. assume responsibility for knowing things that cannot be passed on," he said. White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen said Wednesday there is "a strong suspicion in the White House" that the reports of CIA funding originated in Congress. Asked to be more specific, Nessen replied, "I could but I won't." Nessen declined to confirm or deny the CIA was paying the funds. but an authoritative source elsewhere confirmed the operation, which was initially disclosed in The Washington Post and The New York Times. IN ITALY, hundreds of thousands of civil servants staged a nationwide 24-hour strike today demanding new work contracts as the Christian Democrats. hit by a government crisis, ruled out cooperation with Communists in forming the next cabinet. · downhill juvenile society these days. Thirty-six e mployes of the Ac· era Pac Co .. an aerosol can factory in Elkhart, were injured Wednesday shortly after some "red and bubbly" liquid was noticed coming out of a drain. Firemen said one person was MISS CLA RK bad been declared dead by a medical ex- aminer, and attendants were about to lift her into a hearse when Police Det. J .L.R. Brown spotted a faint pulse in the woman's neck. ONE DETECTIVE stayed in the auto while it was towed about 15 miles to the police garage downtown. A state medical ex· aminer m et the police at the garage and he pronounced her dead. Physicians at Hillcrest fought to raise her body temperature, which had fallen nearly 28 degrees be low t he normal read· ing of 98.6. She had spent an estimated t hree hours in the car in temperatures as low as seven degrees above zero, officers said. A role for the Communist party was a key !actor in the collapse of Christian Democratic Premier Aldo Moro's 13·month-old minority coalition Wednesday night. Moro resigned after the Socialist Party, the nation's third largest after the Christian Democrats and Communists, withdrew its parliamentary sup- po.rt. ALAS, IT SEEMS for most youngsters . if somebody shows up on the hill with a speedy downhill conveyance, you simply go down to the corner store and buy one that ·11 be quicker than his. Riding on a board with skate wheels bas become very large among the younger set these ·missing. T he 75,000-square foot plant located in a huge industrial park on the city's southeast side was declared a total loss. She was revived by physicians at Hillcrest Medical Center. The incident began before dawn Wednesday when someone telephoned the Oklahoma Highway Patrol headquarters here to report that Miss Clark, a student 'at Oklahoma Slate University, was despondent and had threatened to take her life. A hearse was called to the garage to take the woman to the morgue. As she was about to be loaded, Brown became sus - picious. · days. But no longer is il just a matter of finding some old skate wheels and bolting them to a plank. Frat House Fire Deaths COLUMBUS <U PJ) - Two per so ns. one a woman. were killed today in a fire at a co-ed fraterni· ty house in the Ohio State University area. The fire department said there had been a fraternity initiation shortly before the fire broke out. Law enforc1!'Tnent agencies broadcast a description of her car. Off-duty city policeman Blaine Davis spotted the car on Interstate 44 east of Tulsa about 6 a.m. as he was driving home. Christians Launch Attack On Guerrillas l f If young downhill skateboard r acer s are going t o be competitive these days, they must run right down to their friendly local corner skateboard racing s hop. clutching cash in their hands. HERE THF.Y MAY purchase a custom-built skateboard (i n assorted co lor s ) with aerodynamic ··spoiler desig n" featuring kick tails. rugged polypropylene body and extra wide ureth a ne wheels with double-action trucks. Wonderful. Only $16.99. plus tax, of course. You have to guess that these days. money can even buy you success and happiness going downhill. Four other residents of the house occupied by the Alpha Rho Chi professional architectural fraternity wer e injured and five fi remen were treated for minor cuts and smoke in- halation. Identification of the victims was withheld pend- in g notification of re· latives. THE WOMAN was lying in the front seat of her car with her mouth and eyes open, her pupils dilated. Davis said the car doors were locked but he tried to Bodies Exhumed ORADELL, N .J . <U PI ) - Bergen County authorities have received permission to exhume the bodies of five people who died suspiciously in 1966 to determine whether they were given an over· dose of curare, a drug us ed by South American Indians as an ar- row poison. BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) - Chri sti an militiamen spearheaded by armored carS · launched a counterattack today against Palestinian guerrillas who had pushed them back in their fiercest fighting in 10 months of Lebanese civil war. It was the second day of figh· ting in eastern Beirut in which [_1_N_SH_O_R_T_J Cold Closes Up Schools mortar and machine gun fire bad reduced hospitals to rubble in the seesaw battle raging around the Palestinian refugee camp of Tal Zaatar. Nl%oa Appeal Nippy Weather Forces Escapees to Give Up WASHJNGTO~ {AP) - Richard M. Nixon's lawyers say they will appeal a federal court decision upholding the govern- ment's claim to possession of millions of documents and tapes Hl9'1 Low ~P JS ll 40 ,, 10 10 0 36 "' J6 ' " ll ·S .01 0 .... l6 IS .33 36 11 iM 6 J ·10 )S ·I 1S ·1S 0 .7 II 7' tt ) s .. $1 19 ,. 7J ,. .. . " ,, " J6 ,, • II It ) i ~ .. . " ,. 01 10 .D fltloeftl• ., l7 "ltts.INf 9'1 a. " tO ~ltfld. Ore. » .. .4l AeoldClty 4 ·U ... ,. 47 u Stcttn'Olllo M ,. 5' L.CIVI• • ... .u 5t1t UNI• City n 1t ~,.,~lw.o " * SNttl• .. ., .JI ~""°" '° )1 ... V.8.S-•art1 A -....Cllllll~ COid COfttl"°*' 10 ....,_ ""'' l'llVCll Of '"" nort,,.,.,, !\elf ti !fie Mtloll toclay H tlle M~st dUg wt from up lo lfx ll'Clles of ,,_ Mid W Ul!Ptf !ioutll el'ld flltrlht41 I dHll • """' llWI and ''"'1"9 tlln. dKld9d It wasn't -rth flMl"O In tlW t1·belOW·ff•O wuthu Wtel""4ay n19M and called authorllltt to com. get lhem, CaHfornfa SOutlwft ~lllornla had SUMY and mllel -ther with ttmperaturM ,.., 70 tOdly, bllt a cooling tr9"CI was "'"'C1wd for Friday with fog and low clouds moving In •1°"9 tht COMt. Los Anetl.s was sunny with a Ovlc CM\19" hlllh of 61, ctown •-°'9l'tft from Wtdnetdfoy, The Air llollutlOll Control Dl•rlct prtdlcM llttle fW llO •Y• IN'lt~ ,,.,,, smoe111h batl11 toci.y. Mol.l\tal11t .. ,.. wnny with -lllltY wllldS. HltM at resort ...,.,. ........ tlWwutf\ , ... SOI.. Dntns .,.. ... •Ito SUftflY with lll'tfll ,...... ff'Om SS to 6S In the lllQll dtlffts Mid from lS to 7S In 1111 low dt.nvel~ .from Nixon's S'Aa years as presi- dent. ; A speciaJ three-judge federal court ruled unanimously Wed· nesday that the government and not Nixon should decide on public access to 42 million documents and 820 reels or tapes, including those played during the Watergate cover-up trial and im· peachment heartn1s of the House Judiciary Committee. l•rttei Detna9e 81d C'e .. tallt'eatlaer WASHINGTON <UPI) VMIMI• hlllh <IOudlness IKll nat•r 15raell forei-mlnlster Y:J.al Al· ·-y Frldllr. , •" H.tt,t~ dtlvfflt COftdlt~ IA IN L . .19111 vtrltOle wlnC11 1119'11 t"9 100, Who dt.asreea with .S. in· tt1ec1" ., .. , ._ I• """*"' °' '"""1119 hours. "'Gills Fr1cr.y "'the tellisence u1es1menta ... at .. 1_ «eldlftb8M ttlt .. Utw....._ !Nd We. w Ulb ..... tero tefft .. ratu,..t """' C..ttl ttm"ntv'" wtll rMOI country la ftOW the mlJltary equal ,.,.,,., w.,,. .. ,.Y •11 ,, .... ••-.. " a11• "· 1111111e1 tam-of ltl Arab nel1bbo?'I, visited the Utrauolleut Ka11ut, MIMMirl, ..,MVIW Wiii rtnte 11ftwwn Jt Md n-tason toda, 'O taJ'-about OICl•"O"'• and Herth 11141 S.Utll .., 1lle~tllm!Mrlltvrewlll•" TUI ~ " °'w"=' Of more tlltfll ,. "'"" ,., .,_ .. 'l':f~-l<Jl>hi1tlcated weapons llnel '*" ... t ... newly fallen -In " f IT • ..., we". WlnU to bu)', rnanr aren lftt• dfll\l M tlld"""' T"UaDAY Allonb Israeli ambassador 1 .. 1 '"•· Cau•1•• "'11" Icy ""11 IKeflclhltll t:Jtit."'· '·' Slmcha tnlts, State n--rtm-t ~,. llttflweys, trewt -llceftdio. 7:U11.m. u .....,..,_ """ utrel'llelr llaurelou• 111 mtll)' ftlUOAY middJe east expert Joteph SilOO wctloft\oftt1eMlowe•1• l'lnl11'-i:ou .m •·• and Peota1on ffi ial t ··"'th S<otltrtd tclleol clHlll" .,..,. '1ntl0w tO:t4o.lft. 1 t 0 C I me w1 ,....n• '"IC•,..,.,....,,, NWtll 9"oM!llt'I N••·"' u Defel\le Secretary Donald H. <Mo1•Mt11c10111•tflof'lle. 5eulld•olr •:.op.rn. >.o RumlfeJd In bls officeJ1.11t before In~ 9ay, WIL, ... ·~ SvllrlwH:OOa.rn.,stlH:Stpm. ftWft '"-,Oreen 8ay "•fotrnttorr I MMnrlMt 10.$.S..m. • • noon. • AUTRORITIEI said the t!l'· treme cold could)ave li,lowed:tl)e woman's br~thing and heartbeat to a point whefe her pulse was not detectable. One doctor said doctors and nurses were unable to find any s igns of life at one point during Miss Clark's e mergency treatment. 1 ~~rllTICAL leaders, con· te~P,tatfug the ruins of their gov· eOlmeot, began jockeying for p0s1Uon in Italy's 33rd postwar adntinistration -the only al~ff)ative to premature general elections likely to favor the Com· muni.st party. 'Sounded Like Bird' 1-hour-old Baby Alive Inside Bag . P~ILAD_ELPHIA (AP) -Passersby ignored the paper bag, think- ing it was 1ust a nother load of trash. But Fannie Fuller heard "a cry like a bird's" from the bag and found an hour-old infant inside. . The baby's tempe~ature h~d dropped to 80 degrees while it lay in· side the bag on a sidewalk in the cold, rainy weather Wednesday doctors said. ' An 18-inch umbilical cord was newborn infant. still attached to the inf ant when "I DON'T THINK wet.re going Miss Fuller carried him to a to see any permanent Injury to nearby corner bar. Dr. Norman this child, though. I think the Kendall of Temple University baby was found before there was Hospital said the baby was undue exposure of the cold." fomuate not to have bled through The baby will be kept at Tem- the untied cord. ple for fi ve to seven days for ob-· "I JUST THOUGHT it was just some trash ." said Howard ·Johnson, 26, one of the person.a who bypassed the bag. "I heard a noise like a cat sound. I didn't pay it no mind.'· About an hour later, at 8 a.m., Mis.s Fuller spotted the bag, sit· ting in front of a rowhouse in a rundown residential section of tbecity. , ''Another fellow came up about the tlme and he said, 'That sound.a like a baby ln that bag'." Miss Fuller, 37, said. "lt sounded like a bird to me. The cry wu re· al weak." The baby, wrapped in only a thin oran1<' towel, "must have been born withln an hour or when be wu found,'' Kendall said. "HE RESPONDED very well to our treatment,'' Kendall said of the child , firat named "Baby X" and later renamed "Jonathan . Temple" by the bospltal ital!. "We Just warmed the baby up and took some tests. We didn't do anything heroic,'' be tald. Police queatloned resident"4 about t.be •ix·pound, three-ounce baby, but "ran up aplnst. a atone wall,"• pollce spokesman said. Kendall sald he expecta lhe baby to survive the harsh con· ditJana. He said the baby's l>-dep-ee temperature ls often "extremely fletrimental and hazardous to a servation and tests and then be turned over to the Department of· Public Welfare. From there Jonathan Temple will be placed with fostdi>areots. ""',,........ ···-·-··· . Sen. Edmund S. Muskie CD; Maine) anno~oced he will " seclc fourth Senate term and invited Maine conatltueots to examine hi1 17·year re· cord in Washington . ) - Thursday. January 8. 1976 DAIL v PILOT A S Public Hospita& Feel Brunt of Work SloU?down J . ~ ' ., LOS ANGELES (AP) -Medical employes at public hospitals are complaining about \be Increased workload they have shouldered due to a doctor's slowdown, which has forced the layoff of more than 2,000 persons from private f acilitles. The slowdown -a protest against proposed increases rang- ing up to 486 percent in malpractice insurance pre· miums in Southern ~rnia - swelled the county's largest hospital. county.USC Medical Center. to above its budJeted capacity Wednesday. "A crisis exists:• DanAslrnus. head of the medical center's In- terns and Residents Association, said at a news conference. ••we're overworked and un· derstaff ed." · ASIMUS SAID the workload bad increased to the point that in one case a single doctor bad to care for 40 patient:;. At the same time. a number of private hospitals laid oct employes, cut their hours or al- lowed them early vacations or leaves of absence. Ad· ministrative officials at some hospitals took a 20 percent pay cut to help ease the fmancial im- pact of reduced patient loads. State officials said the un- employed hospital workers ac· counted for 14 percent of all un- employment claims filed in Los An&tles County on Wednesday. About half the medical employes laid of! came from a single hospital, Cedar1-Sioai Medical Center, one of Soutberu California's largest private hospitals. A spokeswoman said. 1,000 of its 2,500 employes bad been laid of! since last Friday. "It's very gloomy. The main thin' we want to do is keep our medical center alive, somehow keeping our patients getting care,'' she said. Of the 731 beds available · at Cedars-Sinai, she said, only 319 were taken. BY CONTRAST, the in-patient count at County-USC rose to 1,671 persons Wednesday. Marion ~arents Help, Srores Better Diamond, chief of disaster services for the county Depart· ment of Health Services, said the center is considered over- crowded when the in-patient level reaches 1,577. .. What this overcrowding means is an increased work-load for the staff," she said, adding that the heavier case-load "may reduce the quallty or care somewhat and we want to minimize that." "The staff is more tired and the patients are more crowded together." she said. Despite reaching budgeted capacity, she said beds were available for "a couple of hundred'' additional persons. LISTON WITHERILL, head of the county health services, said about ~ patients would be dis· charged from County-USC one or two days earlier than normal so that more beds could be ob- tained. Additionally, he soid, the new Martin Luther King Jr. hospital would beiin to handle more emergency cases than it has in the past. The Hospital Council of Southern California said a sur· vey Wednesday showed the number or hospitals affected by the doctors' action had risen slightly. Leon Hauck, spokesman for the organization, said 94 of the 234 member hospitals were experiencing some difficulty from the slowdown. Despite the problem, hospital officials said emergency room treatment was available at most facilities. B UT AT MANY prtvate J hospitals, especially in the · ~prawling Sao Fernando Valley ~ with a population of more than l • million persons, doctors were.-.. caring only for "life threatening. ~ llmb threatening" C&Se$ and the" less serious were beln ...1 transferred to the public hospitals. Asimus said the county Health ~ Servjces Department "has mis- led people into thinking they can come to the county bQspital and get adequate care." -j He said that while many or the 750 residents at the massive hospital "admire and support" the slowdown they planned no action or their own. He added that in one sense "there is a slowdown" because the staff doctors are too overworked to give optimum care. Witherill said 205 beds re· mained available at the eight county hospitals, which have a •capacity of 3,556 patients. State's Early Childhood Results Praised "These are not beds we have to drag in from the storeroom or anything," he explained. ••These are regular beds." SACRAMENTO CAP) -State In addition, be said, n early the program covers 33 percent of Riles' prize project, a program education officials say the Early 181,000 parents worked as theschoolsandcosts$63 million. using paid and volunteer aides - IF NECESSARY, he added •. another 1,000 beds could be pro- vided by increasing workloads , overtime and possibly hiring ad - ditional employes. Child.hood Education program is classroom volunteers. The superintendent is asking including older students -to re· not only improving students' test the state Board of Education to· duce the adult-student ratio to scores, it's also attracting 44THAT'S THE most fantastic daytodraftlegislationfortheex-1·10. parents to the classroom in thing that's ever happened in this pansion. The program is supposed to let Seeks Lleen•e uP1 Tei~. astounding numbers. nation." he told reporters late Last year the request for more students learn at their own pace State schools chief Wilson· Wednesday. "Jerry Brown is get-money was opposed by both while their parents help teachers Rain Forecast Former Lt . Gov . Ed Reinecke. whose perjury conviction was recently overturned. is in line for a California rea.1 estate license. He passed the real estate test in July. Riles gave a report to the state ting more free help than be can Brown's finance department and plan their education. Board of Education today saying imagine." the legislature's non-partisan !is-Last year Riles' Department of SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Oc· casional rain is expected through Friday in north coast portions oC Northern California, but fair weather was predicted for most of Central California except for dense valley !og. the more than 800,000 youngsters Riles said he would ask Gov. cal analyst, A. Alan Post. But a Education said students in the in the program for grades kin-Edmund Brown Jr. for $120 campaign by Riles succeeded in program had made 11 months' dergarten through three showed million this year to expand ECE getting some additional money. progress !or every 10 months or steady ~ains in reading and to 60 percent of the state's instruction. This year, he said, arithmehclast year. elementary schools. This year · ECE, NOW IN its third year, is the results were equal or better. ____________________ .....:.,. _____________ ::..._ ________ .....;_ ____________ ~------------------_;...----------~----~----~~~~--~- Oceanside Tightens Liceming System OCEANSIDE CAP) -The city has toughened its business licensing system to crack down on sleazy downtown bars and bookstores. Mayor Howard Richardson said the new laws are intended to cut the high rate or crime in the downtown district. The ordinance, passed Wednesday by the City Council, requires a business license applicant to meet all electrical, mechanical, fire, health and building codes. OUR BEST FLAT INTERIOR LATEX REG. l99 $10.50 GAL. Custom COion higlltt Easy 10 apply. Non-drip. High h1d1ng. Fully washable. For all type walls. 48 Colors and White. SAUf·Hl'f. ru r INTERIOR L4 TCI For Walls and Wood Piii=:. _ _._, work in All Rooms. REG . 899 Custom $11.50 colors GAL. hi9her Looks like a satin flat. Washes like tnamell Resists soiling. Latex ·easy to use. Pure White. &:zc.KARE . 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Then hnger over a furniture collection that combines sunny European design with famous Drexel craftsmanship. Talavera• by Drexel• is an old·world harmony of panels, moldings and scrollwork, set off with gilded hardware. The woods are pecan solids. pecky pecan 11eneers and ash, warmed with a special 23·step finish. In any room. the effect is truly magical! Make your selections today -at extraordinary sale prices. 1 hat's right ••. During our great Semi Annual Sale you can take advantage of unbelievable savings on current and discontinued lines of fine furniture throughout our entire store. Savings on such prestigious lines as Drexel, Heritage, Henredon. Baker, Century, Hekman. Brandt. Weiman, Sherrill, Shafer Leather. Cal Design Forum, Marge Carson. Stanton-Cooper and Chandler's Custom Sofas and Chairs and many more. We have included 1ust a sample of the tremendous savings awaiting you at Chandler's, so what are you waiting for • . . Call one of our professional design· ers today, or better yet. come 1n and see for yourself why Chandler's 1s making this one of their greatest sa les ever. DON'T MISS THESE REALLY FINE SAYINGS From Drexel Save from 15 to 20% on the following Collections: Bishopsga te. Chatillion, Cross Winds. Delray Francesca, Vanessa. San Martino & Talavera. From Heritage save from 15 to 20% on American Tour. Bernay. Kingsbridge. Montella, Venetian, Windward, LeBeau & Maracay. From Henredon save from 15 to 20% on Alvarado, Artefacts Cachet, Canterbury, Capri, Catalina. Bed, reg. $193 .................. Sale! $149 Night Stand. reg. $199 ......... Sale! $159 Dresser, reg. $459 .......... Sale! $369 Vertical Mirror, reg. $109 .... Sale! $85 Chest. reg. $399 ........... Sale! $319- CONVENIENT FINANCING. PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGN WITHOUT OBLIGATION AND COMFORTABLE PARKING. See the finest from Drexel, Heritage, Henredon, Baker, Century, Woodmork, Aireloom Bedding, Korostan, lees, Stiffel, Morbro, Chandler 's Custom Upholstery ond Draperies ond much more! 1S14 NORTH MAIN • SANT A ANA • 541 _..391 The Store of Famous Names Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Sotunlays 9:30 to 5:30 Monday 12 to 9 • Friday 9:30 to 9 . 1 ' • 8 DAILY PILOT E DITORIAL PAGE Candidates Tell All When Cal1forruu·s new campaign law requiring candidates to disclose their sources of income and list their investments went into effect, it was widely pre 200 years of achievement are on display in 10 exhibit cars a nd two s howcase cars. ; , dieted thHt the rule would dis courage the candidacy of qualified citizens who prefer to keep the ir business affair$ to th<.•ms{•lws. · The train 's visits are an important part of the bicentennial celebration, but there has also been some cri~cism . Peoi:;>le object to waiting in Jong lines only to get into the tram and be carried rather swiftly past the exhibits by a m oving walkway. At least so far as Orange Coast city council races are concerned, it hasn't happened that way. ' ! In the general law cities, a healthy array of It is, however, the most democratic way of allow- ing all in who want in. candidat es already htts met filing deadlines for their March 2 cll!Ctions. Laguna Beach found nine citizens s eeking counc il posts. San Jua n Capistrano had 11, though in both theSl' races, two names were eliminat· eel for insufficient signatures of s upport. San Clemente and Fountain Vallcv will have nine candidates on their ballots. In each of these communities only l wo council seats will be open Costa M esa. with three seats to fill, has come up \\ ith '1 ~taggering hs t of 17 candida tes. And early an- nounceme nts in the r harter cities of Huntington Reach a nd Newport &•i.lch. with later filin g deadlines fo r April 13 elect ions. mdicatc they too will ha ve no s hortage of con test.mts. All this com petition will givC' voters plenty of home work, but 1t dues scc m to prove that predictions "1houl tlw d ~1mpcning effect of disclos ure laws just \·Vere not valtd. The purpose is not to ponder the exhibits but to catch the bicentennial spirit and perhaps share it with others waiting in the lines. We Could Use Some Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. says he has the feel- ing the firs t year of his administr·at ion has brought a bout the beginning of a new trust in government. From whe re he stands, soys the gove rnor, he has ··this sense that people a re regaining their confidence in government in Sacramento." Public opinion polls in Califor nia and the fact tha t Brown ·s approac h tu governme nt seems to be attract- ing nationwide attention, indicate he may be right. ,. F r eedom on the Rails T hl' :\m(•rican Freedom Train will brake to a halt in the rounty Friday. Unfortunately, Orange County has yet to see any such upsurge of confidence in government. at least at the county level. In fact, after a year of incredible local political m achinations, there's less confidence than ever. Restoring the credibility of county government will be one of the toughest jobs facing Ralph Diedrich as he begins his s econd year as chairman of the Board of Supervisors. ll 1s due to stop first in Anaheim where vis itors will be boarding it through Tuesday. The his- toric s te am locomollve will pull the train out of the county only to re turn again on Monday . Jan. 19, for a day and a ha lf s top in San Jua n Capistrano. !\lor e tha n 500 origin al historica l documents. a rt treasures a nd memorabili a refl ecting the country's Gove rnor Brown's relati\·e candor a nd Mr. Clean openness about state government a nd its problems, and his ins istence that the state live within its means, have struck a responsive chord with the citizenry. The object lesson for our loral governments -and especia ll y for Orange County -seems pretty clear. 1 So Y ou'd ! lL i k e to Be f Presi dent PAUL llARVEY 1 f So you think you'd li ke to he Preside nt of the United Stutes. What 1 ·m a bout to relate is not in- tended to ctw nge your mind necessan ly . Rut you should know what you're ~clting into. ~ Let"s play P resident. I If R l•pubhcans have con :-1st <.>ntly C!:'poused a ny onl· p h iloso ph y <'ver the years 1t h~s been thl' philosophy of .. less i!Overn ment · Trndit ion::il ly. the bus1 1 nessmC'n who have s upport ed the G OP \ have objected to government re · guJation. Republicans generally -a nd President Ford is no ex- <'eption -have periodically re· promised that if we will vote t heir way they will shrink the bureaucr acy. mu11lc the med· c1ter:. and all ow the F'ree En- terprise System to do its thmg. SO THF. other dav President Ford, in folf1 1lment of thal com- mitment. proposed deregulation t1fthetruck1ng industry. lie said we've been <10 years ac· t•umulating a hod(!epodge of re- gul:.ltio ns wh ich tend to stifl e competition 0:tnd increase con- s umer costs. So the P r esident :-.~1d let's clip the wings of the Interstate Com - merce Comm1ss1on, giv<' lhl' truck and hus p<'opll• more freedom to set their own r Jles :rnd fares Guess who we re· first to Jump down his throat? The truck and bus people. The Ame rican Trucking Assn. called the President's proposal •·the ultimate in gov<'m menlal irres ponsibil ity·•; s.iid he woul d • dis rupt the l't1lire marketing ~ind d1stribut1on system." Dear Gloo1ny Gus The Post Office suggests ordering t hl' new stamps hy mail lo amid lonJ! lines. Rut h~ tht• lime t hey :Jr rive. the rate's w ill pro h~1bly have gone up again. A.H.C. Gloomy G..s commenh .rit submltMd by ,.._, .alld do net nec•u.ariff ,..ftecl IM views of , ... new59.11per s ... ci your .,., _ ... 10 Gloomy Gvs, D••lf Pilot SOR IS this the first lime the Free Ente rprisers have de- manded LESS freedom. When P r eside nt Ford in- troduced an aviation regulatory bill it w as stomped on by the aviation people. Here·s whv: A s is. verv small communities :1n· poorly s·erviced by buses and truckers who regard them as marginal operations. And they don't want to be forced by com- petition to add those less profita· ble stops. Free enterprise would allow new companies more freedom to enter the market and, underst:m- dably, however, selfis hly, exist· ing biggies don't want more com- petition . Government r egulations as presently applied tend to protect those earners alread v in busi· ness -a nd t hey h kc it iike that. So here we have a Republican President promotin~ traditional Repubhcan economic philosophy and traditiona lly Republican businessm en seeking lo s hout him down. SO, you say. if you decide to nm for President you'll run as a Democrat. Then you should know this about that. When t y pically Democrat President Harry Truman tried to prevent steel companies from in- creasing prices his mainmost op- position came Crom Big Labor's John L. Lewis So now pick your party and go ahead and run, but don't look back because you'll never know which of those people who appear lo be following you are chasing )OU, instead. I Democrats Win Votes in Hard Times Economy Mfty Sink GOP at Polls .. WAS HING TO~ One of President Ford's top a dvisers privately forecasts a Republican debacle at the polls this year. His reasons arc strictly economic. On cond it io n tha t we not ident ify hi m. he told us frankly wh y he ex pects 1976 to be a bad yea r f o r th e Re publicans. Here a re his main points: -Mo r e th a n e i g ht milli o n Americ a ns a r e out of wor.k. Millions more. seeing their neighbors unemployed, are un- easy about their own jobs. They can be expected to vote ovt'r- whelmingly for the Democratic ticket. -The inflation rate is now run- n ing slightly above eight percent. This is s lowly i mpoverishing millions of Americans who live on fixed pensions . They a re a lmost sure to tur n to the Democrats in November.too. -ALTHOUGH wages are ex· peeled to keep up with inflation in the year ahead, mos t Americans are complaining about soaring prices. Not only. are prices higher than eve r but the quality of both products and ser vices h ave d e t e riorate d. Americans, therefore, are pay- ing more for less. More than like· ly. the majority will register their disple a sure by voting against the party in power. -Americans are now import· ing 40 percent or the petroleum they use. For this, they pay the oil potentates a s taggering sum which must come out of the U.S. economy. Most Americans tend to bl ame the Administrahon both for the higher gas prices and the sluggish economy. -Contrary to Republican gospel, hig her prices haven't stimulated increased production. An alarming 30 percent of our in· dustrial ca pacity still stands idle- Despite skyrocketing oil and gas (JACK AN DERSON ) prices. for example. the oil com- pa nies are opening fewer wells than they did al the lower prices. Thjs has undermined public faith in GOP solutions. -THE WORLD demand for food has s timulated farm pro- duction. but the g reat grain com- panies and food processors have been ba nking most of the profits. Meanwhile, back on the farm. the farmers are caught in a cost squeeze. Many of the m, who normally are conservative Republicans, may be restless enough by November to vote for Democra ts. -The President's economic advisers agree privately that bis proposed budget provides less, not more s t im ulus to the economy. This may be the responsible way to curb inflt tion. but our source believes it will cost votes in Nove mber. He points out that Americans, when their pocketbooks ar e pinched , tend to vot e Democratic. That's why he is worried about the coming election. AGENTS IN DANGER: Tbc truth about the tragic death of Richard Welch is that the Central IntelHgence Agency didn't pro- perly protect its top man in Athens. Like other CIA station chiefs around the world, Welch.posed as a "diplomat." B~t. it was a transparent cover that foreign diplomats easily s~w throijgh. The CIA has neveT lnade m6rc than a flimsy effort-to disguise some of its regular a.gen~ Wotse, CIA station cbiefS' are usually housed in r esidences, which are passed on to their sue· · cessors. More often than not, the locations or these CIA residence~ become the whis pe,red talk of thi· diplomatic community. THE CIA put Welch. for exam pie, in the same house that CIA station chiefs had occupied for the past 25 years . At least seven CIA s tation chiefs , according tu our sources, had r esided there. In a letter to a former col- 1 eag ue s hortly before hi ~ m u rd e r, W e l c h him s e l f described the home as "very ple~ant if somewhat notorious:• . . A few years ago in Vietnam, to cite a nother example, tbe CIA re ceived reports that the station cbief:S borne had been targeted by the Viet Cong. The cloak-and <lagg.er man move d out t~mPO'!'arily but soon came hack ••because he liked the housc,·• rf! port our sources. · Is the ABC Necessary? The resignation of William A. [ ] an abysmal failure. Sullivan, after s ix month.5 on the For it spends more money than job as director of the Alcoholic · EARL WATERS it collects a nd its operational Beverage Control Department _ _ budget must be augmented with reopens questions which existed ------------' general a ccount funds. Nor can it prior to his appointment and ranged to be in the ABC field of-contend that this is only because were not disposed or by it or by flee in Downey each Friday' re-it distributes the major portion or 1us stepping out. turning to Sacramento on Mon· its revenues to the cities and . d ay. Thus he got the state to pay · Sullivan was named to succeed f i..:A 1 d. t counties since the basis for that or ,~ ong is ance commute, a h · · Edward Kirby. Both bad FBI cost of some $3000 yearly. s anng lS to reimburse local gov- backgrounds. Sullivan has continued the e mments for their costs in polic- As such one pra~tice because, although heotr ing the liquor e st ablis hments might have viouslyrelishedthetatplumap. created by ABC through its expected they pointm ent worth $30,000 a year, licensing. would have added to whatever his federal great respect ONE OF the re asons ABC service had earned him in retire-t d r· for a nd de· opera es at a e 1cit is the fact it ment benefits, be didn't want to · 1·k <licalion to the is run i e a cat-rat factory relocate his family. d' h lf f · c d J a w . B u t spen mg a o its unds e· despite state THE QUESTION here is one or termining whether an applicant law which re-double standards tor state of-should be licensed and the other qui r e s that ficials. Any lesser employe hall proving it made a mistak~ the director r eside in Sacramen-caught pulling such shenanigans granting the license. to, K irby domiciled in Los would be s umm arily dismissed. The profound question is why a Angeles all the eight years be drummed out of the corps, and state agency to regulate liquor held office. He conveniently ar-properly so. Neither private en-any more than soda pop or other terprise nor the government has beverage? In the days before Quarrels Start with the Wrong Question yet accepted the responsibility prohibition none existed. One for transporting workers Crom opened a s aloon in the same man- tbeir homes to the job. ner as a soda fot.;ntain. What But the larger question comes makes it different today? Isn't it back to the need tor an ABC about time, 42 years after repeal. director. That arises because the that the liquor industry be given need to continue the department its rightful place in the world of itself as an entity of state govern· legitimate business? The other n ight I h ad a longish . c hat with a woman I had not seen for som e time. She is always a pleasure. She is in her 40s, and is all for the women's movement as long as it has nothing to do with her. She thinks the sex part of the movement, as distinct from the economic and psychological, is r3ther li ke the s owing of wild oats. This is a vi<.'w that is sym pathetic to m e, firm believer as l am in two sex· es. with equal but separate nahts tor tht- thlrd, fourth or fifth sexual ,arinorities. 1 conUoue to think there are thing s that are un- natural, like a • woman poundfn« a police beat or a ma beinl nanny to a baby. "J"Mt'• tbe way It ls .. I've tried to see merit in lernale cope and male nannies ; but so fa r J . .hnm'tdonewen. ...... ... CHARLES. McCABE . I KNEW, then, that t.his was going to be an old-Cas hioned evening, bereft of the challenges that seem nowadays to be so much a part of social life. Like. "Why s houldn't women instead of men be going to the moon? .. This, lo me. who doesn't think men should be going to lbc moon. until they reduce the fare about a million-Col d. My companion bas a reputa· ti on for being v. s uccessful with men, wbatev~r that means. She was married early to a guy who got it in the Korean war. She lattt married b1s rather. The pre· .sent arra.ngement is a much· admired marriage. "How do you do it r' l asked. SHE KNE W what I was asking, which was more than ln the word,,, In their exact form. "1 had a mother J Uked and ad-. mired, .. s he replied. "She told me a lot about a lot of things. "Her rule in m arriage, she told me, was never to ask a question when I won't like the answer." Well, my dear mother never told me anything like that. A good deal of the women I know would regard the advice as not only !atuous but. debasing, and obedience to it tha worst form of female servility. THE WORDS sound like the sort of thing the reaJly old· fashioned lovelorn correspon· dents. like Dorothy Di~. used to deal out. "Avoid quarrels,'' they used to say. Just as old alienists, as shrinks were once called, often told you to "stop worry· Ing:· Y t't wb at is more important in human relations tb*11 avoi~ quarrels, so Jong a YoU do not . sacrifice some reallf Important part of yourself ln the procas? This question is addressed to hmband.s quite as much as to wives and I overs. .Most quarrels, and C?SPCcially • I those which cripple a marriage or a less Corm al mating, are r eal- ly quarrets with ourselves. When they begin to get us down, the quarrel is relieved by being pro- jected on the nearest person to you, which is usually wife or husband. IN NORMALLY rational peo- ple I should guess that four out or five potential problems can be relieved or disappear altogether if we fail to ask that question which is the start of it all. Quar· rels nearly always start with a question, a question which places the mate on the de!ensive at once; and which ls really a tiny shell.inc of Fort Sumter. The method will fail sometimes, and U senselessly prolonged may cause some deep. set dilf erence to maanJ/y lt.sell to the point or real danger. It's awfully bard NOT to say, .. What about that d.octor you play tennis with?" Or, "What'• with the lipstick on the polo s hirt, jUnior?" It's ju5l better1 lean tell you, than some things 1 IO'lC>W. m ent is open to s erious question. Created som e 20 years ago to take over the licensing and r e· gulating of alcoholic beverages, a !unction whic h had been ex- ercised by the State Board or Equalization in the years follow. tng repeal, it has been repeatedly charged with being more protec· tive of t he liquor industry than the pub.Uc. THIS ACCUSATION took of· flclal for m in a senate commJttee report a couple or years back. It uked "What bas the Depart. mmt of Alcoholic Beverace Coo· trol done (or the State of Calllornia and Its clUzens? .. Raving asked the questioo it pro- ceeded to promptly answer tt. stating" Practically nothln1!" In addltlon to beinf refPoDSible for . control o•er t he sale of spirits, ABC ii deemed to be•.,.. vnue a1ency, colledlnt , .. tor licensin1 and renewals from t.boee engagi?d In se""'-alcoholi c beverages. !ln thla l\mictJoll lL la ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Rob#rt N. Weed. Publb1tn- Thomaa Kt>evtl. F.d1tor f:lorl>aro Kr~1b1ch. Editorial Poge 1':dJ1or The editorial pag~ or lhe Daily Pilot seeks to i nform t.ind stimulate rcoders by presenting on lhls P:lil' diverse commenlary on topics of Interest by l\yndicnt· ed columnists and c:artoonl~. by Pl'O\'idinf[ I forum ror r e&dtf'1' vl~w nnd by presentlna this n<'Wspaper'1 opinions and Ideas on current toplcs. The editorial aplnions of the Doily Piiot appc!ar only ln thl' tdltorial column al the top o1 Ul c paae. Opinions x· pmaed by the ~lumnl ta and ~artoonlsls and let t.tr writon ,,. Ulelr own and no elldonemt"nt 0( their vle-ws b.r lbe Oalbr Pllol should bt lnf•rred. • 'Jlu~rsday, Jan. 8, 19'78 • ·l s l' \ I' n () s f • 1 f l l r ·! Solon Gifts Listed - I From Lamb t o Liquors ~ACRAMENTO (UPI) _ State leg1slat~rs reported receiving over- seas trips, free parking permits li- quor, complimentary football tickets and cash birthday gifts among other presents durina 1975. In disclosures or economic in- terests, they listed their assets in-com~ and gifts received during' the pre~1?US 11 months as required by the Pol.1ltc~I Reform Act passed by Califor.ma voters in 1974. UND~~ THE ACT, ELECTED state off1c1als must report gifts valued at $25 or more and income exceeding ~-Other statewide elected officials must make a similar filing in Febntary. In one of the more unusual reports filed w~th the State Fair Political Practices Commission, As- semblyman Leon Ralph (D-South "So•e of the most popular gift• reported •.• were free pas•es to UCLA and VSC loothall games." Gate) said he received more tha11 $~0.000 in inc~me from an August birthday party m his honor. The affair was officially listed as the ''Leon Ralph Birthday Party." Names of the contributors were not listed. Ralph said the contributions came from friends, adding that the actual figure may be less than $10,000. He said he has a list of contributors and is prepared to pay income,truces on the cash girts. SIMII.ARl,V, FRIENDS OF As- semblyman Vincent Thomas <D San Diego). including labor leaders and doctors, rhipped in nearly $3,500 to sponsor a gathering in celebration of Thomas· 28th wedding anniversary. A spokesm an for Thomas said some· of the money was spent on the party and the remainder will be used to send him and his wife on an ocean cruise to Mexico this summer. Assemblyman Robert Nimmo (R- Atascadero) reported receiving a "butchered lamb" valued at $40 from the Circle N Round-up-Ranch. About two-dozen assemblymen and at least four senators reported receiv- ing no gifts during 1975. SOME OF THE MOST popular gifts reported by the 80 members of the As- sembly and 20 senators (only half or the Senate was required to file on Jan. 1 l) were free passes to UCLA and USC r-football games. Other popuJar presents included parking passes to California college and university campuses, free tickets to Hollywood's annual Academy Compare Awards banquet and to Disneyland. Free meals and beverages, some provided by friends and others by legislative advocates, were listed by some legislators. ··' Complimentary trips to Israel were numerous among legislators last year. Others included jaunts to" Germany, Russia and Korea. ASSEMBLY SPEAKER LEO T. McCarthy (D·San Francisco) report- ed he received $1,500 from the Israeli government t o visit that country in December. In addition, nine in- dividuals raised $1,300 to send McCarthy's wife, J ackie, with him. Assemblyman John Knox (D- Richmond ) reported receiving more than · $1 ,000 from the Republic of Germany to make a trip there. As- semblyman Bill Lockyer (D-San Leandro) received $2 ,000 from the American Council of Young Political Leaders to make an lS-day trip to Russia. The Korean Veterans As- sociation gave Sen. Alfret1 H. Song <D- Monterey Park) $1,400 to travel to Seoul, Korea. _Ot hers r eporting complimentary tnps to Israel were Ralph, chairman of the Assembly Rules Committee; Assemblymen Herschel Rosenthal CD-Los Angeles), Frank Vicencia {D- Bellflower), John F. Foran (D-San Francisco) and Sen. George Zenovich (D-Fresno). BECAUSE THE REPORTING re- qui rem e n ts a r e so s trict, some legislators bared virtually every- thing. For instance, Assemblyman Art Torres (0-Los Angeles) listed ~worth of china pieces he received as wedding presents. Newlywed Assemblyman Richard Robinson (0 -Santa Ana) also said he received nearly $800 worth of wedding gifts. Sen. John Dunlap (0-Napa) report- ed receiving $395 worth of medical services at St. Helena hospital and Health Center in Deer P a rk. As· seinbly man Curtis R. Tucker <D- Inglewood), a heart patient, listed six pints of blood valued at $150 donated by the Morning:;ide Park Lions Club. ASSEMBLYMAN HARRY Keene CD-Eureka> said he received a case of tuna and a case of wine valued at $75 from a fish company in addition to two turkeys worth $40, which he said was consumed by his family and staff. Senate President Pro tern J ames R. Mills (D-San Diego). who reported among his gifts those •alued at less than $25, said be ,,.. giffD a $113 pistol by the California Rine and P:stol Association. He even reported as gifts meals eaten at a friend's home. Assemblyman John Vasconcellos (D-San Jose>. listed 16 speeches he was paid for in the last year. The talks, many presented to educational groups, were listed as honorariums and totalled more than $2,000. THE VIEW LOCATION is unrivaled. High on a wind pro- tected plateau, the site commands Palm Desert. Just three minutes from Town Center, but sur- rounded by mountains and permanent desert park. A security gate guards the entrance. A MAJOR GOLF COMPLEX with a 7,200 yard champion- ship layout designed by Desmond Muirhead with Arnold Palmer and a three par-each without a single house to restrict the views or the fairways. Plus a new executive course under construction. Clubhouse, Pro Shop and restaurant at your service. AN ABUNDANCE OF TENNlS with 8 sheltered courts, three lighted, a stadium center court for tournaments and a charming Clubhouse and Snack Bar. A VARI ETY OF HOMES-8 FURNISHED MODELS Ironwood Villas One and two story homes zoned for privacy and con- venience with view decks and patios clustered around 6 pools and jacuzzis. One, two and three bed- room and bath suites from 1050 to 1900 square feet. $43,000 to $67,500 Fairway Homes One story large homes with dramatic atriums combining great privacy with fairway and desert views. Ample storage, fine detailing, walk-in closets and separate service rooms. Two and three bedroom and bath suites from 1900 to 2400 square feet. $88,500 to $106,500 COME OUT AND COMPARE OUR NEW TERMS Salinger Rebuts Trysts Thursday. January 8, 1976 DAIL v PILOT A 1· Not Enough Pill. Data WASHINGTON (U PI) -Eight of 10 use the birth control pill showed women who use birth control pills re-93 percent of the present and f er" ad what they get about the piJJ but users received pill data that is· e· would welcome more information, ac quired by regulation, 88 per nt cording to the Food and Drug actually read it and 81 percent w ld Administration. welcome more informati n. The FDA said its survey or some or "especially on the use of other s the 10 million American women who simultaneously with the pills.'' INNSBRUCK, Austria -:::=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::'=7----=---~~================:::::;; (U Pl) -Pierre Sal-r R eunited Lauren Bacall and John Wayne will star in a Paramount western, 'The Sbootist. • The pair 1 as t appeared· together in 'Blood Alley' a t W arner Brothers in 1956. inger, John F. Kennedy's press secretary, says that allegations the late President had ex - tramarita l relations were designed to scotch Edward M . Kennedy's presidential chances. Salinger, who served· as press secretary throughout Kennedy's 32-month presidency, also told a news con- ference Wednesday he knew of no extramarital activities by John Ken- nedy. .. IT JS NOT impossible that people throwing these s tories around • have another target," · Salinger said. "John Kennedy is dead. The re· al target now is Ted Ken- nedy, even though he Parents Fined SAN DIEGO (AP)-A man and bis wife have been fined $100 each for allegedly assaulting a junior hi gh school teacher during a con- ference about their son. Wendell Hall, 39, and his 41-year-old wife Gussie were fined by Super.or Court Judge Ross Tharp. says he won't run for the presidency." Salinger, now a writer for the Fren ch news magazine L ·Express, was in Innsbruck lo pre- pare coverage or the winter Olympics. HE SAID r eports on Kennedy's alleged af- fairs were being spread by supporters of former President Nixon. "It is a case of sour g rapes by guys who worked with Richard Nixon and who s till believe he was a good fellow," he said. "To make people believe that image, you must tear others down.'' THE l,ATEST series of allegations that Kennedy had affairs began with leaks of a report by the Senate Intelligence Com· mittee investigating links between the CIA and American organized crime. J. HERBERT HAL ~ewelkrs Fim• Jewellers & Silversmiths Si11c~ 7 898 J'l1,ounting Sale Save 20 010 -40 010 011e<wee1~ Only Out of the past and into the future with your HEIRLOOM DIAMONDS! The lovely gems never Jose their beauty and value. A newly designed setting will display them at . their most beautiful. There is no charge for custom ring designing by our experts. January 10 Through 17 SOUTH COAST PLAZA/ 549-1379 • WESTMINSTER MALL/ 897-0327" Santo Ano Fashion Square • Puente Hills & Fox Hills Molls Pasadena • Santa Anita Fashion Park • Woodland Hiiis Promenade Join Keystone Savings by the 10th and get 9 extra days of interest. ~ ~ When you open a regular Keystone passbook account by the 10th of t he month, and leave the money on deposit to the end of the quarter, we'll pay you interest from the 1st. That's nine extra money-earning days, At the highest Interest rates. You also get the conven- ience of Keystone's hours: three of our branches are open from 10 to 6 on Fridays and 9 to noon on Saturdays, whlle the other stays open Mondays and Fridays, . until 6 p.m. The convenience doesn't stop there. We pay postage w hen you deposit by mail. We have Money Machines at each office that let you withdraw up to $100 cash any time of the day or night, seven days a week. We give you a free checking account at one of Callfomta's leading full-service banks (minimum balance required). And the list goes on. Stop by any of our branch offices. Have a cup of coffee. Meet the manager. Say hello to the folks you'll be dealing w ith. They've got a lot to offer. 7.75% 7.5% S.75% e.5% 5.75% 15.25% The Highest Possible · Interest Rates. Certificate account• $1000 min. deposit Term: 6 years. Certificate account• $1000 min. deposit Term: 4 years. Certificate account.• $1000 min. deposit Term: 2Y, years. Certificate account.-$1000 min. deposit. Term; 1 year. Certificate account.• $1000 min. deposit Term· 90 days. Passbook account• Deposit any amount. Add or with- draw at any time. •Annual Interest Accounts insured up to $40,000 by an agency of the United States Government. STOP BY FOR YOUR FREE NOTE PAD AND BALL-POINT PEN. 0 KEYSTONE SAVINGS Aft LOH ut0C1AT1 .. • We.st.minster Offlcc, 1"4011 Beach Blvd. •Airport Center Off'lee, ~301 M~cArthur Blvd. · Anaheim Office, SSS North Eucl id Mission Viejo Office, 2'4041 Margvertte Parkway Assets over S75 mllllon. l f I I ------------------...--------- A• DAIL V PILOT Thunday. January 8, 1978 special purchase! vvhite vvicker dinette set 299.99 Hundreds of feet of wicker woven over a sturdy rat- tan core make this dinette set ideally suited to the lifestyle o f the busy, active family. The table is 42" round. with wicker legs: the 4 matching choirs feature high bocks for plenty of seating comfo rt. The look is fresh and bright and con go anywhere you need it -indoors or out. Housewares, 95. Moil and phone orders invited. reg. 700.0~ seven pc. early american dining room set 629.95 Save 70.00 on this handsome 7 piece knotty white pine set in carefully crafted sollds, veneers and cabinet hardwoods. Its deep honeytone finish Is achieved through 19 separate finishing steps, many of which are hand rubbed. Set Includes large 40"x70" rectangular trestle table with two 12" fills. plus 4 spindle side chairs. and 2 arm chairs . Also ovoNable: reg. 600.00 two piece 66" china cct>inet with open deck SA0.00. Furniture, 92. Central stock: allow 2 weeks delivery. Sorry, no moll or phone orders. reg. 1 .00-100.00 imported baskets ... 66cto 66.00 Save YJ because we're up to our ears in baskets! Imported from the Philippines. Chino and Africa, they come in a lmost every size and shape imaginable. Beautiful as decorating accents, for dried flower arrangements, as handsome coverups for cloy pots, as serving dishes for fruit and nuts -the possibilities are endless! Gi fts. 70. Sorry. due to the wide variety of sizes and shapes. we can't accept moil or phone orders. an elegant accent at 20.00 to 50.00 savings 119.95to 149.95 Orig. 160.00 Queen Anne wing choir combines grace and comfort In a traditional style that also looks terrific in a contemporary setting. Great In palrsl Save 20.00 ... 139.95 ea. Orig. 200.00 oak finish hall tree is ideal for storing dripping jackets. umbrellas and rain hats. SQve $50 ... 1,9.95. Orig. 150.00 three-sided curio cabinet wlH showcase your treasures behind glass. Contemporary or traditional sty1e In rich frulfwood flnlsh ....... 119.95 Furniture, 38 (off stores except Wilshire). Mao and phone orders Invited. See also our selection of Simmons - -- Beautyrest mattresses. twin sizes start at 119.95 ea. pc. special purchase! simmons correct posture supreme 66 • QO ea. pc., twin size An extra layer of double oensity foam gives you ex- tra firm support. It's the some used in the famous Beoutyrest® Bock Core Ill mattresses. With heavy oury oox spring. long-wearing 100% polyester quilted cover. Twin x-long ..................... 76.00 ea. pc. Full size ........................ 86.00 ea. pc. Queen size ........................ 236.00 set King size .......................... 316.00 set Sleep Shop, 69. Free delivery & set-up in most areas. • .. Ir ~ • ! --:--, . ( f : • ' • • .... ". " Ill q \ J ~pecial purchase! enjoy the plush luxury of our vvool flokati rug 11 ·9.99 5'7"x8'3" These gorgeous long-fleece deep-pile flokatl area rugs are of handcrafted loomed 100% wool ... Im- ported directly from Greece. They'll bring a mar- velous feeling of comfort. warmth and refinement to any room In your home. In natural off-white tones only. Treat yourself to our low special purchase price! Areo rugs. 45. Phone and mall orders Invited. From anywhere In Southern Calif ornlo dial toll-free 1-800-252-9174. • r ....... ,ha~l __ ~ROADWAY NeWport 47 Fashion laland , Huntington Beach 7,777 Edinger Orange 2300 N. Tu1tln Laguna Hills, Laguna Hills Mall I l • I l ...... w1 ... bring home african safari sheets from martex save 20% to 25% . Bakuba Animals-a jungle full of wild animals in beige on red-rust. No iron poly/cotton percale. reg. 9.00 twin.6.99; reg. 20.00king 15.99 reg. ll.50 full 8.99; reg. 8.00 pr. std. cases 5.98 pr. reg.16.50queen 12.99; reg. 9.00 pr. king coses 6.98 pr. Matching bedspreads available. •• J• •':JC: x • • -• ff • • custom table pads ~Y artex green save 10% . . • - Choose "Gem" or "Imperial" table pads to protect against heat, moisture, scratches and dents. Ex: Gem reg. 31.00. 36"x48"; 27.90 reg. 43.00. 48" round; 38.70 "Imperial": reg. 33.00. 36"x48"; 29.70 reg. 47.00, 48" round; 32.30 MaiL phone orders are Invited.Table top Shop, 113 Thureday.Janu.ary8.1971S OAILY PILOT All\ reg. 329.99 chinoiserie ·dinette ·. 259.99 • . • -4 • Four light, sturdy Oriental design bamboo choirs topped off with ScotchguardlOJ seat cushions. com- bined with 42" round pecan grained laminated table top to make this set practical enough for everyday use, dressy enough for special family gatherings. Two extra 10" leaves extend table when needed. Extra chairs at 45.00 each. Dinettes, 95. Mail and phone <?rders invited . 1.-.~_...~.=;:;-..~~~r:r:r:..!"'W"-l~~~---------------------------f.---------- choose from over 30 custom drapery patterns save 20% ~abor included . . Allow a Broadway professlonal to come to your home and assist you In choosing a window treat- ment. He will discuss llght conditions. match fabrics and measure windows. Fabrics range from 3.99 to 6.99. Labor Included. So give yourself a New Year's treat today. Coll for Shop-at-home service. Custom Oraperyf8~ 9based on ai 80" fin. min. length royal victorian draperies for soft lights save20% Antique satin. really 66% rayon and 34% acetate gives any room a soft glow. We guarantee the color for two years. so choose from Gold. Oyster, Lemof\ White, Brown, Carnation. Wedgewood or Quince. Some drapery sizes a nd colors In store stock. ·others, allow 3 weeks for delivery. Ex: reg. 14.50-81.50. 48"x54" to l44"x95"; 10.79· 51 .09 .Curtains, 10. Sorry, phone and mall orders can not be occe ted. Cameron . spec. purch. american ironstone dinnervvare 29 • 99 service for 8 Choose from 3 patterns lnsplred by the worm, ear-. thy tones of the southwestern desert: Cameron. in olive a nd gold, Navajo, a rich dark brown and an- tique gold with brown accessories, or Bravo, in yellow gold and copper. ·Set consists of 8 each din- ner plates. large soup/cereaL salad/cake, cup and saucer. Oven and dishwasher safe. Housewares. 39. In So. Calif. dial toll-free l-800-252-9174. · . . u;.I IROADWAY Orange 2300 N. Tustin Huntington Beach m 7 Ed inger t Newport 47 Fashion l~land Laguna Hills, Laguna Hills Ma&ft ' l I I • I 1 I ' I t A J 0 CAIL v PILOT Thursday. January 8. 1978 Harbormaster Retiring 28 Years Broug lit Big Changes 8yJOANNF. R EYNOLDS Of tlle 0.lly Piiot St•ff It might bt.' said that ror the past 19 years, the water s of Newport Harbor nnd the Orangt:> County eoastltne h ave belonged to Al Oberg. From ht::. offi ce m·stled in the mouth of the - harbor he has pn•s1ded over tht> patrol for('t' whi(•h protects the count less peoplt:.> using boats in C'oastal waters Oberg. 66. 1s going to retire as Orangt.• Count~ Harbor '.\la::.tt'r '.\lard\ JI "l'~t GO~~A m iss 11. but I think 1t '::. lime." he says. 'There's ahHtys a time for a person to !'tep down and let ) ounger people with new idC'as take O\'er. Progn•::.s goes on. "lt's l11ne." SEATF.D in a sparsely furnished orfiCl'. Oberg admit=-he canw to the Harbor Patrol b) an un- usual roult' In 1917. "hill' on lt.·ave from a ;ob as assistant d1spla~ d irector for Aul lock ·s ckpartm<.'nt store. Ober:? heard ahout an opening in the II arbor Patrol. He said he w1.•nt to the internew o n a lark and a day later he "as hired. At the time. h is nautical e:<penence "as bast.'Cl on some time handling ~peed boats at Lake Ar· rowhead and hutlding his own boat A '\'EAR I.ATER he was made assistant Harbor Master and in 1957 he took over the post he's held since then. The Harbor Master is the police chief of county controll ed coas tal waters. il l' run s the harbor patrols in Sunsl•t. ~ewp o rt and Dana harbors :tncl is re:-.ponsi· ble for patrol11n::! ronnty beaches Oo1lly PiloC SC.tll Plloto HARBORMASTER OBERG LOOKS OVER TURF He's Retiring to 'Make Room for Young' In addition. the Harbor P a t rol maintains navigation al markers and aids and issues permits and go,·erns the 1.300 off-shore moorin~s m '.\lewport Harbor. In the 28 years s ince he ;oined the· for ce. Oberg has watched the count v grow and he is proud of th e Harbor Depart - ment's ability to handle those changes. He became Harbor ~faster at the same time that Ken Sampson was :tppointed Jl ;:irbor Department djrector. SA'.\tPSO~. WHO re tired last vear. 1s cred1t- e d with the admin1strali\'e del'1s1ons that OberS? feels h:.ive been important in main- t a 1 n i n J;! th<.• ll arbor Patrol :ts · ·ont> of tht• best in the world ." With obvious pride. he talks about the m en who make up the Harbor Patrol. "When I came here in 1947, there were only about seven o r eight people. It was pretty re· !axed," he said. ··nut Harbor Depart· ment employes are u great deal differ<>nt now than thev were when I first cam«:' to work. Deaths Elsewhere "OUR PEOPLE have to be as well trained as the avetage police of- ficer or deputy in ad- dition to knowing boating laws, havin g a knowledge of the sea, life s aving techniques, fire fi ghting and rescue operations of all kinds. LOS A~GELES < Pl> Television and movie produce r Louis Edelman, 75. who made the first talking picture, died Wednesday of heart failure in Ced ars of Lebanon H ospital. Edelman produced ''The Jazz Singer ," starring Al J olson, and •'The West Point Story.·· "The Fighting 69th." "Hotel Berlin," "White Heat,'' "Springfield Rifle." "A Son g to R emember,'' "I'll See You in My Dreams." and ·'Cowboy f'rom Brooklyn." PROVIDE:--lCE, R.L (AP ) -Tho m as H . Roberts, 7'1 . whose ill health forced him to re- sign Tuesday as chief justice of the Rhode Isla nd Suprem e Court. died Wednesday. Deatlt No tice• WILLIAMSON CORO='IADO CAP> Canadian-born William Vincent Fox, 85 , who spent •t2 years iH the U.$_ Navy and retired as rear admiral. died in a hospital Friday. STATE COLLEGE, Pa. CAP) -Ridge Riley, 68, former executive secretary of the Penn S tate Alumni as · soC'iation, died at his home Tuesday. Birt It• SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL De umber I, 1'7S Mr and Mrs. Clayton Watt\, M•$~10t1 ll1e10. boy Oeomkr 12, 1'7S Mr al'd Mr\. Wayne Hammell, LJ9un.1Hiits.91rl "Th is is a hig hly specialized force. I like to think that these men could get out of their boats and into a patrol car and do the job of an average police officer, while it would be difficult for a policeman to jump out of his car and into a t(tat.,. Last year. the I I arbor Patrol was absorbed into the Ora n ge Coun t y Sheriff-Co ron e r 's Department. 0eumt1er t•. 1t7s W H I L E 0 R E R G Mr. and Mrs. Paul de Smit, South "" La9una,9ir1 acknowledges the in- Oec•rt1btt 11. ms creased emphasis on law ~.~,!;:c'bo~rs. Edd tMruSka, La9una enforcement work re- --------.::....... _ _, quired o f the Harbor PUBLIC NOTICE Patrol. h e s ays the FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAMIE STATEMENT The lottowll\9 persons arot dolr>11 bUsl· nttss•s: HARBOR BLUF FS DEVELOPMENT, 1866 RhOdes Or., Coste ~w. CA '2b26 Frenllttn J . Buccella, 1866 Rl"todPs Or., Coste Mna, CA '2626 Ivy K. Ong. 111• 29111 SI., Newpof1 lleec11, CA '1'2660 Rot.rt F HOlll"9Sworth, 111SWHt Bay, Newl)Ort Buell, CA '2663 Tiiis business Is conduc ted by a ~rel partnership Fran-llnJ. Buccella primary task of the patrol is public relations. "I don't think the basic feeling about this job has changed over the years," he said. ''We're here to protect life and property more than to work as an enforcement agency. We're here to help people have a good time in a recreational area." DEC. 1975 REGULAR SIZE PRICE A78-13 $31 .95 C78-14 33.95 E78-14 35.95 E78-15 36.95 F78-14 3 8.95 G78-14 40.95 itewall Tire ale SALE ENDS SATURDAY, JANUARY 24, 1,976. 1976 New Car Tire $ The .famous glass-belted General Jumbo 780. The same tire you'll see on many of Detroit's 1976 new cars. size A78·l3 tubeless whitewall. plus S 1.75 Federal Excise Tax SAVE FROM $5 to $8 per tire depending on size Blackwalls $3 less per tire. WHITEWALL DEC. 19 75 WHITEWALL SALE REGULAR SALE PRICE F.E.T. SIZE PRICE PRICE F.E. T. $26.95 $1 .75 H78-14 $43.95 $36.95 $2.83 28.95 2.0 5 F78-15 39.95 33.95 2.54 30.95 2.27 G78-15 41 .95 34.95 2.65 31.95 2.40 H78-1 5 44.95 37.95 2.87 32.95 2.43· J78-15 46.95 38.95 3.03 ~3.95 2.60 L78-15 48.95 40.95 3.14 Steel Belted Radial Blems ' Sile 1171xl4 Siu Cl71-14 T ..... T-....1 w......• w......• s37•s s31•s Plu• 12.16 Plus 12 34 feoera1 E.cctM Tn Fecs.tal E1u:IM Tu Siu Gl71-14 StuHl71-15 , ....... Hl71-14 ......... s49•s s54•s Pk11 S2.89 Plu• '3. t7 Faderal Eac.w T 111 Fed«al Ex0ose Tax The Dual Steel Il Radial Built with two steel belts for road hazard pro- tection, and a tough two-JJIY polyester cord body. You'll get the long mileage benefits of radial ply construction at a fantastic price! ONLY Sius H71-14 R71-14 , ..... Wllihwll s44•s Plu& U 6$ Fadefal Eltclaa Tu Siu Jl71-15 T ...... 1 WW..W• s57•s Plua 13 31 f ed«el Eac:tae T aa 11n 8R~13 ~ ~· plua l2 lli F.09'111 E.<CoM TLC SluGl71-15 T.w... Wllllewll s5o•s Pl\1112 ea F..,_alExc-seTu Siu Ll71-15 , ..... WWhw• s59•s Plus '3.48 f eow.I Ellc:M Tu EARL L INTON WI LLIAMSON, otueo away J11nu11rv 1, 1'76 •I ttw a9l' ot llO. a resident ol Hunt11191on Be.ch, C• Survived by his will!, Myrt11t Wllll•mson; dauQl'tter, Mrs. Jo11n Gr11nt , one broth•r, Chest11r W11tl11mson ol Kl'ntu~1<v; four 9ranocr111<1ren Mr Willl•mson was a mtmbtr ol Thi' 31nd c:te9re1t Muoni. Strv•ce\ M ii be held Frod•r 1 00 PM at Pac1 f•t View Memflro•I Perl< al'ICI Mortuary 1n Newport Bf'8Ch, C.t. Interment P11c1t1c View ~mor111 Pll"ll. 5t•,.ths' Mortuery directors. This statement was liled witll tlle Counly Clttrtt of Or11nge County on ~umber U, 1'15 Oberg's plans for re· .................................................................................................. .. tirement are indefinite. Give·yourself a brake ... f t BAL TZ.SERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del M ar 673-9450 Costa Mesa 646-2424 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 McCORMICK MORTUARY Laguna Beach 494-941 5 Sen Juan Cap1st~ano <495-1776 PAC"IC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK CemetetY Mortuary Chapel 3500 PllCific View On11e NeWJ)O(t Beach. C.Uornla 644-2700 PUJCFAMILY COLOMM. fUNERAL ~ 7801 Botu AWi. w..tmimtw ffG..3625 , .. 51612 P\lbfls!led Or~ Cout Delly Piiot, 0t<.11.u , 1975anc1 Jan.1,1;1tn ~75 PUBLIC NOTICE HE WANTS to involve himself in the communi- ty as a source of ex-1-----------1 pertise about the harbors STATEMElfl OF ABANDONMENT OF USE OF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME The IOllOW11\9 C>erSOt'IS Ila~ ~ Cloned t M use of t lie lie tit ious bus! nen ,..,,..., LA CASA de ORO, 25911 MuirlollnCH 81¥d . Ml\StOl'I Viejo, Cll. 91675 The F1ctl1tous Busi~s NMT'llr ,.._ ferrltd to above w.s flltd In Oranoe County on March 1, 1t72. Wilde 'Gene ThompM>n and Pewr J. Thompson, 26ot91 Vera Crut , Mission \Itek>. C.111 '1'2675 This businen as conducted by a OtNr•I p.trtnen lllp, Plt99y J. Tllomp M>n. partner This •ttt~m1tl'f WH filed Witt! Ille County Cler~ of Ore119e County on December U , 1975 ~6Dt Pllbll"'ecl Or•ll99 Gotst O.lly Pll04, ~2S. 1'15.ndJ11nu.ryl,l , 1S, tt76 4'15-1S and beaches he has worked with so long. "You know," he says leaning back in h is chair to light a cigarette, "it ·s been a wonderful ex- perience workinj? with all the people in this harbor-the yacht clubs, the organizations, the chamber or commerce, the fishermen. "I have a lot of friends and a Jot of memories. I'm gonna miss it, but it's time." . . factory JIMEJ® au!horized WATCHES service cente n1ine TIIEl~Electric Wat~ ~= ~ Cells Available Premises Watches Out Of Guarantee .. :Small Charge Complete Watch Reoair Services Larg• S.ltcilon of COMPANY Ntw TIMEX• W1tche1 8:30 to 5 Mon. thfu SM. COMPLETE BRAKE RELINE ...... t1 ..... .. °""""'"" ...... ~~ " .......... ..., . ... ...... ,.~. ·~· o-. .. ..... l 95 American cars ....... MlW '-"' ...., ..... -• 4 : ....... , z.a....., ... q9ail1n••.._.. J. le..d lw•• ...... '-"Y.., ...... fWcL ... ~ ..... ,......,. ..... 5.T ... .-dtrwtl4 .... ...... .. ..,...,.... ......... ... 7 ........... -dl9d ·-· •• ,. ...... l ......... ,._9' 1H1~ ALIGNMENT SPECIAL $ 95 COMPACT It STAHDA.ID AJWAH CAIS Extra charge for larger or air conditioned cars. setting torsion bars • . . and parts If needed. COAST GENERAL TIRE Pho1e 540.5 710 646-5033 I • Thursday. January 8. 1976 DAIL y PILOT A I J Mentlll Health Role in Alcohol~m Eyed ~ hmetoput any together. I ORANGE COUNTY Depression Class Offered A course on "Clin ical Depression," !or medical doetors who otherwise specialize in treat- ing patients with physical ills will be offered Saturday, from 8:30 to noon, at the Saddleback I nn Santa Ana. ' Orange County Supervisors Wednesday r e buffed county Mental Health Director Ernest Klatte by ordering immediate restructuring of the county Alcoholism Advisory Board and the appointment of an interim chief administrator for the pro- gram. Klatte had opposed upgrading the alcoholism function of his de- partment until after creation of a new human services super- agency. The board's action, though it responded to most demands of the current advisory board, stopped s hort or completely separating alcoholism services from the mental health depart- ment. to revamp the advisory board, that a county department be de- signated to control alcoholism programs and that the waiver be sou.ght from the state. SUpervlsors · chose instead to restructure the advisory board and appoint a s an a ct ing administrator for alcoholism Dr. William Heard, currently the chief o! the mental health office in Westm inster. The board removed from the advisory board Jack Hart, Betty Snider Thomas and Dr. Paul Engle. Hart was removed from · the panel because of non- attendance and the other two because of their connection with private alcoholic treatment pro- grams. KLATrE ASKED supervisors to permit him to seek a waiver APPOJNT ED to the threeseats from the mandates of a new state plus one vacant slot on the board law -Senate Bill 744 _that re-were Benjamin Munoz, Dr. John quires counties to establish Belt, Muriel Zink and Richard separate alcoholism programs Santoni. Last year, Klatte downgr&ded alcoholism services by combin- ing them with his drug abuse pro- gra m s und e r a si ngl e administrator. The mov e outr aged the advisory board, ~hich im- mediately began pushing for im- plementation of the new state law. During Wednesday's bearing. members of the audience told supervisors the advisory board and county alcohol programs should be completely separate from any other county unit. THEY DENIED Klatle's con- t ention that their pl'otes ts s temmed from "frustration " over the slow pace of the county bureaucracy relating to grant procedures and contract work. But audience m e mbers told supervisors funds were available last year -more than $70,000 in state gr ant aid -but Klatte sent them back because they couldn 't be spent by mandated deadlines. Kl a tte explained that the money was sent back because it was to have been spent on capital projects and there wasn't enough Lt. Dave Larsen of tbe1 California H ighway Patrol. chairman-elect of the advisory panel, told supervisors alcoholism is too big a problem tq be left as a n auxiliary function o! the mental health department. It was Kl atte's observation that the state would waive the re- quirements o( SB 144 because the county lacked funds to create a separate unit for alcoholism and bt>cause of the county's plans to create a human services super agency. **************"******• ·WANTE : MERCURY SAVINGS . * a'ld loan association DIAMOl'\DS •.G EM.STO NES Jewels by josephs Is searching for diamonds and gemstones from private indMduals and estates. Careful examJnation and evaluation by our experts. Highest prices paid. Call 540-9066 10.9 daily, Saturday 1()...6, Sunday closed, ask for Mr. Joseph. The cour~e is sponsored by the Orange County Department of Mental Health and carries one unit . of credit i.n continuing medical education with the California Medical Association. with their own administrators Since Orange County began de- and budgets. veloping alcoholism services in ~ * Klatte had recommended to 1970, the program has operated • S S C * iew~ls by ioseph the boardthatno~:act~io:n~be~t:ak:·e:n~~as~p=a~rt~o:f~K~l:at~t:e·~s~d:ep~art~m~·:en:t~.~~..!:_·~·S~T~A~T~E~M~E~N~T~A~V~IN~G~S~"~·~P~R~E~T~l~G~E~a~r-d~~~~~~...,~·~r~··~··~r~··~··~·~ui:i~·~N~·~~~'~"~'·~~~--~·$~.._~ .... ~~~ -... * * * •• * * * • * * ••• * * * * • * •, Irvine· Trag edy · Third Lawsuit Filed on Crash SANTA A'.'l'A -An Irvine collision that claimed the life of a 6-year·old Mission Viejo boy and inflict - ed injuries on other young occupants of a day camp hus has sparked its third Orange County Superior Court lawsuit. The latest action was filed Wednesday by Gayle Cantella of Santa Ana, the mother of two children who were passengers in the Rough Riders Day Camp bus J une 23 when it overturned after colliding with a construction vehicle owned by the Sully· Miller Construction Company. Operators of the day camp, truck driver J a mes Emerson Bartley, bus driver Carolyn Anderson Conners and the Sully·M·iller company are named as defendants in all three actions. The laws uit filed by Mrs. Cantella for J ack Can- tella, J 1. and Christopher Cantella, 10, asks that suitable damages be a~ <Jrded by the trial court. A trial date has not yet been set in either of .the two earlier lawsuits. Damage s totalling more than $500,000 were de- manded in Superior Court by the parents of John Henry Ramming, 6. of 23851 Ca lle Hogar. Mission Viejo, who was throWTI from the bus and killed after the collision at the intersection of Jeffrey and Bar- ranca roads . Mobile Home Park I ' Owne r s to Pay Fine Operators of an Anaheim mobile home park have agreed to pay a $2,500 fine after being accused by the district attome~·g. office of barring dis- tribution of a mobile hocne qewspaper in the park. Orange County Superior Ccurt Judge Claude M. Owens signed the order that prevents the Rainbridge Investment Corporation ~operators of Del Prado Mobile Home Park -from further ha r- rassing tenants. A civil action filed.by the district attorney was dropped after park operators paid the fine and agreed to allow deli very of the Mobile Home News to Del Prado tenants. ALL-5ALt=- {V1eRCHANDJ 5 E f5 50'7o 0Ff WITH ANY TIRE I~ MOUNT & FREE ~ INST All TlalS .• .~ ROTATI AU ~ '°'"' WMllLS .• FRIE Y* ::='&'::s FREE MARKC. BlOOME ·•o.ooo MILE LIMITED WARRANTY w.....-.. .-, f.-r h4 .. I • ,..,.. , ....... , Tu•• • .._.._ .. .,..,, .,_, lftr -4 .. 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Front DISC BRAKE Reline I --/ '. 95 #0\•-1\ ~ 2 4 "°"' "•lhl 1&rO• • ' .. tO•ll(,• I •• <••\ &UflH' CO.O•tt(I .. ~ rflMH"lMC. t fRONT 011( IRAIU "ACllAGI Motl U.S. hrs l•<lv41•9· h~v114 Cehpt•\, ••<hint hlors. $498( 8t•lttt fl.,ld & Nt w Mot4w•r• ' t ! ' Who Gefll Custody of 'N'? By JAY SHARBU'IT NEW YORK CAP> -A major question that af- fects all mankind is being asked today: Who has custody or the letter "N." the mighty Nationul Broadcasting Co. or the tiny Nebraska Educational Television Network? . Don't laugh. This is serious. NBC spent 14 months pondering and planning a new corporate identification symbol to replace one in use since Jan. 14 , 1959, a serpentine version of the letters duplicated 200 times among our own starr that day. Everybody was calling each other all day. "At first, we were kind of mad, and then we were all laughing." . But now, he s ays he's consulting with Washington lawyers NE'JV has' hired and "they say we have a very good case of claiming that we have prior ri,.hts to that logo." ll'd"~-v·~~·11"'lot<4•'-'•-....-~-·~i~ · ' '1T.Y'!..'Y'\~:h~.. • t , • >'..:.'Fi~ ... ' • • • She.on Allen's ··• ,.,.,,. ~ERENITV : :.i ·· .. · Skin Care Center ~ rt:-;~._, JANUARY SPECIAL • I • · · · ,. :, . · FACIALS -10o/o OFF • .! .: ' , • · A wom9n's face deseNeS the T ' · finest cate. Serenity offn a ! I NBC. . While it never was copyrighted, he said, he's been told that would pose no problem should NETV take the matter of the "N" to court. He said he may know by Friday if any action will be taken. unlq.-facial designed f0t you. } A complete program - clelnsing. massage stMm end • nounthment. Usmg the a...et J equipment and purest • cosmetics. A facial to help • problem skin or maintain a : lovely complexion Is yours at ! Serenity. • ' NBC UPI Te._.... NEW NBC LOGO TURNED OUT NOT SO NEW 1 Viewers Saw It During Rose Bowl Game NEBRASKA ETV N TWORK TINY NEBRASKA STATION DID IT FIRST Educational Channel Developed This "N" t,:XECUTIVES BROODED AND l\IULLED, costly research was ordered and a high-powered corporate design firm, Lippincott & Margulies, Inc .. of New York, was summoned to lend a hand. It was no s mall matter, because the changeover of a broadcast firm's corporate symbol can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Everything from station breaks to statioQery must bear the new sign. NUC. UNDERSTANDABLY Jl'ITERY about the whole thing, says, "We don't believe there will be any confusion between the new NBC symbol" and that of N ETV. But it refuses to answer any questions about it. Walter Margulies, president of the design firm that put the new "N" in NBC, says, "I have never heard about the Nebraska Educational Television :"Jetwork or seen its symbol." f"ecWI ..........., ~ E~ Method -t\ldlQreyC:0.-1lo9 -F9Clll•900YWU1nt l Gift Certificates $20 . · 1 n Lido Village 34oo Via Oporto, Suite 6 • ·~ :... • • . • Newport Beach • :'I.~ V ·~w..~:~=:~:.:._:u.:J ~:~?.~.:~1-~! .. ~~".J . In April, when NBC's mulling still was going on, Ron Hull. program manager or Nebraska's nine-station public TV system, decided his network also needed a new symbol. He didn't know NBC had planned one. HE SUMMONED NETV'S ART DIRECTOR, Bill Korbus, and asked him to draw some ideas. Three weeks and less than $100 worth of materials later, Hull says, his 25-member staff chose the win- ning symbol by a 13to12vote. FASHION ISLAND On Der. 30, NBC held a news conference to un- veil its new symbol. It was an abstract version of the letter "N'' which on TV is red and blue. STORES On New Year's Day, Hull was watching NBC's preview of the Tournament of Roses parade, saw • the new NBC symbol and was startled. He said it was identical to the futuristic "N" NETV has used in its newspaper ads since June and in its broadcasts since fall. The only difference is that his · 'N' · is red on a gray background. OPEN TONllHI ••1 HONESTLY LOOKED AT THE dial, because I thought I was on our channel," he said of that New Year's Day vision. "And that was FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE Atlto economics Spend a little time on your car-it may save you a lbt of money in expensive repairs. STP has a complete line of car additives and accessories to keep your car·nmnjng smoothly, longer. It's easy to do it yourself - and rt's easier than ever with these special pFites. .. A. STP OIL TREATMENT 15 oz. Reg. 1.29 98c r San Die-go Ends ,._ IT . 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UNDER COUNTER LIGHT. Reg. 6.99 4.88' Shop Ward & Harrington for all your home improvement outside your home in ten complete departments: lumber, needs. We specialize in quality merchandise and help -hardware, garden, paint, electrical, plumbing, paneling, ful salespeople. You'll find ev~rything for inside and housewares, decor, and b~ilding materials. GAAOENGR9rd F~N Harr:i ng~Q[l 1107 Garden Grove Blvd. 301 So. State College FASHtON ISl:ANO, Neu~ Beach: FASHION SQUARE. 537·9571 or 893·8523 870·0050 · Me; HUNTINGTON CENTER. Huntington Beach: =TMtNSTER MAU. we1tmln1ter. LAGUNA HILL Prices effective Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. 32'4 West Katella 532·2506 1275 Bristol 556·1500 LONG BEACH 6980 Cherry Ave. 634 ·7111 : uouna &eo; SOUTH COAST PLAZA. Costa Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 9. Sat. & Sun. 9 to 6 except: Orange 9 to 6 Mon. thru Sun., Long Beach 9 to 6 except Mon. & Fri. 9 to 9. -~=-.......... ~~--------___.~ , l ~ ·Parerlts Are People, Too SCoriea by ALLISON DEERJl Ol .. Defty" ....... Ann Price has been involved in social aervice since her youth in Appalachia. A PhD candidate at UC Irvine she believes that many of society's ills stem from insecure parenting. Her background includes social work in an all-black inner city community in Chicago. teaching in Virginia, training col- lege students for the Brethren Volwtteer Services, a forerunner of the Peace Corps, and college administration. She bolds a BA from Bridgewater College. Virginia, a masters in community clinical psychology from Cal State Long Beach and is a licensed mar-· riage, family and child .counselor. for themselves as an essential to love and care of a new human t>e. ing, their baby." she explained. Her research for her doctoral dissertation at UCI focuses on levelt of self actualization in persons who are becoming parents. "The premise is simple. If ~arents feel good about themselves as people. as in· dividuaJs, they will feel good about themselves as parents and this attitude will inftuence their child's development." Having worked with new mothers in a variety of set- tings, Price felt a need for a training program that included ·both potential parents. Her ultimate goal is to establish a model for such a pro- gram which can be used for all potential parents. During tbe course couples first take personal iJaventory, getting in touch with the importance of tKlndivldua.l. "The more in touch you are with yourself, the more you are in touch with your baby." Then . interpersonal pt'.tception. communication and mteraction are stressed. Sessions also deal with the im- portance oftouching and holding the baby; redefining self; re- alization that there are adult stages of growth, and learning to "keep it all together" as a couple and a family. "There is a desperate need in our society for attitudinal re- versal from parenting being something that just happens, to parenthood being a choice that is entered into only after serious consideration, preparation and maturation~" she asserted. A mother of two sons, Mike, 6, and Doug, 9, she is a former dean of women at La Verne College and has worked in neighborhood clinics, free clinics, institutions and has done counseling in a pediatrics practice. ·Drawing couples from pre· paration for childbirth classes 1n fhe Harbor ·Area and South Coast, she designed a course that began with testing of self actualization levels 'before the birth of the child and retested after six weekly sessions. FOCUS CHANGED What did the eight test couples • gain from the experience? "We talk more now and not just about the baby," one mother said. "In all of these counseling situations, an area of need con- tinually arises, the need for children to have a secure, loving start in life. This is critical dur- ing the first two years of life. CAPACITY TO LOVE "And, the need for parents to have a capacity to love and care There are many "parenting" courses under way but their focus is on rearing the child, Mrs. Price said. Her focus is on the parent as an individual, the cou- ple relationship and then on the parent-child relationship. BEA ANDERSON, Editor Thursday, January 8, 1976 81 Ann Price, far right, with Tina and Timothy McFarlin, leads course for parents ~ .. =--=e --dividuals~ --. "1 Larry Stednitz was interested in what other fathers were doing in terms of raising children and found the opportunity a good one to rel~te to other new parents. 'IUOUGJrr-PROVOKING "It really made us think. It's good to see how other new parents relate to each other and . their child,•' added another new father ... Another participant fowtd the. course a chance to get together with couples with different back- grounds sharing "a common pro- blem, or common joy, depending on your perspective." . Fathers in the class seem to spend more time than the average with their children. Stednitz' idea of a good way to relax is to tuck four-month-old Nicholas into a baby carrier and take a walk. One father is in charge of child care two days each week while his wife works part·time. "I think our husbands can bet· ter understand how we reel about parenting and al 1 of the stresses and problems involved.'' The key, Mrs. Price said, is that you must take care of yourself before you can take care of your baby. Although the course has been· completed, the new parents plan to continue meeting, they said. The South Orange County Mental Health Unit, Laguna Beach, offered its facilities for further sessions . Vivian Clecak, who acted as a co-therapist for the group, will start new groups for those in- terested, Price said. She can be contacted at 497-1781 for further information. t ••• And Baby Makes Three I t ~ t While the pediatrician visits the newborn in the hospital, why not have a counselor talk with the new mother? Baby's in the doctor's office for a check-up? Why not a well- mother visit for Mom? These are two apP.roaches . being used by A~ rnce .a licensed marriage, family and child counselor, and M1ss1on vleJo pediatricians Ors. Michael W. Shannon and Norman L. Zeller. "While the doctor sees the baby, I see the mother," Mrs. Price said. "We talk about how she feels, if she's resting well, how to deal with the sleepless nights." She sees three major times of stress for parents during children's early y~ars: right after birth, at the toddler stage and when the child starts school. In a You and the New Baby course offered through the pediatrics practice, the focus is that "mom is important, too; her feelings, dependencies, concerns. We help the mothers to take care of themselves as well as their babies." MOTHERING FOSTERED Discussions cover communication, mothering and fathering roles, infant and child development, touching and h6lding, and keeping the family a healthy, growing unit. Dealing with the changes that come when a couple become a family of three is essential, said the Laguna resident. At the toddler stage, she explained, the child 1s becoming his own person, asserting his autonomy. The child is often more re- ady to grow than the parent is to let him. The same applies with starting school. Many parents aren't ready to Jet go. Mrs. Price's awareness of the need for such a p"rogram- reaching new-mothers at the beginning. dealing with problems at the root -grew through work at a people's clinic and on an As- sembly task force on services to children and youth in California. . Solutions offered all came "too late" in her estimation. Adolescence or even school age were too late to begin dealing with problems, she said. Her answer? Go to the home and to the parents who have the first relationship to the child and do the initial caring, training and directing. LARRY STEDNITZ AND SON In the multiracial setting of the community clinic, she ran groups for mothers of small children which helped them deal with some of the frustrations they were experiencing .. SMALL GROUPS ''But we could only reach a small number, although we re- alized that if we could help these mothers feel good about themselves and learn to relate to others, they might be able to ·help their children feel the same and deal with life more ef- ... '• . fectively." . - Eventually. she became convinced that the doctor's office could be an effective site for such work. "Any pediatrician will tell you that at least half or his work is relating to the parents. Why not have counseling available on site to deal with parents' needs?" Many of the questions a pediatrician bears are not medical, and could easily be handled by a licensed marriage, family and. ·child counselor. she said. The approach at the Mission Viejo pediatrics office is working well. Mrs. Price hopes to off er such services full-time after com .. p!eting her doctorate in pyscbology in Jwte. John Hancock May Be Ben Franklin'~;; MOLLY FREEDMAN . .._ .. NEW YORK (UPI) Graphoanalyst Molly Freedman makes her living examining documents and analyzing handwriting -the latter often for companies 1atbering in· formation on candidates for pro- motion. She bu startling news for all of us in the bicentennial year of our nation's birth. "I would atalte my life on the fact that all thole slpatures on the Declaration of lndepeodence were written by ooe penon, · • Mn. Freedman said ln an in· teniew. Sbe examined the orlalnal document In W aahlnaton out ot C'Ul"i09ity, and now la eompartnc authenticated slgnatures of the stgnees to aee which of them might have been resPonsible .. Ben Franklin maybe? "You understand there is no guesswork in graphoanalysis. It's not like graphology, where a penoo looks at a signature and tells a tale about what seems to be seen in the handwriting. Gr•pboanalysis is a science that aufyae. the system of strokes in. .bmdwriting," she said. ..I consider myself tops in the country and I tell YoU that one pe'IOO signed all those names.'• Mn. Freedman. ot New York, 1 baael the claim on patterns of 1trokln1 that appear In each signature and also on other factors, including the relatively palnstakln1 way the •isn•tures we"' put down. . "Remember." Mrs. l')<eedman 1ald, "this was a rev • olutlon. These men wen afraid l for their lives. In a hurry and full - of passion, would they have taken the time to be so meticulous in d rawing their signatures? "Not likely.'' Mrs. Freedman is a graduate of the Intern atio nal Grapboanalysis Society and the Institute of Applied Science. Chicago. The latter includes training in the examination of questioned documents. As an examiner of questioned documents, she discovered an al- leged forged handwriting of Clyde Barrow (Bonnie and Clyde) in a published report. She also hes authenticated historical and literary documents, includ· tog a !'fark Twain manuscript. • ~- SCRIPT REVEALS CAUTION .. . ft DAILY PILOT Thurtdey January I , 1979 • Criticism lnvalidmteO Ann Landers Sale-ing 2nd Markdown JtDJn tnhQ WESTCUFf PLAZA ONLY 17• I ........... r::::--9' • MZ..2444 0,.. ,., ALL-5ALe. JV[t=.RCHANDJ5E f5 50%0Ff ~g~~ WHtcWf P~- 1028 lrvuie, Newport S.•ch, CililorID<' 9'2660, Phone 642.7061 die STARTING I DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was shocked at the louay advice you gave the 14·year-0ld girl whole drunken bum of an uncle insisted on .. babyslttillg" with her, and already had made several pnaes . The last -she had awakened out ot a eouod sleep and be was unbuttoning bor ruahtgown. She told her mother and her mother accused her of dreaming. Your advice was, "A 14·year-old girl is oJd enough to buy a slot-type lock for her bedroom door and tell the skunk to keep his bands off her in a no-nonsense way that will convince him she means it." Such advice is utterly useless. Put away your typewriter, kiddo. You're over the hill. - CHEWING NAILS DEAR NAILS: Several readers didn't Uke my answer, but it wu right on target and I'll tell you why -If you 'II smother the flames ln your nostrils long enough to listen. There's a lot of incest and sJmilar monkey buslnHs going on all over this country these days. Someone must give these young girls the courage to tell the Funny Uncle, the Nutty Step· dad or creepy nelgbbor, "Hands off. Buster-or I'll turn you in." Then there's the ever·present possibility that a bit of seduction is going on. A H·year-old these days ls more woman than child. My message ls, "No 14-year-old bas to sit still for such rotten stuff. She can and SHOULD speak up and scare the r at back into the woodwork." 1 Aries Get Going FRIDAY, JANUARY9 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 2l·April 19): Get going -ele- ment of luck or timing is with you . Secret fears. doubts can be dispelled. One at a distance works m your behalf. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You get down to business, to organizing. to assuming responsibility. Relationship intensifies. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Finish assign· ment, project. Enlarge horizons so that potential comes into focus. Friend helps you clear legal tangle. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Ambition, ablli· ty to take steps up ladder -this is emphasized. Highlight independence of thought, action. Eschew old-hat procedures. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Excellent lunar position. You cr eate, write, make contacts whjcb help insure future publication and other results . VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22): Practical mat- ters. usually unpleasant, become intriguing. You're a ble now to clear away red tape. LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22): What appears an obstacle could really be a "low hurdle." You re- bound, circumstances will eventually favor your efforts. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Be analytical - find reasons why -reject s uperficial argu- ments, explanations . Accent on service, special tasks . SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Good Moon aspect coincides now with romance, creativity, dealings with young persons, exciting changes and challenges. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Property values, possible sales and purchases could be discussed. See situation as it really exists, not merely as you would like it to be. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Relative keeps promise -there could be cause for celebration. Money picture will be brighter -ob· stacle to cash flow is removed. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You' get rid of losing propos ition. Accent on income potential - which is better than might be apparent on sur· face. er non SWEAR WEDNESDAY -JANUARY 7th ~di ~00 p.m. Telephone 548-4121 Mon.. Tues.. Wed., Fn., Sat. 1().6 WESTCLIFF PLAZA NEWPORT BEACH DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was moved by the letter in your column from the Jewish boy who fell in love with the Gentile girl. · Tweoty·eigbt years aao I fell in love with a Jewish boy. I dtcided to convert to Judaism and marry him. It did not solve our'problems. however. HJs family and friends still considered me a "Shikaa." My friends amd famUy still conaidered. him a J ew. But our deep devotion to one another overcame all the obstacles. We have had a wonderful life together and our two children and three grandchildren have brought us much hap~ piness. ·or at HOME. • • Please tell the y0W1g couple who wrote that ll they have the strength and the courage to take on a world still full of prejudices (in spite of the pro- gress that has been made) they can beat the odds and find the happiness they seek. -ABIE'S IRISH ROSE T~Y THESe GRP.AT SBAroDDS IN YOUR OWN HO\f P/ Dear Rote: You told them -and I thank you. DEAR ANN LANDERS: You often deal with strange questions in y<>Ur column -questions people can't find answers to anywhere else. I have che<:ked several sources without success. I've roncluded the answer does not exist in print. Can you help me? Here's the question: Now SPECIAL at our · RETAIL SEAFOOD COUNTER · Local S269 Swordfish lb. Cooked Shrimp Yi lb. If a person is in an elevator and the cable breaks, would he be unharmed if be was up in the air when the elevator crashed? Jn other words, would it do any good to grab on to something at ttie top of the car, to keep one's self elevated -or jump up and down with a 50 per cent chance of being in the air when the car hits bottom? Alaskan S 195 Smoked S 125 Crabmeat Yi lb. Swordfish Yi lb. This is no joke. Please answer. I 'll be watching. -SHERMAN, TEX. DEAR SHERM: I hate to bother Dr. J erome Wiesner, president of MIT, with this so I 'll ny blind and say it wouldn't make much dllference WHAT you did. · If I 'm wrong, plenty of "space experts" will tell me. If they do, l 'U pass the word. Fresh Local Lobste r Stuffed u•itb nysler dressing. /{eat & Servel S238 lb. "Sul~s and Strt•ice n/ Fine o .. tl " A nl1qua Resllno/11111 <;. 673-7726 On the Peninsula. F1nil Watch Rcpa;,:· At Main Street, Balboa ~d Ian ~/( u1/c:Jk/(}, ~,; 'P.(). 260 NEWPORT CENT.ER DRIVE DESIGN PLAZA (714) 644·8705 NEWPORT BEACI l;CA 92660 . ...... ;rom ... Gier catffomla , ' le r°"'1dH u,, · · udi-ar NEWPORT 0 CENTER In the DAILY PILOT The celebrated Western Heritage is captured within the PETRIC KS WESTERN . INDIAN/AMERICANA EXHIBITION. The essence of the frontier life on the plains, Indian Folklore, and the arts of America's Heritage, all combine to make this special showing one of the finest ever •.. an excellent intro- duction for this Bicentennial Year. PETRICKS PREMIERE EXHIBITION will feature a superb selection of Navajo and Comanche Indian Rugs, Hopi Kachina Dolls, a beautiful selection of Hopi pottery, including works by the famous Indian "Frogwoman", Navajo Sandpaintings, UNUSUAL Indian Jewelry, over 300 original paintings and limited editibn graphics from Indian Artists of the Cherokee, Comanche, Kiowa, Apache, Creek and Seminole Tribes. ·Art Tafoy_!, a unique silversmith, will create and demonstrate in person his distinctive talent for making Indian Jewelry. ·National Watercolor artist Flo Rowlett. ·Whale Sculptures in Ancient Soapstone by fl.Av. Hancock. ·Arizona Artist Art Stadler's hand carved wood "Bird" series. ·Doc Tate Nevaauaya and Kate Neva~ID.A of the Comanche tribe in Oklahoma will be on hand. Doc Tate will lecture and personally explain the various Indian Heritages on display, and also demonstrate the ancient Indian Art of Flute playing. Mn. Kate ~!!!it• will debut W Exclu1iv1 Wm Co11t Fathlon Premiere It PETR __ . In Bddition Kata will present her beautiful line of the most unusual h nd made Comanche Jewelry. · Exhibition on display January 10th·28th Tues.·Sat. 10 a.m.·6 p .m. Sunday noon-6 p.m. PETRICKS GALLERIES 1741 Wiltdlff Drive Newport Bwh, Calif. (114f 846-3373 PETRICKS/COFO? !<!JOICE ~RT)~ERY 666 Orth Hi Wr( . QALL•111•e Lll"nl Beech, Calif. (714) 4M.o316 l.i • Heady Compliment Millinery Institute of America offers three v.ersions to complete a wardrobe. At left 1s a silk turban by Bob Greene of Irene; center is a Mr. Martin's straw brim and at right, Mr'° John's slouch hat. .Betrothals· Hosmer-Maynard Christina Hosmer and Stuart G. Maynard are planning to marry Feb. 7 in St. Stephen's Episcopal Church, Whittier. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred w. Hosmer Jr. of Costa Mesa and Mr. and Mrs. Leonard C. Maynard, La Habra. Miss Hosmer is a graduate of Santa Ana Vall~y Hig.h School and Santa Ana College, and her f 1ance 1s a graduate of La Habra High School • and California State University, San Diego ~ ,where she majored in ~':;~eting. ~ Pedley-Baker ' Mr. and Mrs. Pierson L. Pedley of Newport Beach have announced the engagement of their daughter, Linda Jane Pedley, to James Eugene Baker, son of Mansell E. Baker, Leawood, Kan. The bride-elect is a graduate of Pasadena High School and is a candidate for March graduation Crom Principia College, Elsah, Ill. Her finance, a r.aduate of Shawnee Mission South High Schoo , is a senior at Rockhurst College, Kansas City, Mo. A May 22 wedding in the Community Church Congregational, Corona del Mar. is planned. (handbags, t~, at great savings!) orig. 12.99 to 14.99 6.98 2 pr. for$13 orig. 15.99 to 18.99 8.98 2 pr. for _'17 or.ig. 19.99 and up 10.98 2 pr. for •21 Your chance to own many pairs at huge savingal Selected groups. Not every size In every style. Make an effort to be early for flrtt aeleotf on. SOUTH COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA UN your 8ankAmericM'd or M..W Ch•'I' Thursd1y, January 8. 1976 DAILY PILOT 8 3 Now, That's Stylfu ~ Ar; WIT'S .END By ERMA BOMBB<X 'confidence. When she Jl there is anything I ·sees a line, sbe goes to admire in this world, it's the bead of lt. Whenever people with "style." s be drives to t be Like the guy I read supermarket, she alms about last week wbo for a space right outside broke out of prison, the door<andgetsit). secured a horse at the One day as I s lid into gat~. and galloped down the car next to Wheezie. the road to freedom like she said, "Your belt is a country gentleman. caught in the door and is That's .. style... flapping on the outside." Some of us go through I opened the door and life with the labels hang. reeled it in. Suddenly I ing out of our dresses; became rese ntful. and our stomachs rumbl· "Wheezie, do you know you. You never perspire. You never bite into a ham sandwich and get a clump of fat. You always have the right change for the restroom. You never rush up to a familiar face at the airport and say. •m there. Nice to see you again.• and realize it's the man who cleaned your septic tank. You always realize you have a drink in your band before you shake bands. You always unplug your iron when you go on vacation. You remember the names and ages of your kids." "Ob, come on ••• " she said. "Shut up, Wheezie!" I snapped. "I've got to get this out of my system. Do you remember when we went to a luncheon and I bad to introduce a speaker? I got two celery seeds stuck in my front teeth that looked like cavities.·• ---- "I suppose so, .. ab shrugged. • "Do you know what i think? I think if 7ow ~ escaped from prlaoni. 1 you'd con aomeone out o~ ~~ a hone at tbe gate andi ride too, instead ot ~ crawling along th ditches." "Don't be ridiculous, darling,.. she lall6hM.. "I'd call a cab.•• ~-r " ing like a volcano during what it is like to go benediction. Our fresh through life with your-----~,-------------------:~ chickens leak through p a n t y h o s e o n · the bottom of our backward?" grocery bags. Our "What are you talking curlers make creases in about?" she asked. our faces that only sur-''I'm talking about gery can erase, and on the first day we wear white shoes, we get an--------- unseasonal snowfall. RUffEll'S I have a friend with uP1 T•lt9Mt• "style." Her name is UPHOLSTERY ONCE-A-YEAR SALE Wheezie. Wheezie bas a snout full of style and W...Y•W_. ....... IUJH.-.lkd. Coth Mfte-541-02St 20% to 50% OFF or MORE ·NOW IN PROGRESS. Va-Y2 OFF BAKER -OtAPMAN -YALE BURGE MARTIN/BRATRUD, TROUVAILLES FURNITURE. LAMPS. UPHOLSTERY PILLOWS -MIRRORS -RATTAN . SOME ORIENTAL SPECIAL SALE LAGUNA STORE ONLY Ml/.f P1Y ·DlJ.Af PrY I 058 IRVINE • WESTCLIFF PLAZA NEWPORT BEACH li..11~ 1910 S. COAST HWY.; LAGUNA IEACH 17 I 41·494-6505 • INTERIORS .SINCE 1937. Help! Jifte Tax Service by H&R BLOClt at all Mutual Savings offices The nation's best known tax preparation service will prepare your individual Federal and California tax returns free, or for a small fee Free, if you have a cerbncate account at any ... Mutual SaV1ngs Office with a balance of $7.500 or more. For $15 if your balance is a mm1mum of $3,000. If you are not now a Mutual SaV1ngs 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. Nof 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 additional taxes due. while we do not assume liability for the additional taxes, we w1JJ pay that mterest and penalty. Furthermore, 1f your return is audited, we will accompany you at no extra cost to the fnternal Revenue Service and explain how your return was prepared, even though we will not act as your legal representative'.' 1J1 Save money. H ave your returns prepared by the best known tax w,:.;, people in the business. Be protected by a guarantee. Just call or ; come in to any Mutual Savings Office to make an appointment. But do it soon because of the populanty of tlus offer ·Service not avatlable in San Diego County. Foootaln Valley 17942 Magnolia Street/963-8396 Santa Ana 631 North Main/547-9741 I \ .. I I • • I t I I r I ' I - ' .. 84 DAILY PILOT Thursday, January 8, 1979 Wflte• to Nebraska I 1 Younger Backs Gag Issue NORTH PLATTE, Neb. (AP> -C.,Ufornla Atty. Gen. Evelle J . Younier has written to a Neb1aska newspaper editor to express support for the rtews media in lts light against ••gag" orders lo the Erwln Charles Si- mants mass murder case. Younger sald bls letter lo North Platte TelegTapb news editor Bill Eddy was prompted by a New York Times story on the case. That s tory quoted Eddy as saying, "It's far better to have a jury that knows the facts than one exposed to ill-founded rumor." YOUNGER SAID of that com- ment, "I a gree with you com· pletely. ·· Younger, a 1940 University or ::"Jebraska graduate, said, ''I first learned about gag orders the hard way when 1 was district at- torney of Los Angeles County." Younger explained that he was prosecuting Sirhan Sirhan for the assassination of Sen. Robert Kennedy in 1968, when a court imposed "gag'' rule prevented him from answering questions about the case. YOUNGER SAID a N!porter asked him if there was any truth to a rumor that the late Egyptian President Nass er had financed Sirhan, and was involved in a conspiracy to a ssassinate American officials considered by Nasser to be pro-Israel. · "I wanted to answer 'of course not, that's absurd,• " Younger wrote. "However, I was operat- ing under a court imposed gag order. If I violated that order I knew that the defense would make much of it and attempt to claim prejudice on the part of the prosecution.'· Therefore, Younger said, he could answer the question only by saying, "No comment." "THAT WAS MY reply. l al most choked on the words . It seemed so absurd to, in effect, perpetuate the very dangerous rumor when I could very easily have put it to rest. absent the gag order;" Younger said. The newspaper which carried the story later r an enormoui. hudlines saying, "Is Nasser Involved? DA Says 'No Com- ment,·" Younger explained. "I believed then and still believe the public interest would have been best served had I been able to r eport that investigation disclosed Nasser was in no way involved and there was nothing t<' indicate any conspiracy in- volving other governments or in· dividuals. "Good Luck," Younger 'con· eluded. DISTRICT COURT JUDGE Hugh Stuart. involved in the con- trovers y over media coverage of a murder trial. says he believes a fair trial is as important as a free press. "You can't destroy fair trial with your right of a free press." he told reporters as he barred three of them from court after they refused to go along with his conditions for covering jury selection in the mass murder trial. MAKE IT A NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION - SHOP REGULARLY AT PIC 'N 'SA VE! SAVE 40 % TO 70°10 ON EVERYTHINGI Qlrle'. 8rU8hect Nylon Night Gown• wtth Screen PrlnU A soft toucll! It's warm, comfy. and comes In contrasting colors wit~ choice of. st~ book !iavres printed °" the front Shpt mtg. Sizes: 7 to 16. l SUS IOAI. Yll• ---.:\ AUOtled \ s9t I Knit Caps L---_J For Women a Chlldren l.atge selection of fancy stripes, patterns. and sohd colors. Many different styles. lrregs. Profeulonel Qu9lty Men•s Assorted Fancy Belts Quality Lea .. er Belts $6.00 -SUD Retail ValHS •.... $2.49-$2.98 Rope and Fabric Belts $5.00-$7.00 Retail Values •.•••. $1.98-$2.49 Sile RETAIL YALU£ "Scrlpto" Broad Tip Markers __ 9_5_,\ fell lip markers with waterproof ink. Marks on II I anything. Choice of colors. It \ C> - -.::.--·\ •_J \~~~~:1 Prellt1rvt1d Natural Flowers Nine va11et1e~ of dried flowers including yarrow. tmal, baby's breath. barley, wheat, etc. Available in various colors. RETAIL VALUES $1.59 TO $1.96 Nore/co® Ribbed Knit, Short Sleeve Ladles' Tops Neat, trim, tailored look and in your PIC' of lovely solid colors. They're 100% polyester for easiest of care. Availabla.in several styles. Siles: S-M-L. $10.00 RETAIL VALUE Ladles' High-Rise Slacks Popular style in your choice of pastel colors. 2-button waistbatld and zipper fly front. Made of polyester blend. Sizes: 8 to 18. Decorative Light Bulbs Top quality bulbs from an internationally famous maker. Select from a wide variety including those with standard base or styles to fit candelabras. Clear, frosted, or spectrum glass. Photo Albums Fer l1st.atic Size Prints Conch Shell• or Rope Plant Hangers Quality album with 10 see·through pages that lie flat to allow best viewing. Accommodates 60 Genuine polished shells from the South ~s or sisal rope in decoratOf colors. Gives added interest to your ltWe II U.U. planters. prints. Store Holiday pnnts NOW! SS.IS IOU. YMIJE Stock Up Now I t oz. Spr•y C•n "Dust Fighter" RETAIL VALUE -S 1.49 Makes dusting a cinch ! Spray on mop or dust cloth. It grabs and holds pollen- laden dust Contains a germ fighting inaredient. Non abrasive. No wax to build· up on surface!). __ _..., Cotton T•rry f'\49 r · Bath Towels \ • _ ~ \..--__. --: . Vlhlmln lupplementa end Multiples Jf. 11 If« flJ. l.a* V'rttmln "C", 250 Mg. (family) •......••• .St 'SUI"'-fllt Cllocolltt CbewaMI Multiples -60 Tablets ••••••• .71 SJ.11 In flJ. Z11t* Multiples, Clleny riav. w/lron ••......•••• H 'SUI 11t * Yltlmitl "E", 200 LU. (Adult) -100 Tablets •••.•• 1Jt 'II.SS lllt flJ. ..... Vita "E", 400 1.U. -100 Tab .••..•.•• UI • WESTMINSTER 1140Zle•llll..t.. COSTA MESA 175 E. 17th St. .. Mewporl ltY4. SANTA ANA lrittol & MacArtls .._..of So. Co.I"- ORANGE 1821 H. Tustin Ave. IC__.tC.-. PIC 'N" SAVE STORE HOURS: AT MOST S TORE ~ DAILY 9 TO 9. SUNDAYS 10 TO 7 \ U~IT ........ Marriage Faring 1 Poorly With ¥ oung · WASHINGTON <AP> -The institution of marriage apparen~y ls faring poorly with young Americana. More are remaining single and thoee who do marry are divorcing or aeparaUni at higher rates. the CemUJ Bureau say1. • A census report on marital status and living arrangementa in tlle United States in the first halt of the 1970s also showed a con- tinuation of trends toward a greater number of families headed b y women and more children living with single parents. about 10 percent of all penoni 25 to 54 years old who had ever mar- ried were reported as either divorced and not remarried or separated. The 1970 filu,re wu 1 percent. ONE CONSEQUENCE O~ JUGHER di vorce and separation rates has been an increase in the number of families beaded by women and the number of children. living with only one parent. · Burt Siding BASED ON ITS NATIONWIDE annual survey, conducted last March, the bureau said the number of persons bet ween 25 '8Dd 34 years of age who never married has in· creased by about 50 percent since 1970, from 2.9 million to 4.2 million persons . The study revealed that in 1975 about 80 percent of all children under 18 lived with both parents, compared with 85 percent five years earlier. Rep. William Ketchem (R· Cali!.) broke his shoulder in a s kiing accident in the Sierra last week. He is re- c up er at in g at hi s Bakersfield home. And the number of persons in that age grdup beading their own household almost doubled, from 915,000 to 1.8 million, the report said. On dissolution of m arriages, the report noted that in 1975 In the same period, the number of f am ill es headed by women jumpe d by 1.6 million to 7.2 million . • "REALISTIC'' SAVINGS ON Hl·fl AND OTHER REGULAR STOCK ELECTRONIC ITEMS $ HEAR THE EXCELLENCE OF OUR REALISTIC® STA-82 AM-FM STEREO RECEIVER! An unbeatable 33%-off audio bargain loaded with Radio Shack exclusive innovations: Auto-Magic 'R• FM tuning: Perfect Loudneis<111; Glide-Path'R' volume /balance controls: Quatravox'Ri 4-speaker synthesizer. Plus tape monitor. phono input. tuning meter. headphone jack. 1Sx12Y2x5" genuine wood veneer cabinet. There·s only one place you can find it ... Rad io Shack. SAVE 512080 GET THIS COMPLETE REALISTIC STEREO MUSIC SYSTEM FEATURING THE STA-82 RECEIVER! Reg. Separate Items Price 499.80 .r Reg. 299.95 ATTENTION CB BUYERS! SAVE $7 e DELUXE COMPACT CASSETTE RECORDER WITH CONDENSER MIKE Radio Shack introduced its famous tow-cos! Realistic CB tine in 1960 and has been a world leader in Citizens Band for 16 years White some of Realishc·s 16 radios may b" in short supply at limes. 1t ti be worlh your while to WAIT FOR REALISTIC f1f you h.1ve to) and avoid the hassle and problems of deahnq with Store X and Brand X We alc;o make our own Archer hne of CB ant~nnas crys1ats coax cnbtes and accesso11P.c; Thec;P are 1n f<tirlv qood supply today Rc<lhs11c CB is sold ar)d serviced ONLY by Rarf10 Shaci.. in our over 4CXlO shops 1n the USA and Canada Buy from a really oual1f1Pd c;peoahst -your friendly neighborhood Radio Shack. Reg. 69.95 6 2 ~~O • T•p• Count•r. &tt•ry M•t•rf • E•rphone. C.rry C•••· Wrist Strap •nd B.ttteri.sl SAVE9% POWERHORN JR. ALARM DEVICE Reg. 2.19 79~!. 199 27S ... 94 • Prottctf DoM. Window/ • Howl• wtt.n D/1turHdl RADIO I HACK PRICH ON AVERAGE HAVE INCREASED Liii .THAN 1,. ltNCI JU&. Y, 117'f COIOMAO&MAl HUMTMTOM IOUMT ... ,.ij.IT L.4MMA..... ~AAMA wcaa11m MU ... c.......,. MACH Ill"......., .. Clo.-.... """' ... ..=l!l:r ........••• a.tc-.M CO•f• .... s• •"1•-•... ••1=..,,_. MIWPOITllACH ....,.c--.i MT1M • ·-" .... "'7 .... c.t""" ........... ... ........ •••=M ... ,,,_,.., SAM NAM ,_., •• ,,.., WIS,._.Sta ,,.. ""' LAMMA llACH. ..._..., ,.,........, u At",.,..c...,_ CAltSTIAMO ......,..,. Ci A TANOY CORPORATION COM~NY Ultl c-111~ HllCf'S MAY VAAV AT INOtVtOUAl Stl'>Rr•, ----· ----\.._,.. __ --,..,. ......... ..-. ' ,. r I , i ' I l r .. BOOMER TUMBLEWEEDS FUNKY WINKERIEAN If a boat is going up a river at five m.p.h .... FIGMENTS NANCY I'LL BUY ONE FOR MY NEW . ' by Wrtt. F. lrow11 cmd Mel Casson and it is going against a twelve- knot current ... VOU'VE BEEN IN HERE FOR AN HOUR .. MO'T"Mtfl ROTTeN NEWS DAv'. by Tom It Ryan by Tom latiuk how many apples can you get for a dollar?·. by Dale Hale by Ernie IUSliniler I -PLANT t• ...... -• """'--• "• "' •H a .. ••\, • ,., ... I r I TODAY'S CIDSSIDBD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 At the sum· mitol 6 Publish \l Bod111g evil 14 U11io11 leader ·····Chavez 15 ·····Md ba· COii 16 Nal'IEduc. Assn. 17 Enroll 1n a conege 19 la1ge vnMI 20 At one time 21 Vt1ily 22 Actor ····· McOueen 24 E •PtCtatlon 26 l11tent looker 27 Poplars JO Handles. as a tool 32 Silly perso11s. lnfo1mel 33 React to pal11 34 Outcome of an act: Suffix 37 Moss ···· 38 West Poltit 01 Kingston 11udont 39 Genetti quatity 40 Clay. today 41 Pa1t1st1n 011· ment·Ver. 42 foJ·trOt 43 Scatter 1ubb1sti 45 Throbbed 46 Hags 48 Middle: Prefix 49 ·····of Com• mon1 or Rep· resentativn 50 Passovtr lightly . 52 Radiate 56 Pertonalities 57 Nut to the last 60 Nolhing 61 Infer 62 Ovebtc City university 63 Even ont 64 Acedtmlc gown1 65 Deep mourn• fult0und DOWN 1 Peak 2 King or Norman 3 Hopkllns: Vtr. 4 Mo1t distant 6 Three: Prefix 6 Token of honor 7 Irritate 8 Ruas11n name 9 Kind of price 10 Bridge ltamewortt 11 Atmospheric up .. 11 12 Depart 13 After I ~tllle 18 Ove<ht!s ..... -.€ _____ . Vesterda(s Puule Solved: L 0 R £ p I la I T 1 IH rlT D D A X l A H C f ~ 0 I 'i ~ T s p l A H T E D ( l A N I .N p l A IC [. 0 I C II C s s A II I t U • R ~ ) 'Is :~ I II A " l O O p s ~1 o•• 14 • £ II II I ( ~ I 1 0 RS • E l A re N• 11 [ Ill i • C i K y II 0 II A II C ( II • 0 C A 0 A S If II I . s l A Y S p ,. IT T I r 5 . E P I T 0 " [ D G RIC S T ll ll lilt r o IU l!J E 15 s 23 TV plly· wright ··· Mosel 25 Unit 26 Religious group 27 Turkish gene111 28 Airtight · dosure 29 In a risky manner 30 More u11n· l." p L 0 v r R N A l F E II N I II £ f II [ [ 41 More precipitous 42 Unsuccessful person 44 t11surance: Abbr. 45 Saucy 46 AslltlC country 47 French stulp· IOI 48 Slippers 50 T real with tiv• scorn 31 Arrow poi5on 51 "Time" 33 Ending with be 35 Asaoonas 36 Neceuitv 38 Household pets 39 Amulet founder 53 Cheat 54 Writ words 55 Valley 58 Oki name rOf Tokyo 59 Type PEANUTS HERE THEi' CG~A6AIN UllTH THEIR PEA~ur S1./TTER LUNCHES .• .. , ·, . JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH • . ARTHU R'S ! TRAVE-L-I ser<v1 C£ l __,,__ .. HOW OE~E551N6 ! Tl-IE ~INCIPAl C<Yr\PLAIN5 'THAT I DON'T HAVE ENOUGH ROOMS .. THE TEACHE~ SA'( l'M COL.0. .. • f~E ADVJC6 • • DICK TRACY i GORDO I " IT1S ALL IN How l<'lt>S ARE BEING ~-BROUGHT UP THESE DAY5 ... ANIMAL CRACKERS T~E 6UILOIN6 IN5PfCTOR A.LWA'(~ CRITICIZE$ ME ... THE (05TOOIAN~ HATE ME ... l'M REALl'< DE~E~CO ... -~ '-0 I I I I I I I I I I I ,.,, I ... . • .. , I 0 CR'/, 8(.IT I 14AT~ 10qf~ft'll WINDOW~! Thur$day January 8. 1976 KAYo, You kNOW You C,AN ALWAYS COME TO ME WITH ,ANY PROBLEM ... WE1LL WORK ITOUT ... PALS FOREVER ··· ~ by Harold Le Doux THIS 15 YOUR LAST CHANCE. WALLY! TELL ME AroUT THE GAS STATIOH AmNDANT ! WELL, THeitE we~e, lAN11L L~'S1' WE.EK, WMeN WE 60T Ht1' Wl'TH 1'HE 'SNEAl(U 1MOCT"6E ... ''I I ~'' .. I ... . -· .... . ' ~' ~ Mf\<...t4'MAA· 1·8 by Chester Gould DAILY PILOT 85 MOMMY.' BRIN~'MG MY·"f"OY" MOSPt"f'AL,... SHIP.' by Gus Arriola by RoclcJer Bollen ( I I , ... I ' ..... l I I • • • ii • I ..... e .. OAILVPILOT Thursday. January 8, 1976 Fire Hazard Eyed Auto Sales ' Took Dive Beach Tragedy Could Repeat ·Northrop'• BidLauJed U.S. Backs Mortgage Incentive By JOANNE REYNOLDS 0tt111eo.a1,,.....,.. Among the questions raised in the aftermath of the Newport Beach fire that claimed the lives of six people wru» the safety of the city's older houses. ' The house that burned, like many ot hers in beach cities along the Orange coast, was a single walled, bo:trd und batten type, originally built 3S a summer vacation home. MANY OF THE HOMES built in the older parts of Newport Beach, such as tbe Balboa Peninsula, west Newport, Balboa Js land and Newport Heights, were built th.is way before single wall construction was outlawed. The problem that confronts city of- ficials today is how to bring these c•lder places up to modern safety standards. "We have a three-pronged attack ... said Bob Fowler, building director for Newport Beach. The point or the "attack" is simply to eliminate the hazardous conditions that exist in these older homes. THE PROBLEMS. HE said, are not j ust limited to single wall con- struction. He lists substandard wiring and improper installation of heating devices as the two most common hazards found in the older places. One method his department uses as part or the building rehabilitation pro-gram is called direct rehabilitation. One m an in the department is responsible for finding places that ap- pear to be dilapidated and getting the owner to bring the place up to current standards. Often t\e works from com - plaint~ of neighbors. This 1s not a very effective pro- gram. Fowler said. because it is time cons uming and occasionally the city 1s forced to condemn the property to get compliance. THF: SECOSD i't ETHOD is one used in most coast cities. When a homeowner asks for a permit to re- pair or remodel his home, 1f 1t is sub- standard. the owner can be forced to bring 1t up to code as part of the re- qttirement for the permit. Fowler said this method hinges on the remodeling job costing more than 50 percent of the market value of the home. "However, 1f there is a hazardous condition. we can require them to cor- rect it, whether they are doing any work or not." he s aid. "'This type of situation often arises when a homeowner asks for a plan check. We have an on-site inspection Dally PllOt St.Mt l"flote ATTACK ON DANGER Director Fowfer and any hazar ds spotted can then be correct~d." BY FAR THE CITY'S most ef- fective program. Fowler said, is the recently initiated R eport o f Residential Records. Operating directly under Dick Hogan. director of community de- velopment, two inspectors inspect. homes that are being sold. Under this program. the buyer re- ceives a report that not only includes information about all permits issued to the home. but includes a summary of all substandard or hazardous con- ditions in the house. .. Jn most cases. the buyer is unwill- ing to go ahead with the sale until the seller has corrected the defects," he said FOWLER SA ID LENDING in- stitutions have backed the year-old program by refusing to commit the loan money until the hazards have been correct ed. The problem. he continued, is not as vast as mi ght be imagined. Fowler estimates there are onJy 75 to 100 houses in :-.Jewport Beach that have some kind of existing hazard. "Ultimately, over the next 40 years all the property in the city wiU sell and we will have a chance lo insure that it's upgraded," Fowler satd. .. But in the meantime. there are some places that just have to be up- graded, and the sooner, the better." S6 Million Project Capo Beach Complex Rehearing Schednled A new public hearing on a $6 million apartment complex in Capistrano Beach has been scheduled for Feb. 2, a year after it was originally ap- proved by t he South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission. The 43-unit project at 35140 Camino Capistrano was never built by appli- cant Frank S. Smith during the ap- proximately one-year life of its state permit. lllness that ~truck the family and a tight money market leading to failure to arrange financing were cited for UPI Te_...o si,....vp Actress Sandy Duncan will play Pinocchio, the puppet come to life, and Danny Kaye will play Gepetto the wood carver in a new musical vers ion of the classic to appear on CBS March 13. the construction delay in testimony before coastal commissioners meet- ing recently in Huntington Beach. Commissioners did grant an ex- tension of the building permit until Feb. 2. but the controversial coastal commission laws require a complete rehearing of the application and ap- peals for or against it. Density levels of the 43-unit com- plex to include 38 one-bedroom and five two-bedroom modes! will also be reopened at the Feb. 2 hearing in Huntington Re ach City Council cham- bers. 2 Viejo Students Receive Grants For DC Course. The Mission Viejo Rotary Club bas presented a $100 check to two Mission Viejo High School students selected for a Washington, D.C. leadership training course. Pam Smith and Victor Vance will participate in t he "Presidential Classroom for Young Americans" Jan. 24-31. The trip is expected to cost $600 per student. The students. both Student Council members, were selected by a commit- tee of teachers, counselors a nd administrators. according to Don Martin. students activities director at the school. A third student was also selected to attend. but was dropped because of funding problems. In addition to the Rotary donation. the Women's Club ot Leisure World and the Saddleback Valley Exchange Club contributed to the travel Cund. PVBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PVaLIC NOTICE ,ICTtTIOUS •USINHS MAMll STATllMllNT • T .. followlno petson Is dOlno IMI-"", "' QU()t4NA GOt..D T R.\OING CO . WESTE RN HO'Rl?ON t;NTllllPstlSl!.S. nu HutM< l.11 . ,.,,.._, !MKll, <;Jlllf 9'..,0 ltrllft 0ev14 Sllpe, 211• Hutt>tr I.JI., "'-P«t 8H< II. C.111 92.eo Thi\ llvtlneu •• <OftdU<l~O Oy •II In. chi~! ftfllft D \tloe 1'11\ iUllMNtflt WH Iii" WIOI tl\t C..Vn1y Cl•tll 01 Or•1109 Coullly Oii Otc.mtw n.. ••n ,...,, '°'*I..., Orenoe C~st 0.11, tllrot, OK.....,U. 1t1JellCIJ.tnlM!'Y1.1, 1S. ,., • .._n During'75 Northrop Corp. ha$ re- c~ved the Federal Ener&Y Administration's Ex- cellence. Award for "out.' atandlni efforts to reduce eneny consumption in 1974,•• DETROJT (AP) -Domestic new car 1alu plummeted to their worst levels in 13 years despite an impressive market rally in t.he last quarter or tbe year. the nation's car makers have reported. Northrop won the award for the energy con· servatlon programs of its Electro -Mechanical Division In Anaheim, which used 48. 7 percent le&s electrical power in 1974 than in the previous year. WASH(tlGTON (AP) -The government announced it ls pro- viding the backlog for: $3 blllloo worth of mortgage money at below-market interest rates to spur construction of apartment and other mult.ifamily dwelling units. FINANCE Final figures s howed Amerlcans bought 1,oso,120 u.s_. built cars in recession-plagued 1975, a 5 percent dip from an already weakened 1974 total and a 27 percent fall from the record year of 1973. Among the m ethods employed by Northrop to reduce energy use are the installation of plastic skylights. mE PROGRAM would permit developers to finance multifami- ly projeets with loans carrying a 7.5 percent loterest rate, com- pared to the nine percent ceiling currently on government-insured loans for multifamily units. Newport Oil Firm . Buy Told IT WAS THE poorest year for the nation's larg- est manufacturing industry since 1962, when saies limped in at 6,750,000. GIILto Hear The Department of Housing and Urban Development said the· money s hould be enough to finance about 120.000 housing un· its. OXOCO, an indepen- dent oil and gas ex- ploration and production company. based in Newport Beach, an- nounced that it's wholly owned subsidiar y, OXOCO-Texas, Inc., has complete d the a~~ quisition of oil producing properties in the vicinity of Corpus Christi, Texas rrom private ~investors based in Houston, Texas.· A public craving for low prices and high fuel economy, however, provided a boom for imports, which withstood a sales lull in the waning months of 1975 to log their 1hird best year in history and carve out a record share of the U .S. market. C. B. Morton At Meeting U.S. Comme r ce Secretary Rogers C.B. Morton will be the keynote speaker at the Greater Irvine Industrial League annual dinner meeting at the Newport Beach Marriott Hotel Jan. 28. HUD Secretary Carla Hills said in announcing the program that she was concerned that the rate of construct ion of new apart- ment buildings is lagging despite a continuing moderate recovery in single-family construction. General Motors, which suf- fered most during the industry's fuel-c~is slump in 1974 because -of its emphasis on large cars, was t he only U.S . company to register a gain over the previous year's The league's fifth annual din· ner will begin with a 6 :30 p.m. re- ception, followed by the dinner at 8 p.m. Tickets are $20 each and may be obtained by calling the league at 556-3106. SPECIALISTS have expressed fears that the current low rate ot production in the multifamily sector will lead to sharply higher rents in the months ahead as the rental market tightens up. The rate of st arts on new multifamily units bas risen by 34 percent over the first 11 months<)-f 1975 to a n annual r a t e- of 340,000. That compares to a 39 percent climb in starts on new single-family units. The acquisition was made for an undisclosed sum of cash, stock and convertible notes . OXOCO-Texas, Jnc., will operate the acquired properties and will open a Corpus Christi office during the first quarter of 1976. . depressed levels, although it was a minor increase of 1.4 percent. American Motors was off 4 per- cent tor the year, Ford Motor Co. trailed 1974 by 10 percent and Chrysler Corp. dropped 17 per- cent. This year's m eeting also wilJ feature the fi rst presentation of the league's award for business excellence. It will recognize com- panies that offer exceptional working environments, suc - cessful employe relations pro- grams, and executive leadership for community and civic or- ganizations and events. But the lengthy period of low construction activity in the multifamily sector has reduced sharply the supply or new apart- ment units actually being com- pleted a nd coming on to the market. COMPARED Wlm 1973, AMC sales in 1975 were down 19 per- cent, GM and Ford each were down 26 percent and Chrysler was of! 35 ~rcent. OXOCO's domestic oil and gas reserves at year end 1975 stood at approx- imately 500,000 barrels of oil and 6.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas. Chrysler Charged In Suit WASHINGTO. <UPI> -The Justice Depart- :n en t ha s c h arged Chrysler Corp. with in- s talli n g im pro per emission controls in . some of the 1974 Plymouth Valiants and Dodge Darts produced at ·its Hamtramck a s - sembly plant n ear Detroit. In a civil suit, the de- ·partment asked the U.S ... Dis trict Court here to fine Chrysler $10,000 Cor each car that did not con- form to Envi ronmental· Protection Agency's standards a nd enjoin future violations. The suit said 42 of 296 cars inspected by the EPA and the California Air Resource Board were equipped with im- proper distr ib utor s, carburetors, ex haust gas recirculation valves and spark advance controls. County Firm Cites Sale Data Technology Corp. of Santa Ana and Penril Corp. of Rockville, Md., announced that they have consummated the previously announced purchase by Penril of Data Technology Corp. 's D ata Ins trum e nts Division. IS Sl.IB'tH6 SIClrMHS STILL AIOVMD? Yes it is according to public health officials who are worried that. outbreaks of encephalitis could be spreading. En- cephalitis is a mosquit.o- born e viru s. Jts symptoms include headac hes, l ethargy, dizziness, s tiU neck, nausea and fever. In its most virulent form it at. lacks the brain and may produce com a a nd possibly death. . 'Ilw>ugh the aymptom.tJ of the virus have been pinned down, there is no s pe cific treatment or vacci ne . Health autboriUet atill consider tbe best protection lo be ·a stron• mosquito con· trot program. •y 0 UR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a delivery. We wlU deliver promptly without extra char,e. A aru t maQy people rely on us tor tbdr health need.I." We welc9me requuta for delivery urvtce and cbarp account.. PAD UDO PHAIMACY ' 35t Hospital RNd FrH 'Delivery .~Be.cf! M2·1~ '· 1 Over The Counter NASO L.istin«JS The~ quot11tons Boolll Np 2S 2~V. Easlmt 16 16:V. lnlrst Cp 1>111 6~ Nat Llbty 3 3~ So C.I wt supplltd by tM Na-Brenco I 20 21 Econ Lab 26~ 27~ •• So Ulll 2Jll• 2• NllMn SY ,. ..... 291h So CnllGl ''°""' A.s50Clet•on of 8'illkS In 8'4 8'\lo EDS Nuc ' 10 IVAC (p ""' n:v. Nell Ullll 12~ 12~ Sine! Pap 5Kurlllts Ot11ltr\, Btoedv F 4'1• 4:V. El Paso lO&a 1111. Jacob Sir 6 1 NCNB Cp 9'11 10 Specrra •re bids Ind oflu\ Brooks F 1•1.<a lS'll El Nucel '"• l>V. Ja~b 11 I 1:v, Nffdllm 6~ 71/a SMioel N quoled by o¥ctr·tlle· Buckbe s s •n Emer\I\ 1\h a Ja,n Em •ll. s•., Newll Co 9111 10 Si11naoy 1 counter ONltrs to Buckey 9~ 1014 Energy C 3¥. •'I• Johns EF lb'• 1714 NJ Nal G 1111. ll'"> 510 Regis Hell other es ot Bur11p SI SV. 611, Equ S&L 187 11> 191, JosJ·~ 11y1nn 1Mn 12:11. 13'11 N•cOltl In 9'h lO'h Slanl Hm CIO\O (EHltr" 8vller M '22 22:\1. Etl!MI A ..,.. v• 10''1 11 Niel~ A ?IV. 12'1• Stll N Ale time.I The QUOll· Cal Mc.rw 10'1) l l''J Execu In llV. 12111 Kaiser SI 36\/'t 37v, Nlelsen 8 17''• nv. StNk N S tions do not lnclllOct Cllwt Sv 2S'h 26'h Errtr.cp 10 11 Kalvar C 2\41 2:v. NotO\lr lO JOv. Strwb Clo rete ll m1r1Cup, mark C.m Iron Fair Lne s 6"• Ka~11 C 19•11 19''• Norlh Kg 13"• IA'!• ~ Er OOWn 0< commis· tl2 137 Farlon El 7¥. 811) Ku PrOd 13~. I•"• Nws NtG 8'A 81h Tally Crp Sfon; 1nd 00 not C.m Ta9 3S1'. 31>'1> Farm Bt 16~ 16'l't Kum Tit Ho S' • Noxell Cp 121 o ,,,,_ Ta~u rll9"Wnt •ctu•I CMlon Ml 16~ 16°" Fa<m Gr $6V. S7\I. Kelly Ser ll'•• 1•"• Ocean Or 28'• 29 T•ylor w transactions. C.rbO Co 20'1) 21'!. Angrht l" • Kemc>er 18 18>4 Oct•n 011 10'-11~ Tennant INOUSTIUAt..S Carp p~ 10'1. llV. Fst Bostn 16¥. t7'tt l(ey O.ta 2'• J\9 OcHn Ex ,.,.. ·~ Tutlle In ANO UTll.ITI ES Cn.J•r 8ll 10'11 tO'h !rt TxFin 8V. 9'/• Keyes FO 13\\ U IJ• Ollstl L9\ 13'-13' .. Tilfa11y WtdMsday CnMtg RI 3h 4~ !st U11lnc Jlll. :M'h Keyrt In! 2W> 71v, OQllvy M 11\o 111/t T-tt Ml JMuary 1, 1976 Cen VtPS 12'1• 12:\/o Food Tw 42'h u KMS Ind 2''> JI/, ()1110 Fet U V. lS'h Tm Ocen Bid Ask Cent T•le S'I. s~ Fo<Ht OI w 1. u~ f(Jlape Vt 131,, , •• ,,, Ooll Coal ' 1 TWln Dis A<U111nt 181h 1'1/• CFS C11tl U~ 1••11 FrM>k El 614 1'1• K11uds Cp 10 10''• Ormonl SYi S'lr Tymsl\r Acr.rn<o R 14'11 2 .... Olmc> Pt 3-" 4 Fresr MQ 8"• <I l(~r Pr 8\4 9''1 P•bS1 Br 22V. 23'!. UB Flnac M Micro t3Vr 1• Olnlp Pr l:nt. !HQ Friend re 2sv. U l(r~r 'I 10 P~ccar 2A'h 2SV. Uni Capt AdYnt C9 14'h 16'1> OWlnl Co 10~ 11~ Fro1 FdE 1•1, 17'. l(Uf\lmn t.!'1 1•t. P&c Glm 26'1• 2714 Union 591 Alex Ahc 32~ lJ'I• ~m Cp 20'h '11h Fuller H U'h 13 UICl4d St 24~ 2S"-P1rk Oii 1\4 I'll. Un T 81\C AIU Bel 17'1• 17>.:. Oli Br Ir 61 62'h Furr s Ca 9¥• 1014 L.an<Ht 1014 10"'9 Paul Rev 1S\4 14 UnAr1 Tl1 Allco Inc 1'1> 8 CJl(ls Sec Gate LrJ l'lli 8'10 LAnce 12V. 23 f>ylS\ C•s 2414 2S US SVC)ar All9n Phr IS't. 16 IJSV, 138'h Gilt-Tr S S.:V. uwsn Pr 18V> 20 Pay N Sv 2S'llt 261,\ US Tri< L 11'111 11 111 Univ Fds 19:w. ~o~ v1nce Sn 11'14 19V• Vin Dyll 1314 U Va11 Sllck W.4 11 Victor! St 1 S14 16Vr Va Chm 16Y• 11 Vlsuel S< 12 14 Vol S1- 20 21 War E8k tO"o 11"-Wash NG 24 2Slh WH'.mn I •\lo s Wffdell • ·~ Wthl' "' JI 39 Wtelot Wt IA~ IS\\ Wtffng M 23 2S Wstcst Pt 1~ 11'111 Ws ICyGs 1lli 1~ Wstmr C:I 9 '0 Wl!llr FO 9'h 10 Wlllamt I 191h 21 WifJll H J 21lll 21v. Wlnns Sir 1'h av. Wint Pl<T 2"-2~ 'WIK PLt lll'l l AV. Wl:>Od Ltll 18 1•11> ~rid Sv 9 10 Wright W S7 S9 Vello Frt l2V1 13 t lons Uth II 1¥11> . . .... 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MASS CO: PltlCE ROWE! Balan< 17,)0 N L Inc. OIY Shr 2 ... 3.2' Fm Bu,.. lll (1) 1111990" 1 61 8.2' Fl'ftm 6 et 7.SS Gnortll 10.SI N L. C.plU 7,SS N L --Hltwd •.12 •.97 fl'llDERATED OR : Ill l11vest 10 87 lt.91 lnelp F •.N 1.S.. ln<om • 9 SO N.L. Stoel! U.12 N.L WIHIMMay NV v ... 10.20 tUS A LAldr 1.2' l .S? lnvtrn G 7.'1 N.L. Man F t.78 10.n Nw Efl 10.3• N.L. SIS OltOUf': Jenuary 1,. f1 916 CG Fund 9.30 10.0S Emore l1.S2 •.• lllV Guld 7 09 N L. MASS ,NC\.: Nw Ho, ,,,90 N.L. Gr'wlll • 6.01 6.se hi Asll CG lllCF 8.03 • "' 'lh Emp 16.15 ••• Inv llldic 1 71 N.L. MIT 9 9110.7S Pro Fd s 36 N.L. tncom 1.08 8.13 Adm Gw J S2 ••. Cao Pov 93.11 N.L. PIOEl.ITY Inv Bos 10.o::I 10.,. MIG 9.n .... Provo Gt 1.n 7.89 Ktmp c 10.60 1111 ....... 1~ 3 JS Cent SM 9.37 10 24 OltOU .. : INVEST Ml D 12 60 t3.S8 Prud SIP '·°' 9.~ 1(1119 M 1 00 N L ;;;; r~s , ... ::: Olel rnv •.171002 8nd deb U.3 8 ... C04JNSEI. MFD 11.0S 11.91 PUTNAM Smmil a:lA 9.li Adwts.r 3 11 3.40 Oler1 Fd 10.4611.'3 c.c>tal l .S9 9.39 Clpom 1 S-4 t .U MCO 11.67 12.S8 l'UNOS: T-:11n1 6.0 7.0 a.tne Fd i u 180 04A.S. Contra ,0.21i N.L. Coolt Sil 4.St ·-~ MFB IS.10 16.2t Conver 10.:n 11.28 ~, F 8.S-4 9.13 MIN In n:oJ,, IS ~: Cly lllC 1.00 N L. INVEST OROUf': Mllheot 9 93 N.L. Equity 1.91 9.11 Temp G I .. 9.47 Allltllfe • 0 N .L Fnd Bo\ 6.41 7.0t OHi 1 SS . . . IDS Bnd S.47 S.67 Mid Am A.SS A.'1 Geor9 12 ., ll.S6 T...., Iv t.oo N.L AGE Fd i 2t i J3 Fron Cp S.63 S.t7 Equity I I 1.9S N.t... IDS Giii • 91 .. , Mooney M 1.00 N.L-Gr'Wth 9 65 10.SS Tran Cap 7. 17 7,19 AllStett 9J'>10,,0 SttTr Bs 6.72 7.lA Eswx 7.67 •.. IDS NO 4 SI 4.90 Morly Fd '2S 10.11 l11eom 7.21 7.9S Trevl Eq t.4) 10.33 AISIN Fd 9.80 N.L. Sc>e<r S.04 S.Sl Fund 14.4S U 79 IDSPr 2 94 3 20 MSB Fd 1312 N.L. l11¥ctsl 7.26 7.93 Tudcw 11 1Ut N.L. Am 8 1r11'1 1010 11.21 5' Fd 8.06 I It Purltll 9.'9 10.37 Mutual I 31 9.09 Mtl 811 F I.St t .39 Vlstl F 9.38 10.2S 20tll CG 2.7S H L. Ant l!.Qty • '° S.04 Dot 10.60 N.L s.ltm F l .79 4.t• Stock 11.lS "" MIF Fd 7 .. 8.sa Voy19 10.7• 11.74 20lll Cl .... s N.L. AM fl'UNOS ORP: CN MNO fl'DS: Trend t9.A2 11.22 Select 1.71 9.0 Ml F Gro 3.•• 3 77 Relnbw 1.A9 N.L. Unified 7.S1 1.27 Am 8el 7.17 7 .... LlbHy 3.9' 4.31 ll'INANCIAt.. Var Pey •.21 • 7S ....,._I OmaM "9WN F 1.00 N.L. Uftllund 7.'1 1.32 Amcao 4.65 S 08 Mellflt 2.n t .97 .. ~UMS: l11v Ae'11 4.H 5.)9 ....... ; Rovero F 4.30 4.70 UNION SIRVtCI A1n Inc 8.t3 1:9'1 Scll1i. P 6.0l 6.5' Fiii Dyn 3.10 N.t... I S I: Amer 11.30 N.L. Salte Eq 7.6' 1.34 OlltOU .. : Aln Mut us •. 13 COLONIAL Fln Ind 3.11 H.L-Gfwtll 4.10 •.st GnMr 4.U .... S.ft(O G s." 6.« Bfd s IV u ... 12.7' A s.io<• s.ss 6.07 ,UNOS: Fiii Inc 6."-4 H.L. lncorn 3,42 ),,. llKmt I.JI 9,03 SCUDDER l'OS: Nell lllY 6.24 •.12 8nC1 FA U .24 1S.S6 COll¥Or 8.U 9,02 ''tFd Ve 10.42 lt.40 Trst Ut 3.13 ••• MUt Sllrs tt.50 N.l . Intl FnCll 11.3.4 N.L. U11 ceot U' 10.20 Cao F A 6.02 6.se Fund 92'10,12 f'lltST Trit Sii 11.5112.64 Hit llldu 9.13 H.L-Mat Rts ,6.05 N.L. UftlO!I In 11.1.,).f' Gilt AM •• 17 • u Gt'wtll •• ,. S.18 INYHTORS: -IS1el Fnd 21.2' n .92 NAT sac fl'OS; 8.tlellC 1UA N.L. UNITllO fl'UNOS; inc "'" 1),71 lS,OS lncom 8.12 8.17 Dl5C Fd •.SS ...... lvr Fund 6.06 H.L. 8 .. tnc • 01 8.7S Stv Corn 8.52 H.L. Accum .S.97 6.M Inv f1o1n 1244 '3 . .0~111"!1 G n ,81 N.t... Grtfl Fd 6.32 6.93 JP GW\h 9.11 9.tO lofl4 Sr 4.07 4.4S Spec•I 21.07 H.L. 8nd Fd 6.79 7.44 Nw Pri 1$,42 16.15 COMMOl'IWL.TM lll<Ofl'I 7.>7 8.08 Jll'IU\ Fd IS.80 N.L. Dlv!Oll 3.2S J,SS Sbd L•v 4.:13 • , • COflt gw 8.S2 •.IM SUI FdA UI 1.SS TltUST: Stock F 1 IS 7.IM Johnsln 19.80 N.L. Pref Stk U7 .,20 l•CURITY f>DS: Collt rnc a.n •.n WHll M 12.4' 13.56 A 6 8 ,89 .96 'SI Mylll 7.lS N.L. JOfo4N HANCOCK; llKom 4.46 •.81 Equ1t7 3.2S >.S6 I~ 10.M 11.Jl AM O•M ORf': C 1.32 UJ 61 Wiii lt,S3 N.L. llncl Fd 11,44 lQ,04 Stock Sr 7.06 7.72 ln-..s 6.00 & .51 5'1enc S.76 UI A GnBCI US t .80 ~ C9 •·r . . . Fdn Gr 3,n 4.12 Grwtll S '' 6.46 Grwtfl 5.32 S.11 Ultra F Ut 7 :tt Venoct 4 M S,all A Gt°' •.Ol 4.40 ornp 811 1· hi fl!OUNDSRS SIQl\lll 7.tl uo N•W t NO I.I': 5enclllel ..... 9,,, \)1d SvcF l"n H.L. A Gnlnc S.'4 6.4' llmCI Fd I Cl) 0"°41 .. 1 ltl:YUOHI: EQulty 14 ... 16.2• $efltry F 11.1112.13 USAA~ ·'* H.L. A G Vtn t 30 10,16 ~d 9,01 H L-Ofwth 4.56 4.tt Cll\I 81 t7.10 11.tt Grwth 8,tl .... SMAltl HU> Git,. ; US G .St t Pl iE9'Y Gr 6.~ 4.'3 Ot'I\ Inv US 9,7S lncom ,0,7S 1t.7 C11'11 82 '7.47 tt.14 iMoin 13.S814.7t Comst U9 S.13 US&..111 llUMOS:. Fnc1 Am 6 OS •.•t Min 9w .S.S7 N I.. , =I I 6.S 9.t Cllst BA 7.33 I-OJ Sloe i!.11 14.~ Entrpr S. u U2 •• F 3.tt 4.H PrM Ill 3.1' 1.70 QlnMt In •.M N.t... , II 7,'2 l .S Cllst Kt 6.1S 1 • .0 NEA Ml , 8.17 •• , Fltl f'd 4.~ 4 .... a.I Fnd 7Jlt 7. -""" Of1'I us u1 E;.'.c 1u2 12.M fl•A Kt..•H eus1 ict s.os s.» Htvwtll 1.n H 1.. Hlfbl' 1,14 8.2l eom st1t 11. 11 Nf1 INln A.17 4.S6 &.07 N.L OlltOUf': Cvsl SI 11.I• 1'.90 NtwtOll 1C1 ti N.t... lAOtl L 6.«I 6.99 VA&.U• LtM ,D t • 4.Jt N.L. DC\.A Alli ~TC 6.06 6.M Ont S1 8 ~ 9M Hew Wld 10.73 1t.7' ~ FO t ,97 1.71 Vel l.fte S ~ ,S ! °' t.tt '·~ Olt!OU .. : Gwtfl Sr S.S.. 6.07 ~ ~ 1.n 8. to Nlchlft U .41 N.L. SHURSOM llOS! Vel lt'C A." 4: 3 ~, ··n 10.e.J Fr 111Cm us 1.11 , S4 1.02 3.30 Nfft 1v1r 1s.s1 N L. ,.,,.,,, u .11 "·'' ... ., }:" 6.u .. : btic" ~ 8 • U'l vs ov s •.M 10.2j 10 "·" ot. Orneot 1.,. 1 • .ie 1ncom 16.•7 1t;oc Vt! 2 • i, u 0.Uy In 1001'f,L, Otlw 9 4 10,3") Utllltlo ._,, 4 Sl Polen J.18 S~A7 °"'"Will U.,N.t., lnwst I.Ji •.IC re . °'1trtfl &.Sl 7 n Dt1i. 3.'7 A.JA it.t CAO 1 •1 U7 l.Jldml1I .. ff 7.20 Ol"NNMM flO; Sh DtM t) 4' NL. O llS• lllCllfTI Ul 1:21 s--2'.SC N.L. ~ltt El(ty 12 J.~ LD t.oi. tUl 14.li Alm I'd t.tl '~ff SIOMA flUNOS:· -st '.a U1 PMMnl 10.n u.n tf QI ..,, 4.31 I LtEq .14 '·"' ~lie 1.00 1.01 Op 'M 6.11 t c:.o Sfll' 1.0j 1 JC vs Cilfft J.7t !'° S..Ctr 4 4 A •• $ 14.14 N.L-d Mi CIO 7.tl H.L OllOUP'; lncom 7.4' I f,W Sii U• 10:41 "*1 1' 0J4 ,. .... Inv .: ... ,.1' Dr -IAO N.L. l'VMDS IMCf' U« 14.ll U.'2 ~Mony I I 00 .,. Tr•'t St\ 7.Sf 1'oc =0 ·,. L. WI Netl t .77 10.J' CHtaY .. US O•f' OllOUP: .. ,, 6... "" ,. s & ..,, Vtfttw .. ., • 41 t I .. ft I.- Audas " t.tc f.lt !1 "'~ 16.'111.tl c.otnm eot I 1.1 ln<om tO.U l'"°' C 8": t. 1000 ~tfl a '·'°Ht... VA AllO 'ettp · X• ,.,. 4.1. 4 4<1 lfT'4HIC 618 1 Al Rfft<ll ;}. .. $.M reml • 1.S-4 l&Or 10 ,. N L l~ 1$..1 t1 Ii OMTCHh LI' 13 11 14.U llldvJ Ir t.91 10 ~ Utt 1111y , .. •· 11 P9t.Mr 7 '1 N t... . Oeftfl' '0~ 11'.~:° t"""t 1 e'i7 ell A 4 4S ._... 'ff LA 10,04 H.L PUC!f US U~ UftCOl..M ~'f&.: Pltllt "9v U2 SAi 111" a.• 1:.S ,..,..,. II ..... ~= • t: ~:r.1,,.·~::; 1:::~:~~s.L~ 'tn,..·c = ... ":~ t-r.N.'f. ~I: l:::=·t ·-.: .::;:.1 ~ i ~:·~"fi 8LC Gt11 9 62 10.51 . &I! Mv Iii (I) -'" 11\d t•,41 H.L. ' Op I.Cl& H L ~It "cl 6.lt .... lrt J ... 1tf L. nn t-t 1 99CK rnc t.7• H t· ~e °' 1 . .0 .... Gui~ t• >O N.L. ~ IU7 N.L. -..,.,. c , " • « • AH ••o Oltf!i1 • " F.~ 1;.~ 'u:J-;~ =:...: ... e-~:l "tunc1 I.TON.~~~:~ ~ • ?h0r~ tr• IUO r::.r,0 :.n ~tt I tg ~ ~ ,. H .... II f'd HI us """"" s_. •.• c.. '14 N t.. Caot.tl ' .... L. ~ in .. 5 H• lltOlltO f'1 , 1.IJPf.l .:f:n<Of'll 1. .. 7.tt~lle 12"7Nt.. I~ 1ttl.131P'tG' 4'7N.~ flt UJH '°° llncl ,_,. N.L. " •••• ,. rt ot" ··u .. L o ... : "" .~ iJ" ,;p ~ !IK • 2' ... ij~ . ,,,. J 'I 101 Fnd 1.61 N.L. !Mmo ,,.. Ui rt Lv • ' ... L AH ltt 7.ot 1.&A "'"" • • ... L. "9 Sir 11.t:J >t'. Gf .... 'l 81f'unr &.80 1 fi. pell ~ f ?9 U1 Hlrv f'd t. N.L-.Incl M • t .71 tO ... ll10Nl91l l IT&AOMAN "OS 4.tf S. ,, ~· \ \ .,, ,, ,,. ,,, ~ ''> ~ '14 lt• '11 \4 II) 'I• "• ~· llo v. ,,.. llo "' ~ .,. ~ 6 It ,,.. ;,; r,; .,. .,. 0 l 9• 0 9 1 I .1 7 1 ' • 0 8 l ' ,1 0 I I 7 1 t ) s , I J ' 1 . \' I \ •• Egg Dispute They Shell Out for Ada W By MILTON MOSKOWITZ orried about heart disease, Amtricaos have cut way back on thelr consumption ot eees -and this rejection has prompted the nalioo's egg producers to ante up for an ad-vertlalng kitty to change your mind. pag~di,~~ ::;:!i?~f:g,~o be bombarded soon with pro- Rut in launching thia "eat eggs" campaign the pro- ducers. have a serious problem. They are going to have a hard Ume confronting lhe very issue that bas caused the sales d~cUne : the alleged l1nk between heart disease and roods ~bin cholesterol rootent. EG,,GS ARE HJGll jn cholesterol and a .se r ies or medical ~tudles dating )>ack many years h as as- Money Tree sociated coronary heart disease w ith h igh cholesterol levels. The evidence is by no means conclusive but it is strong enough for many health organizations and doctors to rec?mmend tha t people red':-'ce their intake of dairy foods. Consumers have certainly taken that advice when it comes to eggs. In 1945, thelhverage American was eating 400 eg~s n year, better than one each day. Jn 1975, con- sumption fell to a!1 all-time low of 275 eggs per person. That amounts to a decbneof about one-tbird. Egg pr~ucers were polled recently on whether t hey would ~ walhn~ to assess themselves to r aise monies for a promotional ~nve to counteract the anti-egg forces Three out off our said "yes.'' · THE Pl.AN NOW is to have each producer put up s <'ents for ~very ca~e brought to market. A case bas so dozen eggs .• which m~ans that, based on current production, the egg. industry will be able to assemble from $8 to $10 million for its propaganda drive. . !he referendum of egg farmers was conducted by the A~culture Depar tment. But even as the producers were voting to assess themselves for this advertising, another government agency, the Federal Trade Commission <ITC>. ~as ~a~ning the industry not to attempt to refute the medical fmdmgs on heart disease and cholesterol. . Judge Ernest G. Rames, an FTC administrative law JUdg~. r uled on a complaint filed by the FTC last year, af. firming that the National Commission on Egg Nutrition !NCEN.> had m ade "false and unsubstantiated claim s in promohn~ the industry's views con<'erning the role or eggs in heart d1sease." , . NCEN. an arm of the egg industry, had r un ads promot- ing the ~oodn~ss of eggs and denying that there was a health hazard_ m ~~ting them. Labeli?g these ads.'' misleading and deceptive, Judge Barnes said "there exists a substantial ~Y of c?mpetenl and reliable scientific evidence that eat- ing eggs_ increases the risk of heart attacks," and he asked th~t the industry be enjoined from promoting its product in this m anner. IF THIS DECISION by Judge Barnes is to stand (it still has to be approved by the FTC), then the egg people will re· ally have their work cut out for them. How do you persuade consumers that eggs are good for them when you can't reply to the allegations that lhey are ha rmful? Watch the legend on your egg cartons to see how the in ctustry handles this one. More Energy Usage ,-S~A~~G ~~~;.~~an~d~~i? more :md more elc<'trt<'ity to run htmseholds and businesses. will consume an average of 2.5 per<'ent more energy per person each year until the end of the 20th Century, ac<'ording ton government forcrast. ' By thC' year 2000, the nation will be using more than twice as much energy annually as it does now, the Bureau of Mining prechcted in a report released this week. The United States will need the equivalent of 163,430 . trillion British Thermal Units in all forms of heat. light and power to me<'t its needs by the turn of the century. the report ·said. NEARl.Y HAJ,F of that ('Oming mostly from coal, petroleum. n atural gas and mtC'lear power -will be used in 2000 A.O . to generate electricity. The bureau said its report was based on f1ssumpl1ons that some surface mining ol coal will be permitted, off- shore oil leasing accelerat- ed, energy resear ch con- tinued. natural gas price con- trols relaxed and domestic erude oil pri<'es deregulated. Nuclear power con - sumption will rise from I 6 per<'enl of total U.S. energy used to 28.2 percent, lt\e re- port said. But even wit h anticipated commercial in- troduction of the highly effi- cient "breeder" reactor after 1985, nudear power can be •·only a partial answer" to future needs. Plymouth's Newest Mini-import Debuts DETROIT CAP> -The Plymouth Arrow, the latest entry in a growing U.S. field or s mall, low-priced cars im- ported from Japan, debuted Wednesday on the West Coast. where the m inicar battle is ricrcest. · Chrysler Corp .. whjch is staging the little <'ar's mid- year preview in Los Angeles. plans to import 25,000 Arrows in the first quarter of the year. About the size of t he Toyota Corolla. Datstm B-210 nnd Chevrolet Chevette, the Arrow becomes the eighth Japanese car to compete in the U.S. m arket for 1976. and the third to be imported by a U.S. compan y. THE ARROW will join it.& look-alike Dodge Colt, whkh Chrysler has been importing for several year s. ~th cars are built by M itsubisht. Gener al Motors' Ruick Division ls imrorting for the first tlme in 1976 a J apnnese Opel. built by Js uiu a nd slmltar ln slte to the Arrow and Colt . The Opel had been built by OM's Adam Opel sub· sldJary in Wesl Germany, bul GM decided to s top importing it last year because or rislng COltl abroad that price!d the Opel out of the economy market. Jn addition. the American public can choose amons To1ota, Dats un. Honda, Mazda and Subaru. Eachsold 1tron1ly tn 1975, derplte the ~N HIGH GEAR) domestic car slump. A1,l . SMAJ,J, imports with good fuel economy sold well last year because or ris- ing gasoline prices. but J apanese cars flexed the g reatest sales muscle. Indust ry analysts attribute their s uccess entirely to low prices, which have eroded the traditional strenfrt h of car~ imported from an lnnation- beset Europe. CHRYSLE R, THE only ll.S. firm s till without a domestic sub<'ompact, hopes the Arrow and Colt will keep the company competitive in the s mall-car e nd o r the market until Chrysler can br· !ng out a new U.S.·bullt minkar In 1978. Jndustry obAervers say Chrysler hopes to 1ell 100.000 C.Olts and Arrows this year. Colt sales ln 1975 totaled about fl>.000. By contrast, GM has a modest gopl for Its new Opel. P.uick plans to Import them nt 1 n rate of only 2.000 a month ln· ltlally. Sah~• ot the West German Opel last year totaled about .f0.000. • Thursday. J1nu1ry 9 1978 s DAILY PILOT Thur&day' Aftern~n Prices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE HEW YORK • rUPll -toirl Ntt l'ollOwl,,. ~ Pf'lc.ft Oii the Pl~ CJaM a. ,... Y11tll Mo<ll h<ftlne9. .... ..., ge·•t> 4S ttYt• \Ii ..,I! lllOS> ust OIQ. '"" • • • "' ... --.\ Co 1.10 7 S7 11 .,. 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W>rld' Al"" 6 4 41~-'°" Wr1Qly1.40I 10 " '9'11-Wyly (orp • » JI,-\'t l J l DAILY PILOT Thu~ay, Januery &. 1979 ·~ . . . -~-· t-9 ·-·. '" . -::r:;;v\~' ... The meeting just broke up. It's going to be a long Bicentennial!" Lltl. Boyd Watering Your Booze Liquor drinkers, check your bottles .. Dis- tillers of more than 100 hard booze brands 10 re- cent months have s ilently dropped the proof of their tonics from 86 to~. simply by watering the grog. No price changes, no public an- notrncements. They're just squirting in more distilled water to cut th~ kick and pick up the pennies. · . Political campaigners who shake hands too much als o can comedown with that ailment known as tennis elbow. Even to this day in Italy, as many as 1,000 people on any given sunny afternoon wend their way to the grave of fas cist dictator Benito Mussolini. corres pondents report. BACHE WR PRESIDENT Q. "Have we ever had a bachelor presi- dent?" A. Only one.James Buchanan. He gave up the notion of matrimony at the age of 28 after the girl he was going to marry killed herself. He did not forever live alone thereafter, however. You know that song called "Listen to the Mock· ingbird"? It was dedicated to one Harriett Lane, a violet -e yed blonde re- nowned as the beauty of the day. She was Buchanan's niece. She moved in with him and saw to it that the s alt and pepper were in the right shakers, soon. So you always thought that Superman's real name was Clark Kent, did you? Wrong! Hts r eal name was Kai-El. His adoptive parents John and Martha Kent re- na med the little tyke. ELEPHANT HAIR It's not entirely safe to pull the hair out of the end of an elephant 's tail. Such a beast has been known to get testy about it. So the hazard in acquiring such probably has so~ething t~do with why circus performers thmk nothing makes a better good luck talisman than a tuft of elephant hair. Address marl to L .M. Boyd. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa,92626. Teachers Fired For 'Box' Tactic BUTTE . '.\lont. (AP> -Two teache:,s who_ con- . fined a r eta rded child in a s_mall behav1oual modification" box will not be rehired and the school principal will be de moted, school officials sar,. . The fate of the three educators in the boy-m· hox" furor w as an---------- nounced by School Dis- t rict Supt. Forres t Wilson in a s tatement is- ~ued by the Board of Trustees. The boy was not identified. THE OCTOBER dis· closure that two teachers at the Emerson School locked a 12-year -old re· tarded s tude nt in a wooden 4 1~· by 41 2 · by 3-foot bolt generated a He Was The Last Holdout f' SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The Assembly Health Committee has present· 1 ed a baby's pacifier and • a commendatory r e- .. so lut io n to A s · semblyman Gordon Du!fy <R-Hanford), for "' becoming the last com· " mittee member to give up smoking. Then, chairman Barry Keene <D·Eureka>, or-· dered ash trays removed Wednesday from the =' hearing room where the JJ -member committee mffts. •·n·s embarrassing to • me that r have to be the ' last one on this commlt· . ; tee to quH,0 Duffy aa1d, ;"'-promlsin1 to return tM "" pi11clller and resolution Ir he resumed th bablL • public outcry. The box had no interior ii· lumination, almost no ventilation and just two small silver-dollar-sized holes for observation. The teachers claimed use of the device was re- a sonable to control vio l ent behavior. R e lat ives of the youngster said the treat· ment was cruel and caused emotional pro- blems for the boy. THE BOARD ruled the two teachers will be al· lowed to serve through the school year but their contracts will not be re- newed for next year. The principal will be demot- ed to a regular teaching past. effective next Sep- tember. Principal Don Her · rington left his orfice after being advised of the board's decision. TEACHERS GAYLE Stagg. 24. and Sallie Ulsher . 29, said they would consult an at- torney retained by the Rutte local of the Montana Federation of Teachers. The teachers charged last month that they had become victims of a witcbbunt and com· plained of receiving threatening telephone calls and letter&. They s aid that the box was used as last resort for violent.. uncontrollable tantrums. · Glidden Spred House · Paint Bicentennlal Plate • A ti IUSS_ ....... ,let. .............. Sher Ce. •• •AIMricm .................... . .-.Ss.t 276 Woven Yarn Plant H•neer •A.....W..-..,i. ,...., . . "~ii•wWot :~ Bol•r9 JUt• Plant Hanger ......................... • Ciiek• tf ...... , ... .376 Spred Satin Wall Paint • Glidden top .,.lity latea pah•t • Dries quickly to o velvet like finish • Tools dton up with water :; 6!~ • Wtother resistant acrylic latu finish ""' its litouty • Ouicll drying Oft eaterior wood and masonry Reg. 876 11.79 Gal. Spred Semi-Gloss Latex Enamel • NM-yellewi .. -i...,nve4 illvrHility • lcleel for ttSe i. •r4 w"r erto1 • my te vs• -· ceven ~utlfully ~1; 9!~~,.... 9 Inch Paint Roller Covers ...... --·· ...... , ..... .,,.kett.e ...... n • n. .-M ... '" °" .... .., ... ...... 76C 7 6' Tri-Color Garden Hose • R-4, wfiire & W.. hese is 76 ft '°"' . • R_eirtferc-4 Svperffu 1tyl.. S/I'' cl•merer ' 776 \• " Delta 'Delex" Kitchen Faucet • hck .......... , .... ... • htre hee.y ctn.. ,...... • c .... -.. .......... i.1.121• 1476 Vigoro 6-in-1 Dichondra food • ftt4s, Wfe4s & lilf1 .......... tttucts • Ctt1r.1M ;,_ fer s..1; H.r.frff ··7li~ .. , .,. t Pruning Shears • :: tflllllity ..... ,.., <stti..,, """"" , ,......_ .. y_, ...,_, & ,_,, , ... • llolles ere <•nre4 for ecsy tri-.i.... •"' rltey •twy ... ,,. IS1' -~ ...... 176 Toilet Repair · Flush Lever •S..,...._-~..._.,.. .a.,... ........... _ ... , ..... ................... imsc 176 I • ; .- DAILY Pit.OT £1 h • . . I') Laser Device to Siilistitute for Football Referee· NEW YORK C~P) -A lanr certain instances. an inch of the correct posltlall. wu proposed to him by a Tex· . . be supplied two or three ot-ceJ)tor on the nose ol the ban! beam which wm take the guen The apparatus wW be used Viewers wlll be able to follow u outfit known as Sports Laser ficlal$ on the fleld . The carriage module is movef work out of spQttina the to spot the ball starting each the procedures on their TV Co., of Hondo. The receptor rod is mounted down the field until the laser football will be used in a m$r Hrles of downs, replacing it screens. "I said lt wu okay with me if on a belt and In no way in· beam encounters the receplOI' e~e for the first tlme in the ·after an incompleted pass, de· "Viewers will just have to it was okay with NBC,'' terferes with the official's re· rod, thereby activating tht _:.:w-or Bowl at Mobile, Ala., termining first downs and follow the blue Ugbt on their Schuessler aald. NBC decided gular duties. The carriage flash unit. 1 ·,;,unday. stepping off correct yardage. screens to see the results of the to give It a try. module, about 30 inches long Finkel said the electron!' The National Broadcasting It will not in any way serve to electronic input which makes Equipment consists ot a and 16 lncbes from the top or equipment not only will takt • Co .• which wjll nationally· settle disputes on conr this idea wor~,t· satd Georp portable module containing a the module to ground level, is humanerroroutofspotUngt~ twelecast the game, announced troversialplays. finkelofNBC',producerolthe · laser beam which wlll be protected by a shield. ball but also should speed up ednesday the use of Italsowillbeusedinplaclng telecast. moved up and down the Wbentheballlsdowned,in· thegamesincethechainswil electronic accoutrements to the ball on the bashmarks, Rea Schuessler , director of sidelines aed a receptor rod, stead of marking the ball with not have to be brought onto the substitute for the referee in spotting it within a traction of the Sen1oi:Bow1, said the idea like a 20-ioch wand, which will his foot, the official puts tbe re· field for measurement. • UPITe...-.e Russ ian on the Ran The Chicago Black Hawks' Dick Redmond foul s Vladimir Gostyuslev of the Soviet ice hockey team in Chicago Stadium. At right is Hawks goalie Tony Esposito. The Sov· iets won the exhibition game, 4-2 Wednes- day night. LA, Halos Drafting Outfielders , By Tbe Associated Press The California Angels and Los Angeles Dodgers went for out- fielders Wednesday in the rrrst round of the major league baseball free agent draft. The Angels· ·-selected., ~ear­ old left-handed hitter ~~eb- . belts, who hit .374 for Florida State last year. · 1 Michael Wetklow, al9-year-old irom Sacramento Citf College, was the Dodgers' first'C!raft pick. The 6·foot·4, 100-pound~ ~also a fine basketball player. The Dodgers chose 14 players and eight of them were pitchers -perhaps prompted by the ap- pa r ent lo ss of Andy Messersmith, who has been declared a free agent. The No. 2. 3 and Ss electiQns were all right-handed hurlers from California -David Pat- terson of Cerritos College, Paul Bain of El Camino College and Tim De Wald of Cypress College. Bruins, SC Play; HB Bowler Leads UCLA's Bruins, the defending national collegiate basketball champions, open defense or their Pacific-8 title tonight at 8 battl- ing Oregon at Eugene. The Bruins, 10-1, are favored in their invasion of Oregon as a solid challenger bas evolved in the Univers ity of Washington Huskies, the only Pac-8 team still undefeated. While UCLA plays at Oregon and Southern California at Oregon State tonight, the Huskies open their bid on Friday night at California and then meet the upset-minded Stanford Iri- dians the next night. Soper in Lead ALAMEDA -Butch Soper of Huntington Beach went into the third round of the $65,000 Alameda Open Bowling Tourna- ment today with an ~-pin lead and a 230-a-game average. -each had six points in the finale that started at 79-79 and saw the Lakers move to a 91-87 lead on eight points by Gail Goodrich. \.OS ANGELES (1031 -W.mer 3, Ford 10, AbOul.Jabtler 17. Goodrich 27, Allen IS, LMlti 2, Ruqell13.~0.n!.lst. TOlals47~1t. BOSTON (109) -11avlluk 6, KUb9rsld 2, C:OW-23, Wl\1-1e, lcoft 22, Silas•. McOonakl I, Ard•. Nelton It. Tot.ls St 7.9, Los A19les 27 21 14 24 -103 ~ton 27 11 14 30 -109 Fouled out: N-. Tol•I touls: Los Angtles 22. '&oston19. TecMlcaltoul: BostonCoachHelntohn. A: 14,13'. Plaffer Kiiied CARLSTADT, N.J . -The secon d-leading scorer on Fairleigh Dickinson University's basketl>all team was killed and two teammates seriously injured early today in a one.car accident on slippery Route 17 here, police said. Ben Johnson, 18, of Plainfield, N.J ., was dead on arrival at Hackens ack Hospital Crom severe bead injuries and a crushed chest, according to a hospital spokesman. Colleges' Oldest Playe r? OGDEN, Utah CAP) -Dan Skinner plays junior varsity basketball for Weber State College and looks forward to a career in high school coaching. That alone is unique since his doctor told him three years ago be would never participate in athletics again. But Skinner is 35, eight years older than his coach and possibly the oldest college player in the country. He carries 19 credits, does a bit of farming and may wrangle a spot on Weber's rodeo team. In three years his oldest son will be in college. . He suffered two crushed discs in his lower back three years ago when he slipped and fell on ice eil route to work at nearby Hill Air Force Base. The injury left bis left l~ immobile for several months. "It took a lot of hard work with weights and jogging to get my leg back into shape. I was intent to prove the doctor wrong for saying I'd never be able to participate in athletics again. I wasn't about to let a back injury keep me down," said Skinner. At S·foot·lO Skinner says he makes up for his lack of height with quickness, bustle and de- termination, but, "I've always wished I was 6·foot-8 because I've never been able t9 look eye-to-eye with my opponent.'' JV coach Pete Barry says the "kids" on the team look up to Skinner as they struggle to keep pace with him. "He's a real com- petitor, sometimes too much so !or the other players," the 27. year-old Barry said, adding that Skinner is an inspiration an(\ pro· vides an excellent competitive spirit. Skinner, a junior on the GI Bill, will graduate with a physical education major in the spring of m1. He says it's rough playing with the younger generation and he gets his share of bumps and bruises. "But that's part of the game and I love it," he said. He says he got started with the junior varsity team by chance. "I was watching the team work out one day when former coach Steve Sparks saw me and asked if I was interested in playing. I told him I was 35 years old, but had been playing for years and would give it a try if be wanted,'' Skinner said. "Many of my friends thought I was crazy to dive into college b~ketball at my age," he added. · California chose a total of 21 players. Their top selection in the secondary phase of tbe draft was right-hand pitcher Greg Johnson. 18, who graduated from Santiago High School in Garden Grove, Calif., after achieving a 7-4 r e- cord with a 1.20 earned run average. Soper had 2, 770 to 2,690 for Gary Dickinson of Fort Worth, who led after Wednesday af- ternoon's first six-game block with 1,420, but could topple only 1,Z70 in the night block. Soper had 1,383 in the afternoon and 1,387 Thursday ni ght on games of 243, 218, 222, 259, 236 and209. Hamill in Lead Orange Cormty Girls Trail * * * Area1 .Aces Go On2ndRound Mission Viejo's Dave Patterson and Dana Point's Bill Springman were selected in the second round of baseball's free agent draft Wednesday. • Also picked were Golden West College outfielder Leo Sutherland (first round) and ex-Westminste11 ·High a n d G WC pitcher Pat Espinoza (eighth round). Patterson , a Mission Viejo High graduate, played at UC Irvine last season. A right-handed pitcher'· hew as drafted by the Dodgers. He had a 2·5 recor4 and a 3.47 e.r. a. at UCI last year. ... Springm an, who prepped at Dana Hills High and battlc:t .193 for Saddleb ack College last season, waa picked by tbe San Dieeo Padres. He'• a second baseman. Aacard t o Ro•e NEW YORK -Pete Rose of the baseball champion Cincin- nati Reds won the 26th annual Hickok Professional Athlete of the Year today, beating golfer ,Jack Nicklaus and heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali in close voting by sports writers and sportscasters. Rick Barry of the National Basketball A ss ociation <'hampion Golden State Warriors finished fourth and Minnesota Vikings' quarterback Fran Tarkenton was fifth. . La1t.en Le•e BOSTON -Don Nelson came off the bench and scored 11 of his 18 points in the fourth period to lead the Boston Celtics to a 109-103 National Basketball As- sociation victory over the Los Angeles Lakers Wednesday night. A bucket by Nelson liM the game at 91 mid way through the period, t hen be pushed the Celtics in f root 99-95 with a Jumper and iced the game at 109-99 with another basket. Charlie Scott and Jo Jo White COLORADO SPRINGS (AP) -Two-time defending champion Dorothy Hamill had no reason to fear, and neither did most of the other favorites Wednesday at the U .S. Fi~ure Skating Championships . Hamill conquered her usual case of nerves during the com- pulsory figures and turned in a near-flawless performance to take a comfortable lead in the senior ladies' di vision. The 19-year·old starlet had ap- proached the compulsOry figures with special caution, knowing her propensity for becoming nervous during the exacting competition. •'When I get nervous, I start to shake and my feet go wobbly," she had said. But she kept her composure and was rated first by all seven judg~. In second place was Kath Malmberg of Rockford, Ill., followed by a trio of Californians. Wendy Burge of Garden Grove was a solid third, Linda Fra- ttanne of Los Angeles fourth and B•rbie Smith of Westminster fifth. The leaders after the opening round o( the pairs competition also ca m e as no s urprise. Smooth-skating Tai Babilonia and Randy Gardner of Los Angeles were second in the nationals a year ago behind Melissa Militano and Johnny Johns. But, the champions re· tired this year. DOROTHY HAMILL RICK BASHORE Edison KEVIN PATTERSON · Fountain yalleJ Football Elite VIC RAKHSHANI Edison · KEITH DIONNE . Huntlng_tC?~ 8!tach All-CIF Honors To Area Foursome Foiir Orange Coast area prep football stars have been setectea on the All-CIF 4-A teams as picked by the Citizens Savings Athletic Foundation board. Leading the way are Edison's Rick Bashore a n d Vic Rakhshani, both tabbed on the first team. Gleaning second team berths are Fountain Valley's Kevin Pat- terson and Huntington Beach's Keith Dionne. Another standout from the area, Costa Mesa's Rob Mc- Cormisb or Anaheim's Servite High School, earned fi rst team honors at linebacker. The 200· pound senior was credited with 74 lead t ackles and was the Angelus League's most valuable player on defense. Servite shut out six foes. Player of the year is Jon Van Vuren of South Hills, who scored 18 touchdowns, ran and caught passes for over 1,500 yards, had a 39.2 punting average and in· tercepted 26 passes in three seasons. . Bashore was a complete player !or the Chargers, with his run- ning, passing and great defense in the secondary. He passed for 1,403 yards with 99 completions in 175 attempts, and 13 touchdowns. He intercepted four passes and returned one for a touchdown and is being highly recruited by the major colleges. · Rakshaoi operated at tight end and linebacker for Edison and was selected on the f io;t team as a tight end. Although he only turned 17 during his senior season, he was considered the best blocking tight end in Orange County. He caught 29 passes for 487 yards and three touchdowns. And 21 of those catches were for first . downs. At 6·3, 208, he too, is being highly r ecruited. Fountain Valley's Patterson is t he smallest (185 pounds) lineman of any on tbe two teams. As a nose guard he terrorized the opposition with outstanding abili· ty to move and pressure the quarterbacks and runners. Redlands coach Paul Woma c· called Patterson the best nos man he'd seen in 15 years. Dionne was ... lineman of th year in tbe E mpire League ani the Orange Coast area and is cor sidered a sleeper for major col legeduty. He played at a 200.pound level but could easily move into th 250-pound range. On a 3·6 tean which failed to make the CIJ playoffs, be was in on 120 tackles including 12 sacks on th1 quarterback. * * * First Team Offense Pos.Player,Scbool Wt C B-Ford, SJB 185 Sl B-Muno, Loyola 183 St B-Johnston, St. Paul 175 Sl B-Hargrove, LB Poly 195 SJ R-Parma, Kennedy 170 St R-Stivers, W.C. 164 SJ R-Rakhshani, Edison 208 Si L-McFarJand, St. Paul 235 Si L-Butler, Loyola 230 Si L-Close, Camarillo 210 Si L-Katsaros, So. Hills 245 Sr C-SCheper, Crespi 212m Sl K-Gibson. W. Torr. 145 St First Team Defense B-Van Vuren, So. fills 185 Sr B-Basbore, Edison 175 Sr B-Pugh, Loyola 165 Sl B-Baggott, Servile 170 Sr LB-McCormlsh,Servite 200 St LB-Peterson, W. Torr. 196 Sr LB-Woolway, Loyola 100 Jr LB-Johnston, Fontana 175 Sr L-McEwen, No. Torr. 218 Sr L-Munoz, Chaffey 265 St L-Anderson, Arcadia 250 Sr L-Patterson, FV 185 Sr L-Kentris, St. Paul 205 Sr Se~nd Team {)(fense B-Al!aro, W.C. 185 Sr B-Ancicb, St. Paul 190 Sr B-Nomura, Loyola 170 Sr B-Boswell, W'inster 200 Sr B-Larsen, Kennedy 170 Sr R-Hons, West Torr. 155 Sr R-O'Connell, Glendora 185 Sr R-Center, West. Torr. 208 Sr L-Pugh, Sao Marcos 235 Sr L-BelJ, Western 218 Sr L-Cabrera, Pius X 215 Sr L-Linnin, Arcadia 215 Sr Both Springman and Patte~ are playing for Cerritos College m .Norwalk. SUtherland was drafted by the Chica., White Sox and E.tplnoza, now pitching at UCLA, was picked by Baltimore. Sutherland Is a SanUa10 HJ eh graduate. Film Shows hiterference--Fisk . . C-Katnik, Foothill 215 Sr K-Aragon, Los Altos 210 Sr Setond Team Defense B-Smitb, Sta Monica 185 Sr B-Carmicbael, Anahelml76. Sr B--Oermaln, St. Paul . 180 Sr 8--&bwam. Simi 185 Sc LB-Kau!ma".J. Sta. Mon. lM st LB--Ottman, \;f'espi 195 Sr LE-Ybarra, Anaheim 156 Sr LB-Maloney, LB Poly l~ Sr L-Echevarria. A 'btim 198 Sr · . Giants Deny Sale TOR ONTO -The San Jl'ranclaco Giants and a c.anadlan brewery denied Wec.tn.day a re- port that Horace Stoneham, °'"*' of t he National Leape club, bad aareed to Hl1 tbe team to the brewery. BOSTON (AP) -Catcher Carlton Fisk of the Boston Red Sox insisted again thnl be was in· terfered with on the controversial play which cost the team the third aame of the 1975 World Series .aeainst the Clnclnnati Reds. "No, I didn't sec anything dif- ferent and I stUI thtnk it was In- terference," Fisk said alter view· in~theofftcial WorldSerlesfilm. The Red So1, who lost to the Reds in M Ven Cames, were hurt badly on the play ln the 10th inning of the third game. With the score tied 5-5 in the tut ol the 10th at ctncinnlftt Ed Armbrister put down a sacrU'lce bunt . Fisk, prevented Crom gettlnl to the ball as Ar mbrist• broke !or first, threw wildly to second bue when be flnall.1 pteked up the ball, settlna up the Reds• winning run. "He may have triedtogetouto{ my way but It · was still ln· terference, •• Fisk said. "I couldn't play the ball the way 1 normally would." Other than that, Fisk said the World Serles film, entitled "Super Series," was an "out· standing movie.·' "However It stOl winds up Them4. Us3,''Fiskaaid "It's a great Cit m," Boston lhlrd baseman Rico PetrocelJl 1aid. "You see 10 many more things that you don't really see when you'reon the field playiJ\g." "I love It,'' said veteran pitcher Luis Tlant, who won two games apinst the Reds. "They ccm to give it all. The only thing I don't llke ls the ending." Ir-Fredette. Oxnard 232 Sr L-Ross, St. Paul 212 Sr L-Freeman, Camarillo 197 St L-Dtoa11e, Rnt. lleada 211 Sr • J (2 OAfLY PILOT Corona I 1n 52-36 . Victory I By ROG ER CARLSON Ottll•0.ll'tPl ... 9'1ft Unbeaten Corona del Mar. the only perfect prep basketball team in Orange Co unty , cont inued its winning ways Wednesday night in the opening round of Century League act ion as the Sea Kings put down visiting El Modena, 52·36. Only briefly did the Vanguards of El Modena appear capable of s taying with coach Tandy Gillis' impressive Sea Kings, as they outscored CdM, 7-4. in the first four minutes of action behind 6-8 Richard Ruiz. But it took El Modena 12 more minutes to get its next seven points and by then the Sea Kings were on their way with a 27-14 halftime bulge. Alex Black. Corona del Mar's 6-6 junior. returned after missing two ga m es with injury and scored 13. • Thu~ay. January a. 1978 Dally Piiot pl!Otos lly L.ff P•YM • I • • ...... ~-, 11 • m a Row Aids Marina By GLENN WIDTE °'ti. 0.11., ...... S&tft Marina Hieh's Rieb Branning was credited with 10 assists to equal the CIF careerrecordof 535 as he helped the Vikings to an 8·58 maulin g of W estminster Wednesday night to open Sunset League basketball warfare. Br anning contributed 27 points and four steals /interceptions to t he cause as coach Steve Popovicb's forces success.fully rebounded from their upset at the hands of Huntington Beach last Friday. And despite Branning's s parkl- ing statistics. it was a team effort for the hosts, who for one quarter shot as well as I have ever seen in any high school game . . It was, in fact . a nearly perfect performance for three quarters in a game that was deci~ed in the first five m inutes. Manna got the first six points of the evening, yielded a bucket, then picked up the next 11 points to go up, 17-2. bound in •. The .Vikings' shooting was un- canny. Hitting an imposing 55.1 percent of their field goals for the first two quarters, they cam e back for the encore. And what a showing! Shooting from everywhere they connected on their first 11 field goal tries of the third quarter, finally missing with SO seconds to go in t he frame. By then they were ahead 62·34 against a good Lions outfit -one which had just won the Santiago t ourname nt and which had smashed 1975 CIF 2-A champ El Dorado. Coach Bob Ferguson's Lions shot 9 for 14 (64.2 percent> in the ·third quarter, yet fell even deeper in the bole because the. Vik es were shooting ~.6 per cent. And, Marina was playing a perfect floor gam e to boot, guilty of only three turnovers in three periods. Westminster did nm cold in the first half, shooting only 28.5 per- cent, however - El Modena's 6-8. 6·7 barrier inside made it tough for Corona de! Mar to go ins ide, so the Sea Kings d id their work from outside the El Modena zone and Jacque Tuz a nd Pat Ahern came throug h with 16and12counters. EDISON 'S BOB HERSON (45) GOES AFTER A LOOSE BALL. RAY GOMEZ (21 ) WATCHES. Branning, Dan Boldt and ~att Cook were ripping the Lions apart with scoring while Tom Ugland a nd Mike Buhler helped with unselfish passing and re-Ugland had the hot hand, too, missing only one of seven shots -all from 15·22 feet out. And Boldt had eight of Marina's first J2 points but got into foul trouble and ended the game with 14. . The turning point came m id way through the second period when Ahern connected on three straight from the corner to get CdM away from a 14-10 lead. Steve Schloemer added a free throw, Tuz scored twice from the free throw line. Black hit a n eight-foot hook over Ruiz and Tuz score•J from inside. That gave the-winners a 27-14 lead and their 12th victory was in sight. .Vogelsang Hits 34 As Edison Wins Tuz and Ahern each had 10 at the half and the Sea Kings protected their lead with delay tactics the final 90-120 seconds of each of the last three periods. Gillis' crew had a 20-point lead (48-28) with 3 : 18 left in the game and hit 23 of 41 from the floor for 66.l percent. El Mode n a made 15 of 44 ll gainst CdM 's tough man-to-man pressure. which was guilty of only 11 personal foul s. Doug Garn (6·-1 > missed the game for Corona due to an a nkle injury. El Mocleft• CU I ~r ... r si..p1ro Ru or Trumbo T1~,..n Estr.O. Cody • ~ti Tot.ls 19 II pf Ip 1 0 0 2 0 1 I 1 s 1 4 11 4 0 l 8 J 0 , b 0 4 0 4 1 0 0 l 1 0 0 2 H 6 t 3' CS21CdM •• ft ,,, lp R11riCke 0 0 I 0 GuiSllHS 0 0 0 0 e1ec1t • 1 2 1J St•uel 3 O 2 6 Tut 6 4 0 11> A-on 0 0 S 0 J4Mrn • O 2 12 Sclllo.nwr 1 t 1 3 HellCI 1 0 0 7 Tot.ls 1l 6 11 Sl Scor•llY Q"'~ EI MolH!n• Coron•O.I M•r a 6 6 1-36 12 IS 11 14~7 By HOWARD L HASDY Of tM Dilly Pilot Stiff Bob Vogels ang score d 3·1 points. 12 of them in the fourth quarter. to lead the Edison High Chargers to a thrilling, come· from-behind victory 70·69 over the Loara High Saxons Wednes- day night in opening Sunset League basketball action on the winner's court. Vogelsang was the spark of the Edison attack. bringing the Chargers back from an 18-point deficit (55-37 ) with 3:37 remain- ing in the third quarter. His brilliant s hooting display included inside s hots on the front of the fast brea k. baseline shots from 8 and IO feet away and 15 to 20-footers from around the key . Earlier this year he had.scored a school record 35 points against Kate Ila. Loara held the lead from out- set, jumping to a quick 6-0 edge. But the scrappy Chargers re· fused to wilt under the full-court pressing defense of the Saxons Vogelsang was the key to suc· ::McCloskey Sparks [ Eagles Past Tustin ~ ,L , .. Ry ED BURGART Of tM 01lly Pll.C Staff J im Mccloskey put on another spectacula r offensive show Wed- nesday night when his Estancia High Eagles routed the visiting Tustin Tillers. 77-54, in their Century Leag u e basketball opener at E stancia High. tempts in the first half-many came f r o m 15 -18 fe et Mccloskey caused 6-8 Kevin Kiley and 6-5 Doug Gray to each pick up three first half fouls. McCloskey has now scored 30 points or more in four games and the 6·6 center is averaging 27.0. cess for the Chargers despite picking up three quick fouls in the first period. After sitting out a portion of the s econd quarter. he came back to finish the game without a nother foul charged against him. In the first period, he con- tributed nin'e points and a pair of steals but his hottest streak was left for the final drive to the wire. Edison tied the score for the fi rst time at 63 on an 8-foot jumpt>r by Vogelsang. Ed Bell put Edison ahead with a pair of free throws with 3:48 to go. l..oara came back to take the lead, 67·65. then Vogelsang hit on a three-point play and the Chargers went in front to stay at 2:25. Mike Samuelian retrieved a loose ball with 2: 00 left and the Chargers began to run down the clock with a passing game. Mike Mccourt and Vogelsang added free throws and it was 70-67 with 35 seconds to go but a turnover and bas ket closed the gap to 70·69 with 12 s econds re- maining. The Saxons got the ball with five seconds left but a traveling rail on an over-zealous shot at- tempt gave it back to Edison and it was all over. Bob Herson contributed five important field goals for the Chargers in the second half. Lo1r1 CH) 19 tt pf tp F1tnt11rna 1 2 4 6 P Roct>t S 1 1 11 l(••no Krutclk M. Roelle !>we.ney 59G'ltl Tot•I\ 2 0 J 4 7 8 3 22 • s J 21 I 0 I 2 1 0 0 2 20 11 10 o9 1701 EdiJOn Herson Galla911er O•sllwood Samu~ll•n V09tls.tng ~II Go~r Mc(.ourt F1~ w111oam5 Totals ,, ft pf tp 6 0 3 12 1 0 4 1 2 0 3 4 1 0 , 2 u " 3 )4 1 2 1 4 1 I 1 J I 1 0 l 1 0 2 2 1 2 0 4 29 12 19 10 LGar.9 Ed1\0n k on lly Owart•n 2118201~ 10 11 11 21-70 I BOB VOGELSANG SCORES A BASKET AGAINST LOARA. Popovich said, "we shot well, moved the ball and played well together. I'm glad we were a ble to come back strong like that after losing to Huntington." W.stml111ter CSll CIOl M.rl11a. f9 ft ,. tp P•ge 4 2 2 10 lJ9lltnd Rodgers s 1 4 11 Boldt Boswell 4 1 1 9 Cook Sodders l I o 7 8"111er Segui11 1 o o 2 &inning Compton 2 1 o s W1rr.n RomlM 3 o o I> Kanter McG9rrv 2 t O S Dederick StMIMd · 1 0 1 7 Stflllbell C.lloway O 1 2 1 e.rwwr Tol•ls 2S 8 10 S8 Tot.IS kor• by Olllrt•rs lg ft pf Ip 6 o 1 n 6 2 3 14 1 1 J IS 0 0 7 0 ,~~ 2 21 ~I · 2 0 1 4 0 0 , 0 0 2 0 2 0 0 1 0 3S 10 16 80 westmlnl.ter S 13 20 70-M Marina 23 1• 23 18--eD FV Rolls; Tars Fall Fountain Valley High's Barons breezed to a 65-46 Sunset League basketball victory over visiting Western Wednesday night as a dozen Barons were in the scoring column: Newport H arbor, however. was dealt a 73-58 setback at Los ~Jamit os as the Griffin;; handcuffed Newport with their heig ht, out-r e bounding the Sailors, 24-10, in the first half. The Barons of coach Dave Brown broke it open in the third period after Wes tern pulled to within eight points at 31 ·23 with 2:03spent in the quarter. Fountain Valley beat Western on the boards by a 45-22 count, led by J on Holland's eight caroms and five ,r ebounds each by re- serves Paul Laux a nd Scott Ford. wuteni (4') ('5) ,.._tal11 V111.., S.UCy Cr•ll JohnSon Ro» Lto ~"t.f9 ~ lweguthl GoodWlll Totals •• ft ,,, '" 6 3 0 IS 0 2 3 , 6 0 3 12 0 0 2 0 3 0 0 6 0 2 1 2 1 0 1 2 0 1 1 1 2 2 7 6 18 10 13 46 Tessler. Ford Zumbo S.rrios 8o•Old V•llluenl Holland Tingey CMroll Soulllwldt Ulla K,.,..r T~1ls Scon by Qurttn ,, " ,. ,, 1 1 1 3 3 3 1 9 6 1 , 1J s 0 1 10 3 0 3 6 1 0 2 2 1 0 2 2 2 0 2 • 3 3 l ' 1 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 , 0 2 ~ 29 9 19 6S McCloskey, w ho his coach Dave Carlis le calls the best of- fensive player around, scored 33 points agains t a slow Tillers team that couldn't stop him with a zone or a man-to-man. Mccloskey h ad 23 points in a lopsided first half in which E s tancia r olled to a 44-27 Mccloskey wasn't the Eagles' only star. Guard Gary Confer, despite scoring only two points. played a fine floor game and was primarily r esp on s ib le fo r Estancia's low number of 10 turnovers (three in the first half). As for Tustin, a pre-league favorite two months ago, it was just a matter of being too slow and too mis take·prone. The Tille r s (7"6 > committe d 15 turnovers ag ainst Estancia's 2·2·1 zone press in the first half and lost the balJ 2,1 times overall. Mesa Flattens Saints, fJ6-42 Wts1~ 10 • 10 1~ Founi.in V1lley IS 12 17 21-tS Newller1 (Sii (7JI LHAl1mlt" ft ft llftP I ft ft pf tp "c,aiey' 4 4 1 12 Biker • l 2 o 8 1 halftime lead. Easily penetrating Tustin 's 2-J ·2 zone. the Eagles connected on J 8 of 30 field goal t ries. By CRAIG SHEFF OftM 01lly Piiot Stiff The Eagles didn't cool off in the third period when Tustin s witched to a man-to-man. McCloskey left the game with 2: 14 left in the period when the Eagles had spurted toa62-31 lead. Es tancia, 9·1, meets bosl Magnolia Friday night. Costa Mesa High, dominating play w it h its inside game, outscored Santa Ana High, 11-2. in the closing 31/i minutes of the first half, then went on to post an easy 66-42 win in the Century League basket ball opener at Mesa Wednesday night. &tancia hit 8 of 11 in the third· quarter when it outscored Tustin ,19-8 and sank 31 of 59 for .the game. The Tillers, who turned the ball over numerous times try- ng to get inside the Eagles' zone, only connected on 21of47. T111tl11 CS41 .lunar Hume G<1y R•Y Oesi•dlns K. l<ll•V Coctwll\ Nllioft 8.Kll.y &ltlks l.Oellf'Nft Totals ,, " ,. tp 0 4 1 4 " 0 4 11 7 I l S 3 0 0 6 2 1 I S S 3 4 13 0 0 1 0 0 , 1 2 1 0 1 2 I 0 I 2 1 1 1 3 71 12 It s.. 1n1 E1t111cia ftftpllp V111Horn 3 1 1 1 ~,,.,.,.nn 3 2 3 8 M<CIO\k•y 14 S l J3 Confer 1 O 1 l 81Kh011 l 0 l 6 ..... 2 1 10 l(roflnftldt 0 0 l Prk • 1 4 1 " laRue o O 1 0 ~ I I 2 l TotllJ 12 u i. n Costa Mesa, behind the play of Gary Spink, Mark Oman and Dan Byers, jumped to a commanding 12·4 lead. only to see the Saints tie it at~ with 3:30 to go in the opening halt. The difference though was Mccloskey and his soft touch. Hitting JO of J3 field goal at· Sure lly OU•r1•n But coach Larry Stmderman 's Mustangs fire d in 11 straight points in the next 3: JO and were never threatened again. Basketball Scores El Moftt• 49, l<•lllltl 48 SolnC..llrl9167, Ml. View SI Scl'lllrr SJ, Rosemead •9 CS.a o..n.t u .. 11el Wllrrtn 41, S.llff-r 39 CerriloHl. p.,.__. ff (2 OTI lA Mirada S7, Downey 4• Ly,,WOOdl2, Norwelll 41 CWlllttMMU .. M I Wlllttlff Sl. C.H!Of'nl• 41 Mof!Wll911o .. , La._,.,.. JS Sl~r• "·Mont. Vlst• 60 Seft\a ... '°· ,.._ S4 CHM ..... U .... , Bonita U, Waltwt S. 0Mdl'°"9 SJ, ._..,el Olll 50 er.1air1o t•. si.rr • v 1t1• •, Ana \MN 1'. s.n Olmas 4S ................... , .......,,. 4S, ArvH 19 0.rtH0.111:61, 81l4'Wl11 Par1t4I aa,'9t1 _,., Hot'tllY .. W " COT I w.n-•.~ineo NOM·U •oua CAwtoon IOt Mayfair M uu-oc1'6, St. Alltllony SI MOrMllOsldel7, Ouart• 74 Twr-• 70. MllllU I\ SI Sift Merc.ot SI, $«111 Cl•rf SO U on · I.A (MWdt 65, MuTr '4 Caltfillo2, St. JMtpl'IO CIOrf•ltl 12 1S I 1~ 14 20 It 14 _,, A short jumper by Spink SMALL BUSINESS LOAMS s 50,000J 400,000 5-15 Years SBA GUARANTEED Steve Grief & OIAMcH COUNTY OFFICE 20JtMe. ...... ., Stit.Jtl._..._..c .. IJS.3117 .... """*'"' M•NY MVTUM. Of lilfiW YQlllC Ufe ........... .., .......... " ............. , ...... started t he 11-point spree and after a long base line shot by Oman . Spink hit a J6-footer, Steve Kiley canned a trio of free throws and Byers had a basket from in close. A pair of charity tosses by Santa Ana's Richard Jensen with six seconds to go ended the Saints' drought, but by that time the score was 31 -22 and they were out of it. And if their was any doubt, Mesa outscored the Saints, 8-2, in the opening three minutes of the second half to stretch the lead to 39·24. The small Santa Anans were no match for the taller Mustangs. Mesa repeatedly got second and 1 . Pa1rlck 1 o 1 2 Che.,..,.n 3 O 0 6 third shots in dominating the boards. Schwalbe 1 O 2 7 Drake 4 1 2 9 Wilkinson 6 o 1 12 Ketner O 1 o 1 Cooke .c O 2 8 Jones 1 0 O 7 And the Mus tangs• passing game went well as they often hit the open man in close for easy buckets. Keys J o 2 6 Meld l o 1 4 OISt1t1lslao 3 0 2 6 St"t>ri~ • 3 0 11 Cr1l9 2 O 3 4 M'gomery I 0 l II> Ae9M' 2 o o • J9f\1tlns • o 1 e Ooodey 1 0 0 2 0.Cktfle • 0 1 8 Totals 21 • u sa Tot•ls ll 7 I 7l Spink led all scorers with 19 points, hitting nine of 10 field goal attempts. Sure Illy Qu1run ~Harbor 10 t6 10 n-st L.os AlamltoJ 11 21 1S 19-13 * ('6)C.tl""9 .. l ., " ,. 1, 8Y9rs 1 o 2 14 Mlli.r 1 o • • Kli.y 2 3 I 7 Om.n 1 O 1 14 Soinll t 1 0 It Oy\•rt l 0 2 6 Wiiis o o 2 o ICftox 1 0 0 , Wllll-0 0 1 O Totlla 31 4 12 '6 Lease the Fiat 131 wagon for an unbetiewbte '123°5 a month. Put 1300.00 down. and~ ontv 1123.06 a month on 1 38 month open 4tnd i..e. Thia t1 a limited time oner to ... u• right~-cap eott $5389.SO Rffldual $2419.27 Olp. ,.._ 12953.23 (mo. ~Ion 182.CM) Advance payments 1231.~u a lie. serial 1(131AF24010798) fac:t()(y equipment. Mission Viejo lmpo1ts S. DI ... FTHw., It A"'Y P.trw.r, Mhalo. Vlefo ll t-1740 .. 491--1700 'l I ~ Anita Results ........... , c .......... , fllltST ••c1 -• fur!oftt 4 .,..,. ol4't .i1e1 "°' Clelm1111i. Pu,.. wooo .... 1 ... IGOllUlt&) lUO tl.00 i20 Mynemelssut 1Remlre1) 11 oo 140 ''Oad Mlnct.o Min CMuno11 · 3'eo Tlmt-1,111/S. Noteratchu. S&c:ONO ••CH lurl°"lfl. •.,.... 91111 encl up. Ct1lmtno. Purw MiOOO. Knight Moer CHawteyl 19,IO •.oo s.eo. FIMtN•henl IL.Opell •.20 •.60 ~dMenorPrlnce lGona1t1) •AO l ime •I. tot/S, Notcr1lchu. Diiiy Oolillte, 1·f'eel ... •NI ._ltllltllt Miil~. N ld $Jll.IO. -TIUltO ltACI -t fur~ 3 .,.... old maiden fllltu bred In Celli. Clelm1nv. PurH "soo. Ct1mson •noe• (Ar190ftl 1UO ~veALlttle (Mawteyl E~eu Off (Oliveres) Tlmt -1.123/S. Scratclled -Cllerl Merl, c.rwset Melod.,, Whlmslc11 w .. 1111. Candy SN.r, FOUltTH ltACE -11/1' mlln.. Allie' Incl mares. • Ytar old$ end up c1 .. m1nv. PurHS/000. • NorloO.te IDla1I 3.IO 3.00 2.40 l>rHMSOf fof1un1t IGontelet) CNt1oe1 CMorele'l No S<rl(CMS. FIFTH RACE -1vt miluonturf.4 .., .. , olds up. Allowances. Pu•S4t SU,000. GallenllAmb <Munl 7.00 s.20 3.00 TrondS.no IVeldetl 1.00 3.60 Peter Prompt <To'o l 2.40 Ser etc Md-Prince Mlsiv. U E•acta, 2·Gallent Lemt. aftd •· Tl'OllCI Slnt. peld Stt2. SO. SIXTH RACE -6 lurlo119s. 3 'tffr old maide n colts •nd oetdlno~. Allowances. Pur5e StOOO. l.lle's Hope (Skinner I 6.40 3.20 uo TM ICeed Hlmwtl I Mena I 3.00 i 60 Misty Slone IRosaltsl 4,20 Time-I °'4/S, Nosue1c1>es. SEVl!NTH RACE -tt/16 mil". 4 YH• okls end up. Allow1ncu. Pllrse '13,000. Coffee Grounds <Rowles! Min'1re1 (Toro) 8er91n In IMtna I •? 10 n 60 •.ao l .«> 2 40 2.60 Tlrne-t 43. No scr<ltches U u1ct1, l-CoffH Greuntls end 4-Mln'lrlll, 1M1id MJS.541. EIGHTH RACE -.... lurlonvs. 3 ~·· old lllllts. Stakes. Purse $2S,OOO acl<Nd. La Centlntle slakes. Oftam Of Sprint ISl>CMlmaker) 6.00 4.20 3.20• FlttllngMald lrnenel 1.60 4.80 Granadama IOliveresl 2.ao Tlme -1.17 Screlche<I -Dur Rlte, cactus V•ll•'f Rose. NINTH RACI! -11116 mllos. Fiiiies ~ir1d meru . 4 ye•r olds and up. Clalmlnv. Pur.se $7000. Mlrr19lo ISMotnakerl $.60 J 60 uo l .60 3.60 4.40 Do Pltai.e I Pierce> N1vejo Min (Cope des I Time -I •SllS. No scralCl\e\ SS IUcla, J.Mlrr1110 llnd •·Do PlteM, P<llcl $79.SO, ~· Los AI Results For WedMsday CIHr, Trac:ll l'Ht ' I 11 1 l'lltST RACE -JSO 'f••ds. J ~r olds&up. Clelmln9. PurseSl700. Oootln's Time <Treasure I 28.20 Ven Oee o.o I Garr.a I Aocket to Ma (Mltchtll) Tlmt -11.16 7.40 .S.00 3.40 , 20 :IAO Scratched -Mr. Joe Weaver, Tiny Hop, IClssemell, Bevan Chic!(.. Mr. Kandy Charve u l!UN 5-Doolln's Tim• & l·YM Off Oto , ,eld S 107 .00 51!CONO ltACE -400 yercfS.l't'ffr Ol<IS.Maldens. Purse$t700. Trevellno women (Nlcodtmusl 11.00 6.20 uo l'ma Tom Bo'f IHldl119er) 11.20 •.OO Fleet Convoy ILlpf\em I t..40 Tlme-'l0.40 Noscretchu THI •D RACE -870 yards. 3 ~ar otcts& up. Cl•lmlno. Purse $t700. SandyVennah (Morri\I Swlft8o(Gart1I 6.20 3 Ml 7.60 S.20 J-40 3.40 Nallvt Twist IN1codemusl T lrne -41> .0 ScralChed -Molwfl 2: Oand'( Sea ereeie, ldlho Go, Hilo Blob FOURTH 1tAc:E='110 yards.3vtat' Olds& up, Cl•lmlnv. Purse 1J)OQ, Plte»e's L.eu IMvltsl 8.40 4 40 3.40 Sure Fleet IGerr1) S.ao 4.00 Nuther Wiiiow <Welson I 2.ao Time -4S.10 Scr•lchect -1Cnl9hl of Glory, Lynn ~·.Joe Fruier FIFTH RACE -lSO yards. 3 ~ar old\. Allowance. Purse '2600. Sliver's F1ee1 !Richerds) 7 .10 •.20 3.60 TouSklt IM'flt\l 7.00 •.OO Limit's Aeg1ros (Trusure) ,.ao Time -17.ll NO Scratches • SIXTH RACE -..00 vards. 3 Yl!ar olM c1a1m1nv. Purse $7400. Fen R1n Dlncer rwaru I t0.60 •.20 4.AO 'Mnktn 0tp111 (Clerlssel U .60 8.2C Fest 8 reaktr ILlplleml 9 20 Time 10 79 Also Ren -Char"' Go Bar, Jus' 0.nd'f, Oernrt Gem. Sand River Aull1h. Fo•Y Glare. S.v1nNh One Time. Frosty lslt Scratched -Tru Cuplcf. Mr. Bettown. Sunset Gell¥1t Jet, mlblt Sir SS IHCta 1·Fan R11t D111Ctr & .. Wlnllett 0.~11. palOH7.5t SEVENTH ltACE -.00 yards. 3 Y'tl• olds & up. Cla lml119. Purse $4000. Go V•n Pee Ilic INlcoctemusl ?o.10 7 .60 t.40 Myrt's OlarQflr ICerdo1a I 4.MI 4.20 Clle•lleoo <Brooks) uo Tl"'9-20.17 Alw Ran -Easy Ousil, OpefllnQ Gun, Step end Gont. IC•n Kan, (Mrmer Bert, Grand Ber No scratthts • ,, ~ Thursday. January 8. 1976 DAILY PILOT ( -For Coast Area JC, Prep Wrestling Summaries Gauchos Wi"' 84-lJ!J; GWC Tumbles, 74-~ Prep Basketball ~UNIOlt VA Min ~Vtej9 (Ml {11J UlllWl'llty Otflildleft CS) ,, w Mitulell 5',ott 121 ft le) Mk '11owry <ti C (OJ Thomes E9"S\Oll (IS) G 10) Foley C'.allletl C10 I G (4) Ha '-9en MV tcorlnt subs: Hawldru I. Betti I. lo0(11•.Ga1v1n2, FaleM•. Uni ~lno •l!tli; Vesley •,I-tool!•, fl•llM l. Outetano 1. HalttlrM: MY.21-lt. 0-.Mlllt IJO ltt) ....,...-.Cit lt'9WI\ cm , ,. m Andtnon SlllClln 111 F Ill 8rot/lenon llttllQ le> C Ct) Gr~ Miklewlc.r Oe> G IUJ Ff'...- f'Olallly C2I G (l4J McMlnus Dthcorlnowb: P LB S<0<ln11 )ubs: Stromllolne •. Pllr<etlt. Hltlltime: LB, U-20. OrMtt (S6) 11•1 """'" ..... 8erU (2 I F ( 111 Pt"°"" flt.et (111 F (tel JoMllw'I Jeckson en c (IS) &urt 8"ne1Cltl G 1111 Stelnl\lus a.nn.tt IOI G 110) Coolrern HB M:orlng 'libs: O'AlesHndro 4, Atny2, Diiion 2. C.oocclene 1. Halttlmt: H8, 32·19. ' SN 0.-llW <•I (48) El Toro ~klnoer ltl F rt> HolmH Frat\k (IS) F (2) Simpson Fortflter m c (4) Petra11111 Mltcllell U21 G C?OI CNr~ Htlllntl (It) G ( 101 Cieor9e SC «orlnv '111>$: Beard •. Vle1sicles .. Wtrnet2. ET scorln9 s ub': Slt Hhtlm i, S111n991. 1. HelltlrM: SC, •2'. Cos~ Mine ISO <•~> S.nta Aft.a Perrino 1211 F (181 Wiider Mulligan IO F 171 Jac:ksoo Biss.ti (ISi c (4) Novella F11na9en (II G 121 Glella Cool< (3) G (81 Susan Helltlme: CM, ?4-1S. T•'"' COl IHI l1ta11<1a uon StrfltmtY'I'' Ct) F 151 Corbett l<tltt\IN CUI F (t) l(roMMtcll Ollfoy (14) C (It) .J,tfitiM Miiier 121 G UI ~n McOutld m G m1 HllV' E$ttncla scorlllQ su1>11 <>9dllfl 4, Reid•. Adams 2. Halftime; Estan<la.2MJ. MlrlM (Ml 1 .. 1 W•almllll .... Sptdt 111 F (UI Oomll>Qllet Torr.s (ti F Q) Reid Gltm 1101 c m wotte 91'uc• l1l G <I I l<lrlt,.ra Wollet lll G m~ter Mirlna "'°''"° subs: H•Wllln.s •. .Co.II« 2. &ogdan i. ' Halftime: »JO. ......,.... <•I (f111..oaAlell'IM Bf acltllWM ( t2 I F ( 1'I &ederd ICt~ (It) F 1101 ~II Geronlml 121) C (UI Broersma Timmons C.I G COi ~ Meswy CtOl G Ill KAub NH scorln1 subs: Slevcove e, Fansler>. Tour 2. Bro-•, Moo1on2. Halltlme: NH,3S-27. LNra C•JI (SO EdhM Beadle (t) F It) Scllfoedef' Mirtlnd•lt 141 F 11'1 Lencell Volpe ltll c (4) Hennen Pli11rMr(l4l G C1lGrlf\am Bala-en Cl61 G I 111 Tutton Scorln11 subs • Edison-Hyder a. CMnpCJell 3. Loue-Mutln •. Miklos 3. Helltlmt: Lo.,•. 39-33, ... .taln Valll'f (a)J 1411 Wff""9 Holmes tm F m Mllltt' Wiikinson Ill F 171 Soarff Svalstad 181 C I 111 Evans 1uaelsky 101 G cnJoMsc>n Roler 10 G (81 P1111t1ps FV "ortno subs: Merverum 'lO, Maek 11. Cloward s, Albln 2, Helde 10. Helltime · Fv, 2'·12 Anita Entries 11--. CUI (it) CAM Yer11 (JI F (0) Divis l(e,.,. (10) ,. (4) Oltl- Klrs 111 C ( 1 S) EMlOlllo St\aolro <e> G If) Rains RW1 l2l G (6) FlemtOn CdM .cotlllt *IOI: Mor .. n 2, Pair 2, l.t9f al\O '• Halfllrnt; C.CSM. to-11. SO""OMOltK ..._..11V•ll•Y 1:u11:u1-........ ·lt.lufman ()) F (81 Thome" GfHlllMI (S) F c.) Deno SNe.ta (4) C (14) .,_,r.rot ToOles "' G en Br..,,. $!,,_ ISl G U1 8owfn FY scorl"ll SI.lb! Rtllf 6. ... lttlme: FV,21·1t . "-tail! Yllley Ue> (3') SentletO Heide Ill F (II Pact1 Sl\lbtte (71 F 01) Benton Simon (1) C ( 10) IClngsbet'g Totlias 1121 G (4) Martin E'Cllnow 191 G (2)Alfa<o FV scor1119 sutis: Relft 11, 1<41ufrnan 2, SkklMll s. Collnors 2. HalfllrM: FV,24-U. C»lte Mew CSJI 150) S.11~ AA• Wllllems ttl F ( 111 OouOlllY RichardlOft (4) F (?) Oevlson Fellr.e (11) c (41 van Zant "'""'" (2) G 121 Lomeli Cribbs CU G 17) Ven Pllnon CM scorlnv subs: Dawe a, O'Neal 14, Wlllin(lhlm S. Helftim•: CM,35-t•. Miu!.,. VleJ. (7') CUI Vni~ry Huttman (131 F (9) Kube5 Krue1•tr 1101 F 111 R09trS Br1wtey Ill c (7) Hoope,. O.Caus 110) G (111 BllQley Spur 1111 G (01 Davi~ MV scorino subs: Alexander 4, Cummino 3, t.eonerd •. Kiit t, Flynn 2, Mohr 4, Z..lln 2, Frost 4, Rudolph 2. • Halftlme; MV, ~S·11, E'1Mlcl• ($6) Citl Tustin Camp (9) F IOI S<itlllf L.erlrner <SI F (?) Oen1c1 0>oper 1131 C ISi Llrson Cerrlclo • Ill G m Wlogs c;.rllcll 1101 G IOI Hllhn Estancia scoring subs: tceremenos 3, Roe:sell 2, Staurlchos '?. brauns<lorl ?, Due two rm,. tqllllrM: Estanci•, 20-16. Oetdell w.tt (Jt) "" "" 0 1 ... Me .. tte-Yostllllera (Gh•on by f0rf11l. 12t-6mlth IGl dee OuOano s.o. l~orllUNs IG) w0n by forfeit. \42-.t.llllfooll tGI won by forfelt. 1»-<:lalr CSI pinned OelanoJ;U. 1sa-a.1enger <GI won b'J' fOf'f•lt, 1'7-tfnanou \Gl-n bY<leflUll. 177-ubblrd IS) pinned Vogl t ·t1. 1'0-Gebherdt IS I won by lorl11t, Hwt Emery IGI won by lorl•ll. 0r ..... Ctast 11•t (11) Sin ••rnardlno 111-Atondt IS> won by torfell • 126-sowa COldtc Palhe9Yl 1' 17. 1M-AA•Y• CSI -n 11., lor1elt . 10~1.-rt tOldec Stre1ton6-! HO-Moren IOI pinned Renkln!.15, 1i.e-oevts IOI de< Sperks 7.2. 1'1-<Slllllldey COi won by lorlllt. 171-+till IOlwonbyfortelt, 190-Mesters IOI pinnad Tri t:n. Hwt·Lend"f (0) de< Orl4111a l2•Z. Or_,. Coast Utl ( UI ltlvenldt 11~ometch. 12'-Sowa IOI de< c S1>ev.rrle._s. 1)4-<iay IRI won by lorfe1t 141-Sttwert 10 > plnntd O•v1s s·:JO. 150-MOran (0 ) pinned Bruno S·?S. 15'-C..vencter <RI cMC D•YIS,·1. 167~11110.y IOI dtc Bentom 1).1. 1n-111 IOI pinned Taylor 3 :it. 1'1>-Mtsters IOI won b'f lorlt11. Hwt·Blevin\ <RI pinned l.Andry3:40. VARSITY et Tero CUI IHI SlddltNcll .. 7-WIM IE) dee Marril IS '· 10S-<ti• ISi dee Beru 1-2 . 114-Munor (SI pinned Ttylor3:48. 112-lcl<•I IE I pinned Garcia I .:io. 12'1-SlrOCklS (El pinned Gadsl:SO. ll~Kobo (EI tied Rothwell t-t. 140-Mcl(ay <SI dee ICemp 10-1. 147-.Retd <El Cite Strimback 7-6.. 156-Younqe IEI won bv IOrfelt. 1•7-Moroen IS> ate Nleble\ 4-0. 1n-<:.arc1a ISi pinned Lanv101~3.18 .• l'll-<1ey9a ISi won by torfell. Hwt·MoSb'f CE I pinned LuuonosO OS, Santa Monica City· scored C WC. 9 it, behind College llmited Golden the play of 6·5 J ohn West College scoring Moore to take :i com· star Paul Schilleci to just f'Ortable 524 l kad. 'fhe two points in the first closest the R ustlers hall. then went on to a routct get after that was 74-63 victory in the open-67·59 with 1: 45 to play. ing Southern California Schill eel. who had j ust Conference basketball two rebounds in the game at SMCC Wedne:i· opening ha lf against daynight. SMCC's t ough man-to And in a nothe r J C man defense. finished game, Saddle back top· with 17 }>oints a nd seven pJed Vi c t or Valley rebounds. Ja>· J ohnson College,84-78,at Mission played well fo r the Viejo High. Rustlers before foulrng Sant a Moni ca's out with s ix minutes to Corsairs, r ated the No. 1 go. He had six steals. team in the state, held a M ean w h de • Sad. 34·31 halftime edge and a dleback led au the wny in topping Victor Vallt~' Gauchos coach l • Mulligan s ubstit d freely in the last non- conference gam e . Sad~ dleback opens Mission circuit action Saturday at Citrus. Fres hman centef. Dennis Smith led thf Gauchos. scorjng t-i points. getting JO rt-· bounds a nd seven. as- sists. Saddle back hit 34 or 72 ~hots from the tield for ·17 .2 percent. 43-37 lead mid way through the second half. But the Corsairs out· * * * Hulst in Marathon Goldell Wttl CtJI '' 11 p1 tp SAN DI EGO l.a(:!una lie has been working =,. : ! ~ ,~ Beach High's Eri(' Hulst out 25 miles per day in ~Ml•<i • s 1 11 will be trying to qualify pre .P a r a t i o n for ~~~ ~ ~ ~ ·~ for the Olympic trials Saturday's marathon Parker 2 -i s t. when he runs in the Mis· and appears t o have an HlrS<hhrr 1 o 1 -i sion Ray Marathon here excellent chance at ASl\lty 0 I 1 To1111 ,, » 11 u Saturday morning. c1ualifying for the triali;. SAnl•Monin C7•> To be t.'ligibl c for lht• despitt.~ running a 2 :30.57 fg ft pf Ip t . I . E Hooper l l , " na s in .... ugenc•, Ore. in at· the Culver Cit y Perrv • o l 12 June, Hulst m usl com-Marathon last month. l Oel99range l O S 6 1 "'°«• 11 1 3 11 p cte the 26-milc, 385-The race will also pi snumw•v l 3 o ,. yard course in less than H u 1st against hi s AtonchlClt 4 ) ? 11 h f Totais 31 11 18 14 two our s a nd 2 3 nemesis rom Pa trick JUNIOR VARSITY Halftime· Sant•Monlca,34-31. minutes. The racl' over H enry Hig h in San Et Toro 1m 101 s.tddl•N<tr Saoo1e11Nc111141 the flat cours e around Die20, Thom Hunt. n -Oonohoo IE) won by f0rfe11. ~ flwFrk&ay Duel Oed (L.embert) El Ptnon (Hewleyl Sacldleblcll (Plt1cel , 1os-SU<1ol <E>d•c Ale••nclerl-4. o.., " 2 "3 P', 1~ Mission Bay beqins at 8. Hunt defeated Hulst in 115 Edl-Tevraame11t0lamp'-11ip 114-4"lou~noy (El wonbylor1e1t, Musick s 1 l It Hui.st, a senior, has the Mt. SAC Cross -~ Her11cw (lJ) U21 Eru.nc:i. 111-fltid IEI won by forfeit. &o•O\lt'f • o 3 t? h' d t ( t C t I · · 11 11s M1rev1c11 131 F ll•>c.mp 179-0rim1 <El wonby<1e1e u11, Lovelace ~ 0 3 8 ac 1eve ma ny op ea s oun ry nv1tattona ate CM« & Fest. l'lnt ~ 12:30 P.M. S2 Dally DHlll•on ht & llldRICts.UEuCUsonSlll, 6tll&ttll Reces Mr.Miiiar (Morein) 8u'990ft IOllvt rH) MotlGatNu ITcwol 11s ste1to1111 F to1Cu1manc>1 us-uon cE1e1ec A11en11-1 Smllr. .s 4 1 14 in track, includin~ a last ye ar a nd r an six llS Pequin 1161 c (1'1 ~ 140-ltbles IE I p1nntd Woll 1· 11. Dove 0 0 4 d ;:l (' · 11s Vwncllk CO G C1>lCa<ri<1o w -s.-11e 1p1nnec1M111er1 u Mareck i> 1 1 , secon P ace inis hmthe minutes faster than 11s Louvier 101 G 101 Tyrn1n5 IS6-•lson <El pirw1e<1ov101n 1 XJ. Zogq 1 • 8 10,000 mete.rs al thC' U.S.-Hulst <It Cu lver City. l'lltST ltACE-6 furlongs. Fl Illes & lnll~. 4 yeer olds & up. Purse $8000, O •lming prices 12.soo-s 10.000. Tlmontmll tRoseltsl Tim's Ololce IS'-'"•"•• I 1c1c11111 101.rl 113 NH1<ori09sub:Altm•n3. 141 bhe<11IE lC1tt P•rks 111. EQef1son 1 o 4 So · tlJ · · · t k "l d 11s esiencl• «Ol'ino ,ut>s: siau"'™" 111-Nomatcl'I. CMli~le 1 1 8 vie n1on Jllntor rac · ·" so entere among 11S Sundet l<nl9ht <Mena I 11S Olw'MTlme IV•l<lel) 11s s, ereunsoorn. 19'.l-f-40 match Totals 31 1• 20 14 and field meet I ast sum· the 4 0 0 run n c r s is ::~ H1lft1me: Estencia , 1S·l4. Hwt·ICtl5eY IEI won by lorle1t. Halftime. Sa<l<llebeck, 41 ]4 ffi(>r. Ari Lona ·s Ed Mendoza. 1 IS Alse Elltlllle 109 Sllvw Ster IGo111aler I 11• Ae<ronetlon IColanqelol 116 Clandestlno (AraQOnl 116 Tlmy's Tip \Lopetl 108 111 110 121 Sadrullah IPlffce) Ma119ie'sJl9 tAr~l THtll'l'lnQ IC.mpul M!Jtatlon Miss <Gonzeie1 > Vffnle (Hawley I ' Aurenulleh 1011vart5) A-~lveOf Roses (Skinntr) Miss Glllado IVeleleil OeyllQhl'em (Toro) ~Sprite (Mena) Beut>len I Munoz I Punnell~r• <Lambert) 116 121 ns 11S 120 SIXTH .-ACE -t.'h furlOllQS. Fiiiies & mares, • yur olds & 1$. Classified allowencts. Purw Slt,000. Pasadena Dispensary Au•lllary, l<ernaclora (Hewleyl AIMEllt llllt Pepper Rome CH1wtey I A·lmbros Doll CSt>oema•er) kL Rosetrelnedentry. 115 A·SINk An<I Fletl tTorol 118 Sun Festival <Gonzllltll 11l 113 '°' 11S SECOHO RACE -6 furlongs. 3 year Old <OH-' & 0tldl09s. Cta1ml09. Purse SlQOO, Clelmlno price s20.ooo-s1t.,OOO. Hotehl's Boy 1Gonzlt51 111 Marlletter \Herrlsl 111 Sir Gun Box IDlax> 114 A4111la ICeOallerol A·Ll<IY By Choice (Toro) Lucky Spell (AlvarH I Oonna8Qulck (Men•> Effusive ISemkinl botlcA11e IS"°"makerl A·N. Threttw1tt 1,.intd entry. 113 113 11i I II 113 Swift SockS (Toro) 119 Trwtflre (Ollveresl 111 Oull• A Show (Shoemaker) 1'<! TrySheepRoyel <Skinner) 114 Mr.Mc.Nasty (Morales> 114 SEVENTH RACE -6'h turlonQS. 4 year olds & up. Cla lm ln11. Purse St4,000. Cle l mlnv price \40,000 S30,000. Lltke Taml ll'IO<'CluQN>red term. Ferne's W•y Jay (Lambert) 118 Noel's 8eQtl (Hewleyl 120 #k. Loyelty CMenal 114 a.ienced Re 1111t <Pierce, Niner Power U!emi.rtl ~ntury Gold \Shoemelr.er) Ocale8o'I' ICampH) THlltOltAC&-11/1'm11es.4 yNr Rounoffumt>ers <Lopez) otcls&up.Maiclens. Pur.se s10.ooo. H.lrdAt ll IDlail ~el.erk (Harris) 119 llensadrHm IH•wltyl Oii Riv IOllvwes> 119 Sc>ortinQ Goods !Toro! TernVnstontd (C.anol 114 WlldTec\ks (Gonteter> 115 119 11S 11e 1?1 '" '" 11• tOI BledlWattt(GonzalHl 114 A9yal Retie ~lvarez) 119 El~TH .-ACE -7 furl0fl9s. 4 yur !wifl!ll011Adr1ilnli U:.ri\llf1) 1111 olds & up. c11ulfl•d ellowlln<es. •MW Bend (StlltNI 119 Purw US,000. Kern Counly Fair. A·FOf"e°"C~rce> 11" A91lnstl'he5Mw IMene) -.OouctollHtr"(DMe~ 1 119 A·S.llMlrch (Lot>tll A-N. Ory~lt trained entry. A·Bl1181nd (LOl)4!1) Olab04o IDl•ll Bold And Fancy IShc>Mlekllf) Canva.ser IAlvareil Blnoo 11 CTorol FOURTH ltACE -6 furlonQS. 3 Y'M' old maiden flllles bred In cam, Purse $9000. 117 NO Blas (Hawley I 117 A·He•rdselaltowned entry. 119 122 119 11• 117 118 114 119 Geellcwln (Lamberti VlclllJones IGilllgenl Rallll'l9 INoouei) &encl• IBecon> Vent• Susslt CC.no> eontro•s Princess <Ciimpu I Royal Spangle <Bruce! lnGa., Parff CRosale\l 5-ttJesslu !Pierce> 015tantQuHn IValde1I Glr11Sft Luclt CGonza leil 8elt't''s Por1 CMene I 111 117 112 117 117 117 117 117 111 117 NINTH ltACE -t 1116mllH •year olds & up. c1aimln11. Purse USOO. Alsol!lltlllle H(9herTlle Fewer (Hawley) ai-nMldu (Aragon) Fair Pool (Mtnal 111 11? 111 "'"H ltACE -I~ mllesonturf . .C veer ol<IS & up. St•rt•n a llowancH. Puf'w s 13.000. HllKl<M dlstanu seties Ci.lminv price S6?SO. Buddy Beer (Aregonl Lucky Balc!Win 1cano > Lacesto 151-makerl l'llul'S Impulse ((ampasl Sc•rfl T KllCS (Lemi.rl I v11a1 eu11 (Munoz) T81t Aun IMenal Audeclly <Gon1elell Fleet Centurion (Oliveres l 8111 Alder I Hawley I Ornarron II (Toro) Nooney Game IOiul Alto Etltibl• Llt9U IHowerdl Anonlmoll IAregon) -Oessll. G\Ny (Alv1rtzl 11s Ala's Wllft (Rosale\I 112 109 11S 111 Ill 115 11S '°' I 17 11S llS ns 11S 110 114 Los Al Entries ForThun d1y CIHr, Traci! iresl, l'lnt ftolt1:4S P.M. SJ E•acte "lr~t R1<e. U Euctas •ttt, ttll •ltd 9'11 !tacts f'IRST ltACE -3SO 'l'IHdS. 3 year olds end up. Cl1lming. Purse Sl900. E1rt11Quekt Andv (Morris) Fut Ftlll IPegel l(lpty 8rl9ht l1Cnl9lltl Tiny Ferocious <Richard\) Sevente.n Five ICerdoia t Paoe's Suoar IOrtyer I 122 122 122 122 122 122 Clelmlno price uooo. l<is.sernell <Treece) Ketchup ILlpllam) Str-Bolo C8rootis) Oupe'sNlner ICerelozel P91's0endy (Adalr l Jolly Shadow <Ward) Niie Flight (Dreyer> Jo Burm INlcodlmusl City litH (Cterlsw I Mll~tlcOllc lM;les> "'"H RACE -350 yards J yeer 1?2 olM ancl up. Allowance. Pur~ $5000. I 19 The Orenge County Employees. 122 Mr. ThoUOM IAicl\ardsl 11" Fi"9 Chics <Llpllam I 119 Top Muter <TrH)Urt) 119 Sru19le P\iss (Nicodemus I 122 ~er'sCholc1 (Werdl :~ e.,., Rita Jet IC.Ill WindO' Summer ICltriswl 119 CrlmsonAnget IC.treloia) 117 117 "1 117 111 SECOND ltACE -350 yards. 3 yr,ar old rnaklens. Clelmlnv. Purse $1700. SIXTH RACE -350 .,erds. 3 yur Okts end 119. Clalmlno. Purs.e t.?IOO. c111m1n11 price ~000. TM ruval 111 Station-San Dleoo. Oalmlng price ssooo. TlleOU.rWomen IW.,dl Rloyal Bar 8" (Milchelll OleteGold CClerls~I ~lcai.Mlu ICelO 11• 11" t1' 122 119 lit 117 11• 11" 122 Foilr Forty Prince <Welt") Jeuoe1i. (Rlcllerdsl Go Oh Tory CW a t.so11 > Ml» Barred Umlt (Tre&surel Off Limits Bar <Morris I Double Direct <Brooks I in Hert Bars (Dreyer I 1n Gutllllo (Morris! 111 wuv Rocky (Nicodemus> 1n TlnyWetch Bound (Llpl'lam> 117 Mr. Bo ITrtlSUrtl 122 Un<ltJlmmy (Hert> 122 Miss Jet On ICMdOHI in Flt&arToo(Wtl<hl 122 MQJt Roy•I (Knight I 814\Nho IBrookO T"lltO ltACE -170 y.tr<ls 3 ytar okb Jnd 'up, Clalminv. Purse \I~ Oalml119 Clf'lct NOQO. SEVENTH ltACE -300 yards. ~ Yffr olds and up. Altowance. PU,,. MOOG. The ElllS LodQe Ho. 2046-Buena SMdow Finl !Nicodemus I 119 Mr.~ual• <Banks> 1n Stamlte (KntoM> 11" I Step N '-tcfl It C Gane l 119 ;--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ALIMASEAl UllATOI f:::" llPAll ClllQ([/fl AOuo<k.P-1 Metol s.o1 wo1er 99c '"""' lubroc.,.,11 l11•1ln/11b<•or. IAOI fosy To lntlOll "-••1 Sioll• ~-f~& v,..,. lo<t. Allowt full flow Of Go•. ....... 599 0 m 1,:3 AC· CHAMPION- AUTOLITE· SPARK PLU&S s..11' Wlo1u ro 2Slbt., ......... S.011/'.nd lftflo••1 fcn1. fl .... 1no1 .. Joclo."'9 UpCM Nolwe °""9"9· IUU I 191.AftS UlaS.1111 Na .. ' w , ...... .,f>ntOt .. ""<hot•. .... ,,,,,CJ·•'o..f'"'''··O... 100.1 .... " Ir! °"°"~.....,,11~ oOf ~ ...... 1 '"'•1• ..... , ..w.u l .. '4wellW11t-w•C•a.9"' .,,"' eo oo"' ""' w.1,••o'•• Wti+! /Ii 1>.i•• t,qu.,, (tl.elQ.of'\9 01'11fflY,f.t•ocf0t ()....irt., ..... p ((11"'hl..St. ,, ...... "" ,_,.,..,_, ~,,.,..l .. ,•ll'·o(·~·'"'­..,. •C'M..,,...ft\\Uiow~ LIFETME CHECKER BAnERY 32!.9 I < ... ~··'!' --·-..•. ·of TO~ ... i·~· .. -. " . ---...- PARTS SAYE 303.:503 • IWtS!AcmllS UST P11C1 NUYYDUTY 14" llM WIEICN 11....., Dur, fovt Woy lug W1enc1t, Oropfot9ed Steel. (01y lo Holld!.. FOREl&NCAR REBUILT$ ALTEIMATOI top o.o1.11. f ,,, toyo10 & Oohv•' '"'110Cl- STAITEI 3899 !ACK 3899 21!.9 DllllE SIPllOll nMP (•<•II•"' lool fo• ''°"'''•"•no Wotet &Gth Sqve•t•Gr1r Action fo,, to u,, A.,,o.q A ~·"I A I S.0-f f.lmR-. Ch110iv•\ Gr•me. ~-~ S910\h Sfol1ne\ You• W.,,.j,t..eld Cleon A id 1"9~1• S..WAT Clll(;Xf6 •11T01 I ,\ \~ QUALITY REBUILT$ IK. AlnlUTOI 11.tt .. .,... ...... Cll.......1.--·· 1111 1133 16 99 ~,,...,., ~.• .. lo•• .. , ,,tf:edH•9~. •• ••"""'•' .... ' ._,.,4 ..,..UOIAM f':,;.1::0-~··.::!... STAITEI , ... ··~~.,,,..o ... ,,._. c .... .,,,. .. -.-.~.o-....... .. ! ... ~ •.... _, .... -.... . .. ....... ~ c.. ....... _ .... . .... "'", ,, •·-.•91if• Ot ,,_ tot ....... , (.... • •• SPIAY 1911 COAtml 'r..--et\t11.,.,, ANS 0.00....\o-il l._,.,ity form.Aoled r o Uncle«:oot -'-'Md F.ftder l.Poc9f'M'nt' S.C·•on •-rt Wtlcl '°'"" Altd ~·"· =·-·-:£ :r= ... -~-~ ~-~·--.i YIMYLIA•AH ,_,,Co• S.O•l, 99 Vinti Jopt 1"99099 Etc. ( siur·.s· •1o"T" .-•c1 -.iooyarcfi.3'fNr LllAml90(Cerdor•l m olcl\a.llf). c1elm1no. Purn1snoo. ~lcldty (Watson) 117 Perk. ~tva.udv<Wtlch> TlltAmbesuoor ITraesurtl CMd11nc1 Letters (Llpllam I Slit's A Go CClerlnel ""t<hln' Hour IOrtytrl Arlll Pass CNitoelamus> VIiia Vlllt (Gall) 117 "' 117 JlllSEI COISOU ThelttdPony (Wtrdl E'.IT1tero(Harll 122 4.00 uo 'l.AO ~lto<llCltoolcll 1" OtMUebtrt'' lnltnt IAdalrl OH L.ecrem1deCl1bbt• IC-Ill flO\lllTM -~· -350 yards Jyeer 1 tO 2.IO old melcltn1. Cl11mlno. Purw s1100. Cl•lmlng p+-1~ UOOQ, , on 2.80 1 Dldltmyw1r cerook~ 1 111 "' Rltcord CMroer (H••tl OtlCll Doolin IAclelrl 117 m 119 t22 ,,, lit Time io.,. Alto Ren -Mooll Voyaoe. Vlllt'I' IHu, Ollc,1m0or, Al•••· Sllllf't Off '-·"·HY Straneer $uiMtt c.M'f ear <Cell I Jtt NI..,. (Ottr.al s.or-ti Ot<ll (C11rln•I 111 llOMTH ltACI -UOyarcts. S'(Nr t22 01Cb encl utt. Clelml119, Put't $1100. kralChld -0 1•1• El Toro, Plllllo'~ ear. tommy ONn, Solomon'• Wl>t'WI u aaa<I• .. ,,.. ""' ,...., & DH-._ IC'"'"''' 111-1,peldUJ ... ti lud• t.Til• ltH ,...., & ON-1· ~ ... (le11Mf ,11Ald '11.tl Pro Scores NeUMal .. ntNfl AtMCllOtll 0ttro1t 1 t~. o .. e1enc111e, OT IOltoft IOt, LOS A"9tltt tO) PtlllMitlClfll• t 11, Mllweuk" 1«l tcaraas City 1oe, "-'I011 t06 Oeldlll Stet. 11._ ,.,_nl• 1 to SHtttetl,NewYor\" MMri<• ........... ,_...._ Vl"9fnla n2, N•w York" 5l. Louis 114. Jnclllnl tJt. OT SM Arllat\lo 121. Oenver 111 NatleMI Meclley '-'It" Sevltl Wino\ •. C'11ucro i. ••· hi Diiion flftllldltltl'11• 1, T~lllO) Moflt,,.al 2, Mlnnetot41 I C:.llforni. •, ~tt,t>ur9" 1 l • AngelttJ. t<anw s Clly ! 11 Oelmlno prl<'f USOO. Ton'°'' BoJlnol• IKnltMI MDfaoe Roc~9' 11.l""m I Kristy Eerlte<k CCr .. Otrl "°<Ir.It\ &ar RHd (WAiton I Aoelllnt De<• 1.-icf\erdtl o.-. l'o. (()Mui SCylltfl Mell (AcSalrl Luc11rS11Uet1 (Marti ~Oflolt CC.r.-Or•> NOSld$OnOS ITr-rt) ltt n• tu lit 11• "' "' '" 122 11t NlltT" llaCa -400 yards. J .,.... Oldl. O.lfnlno. ""'" ••800. ClallNlll llltk dlJOO. Soilltorl IWlbolll Otllbln lyre CBreolcsl Celw.rnf11ui\tll1 nt team 1,lttle Revtll9' (Mer ti flollone•s LI ml Iman CMlltl'ltll I C.11161'111• Seve11 <Rlcherdll v t't !toll (Llplleml MortOolCI CC.rocuel tvrel &rein CMorrl\t How's Tri• ICleflH•) "' U2 11' t:n '" l't1 m "' m '" SANTA ANA 1*7 TUU IN "YI! J"'I Nori~ ill 11111 SI 541 .. 5111 I • COSTA MESA 111 E It•~ ll .. ~,, . .._ 645·•2" OAIDIN GIOVI 111t> UOOKKUIUl 1, lllact ''" c~ 636-7Ul 99c fULUITON SANTA ANA 170 H MAllOll 1 ... I .. IS T°'- 11 U1114!1 ~~ t ' ''!!' $1 992·22~6 ·~6-7735 ""<><"•• fo•llr ro """ floor t'vmp t<olch '"'° e...10991 C•90<•"••·399 Ito<• W••lt Wood O••·~ 'one!• .......... ... _ .. ,, •i• ....... , ... _,..n .... """ ...... , ... . ' • DAILY PILOT Thur'lday, Jenuary 8, 1979 L' .Ballew at OOC 'Frunily' Series For TV ,-:::::~R~~!!~' Opens at ~!ian~~D!! tbe'~tbeatrical new year this Intermission Playhouse through January and . - .wee~end with another of its most of February is the bio· many West Coast premieres, this TOln · Tltm graphical musical .. Gypsy.'' .ooe taking a sardonic look at the Audrey Sperling stars as the inner workings of a British mother of the future Gypsy Rose hospital. MacFarland, Marnie Oberbeck; Lee (played by Denise Dales) ¥•The National Health," open-Peggy O'Hara Gibble, Heath with John Moran, Patty Hubler ing Saturday for a six-week Park, Reginald Rook, Geor£e and Joe Fletcher in featured engagement, is set in the men's Rush, Richard Ryan, Howard roles. watd of a London hospital where Shangraw and Don Tuche. "Gypsy'' also includes a show- pl~ywrigbt Peter Nichols unfolds Original music has been com-stopping performance by Becky :t three-dimensional look at posesi for the s how by Glen Gonzalez as one of atrioofatrip- England's program of socialized Barkley with Bonny Hill serving pers. Performances are given medicine. According to director as choreographer. "National Tuesdays through Sundays at ~artin Benson, "National Health" plays nightly, except varying curtain times at the din- Health" is alternately realistic, Monday, at 8 o'clock with Sunday ner theater, 140 Avenida Pico, satirical and farcial. matinees at 3 p.m . in the Third San Clemente. Reservations For SCR, it will be the second Step Theater, 1827 Newport 492-9950. ~ichols play to be pres~ted at Blvd., C~ta Mesa. Reservations • the Costa Mesa theater fOllowing 646 -1363. BACKSTAGE -Enrollment the success of "Joe Egg" in 1970. for the 10-week winter session of An ambitious project requiring a ALSO ON stage, for Friday and the youth theater at the Laguna large company of performers, Saturday performances only, is Moulton Playhouse will be held the play bas beeq lauded by an anthology of plays by Oliver Saturday at 10 a.m. and Monday Benson as "an ingenious exam-Hailey at Orange Coast College at 4 p.m . in the playhouse, 606 pleofmodernplaywriting." entitled "Oliver Hailey and Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Friends.•· The playwrig ht Beach ... youngsters from ages APPEARING IN the SCR pro- ®ction will be Gary Bell, Wynne th-oms, James de Priest, Richard Doyle, John Ellington, Jake Gardiner, Demene Hall, Caroline Jackson, John-David Keller, Scotty King, Art Kous tik, Rosemary Mallett, Martha himself is serving as narrator for 5to18 are eligibl~ ... the project. The Fountain Valley Com- Curtain time is 8 o'clock for the munity Theater will offer a two performances in the Orange series of drama workshops for all Coast auditorium . Admission is a g e s , b e g i n n i n g free. Tuesday ... inforD)ation on the program is available at 893-4753 CONTINUI NG its engagement or 839-0173. 'Globes' Noininees Set BEVERLY HILLS (UPI) - :-.lominations for the 1976 Golden Globe awards -presented for excellence in 25 motion picture and television categories -have been revealed by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. The i nternational Golden Globe, similar to the American Oscar, will be given to one of five candidates in 16 movie categories and nine television Qtegories. ·The 33rd annual awards pre- sentation will be televised n•tionally from the Beverly Other Side of the Mountain;" and Glenda Jackson in "Hedda." For best actor in a motion picture drama, the nominees were: Gene Hackman, "French Connection II ;" Jack Nicholson, '"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest;" Al Paci no, "Dog Day Af. ternoon;" Maximilian Schell, "The Man in the Glass ... Booth ;" and James Whi tmore in "Give 'Em Hell, Harry !" • Pictures nominated in various categories included "Barry Lyndon,·· ''Dog Day Afternoon," "Jaws." "Nash ville," "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," "Funny Lady," ·'The Return of the Pink Panther," "Shampoo," "The Sunshine Boys," "Tommy," "And Now My Love," "Hedda," "Lies My Father ·Told Me," "The Magic Ftute" and "Special Section." Actress Halts Filfil liilton Hotel on Saturday, Jan. 24 LOS ANGELES (UPI) -saying 3he appeared in his mov- by Metromedia Television. Actress Karen Black has won a ie, "Owen," believing it was only · In the individual categories, court order temporarily forbid· for use in his film classes at the nominees for best motion picture ding a college student from show-Art Center College of Design. She LOS ANGELES (AP) -Network televl1lon, which bas been occupied with the "Family Hour" during the current seaaon, will &oon be get· D--'---Ung a series called "'~-r"· "Family." _ Actor Robert Culp ABC wiU present the has joined Columbia Spelling-Goldberg pro· Pictures Television duction beginning in as a developer of March. The company films and series. says that .. Family" will ----------offer viewers "of all ages Spielberg Due Honors LOS ANGELES (AP) -Although he has not yet reached his 30th year, film director Steven Spielberg is already being honored with a retrospective of his works. Spielberg will be the subject of a three-day seminar of the cinema studies and mass com- m uni cations depart- ments of Cal State Fullerton. stories of substance and truth, without having to resort to situations cen- tered around life-and- death jeopardy, violence and bloodshed." The series has im- pressive creators : director Mike Nichols ("The Graduate"), who will supervise all creative aspects; writer Jay Presson Allen ("Cabaret"), author of the pilot sequence and script consultant ; director Mark Rydell ("Cinderella Liberty"), director of the pilot and executive consultant. ' edwards LIDO CINEMA CO.HIT AT WESTBROOK "LET'S DO IT AGAIN" HEW,OtlT &YD. AT YIA LIDO "HEWPOIT IUCH 673-8350, 1100 1115 10120 Call Tll1.1lre t'er Times I ·· * * * * JA-CK NICHOLSON'Sl PERFECT TRIUMPH!" -·. · SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES SAH DIEGO FWY. AT BRISTOL SO.COAST PLAZA W..2711 SO.COAST PLAZA Sff.JJS1 MOii•• e. scon, ...-"'**'" "HINDENBURG" (PG) DAii. T 7:Jt I fllt SAT/SUM-l:l .. ~1:41-~U& FREE PARKING JA "ONE FUW om THE CUCKOO'S llST" (I) DAI\. T 1:JI I t:4I UT /SU_ I :tO.J:l S.l<Je.1:45-1 .. 15 CllEMAUllD THI& == GIOIMSMAL "THE ILACICllRD,. D41LT 1:41 SATJ1Ul'-l:ll-l;OO.a45 "ROOSTER COGIURH"' II.IL T 6141-1 tiH lA T ,.__.i:-6.-45, 1 •.>t . 0 DOG DAY AFTllNOOM0 DAIL'I' 1:00-10:11. 14T.llON. 1:3$4:0C>-10;15 "DROWNING POOL" DAIL\' 1·20. IAT . .9UN. J;so.1.20 actress in a drama were: Karen ing a film in which she plays a said Tilton was planning to show Black for ''Day of the Locust;" male homosexual. o n th~ the Cilm commercially in Los WWTBRQQK "STORY OF 0° (X) Faye Dunaway. ''Three Days of grounds it would hurt her Angeles and Riverside counties CO.HIT AT LIDO the Condor ;" Louise Fletcher, chances for an Oscar. and submit it to the Motion "ALOHA, BOBBY WfSTMIH ATMOOllHUaST l:4M:JO-I0-..25 FR PARKIN On F1 0 h Cu k · AND ROSE" '-••DEMG•OYE 530-4401 SAT~l:JO-J:IS.S:OO " e ew ver t e c oo s Miss Black brought legal Picture Academy for con-•"' 6:4W:J0-10:2._s··· Nest;" Marilyn Hassett. ~~·T:h:e~~a:c~t~io:n~a~g~a~i:n:s~t ~S~h~e:r~wt~·~n~T~i~lt~on:·~Jsi~d~e~ra~t~i:on:_r~o:r~th~e~s~h:o:rt~s~u~bJ~· e:c~t~~~~~~:~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~_:~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~:__-Oscar. • 1581 W. SUNFLOWER W F AISTOL C.M, 5.0-0594 A '"THI ltu.11 Ill"" INI V ,_LUOUT" A "GO .. IM lO HCOHDS" Y "Ot4 AMY SUNDAY" .. MONTY PTTHOtif' '"ILOYI YOU. AUCI I. TOia.As." INI -.0 .. IH 60 SECONDS" .. OH AMY SUHDA Y" "Df.AMOMDS" "I 0 UTIU INDCAMS" "UT"SDOITA4iAIM'° '1>0C SAVAer "HUSTLE" 2:)0 4:50 7:10 9:20 "CAI.I. MIMR. SHATI'H .. Clt J:JO 6:01 t:41 • • For the price of . a ID!JYIC, you'll feel like a million Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pf~ts ''J"n> dRc!yS!di• P>oJuc.unc:JJ He•bertRoss r.m Walter !Viatthau & George Burns .n Neil Simon's "The Sunshine Boys" co s1a""19 Richard Benjamin P.;oav,~i Me'•ocOIOI' · Socenoi~ 0y Ne.1 S.moo Prodl.<cd by Re!)' Star\( ~ Ouect<:d by Herbert Ross A R.tslc11 F ca1ure "' ...... _.,,... MGM V UMlll ...... ----- edwards BRISTOL CINEMA 'THE PICTURE 'TO BEAT FOR THE NEXT SET OF OSCARS" , WALnR MATTHAU GEORGE BUllNS RICHARD BENJAMIN FOA THE PAICE Of' A MOVIE YOU'U. FEEL LIKE A MJWON edwards BRISTOL CINEMA • \ .. ' . . . ... L \ --.oar HOLMIS' . SNA1Ta •onmr ,,..,. -SUHSHl~E IOYS .. lPGJ aca MICHOiLioM "OMI RaW OYla 1"' CUCIOO"S Mlsr W '"MAH06AMY-INI '"OMCI !S MOT IMOU5H" W •J DAYS OF THI Cot4DOl• llJ "'DAT OF THI JACKAL" llJ "'DlnY MART, CIA%T LAllY"' "'YAMISHIM6 POINr -.oMI IM 60 SICOM»S• INI LA MIRADA WALIC·IN IAAGAIN l>ltlCE SUO MONDAY lhfu SATUADAY(btepl Holidays) 12:30-S:OO •• ) . ._ Lt ..... DOI DAY '"8NOOM • ......... ... _ ....,. 110W1•• flOOl "' _, ... _ ... , H •• ) ... ...,... Lt-MUlftl. .. ---..,. M COIMllATION "' ......... ,.-... -) llOlllT Wlfdle e f&Yf DUMAWA'r Lt •klN a DAYI Of M CONIOI • .... _"' ....... .... ,. ........ •• Ltlll .... ........... .... ,. ... "" lhfl ...... IS • frl • hi • llll I • • '"'" Sltfl II 1:45 19'tllAIT llTIC(I CMllMlll unH 11 fl(fl si--r.iw ,..., ~ • ~ &-1 t !Ot • "* s "" ..... IOI MY Af'llllWlllNOON•-111111 • ........ llOWtlNI .. "' .. ~I · ~:;JU. ., ¥.?I UR~~~g~~ HOWFARDPES A GIRL HAVE lOGO 10 UHTANGLE HEITINGLE?? .......... .._._., LUCIY LAIY "' 1.-..i1-.u.-e .-T •• ,_. MO IWT ltTMOlDS IN ••• HUSTLE 1" ......... •UM1D111 sn Tll mr. mmm -35 • PllTS!. •--·pt.US THE stCOM> MOST FAMOUS'-• AIM.T flM OF CUI J9E_ The Dml 111 Miu Jone1 oav ORMCE coum SHOWING! PUllYCIT • 873-IOU 709 t lalbo1 Blvd. Newport ltach OP£M DAILY AT 12 MOON Q: Can yoa glve me a ca~ale blo(rapby of tbe crtmert«bter wbo follows "KoJak0 on Sunday llllbts -.Jack PaJuce? Also ls It fact or ficUon that PJ]a.nce appUed for hls Ont movie role wttb typical police mus photos -full face, left and rtcbt proOJes de., because be looked so mucb like a bit man for hlref-R. Gallasher, San Jose, Cal. A: That's pure fiction. He looked that way because his nose and race still bear the scan ol bis football and boxing days.,As a professional fighter he won 18 of 22 fights -most by knockouts. He hung up his gloves to enlist in the Air Force as a bomber pilot toward the end or World War II and entered Stanford University to study radio acting. In '47 he .. was signed as Marlon Brando's understudy in "Streetcar Named Desire,·• with which he went on tour in 1947. Now he's busy as a plainclothes TV cop, chasing the same kind of killers he portrayed in five or his first six films. Because he played his tough 1>ALANts guy roles to the hilt and got rough in scenes where the script called for such mayhem, there were some leading ladies who refused to work with him . They didn't wish to defend themselves against his re- 'Glad You Asked That' by Marilyn and Hy Gardner allsm. Like Linda Darnell -who once got so in- furiated with his toughness in a scene that she stuck a penpoint into bis hand and drew first blood. On the other side of Palance, he starred in the ABC series "The Greatest Show on Earth" in 1963-M. And played Shakespeare at the Stratford (Conn.) Festival. He was a gunman in "Shane.'' He sings and speaks well enough to have cut an album in 1970 which won mildly complimentary reviews. Send your questions to Hy Gardner, "Glad You Asked That:· care of this newspaper, P.O. Bo% 1560, Costa Mesa 92626. Marilyn and Hy Gardner will answer.as many questions as they can in their column, but the volume of mail makes personal replies impossible. a Sm: BLOWS! JAN. & FEB. WEEKENDS ONLY Leaving From the ., BALBOA Pl\Vllalllft Weekends. 9 am and I pm Adults S4, Children S2.SO CALL 673-5245 Lila Cast NEW YORK (AP) - Lila Kedrova, who won an Academy Award as best supporting actress for "Zorba the Greek." will play a leading role in "The Tenant.•· The mov· ie is currently being filmed in Paris. ... KACllNAM "ll'lllfHTil'u.n- o\UO CMAIW llO-"'IUAJ[0Uf" ,,., W~!~·~ ~ COltO"A DEL MAil. · CharffOR Heston GeonpKtwdy "AIRPORT '75" + "EARTHQUAKE" The Life and Times of GRIZZLY ADAMS [g]·'.~:~--... ltfllASfO I Y SUN CLASSIC l'IC!U•IS<r 1'74 '"' SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT MOW SHOWING! ONE WEEK ONLY ONLY SUN COMPLIMENTARY PASSES ACCEPTED CO·FEAlURE Ar ALL ORIVE·INS "MR. SUPER INVISIBLE" O£AN JOHEI MESA Colle M-CYflAESS TWt N CyptMS WESTBl!O()I( CINEMA It Gttcltn G..,.. 'l\JSTtN SOUARE Tutl!ll LOS Al TOS t 3 Long llttcll ~ .. -PAULO ORll/£4N Colla- ~t562 826-leeG s»+IOI 544-leo6 421~1 S'W313 ORANGE MALL~ PUn CITY CENTER 12 111:1:.S Son O-nt• CINEMA M_., v..,., CINEMA WEST rt w-er WARNER o.;...in FOUl'lleln Vll"'1 M7-3511 s,.cw "iii ...... ,.... .c::: Ste THEA Diw ad•'" Far •• SPICCAL LOW PllCID NEY1IW PllFOl.MAMCESI PETB tilCHOU' "'THE HA 110HAL HIA1.11r Brllllant, Dark English Comedy about life, death and the world of Socialized Medicine. wm. & THUIS.-JAtt 1 & .....,:00 ,...__ ewy n .oo ~ Jhutli Coa st Rcr)('rfon 1he masterpiece of bizarre · looe that stunntd Franu. Aportmitof love and submission to dismrkr the S81UeS. Thureday, Jenu!fY a. 1976 DAIL V PtLOT (!'I t ' Tonight's TV Highlights KCET .@ 7:30 -The Heimaey Eruption. This special focuses on the evacuation, destruction and recovery of the Icelandic town of Vestmannaeyjar on the island of Helmaey after the eruption ·of the volcano Eld.fell in January, 1973. KHJ 0 8:00 -"Mister Roberts." Jack Lemmon gives an Oscar-winning performance in this 1955 movie version of the stage comedy classic with Henry Fonda in the title role, William Powell as Doc and James Cagney as the captain. NBC f!J 9:00-Medical Story. A two- hour episode headed by Tony Musante as a doctor who reluctantly leads a con· frontation between doctors and politi- cians over appalling conditions at a coun- ty hospital. TV DAILY LOG Thursday Evening JANUARY I •tulm: A rortntt o1 Hlll'Y r1rtdl A portrait of the Ille and unique composer, Harry Partch, a man who created his own inslrumenls lo match the sounds he wanled. el Mlllical ColltdJ t:OO f) @ (1)@ Hanli flvt.O MC· 1:00 I Ea i...um ~.let~......, Garrell Witches with slunntd Cl) (}) ~,..... 1ul121tion U the Stilt's IOCk·SOhd murdw use 1a1inst Islands rKk· Kinas vs.. Ptllladtlpllla Flyers. titer l<um Chi suddenly nponus lfl•IJ Mair becluse McGmett has been suder· • llMIW• , ed by the p1osecuhon"s star w1l· Plltri4tt r .. 11y -MSS. Mt•1z 0 al @'@m Medical St•ry Wed.. (2~r) "The Quality ol Mercy° FICld Stir Tift w11h what he sees u 1pp1lh11& con· : II S..rdl tf A lilMJtrt (R) dilions 11 a county hosp1lll, a re· Oocumenllry on th1 8alt1moft luctlnt clottor (Tony Muunte) Symphony Ordleslra's h11t Youna becomes 1 m1hl1nt and luds a Cooducton Com!!'t1tion. confrontation belwttn doctors and 11 Ci)) Slit Trek polihc1ans. Scoll Hylands, Harold · Witef WerN Gould, Catherine Buins and Helmul ' ...,.... SMr1Mt Cantine also 1uut Utt1t llucll1 O USC hsbtball Trojans vs. Ore· 5:30 i ID W, Cllfflttl SllfW ~ State Beaver$. Merv lrtflltt SllfW ltJ W'dd Wild West (}) ttecal'• Merta 0 t'OLICE BUFF KILLS 7:00 I B O @(j) mm""' * e STS OF SAN FRAN a-m (~@I CD m Sheets ol San Tt Ttl Ille Truth llCiKo "Police Bull" Sloroe and • Ctlcltltratlttl ktller me ar1inst lime lo lrnd a I LM UcJ murderer who approaches ~rchms Tiii fll i 1mpemn1tina a police ollicer. lrn c~llSlltkl Tiit lold Onts LI Ulla Fe$1inl lnttmtional lMt Alltritl• s~ ~ Movlt: (C) (2hl) NA 01,tant Tiie •••lltic •ebtllitlt Trv111pet" (dra) '64 -Troy Dona· I Ci)) 1M1G1 I hut, Suianne Pleshelle. Drane Mc· riltu &in. Claude Akins. Tiie M4u1 hllily fD Honywoo4 ltlnision Thutrc 7:)0 Wt ti Ille WIN "Knuckle"' (R) . m Prlct .. ltlcllt I m LI Cril~ litn Criada WerN tf t11e S.. "Island ol lh1 9:30 m D Cllofu G111n Turtles"' lO:OO I. ~llllMI~~· f) BUDDY EBSEN MAKES ~ Ga11t * BARNABY JONES MOVE lrMta.dl 6 @ (3) (j) II ruby JoaH lei)~ ~ Peter Haskel 11Jt$1S as a smooth Cira Mae• Dul I 1alk1n1 con artist who uses his wilts aBliD TIM Ktlraacy Erup-10 g11her inlormalion lor his bure· The tvtcuahon, destruct10n andl tary nn( from women who hold recovtry or the lctlandlc town of responsible pos11ions wrth lnms Veslmannnyjar on lht island of ~ lor robbery. He1m1ey 1l1tr 1 (illnlic tfllption Lt) Ptfl'Y Muon and lava lloW by lht volcano Eld· O HARRY O vs kidnapers ftll In J.lnu1ry, 1973. * rip-roaring Adventure m Med~ Mlrllt 0 (~ (j)) CD m Harry 0 "Mr. '1) My ftve and Orme" Would-be SUPfl· l:OO C ET HAUNTS sleuth Luter Hodees involves 11 A SE R Harry in 1n inlneuine e1se but LH· *THE WALTONS FAMILY ter's ueeuiess keeps Hariy in hot fl (tj) Cl) Ci) TH WaltHs The water with the police ind covem· lanliillinc Of llis sister Eliubtlh ment aeents. and the kidd1111 by his sisltf Erin, 0 ID Nm plants the sud ol serious turmoll m G.r Smart in you111 Jim-Bob, who ~110:301 LI Trtllllldl c.rtt tormented by a doubt that he IS 11:00 (1) fJ fl) er;) m Nfts a nalural·born Walton and by lhe . (j)@) tD @,...,. suspicion that 111 was a 1oundlin1. 6 Tiit 11o1e,.Hltn B NEW COMEDY HIT . Tht LllCJ SllfW * THE COP & THE KIO m Grandpa Larkin Freed, B 9(i)IKiJfDT11t C., I 1111 *Mary Arouses Tom's Klrli IW ""' Ire .•. But Little Else <9 Cll> mm .. IMY .., I ... If Hlrtlw, ...,, "'11""& • M111H $ itvlt: (C) (lllr) "Mis· Mod Sqtld ttr •tllertl" (com) 'SS -Henry r. e1:~ Liie rond1, James Caaney. tll) •o11trt flladftll Rtplft I Crns Wlb (':29' (l)) Trvtll er CotlsequtnctS fl= larkllf SllfW ll:IS O UCCA llsbtblll Bruins vs. ~ Ii .... University of Oleaon. o:.u. alld DJltlf A con~eru· m Clrttma 34 •• hon wim psycholoeist and tulhor 11 :lO f) (IT (}) CIS LI~ M.v1t; (C) Ellubeth l<ubler·Ross, 111.D.. who Hmtt1 W'rtll • Gull (wes) 69 - commtnts on the problems ol lhose Glenn Ford, Carolyn Jones. who are dyinr and ,lhOSll who ~ft~~ ,,::"":itll ~ mourn and th• queshon or. Ille (rom) 'SS _ Alec Guinness. alter de1th. Bill V1rnty inletvrtws. O (~ ({)) m Wide World Pft-1 Noelle Ttpetill •'M ·r1 "Ull stntt" ~ .... Ll!l,Dlt ''°'""" Hiits allftl ' HI OJ Cl) @) W Cr I d J "N11hl (()The Fii · School" Grady ftlls undt1 the $11tll 0 fvtu!' Sllod. Jtmes Brown 1 d at. ftllow student In • hosts thlS entertainment m ies. o I e191r m TN lillest I Mn. Muir black h,istory cllss llu&hl by Hal l!:OO m MfWie: "Tiit lri(aMI" (•dY) and sw1tdles cum paptrs so she ·sz _ Atlthony Dater, Atllhony e1n pan the course. Qu'inn '-'y • -rence o <a C1J1 rn m o. t11t .. • ,.,., ..... • "Undtrlfllllnd ~1mtnt" fut11les &) ~: "Stn111tr. •• tllt ProM" and llis friends art vislttd by "Mr. (dra) SJ -Paul M~n1, loin Lomn1. Bil'' _ Vinnit Pattlti _ the mi· lZ:JO @,~: ';M Irides ti ru MH· d t hotshot Of Alamm who de-ch• (dra) 67 -Cb11stoplltf let. m'."nds their help In dla inr an ~~= B $ ~ ~-==• De-~PI tunnel.. liaqtlttt" (com) 'S7 -Jerry lewis. m Michael Caine, ~an 1:45 f) MeM: •u 11ut Mfftltlnt" * Connery, Jacqueline (mys) '47 -James Cagney. Bisset, Jos. Wambaugh z:oo ID AMiPt Slltw: ~ G.rt," I Merv CMlll .. "Tiit HolDtstnt~" WM!ffe Mwtt1n l:lO f) Mtwlt: CC) "Stlld fot tfll Ewil ClBii!D Tiii Dru111tf Tlllt Ollt" (d11) • 68 -lee P •lltllOI\. 1:00 0 "So ,..,. s. ..... (dn) '50 Friday -Anne frlftcis, Paul Htnttul. @"If .. tt It Yery Yery ...,.r (mus) '55 -Btl11 Gnble, ShtrH DAYTIME MOVIES N011h, Robtrt Cummlnp, Orson Bun. J:OO 0 (C) "SHtl ,, ,.....,.,. (wts) t:io D "lei'• llllllt It a..t:.:.~~) '55 -Jolln P•YM· him Dointrauc. '51 -Cl111dtttt Colbtrt, 111-•kl ~ (C) "lfew I Ste11t My s-- C.1ey . .._.... If tfll ,....,. (dfl) futiell" (adv) '6'7 -Rolltrt W•I· 'JI -Htnrt Fondt, Geortt Raff. ntr, Peler llwtofd, I.al• Alllriallt. 10:00 m......,. ........ (mus) '31-l:JO 0 (C) ........ ...,,.. (lt!V) '67 • l0ii11a, Phlf 8'Mf. -Darren ~In. Nlclt AdlntS. U:OO m ...... lltWMcltt & ...... 4:00 rn (C) "l1le Alt tf lM" (COlll) ' (di•) ·50 -Iii_,. Stevens, [dfllOndj •65 -Did Yan O,h, J1mn Gif· 0'8rleft, ''" StOllll. lltl, Eltt $ollt1Mf. KOCE Television (50 PUBLIC NOTICE PICTJTIOUI •USINH.S NAM•ITATUUN1' Til9 fellow1119 perwn It ciolllO ..,.,.. -ti: THI PET Stnl!A, f'OIH' ~ 0111t1. Newoof1 e .. <11. CA nMO ,__I.IN lt.O.llle<lt, F-Ot<Me Cwt1, """"'1 .. .ell, CA '2660 This WliMu It ConWclH II'( tfl I,._ ·~ Mofte.U .. 11104tele<li Tlllt ii..tement ••• Iii.cl ... th ti. County Clerk Of Or•n99 COllnty on Jf/hllllrf s. "" PSttti l>utllllhecl °"~ Coesi O.lly Pllcilt. -'-'· •• 1', 22.1'. f'7' »-7, PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS •USINHS ..... ITATaMaNT TM fel19wlnt ,.,_ 11 .. ,. 111111· ltttSM: Hll.LVIEW BUILOING, llZJ E.9.st S.-*tenth Stl'ftl, Satlte Alie, CA. ft101 Oe11lel M. 9rl9h•m, Jr., 2007 .. Y$1de Ori ... , Coron• Oel MM, CA. ft61S This bYSlneu Is conctu<teo by en I,,. . .....,.,. O'"lel M. 9r1Qtlem Jr. 'This ltalement wes fllld wltlt tltt ·c.oun1v Clerk of Or•"oe c--.ty on ,,_,, s. tt7'. "'"" f'l*llNd <>reno-Coest Delly Pliot. ,.,_.,I, IS,22,H, 1'16 t,_16 PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS•USINUS NAM•STATIMINT ni. foltowf119 person ls 0011111 buslnns Ml FILM FORUM, 26661 C..011 O rcle, PUBUC N&ne-1 _ ... MISSION O I NTAL HEAi.TH Ct!NTClt, ttm IUr.,..1 .. ,..,._,, Mlt6kft ~Jo. CA. t1'7S WlllltM w.,.,.. ,...., Jr. D.0.1. 2011 l>et.o Otl Campo, ~ Hl9Utl. CA. m11 Tiiis IMKlnes• la ~Of'Oll<led b., • IA-1 dtvldl*. Wllllltl'll Fool• Jr, Tilll 1181-"I WU fllff ...... County Clttli of 0te11 .. C..W • ~2'.191S. PUBLIC NOTICE ~- PUBLIC NOTICE I Mls.slon Vie jo, CAt1'1S -----------..-1 Vern D. Vihlene Jr., 26661 Cldi1 NOTICE 01" INTENTIOHTO O rcle, Mission Vie Jo, CA 9761S E NGAGE INTHI SAl.EOf' Thll buslftflS Is conducted by Jn on· Al.COHOl.IC BEYEltAGl!S dlvlduat. f.1·1b Vern D. VlhlentJr. ToWnom ltMayConcem: This ste1ement wu llled with the Subject to lssuanct ot the license ff CoYnty Clerk of Or•n9e County on ptled for, notice Is h4!reby given tMt IO' Dtcember 23, lt7S. unclt<SIQned Pre>pOHS to s.ell eleoftollt FM71 l)eyer~s •t the premises, OHCl41MC Pl*llllH ~ ..... CNst Dlll'I ....... as follows: DKWl!MrU, lt7S.111IJ•"YArl '<hls. 1714 Placenll• AY•nU9, GMI~ 197 _,.,s Mase, Cellfornl• PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAMISTATl!MENT Tlte followlflll person b Cloi119 busl· NSS•S: ARIC ENTERPRISES. 29SO W. Central, Sent• Ana, CA No•h SlnClalr Harelgr•ve, 1212 Ot.en, Stel Beach, CA t?O.O Punuant to suclt lnttntlon, U. uo °"slQfted Is •PDIYlncJ to the Oetiert ,..nt of Alconolic BeveraQe Cantnil Hr Issuance of an •lcoltollc .,.,,.....,. lkeme <or llttn5" I for these prvnlses •sfOllOWs: "41" ON SALE BEER ANO WINE (Public Premises> CLIFFORD, 0.YldGeorge PubHShed Oren~ Coest Delly Piiot J-y •• 1976 ~,. Tltts MINSS Is Condu<led by .. ;,.. -----------clYldull Hoefl H•rd9r llYe This st•tement "''" filed wotn the County Clerlt of Oran<;ie Covnty on Jet1uerv s, 1976 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE INVITING •IDS alD ITEM NO. 2't f'SIUO Publlshed 0r•ft91t Con t Delly Piiot. Jetl. I, IS, 12, 2'1, 197' PUBLIC NOTICE S·14't NOTICETOCAEOITOltS Ne.A-ISl26 Sttptrlor Court of Ill• St•I• of Cellffrftl•. fw tlM ceu11ty of°"'"" In t11e Maller or the Estate of LEONA BLANCHE GATES. Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tl)tf sHled P'CICJOSlllS wl 11 be recelwo by u.i Clty of Costa Mesa, to wit: Tiie 01~ Council, P.O. Box 1200. Costa Mtw C»lltornl• on or brfor. lite hOur of II:~ a.m., on Wednesday, Jenuery 21, 1'76 BICIS will be publlcly oc»ened MCI rM<r aloud •t l1 :oo e .m ., or es soo11 thtrHfter as prectlceble, on Wtdnes Clay, J-ry 2t, 1916, In the ~II c:Nmbtrs, City Hell, 77 F•lr Orlw Costa Mesa, C•llfornl•. for thl furnlS/11119 of BROOMS, PICKUP, for the Strftt Sweepers . Notice Is lltreby 9lven to creditors havlftll cl•lms a9alnst the said dee.- dent to file salo ctarms In Ille office of the clerk of tile •loresald court °' to prtsenl them to Ille unde rsigned ar the ofl lce of GEMMI L, ZARETT. OO VIDIO & R OWL EY -AT· TORNEYS AT LAW -1Sllt E. WHIT· TIER BLVD .•. H60 In Ille Clly of Whonler, ln Los AnQelt s County, wNcll Iller office ts Ille pl.ct of ~neu ol the un4ffS•Ql'eel 1n all matters ""1-'n· lft!l IO seloeslatt. SU<h claims with the ntossaty vouchers musi be flied or pntsenteo n aforesaid w1tllin lour rnonthsllfltr the first publrC•toonof this notice. Aelelltlonal sets of the s peclflc11ion• may be obtained •t the offlc.e of Ult Purchll:SiftQ AQel\l, 11 Fair Ori.,.,~ Mesa. Celifornia. Bids snouto be rt1 turned to the atten I Ion of the OIY Cler11. In a seated envelope Identified on tt> o<ltslde •Ith tile Bid Item NumCler MICj the ()penl119 Date. Each l>iel shall specify t ech anel•wrt item llS set forth in tile specilicalionli: Any •no a ll exceptions to th• Sl)Klfkations must be clearly sttMCI I• the bid anct leilure to sel forth""" It- In the ~1fic•tlons shall be 1l'1IUftd for re1ec1lon of the bid. Dated Jan S, 1'76 DUANE M. GATES Executor of the w111 ol selel decedent Ee<h bid shall set forth the full...,... 1ne1 ru ioences of all ~rsons end Pltf11es interested ln the pf'OMMls.., Pf'lnciP91$. In ca~ of corpor.tloM, ltC elude the n•mes of the Prnldent. 5e< retary. T reuurer, •nd Mii 1'1119Rf. l GEMMIL,UllETT. DOYI DIO & ltOWLE Y Thi! Clty Council of the City of Cos1 Mesa rne~s Ille riQhl to reje<t eny Ill bt<K. 1$111 I!. Wlllttltr•lvd. ••to Wlllttler, CA. "60.1 PubHSl\ed Oran91 Co•st Dally Piiot, Jenu.rye, u. n, 29, 1916 .:1·16 DATED: December J I, t97S. PubllSht<f Or•n<ie Coast Daily Piiot, J enuarv e. 1911> ., 1• PU8~,fC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE COMPTROLLEROFTHECURRENCY ADMtNtSTRATOROF NATIONAL BANKS ' • I ' REPORTOFCONDtTION 1 Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the South! Coast National Bank of Costa Mesa, in the state o~ ·california, at the close of business on December 31, 197s1 published in response to call made by Comptroller ~ the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Sectl~ 161. 1 Thousands of dollars THOUSANDS HndS. cu; ASSETS cash and due from banks ••••......•. 1,273 U.S. Treasury securities •....•.•.....• 500 .Obi igations of other U.S. Govt. agencies and corps ......•.•..•..•. 200 Other securities ....•......•.....•••.• 136 Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell ...........• 1,921 Loans •••...•••..•.............•.... 2, 998 Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other assets r epresenting bank premises ••.•.. 268 Other assets .......................... 123 TOTAL ASSETS .................... 7,420 LIABILITIES Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corps .......... 3,276 Time and savings deposits of Individuals, partnerships, and corps .•...•.... 1, 913 Deposits of U.S. Govt .................. 19 Certified and officer s' cheeks, etc ....•• 39.c TOTAL DEPOSITS ....•• 5602 xxx xx <a> Total demand deposits ............ 3689 (b) Total time and xxx )()( savinQs deposits •••• 1913 xxx xx Other liabilities ...................... ~5 TOTAL LIABILITIES .............. 6,037 CAPITAL ACCOUNTS EQUITY CAPITAL, total •......•.••• 1,J@'l Common stock, total par value ........ 800 (No. shares authorized 192) (No. shares outstanding 160) Surplus .•.••••..•....•.••.•....•...•• ..00 Undivided Jjrofits • . . . . • • • . • • • • • . . . • • • 183 TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS ...... 1,383 TOTAL LIABtLITI ES, RESERVES, . AND CAPITALACCOUNTS .... 1,A20 MEMORANDA Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar days ending with the call date ................ A,656 Average of total loans for the xxx x xxx )(~ xxx xxx xxx X'\ xxx xx xxx ~x xxx xJ( xxx xx xxx x>t )()()( xx xxx xx. xxx X)C xxx xxx Xx xxx xxx ~· xxx xxx x~x I 1Scalendar days ending with call date ............ 2.638 xxx µ Interest collected not earned ' on Installment loans Included 1 In total capital accounts .......... 215 xxK Jf I, Samantha 0. Ketchum, Vice President & Ceshitr rlf the above·named bank do hereby dt<:lare that th I...._ port of condition Is true and correct to the best of y knowledge and belief. , • !S I samantha o. Ketchum 1 January 5, 1976 ~ we, the undersigned directors attest the 'orr -ness of this report of condition. We •1are that It been ex.mined by us, to the best of our knowledge betlef Is true and correct, end that It Ms bten or wUI publlShed In the m anner P"fl(rlbed by Title 12, U.S. 161, within twenty days from the date of the c:.all fw port of condit ion, or as otherwise prescrtt»d by COmPlroller of the currency. Dlrectw$ NlckJ. Rwlo DomlnlcJ. R.cltl Albert Ptrelsteln Published Orange Coast Diiiy Pilot, Janu.ry I, . .... ,. - ... I I g'I OAll. Y Ptt.OT 4 Thursd!y. January e. 1979 In the Swit1g P~act ici n g o n the grounds of thei r Hµlsborough home in San Francisco, the Bing Crosby fa mily (from left) Nathaniel. 14 ; Kathryn : Bing: Harry, 17; brush up on their golf strokes. Kathryn Crosby will be making golf headlines as honorary chairman of the Sarah Coventry-Naples ·Classic Fe b. 4-8. ' Canyon Routes Sclwol Board Nixes Meeting Time Limit Study Urged Get Tran plants Hairy Matter For Official From Wire Services Mayor Ralph Perk or Cleveland has gotten hair transplants where he lost some locks when his halr caught fire at a 1972 metals con· vention while he was using a blow torch to cut a ceremonial metal ribbon. Dr. He111Y Roenigk said that 46 hair plugs were transplanted from the back or Perk's bead and another 46 plugs are to be transplanted in a second operation in about two weeks. Perk s aid he is paying for the operation himself, which be estimated would cost $480. * ~E•K "It seemed like a nightmare. then it was the most wonderful thing that happened to us. Now it 1s another nightmare." PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC N0'11CE PICflTIOUI IUSINIH NAMI STATIMINT The to11-1nv person 11 dolnia DUii· -··•: -OM ANO H•LIH'$ OLO. FASHl°"IO SHOP, tt4t S. C.01 HltfwNY, UOUM .. ectl. CA m$1 Roneld c. Hellll. '°" lenl• Me ~~ .. ech, CA'26SI Tiiis buSlntO 11 c~ttd by en In. dM...i ROMld C. Hollls Tiiis steltf'Mftt _, 11194 wltll tM county Cltrtl ol Or•net COuflCY aft Otamliltf U, tt7S PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NarJCE PUBLIC N011CE PICTITIOUS IUSINIH NAMI STATIMINT Thi followlng ptrt0n Is OOil'I 1M1 --; KLl'SS RADIOS ANO AP- ~~~~. ~!'.,::t'"t Aven11e. usllt Jt.,., MU Alt.-+ Mh- slen Viejo, CA tK15 This 1>11l111H1 Is condllet.d tioy .. ~ dl111$1el Ltslle.ltlft ""' stet-t •H fllef w1111 t11t ~ly Cltrk ot 0ref'99 C-.y 1111 O.CemCler u. ms PUBLIC NOTICE State Sen. John DeCamp of Nebraska described his ~rief guardianship of two Vietnamese orphans, PICTITIOUUUSINHS FICTITIOUUUSINESS saying both had been taken from him after their NAMISTATHISNT NAMI STATIMl!NT mother was located in South Carolina. : .. ~iow11111 peNOf' Is dOlne 111$-,,.'!!".,~1ow1n11 perwn 11 dOlng busi- "I would be a liar if l VALLEV AUTO PARTS. Ulll GOURDS GALOAt:, 9$74 Telben denied that I considered a AllClePltwy., LtQUMHltts,CAm» Ave., Fo ... telnVelley,CA.92708 Ec!werd w. LIAIH, IOl1 AoMM Roseann• Jean Smith, 9574 TalbM COUJ1 fight, bUl after the ( J L.Gn9&.Kh,CA90IOI Aw., Fountain Velley, CA. 927(11 children saw their real PEOPLE Tiiis l>USIMiS Is condll<led by an In-this bu11nen ,, c.ond\Kled by en In. 'dht~I dlvlduat. mother there just didn't Edward W. Lukas Roseenna JNn Smith Seem to be any point in ----------' TillS Slaltmtnl WU ffltd with the Thl5 5~tement WU fifed with tht it," DeCamp s ai·d. county c1er11 of Orange COYflty on enunty Cltrli: of Orange tounty on O.~ tS, "7S 'Otc..nlbtr29, 197S. ,...,, .. ,..,, • Assemblym a n Willie Brown has his 145-mile· an-hour jet-black Porsche Carrera on the market because he wants to buy a faster car. · The turbo-charged Carrera he has in mind would be capable of more than 200 m.p.h. and could negotiate the 10 turns of Laguna Seca's road course with ease , says the 41 -year-old San FTancisco Democrat. He wants to go racing - "amateur racing -not for com- Publl:llled Orenot Coast 0.llY Pltot, Published Orange Coast Dally Pltot, DK. 11.u. tt7S•ndJen.1,e. tt7' Jenvary 1,a, u,22, lt16 .,n.1s ~1S PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTtTIOUS 8USIHESS FICTITIOUS 8USINESS NA.Ml STATEMENT NAME STATEMENT Thi follOwl,.g persons are doing bu5I-The t~ng persons ere doing busl. nes.sas· lnesses. · A L T O CAPI S TRA NO PA C I F IC MAR I N E PROPERTIES ~Vie OeA®e Sen WOODWORKING CO., 1135 Wtllllier. JuanGN>fstre..:i. C.llfornla 92675 ' Bldg. Q , Costa AIWW, CA. 92'27 Morris Mlsbln, 33901 Calle &or· Cart W. Sjostrom, 331 R•mona Pl. •·-J ,._ · 1 ,..1· Colt• Mew. CA. ,,.2, • ~s -· uan .._.pis reno, ..... 11omt• Don L. Frtdrlli:sen, llSJ Gari· nus busineu is c.onducttd byo limit· l~d, Cotta Mew, CA. '1614 tdpartnersnlp. Tll1s buslntu Is conducted by a MorrisMlsbtn What is viewed by some Orange County planners as the first major s tep toward making canyon areas above Mission Vie- jo m ore access ible to motor vehicles and developers was taken this week by the County Board of Supervisors. start building and if sand and gravel excavation is permitted along T rabuco Creek. Saddle back Va lley Unified School District trustees can now talk during their m eetings for as long as they want to. ' petiton" -and plans to take aAOwN driving lessons a t Sears Point near San 'Francisco he said in an interview in the Capitol garage. • 9tfltr•I par1ner5'11p. This statement was filed with Ille g:,1 tFs,i:~r::n County c1e.-1r. ot o,.nge CCM.inty on The board ordered the county Environ mental Management Agency to begin an intensive study of potential new access roads fro m the central Sad- dleback Valley to the Trabuco Canyon area. ACCORDl'.'JG TO E M A Director H .G . "Geor g e " Osborne. the new study would be accompanied by "environmental analyses" and would be directed toward possible amendments to the county Master Plan of Arterial Highv•ays. A key part of the EMA stud..- v.ill involve prep a ration of an i ni. plementation plan that could al- low road cons truction to begin before 1980. · In a letter s uggesting t he study, Os borne told supervisors that the lone access road to the Trubuco area. Li ve Oak Canyon Road, is inadequate to handle growing demands. OSBORNE SAID the road already has one of the highest ac- cide nt rat es in the count y because it is the only way into s m all canyon communities. O'Neill Regional Park, Escape Country and the Coto de Caza amusement ranch. He said t here are increasing press ur es coming fro m l a ndowne r s in the area, particularly a t the latter two sites. to dt?velop their property with new residential areas that would hopelessly overcrowd the narrow road. "The road cannot accom - modate the significant additions to the t raffic demand," Osborne said. The EMA chief noted that the problem will become even more severe whe n owners of the re- maining 917 acres of the Starr Hanch in Dove Canyon dt!Cide to Group Plans Concert in ·Laguna Beach Baroque music will be featured by the Laguna Beach Chamber Music Society at 8:30 p.m . Mon- day in the Lagun a Beach High l>chool Auditor i um. 625 P ark Ave. T ickets will be sold at the door and are $5, $3 fpr students. F or this concert. six works by J.,oeill et, D e V ienne , Bach , jtamcau l Haydn a nd Vivaldi, all in the orif;?i nal ins trumentation, will be performed by the Secol6 p a roe co. Future roncerts will include ~e New Hunaarian Quart.et on tfanuary 3 0 . th e Berlin lfbllharmonic Octet on March 14, and the Amadeus Quartet from London on April 29. For further in· formation. contact the Laguna Beach Chamber M"'-'lc Society Memben b i p S ecr etary at ,AN-3S45. oetry Presented Tbe Laa una Beach Poets will ft sent. "Re ad Out," a new ftriet or ~try readih ns each 1burtday, s t arting at 8:00 p.m. ~day , at 509 South Coasl ~Hi1bway, Laguna Beach. OSBORNE NOTED ttia t arterial highway construction projects have been plaru1ed for years in the canyon area. But he said none of the new· routes have been built because of environmental concerns a nd other problems. The county's current master. plan of h ighways s hows a number o f arterials criss - crossing the canyon area most of which run from the Missi~n Viejo area. Sl'.'ICE THE plan Osborne has been ordered to produce will tie in closely with the ongoing South east Oran ge County Circulation Study <SEOCCS > it is likely the r esults will not ' be presented for s ever al months. A county planning spokesman· said SEOCCS a nd other studies involving the county's foothill area will have a direct bearing on lhe new s tudy. i . ' ~' "~ ., UPI Tt..,._• It's Got Rythyne Neiman-Marcus. the depart- me nt s to re that gave us pink a ir and $3,500 mouse ranches, now is offering the world a pocket calculator p rogramm e d to give its owner a personal biorhythm forecast. The board has rescinded its rule that all meetings end by· 10 p.m. unless a t wo-thirds vote ap- proves the continuance. The now defunct bylsw also limited the dis cussion a mong board members of any agenda item to 15 minutes. Each board member was supposed to get a "fair share" or the quarter-hour to have his or her say on the is- sues. Superintendent Richard Welte recommended that this rule be rescinded becaus~ it is not in "the best interest of full and Cree discussion." Trustees did not discuss the re- comme ndation be fore voting un- animously in favor oCit. Harbor Area Vietnamese Form Council Vietnamese families living in the Harbor Area are planning to form their own council to tack.le common cultural problems and to run social events. The council will be formed at a meeting at 8 p .m . Friday in the fellowship hall of St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, 1015 Baker St.. Costa Mesa. Julie Brady. a member of a c hur c h g roup whi ch h as sponsor~d a Vietnamese family, emp~as1ze~ that the Friday night meeting will be fo r Vietnamese only a nd only for heads of households. "They plan to run it on an elder system," s he said. She estimated that there are about 200 Vietnamese families in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. She expressed the hope tha t groups sponsoring the families would tell the Vietnamese of the Friday night m eeting. Desert Tours Capitol News Service Weekend guided tours and campfire programs at Anza Borrego Desert State Park will feature four inte r pretive campfire programs, two nature walks and two auto tours. In Newport Betttla Guard Facilities Expansion Okayed Plans to expand the Newport Beach lifeguard headquarters have ~n approved by the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Com· rruMion. Commissloners meeting this week l.n Huntington Beach authorized a $53,000 expansion or the city's Marine Department building, at the bue ofthe Newport Pier near McFadden Square. IN RECENT yean tM build· lng, whirh houses the lireguanb as well as tbe city's barbon and tidelands administrPtion, bu oc- casionally been i.nu.ndaled by hi&htides. Lifeguard s pokH ma.n Larry Gibson explained that wooden groins have been built nwtns the building a nd a rock waU bas bt.n put up in front oC It to pre. vent luture water damqe. PLANS APPROVED by the coastal commwion call for the addition of 1,344 square feet to the two-story bulld.ingtomakeor- fice space for the four staff m11m· bera involved with admlnatratlon of ha.rbon and Udelands and the ocean front parltin11ots. The addition, Gibson said, will Include ~ conf ermce room. • Adopting protocol usually reserved for heads of state, Egyptia n President Anwar Sadat hosted a dinner· in honor or visiting Britis h opposition leader Mrs. Margaret Thatcher. The banquet at Sadat's Giza residence was attended by Vice .Preside nt Hosoi Mubarak :Prime Minis ter Mamdoub S_alem. and s?m~ of the pre· s1~entlal family including the First Lady. Jihan. Mrs. Thatcher , leader of . T~ATCHE~ • Engla nd's Conser vative party, ts making a n gorous three-day fact -finding tour. • Brown Keeps Lmv-key Goals SACRAMENTO CUPI> -Following his own gospel of "lowering expectations," Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. has promised little in the way of bold initiatives for 1976. In ~is "st a te or the state" message Wednesday, Brown s ne w proposals a mounted to modest e x- pansions of existing programs, including income t~x breaks for the working poor, college grants for disadvantaged students and a civilian conservation corps for the unemployed. The governor said California has left behind the era of rapid governmental growth and is ·'entering an era of limits .' 1 • California Democratic lawmakers gave Brown good but not r ave reviews for his subdued 11-minute speech. Republicans gave it a cool reception. Sa•dra Good lndJeted SACR AMENTO CAP) -One of Lynette ~omme's . former roommates, already charged with conspiracy to f!lail threatening letters, has been accused of making telephone threats against business leaders. . In an indictment Wednesday, a federal grand JUr):' charged Sandra Good with making the threats during telephone interviews last year with three radio stations and the Detroit Free Press. ~"er I• Oallla•d ~~KLAND (AP) -There was no fanfare when s henff s de puties returned Eldridge Clea ver to this city where his former Black Panther Party com- rades have disowned him. Cleav.er had not set foot in Oakland since 1968 wh~n he Jumped SS0,000 bail after a shootout with pohce and began a seven-year odyssey in exile. He returned voluntarily to the United States last Nov· ember and wa s held by federal officials in San Diego until his transfer here Wednesday. Tiils stetement was flled with the Oeumber 2', 1'lS. Counly Cterll of Orenge Collnty on PVl>ttstotd orange Coast O.lly7::,~ Jenuary S, 1'76. Janvar y e, IS. 22. 2t, 1'7• Sl·7• 1'51112 PubllShed ~·~ C~st Delly PllOI, .-----------PUBLIC NOTICE Jenuery I, 1S, 22, 2', 197• 20-76 PUBLIC NOTICE NOT1CI Oft SALi 01" ltUL "ltO,lltTV AT ,ltlVATI SALi .... ~m•a ~CMrtetti. Met• .. Cllw.n.I• .... ... (Miity .. us A ...... In the Metltf' of tllt Estate ~ ConserntorU\ip of Marth• Holle<"an Coftservet". FICTICIOUS 8USINl!SS NAME STATEMENT Tiie followln9 persons art dOino llusl· ness as: SE·GI PRODUCTS, t.OS CE. Allon. Santa Ana, C/ll. 91705 JoM Ro!M'rl Gino, 33292 Me~ \lls· le, OaN Point, CA. 926?9 Helmuth Sen~. 1408 Sycamorl', Gltn$1e, CA. 91202 Tiiis buslnus IS conductt<I by " ~ral partnership. JoM Rol>trl Gino This s1atemenl was loltd with Ille County Cl~rk ol Orange COi.iniy on O.cem~r 2', 197S. ~let Is htreby glwn 11\11 tllt un- dlnlgned wlll Mii et prl .. ate Wit, on« en« lht 12th dey of Jenuary, 1'7•, at !tie Offlc.e of Josttlfl R. M<Gulrt ... So. SOrlng St,..I, Los Aft9eleS 90013, ~ F5"61 tyof L~ A119elts, SI alt of Cellfoml•. to Publlwd Oran9C! ~oast Dally Piiot, IN hi9f\ftUndbest ~r. endwt>i.<t January 1,8. tS,22, "7• to confirmation by w ld s._rl« c.owt. 1---------...:"'::!,._~H ell tht right, tlllt end Interest of said ConMNatM In end to •II the cer1.in PUBUC NOTICE AHi PtOPtr1Y situ.It In lht Counly of 1----------- 0r ...... Stet• of C.llfom l•. pWtkula<· SUl'E••o• cou RT OF THE lydnc:rll>Nestollows. t~wlt: STATEOFCALll"O•NIA FOR NI YftdM ded -~alt lnltrest In T"E COUNTY OF ORANGE end to t"41 rHI Pf'Ot)erly loc.eted In 1 ,.. A_....t County of Ore~. duc:rlbed es Lot,.. NOTICE OF HEA•ING OF l'ETITIOH end170,~llaHomt S""t F. FOlt l'lt08ATE OF WILL AND FOlt T'""'ofultcalfllnl-t111-tor UTtEU TESTAMENTA•Y AND lhl Unllitd St•tts on conllrmetlon of l'Oa AUTHOR I ZATION TO sate, or pert CUii •I'd b•l•!ICfl AOIJlllNISTElt UNDER THE t¥1dtl'Qd by not• w c11rtd by Mort91ge 194Dtl"ENOENT ADMI NtST•ATION 'r°' Trust Oted on tht property'° !Old. 0, ISTATES ACT IPR08ATE OOOE en Ptf'cenl Of emo11nl bid to be ~posit-,., ET SEQI Mwllllbld. £~late ol AIS H9Y OE BARO BldlorofftrstobtlnwrlUngandwlll OK4'11std ' bl 1'9CalWd et Ille efon u ld otfl« at NOYI CE IS HERE9 V Gl\IEN '"'' eny time efter lht first publlcetlon TERpY L. OE 9AAOll.sfllltdllereln a htreOf ~before date of Wit . pt1illof\ for Probate 0~ WI 11 and '°' '" Otted~c.,e,.n;.::•U, 1'7S SU<ln<t of Leiter~ Ttstament•ry to ttw flOn petitioner ~nd for a11111orlt•tlon to Conservator of IM Est.Ce administer under the Independent .,....... :' ~~servatff Administration of E stttes Ac I (PYobltlt •le S.:..1t1tSt,. Codt 591 ti ~I relerence to Wlllch Is w.m · m.cM for lur111tr perticutars. <Ind 1~ Lea a-.. ... 1 ........... , lht time and place of lltarlno Ille _.,. _...._..,.. .....,.._. "°" hes llttft set fg, Januery 27. 1976, at "'="'fer c:.MMf'V.ttf' 10:00 U JI., in the c0<.1r1room of 0el*'1 1"'9d ~~99 Cout Delly Pltot. ment NO. 3 of wld c0<.1rt et 700 Owlc DK. 31, 1'7S aftcl Jan. '· •• 1976 '" 1-7S Ctnttf' Orl\tt Wnt. In IM 'cuy of Santa P UBLIC NOTICE Ma, Celilonua, Oiied Jenuary 6, 1976 WU.LIAM E. SI JOHN. .. ,. COi.iniy Cltrlt NOTlCEOl"T•USTEE'SSALE OURYEA,ltANOOLl'H, UHDE• OEEDOFT•UST MALCOLM ANO DALY TF4*1 AltWM'fJllfUW LOAN NO.OOtSIS76 Git Ma<Artllur 81Yd. Notice Is ht,.11'1' given 11ta1 SEA· -~ .. a<11.~11ton1lat1"3 RANO RECONVEYANCE COMPAN Y AlWrM'fJ tor "-lltlontr A Celltoml• corporelion as truslft, ~ PubUwo Orange Coast O.lly Piiot. wc.ceuortrvstff,or substllutedtNSlee January a, 9. tS, 1976 66--7• PUBLIC NOTICE 1111rsuant to the cited of tr11sttxecuttdby ROB E RT N. R ICHARDS ANO SUZANNE R. AICHAROS,lluil:Nlndand wife and recorded Feb. 25. 19n In book ----------- 1001' page '°6of Ottlclal RecordS In Ille S-1462 Offlceof lht Covnty Recorder of Orange NOTICE TO CltEOITOltS County, C.lllornt•, and 1>11rsuan1 to the Ne. A ... '!>4 Nollet of Oefa1111 ano Etect lon 10 Seit Superior Ce11rt tt Ult llatt of tt.reunder recorded Sept. 11. 1'7S In C..lllOnllo1,lortMC.1111tyef~antt book 11513 pege St2 of Hid OHlcial In the Malit' of tht E•tiite ot Records, will SELL on JenuaryJO 1976 P E AR L E JU 0 I l H N E S 8 IT al 2:00 p.m. Al 1 ... South IF;ontl GA LLION, Oeoased. entrenct to lllt old County CoUr1~ Notk e Is htrtby Qllft n to creditor• In tht Oty of s.tit• An•, Calff. 111 put>llc having ctelms •o•tnst the v ld cit<.• auction, to tht highest bidder for caSll dtnt to Ille said ctalmt In Ille olt1<e of (pay•blt at tllt time of salt In lllwful Ille clark of tilt •lore.aid cour1 or to moneyof tn. u"lled stain I all right, Ii· prtttnt tllem to 111• uno."lon«l •I the "-·•nd lnltrHl,convtyedlo endnow olfice of PATTEllSO N, POST~ lleldt>yltuncMrstlddted lnthtP"OP!rty SMITH, AT1'0 RN tYS AT LAW. )ltt situated In said County end Slate tfORTH B•OAOWAY. S11ltt 100 In I~ dnc:rlbed ., '1111-s : Tiit IHS4!hold In-Clly of Sent• ANI, Ill Oranoe Couflty, wrestcreettdbyaleeselloldMAyl, H?I wtolcll ltttaf Offlu h Ille plll<4 of blljl Illy and btlwffn the lr¥1ne Company A ness Of the IHldtrslOfled In e ll m.lltr~ Wont Vl~lnl• COf'p. as IHtor .:net Ptf'Ulnlno to wld Hl•t•. Such claim' ~ N. Rlclwlrcts end ~-It. will'I U'lt not("Wr'f wOUC:htr\ mu\I ~ Rkhanb, Huiband end wlft, 115 Joint Iii.cl or presen'9d ., alort~l<I wltntn T-ts. H 1-. rtCOfded ~ ,_ montM .. ,., IN fln l pullllcatoon l. tfn, M docUIMnt No. MlQ, In 8oOll of this nollu. 10014, P•9t S9', offlcltl rtconb of 0.tHJeft. S, "'•· Orentt c-nty, Celllornle In Md to the ARTHUR I GALLION lollowlnt «Mscrllltd real IH'optf't.,: EM<~ et the wlll TlloM llO'tlons 9f Trect No.'-lfl"" of u ld dtliet•nt. O ly of Newport BHcl'I, eoun.y of lll'ATTalttOtt, ltOST Orenge, St•I• .. Clllfomla, n Plf nwp & SMI TM i.<onled In 9ooei 17•, Pe .. s M 10 'II 111-ttDMartll8' ..... ey S.ltt 1• clldlve of mltctll-s maps,~ ........ , CA.mM LOS ANGELES (AP) -One-time Wall Street ot seld °'anvt County, ci.w111M 1n PuD11~ Of•11 .. eo.11 o.11y P11o1, "Whiz Kid" Kenneth Moss has been sentenced to. :::r~.':':c'~~~:''A~e~ ,,_.l'T•.u.n.n.m6 .._,. 120 ~ays in jail a_nd placed on four years' probation . ,,_.*'"""'""menttor1..,un11 PUBLIC N011CE on hi 1 r 1 ...... tt1rou111ou1 Lot u of Mid nect s P ea o gu1 ty to involuntary manslaughter in ~. 109) '°"""r wttl'I Hstmenta tor the drug overdose death of a rock musician. ~t •nd settlement .,..,.. set<1 Moss, 31, who made a fortune in the stock ._.~~n:!!:=::~T::::Sei: market before he was 30, was sentenced Wednes· ~ """" wctt """ •"' c-. day. He had entered the plea Dec. 8 as a jury was =!~~!'d~:.=·.::~ ~! being selected for his trial on murder charges. ,_., _ .. ,.c111t1111 ,._ .. ""' 111e He had been indicted on charges of murder and =~~..-,:~~. ~;:,~":.. .. unlawfully providing narcotics l.n the September Int o.cemw 11, tM ll9IOfl the,.,,.,_, 1974 death of Robbie Mcintosh, 28, a drummer with ~·d~:..~=1~== "The Average White Band... ..,., Md C9"ClltlOM, """''*'tor en 'I PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE FICTITIOVS BUSINHI "'CTITIOUI BUlt•UI MAMISTATIMINT ....-nATIMUfT Tflt fol .... ,..,.,_ ..... ..,,...... ,,. ......... _.,.... .............. ,....: ,_ .. : \-41 CASA de OltO, UtlJ Mulrlanda Lin LaAStNO 0),, M OC:Mft .. .._, Mh&lon Vlelf, CA. tt•rS A_,.,..., 9Mdl. CA. "1• Gt<ll Sl-•r1 to .... ?tU 1 Teno... "'"'" W•IM1er1. o•s ~ l.n., M1'610ft VlelO, CA. n•7S ~ L9flt .._..,CA. tOIOt Merylov EllteMlh COIM, UJSI "•try S. (OOlltll, 546 OCHll teKew l.11 , Ml~~•on v ie Jo, CA m 1s A-. SoMI ...... CA. '°7-0 Tflls ~tlneu I• coMuUff itr • TNs IMlallleU I• collducted tty • """" ... ~,,. ..... ... _,,_ __ "' Cecll I. Col•. pertntr HMf'Y $, CM1*1 TNI llllttmtnt wet lllef wltl'I ti. 1'11t ..... emef'll WH tll«I -411'1 tN CWlll'I' Ottrtt ef Orenge Coufll., on CtvMy Cltrk ef Or•nve c..-y e11 ~tt. ms. Dwim• >•. t97S. • -PWll't ,. .. Delly f4ili.\, Ol~llet U, "75 lllld Jllilltlllllltd 0rMl9' (OHl 0.lly Piiot, ~-'·"'~·'"' ..WJ --ryl,t$,tt.tt,t•7' ... ' ' opClollto~"'M. ~l!Mf'tY M*eA _.."*1MIY ~ .. : au Vlt&a ........... ..., IMo\. CA. .... .......... " ....... ..,. ..... c.-.t W _,.Mty, HIW'MS er ~ ,,.. reeardltlt uu. .... ....,.. or ~. IOMllsty IN I ..... ,.. *"'°" ty Mlf Ootff, lnclWlng\llt Jle IM t.,_.. of IM trw ... at141t1""9 ""'*' Cl"NllM Illy Mll4 ..... ~ .. ..,... • wlltl '"""" .. .....,.... """9ffl. ..,_\ht ~Id prlnclpel GI._ ~t MCIKM lty HI~ deed; t•wll ..... ,. wlttl IMWttt tflt"'°" ff'Ol'fl J!Mttt, 1'71•., .. l•• In wkl.-.. O.t.,.1 DKemw ao. m s. se--ANO -l!CONVfYAHC! CX>M~ANY •Ml'ITl\IMM ByJ.l .COltNWAl.L MitMlllMOfflCM '9111111'1\t• Ne-..n Har• .... "'"' CMtOIM4t wllll "1e Or•"llt CMll o.lly ............. ~YI. IS, U , 1•1t -.,. su .. a 1t10" COUltT Ofl THI STATI Oft CALll"OltNIA l'O• TMI COUNTY 0, OltANOE .... A .... 17 NO~CI Of' NUltlNO Off PllTITIOH l'Olt "ltOBATa OP WfLt.. AHO fllOlt LITTlltl 'fllTAMaNTAltY A .. 0 "Ott AUTMOltllATION TO AOMl"llTla U NO Blt THI INOl~l .. DINT AOMINllTltATION 01' l!STATQ ACT C~-..e C. fll ..... , ~ of JOSEPM A. l'ICICllTTS. ._.JOS. A. It ICK ETTJ , Dtctettd. NOTICE IS HEIUUtV OIV(N 11\et SICUltlTY "ACl,.IC t'ATIONA'- 8.ANI( "-flied llertlll e 11tllt1Gr! '°' ~at Wiii end tot liivenct of Ltl• ~ Ttst-tert IO lf\t Petlllofw llld Joi .,._l1atloft co edmlnbtw llllCIW the llldt ... 11dent AdmlnlltrallOft °' E.st.attl Act (,.,...... ~ode Stl ..... ~to wtll<.I\ It INClt tor lllrtNr ~ M4il tMI tf\t time .... ,._ "' ... ""' Ult .. ,,. '* lilMfl lllt -...,_.,.., 21, 1'1•, et 10100 a.I'll., 111 U. cowtl'Mf'I\ Of Otpertmtnt No. 1 of tel4' court. •t JOO O vlc Center 0r1ft WtM. In .. City If SMte Allt, C.ll~nla. 0.-..0.-~H. "11. WI LU AM I , M "°""· CIDl!My Cle rll "'WAMV,ICHMIOT ...., .. Loll. •S-,.......onww.• ....,,..........,c:., ....... ,... fthl?t0 ....... 1 flll*IWd e>r.llge ONtC Dtttly lllllot, ,,.,_,., t, 2, •. ,.,. ..... ,. . Hou1H For S-. 1Ho.M• For 541 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• G Hlfll • I 002 GiM rctl I OOZ HowMt For 5* Houwa For Sal. Ho.nn For S. IHWH hr S. · • ···········································•··· ••.•........••.•..•..•. . ...................... ··············~········ ....................... . e ... rlll tOO? G ....... 1001 GtMr.. 1001 ...... •• . • IOOJ .•..................... ·········•••••········· ............................................. . t7 Thursday Janu rye. 1976 CAIL. V PILOT l.l u ~· ....... ForW.' ....................... . ........... ~ BAY ANO BEACH 6 7 5 -3000 • "'''' I ' 01\:,T .-1w T' t:Ul-IONA Ut l P\111\~ • ________ .. ·G•,_•111•.·· ... •111•••• ... ••••••••• ••••••• • •• • •••••••••••• GtMral · I 00 ., .. ,.. I OOZ· 9UALITY DUPLEX -~ ................•...... ······················~ BtROR.. Adv...+1sen1--------------------------• should chKk ffle lr .. HEAR MEW HOW VA.CA.MT JUST LISTED RILL DIEQC/fULL Ul'E i This home bas it! Island countr)' kitchen, single story privacy, patio POOl Qff master s uite, smooth flow for , entertaining. plenty of walls foJi hanging art and plenty of deck t"-'~ hangs over Jasmine Creek Canyon. T ocean view is a bonus! This is a Unique home, $122,500. A listing of Pat Lane. deily mtd reftOti Hunonaiton Buch 4. Owner tranafe rre d - rors lnuMdlatefy. The PLEX-4blocks Crom must have fast sale. ... YAO. SMAU. PIUCltlB.ATIV&Yt Mesa North estate, ~ acre yard and an added family room that serves as a teenager's billiard center . Sound great? It is I 1t 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 space. Th is est ate is relatl vely inexpensive at only $55,900. 3 & 2 Bdrms., frplc. each unit. Beautiful inside, high ceilings, quality carpeting. dishwashers. Call for app't. DAILY rlLOT beach. Always tented! Popular Camelot model. ~ assumes Pri~ U140 ooo 4 Bedrm with large fami· U.Wty for the first ~a ' · · ly room, living room, eornd lnsertloft only. UPERB formal dining room and kitchen eating area. Pie· AVAILABLE FOR LEASE Only steps to ocean & Big Corona Beach. 3 Bdrms., 2 baths, frplc., garage +parking. Only $.525 mo., annual lease. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any a dvertising for real e slatc which is in viola- tion or the law. General THE con AGE Over ¥.& acre Ne wport Heights. Separate in· come unit. Sacrifice $.53,500. 645·0303 FOREST OLSON INC. SALES Associates, share office expense, get 90% comm .. learn equity purchase. tax s helte r and tax defn . exchange. Will give you 5 to 10 of- rers every day to pre· s ent. Sam & G e n e, P ILOT Re al Estate, 540-0555 BALBOA ISLAND New. 2 unit. Make offer. Large 2 story. inland pro- perty on the Island. For information call , 400 u r• · FOR ALL C.M. ARW We Tri Harder cit TRI HARBOR BLUFFS CHARM See the warmth or this 3 bdrm., 2112 ba . home; ex- citing e xtras. wra p· • around patio. End unit ; comfortable but conve- nient distance to area pool. $78,900 C. F. Colesworthv Realtors 640-00fO Classified ads sell big items, small items or any item. Just call 642-5678. DAILY PILOT 642-5678 QM E S lure perfect cond.Jtloo. .3141 CatnPUs He 549·'655-Great locaUon. Aekln& $67,fiOO. Call540·1151 ~~~~---..:====:::t FAMILY HOME 3 Bedrm, 2 ba, POOL. Eastgate area. Fplc. Din CLASSIFIED HOURS Advertisers may place I.heir ads by telephone 8:00a.m. lo5:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday 8toooonSatu.rday • COSTA MESA OFFICE 330W. Bay 64,2.,5618 NEWPORT BEACH 3333 Newport Blvd. 642-5618 HUNTINGTON BEACH 17875 Beach Blvd. 540-1220 Lf.CUNA BEACH 1186 Clenneyre Laguna Beach 494·9'66 SADDLEBACK 2S201La P aa Road Laguna Hills 581~10 NORnlCOUNTY dial free 540-1220 CLASSIFIED DEA DUMES Deadline for copy & kills is S:JQ p.m. the day before publication, ex- ct>pl for Sunday & Mon· day Editions when deadline is Saturday, 12 uoon. CLASS IRED REGULA TIO HS F.RRORS: Advertisers 6hould check their ads dally & report errors Immediately. THE DAILY PILOT assumes liability for the firsl in· , ~ insertioa only. .~ (;~f:l,.LATIONS: ~ 1'jJHng an ad be sure to make a recot'd of the KILL NUMBER 9dven you by your ad luker as receipt of.your cance llaUon. This kiJI number must be presen· led by the advertiser in C3$! of a dispute. CANCELLATION OR CORRECTION OF NEW AD BEFORE RUNNING: Every effort is made to kill or correct· a new ad that has been ordered, but we cannot guaran· lee lo do so until the ad has appeared in the paper. DIME-A-LINE ADS : 1lleSe ads are strictly cash in advance by mail or at any one of our or· fices. NO phone orders. Deadline : 3 p .m. Friday, Co6la Mesa of- fice " 12 noon at all branch offices. THE DAILY PILOT reserves the right' to classify, edit, censor or refus e any adver · Usement, and to change its rates & regulations without prior notice. CLASSIFIED MAIUHG ADDIESS P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626 ~~~~ .,~~;ill>-HERITAGE REALTORS •DUPLEX• Steps to bay & park & , shopping. Newly decor. G......a I 002 G1Mral I OOZ IJ~·l()UI: t1VMl:S REALTORS~ 646·5990 1525 Masa Verde Drive, East, Costa Mesa BAY & BEACH REALTY OUI 26.. YEAR 675·3000 . U~l()U t: li()Ml:S REAL TORS~ 675-6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar . I 002 Getteral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• duplex. Bargain priced ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• at $64 500 Seller will ----~ ----.-.'. -,... W .. ~S LEY N General I 0021 Gewral 100% f. t . _....----~~~ TAYLOR CO. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• mM~. ' Bolboa lay Prop. LEASE OPTION Realton 3-Bedroom, 2-bath, builtins plus stone •675·7060• fireplace. Newly painted. Big lot with double garage. Real sharp and only $62,500. BEACH TRIPLEX Super location -Clean. Ocean upper unit. $11S,OOO. E·Z terms view HEALTORS si11vt: lH46 UMDA ISLE-MAIN IAY VIEW' Exciting water traffic seen from this comfortable 5 BR Contemp. Abundant tile & teakwood. Lge .bayside terrace. Space for 3 boats. $395,000 2111 Smt Joaquin Hill Road NEWPORT CEHT&t. M.I. 644-4910 • I 002 General 1002 LIDO ISLE Like new! Lido Soud 4 BR .• 4 ba. 1- 0wner. Custom bayfront. Lawn, patio, jacuzzi; pier & float. $325,000 ~ Waterfront, Lido Nord. 6 BR . or 4 BR . & 2 BR. apt. On sandy beach. $285,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Buy\1d1· Dr•vt· N B b l'.J b161 SPIRIT OF 17 6 Treat yourself to one or 675-6670 JACOBS REALTY ·······~··············· .••.........•.......••• SUBURBIA ESTATE DOLL HOUSE G...-al I 002 GeMt"al I 00~ WALK TO BEACH ASSUME 7112% LOAN .............................................. Mesa Verde's fine ex· 2919 11...1ewport llvcl.·coner 30th ecutive homes. 48r & "" Den+Pool. Outstanding ....., value at $82,500. Call now - to see this terrific new G:...____. • . 1002 listing. .._......_ DAVID BOURKE •••••••••••.e••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MINI RANCH RLTR. CALL 546-9950 3 IB>ROOM IEAUTY 2 Story carpeted thruoul with fireplace located across from beautiful Mlle Sq. Pa rk. Total price $42,500. Hurry! It won't last. Call 963-6767. ON/.i 1119·11 s rulv ro·er ii11ct • [\lll~&ltll TRIPLEX 2285 Miner, C.M. GLEN MAR · BEAUTY Super sharp 3 bedroom home ideally located on quiet cul-de-sac street. Convenient to shopping and schools. Newly de· corated inside. Hurry, new Listing. $49.000. 640·6161 • ~ $36,500 3 IR-GI HO DOWN Tree lined approach. Massive 23' living room. Formal dining room. Large country kitchen. Huge grounds with cov- ered dance pavilion to entertain or just roam. Separat e wing f o r hideaway mas t e r & childrens suites. First to cal l gets thi s SACRIFICE BARGAIN! _Cg,!fN~7.,huN rbtir wet';· ·JWIUllMIJ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. POOL & JACUZZI I mmacula t e t s tor y O u t s t a n d i n g home on tree lined street. neighborhood. Tree lined 3 Bedrooms 1ncludmg street. Secluded enlry. kmg size m aster s uite. 2 · Spacious living r oom. Full baths. Family din· Go urme t s kitc h e n s mg room. Complete with ser ves formal banquet built-ins & dishwasher . area. HIDEAWAY RUM -Highly upg raded with PUS ROOM. 4 F amily ne~ c_ar~ts, dra pes, & s ized bdrms. Includes pa111t ms1de & out. New secluded large master ceramic tile in kitchen & s uite. S PARKLING baths. Large covered CU S TOM POOL & pat10. No qualifying. S269 JACUZZI + low m ain· month pays all. As ki ng tena nce yard. OWN ER $43,500. Call 842-2535. MUST GO. HE MIGHT (J•fN l•I O••IHrJN llJPft,ofl HELP FINANCE. 1~· , , ~ Hurry! Call 546·2313. ~ jj [ i :IU'i il . VA-FHA ' BUILDER'S CLOSE·OUT 2 Beach!ront 2 bdrms .. 2 baths. $57 ,500 And BARGAIN Top cond. shake roof, all bltns, cpts, drps, frplc, lovely patio. $74.500. 10% dn. Principals only. 960-1200 Bkr. TRAHSFERRB> --------•I $59,750. Submil all offers You vets-here is your starter home already to move into. Not a ftxer- only 2 yrs old, 3 bedroom. 2 bath, plush ca rpets. dble car garage with opener. Try $35,500. OWNER _. ~TIOH & trades ! VlEW HOME IM "'1 1 '"" BEVERLY CREEDO .... Huge single sty, 4 bdrms, IUILDERS ..... HARIOR VIEW 2 ba, fr ml dining rm, Cam REAL TORS 645-24 11 HILLS rm, hvy sbk roof. All of LIVE IN THIS NICE 21--------- Gracious 3 bedroom, 3 this + can be purchased bedroom home while you ~ bath executive home subject to 6% VA loan. build your units on the -· ·cClltftery Villaqe -· y,:ith. 180 degree view. Must sell. Only $62,500. :l-4 l~l. room for pool tad 45x100 With small 'bouse Perfect for entertaining. !)45.9491. e .m arge convert~ and covered work area . Large living room, hu~e WALKER & LEE family roo~. Walk 10 For sale or lease. In· family room, Anthony REAL ESTAT.E ~l05ets, panelmg. gas bl_t· ouiries invited. 546·41 4 1 ~ COATS & WALLACE REAL ESTATE, INC. swimming pool, views --------'---I ms and ch.vered patio · PETE BARRETT ... from kitchen, living eDonh~ndcel l is pr:opeorly. . REA•·:ry ---------room. dining room and JUST LISTED n t e ay on Lb1s. nly -1.. - ma s t er be d r o o m . M E S A N 0 R T H 4 $40,500. Call S4S·S880. 642-5200 675· ~060. YOUNG CONDO Owners are motivated. Bedroom, 2 baths, fplc, IN OLDE CdM ~ If/I) •THESEARE* SERIOUS SELLERS PLEASE CALL OUR OFFICE F~~ * 4714 CORTLAND DR. Choice Cameo Highlands 4-bedroom home or 3 & den with private beach. In beautiful condition- ready fo r quick move-in. OP.EN DAJLY 1-5 "ABANDONED" BEACH CLASSIC Owners have packcd.Qti and moved out! The1 have vacated this 4 year young bea uty and haw put a .. s ell-it .quick" I • price on it! Child-safe cul-de-sa c ! Executiv~ entry to s oarin g cathedral ceilings, lush a nkle dee p carpe t. squeaky clean paint. s un- shine kitchen with walls of glass! Party-pa tio and expansive rear yard l Toa s t·your-toe s firepl a ce! Sweeping master bedroom retreat with separate dressing area! 2 Childrens rum- pus sized bdrms ! Bail him out at a conserva tive $51,950 or assume exist· ing loan at $251 pe r month! Act fast. we need HELP! Call 847·6010. • • Ol'fN ru _o. II s IUN l~fol ~I<'. • 101 ;Oci<roRD Rn.,[ 1~~~~= .. :~l~f~~~~l~i~l~l~*~I~· Cameo Highlands ca-1_ nyon and ocean view 4· bedroom or 3 & den. L·A-R·G·E covered patio on canyon side. Room for pool at the front. Private beach. In fine condition. TRADE ANYONE? Priced at $117,500. Call complete carpeting 673-8550. thruout. Drapes. Bltns. I MEED SOMEBODY This s pacious 2·story. 2 • 1606 ANTlQUA, Dover .°[jji[jl\it' ~:~·iZ~{~~: !!:~~~~t ~;.:I~;~r:fi~~tl~ ~f~~{~~:;f.~:~~ fg&i;,~fr~{;~: Condo w a nted in ex- change for n ice Palm Springs home with pool. 675-6060 ~~;;;~~~~=-~~-Realtor 1810Newport Th.ishomehasilall. Up· are: 5 lge bdrms, 3 ba, $74,500.Callus now! beautiful view. THE .. R•...acH•• CostaMesaS48-7729 graded throughout , brickfrplc,famrm.I'm COLEOFMEWPORT "'"" l~~~~~~~~~~I prime Huntington Beach a 2 sty. 2650 Sq. ft. ugly Is the gorgeous setting location, fireplace in duckling with unlimited REALTORS for this imr_nac s pac Cam OM THE BLUFF family room. Just listed possibilit ies. To know 2515 E. Coast Hwy. home with lovely t n1 $37950 rt • m e, 1s lo l ove m e. 675-5511 manicured grounds & a View• View• View fas~--ltke a'dva.ntag~~~ 54.S-9491. .., COMPANY · ""NEGLECTED'• "spit & polish" interior. $46.500 first lo call for appt. lo WALKER&LEE REALTORS BAYSIDE BEACH GIANT Owner by a military of-2 bedrooms, 2 baths Con· see. 963-6767. REAL ~STATE Sl:"CF. 19·" ELEGANCE Price slashed! Owner fleer, you KNOW the en-dominium. Fireplace, ()P(N 1t1 0 ·•1srvN 1o~t N1Ct• 673·4400 bought another home! tire property is in s uperb [~ i SPANISH HACIENDA Country French Villa on cond. Nestled among family room. til_e entry. , , . 4 BR TRl·LEVEL wide s andy beac h. Desperate! Pnced below 00 h 0 1 Cus tom carpeting and ' , ·--------•I 4 b e d r 0 0 m a n d market ! Take advantage' $70,0 omes. n Y dra pes. Decorator 's . ' ' I POOL of this soaring 2 story! $52 900 a"6 7711 Ope n ~~,~~--~~~~~~ gameroom, with large · · .,.. -· wallpaper throughout. · · A most exciting and ap-HARBOR VIEW Secluded entry to huge Eves p a t io . f o r privacy. WALKER &LEE Separate laundry room.---------pet alinµng ~tobme•d. ~1panishf $239,950. li ving room-dining en- REALESTATE Twoenclosedpatios,one ._t-H._..__' s y gw1 re ll e roo . Lusk Home JYrwarrantyinc. t ertainmenl. rumpus _________ 1 custom bricked. 2 car -'r'"' ..-.RT S Very separate private 675·72ZS sized fam ily room! Euro· garage, electric door .ATTENTION!! master bedroom suite, Charming 3 bedroom p e a n kit c h e n ! 3 Public Hotic• GonrnfMftt opener, swimming pool J ust listed. 3 bedroom attractive H/F pool with with magnifict!nt view Childrens suites! Spirall· around the corner. and family, rustic beam low maintenance yard. from rear yard and ing sta U'case to master Assumable Loans Avallable lo everyone! Low interest & rent-like payments available. Easy to qualify. 3 & 4 bedroom homes availa- ble. For details on how you can own one or these homes, call Tarbe ll, Realtors. Jacuzzl&Sauna. patio, brick B·B-Q and An ou ts tandin g patio. MUST SELL TO bdrm retreat! Vaulted By Ow ... ER fire ring. Super sharp neighborhood and street SETILE ESTATE. ceilings. Executive ol'· ("1111 with lots of extras. Near location, round the cor-$94 000 fice. Romeo & Juliet 18724 new. As king $57,000. ner from school, park, • ' balcony! Paint & save! MaalewoodLll Must sell.Call540.1151. tennis courts. bike t rail 11 ~·11· Help this seller -try any TING and close to beach. Even 64f-SBil _________ 1 offer. 2400 Sq. ft. 2 Story HUNT NGTON BEACH more to your advantage Real Estate Sales bargain at $53.900! Help! Off Ellis, down Chapel priced to sell instantly al ANYTIME 847-6010. Lane between Beach $75.000. Please phone GALAXY REALTY Ol'!N r11Q •llHUN '11 " ' Blvd&Magnolia ~~~~~~~~~I 546·2313 for appointment, Prt>st igio us l ocat 1on . [ 968-4293 -but you'd better hurry! Strong sales s upport-IEACH GIANT Ol'fN 1119 ·" s W N ro B1 "'PC'' High commissions. Call 540°1720 ~: : I ' : . ! h ' 1 · I ' : "' --------•I PARADISE MA.MOR Ju.$l 500 yards to sand 1~· >.: ~ ,.!:l~EWPORT BEACH Vic Stuart. 901 Dover Dr, MEWLISTINCi 31R·2STORY beach·3,000sq.ft.o£1ux· ... ~tom4br.2 ba,Nwpt S uite 130, Newport POOL·BEACH ury llving. 4 to 7 Hs. lm m ac. thruout. Beach. Classified Ads sell lu~ Sea Wind Condo, Npt. bedrooms. Warm. . Frplc in exposed bea m 645-3111 items, s mall ite ms or Beach. 2 Bdrms., 2 $35,000 charming family roorn.1---------ceiL llv rm, lgc dining ---------' a ny ite m.642-5678. baths ; u pgraded Formal entry to a r ea look in g out on carpets. draperies ; dramatic livin& room. Oriental plank patio *JUST LISTED* tropical planted garden. washer /dryer. Never Huge garden view overlooks mini orchard Rustic upsidedown col· A gleaming kit. w/serve· lived in. Spacious & airy kitchen. Artistic open in private yard. $84,900 tage on large corner lot-thru bar, master bdrm corner unit. $57,500 stairs sweep to separate Cull price.10% down. For bea utiful ocean view-suite w/pvt bath & patio. 673·3863 64.2-2253Eves master s u ite plus appointme nt. CALL t t b t b h Off ed$87 500 childrens win". Secluded KEY, 962·7188 s eps o es e ac . er Myer's Al.pha 22ft.ballroo~sizedpar· ~ --k€Y-~-··-f~~·.tsrg~s.s ~h~sa :~ Corpo~allon ty room that overioou _Vil n~ •tr~s A Properties. s13-5410 673-s1ss walled courtyard. Hurry n-.;."' ~ associated 11 ~ ! ) ... f .., ' ~J ( f1 .... t. ~ c, ' 1.. "t/t,J ti 11 t I ~ I f ' I 1002 for this call 963·7881. 2 STORY-FA.MIL y CitMral I 002 GeMt d l~~~~~~~~~~I O#'(N 1119." s l(JN f08(Ni(f'T' I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • ' · · " POOl.-$26,9501 h V.. ~ . Two story bargain! Just ~ $26,950 run price! Large N VIEW 1..=;i; :::''=·=· :::':=::=~!!!!!:=..I living room. VERY larse eowtynd entry, cascad· family-dining room com· int fountain, thick adobe LAJ<IEFIOMT bo! Brlihl • spacious walls, 3 levels. aplral Llvlna ln the City-tiled kitchen•step.in pan· atairwaytobuaemaster IBr/fam rm, enclosed tryl Wrought iron with mcker1n• rlrepltce, p•tJo. near So. Cout attlrway to k lnl( ah:• band h ewn b earna, Plua.t67.500. Terms. bedroom a. Secluded wrou1ht iron, formal HAL PIMCHIM muter w/bullt·in vanity. dlne ,•loo cel lar, REALTORS Redwood Ceoced patio ill.· mac~ab I Irvine t'-realty · GIMt'al .. I 002 GHet"al 644-7270 . $30,000 DOWN 1002 on1y the Delly Piiot rully tella JOU whit'8 MW In your local community ••• every day maplnc:ent ooean vlew. 675-4392 overlookln1 wroutbt lron Hurry, can't Jut a t encloaed super-pool. S7UOO FIXER UPPR ~1.CIHd garep + extra Roi •. TS 1•&L""' 2300 Sq. ft. custom home ,pnkln1. Take advan· SA · • • ta.ce·call now 752·1700. •41•1611 on San Clemente Golf · O!'fN'l!i"O·lrS1CJIHON~· 1~~~~~~~~~~I Course. Pool. choice 1~ location. Owner anxious· THE REAL Cill -' CORONA D& MAll-YIEWI Newly listed! 4 bedroom, family room home w /that special charm & lovely sunset view or Newport Harbor. Newly redecorated! $137 ,500 & you own the land t Jeanne Newman 642-8235. (P41> •a UY S · T H 1 S LA R G E U COLONIAL HOME in DOVER SHORES for the big family that likes to entertain. 7 Bedrooms, 6 baths, family room, large billiard room with wet bar. Master suite has ms AND HER baths + a steam bath. Gym. Private study. To see now -call 644-7Z'IO. DAILY PILOT Make offer. BKR. The fastest draw ln the «~3 West .•. a J)ally Pilot ---------• Cl~nlned Ad. Phone nlM1 wbat you want ID Sell thlnp rut wilh DallY Ma.sl7&. Dally Pilot CluaUleda. PUot Waot Ada. E~~AH:R~ 642.UJS MWJOI 901 oo.... DtlY• ,.... .-ecAttw ~ hid!, Clilltemle ...., I I DAU. Y PILOT ~~-=~~~~--:------2~~~~~l!8.!!.t~9!?,!78 Ho.:Mi For S• HCMllH For I* HcMIMt For S. .._,..For S-. 1•••1 P't aperty JOOU H•H U•fnlilod .. ""?a''" ..... s. Hoeln For SGle "°"'" For SGle • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••• •• • ••• • • • • • • • • • ••• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • ••• • • • ••••••• •• • ..... •••••• • • • ••• • •• ••• • ••• • •• • • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .................................................................. .,..... . l044 "9~1e«.ll 1069 ..... 1069 C11m1ale 1076 C..-c11tMtr' 3Z2Z 1-a•P...--a 1007 CosiaM.M 1024 ........._ •• eca. 1040 ....................... ••••••••• ................... •••••••••••••••••• n••••••••••••••••••••• ttCJf. Spendable. Tfadc ......... •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......................... •••••• .... ••••••••••••••• Uni v. Park Kome-4Brs ~ local property for Oceanfront. Small 2 bt'. 3 Ouple x·Bay Ave·Neat· $29,995 Pool +IHc• J:l:s!J'!,"·Prl••iu;~ DOVER SHORES llOUa'SD&IAM ~,l::"8'~J"~'.""~ ~iio.lrt='.:ft":1'l •••· • Convenient Cus tm. bit 543•500 2•bedroom. 2·balh Condo __ 12Ytold Pnc..>d Loaell at East SI• A.BA.HDONID z STY E~cellent opportunity to purchase on utb-f al rway .1....:....:~~-----2Story 2BR t ~ BA. w;w. t &'f . s o o . co as l .. As 11 .. Ee ar9111cySale SPAHJSH Architecturally designed home. Panoramlc ocean v ew. FOR SALE drps, range, udult.s no ~pem~. G7s S4l0 Cha nt'e lo r4'ally uve! ~·1!!~d0f:'trt;!'1,f ! s;: + 2 PATIOS January 15, this home will be listed. bJ&bly upcradcd. Only Goodyear Tire Center, pets. $38S. (213)433-1391 · ~ cMt Mor I 022 Bia. private lot , room for tance from this 1re~rif1~ NllD OCCUPANCY? Contemporary 4 BR. 4 Ba, redwood & i5iJ.:t£v REALTORS "m111ent tlocfraeUeon1•00~•11t!r'~ Irvine Terrace •·BR,3b1t. ••••••••••••••••••••••• )'Our campe r & boat. pool home! Big pool with Vacant & waiting! Move glass view home on GA.LAXY DR. 492·~ lease, .FREE atandlng 3,025 gq It, pool, bay,~ IARE Farm.style<! home with healer & tilter for year· ln fast and decor#te you Quality & distinctive. Real value ln this brick bulldinl with rour ocean view. S850 mo. l•! 41RDUPLEX venuatllenoorplao.Cozy round entertainment. 3 heart outl CLl!:AN & comfortable. well planned home !or SbarpNt1wLlstlng-6one (4)serviceareas.Porln· June 15. CARRlAGt; SO.OFIAYSIDE ~~~·n~;; ~~~~~e:a~l~rh =~ t0~~~~ C:::i ~:~~:f11~~~;f1~ii: prestige living apd entertaining. ~!1~ ~~0$~:t~ ~!~11k fo. call Tom Utman, REALTY,67~ ' ' v.ilh a 3 BK, 2 BA rental. wood cabinets. For com· COWlll')' wood cabinets, logs. Bright as spring al $255.000. Beach, & Public Golf 644·Sl~. A!lklnl *2 15.ooo. Cotta MelCI 3ZZ4 Oqly 1 ~, ye a u o ld ptete del01Us, BKR, call bullt·ins, dishwasher. tned kitchen. Gigantic 646·6900or644-4684 Course, Income $11,100 ..,..R s•LE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Featuring beam ce1lmgs. S40-1720. Unbelievable savings, ''fiesta .. family room. S95,500 AA Realtors, rv ,.. PRIME AREA ~ na tural Wood und bri<'k BKR,cal1S42'88.S4. Winding staircas e t . 492·2100 Income producing 2 Br 2 bn new decor textures a nd pedecl TAABIU.. Qu oiS inh.d . Medical & Profession.al $315.' Gard~o~r/Wt.r pd: locallon.Q.11 644·7211. 1We:!'&Ji!asiu1,::1~~Y l.acJ-aNiguef 1052 l'Wwportleoch 1069 ~~----1071 Building, Fo untain Adults,nopets.673-6372 closet p · t s · b ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• _...,..a..--Valley, 9SOO sq. rt., 1 --~-"'------ 0#1 in California" •••If bnck ·paJ:,vp~usPT~e HARB9R VIE'WHOMES ••••••••••••••••••••••• story. ~pr.rox. 00'7o + Exceptional 3 hr. 2 ba, "#I m Callton.~.. backyard patio! Low Port~ftno, immac, 4 Br, 3 Sharp condo, 3-BR, 2·ba, leased. X nt area, his· xlnlloc. $375 mo. Rers re-$32, 900 y A maintenance. Try $61! Ba, finished bonus rm & all upgr4lded. Low down. tory of low vacancies. q'd. 540-1542, 546·9460 3-Bedroom home OD R·2 ON THE BLUFF down for irullant home! lo~. $91.500forquicksale $36,500. Pb: 493.o743 ~o;n~~~.~~~l5_1·~~k~~ Back Bay Condo. 4Br, l>uplex. Price n:duced to lot with room for addi· y r-Sharp-don't hesitate.call pnnonly,64().6341 MobHeHot11es $350000 3ba, l)ew c pts, drps . S:9,800. Corona del Mar. tional unit or boat & f'S'W • VJ.w •View .t~,r1~~-~~~iv roBtN1Cf• HARBOR VIEW HOMES For Sale 1100 ' · paint. $425 mo. 492·2796 Joor sale by owner. Ex· traller storage. Favora· $46,500 [ Portofino, immac, 4 Br, 3 •••o•••••••••••••••••• 4·plex. By owner. Xlnt l'e llent cond See owner ble financing availa ble. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths Con· ~·lt~ljil'rl Ba. fmished bonus rm & 8' X3S. 'SPARTAN. Costa Mesa rental area. 4Br, 2ba. Completel>: re- /JD.NIGEL UAIL(Y & ASSOC I I\ TES .it 420'2 La~k.spur, CdM and with a price this low dom inium. Fireplace, --·-· .. l--· loft,$91,500,forquicks ale with 21' add-on, mint $m,500.642·9772. dsdebc. bNewf. aplpl lndcbll or call 644·7326 you belt t f ·1 t ·1 · ~ prin onJy ., .. ,. ~ .. 1 cond C l t · ws er, irep ace, · er a c n o w. arruyroom, 1e entry. ,.....,.,..,... · omp . seup tn11 New Pride of gar. lg covd patio r 'ourplex Pm:e reduced CALLS56-2600 • Custom carpeting and BEAUTIFUL C.M. conv. loc., 19th & Ownership Units. Open w/BBQ. Lg fncd yd. Off to SlGl .Joo. Corona del t;:: SELECT dra pes. De corator 's MAJES'I'.IC 4 Br spa~i~us QNLY ONE LIKE THIS. DOVER SHORES ~~~~. ~l~k~~:~~l house Sat & Sun 377 W. street rec vehicle park'g. ~1ar. For sale by owner. T' PROPERTIES wa llpaper throughout. home with formal ~g Immaculate J.Br, lg faro LOWEST PRICED day Sat & Sun., or bef Bay, C.M. Agt. 642.()758 Schools K thru college, 6 1-:xcelle n l cond. See Separate la undf1'. room. room, s eparate fam.ily rm w/fp. Plush carpet· blJcs ~nn 540 l\A.,., Twoenclos d t room d b ing and window treat· HOMEON 9AMoraft6P[dwkdays. ~~ ·~mo. ·~ owner a t 420i'2 Larksp ur, SHARPVACANT ~ pa1os,one f. 1' woSo urning GALAXYDRIVE -I' 2100 be(ll. <.:d Mor call 6"' 4 . 7326 . 2 Br St d . M d 1 custom bncked: 2 car 1rep ac~. teps to the m e n t s . COM PAR E STB•'WIEIRYP•T 1---------. u 10 0 e · garage, electric door commumly park featur AT .... $83,SOO. Ivan Wells atrium. 4 BR. "'-A CH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3br, and family. In Mesa *VIEW!* ~ew listing m Irvine Tcr· race! lmrna c. 2 ·BR -rconvert. den with great s1t·down \'icw of Harbor & Ocean. $92,500. inc land! CALL today J ack Howell & Assoc's &44·1156 (24 Hrs.) S36,90?. Owne r /Agt opener, swimming pool ing huge pool,kiddypool EnioytheGoodLife~ 3 Ba. "Marvelous day & 1 Bd, adult prlc. C.M. Forsaleorlease5600sqft Verde.$375/mo.Agt,Ask &16·30lJ, 546·7739. a r ound l he c orn e r . & many ball courts. Call 32325So. Coasl Hwy nite view. Pool & jacuzzi. ~ .. ~~19re1s5• bus . $4,500. ~ned M·l . 85% A/C & for Les, 540-1151. $30,000 Full Price J acuzzi & Sauna. Ranch Realty 493.2513 499-4S84 Price reduced below ap· '7tO • improved 400 amp By 551 2000 Praisal. 1824 Galaxy Dr. . FOR LEASE 3BR 2 BA Must sell lrg 3br ranch BY OWNER · Trailer Space owner. 883 S. East St., 1 f d d $4 • house Assume 6°' FHA HIGH 0 N Open Daily & Wknds. 1·5. Anahea·m. 956·9630 rg. nc . yar • 60/mo • IO 18724 : ·A-HILL , $159,S00.645-8498 AHll. 631-1830 loa n, paymnts only TILE ROOF charming 2·BR, 2·Ba ~ $85. per mo. incl water& Loh for sale 2200 --.------ $142/mo. Call540·3666. MaDlewood Ln Hi~h Ceilin~S den adult condominium. WATERFRONT w /SLIP gas. 133 E. 16th St. C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful 3-BR, 2·ba Con· HUNTINGTON BEACH Rec'l. facil's., htd. pool. Bill Carroll 640-5560. 642-1265. LAKE ELSINORE 50xl30 do. All xlrs, pool. club· Off Ellis, down Chapel Popu ar Plan l, an· Clean air! SS9,SOO. Hasting & Co. Realtor . . Lot, xJnllerms. hse. $325/mo. 645-3777 Lane belw"'e n Be ach cellor. Two separate * 80 ... D REALTY * Local Park 8x37 mobile " t bed · " THE BLUF·FS ' 549.2509 2 'super 3 and 4 bdrms. Blvd.&Magnolia mas er room swtes 831-9411 home,S2000orlalemodel1----------968·4293 PLUS DEN . $57,500. $53,750 car.646·9541 BUILDER WANTED Crpts, drps , dshwshr. Costa Mesa I 024 · LE RAISOR DEN + pool To buy & develop 12 $ 345 / mo. 963 · 4 569 / ••••••••••••••••••••••. Mesa Verde North, 4 Bd. 3 R a r e 2 Br B e a u t y . Newport Beach I 069 Sparton·Mansion l Br 1 · · 963·1786. E ·Side, lar"" R ·•lot, 2 Br ba, Cam.r m .. dinrm .. Secluded. 31,A;i yr old , cul· ••••••••••••••••••••••• The fa.bulous "S" p~an! BA. CM adult pa'rk, work ocet da~ vieSw loCtsl in out· ----------,.,.. "' d REALTY i Red. l1le roof. Rais ed shop, awning, reas. r ent. s n ng an emente On MV Goff Coune +den. frpl c. ha rdwd 2100 sq.ft. choice corner ·s ac. $46,500. 581·2306 BgCanyonCondo portico e t St to lo c . Pre l iminary lloors. new cpt & paint location. 567,500. By _o_w_n_. ________ , 4S23Campus Dr .• Irvine Beautiful 2 + Den or huge Livi~g~~m~~i~~ to ~53appr. 644·1816 or eng ineering cmplt'd · ~r::; ~c~~:!:?°lhF~f: inside $-l6,500 By 0 \\ ncr owner. S-10·4~· H r ,,.. Campus Valley Shop Ctr. Form. Din. 1780 Sq Fl. sparkling blue common ----------tentative t ract map ap· '76, lse, $600 Owner 167 Broadway 833 O-i95. ... an.,. on CALL 133-8600 End unit pnv + sccur. pool. Comfy gourmet 1973 Mobile Home 24x62, 3 prv'd. No need to hassle 540-6005 ---Dona Point 1026 Harbour ----------1 Owner 644 6249 kit c he n. Queen s ize BR, 2 Ba, encl. porch, coastal comm. Xlnl ---------- HUGUMGUS YARD! ••••••••• •••••••••••••• TOWMHOMES bedrooms. Den ar extra Huntington Beach adult financ'ng :ivail. -possible Sharp, new decor. 3 BR, 2 5', do \\n poss. 4·BR. BR Co ndo, Oce a n / DRAMATIC bedroom .your choice ! park w/2 Club Houses, ass~mabl Ly of present Ba, pool. No pets. $395. ~J,908~.,,,,~kr . 847-8553i Sunsel Vu,Tennis,Pool. !~B~~;'~· q ui~~ abre a. ENTRY... *REDUCED* Decorator wa llpape r ! Pool&jacuzzi,nrbeach. d8%~. note. For further First, last & cle aning _ ve ,!A/7 544,950. By Owner. (714) r ro m a r ou r takes you into the two· Se lle r has purc hased $30,000. 960-1429 etails please conlacl dep. 548-6797 --833 4669 Wk dys l-14 ) Mall. Pool. Jac u zzi. story living room of th1s 4 And owner is very anx· new hom e·ANXIOUS ' Holly aft 6pm, 559·1828. --'---------- OWNER HEEDS HELP! 496_8174 Wknds. • 1 clubhouse. Ne w & re· bdrm .. 2 balh home . iou s b e ca u se he 1s Take advantage SSJ,7s0 Business Property 1400 Will co-operate. Mesa Verde pool home, 4 4 + 2 + FAMIL y. sales, from S!H,900. Sunken familv room with transferred Townhouse f u 11 P r i c e , C 3 1 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . br ranch, $425 mo. For DIME . fireplace and wel bar, ,with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. today·752·1700. · Bead Shop for sale, gd op· ~d ~w.tabfe for 8 unats. appt call bef lOam or aft powder room. paneling, 5 6 8 9 5 o d brok t h I m m e d i . a l e Fountain Valley I 034 cm ultra-modern decor JUSt '""1N Iii 0 ... ' ll)N rn 1•r N•f'(' portunity. 425 30th SL. Principals only. 898-4121 3pm, 979-2807. l>Os""'·""ion '.'·' i'IO\"' in••••••••••••••••••••••• I . • a n n o w [ ~ #29,NpBch.213·433-5066. era ome. . , .... ,.... " " ACT wa k·1n closet and even a VACANT ~ . . Newly pa1.11t.ed 4 br, 1~ now''' fatensivc us(•d FAST!! I I POOL a nd J ACUZZI. 839-l7lO , '.. Commercial ~antastic ~acre view lot ba, ram.rm., $395.mo. brick atr~nluatcs thh 38rand newhomes left $75.000 REXL.HODG ES Property 1600 in San Diego Country Ref's. Families only. cou ulry ~\~l e hu m l" 2600SQ.FT REALTY INC. REALTY ~,==========~·! ••••••••••••••••••••••• EstalesSS1·5130 1608 Whit e Oak, Every woman·s dn·am 4 BR . 3 Ba . $78.250. 714/846-1371 SS2-7S00 --------NEWPORT SHORES Mobile .. ---/ M.Verde. 545-7359. 1.itcht.-n \'\illl .ill Lht• wtft• 26-00SQ . f--r. THE BLUFFS ~ s aver con\l'n it•nccs. ·I BR,3 Ba .. S77.500 d h'll SSB.000!!! 3 BR .<or 2 &d dccnh}, in BALBOA Trtrl'rks 2300 4.Bdrm, l lh·ba, East· l\I a m m ll l h b r I t k 2322 SQ. FT. re I 3 BR. 2 Baths move·IO con . oice ••••••••••••••••••••••• side. Fncd yd. 226 Sierks f1replat't' l'<1ur ktng 4 BR. 3 Ba , $?2,soo. SHOWCASE Agent640·5560 loc. nr. pools & tennis ; BAYfRONT LAKESIDE MOBILE St. $295. Ph: 548·6680 ::>ized hl:'tlroo ms wil h Super Floor Plans r 1 r e alty __ __;;::;_ s hort wa lk to ocean HOME m<Jss 1H· ma~tt·r ::.u1 t1: Xtra large tots, too HOME EXECUTIVE'S $56.900 120 feet waterfront pro· PARKSPACES·S75/MO. 2 ~R, fncd yd, gar, ~:ntertainl·r·:-. to\crc•d manyfeatures to ltst A "one of a kinu ·· on a ~ CAYWOOD REALTY pertyzoned com'l.Suita· ll's lrue! Mobilehm/lrvl children/petsok.$225. p a ti o 1-:nt lo s cd O p en D aily . <o ff large. irregular lot 4 ,.__~-------• *VILLA* •548·1290* ble for marine service trlr sp aces. ONLY 5 2 BR, cpls, drps, gar. v.orhhop an•J + + + Drookhurs l&Ga rfidd.> Bedrm + bonu!> room +i· Perfect for entertaining. dock, s port fishing land· LEFT! Steps to pvt bch, cbildren/petsok.$225. Assume lo\\ intcrc::.l V.\ Huge master suite opens BA YFROMT ing, ya cht sales, oceano· pool, rec pavilion + + 2 BR, lge fncd yd , new loan. Scllcr ·s loss your family room + formal Uni versity Park, 1 sty, 3 t o s p a r k l in g p ool , graphy base, restaurant much more! As k for cpts,d.rps,gar.Children· ~.11n atS49.950 1ull pn ct!' dmmg area.2400Sqft.or Br 2 Ba Twnhse. End waterfall and jacuzzi. This dehghtfu1Lido5 Br or shops . Price $650,000 m g r , John . (714 ) /pelsok.$23.5. Call today 646 7171 luxury ll\'lng. 2 Wood Unit on Greenbelt. Well Elegantly surrounded Home with pier & slip. or will consider lease. 678-2112. HOMEFINDERS ,., ,. ~urning fireplaces. one m ain l 'd . by o wne r . Just r e du ced f r o m 642•5200 642·9900 · [ ® ~ in master su1 te 3 Ca r Pnnc. Only. 552· 13'12 with gracefully te rraced S325.000 lo S297 ,500. Call Ranches, Farms, garage with 5 off s treet gardens. Majestic bnck for Appoint ment Pet• Barrett Realty Gro•es 2700 parking. LOCJllna Beach I 048 fireplace in laving area , Larry Pfister ••••••••••••••••••••••• $72,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• vaulted ceilings. wet bar. ---------• 44 Acres -near Perris OCE Truly gracious li ving in Pace:-.etl(•r Bv Ownl'r ~'~-~'8'1:!i1· Ra.re atA~f9~?ro~.· By ~~~.ligious area . Sec it LAND VALUE , i ~~~~'vfu~~g~J;:: aut. 3 Br. 2'h Ba, Sep. i Din. Rm. Twnhse. W/D Jncl'd, dbl gar, pool, $340 mo. Avail. aft. 1115. 557-086.S Very special i\1.verde 040· o owner. 752·1171 /499-4384. 211-21362nd St. N.B. bor;:;c couolry,,+j~:>Jff 1----------llome·Worth Your Vis it M 2500 Sq. ft:· concrete blk Hwy 60, $2500 ~~dP. .Side 1 Br, just dee. lge 4lk.2Ba. DH , many trees . ANYTIME OCEAN VIEW .. ~..,. CALL NOW ewport Beach ~ldg, retail store or of· prin only (714) 675~75 ~.~~~r1~2~:280r pd. 2810 Scrang PI 55718119 HuntinqtonBeach 1040 *LOT 752 7315 Sl7,000 · face. lot 60x90. Contact --~---~·--4-_...·,~11~=~~~~~~- 0pe n \.\'knd + Oa'"S ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~~~~~~~! * ...i • Yo ur own home-one Mgr. 642·8252 Owner , R.._...._,;s B F 3 5 30 " -50x100 ft. builda ble lot in bl k l b h (213)2A., 2120 ens• r, am. Rm, newly re· . . MEREDITHGARO ENS •OPEMHOUSE• highl y desirable ar ea. OONALDM.BIRD oc o eac •com· -· . ••••••••••••••••••••••• decor.$395.Ref'samust. VACAMT WESTSIDE Oon't miss th1~ onc·4/BR home with huge family roo m w open bt.•a m cell ing and b ric k frp lc . Needs some TLC ·All ler ms . 538,900. CALL Prestige Homes. 645-6646 Eastside-$32,500! Lg 2 br. 2 ba condo. xtra lg hv rm,pr1 vpat10 µool. Sell fas t at this price. Open House Ua1ly 1·4. 2400 Elden No 11 Don Thompson, Bkr 548 5335 4 br, 3 ba. 3 car gar., 3000 1123 Main St., 12-Spm S26,000 + owner will Au ociotes, Realtor~ . ~unity pool, delightfully NEWPORTOCEANVU Houses Furnished 548·3337 sq ft. Largest lot avail.. carry . HOWARD H . . ecor aled , 2 bedrms. 6000 ft C B ·1d •••••••••••••••••••••••1---------- wilge gate for boat or Must sell lrg. c uslm. ZAGRODZKY, Realtor 2. beach units. $52,500. Gd dining, fplc, priv patio. . sq. H omm.H w j Balboa lstc.d 3106 4 BR's, l bath. Fam rm. mot-0rhome. Many more 4·Br. No qua lifying, •• 494_8611 ** income. R·2 cor lot. Gin· Finest adult li ving in 527ang0000nr.548 ~: .. g os p ••••••• Lge backyard. Br and xtras in & out. Just prof. quick possession. Price ----------I n y F 0 rt u n c. r l l r . b eau l i f u I Bays ide • · .......,2 n.. i t •••••••••••~•••• new cpls, drps & paint. decora ted comple tel.v. redu ce d . O wnr/Bk r . IRVl ... ECOVE 675-7520. Village Mobile Park F l t d c "" .. an 2 sty,2 Br,utalpd, Horse stalls avail, tack 536·0133 ,... C I . or sa e or ra e. om· nr beach. $295 winter Close to everything incl. M 'f. t 3 BR h 1----------.. e nlra ,,to a ll that mercial properly, San • ..-.yrly.673-897. 0 • room. $375. mo. incldg beach. This house has El~~~1n~ce~ecor. Fa~~Y· LIDO SANDS Newport means. Call CJemente. Choice lease ..-.. -gardene r & wale r cl ass. By owner. Prin. ABA NDON ED COT· r oo m w /we t ·b a r, Well kept 3+ Den home 540·9922 income $8700. Priced CoronadelMor 3122 Children & pe ts OK: only. 582.500. 968-7444 TAGE in secluded tree gourmet kit chen , sep. w/be autiful covere d $89,500. Principals only. ••••••••••••••••••••••• !5~91i~~~v6ab~F:4b5~r.c1 s h ad ed atm os phe r e . dinin g roo m . lovely Lanai ringed with col· 498-3413. Furn. 2 Br, twnhse, W/D,1--------:....:...;=..::..._ $26,250 RETREAT 2 Bedrm jewel. close to beach. shopping & com· munity pool. Value like Used brick frplc, warm garden w /pool, ocean orful flowers & greenery. 2 blks to China Cove. BR, pool, covered extra w oo d Pa n c l i n g . views. $295.000. Only 144 paces from a 2 BEDROOM CO $400 673-8936 room. Dble gar. Close to TUR .... ER ASSOC. sandy beach & s hort STA hools 1 b ookca ses. fa m i I Y "" walk Lo pool & d MESA HOME. Convert-Cameo Shores Oceanfront sc ' ooe b ck to San center , kettle kitchen 1105 N. Coast Hwy, park. propose __ _;;;;;======:...• ed to C·l use. (about 1100 home, w/pool. Pvt st.airs Die g ° Fr w Y o Cf and bar. 3 BR. small den. Laguna Mow Reduced To Bayfront. Luxury 2 hr .. 2 sq.ft.) Large paved and to bch, 3 Br + maid, 3lh Fairview. Agt 646-3255 ... OT this wi ll soon be gorie "" ICE rorever. New FHA is OK neat and clean as a pm ~ 494· I 177 Only 563 ,950• ba condo. s125.ooo. Agt, fenced rear area with ac· Ba, Din Rm, Fam Rm, wpt Hgbts. 3Br. den • Assume $19,500 loan &15·lS64. Su · J SlSOO mo Owner67"""'"" lb balance. S217 m onth 5 INCOME UNITS Call644·72llquick! cess. per pnce on Y · .rvv.x> a, on cul-d·s ac. Pet PlTl. 6% Interest. BK R, In North Laguna. Just ,.. · $49,SOO. Close to Newport 1/1-6/13 2 BR 1 Ba frplc OK. Avail Feb 1. $350. how Daily Pilot Class· or low interest FHA may ified ads dis play their be assu me d . Take a messages with legibility took! 962-7771 and impact? Our ads. we •• ,..,. __ . are proud to say. really "9 _fu_e_~_56_~_:._s_u_i _t s_._P_h_o_n_e_, ddb 962·5511. steps to sandy beaches. BIB BEACH LOVERS" Blvd. Call 546·5880. l blk u; big Coron~. Ref~ 64.5-41 66 acros s from H eis le r ~ DELIGHT req. 675-1917 4 BR, 2 ba., w/w cpts. & P ark, with fa ntastic I_._.:_..... BAYSHORE Quiet Cul de sac 1 Blk to drps. Vacant. $350 Per ocean views. A whale of ' ' BOMBSHELL • mo R l•A Bch & Shops. 3 Br. : ea ..,r548-SS27 ... good day to~lle in the Olly Piiot 0111 itted Section. DAILY PILOT ., RAMBLING RANCH NR BEACH + POOL enclosed front courtyard leads to elegant tiled en· try. FORMAL DINING. Huge family fun center. Massive stone fireplace. Many custom features a buy at $189,500 3 Bed b NEWPORT HEIGHTS room, 2 alb beau· 626.Q72or626-0867 aft4 •2 Br twnhse. Mesa SPECTACULAR OCEAMVIEW Authentic til e throughout. Ne w lux· urious carpets/drapes. 3 patios all with views. Located in the very best view a rea of Laguna Beach. CENTURY 21 556·6001 Oc v· L Bd ty. Massive fireplace + V d G ean iew g 4 rm huge bedrooms + extra MIMI CENTER I Costa Mesa l 124 er e. ar •. W /0, pool. Pool , Prine. Only. large garage. Perteet for 4 Co , . • •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• $285. Pvt patio. 833-8974 $98,SOOOwner. 548·5556 entertaining or just com· ~. :U~u1~~~~8!;tQ~: Bac·k Bay l·Bd. furn. M~A VERDE DELUXE fy living. What more can Phone for 1 breakdown house. Mature adult. $195 3 Br, 2 Ba many xtras SUPER BUY! Brand new 4 BR, 2000 sq. ft., bltns, frplc, fam·rm. lge lot. (60x157) 10% Down. Full price $79,900. you a s k for ? Just sheet inclutll.642·1272 $385, 3066 Ceyl on $1 24,950. Call t oday JackHowell&Assoc•s 1 Bd 642·9292 673-:u!S 646·7171. • cozy cottage, Jge yd,1---...:.• _ _;_....:..:;. __ _ .":1N'u 9 •1rsruN ro8£NteE•· Rltrs.644·1156(24Hrs) qulet,privacy.$180.mo.3 ~r. 2 ba, crpts, drps, [.~,~~l'!i.,l DllDlexn/ Waterpd.54J.5042 kids(pets ok. F ncd yd. .:~ ' • Onitssale 1800 Hewportleodt 3169 Fru1_t_ trees. Wtr pd • . ·Aj ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• :::•••••••••••••• Families only. 866 oar. -DUP.LEX Oceanfront Penin. Nr rell. $325/mo. 557·3350. , FIXER-UPPER NHYC, $650 mo tll July 1: E/Side 2Br, l ba, comp re-~ to beach. $66,500. Is. 3 Br 2 Ba 213-795-0635 dee beaut nu cpls bltns Scm Clemente I 07 6 Village Prop. 846-6486. ' '295. 546-6299 • • ... --&L-y thruout the 3 bedrooms. ~·JK'r ear... + guest quarters with of values' lt·s time lo private b a th . Bltm buy & here 's an un· cabinets. desk, bar etc. believably s ha!'J> 4 bdrm Wro ug ht iro n fe n ce- model home in an up· isolates spa rkling pooU graded tract. t'lose to .from patio area. Hurry -11111!!!!~------.i ....................... lncotne Pr ,.., 2000 Fabulous w aterfront1----.....:.... ____ _ Large ocean •-c 0Pl1 home. Avail UJ July 1. 3Ba, Fam. Rm, frplc. . at anyon ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reas B B dbl ga -c A J ocean. Roc k botto m and c all t oday! Try pri ced to sell quic k. $S9,SOO. 962·SS85 or 213: ~Ian vi~w lot. Buildable & in Multi tenant industrial & m..2Di.;6'7~n ay • Tip.To~·Q;d: ~:57;;m. p~me a~ea. Watch the office bldg, Orange Co.. ---~-....:..:;..;;.;';.._ __ .1_-'--~--:....:.:.....::..;..:.:..._ 968·4456 S92· 1S25. REAL ESTATE sailboats. $28,~. Airport Location. Prin. tto.ei UzfmaWvd Br 2 Ba, frplc, cpts. •gins To Roll in the profits of property owners. You can too own a fabulous Deane Garden home with cathedral ceiling, Atrium, plus h carpets, cozyfrplc . Private prestige Lract. Call 968-4456 lnchxies 1 yr warranty By owner. 3 br. 1~ ba. frplc, encl patio, lrg back yrd. dbl gar, nr park. 17871 Carranza Ln. H.B. $48,500. Shown by appt. only. 842·1996. ~~ -~~~~ Selling anything with a ANCHORAGE ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• Family $3SO mo. 631·27U' AES"rHETIC ea;:ysr,:,1°~et~:::~:ci Ad INVESTMENTS =·~~~~~d:~.-= ~~ ..... ~?.~~ F.astalde 3 Br 1 Ba Nu ~d J'W01\:t rome, justcall~2-S678. ' • . C714J 496-7711 dn prln onl1 bmkr Otarmlng 5 Br, 3 ba, 2 crpts, drps, re~od. ! rs, a Paster, -, 875'2172 •tor>', encl pat, gar. Yr ly kitch. fenced yd. Family. white water vu, 4 BR, 2~ Newport leach I 069 Newport leach 1069 $475. 6'73-0686. $28S. 631·2711 ba. $205.ooo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• 6 HOUSES · tBd ~1!!!1•••••••••••····.··········~···• 3 Br. 2 Bl, near N. Bay, • ~ep gar, $225. incl QOO Gll'IHH'Y' ,. St. 4'1·1 Q•l' I SJ? OJI(> A COlDWlll U.Ell c:.MT° WEEP THEN SWEEP 3 Super Chea pies frorn S37 ,000 to $45,000. 2 Br on Corner lot + L.,. 1 MSpet I 052 3Brw/8a)'Wlndo~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Br w /lge kltcHCn. MALLO~~~ToRs Laguna Niguel. . Pri¥afe Street Yrlylse.MOOmo. ~8:J~~t.~yt a~~~l. * Coldwel. Banker Your own private tree-673-389l lined street and slx com· c.,&"9o .. _. 3211 x Duplex 3 Br. 2~ Ba, RE~NTIAL flQOKERPGE Ct::JMPNf'( fort.able rental homn on .......... •••••••••••••• din rm, s unken Jiv rm ~ acre, lncludln& a a 3 Br" Den 2 Bl ram rm w/f~lc, dbl car gar, fncd POOL! llEACHI s BR, 23SO sq. rt . ·~mi. to undy beach. l8x40 pool, assume loan, vacant. $72,500. the choice a>mmunity • * NEW LISTING • • 3-BR. 2~·b• bome on quiet cul-de-eac street. Great famlly area close to Khools, cbu.rehc~ and 1hoppln1. $$1,750. La1una NlaueJ Realty IJ0-5050 496-4040 H.ave tomethln.g yoU want to atll? Cluamed ads do It well -Call NOW , &U-5e'TI, ... BIG C _. .._.,~. LOT bdrm, 2 bath owner '• trplc, ctO.e tO beach• yd, chUdre:n sm pct OK """ vn home wltb pool. Will COlt· walk to school, fncd yd: $400 mo. 637 ·7091 an Gorgeous view lot & perfect for Pderexcban&•· avalloowm.ane 6PM. spacious , elegant home ln Newport 's excitin g new community on championship golf course• $85 I 000. A CO&.DWll.I. ....... CO. 644-1766 ~ ...i ........ _____________________ .......... ~ ~~· Let'1Deal •1110 'REX L. HODGES RE,U.TY .. • . ....... - ... " ..... , ... ~ H1tt111. """ I • d . . ............. -................ .:!' .. ~'! . Afu ......................... UilfwlL .................. .,.......Ullfwa. !hw!dar·Januaryl. tm OAILYPILOT 0 I Is Ul-M IHcla 3240 I ••• I....: J"J-;I• :::::••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••-••••••••• ..... •••• ~.•••••••••••~•!•••••••• I • • .... •....-.&...1 4..150 ~ ....................... .............. , -MtM 3114 C• , .. .,..._. llll 11a11f•••1140 Newport••" 31.,,., .. ...,. 4J00•11-, .. -..uw-.d IO rareptace 4br 2ba bll £L ••••••••• .............................................................................................................................................................. . 101. ne;, crptt/drpa: ltON~iANTLlVING SJ7.IOWIB&W Lce2Brl k. Fain. Din. I llodltoOc.Hm Bayfn:mt % 8d, 2 Ba, Pvt HIWPORTllACH Wuled·cola opera(• $335/mo. 9U·'5U/ New 2 8r~~AJ;."&LLA •Sh.ltlo&\BRApls area.ain._ieaar,2bJJaCr 1 Br volh View ~rric Bch le pier. $.SSI. yrly, Male to ~bare 2 bdrm. STOIE laundry "1oloa ~I· 963-1786. vlcw b 1 1 • ean •TVfdfaJdSe.rvAvall beach. $350, 548-2101 or stovo sml pet OK From 971H935&&4+-4UO dupfelt wt. oldel' man nr. Across from Newport ness".C92..o217 <! 1• • COl'l es, 2 frptcs. •Phone~ Htd 1 r7&-m3 ., • ·th S Hunt. fl Atlanta ab. ex· Beach City Hall. 810 t-'rptc. 3br, 2ba. enclosed f:: •sauna, security, •ChildreoS:euonpoo :4..!5.:~!•r2164!~1•0714 t. 2 Bd, l'r'I bia near Hoac, pen.~3488. sq11are rec:t, air condl M..yW..W SOJO patlo, crpts/drp1 , easeowner644·1519 •Lowmoothlyraltt Bacbelor apt, refrl& .• ~or -1-0 $230. mo No Cbildren/· honinl aod carpeUna. ••••••••••••••••••••0 • $3o65/mo. 983·'569 / SWlMTHJS WlNTER •S.SOFFwetk'attnt stove. Req. tenant over lDayFreoRent pet.a.Gt~ Nowl Roommale tor ~~ 11en avaUabJe. Needed lml"OCd. ff500 at 9S:J.1786. 3br. frplc, mag. view. w/ad 40. Sl2S. mo. 6444394 8 to H ·3 Bedroom Apts. Lido lalc 2 Br. Ulil incl. !:!ice2r .b$·:S~•t+ ;:;: , ~r month on lease 10% Scc1.11ed Loan paya-• 3 Br lam rm aba f l HEATEDPOOL 23'76Newport81vd.CM l2am.ltaJter5psn. WalkTo8cach S375 2 13 ·681·8'06 548-4311 Wlth11an-upconceasion.s. ble flOO mo. Call blW 2~.,.,·a.r fhc~~· 890 Canyon View ~·9755or~S96'7 CotfaMeM 3824 LtONSESTATt:S Evesiwknds 675_2342 ' eve. ~k at 3333 Newport ...,;:M2.:..:...·1....;362;.:__ _____ _ Klds ok. No eo: $325 mo~ 497.1532 ' ZO ....................... 536-2S79 592·S010 . 4Br, 3ba. 3000 ar home. 1 " vd. ~d call 642-43:21, Mort-. y,...t ist Pioneer, M2·4421 · 35 Al•rtoe. CM CASA VICTORIA bile oce•o. Man over .0, Ext. 276 o.::t= 5035 ~---..;.... ____ ,EXCEP1't0NAL2 brviow 1 !SR f'u.m. 2 Ira 'closet., WAUC TO IEACH S.. C&t__.. 387& non-smoker. $160 rno. Lease. Art Gallery. Bay •••••••••••••••••••-"'• home. Frplc, 2 cu gar., qucen111e bed, prtv. 1•2413~r, Deluxe Unful'. 2 8r, cpts, drps, bltns. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~fs. 842·1802 & 963-5549. loc. Walk· by tramc. Od. ,. WALK to beach 2 br, patio & yd. l blk beach. dressing rm, x.traa lge ,J~ jJ'· gas/~r pd. gar. 221 l6th St. 2 Br. $200. mo. $50. reduc· for girt shop or compati· LOANS up ta 80°' fncdyd,garage.$225. No pets. $395 yrly. 229 room s, encl. gar. Pool~;e:J:~eto~a~~c 536-2064or847·3957 tionlfserveasmaoager Plus h Garden E .BluH bleitefJlS.962·6009 /0 CLOSE to ocean 2 br Heverly. 4i4·1795 w/storage. Adults only, 525 Victoria, 64a-89'70 Spacious new triplex one for 7 units. 332 Enclno. Condo, pool, tennis. $15S For Lease. l500 sq Ct Store ht TD LOant.-1 ¥•"-.. ~uplex, garage $225. no pets. mUe to ocean. $34S. 3.er, Easy walk \o beach . lnc utU. 644-4473 Bide. in Jr. Shop ing 2nd TD lo.a STEPS to beach 2 br, Ocean vu lBr. frplc, walk· 2-ba blt.ns lg frplc ~P '47-8017 dJ~. 542·9009 Fem Roommate 25·35 C n tr at Be a c C & FaJrestTermntneetld C n c d yd. db t, gar beach. lease 2755 Folano ' • · · eves & wkll'd.s. · ' ' y kto • d t!:-&&1-M'-'· C chlldren/pet.sok S2SO • Way494.79861499.2277 $1BRFum. $185. gar. w/lndry. conn. share C.M. Apt. Call or wn . JIB. Plumbe ~ .,,. o. HOMtl"lNDERS · Lots of bltns, pool, walk 54.6-:5633wkends or aft 6 s-to Ano 3110 752-0160or75l-4286 f~ laundromat, will con · 642·2171 54S-ODI~ 642.9900 Miii1--y1...i... 3267 to shopping. \".! ML ••••••••••••••••••••••• ve-rt. Ph: 962·8996. ..u ""' ........ be b Walk to bch' $180 & up. No . Female Roommate, 25-35 . "-~TD • ---...,, .-&......1 ---------'••••••••••••••••••••••• ac . 931 W.19th St. Summer increases. Pool, 2 Br. stove, dishwshr, dis· yrs lo share 2Br. 2ba Pvt omc.e. $125/mo. In 6'tu __.. _..... t 3 Bdr2~&d nus.~~·fncd 4 Br, liv rm. dln rm 548-0492 recrm,drps.crpt.Adl\.s, pos, a /c. shag_crpt, bouse,CdM.61S-702S. manlcunn~salon.Relat· 8LouyT.D.'2nsr~r;.,c~~ I Y , cp .. , rps,.,_, }St & bltms lo ma· t d • no pets. 220 12th St. d!P5·· encl paL Nice re· e d bus 1 n es s not ans on . . • 968 1st .. 7 N 14 r 6 . Heil & Beach. scbl, $J9s,S48-~~n Y or 1or2 Br Trailer, water & PINECIEBC 53s.9505• 219 15th St, 111d area. Close t.o shops. Fem. Rmmate over 21, lo necessary. 752·1338/ New$3000Loans .. ~~d.000T .. D.'t S36-7031. Maluro adlts only. No share lge 3 Br on _58_1·_264_5.______ ...,., :J Br,2~Ba .heatedpool.~,wportleoch · 3269 &~1~·:1~ce1.0:;!fi.a~ TU0VEITSSU~ .. ME pets.1nq.415So.Orange, Seashore. $130 mO.lffarbor Blvd. Frontage 8~~~~G~b~. • . to h h Edi • •••••••••••••••••••• E 16th St CM 642 1265 """ 1 Br, newly refurbished, Apt c. S.A. 67>3184 . ' store or office, 1000 scwf( . ·•ml c' son Hi Uni p k · · · Over 500 tall trees and closetobeach. lst mo. + $300mo 5482m8 20YrsinOrgCty. area $425. 968-8068 aft 5 FRv 3~r PH~me-4Brs, Studio Apt partly furn 1 o s trea m tS w 'L h $50 dep. 962·7788 Days Don't give up the ship! Share lg. home w /pool . • 66-2134 anytime Spankl~g clean h.ouse lease's.s1~: nvateJ4~~0 S150 mo.' 226 Cabrillo wate~falls cr_eatc a 962-8050 Eves. ' ~~:~t·~0ils~r:1~!~~l~i ~~.:es~-~· :O!: ~!';i~.~~!~ .. !~.~~ For Sale 2nd TD al a dis~ Oc~anv1ew Sehl Dist. 1 eves. relaxing . setting for 642-5678. 892·2345Monly. ._.EW count. improved proper- child OK $33S Mo. incl. HARBOR VIEW, 2 BR, ..._~ le h 3740 your spacious new 1-or J tC _. t d *" * ty,gdsecurily. wtr & gardener Ask for Den & 2 Ba, or park & • ._ .. ""'f"on ac 2· bedroom upartmenl. "' o .. .,..e e •-I wnts fournished Female seeks s ame to COSTA MESA $18 000 10~ $185 lfto an . " mo. 1Sl2 Port ~ble BEAUTIFUL 1 br furn available. Small pets Brs. Dishwasher, bltns, or Unfwnished 3900 s e au 3 rapt. <Near Harbor & Baker) Ava al$16,50_0. N 962 7787 . school No lease $525 ....................... From $220 Furniture Deluxe Triplex. Lrg 2·3 ~ .. har be Uful b . ll o • l 1 Blk to beach 3 Br. 2 Ba. 673-1148 y. apts $170 & $180. Spanish OK. Adults only. Office frplc, pvt patio, e ncl.••••••••••••••••••••••• $150.5"8·7200 1300 to 3480 sq. ft. i3c per $5.000.lO% $55 mo. $350mo 4ijr 3Ba$475 style bldg pvt encl gar open 9·00 to 6·00 2300 gar.Nopets.$250&$340. TIIEEXCITCNO Fem. RM wanted. 3BR sq rt. ll0-2,08, 3 phase Availal$4,500. 642·1802or96i5S49 · 1 Br. newty.decort'd, nr pool,saun~.lndry,adlt.s: Fairv&~w Rd.". ~osta 18482 Huntington St. PALMMESAA."S. 2BA condo. own rm+ power, <~r:;1;:~ec., Abovedueapproic 3 yrs. ---------1 park & bch s. NO PETS. 17301 Keelson Ln . 1 bl.k Mesa. Phone 545-2300. 557-4608&530-5775 MJNUTESTONPT ba. $108.33. 646-4221 owner9 k or R.E. Bkr.642 - 4603 3 BR, l~ ba, cpts, drps, Frontof21044thSt. $250 W.o!BeachoffSlater BCH. 1...;...yo_ur __ ro_e_r _____ 1 bltns, fenced. Gd area, inctdn 'g util. 673·2256. 842·7848 • 2 BR. 1 Ba, pool, 2 adults 2 Br. 1. ba or Hunt. Hrbr. Bach. 1&2 BR. Garagea for R..t 4350 Lease 1,000 sqfl w /office ~/ • ' $325. (714) 842·8263 or • • max. $255. mo. 1632 B W/D hook-up, bltns. $235 from$180. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 110·220 v. h eat , hot Penortds/ (213)88&·0908. NEWCONDO·llevel2Br, Irvine 3744 lowa,549-4338 mo. Also 2 Br. 2 b~. nr Adults, No Pets Storageonly.$30. water, new building, gd Lost&FoUnd 2 Ba, blt~s. frplc, pool ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brookhurst & Hamilton. 1561 Mesa Dr. 32SJ 17th Place, locale. 645-2244. --•••••••••••••••••••••• •Meredith Gardens Tri Wes t Cliff $400 mo. $70 wk or $300 mo. in· LRGlBr,pool,nr .. shops, $250 mo. Clsd garages. (58lksEastofNewport CoslaMesaaft.llam . Lo t&Found 5300 level 3 Bd, 2\-; ba, den, 675-1957 eludes maid service TV adlt.s/no pets. Util. pd. Agl no fee. 846·1311; Blvd) AIRPORT ••~•••••••••••••••••••• frplc, din.rm .• gardener, SHARP lit 1 sauna, jacuzzi. po0l & 1884.Monrovia,548-0336 846-4938. 54s.98oo Garag~reotal.Coronadel 3200SquareFeet Lost: MaJe Cock·a·Poo. lease,$475.968-7911. sp evel 4-~R. pbone 1717 E Dyer Rd . . Mar area. $30/mo. 19WPerSq Ft 3-BA c?ndo •. tennis, Irviae 540-lSlS · NR. NEW 3 BR, 2 ba, 2br with garage. Refng. • 540-7194. 2 Air-conditioned offices Apricot w/b1k on ears & 48r, 2ba house nr Hngtn sauna, Jacuzn & pool. · Crplc, gar, no pets. $315. lblk to bch. $275. No pets. . ample parking • tail. Fnl. Valley, nr Mile ~~~~\petsOK. $450.642-2422 Lagmaleach 3741 E-CostaMesa.642-1603. 536-2774. RESORT OffluRtfttal 4400 HsborlRY~st.Co. ~1~a r k. Reward. I · · 3 Br 2 Ba, D /W, frplc, ......................... 3Br,2ba,1600 sq.ft.walk ForRentupst.alrsApart.2 ....................... Reallots 673-4400 --------- Renter/Leasewilh option. rerrig, etc. l Block Ocean 2::lhsj1B:i8~8(> $250. toshop'ng, 2car gar, pat. Br, 1\-; Ba, frplc, lge pvt 150 I Wntcliff Dr. Lost: Fe male German Lovely 48r Condo. New $340yrly.642-3361. . c ~:5145 • cean· NOPETS$365.631·2018. deck. 1 o v e I y NewportFinancialCtr 2000 Sq. ft. of~. & Shorthair. Ans t.o Jane. cp~. bllns. By owner. view. · neighborhood in Ol{l Leasing Office Space warehouse space dtrect· Lost 1/1/75. Atlantic/• l213)BW·9240/869·9046. 3-4 Br, 311.J Ba, Bonus Rm. Bach/kit. Util pd. $l75 Off Beaten Path Town HB. ~lks to ocean. LI v ING Callon Site Manaeer l~ across from OC Beach. Reward.~. c pt s & d rps, lg e up/SSS kJ 1435 N J, 2, & 3 Br. Adults, no Lndry Fac1l $250 mo (714)642 3111 xt2AS Airport. 549-1480. SPARKLING CLEAN 3 patio/Over hang, aut up w · y. · pets, dshwshrs, shag Call aft5PM. 846.2116 · · e Found: 50 lb.Black Dog. br. 2 ba, cpts. drps, sprinklers, pool/tennis Coast494•2508 cpls, closed garage, *COSTA MESA* Male. Looka like Lab. fam/kit, frplc. $325. Red priv. 64().1327/ 640·1 Newport leach 3769 frplc, BBQ. Gas & waler For Rent l Bdrm Apl. 2500 Sq. Ft.. 3,000 Sq. Ft., w/wht spot chest. Top of Cpt RJtr 893-1351 e.xll46S ••••••••••••••••••••••• pd. Pool. $180 per mo. From $l75 10.000 Sq. Ft., near S.D. lhe World, Lag. Bch. 1 .. M .. ~cH PT 515 7th St. HB. Frwy Natt.ress Realty 494-2382 eves. 3 Br Co n do , rrp le , 3 Br, 2 ba, $350. 308 Kings $40 WK UP 1&2 Bdr _& -""" AA S Oakwood orrers the · • ---------cpts/drps. pool. $280 mo. Place, Newport. Bach. Color TV, maid 778ScottPlace,CM Logunaleach 3841 finestinresortlivingata ~Alr~ltftlftt 979-6S7l FOUND; Vizsla, w/choke Ph:962-7275eves. 805/495-6205 serv, pool. THE MESA. 642·5073 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pri ce you can afford. v_,~Jllll""'I Newbldg2500 sq.fl .,M·l chain.darkbrown.male, 415 N. Newport Bl, NB 2 BR $l8S W t Drop a pebble into the There's $1 million in v.-w/ft ofc. Lge rear dr. 11 Vic. Heil & Bolsa Chica, •4 Br, 2 ba, H /f' pool, Harbor View Homes. 2br. ()46-9681 aJd.g2~6 Pla:~tia aae~ Ocean from ,your ~pt. r ecreation facilities. ~:=......_ sq.ft. Days 540·5710 ; H.B.840-1924 c pts/drps, nr. Hunt 2ba, corvert den, crnr f d P... • P Lease Luxury securi ty NIGHTLIGHTEDTEN· v.Dlel-*" · eves646-0681 Hrbr iclnt neighborhd. lot immac proflndscpd. Dix urn . uplex. 2 Br, F .636-4l20.l ·5pm. Mt · d lts'31755C 1.' NISCOURTS.Afulltime ~1ec-t_..llNlll. • FOUND. bla ck male ' ' ' lower unit on Seashore a ure a u · 5 • ./ .-...... ...... ..,. Cock 1 h v· Call847·6010. Agt. $500/mo. 673-8761 days, / w· t / Newly decorated lge Hwy.499-2835. activities director who _,,..... ,.... Office/Industrial space, . apoo, ~n eas · 1c. 644·2m6 eves For appt w gar. to er summer. t di p . d I Ca plans parties BBQ's Lag N1·guel area 400/ Indianapolis & Newland. IMMAC. 4 br, 2 ba. Up· . . Agent640·6161 s u o. !llio. la u ~· t OCEANFRONT year ' ' graded in & out.. Nr. Adult luxury townhouse. ok. Appliances. Utal pd. 'round 2 br $375 bach ~~b~b:-e! Free Sun· S ... ~. Nr Frwy831-1082 _960-__ 3062 ______ _ beach & steps to school. bd, 2 ba, frplc, patio, all o;E:N~RONT 11inter. $l60. 859 W. l9th. 642·3452 $175. Kids/pet.s. Util pd. 'Plus beautiful singles, $l40 up store~rci·ces cpts 1200 Sq. Ft. M·l s pac FOUND; Keys, Vic. 22nd $375.840-2701 f!eW drps, cpts & ap ea 2 r, gar. a ts, no c•s• HERMos• 536-0321 1&2 bedroom apts. . b.., h w/!ront office, lge rea & Santa Ana, Costa plian c es . Walk l pets.$250.213-795-3018 --A A furmshed&unfurnished. drps air al. 17301 door. $189.50 mo. 62 Mesa.645-4190 Westcliff Shoppin Wiolerrental. 141W.Wllson,CM OceanView.lBdrm.lblk Rents from $l75. Prices BeacbBl,H.B.842·2834 Terminal Way. 540-571 FOUND young fe male Irvine 3244 Center.S385.mo.645·1528 largelBR,$175. lemdiful lo bch, stove/reCrig, vary by locations. SINGLE to 6 rm suites days,S46-068l eves. black k itten. 4lst St. ••••••••••••••••••••••• furnished. Pets/kids OK. M d l BEAUT. San Joaquin Slepstoocean,3Br,2~a. 615-8224 Townhouse Apt $200. Pb ; 547-0993 & 0 e 8 open lO to 7· Avail. in plush omce Storage 4550 NewportBch.615-7983. Twnhme Large 2 Br, 2'h frplc, newly dee. patio, Ocean Front with view nr J t C _...._d 496-1981 Sorry no pets or children. bldg or. OC Airport. Full ••••••••••••••••••••••• . Pvt com pool $425 us o...,....... Roo.mmate service s.er~ice incl: Recep· V•ACRE.Fencedslorage FOUND Chihuahua Vic Ba, 2sty. View of go pier2Br,furnorunfurn, Accept. Chlkl&Pet 1 Br. util incld. Small available. Month l o tiorust, conference rm, area in Santa Ana Adams&Bushard,H.B. course &c lake. $550. 675-2445 yrly lease. 540-2018, lllclHdes: kitchen. Single adult. No month occupancy. :cerox, automated typ· Heights. Tax deductible _536-__ 747_6_ . ..,.._ ----- 547·'70C4 Newport Shores 230 62nd, 536-36.24, <-213> 793-8080 Private patio, carpeting, pets. $150. 494-2540. ing. etc. Call 833·3640 through Sea Scouts. Call Found Boxer/Brindle vie Univ Pk Terrace 2 Br, 3Br, 2ba, .near ocean. Bachelor Apt. UlU pd, draperies, was hers, 642-4798or963·2688 So. Coasl Plaza Jan 2, • Ba, twnhse. dbl gar , Pool, tenrus, club $375. Refrig, no cooking. $125 dryers, dishwashers. Mewport leach 316' FREE RENT 552 3052 d 551 3980 frplc $375552-7896 673·26S4. No dogs. mo. 543.1764. garbage disposals. gas ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oakwood Offices as low as ~per Rentals Wanted 4600 · ays • · · ' stove, marble pullman, Newport lsle. 2Br, 2ba. sq ft. Mission Viejo & ....................... _e_v_es_. ______ _ DEERFIELDPatiohome ~~&...--~ '!12~8 3 Br AYl. Gar, Yl Blk to powder room, fire alar m Upper deluxe duplex.. Garden Laguna Niguel. 200 to Prof. woma n w /we ll Found Fem PUPPY. 38r28a,frplc.$38S · 11'~;111•rr-• ., Bch:Adults. 675-9225 or system, forced air heat· $350 yrly. (213) 791·4348, Apartments 2000sqft.831·1400 behaved 16 yr old Cockapoo mix nr Spr· 551-1706 644·3185 ..W••• llt•••••••••••94•• 213-944-4890 ing. enclosed garages, (213)681-5315. . MF.SA VERDE·500 sq ft daughter wishes to lease ingdale &"Heil H .B. LuX l Br '3 Ba 3 car gar, parking space. ....,,,_....Cit new bldg Cpts drps' unfurn ~Br, 2ba apt. nr. 846-2336 Univ. Park II. priv. 1 of a crpts, drps, beaut. yd. •OCEANFRONT• Prior Rental Refer. Req. LIVE Near The Beach! ·eeo Irvine f ( . • I) • • beach 1n Nwpt.. yrly. . kind, 2 BR, suitable Close lo b ch. $•00. Bachelor, garage. 2 BR $335 Cosa del Sol Irvine at 16th um optiona • $250/mo. Start Feb 1 646-2125 Found pr. childs glasses adult.s. New crpt, dbl 493-3437 $23Syrly.673·2493 2 eRw/frplc $34S BeautifulAdultApts 645-0550 Mr. Wood, 675-6000 or AM • • inblkcasevicW.17lhSt. gar, xlnt storage, pool & , 3 BR $39S From $190 675-6061 · C.M. 548-9452 bef 5:30. jacuzzi. $375. Call New Home. 4+2\-;. FR, BEACON BAY 1 ui td fi Maturewomanw/s mpoo· . Owner,S52·8357 ,OR,frplc, dsbwshr, co_m FUm. Apt.. $275 yrly, util H~~le~~~e~ ~~~ 21661 Brookburst,HB LUXURY duplex 3 Br, 2 Of ces, 2 lge, 2 sm. $75 & dle nds bach apt or rm Found Siamese old __ ......;. ______ 1 pactor, wtr pd. Missio incl'd. 613.a203 962·6653 ba, unfurn yrly $345 mo. $150 per mo. New M·l with ba &. pri~ ent neutered cat, collar vie Culverdale, 3 Br, 2 Ba, Bell R a nch oft de l60W. Wilson, AptU FUm. 3 Br, 2 ba, lhru c 0 m Pl ex· 17th & Bal/NBa'rea 546-8811 · Harbor &c Ha milt.on CM Community park, pool . Obispo. Mi froin Marina Lge 3 br, 2 ba. Yrly $425. Costa Mesa 1 Br Nr. Hoag Hospit~l June 30th, $375. Steps to Pomona. CM. Comer loc. · 646-5150 tennis $380 mo. 552-9606 ~-33162 PaseoBlanco Winter $400. Beach & $175 mo. 1481 Placentia wtr 209 41st St NPB' Can be used for lite Semi·Retired Business --------- owner (al3)894-2321. Lidoarea.673-2485 ~ve!! 2r B~.;ptshl/drpsd • NB.Adltsonly.646-6973 (2U)869-S985own~r. · comm/ mfg. 646·4296 ; Gent wants small cot· Found: puppy. near s~v ex re rg. _....,, c ovr eves call 551-4289 t h Patans· &c Evening Sta .. • 7. 702 James St. 673·3078 Sub-Lease Park Newport R--4000 · age or ouse·Apt.in '• •RENTALS• 2BR&den,r~c.facil. ........... Costa Mesa area. N.B. Discri be & it's UNIVERSlTY PARK pools. Childr~n ok. $290 s..taA.fta 3710 L g 1 bd Blt-i Apts .• lovely 1 BR, till •••••••••••••••••••••••FREE RENT.1 month on 893-8770 Mr e ·n yours.642-5607 • 4BR2\.;Ba,furn. $500 mo.83.1-2395 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rd It rm. t $1~~· June. adults only. $269. Pvt ent/K.priv..CM$25/ 300-llOOsq.ft.deluxeofc. • . '. ~r!~n~ ~.~679 · 640·1218 wk &$60/ mo. up. No. C.M. 540-2200. lminest/ln•eit/ Lost: Re~ard. Charm TIIETERRACE s.ta Ana 328 AMIASSADOR IHHS . . YRLY 3 br, 2 ba, b 548·5954or556-0058 Ffltcmee bracelet m C.M. area. ~ ~:: ~ ::· $36S/= •••••••••••••••••••••• OF AMEllCA EVERYTHING! beach. Near new, blt.ns l FURNISHED ROOMS NEWPORT IEACH •••:••••••••••••••••••• Call 963-1533. TURTLE ROCK s_uper clean 3br, 2ba, bit TWO LOCATIONS New all conveniences 3 g g $390 548-4063 STORE lm~t LOST· Mal C k TERRACE ms, ...... t.s, drps. $3SO/mo · · ara e. · from $190. Pool, maid, Across from Newport ~ t u.. 5005 · e oc apo~ • ... ,.. WEEKLY RATES BR, 2 Ba, Frplc, ground pho 1 dry Vill _...,..... ... , tan w/bllc ears &c tail. 4BR,4Ba,Pool $1000 983-4569/96J.l786· FULLSERVICE floor, encl. yard. Priv. 3Br,2Ba.yrly2bl.ksto Inn~~:;: • age Beach City Hall. 81.0 ••••••••••••••~•••••••• Wearing bro collar. DEERFIELD 3 b 2 b bltns cpts 2277Harbor, C.M. garage . 2445 Orange beach$365 mo. tq~~ fee~ air coudi· DRESS shop for sale. Top Name '"Peppy ... Vic. 32BBRa.22~BaBa ~ ~-·· gar~'Nr. warner' 29098ristol,S.A. Ave.$360.mo.540-2345 642-3188 Rooms $25 wk up. Lioghrunted ~gn caa.Zia~:· CostaMesalocaUon.CaU N.B.673-2319 _..., Fairvt HC/I 642 5583 645.@40&540-2300 . . YRLY 3 b w/kilcheo. Apts $37.50 th · Paul 831-1400 or 645-5000 WALNUTSQUARE ew._..,. · Enjoy lbe new year 10 a spac. r, near k 548 9755 $400 per mon on lease apt2l8 LOST New Years Eve. I JBR,?Ba Condo•--spacious 3 br, 2 ba apt bch/bay. Only $314.95. ~~~· · or with sign.upconcessions. yr old German Short ZBR,2Ba $325 Uftfuntished Apwt11w11ts w/patio, frplc & pool. 61J.1909leavemsg. Look at 3333 Newport COCKTAILS-Hair Pointer. Black GREENTREE •••••••••••••••••••••• Unfunilhed Adults only. $275. 2 BR l 'n Ba condo style. Sle<;Pi.ng rm. \llf/kitcb Blvd. and call~. DIHHEIHOUSE w/whit_es~t.s, Jong ~ii. 2BR,1Ba Nr.S.Cst.Plasa3BR,l ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-3381 BltnS, cpts, drps. encl. prav1l. for sincere Ext.276 GR0~$20,000Mo. Name1SV1ctor.A.nyinfo RanchoSanJoaquin ba, 2-lev. •""". 835-710 lolboaP•....,a 3807 ADULT 1 g 2 b 2 b patio heated pool. trustworthy genUemao. FREE RENT NpBcb at Neat small &c intimate. pleasecallS48-4721. BR Ba ..,.,., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ar e r, a. , Dana Pt. area. $25 wk. . • Se ts onl ltQ b l 2 ,2 after6pm. 2b 1~ b t dl A il Like new. Patio, dsbwhr, Adults. -no pets. $215. Pref 4 wks in advance airport. Utilities &c a Y .-, ul a ways Lost· Siamese cat male. 2BR,2Ba,den $460/ Tustin· Lovely 3 Br fam yr; 1 Y a$~~ 5o/. mv~ encl. gar. 644-0878 548-2682 496-59t9evesor early am. Ja!lilorr Incl • ..2.ll!.!!~n busy;_ OwtneelrLITeeavlng Scar on right fro'nt leg. . , • • . • swtes rom $88. 1r11r"VVUV. area ex: mus s rms. Lost Bal. Pen in. area. rm, frplc, s hag. bltns, 751-SOlS/MS-6822. 1 BR, ulil pd, cpts, drps, oee.A~fRO~T Room Pleasan• pri en· Agent 837-4200 REWARD 6734il.3 552-7500 red hlll reelt'V patio, gar. pool $325, refrig &c stove. No dogs. '"""" " ' . ... • . Pina ----·-----968·2647 Corofta .. Mar 3822 $175.831·9276 l·Bdrm. Yearly.$325 t.rance, cookmg, closem, Exec.ti e-llH llKEREHTALS FOUND· W b"t c at ....................... BACHELOR kit b STEPSTOIEACH Laguna.497·~14· eustOU:~:::ed full $6,800FULLPRICE w/green eyes. Vic of •no c en. 2BR,2ba,yrly,ruro$375 Laguna Bch. Pri home. size view o ffices . Price includes $3,500 Buscbard & Pettswood.. ..., -No pets. f 87•50 mo. 3BR.2ba Wnt.r$3S Light cooking facil. Services of Certified stock. Some sales & 968-0573. ~v 642-5848 3 BR, 1 ~ ba house $375 494-6176 or 838·9615. Professional Secret.ary, service. Needs live-wire ---------1>. orl• 2 BR ....... und floor paUo LIDO ISLE reception &.nolpment.1 operator. Xlot beach FOUND, bile/ta!' Poodle. • • --• Priv. Home, room &c bath. --. area rem puppy. Vic. Alphe -·-·-• .' new cptts,Ndrpr, r!llge, 3BR,3s~.' uWnf 1 ,J 0 rty$650 priv. entrance nr. O.C.C. blk Airporter Inn. 2082 Agen°t 83'7"'200 Beta. So. Laguna, R&n'ALS CORONADELMAR carpor . on·smo .. ers . '""" " 545-2:605 . Michelson Dr, Irvine . 640-7329 2Br.1ba 2 Br Townhouse frplc. ~Tl· J>U 20 mo. 6'5-4532o Condo· 2 BR, 2 Ba. Un· CallEveMoore,752-0234 Pboto Studio portrait--------- 2Br+deo,2ba Pool tennis conUnental .no· • furn.Yearly$.c>O Quiet Laguna.Nigu el R •te xlnl comm.lest.16yrs,S.Org FOUND; med. blt/wbt ~ 2Br,2ba breakfast &meoceanlc VIU.A M~A $20S u,p. home $115/mo. mcl util. 'am°:>:eU:,11:g,uw~: Co.aplinrearinclequip. shorthair m_ale Do ~, 2Br,8baNB C •~"-·. C1 t BR pall pool no pet& e5·5752or831·9279 $275/mo 61~ compl nee rue $6500, appx. 4 yrs. Vic. Redhlll awauua views. ose o , o, , '92-6303 • & Pullman., CM 534-5221 3Br,2ba $430-$470 3 Br 2 Ba, 2 aty. Coata abopping 6 line beach. 719 W Wilson 646·125 ROOM w/kltchen dlxS 'te b th. aft 4·30 • 3Br2~b• $380 Meaa. Dbl gar, Pvt. 6'4-2511 (9-5) prlv'lgs. employed p~ rmsm • a MOM'N POP • What's --·-·-------3Br2~baN8 $1500 patlo.$300.963...0SS fetred.962-7520 Patio, ample pq, uW. yoor best bid f'or Laun· LOST:Sbrthairedbllt s~ .cBr,Z'Aba sm .Just completed Ba $390.675-a>O dromat. Fountain rem cat. Kids pet 4 Br 2~ ba $500 DlfleDI U..-. 3600 2 Bllts to Bcb, 4 Bd, 2 ba, Chalet apts, very prlvat New Dplx, walk to ocean. Now renUng. Singles, B E u 'fl Valley'> Nets about."'500 heartbroken vie o! Np£ LE R _.•SOR •••••••••• .. • .. •••••••• or 3 Bd, 2 ba, &75-3772 or 6: unique. 1 Br w/loft 38r 2 Ba, crpt, drps, kitchenettes, 1 bd apts. 1:,.x'.14., "!~~ J:c:~~~ ,ear • Hrbr Hi & st. Andrews Al CDM.3Br,2ba,oceanvu, 644-7211. sunken llvinl rm, bric D/W, iarbd.isp. aar, yr· Pools, TV, Dally, wkly, sunny, wJview-recept. • 640-7'38 Cburch.548""2S8. RE •LTY deck, frpl c , beam frplcs. pvt patios 1 ... Cbild OK ,385. monthl}'. Adults. •-========c::::::::::::== /1114 ceil'ng, cul-de..aac, 2 c 2Br Near beach. Pool. balconles, c losed l 67s.0642/642•05961613.6692 536-070. rm, HWxll' wet bar, 1. 4523Camv,1.11or,Irvine gar. Pvtbcbprvl'g~. ~mo. to mo. 8'75-'1033 1arages. $240 mo :::·c~'is~~·· $(C\\'1}A.-/&£tfS• Camc~•lalleyJ• ~6bo0P0Ctr 675-3203. days,.._..37~eves. "2-4228 $365 Yrly Ocean Front 2 Gwtttto.e 4150 .Botbnrbeacb• .. ·--Tit ..JG a. ,, __ u - -Br 1 Ba blt.i di k .,_ of lnt1191fng Worv am• witn a C iru.re ---------12 BR, 1 Ba, CdM, no LEASE$310,2Br1Belge 0...Polltt 312 • • n.s, ec • •••••••• .. •••• .. ••••••• .JacobsRealty,67~ ...,.,GA.,a.POUM----- Unlv. Put TetTace, 3 bd, chlldnn or pet.. $275. latlo, blk to oct•!'· ............ •••••••••• 1arace6'S-3SSS • Lovtn1 care for elderly 2ba. twnhse, frplc, gar. "'°·~(Su.lie) dults, do petl. Ref a. Ocean Vi.,, 2 Br 2 Ba, UTILITIES p _.ID bornalrnee 'Jar, pateUom •• ~1;.,~et.s, tw~ .. Wl~eodrc~o~amroe 0::;·:~11~ ~ :: $375.552-7'1960C'~· 3 3 0 0 Se av t e w' la .. Dtx. Blt.ns, $239.50 BLO,..,,TOOC"'EA"'" .._..._ .... .. ... vv a... io ,.,_ ,_ _......., -1-~d '11 4 • e 1 3 • $ a 6 4 o r ~ ar UO.SZJ.5 """' '" _..__ I .. 250 lnclds recept • phone. f Unlv. Pk. Temco2 BR,2 Afr&luxll Fww 21$-JS5.6343 ()pen ){ouat Deluxt Prtvate2Br, 2ba. Yac...-lllhh ,. AcctDI secy avail. , DOM S ET I 8 a • 1 1 e f a m ........................ lM,1/101'11. Ocean View Twnbme, Lge walk·ln closets, ....................... Newport Clr. 1303 I~ I I Ii I . nn.fldlclaeo,(tplc,$375 ...... 1...... 3706 8rZBll,M/BrBalcony. blw,1ara10.cabte TV, PALMDISaT Avocado. Ste JU •. _____ _ Nr Pool. 552-3016 •••••••••-•••••••• •• •• 2 & a Br Twnhac Apts. i.a.. dbt. bltns. '295. Adults/no pets. $300 mo. VIEW ·2 8R CondG. Teo· ~. Yurly 2BR Adulta no Encl paUo, blt.M, frplc. __,.,Ol'ao.a21S till J\l.DO 1$. $375 mo. on nla,~J!•cuul. Oreati--*-1-.. -0-...,-.,.-E-n-~-.-i, G RAC 0 I • UnlY. Pk Terrace · ti ~ ' IS73-718S vearly 1eue See t.o ap. for a an.a .. N*"''.. • .,_ ~"A. j CbarmlaJlbr,aba.up. pe ~~aft.him ....... _ b L1e Mod. I Br. Clo• # • t .... _,. NMJ 1·2·3 Rm. olOe. from• I r I I traded. Frplc, wetbar, ··--studio1J.....-beac ,$230. oceaa. $21S. mo. Cota predate. Call for •PP ndel.'7MM& $135 per mo. Near · -f all:Jtlt.. Anll Maftb l. .... ,, lint• 1707 lDcla . utll. Dne s. 1>rp1.mcna-.1J01 W.-UafterSPM. ._.. .. .._.. 4300 a.irport.Not .... nq. I •' '315-55l-$411«13CM10e3· ....................... ...,7211•~ 31 PAllHIWPOltT ........................ m-mstTUDOOG ~-.. "~'-" .. E-.• ..... _ L JJAI IBRrana.&Wpltobeach. B tMlo R &Toro 3 A.PAITMIMTS WANTTOAVOJ.Dm.E ............... 4450 1 I I I r ... !!.:~ .......... Now&o.I~~ ~;1~. :an1e, ':.err~~: ;;;·;;. .. ;; .. ~·:::s BHbeloc'lor2 la..otf Artht ....................... ~:::::~::=::: __ RM ••-water Ir eloc pd $235 • ' ' Bedmomsand CAiLROtJsE·MATES JDEALsboploQtedbltbe I 4~~ .. u~~be.o'. IBr:ZS. tmmo. ITS-Hl8Bws.0rftnda: ~=:a:A":n frplc. Townhouses and!lodtomeonewbots mallattbeFa~1 Can· .,. _ __,......,joolllj--._.. !:,~wttb•Oc~ 67J.tltl View. aBd. 2ba, frplc, ,_,.y.-.,, 3134 ~~::'o~l'/ DeDendable ~~~8.,'110• .__..__..._...__. .............. eaat'• ,,:.r,r:., emove CtrH14WW.-3722 ••n1e, .New. Owner ... ::; ...... -;;;,........ Spa-Pools·Tennlf tosha\-ehoustn1wllh. x-;:::;;-;:;;-;;::;~';';":':=T~...,~r-.... -..~r411 into ........... ,........... $495. lf"4Mlor63J·ZS33. N'r. Mlle Sea. Pk. Altr. ad1t AcroH from Fashion 832·41.34 ask for Jlm llAL&OA. lMM ;~~~~~· ~:;;~~~;::~~===~· 1400MO. l Br pr apt w/1.nf't. l8R. 2 b1U to ocean. Oardeo Condo. 2·BR, Island at Jamboree on Commercial spact .UHJCtAMktllnUS tOI I I I I I I? JUSSIOffRZALTY OoodLotttlofl,CdM. Adutts,nopeta.t2GC)\ l~. drpa. ~pt.I~ pool. SanJoaq'11bHlllsRoad. ELL Idle Items with • avallllblG, SlQ0.$300 UUf· -m:i9,;,;!,T""A;;.;N,;,o\WI~~--_.. ...... _.._""_ -"-li.ll-...ol.1.-....1.:~:.:I PH ... .om C.1lm-oiNe f?S-41'4 S200.8M•"IU7 afl6 1714) 644-1900 DallyPUotClaaaifiedAd. 106MalnSL 875-8'140. ~ AMWlft•aa...Hleiltli•7I•• l r • t A• OAll.YPllOT 1'tur!d!y,J!?U!!Y!, 1915 f Add it ••. Build it ... Oiaper it .•• Hammer it ... Carpet lt. •. Cement lt ... Wlre it...Hoe lt, .. Clean lt ... Move Jl ••. Press lt...Paint it ..• Nall it. .. Ptaster it ... Fix it ..• 1 l SERVICE DIRECT-ORY Af•l•ceR.,-.. c..,.a1,, · c:. .... tjeo.c,..t. Gwrtls.nkn th fl g lhu1edt•ii9 Masw1 P ..... /P••"'-9 rtuMb""1 ·····················~· ...••••.••...••••.•.••................................•.........••.••..................••••..•.••.•..•............. ····•··············••·· ..............•........ ····•····•····•········ APPLIANCF. REPAJR RIMODBJHG Brkk & Block Handyman. Can cleanup Fasl Dehvery H•ullng, Thorou.ghJyl Good refer. MASONRY·Tilc, brjck, Prof. Painte r. lot &c Exl MARV'S PLUMBING $10(74Se> ..1"~".1~U Alleratloos. repairs, Patios. curb& aiutter. & haul. Minor repairs, & Moving & Cleanups· WiJ1dows, apt. rea50na· block, c:oncrete, s tone. Qual work & r . l1'ree • G4TIJO.tl8()70S~AL' 1 ~-st.ores. addlUot\s, baUas & Wayne 64.:4-8673 painting. 548·3983 $7up. Free esl. 842·4597. ble. Licensed. 968·~ esl. 751-0084 /S41:M?1SS NO JOB 11 u -........~ kltct\ens cabinets . Colle s ..... / S4J.-34T4 - -EDf _, .... _... patios, c~ment work' Custom Brick Work. CARP.ENTRY, Painting. IC l""'e.~t w strong • Quality brick, block, slone CUstom Wullcovenn&~ & DRAJN CLEAN ro~ •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Contractor does ow . r-allos & wa ll sour Manor repairs Free back & lT packu~ truck. BE FREEi CALL ME! & concrete work. Lu:. & Painting. L1rd·20yrs C}I..· $-1.SOEvc:s.wkndssame I.1c. B-.bysittlng in my work Palombo Coo ~ aprcialt)'. f"tM-elllc!ent. estimates ~14o8 A I so i a rd en 1 n g & Superb howsccleaning a bonded. 5361108 pr. Very neat 63S.SG11. price. Guar. 558·7380 homeinCM.Wkd)'ll,not w-~ BB s . &u-8512 cleanups. Jdfrey reas. rates. Mlz Mop . -· &R 1 nlcbts. Call oft 2PM. ~r · ,B.Allwork Prof. snow ski base re· 536·1730. pets.54S-2022aftSpm Block & Slumps toneAttn:Apt.Owncr~&Mn-R.model tpar 631-1929 guar. 962-8314. Fe.cincJ pair. P·tex, flat file, etc. Wulls. Sidew""lks. Drives grs. Apt. painting $U u ••••••••••••••••••••••• Carptt StrYice ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Yrs. eitv. Prompt serv. HouwcleaninCJ Housework wanted. ~ut & Patios. 645-8120 room. 636-7085 Ted. Rm Add SS.sq.ft." Remod. ,. __ ,,...... .. .. •••••••••••••••••••Redwood fence special. PU & delvry . J im n••••••u••••••••••• .. I~. Refs . Babys1ttm Mo.__ f<'rciit,puUltini;837$1S/rm ~r-' Sh Qu1dlty lumber $4 run fl 968·1412 w · R C E N nates. 673-4053 v .. ~ 1 l.ic. XJnl work ·6824 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ampoo & steam clean· 1 b & ·l . 1 · · ant a EAL L A ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plaster/Rttpa r c~atotl\ Booksnetves. mg. color brigbt.eoeni~ ~~ ma e nu s . Saleguardlife &property. HOUSE ? Call Gingham LanckcapincJ Moving/Hauling. Stvdcnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Roofin9 tbles,roomdividers,Clc. wht carpts .10 ml.n · Veryinexpensive,effec· Gitl.Freeests 645-5l23 ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• w/larg"8 truck. Reas. VERY NEA'f ~·ATC 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cull Vince Le nho ff . bleach. Clean hv rm, din Gcrdttting tive smoke detector. Box KATHERINE'S WHITE Rototllling-$2S. Lundscap, Barry 548·9723/839 5779 JOBS & R t.:S1 UCCO. REPAlRS-ALLTYPES 536-8475. rm & hall $15. Av~ rm ••••••••••••••••u••••• 2793N.B. 92663 GL<>. VE CLEANING ing, Sod·Bluegrass 16\.'~t 11'ree est. 893·1439. Reas. free ests. lJc. I S7.50, ~uch $10. chair $5. Expr Hawaiian Gardener 640-8080 5pm to 7pm Sq.Ft. Tom 000·2170 MOVING? Let 2 exp men Walt gJ0.5020 anytime REMODEL·BUILD Gua~ elim pet odor. Crpt Yd. Cleanups & Hau Ung Prat:·t. Nurse, llprn·7am. • · move you. Reas. Refs. • -SPECIAL on Insulate repau. 15 yrs expr. Uo Trim & prune 6464676 Reliable. Bondable. Rer. 2 High School girls need Vrnsnrs 833-:JS« & 552-8481. PATCH PLASTERING Tree Serv1c~ REFS Lie "'Ac. 34""' wo k If R f Box 2793 NB 92663 ...._....... 11 **AL.LTYPES•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • . .,....,. .,., r m Y s e • e s · · · housecleaning J·obs afl F p-L...6Lu. JP..._..i 531-0101 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11111111 .... ..,,. Vf""""" .n9 Free Est 540-6825 Removals, hmblng. top- MASTER Crafts mans · G.neral s.t-Ylcts 2:30pm Weekdays & Sat. WlLLIAMS&SON'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Specialty. Remodeling Call Uniled·Professional ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hauling & Sun. Have references. Masonry Brick/Block PETERS PAINTING Houses, additions, restuc· ~IiRnE~oo'br ;7; ~rj/: Cinisb work. Refs. I-Te~ Carpet. uphlstry. win· I DO IT .ALL! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Sue 979-962l & Stooe.'Call 581·7829 Int/Ext-Reas Rates co, patching over block de 1. 1 i c Ibo n d /ins. est,guarwork499-3105 dow & f~oor cleamng. Electrical. Plumbing, •HAUL ING • HousecleaningWeekly CaUGeneat~2-C>158 waJls.586-4892 642-2624 . Addils, Re"lnodeling, pallos, cabinets, panel· Reas prtces . Balboa etc.Reas rates.642·4957 YARDCLl::AN UP Owntrans.Goodrefs. Brick paving, terrac:ed---------1 I~.:;_:_ ______ _ Island. 675-9024. •• 556-0347 • * Gd work. 642·l440aft5 front walks w/brick & *PAl..._.Tl..._.G * You don't need a gun to HANDYMAN. Hauling, concrete combined. Tile ....,. ....,. "draw fast" when you Don'tdroplheball!Gela 1ng , concre t e . ry a Dail y Pilot -1~·9739/750-9460 Jack or Classified Ad to buy. sell _l_o_hn_. _______ 1 or rent something. painting, plumbing, etc. Hauling anything. garag Expert cleani'1g lady entrys. Slumpstone walls lie/ins 979.3335 Try me place a n ad in the Daily job with a low-cost Daily Lowest rates. 493-0771. cleanup. Reliable, fast Phone & planters. Lie. 227430. PilotWantAds!Callnow Pilot Classified Ad . :Whrs. service. 963-6452 673-6794 or 642·4670 Ph: 531·4973 Classified Ads 642·5678 -642·5678. Phone 642·5678. Last& Fo9MI 5300 Help Wanted 7100 Help W•t~d 7100 Help Wanted . 7100 Help W.ted • 7100 HftpWGRfed 7100 HelpWCMted .. 7100 Help Wonted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .LOST Germa n Shepherd, • female, blk & tan, wear- ing silver chain collar. .ans to Baisel. Vic, Bolsa & Springdale. 898·5204 or ~73-6490. LOST 12·27, LG MALE I R l SH SETTER . REWARD 633-8838 .FOUND: Black Cat Female. Approx 10 wks, collar & bell, Pemn PL 12·30. 673·2965 BOYS AND GIRLS DELIVERY ROUTE . -. ORTHC?-ASStST~NT 'HOSTESSES Good Job for rq~ht Motor Route delivery route for Daily Pilot in Newport Beach, afternoons 3:30 . to 5 :30 a n d Saturday and Sunday mornings. For details phone 642-4321, ask for Mr. Salatti. Equal Opportunity Employer Apply ln Person Mon lhru Fri 3-Spm COCO's LOC)'Ma Hills 24001 Ave de La Carlota Equal Oppor. Employer If you are 12to16 years old and would like to earn $20 to $50 and more per week, with a chance to win a trip to Philadelphia, Cape Kennedy or Washington, D.C. and cash awards. bikes and other prizes . I have a job for you. If you are willing to work hard • learn responsibility and the value of ~!.~~ ••••• ~!.~~ ~~!.~~~ ••••• !~~~ HOSTESSES money, call Mr. Scott, 642-4321. Applyinpersondailyaft. Transportation will be furnished. This COOK-EXPER'D DRIVERS WANTED S:30PM . Airporter Ion JUNIOR SALESMAN person. Exper. pref'd. Costa Mesa . 546·5170. ~---~--~-- 10 To 15 Years Old Earn $20-$40 per week working after school & Saturdays. Huntington Beach & Fountain Valley areas only. Leave name, address & phone numbei: . on tape recorder. Call 536-4298. Part time Dream Job wilh United Way Agency. If I you have 1 or 2 children. over 6, we'll even ar· range for their care. AP· prox. 22 hrs per week at new minimum wage. In therapeutic diet. Ex· Men or Women Hotel, 18700 MacArthur FOUND; 1 Gemco Reel is not a paper route. ccUcnt benefits . Must be2Sorover Blvd. Irvine, ca. Ask for Rider type wwnmower. Park Lido Conv. Center Apply Jn Person Mr. E. Paulus Must be patie nt, in- novative. talented and like working in varied situations. Mobile Direc- tor 646-718 l. owner describe color, EqualOpportunityEmployer 466FlagshipRoad Y~llowCab PART TIME worke rs senal no., date & loc. Newport Beach 642·8044 ll251SlaterAvenue Housekeeper. Live in, HelpW.ted 7100 Hel Wanted 7100 needed fo r Welcom<· ~'!t562. Hl.B. Pollcc Dept..•u -•pw--1.....d . 7100 u-•pwana....d 7100 Cook, m ·1ddle aged -Fountain Valley wknds off. Mature p Hostess P.rogram. Car ~ rK"t ~ J"1C"I ~ h rk kids. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUND· adult 1 1 . h · wo ma. n Pre e rr e · Earn $18·$50 an evening S3Swk. S36·1003 CIUft ry· an1tor Mana ment Valley Chamber of Com· ---....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• . r d . person w 0 I es . L d J . l nee. Contact Founlalll Setter. 'vie. Ar';;~ ~~~h B~MAID. Must be ~e-CockLaalLounge.548·9006 wit~out cxper. S~ll Housekee er & Naon Full time. Ne wport Will 1976 be9the year 0 merce for interview. Hts, Lag. Bch. 494.1580 ACCOUNTING Liable & dependable, no Bt'ehne Fashions at m· live-in, fuu-time. Cd~ Bea.ch Travel Lodge. I\~· indepcndance for YOU 18~35 Brookhursl, F. V. ---"------expernec. 847·5411 COOKS home shows. Use or car~ . T S 1 Call ply m person. 6208 W. Cst YOUR FAMILY? p l .... 962_·_44_4_1 _____ _ FOUND Jan. 1. small I phones. Wkly proC1l area. op a ary. Hwy. . · . u male dog, brown w /blk Now s The Time BEAUTICIAN check. No investm. l''ree 673-3954 aft 6pm. your unproductiv~ t1m Part-Time eves & Sal AM. face Fou t · Vl For All GoodPe-ople Manager w/foll. for NB Apply In Person samples. Call 557-04al or LIFE AGENTS to ~ork & make .it h~p· Perfect for s tudents . 963 6. n ain Y' To Come To The salon. 540-8582, 644-0661 Mon lhru Fri 3·5pm 963-7470. ' Housekeeper for gu~st Interested in making a pen· .For executive m· Jnside work, guaranteed ·l 7l. Aid Of Their Country COCO 'S home. 1lpm-7am shirt. h g ? N t Ct· tervie w a ppt. cal wage Call Al Aft 4pm LOST : Mini. Silve r Grav BEAUTY·Hair s t ylis t Laguna Hills Earn S200 mo p /time. ~~~~twn 9am·5pm, ~aa~I eRa/wJ'~~'1ot~: 640·4067. S.A. 0 542·901J or G.G: Poodle at Dick Churches LET'S GO w /follow. Needed i m-24001 A""' de La Carlota F\Jller Brush Sales, local 640·1752 before 3. 530·8460. R ed 39 .. a·11 Manicurist lo r ent spac --------- An esti:iurant. I 17/76AM . TO WORK! m · 644-8762or644-0 8 Equal Oppor Employer area. 1 • 968·8378. Housekeeper/Babysitter. L ' ht h k M / y info please contact 2 · l 16 & 9 A 1g s e pn g. on 1.n Laguna Bch. l~t M PHYSICAL THERAPJST 540 3440 d Beauty Operator. 2 Assis· Experienced waitress af. gir s yrs. pprox Wed/ FY 4 h s d· l~ec to get est~bhshed. -n~gistered. Cul time. Ev~. Re:J:d or S-18-08!4 I 0 Key Operators tants & 2 manic~rist for COOKS ASSIST. le moon & eve. s h ifl. 3 days "':k. some eves. Some r1~ok i~tcrM ~;t Call 499·4000 for mte rvw Avail. 2/1/76. 833·9498 ( A/Pay&A/Rec new salon. Richard · , . 494 ·8:IB5 or 998 South Ownlrans.968-41ll havedrivers lic.494-0Ul5. --~ Oue I lette Sa lo n 200 Maunce 548-7418 6-16-8251 Coast Hw y. L.li. Housework 4p•t thru n1·n· . Manicurist. exp. Slat ion REAL ESTATE SALES Bookke-e-rs u rental avail in manicur-ATTEN'fJON r-Ne~por t Cent er Dr. Cooks for coffee s hop, ex· ncr. Mon, Tues, Thurs, Liquor & ma~ket person· Ll''E1N"L'D. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Longor shortterm Design PlazaN.D. per·d. Xlnt wages.I Fri.S40wk.673·1879. nel. Experienced. Gd ~.~~~.Ion . 752·1338 . " "'""' D · k. 493·4951. Tiny Nay tors FOOD · pay. Hours flexible. App· UNLICENSED. c:UnAI~!:C,~~~!~;1~e local jobs avail now. B & G• I Restaurant, Capistrano. PROCESSING Hskpr. Live-in. Drive. ly in person before noon MASSAGE TECH. GECTATHE RED Personals 5350 I • 2Ahrsaday835-3S30 Tem~~~~~;rkAt OYS 1r s . Applications now taken Ref. Own room & bath. at304.1So. Bris tol.Santa TRAINEE RPET 3723B1rcbStreel 1oto1(yearsofage .Dai· CustomD~af:ry for: TV.Gdwage.573·9042· Ana. Young lady 08·28) for We I:!.f:T:O~t~!selt/ SPIRITUAL READER <Between ly Pilot delivery routes WORK Cal 642·6171 Bakers Helper legitimate full time posi· homes with an accelerat· l Open 10 AM·lO PM Bristol/MacArthur) may be available in your ,.. .. t <-$475 Warehouseman I.E. Mfg/Hydrau $l8K LOAiu tion. No exp. nee. We ed th t t .... · ~ Advice on all matters, 9-llAM or 1:30-3:30PM area. Earn profit for de· ~s • .-rv.. .. E h I f I b " course a s a ... s am-1 312N.EICaminoReal. liveries & cash, trips or J::>ersonahl.Y ++ for xper. e Pu ' ut. not Exec.Secy/AJA S800 PROCESSORS send to school, earn mediately. U you are in· I San Clemente. For appt. office overload merchandise for selling lh!S f~nlasl1c on the JOb nece~spply In Person Order Desk $600 ::!~~·~unle~~~~~~ ~~ lerested in earning big 492.9034 492·9136 557-0061 new subscriptions. For tr3:ining. You can de· 1672 Reynolds Ave Cost Actng Clerk $600+ Downey Savinnc. '6~ .•~11.a.a. money from the start, I ---------1 information please call fn~1tely m 1 ake ~career of Santa Ana Irvine Personnel Agency ~--~ ~ ...,...~~ get individualized fftl! 642.4321. From San lh1Sone. Bankin~exper. 488E.17thCostaMesa &Loan ,Be· trainingonthejobindnc PREGNANT? Carin g confide ntial counseling & referral. Abortion, adoption & keeping. APCARE 547-2563 A~ rt• • Sal . Equal Oppor. Employer Su.l 224 642 11 · d' l • ( t ff' 1 u..-e ISllHJ es Cl emente-San Juan helpful. Call Control 1 e ·1470 as imme 1a eopen1J1gs ¥~ate.ii lnsur~m_ce ''" o many opo ices ocat- Young Company opening Capistrano area, call Career Employmeot ~~ in Orange County for .BiOerne~ded. , ed tbruoul Orange Coun· new office in Orange Co. 495--0630 and Mission Vie· Agency, 556-8505. GEL REP AIRMAN conventional loan pro· ~2.6261 ly, call for further de· 1 Must be aggressive & . El T 11 Boat.experpref'd. <'esso1-s. Must have ex· l.ails. Arlene, {714) bard working. Straight JO-oro area, ca Deli/Counter Help & Food Inspector per. in processing from Motel maids. full or part 848-8742 581·6310 p t ' P /t ' MacGregor Yacht Corp commission. Contact Mr. · repara ion. 1mc. ~ocuments through fund· time. Exp not ren. Apply --------- pare at646-0c'>c. Equal Oppor.Employer WiUtrain.Sam·s ltaJian 1631Placentia.C.M. g "' REALESTATESALES ,,,,., ---------RECEIVING i.n . in person. Co6ta' 'Mesa Lose your cool with your ---------1 Market, 1909 Harbor Bl, Contact Personnel Dept Inn. 3205 Harbor Blvd. Joi·n # 1 children ? Help is avail.a· Assembly, exper'd in CM 548-7822 GENERAL 549-0902 Tt ble24 hrs. 549-8939 loading, audio cassettes Boat Electricians INSPECTOR Equal Oppor Employer MEED EXP. P.AIMTER Tarbell, R~altors or related magnetic tape Delivery & Pick Up girl products. International & D~sel &lqin~ needed for lot>al dental •Secretaries 751-0684 •Free 15 day trainin&: Audio, SS6·1787ofc hrs. lnstallff'S lab. Call 645·3465 after 5 •Typi"sts 1st s hift. Minimum 1 MACHINIST M course Have your own personal ..,ust be exper'd. Good for iolervw appt. year related experience. All URSE-RM; •Cadillac car program 1 11 "' 0 M h b.li around machinist to F/time 3 11 sh.'t Hunt H ·· A ] l · masseur. w1 come lo ASST MAN.AGER co. benefils·rnedical & ____ _;_:...__ ___ •Keypunch prs ust ave a i ty to test work in medium sized in gton Beac\: 'conv·. • awau. capu co nps LADIES your home. Ask for Bob Exper'd women's ap-life ins. Paid vacs. We DeliYHy & PBX O and inspect fabricated Production Shop. Able lo •1st place-sal e s in al 968·6806 aft 6 pro, all parel shop. Call for appt. arc looking for good Stock Man * prs parts , electrical and d li tin od Hosp, 18811 Florida St, Orange County d_a_y_S_a_t_-Su_n_. _____ 1 co"'208S. Laguna Hills. F/l' M t be ·i mechanical parts. Must 0 te loo g & pr UC· HB. 847·3515. •1st place·listings taken Orqanic Naturci Facelifts & Facials by Betty Eastbluff Coiffures 644·1570 for Appl. ..,.,.,.. perm. employees for fast 1me. us ava1 .... EEDED uow.r tion. so hr wk week. Com· ---------· Or growing co. wknds. See Harold, 495 " " have knowledge and use . d 1 A 10 ange County J\pply In Person E. l7th St, c .M. Tempo Temporary Help of small inspection tools. ~f;1tf~rs~~~~g~eho~~ NURSES AIDEs •1st place·listings sold in ATTENTION! 3·6 Mo's Work ll&Onr Paci.flea By -----..,.----1 l7802Sky Park Irvine Jls 1 Be h ur Orange County ca p ease. ac , .. g. 7·3&3-l!Shifls 1st 1 d rt· · · Kipper Yachts Dental Hygienist, Beach Call 5404455 STANDARD 15602 Container Ln. HB • Pace-a ve IStng in 928W i7thSt c M Area. S60 per day. CaJ11---------1 Exper'd. 549·3061 California · · · • 962·1345 NURSING •1st place-advertising in We will train you in oar General omce, 2·5:30 Memories, Inc MAIDS the U.S.A. ~:C;;.spl:O~Y ~}".;0e:k. ~r lo'*lceeper /Typist Fo ~e;!~ !is;~~~~tOf c. ~ti°i~dt~.11~s~~~t3 li ~~ <An Applied ~eur1s1o~ ~~~Ma f cf 1 lP ~ ~ SuRi:;~~:e:!~ JO ~~~~l~~~~~~~~n~~LO I you 'r e ambitious & .for CPA .. s.alary open . Must be exper'd 1 yr in 64.2-3SSS. MagneticsCorp) Laguna HiJis Hilton, . LVN If unlicensed, let us as· would like a positionCoul r:~mm~~~~~n. Call aft gen'l denistry. back&•---------222lSouthAnneSt 2520SLaPazRd,Laguna Full·time3-11:30 sislyouinobtainingyour ' or the ordinary. all • fronlofc. 644·0683 GENERAL OFFICE Santa Ana Ca 92704 Hills. LVH Real Eslatelicense. Call betwn 9:30 & 3 p.m. Bookkeeper F /Chg (1) Pleasant telephone voice Maids for small exclusive J1·7:30 Fri/Sat Nites Bill Rory position & General Ofc DENTAL .ASSISTANT, lOkeyaddingmach.elec AnequaJ motel. Hrs can ·be ar-HURSESAIDES 9 539-1183 HAPPY 13th BIRTHDAY Peggy! loYe, Mom. John, ---------1 (l) position. 642-8400 Ortho·chairside. N. B. 4 •ri typewriter, please apply 1~~o~p~po~rt~u~ru~·~ty~e~m~p~lo~y~er~l~ra~n~g~e~d.:..'.. 4!:94~-85~2~1::_. ___ All Shifts. 62·5 566 days/wk. Ortbo ex per. in person 1911 Placentia1. XlntSal & Benefits TARBElC BookkHperF/Chq req'd.642-2626. _A_v_e_.c_._M_. _____ , INSPECTOR Maid wanted, Sea Cliff ParkLidoConvCenter Porntta & Shannon lnte nsive Individual Aversion Smoking Treat· ment Guaranteed. UCI Area. 833-9292 University Smoke Clinic AVON. ~upestn~~~lye t~ l:~~~:~i Deotal ~ss~. Chairs ide, GUARDS First Class to work in Motel, l 66l So. Csl. Hwy. 466 Flagship Road for Ped1atnc Deotal Ofc. p /time & f It f me. Medium Sized Produc· Lag.Bch. 4.94-4892 Newport Bch 642-8044 _ sets of books. Wor~ your Exper &/or Formal Den· Uniforms furn. Retired tioo Shop. Must have own M · t M ·th · ---------own hrs Fantastic op· 1 Ed · A tool •· b · l ain. enanct: . an wa Nursing Attendant ex· ---------• . La ucalton. ge 18 to ok. 'l'eleph & car req'd. s, "' mec: anica qualified painting cxper 1 d 8 '· por. for raght person. 21 Dr Donald D King Call Lt s·t 833-4693 background. P ension Call after 1 PM for a : per ence •. ayv1ew REAL ESTATE REply to Classified ad 546.5613 · ' 10 3 · 1 er, plan & xlnl co. paid m· tmentG?J.1788 P Con~. Hospital. 2055 OPPORTUNITY 1926-1976 no. 606 c/o Daily Pilot, am· pm Insurance. No phone po · Thunn Ave, CM 642·3505. Well located RE oHir~. W/M 27, good looking ~~ 1560 Costa Mesa DENTALASSlSTANT GU.ARDS calls please. Apply in Management Office Typist, part-time Opening for 2 licensed seeks women for fun & Ort.ho practice. Exp pref. Full & p/tirbe. 3rd Shift. perso~. Beach Mfg. 15602 . PEOPL~ PERSON approx 3 hrs per day: salespeople. Your own Why G.t Sttow~d Utt ... By ChrishncH lils?Eam ~I~~ ~.u~113ox 503, r'v"J~lo if~ ~~e~Sa~~~ Bookk.eeper. 4 hrs . per Call 640-0121. . Retired or pensioners Container Lo. HB ~xec:. l~kmg for ~art 60WPM, call 640-lGOO desk and phone. 18 Years ;:;;;:;;;;::;:;::;;:;::.....;;===-I TATIVE. l'JI show you day in r~al. estat~ ofc. DENTAL/RECPT ~·d. .Phone & car re· ifie!t time business associate in same locaLion. Call for how. Call 540.7041 or Contact William Wmton Full time position open 9 d. l!nilorm furn. Plant lnlne Uta" in wholesale supplies. OPTICS interview. W. E. Lachen· J'orCJassifiedAd Zenith 7·l359. ••675·3331•• for e nergeti c, im· inlrvine.CallLtWarren SchoolDistrid B u siness fully Optical Clean e r & myer. Realtor/Owner. ACTlON aginative. pleasant in· 833-~ 10am·3pm, Wed Accepting Applications capitalized.. Interview trainee 882 Product.ion 1860 NEWPORT BLVD. CASHIER/ dividual, busy office for 3 thru Frt. For 673·222.3 Place N.B. 642-5446 Costa Mesa. 646·3928; Call a IT CL K ~-L..&LL....t...-Food eves 673-4577. Daily Pilot BABYSITTER, 5 days C~ED B doctor~, good salary, Hairdressers-have your ~u1mnnw AD-VJSOR wk. Costa Mesa area. For fme jt;wetry store. cbalrs1de ex per very own space, $30. Unique Service Assistants SlfK & FINO... FAMOUS CONDUCTORS 642-56'7&· 631·2636aft.5 Perm. pos1tion. Phone helpful.552-8339 salon w/choice clientele. On Call Basis. $2.93 Per =::::::::=::::::::::::===:fBabysitter. lit e Mr. Riggs, 89'7-0327 for Dental Assist.ant, f/time. Aud~ee Hart's Hair hour. Apply, 2941. Alton ___. • housekeeping. Mon thru appt. Exper'd onJy. Must be Fashions,548-1575 Ave, Irvine. Equal Op-'~~ • Fr' por. Employer ,..... 1. 7:45-4. My home. W· Casual Labor, PJT, FIT, mature & enthusiastic. Hairdressing Assist. Good'..;;..---=--"'----- Real ERwtc Career FrH lOday fralnlftcJ CCM)rs~. ....................... aideC.M.646-6706 Hrs. 9-3PM or 8·4:30P.M, H.B.846-0697. hrs. Guarn $25 a day+. J•or/Super~lsor I · _,. Wcmhcl. 707 BabY1itt« w/light hsekp· Moo-Fri. Lite assembly 499-4000 for Interview. Ex per. onl)'. Write ••••••••••••••••••• ••• Jog, approx Z.Gpm. Ava II & packaging. lot.erview· DISHWASHERS (Laguna Beach ) quallfitaUons top .O.Box K Y I T E L l A T N A W S 0 U D I E S UCN E HCROBIBADNALPOC TNESTNSMKLlEAMGAUTP EOK ARCESYO MUE TSHRO HSELARWMCIDRLFAHEZL C LLNDOLENVW ED ABENAA N E I S K I T I N A E 6 I M C A I H A A N V 0 T R C: l H A M S E 0 G l 8 S K. lRTURT USE N CT RS DSGLSMOTJOHST SEC REM HLANACAROLYHARHIALA UPR£VINft HAH SESAGI DH SEPTE "OCDT ET H I SDL ES BJAHU"FEGYPREVlNZIT OKRG ESE YE CL SNEERGF O •C1111.ie1 Rtart immediately. •Speclnl. Pe~nt & Jnd1vlduallzed help. 1 Hl.gb School girls n overnight when nee. lngbyApptonJ1 9·11AM, 176,CostaMesa,92627 lllouaecleaning j<)b!l art. 83'7-0742or ~1.3674. 12 le 13 .Jan. R ain bow Higbschool girl to ht1lp 2:30pm weekdays le sat Magnetics 3081 S. Harbor Apply In Person wlUt housework. Approx Is Sun. Have reJerences Babysitter/Cook. lite SantaAna,54CH717 · Monthru f'ri3·Spm 10 hrs week. CdM. .....,,_ .. COCO'S 644-5898 C&USUef7t..9621 • ...,...,e .. eeper. Mon thru CHAJRSIDE ---·------.;,.;::..;;: ______ -I Fri. Own transp. Refs. RECEPTIONIST lagmeHils Dmt.11 AHbl a98U 96,2,2003.So.E.H.B. F ll t· itlo pen 24001AvedeLaCarJota HOSPITAL full/,,..·time work exper u imo pos n o !!;",. l 0 "' I JANITORS EX])er'd only. 3-4 Hn night. S Days wk. Male, fem, or cpls. lrvlne area. Call betwn 2pm & Spm, Mon·t)'t, 752·'1292. ~omce-.2213 Babysitter/ llte for energetic. im· ~ua ppor.-.mpoyer ADMlmMG/ ·~.:.;;:~~_..;.------4 housekeepin1 my home a~l~aL1 ve, pleasant in· PIX Janitorial part Lime, eves. LN. wUl «ift~I car for 4 YI'· old. Own trans .. divtduaJ, busy office for3 •Dispensing Optician ex· P/Ume relief 11·7 11hlft. local area, own tram ft • lnlant. My home Cd.M ,6'4-1680 . doctor~, good salary, per. part time, xlnt o~ Expor . prel'd. Good phone.Call2lM75-04.97. f'l'eftpert/t.5»1'791 . cbairside uper very pol'Wnlty. Good salary & working conds. E.O.E. JEDROS WaJlteSI OTer 1-.::;;.;.,;;.;;;..::..;;.;...-. ____ -t Bab~1tter/Rouselteeper, belpful.552-8339 benefita.556-7808 Contact Mrs. Cy«an, 21 ni... ..... ~ ·~· , .. ,_ ll~Ul. 2 Boys <2 "7). -...:.....-------•_.;..:,--_ _..;..;..._ ____ , Costa Mesa K emoria1 • &119Q -IJ.l'U"• >J 111 Good pay. Own rm Child Care It It. bsltpg ex· DOCTottS ASSIST. Hospital, )Ol Victoria, person. 3000 Br Ito!, wrrv . Spanish. ok. Coo change Free Room, Young ladks (18·211) to C.N .6'2-2'7J4. _eo. __ t.a_M_esa_. ____ _. POqUito Ingles. 64-4-1537. Board ft home. plus $200. .. I lb 1 i t mo. 9 Yr. old 1Jrl, nr wor. • efi ma ' ---------Lad)' wboneeds$.SOOmo BabyaiUeT. Weekdays. 0 .C.C. 545-4eJt Nmus•!e r'!_ lle!elhtrSapina. up.¥• onented... P apm~:30pm. o ex.,.. .. ..... • · M1rt1yn, 86808. M1~308J. C 0 MP ANION I L. t Apply noon • 8 pm. 2.112 IF YOU --~-----bouaek~r.tns fore.lderlJ Hnbor Blvd. Costa baveaaervlct&oot'feror lady. Sa •1'1 open.. HO IC a. roods to.ell, rlue an ad ... tklll~ .. •11Jtln'. •on·Pri. 2 atta.541-2'730af\5. •--------fa the Da 11 J>Hot bo7a, 1 :J0.5:ao. CdM Hne somethl.nl to sell? OllNllled Sect1on • • • ... Jant PIY~IMOJrlTI ant ad reswt. to511'11 Claullled ada 6o It 'RlL Ft1oM ea.~ ., I -l \ = ...... ,,. .......... = ..... ~ ......... t =................... ........... ..ca. .. ...._ __ .................. : Bernstein Mahler Shaw • • Copland 01'1111nd1 ~sa Ff edler Prev1~ StokOMstt Ganz Seidl T01<1nlnf. Tomorrow: Nllllbers •On the job tnlnlng FREE •Mana1rrmcmt opportunl1Jc<1. •Ch•llc.m-ing cu~t e.xpanaloo pro1r1m. *To~ Commlum. •Uc. prepdayornl&hl dusea .• •'!WotncelocaUant. No J I~ fM'CtQary lb lpJll~. Pol' dellalli plet11e call Linda Ul·TW. -~ StU MSl1 ltt1111 ..,.. . J \ 1 I •• s. ta ily d. h (. 'd. ilh lf ST . 8 -( s ing ice. sed WI\ ars Cor I f \ I , ~!~¥.?.~ ..... ?~"'~~.~..... 7110 HelpW-'M 7100 Mlrct.I... Ml•c•••.;. io1o'Mlliul.i1-·aoao Thur!d!y,J1nU11ty8. 1'79 OAILYPILOT GN .... ········•······· ........................................................................................... . S w .. 11 ' IOtl .. & Ma.. :YCJet/ Amtos Wcmled AUS MANACER TUININ" l!lCRETARY needed to....................... \ ........... s~aaohrs 9150 ................... . N a btlp talua off workload Welsh Oreuer 811ea ullli,;.lcl ' .A ·MED ••••••··••····••••••••• ••....••..•••.......... -WANT TO sa.&: ' • ewapaper promotJon company ha&' from bul(c Exec. Mu1t Circa 11IO. 2 authen.Uc " ~ C ... ,.. 90 I 0 '73 Ya ma ha .-TX.SOO Ex. YOUll CAar.!t openings for people with vans or station ~~p'Y: acctn~ h.and·cralted reprocluc· PRSOMAL PIOf arY SALE ·-··•• .. ••••.......... cond. Must aell. Best ofr. Let u il 1 Jff.'t . wpeagron.sw.eEeakrnlnGgs suod lo $300 or more 1 •~r blUniu~t'· :anbb: '<'1o>oo'a·k <:3>2PSlnAeost,zq7u5•, SAT • .,... wm. NCalleed ·~~ r~e~!.!ls·s.•lnc;! P.P.86C).l.20 CAS;ft ~take~ · oo chance f Eo1ll1h 8 IC atart.r • · ._,, ... \&Mt• .. MotorHo••· • n y m • k ~ 6'1 advancement. Must be able to wo~k wllllni to uaum • ~:=:C~~!l~'::: ALLSPACE Ana.54'1.aL S•/Rettt 9160 mode l .. car s , tr db. wiU. t9"a1ers. This is not a pa reaponsibillty. Salary 957 Newball St, CM. Anllque Motor Launch ••••••••••••••••••••••• van~. recrcatlonal route · per commensurate w/exper. M5-03lO realored by Bnu El: '72TIOGA vc h itl.es Imports 6 ~Call · Mr. Scott at 549-8958 for ~~·Mr. J\llldman, Llrte ~run1wic1t wind· CMH-SILPSTOIWllWAIBtOUSISI ~~~:Sm~~::~~ 19'MlnlMotorH~ ~U:,T:~~~/i:~.~ a ppointment. up. maholany victrola. 1164 HAMILTOM ST; rebullt 14' ~ t to Dodge 360 V-8, A/T , P /S, Calllorrua sarety cq.40 Secretary /Girl Friday Haa itorage area for (Comer Hamlltoo & Newland) appreciate. ~!ad~e to Pl ~. dash air. roof air. sWlda~. Secretary • Recept. albl.tms. Plays exedlent· Jauncb. 5$7..3814 rud.io, awnioc. roof ~ack t:l CammoAutoS= Skills required. 556.f64.6 1 _,.,.. 00 .. ,.,.7475 W DAYS a.1 W el... &. ladder. 6 new t1~ei;. A<llA-1400 ~ ... ·Equal Opportunity Employer • HtlpW .... d 7100 HtfpW .. d ? IOO SccrctaryNceded,airpott RUTH'S ANTIQUES 60 hrs. $500; Nu lntema: $0095. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR 9-&PM Y·-· ,_,.. '73 Evinrude 40 Electrir Lie. S~f.'!NJ. Sale price, ~ • .............................................. area, P/T 1.5. Mon lhru J-,Cte•GRC• .......... 8080 llonal nautical murine RE ENCYMOTOR f'ORTOP U.M~CA~ Fri. Immediately. Send 10to20%0PF ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• sext ant, $150; 6 ma n II MERENTAL FOREIGN, ES'ttC I . Rec Ptionial/Seeretary r esumj,.. Webst•r In· ON ALL STOCK C ...... m made ln Den. Winslow 11elf inflating 92SN. l:lrbor 61vd, S.A. or CLASSICS Part time. afternoons. RN'S Q "' -w WANTED raft survival kit $300· • S31·2S03• • IC your car is extr;1 dua Call 64.2.5785. ternational Corp. 18552 Wed thru SUn Noon·5Prn mark, be.aut. oUed 8' oil Nu SS pound Da~forth see us first. c~·fl,.fl-) MacArthur Suite 460. S04Y.a S Bayfront walnut solid top dinlng TOP CASH DOLLAR anchor, $lSO·. 60ft. & , , Mo HotM R...tal BAUH IUICK Receptionist/Typist, Ex-"' ,... lrvine.92715. BALBOAlSLANO table, w /8 chairs, PAJD FOR YOUR o•.2z•.•4• per. Wed. thru Sunday. Med Surg, 11·7:30 shift. (Next to the Ferry) matching 7• buffet. pad & J EWELRY, WATCHES. In. nylon dock lines. $150. A 2925 Harbor Bl vd. SendresumetoboxN42S Exper. acute car .,. 67S-0433 linensincl.$H00,63&·l938 ART OBJECTS, COLO 831·2.BSOeves. Spe ialWeekend Costa Mesa 979·2SOO CdM,92625 ' hospital only. Excellen Sl!C"ETARY . S ILV ER SERVIC E. &Weekly rates. benefits. Contact Mrs. Top Notch. Xlnt t>Yisl. ~g. Antique Murphy bed Bdrm & dining rm. set 3 f'JN E FURN & J\N. Boats, Mn~ Reserve for holidays now TOP DOLLAR R.£. S.4LIS Jensen, 642·2734, Cost Sh. Use transcribing with new mattress. $125. mo. old. $600 for both. TJQUES. 64~2200 £-1-6 9030 REGENCY MOTOR PAID ST•RT THE Mes a Memo r i a machine. Xlnt "-nefi•·. 873-7170 cost$1200. 848-0564 ..,...,........ HOME RENTALS "" Hospital. 301 Victori .....:: "' Firewood Org. Euc. $80••••••••••••••••••••••• 92SN.ll;borBlvd,S.A. IMMEDIATELY, NEW YEAR C.M. EOE. ~ua:yl .~f!$600EmmpoloyCaer11· PRIVAQTE SORUTHTUERRNE New woven Lear design cord. del. Oak. Coast • BARGAIN • • 1·2503• • FOR ALL ..,.,,..,. · ANTI UE FU NI Hcrculon Sofa.. Coffee Fire wood S upp 1 y. 16 Bay . Boat, wood lap RIGHT! Mrs. Baker.833·9~. COLLECTION Carved Table. both for $325. 581-1122. strake fixer upper $100. T II T I FOREIGN CARS s.tl HoMH S41LMAkER WANTS> SECY/TYPIST Oak dresser & mi~ror cash. Value $700. 495-1888 548·3561 ra et's, ran 9170 CALL OR COME fM L lft hntnh F/time position. Exper . $795. Oak Icebox w/lron Firewooc:l/Stock Up ••••••••••••••••••••••• TO SEE US ...,. •H helpful, but not req'd. Excelle.nt. typin.g & legs $595. Oak square top WATERBED, ped es tal $75cordtdel642·2624 lo • '60, 12' Lakewood Deluxe Eam More 548·3434. lra ns cri bing s kills . dining table w/claw feet frame, l ine r, heater, ats. r-ower 9040 Reconditioned ms1de & • Our residential division ---------1 NelNport Center area. legs $495. Oak library ta· $125, 645-3241 IRVINE Coast Golf Club ••:•··~··••••••••~••••• out $450. 536·4895 aft t. NEWPORT IMPORTS lists and sells more in · SALES COUNSELORS Sa 1 a r Y $ 5 0 0 • $6 0 0 . ble $225 Call aft 6 PM Membership Cor sale 40 Chns Craft Twin V -8. vestment properties than For Newspaper Promo· Benefits. Equal Oppor. Mon-Fri. only 960-3462 or BEDROOM SET. Xlnl 67~2252 A/P depth finder & xtras '73 J ayco J ay Eagle. most investment offices. Uon M t · k" Employer. Send resume 963·7061 cond. 6 pcs + lamps for cruis ing & live Many xtras. Sleeps II. Personal Training, Video with y:~n;n~pie0r10~~ to Classlfied ad no. 491 Sacrifice! 644-8521 25" elephant tusk · leak aboard. $16,700. 962·2006, S2.000 962·7223 aft 7 Training, Prestige Of· 14 years oC age. Reliable c/o Daily Pilot. PO Box STOP.PAYING 0 h ped' bo wood s lnd. etched 847-8166 AutoS , & fices, Full Facilities, tran"portat1"on reqw·red. 1560, Costa Mesa. Ca Antique s hops high rt <? ic mattress, ) dragons design. $800. et'Ytce 3100 W. Coast Hwy. N.8. • 642 ·9405 " 92626. . springs . headboa rd 640-8688 16' J ohnson Runabout 155 Parts 9400 Property Purchase Plan, Excellent part-time posi· pnces. (We take tr.ades ). m etal fr a me . Reas V-6 1.0. w/110 hrs. llvy ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fringe Be n e fit s, lion. High pay for 2·3 Service Station Allen-Yesteryears Antiques, 493-7575 • T wo golde n -colored dutytrlr$2695.675·7687 4 Mag Wheels & Tires.------ Superior Commission, hours each evening. half. dant, expe r'd. Day & 1673 Irvine . Ave .. C.M. Naugahyde recliner· G60.15 2 t . .1 OrancJe County's Dynamic Organization, day Satu rd~y . c.all Eves. Full & p/time. Ap· (~7th St, Behind Hi-Time 54" round oak table, xlnl rockers. Good condition. • 71 1:l er l r a. m 2 5' tir es,· se t~xo:~Jts~ Highest S luyer Leaming Environment. 642·8102 tor mterv1ew ply, Shell Station, 17th & Liquor) cond. $300. 494·5669 0 1 $45 ea. Crystal & br_ass spo~hshcr Twin Mere. weights, $30. 673.7348 on Imports wil~lll wtolmrkefolirceenasren.e1.sngwsh1·no before6:00 Irvine, NB. Antique Armoire $350 548-3668 c handeli e r, 34 in. Mov g. $500/take ove r _ __,;;;,,, _______ , Blll Maxey Tohoto Edis Ph Sor · , diameter w /12 candle· paym. 640·5955, eve 1966 VW pan trans-axle & excess of $25,000. per SALES SEWERS·Homew/power on ono. $250. a 9 Walnut cred~nia cusl like light s, $125 . 675-7104 lront end.' Best offer . CallRogeror ill year are encouraged to Lady fo r Children's Slhreadoverlock&blind T497bl~lO. All A·l cond. tmaeed:_,~644.A~77qoak hal Touris ter luggage, $45. M . t JI ,68 ... ,. 968·7412. 847-8555 apply lo't a position with Specialty Shop in Mis· s titcher. Pny per · r __,. ""' · Call645-0955aft5 p.m. ~vmg mus se • c.v ---------1 our Investme nts or sion Viejo· Exper. pref. fini s he d ga rment. Appl.en 8010 Honn 8060 Fi~rform, 1/0 w/ Mere VW 1600 ENGINE SB.LIHG YOUR CAR? Residential Divisions. FuU lime. For appt. call 893·2650 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Queen Site Be d. com· $3cnuser, many xlras. Newly Rebuilt! TOP PRICES PAID Call Oon Berman. Presi· aft. 6 p.m. 493-4704 h Fr f . plet.e, Uc. new. 4 sheets 100 642·4051. $375. 642· 7381 For Imports dent. QUAIL PLACE SITTER for 2 children 2·6 est eezer, 10 cu. t. NEW Western stirrups. Hdbrd & frame PO<> p 'd r N t PROPERTIES IN C. SALESMEN pm. Mesa Verde S~hl. Elec. Range, self-clean, Relailfor$24,selllor$14. S48-3966 · · 32'CbrisCraftEmpress • ai or or 0 752·1920 Direct. Money daily. $500 area. 546·2331 WasherMach.,645-7918 _P_h_:_646-_1_sa_1 _____ ----------~fn·t:~~:~~!~I~.r ~;::~fs 9520 D~: ~ew:! lm!:,rts Com.m per week. Small SITTER· 7 yr girl alter Will buy some refrgs & Must Sell Jumping Sad· 001:-F M EcM?ER~HJP $14,SOO. 646-9000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• s!'~.9~j . mus1cpackage.Call9·12 school. CdM area. appliances running or dle,likeneww/fixt1JTes, m~~-~~ e. • Ford '14.ModdT Spced· --- 831·9231 for appt. 556·3106 d ays/640·8034 not-also scr:ap metal pad & cover. Best offer ---------40 M~tthews Sedan. ster. restored. SJ,000. TOP eves. · 675-5258. over $200 takes. Barbara WATER BEDS Twn v-8 s-radar-3 radios 645·6597. RN CCU/ICU Full & p/time. 3·11:30 & 11-7:30 shifts. Contact Mrs. Jensen. 642-2734, Costa M e m o ri a l Hospital, 301 Victoria, C.M.E.O.E. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Modest -Cargo Rhyme -Bucket ROCKERS During these Limes of in· RN flalion, anybody who wants lo r e tire has ROCKERS in his head. ~ncy P /ti me, 11PM-7:30AM. Secretary w / s t ock Xlnt working conds. brokerage firm. Prefer E .O E Contact o . some cashier or wire Roache, R .N. Cost a room exp. Xlnt working Me s a M e mo r ; a 1 eond. Contact Heidi, Hospital, 642-2734. 640-1460 --------- ~=.:.-------1----.----:--Days, 642-4000 x. 17, $16,500. 646·9000 ----S Teachers.Parents Ref;'. W~ ile dbl door Eves. 968-4158 Complete Sl29.95 delived , . '56 Cadillac llearse. Lo . • Frigidaire Ex. cond. ---------ALL ITEMS DISCOUNT 38 Chris F /BSptsrshr mi .• Runs. Needs some . Social Workar1 $125. 675·0105 2 Pontes. Mother Shetland AquaHeaveo 830·7062 Twn dsls, llOv , radar. restoring. S900.or ofr. Paid Field . Ent e rprises . . & baby ~ W e lch / $34,SOO. 646·9000 642.8627: Education Cor~. needs Refngerator for saJe wi. Shetland. Suitable for Bullock's cstm dble velvet FOR people or lntegnty to de· bo~tom freezer color child. Very gentle. Will· beds pread. melon un· so• Offshore Cruiser 1947 Packard vs. Lo m1. Used YW'S mon s~rate . varl~us whiteflS.963-8178 ing to spliL Tack avail. used . $65. Pd $200. ~ dsls, 8K plant. 1200 runs. $1200. 494·4158 aft educat1onalatds.F/t1meGE Am rica a S'd b 557-1198 aft 6 PM , Beauliful.494-4770 nu. Aft. cab. 2 heads, 6PM. & p/lime. $750 Guarn. for . e . n i e . ~ 6454330 aft 9 AM. . shower. Jusl hulled, sur· ---------1 100 sales intervws. Call side, refng. Cu.stom dis Atlas aquarium , 45 gal. veyed , painted. 4 W'heel Drives 9550 Virginia Ca I k i n s. penser. ~ate:. ice cubes. 31f.a yr Bay Gelding. Parl and access. Like nu. Ask· Owner will fi nance. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5.57-1041. crushed tee m door. l 'n Thoroughbred. 16 hands. ingS60. 494·4778 S26,SOO. 646·9000 yrs old. $500. 644-0111• 644-0665 · ---Landcru·1sers TELEPHONESALES ·--r. . 8' cul vetvet couch. Xlnl '66,_2 7' Tall y Craft Motorcycle AcC'essories The fastest d'raw in the Jewelry 8070 cond. $250/offr. Front Crwser. 210 HP e ng. •75 Hcrclop EASY MONEY West. ... a Daily Pilot ••••••••••••••••••••••• throw m ower . $150. Depth finder, xlnt cond. (062NDM) Nat'I dist of motorcycle Classified Ad. 642-5678. WANTED ~·2228 $6500. 493·7056. $4899 accessories & sporting TOP CASH DOLLAR '75 Skip J ac k , 24 ' goods has 3 telephone AllCffoft 80 IS PA I D F 0 R Y 0 U R Miscellaneous flybridge. Best buy to be 7 4 WaCJOft Paid for or Not u1 .;uM71 um1 ac v llunt. lk'h 842-4435 STUDENT NEEDS GO LO MI ECONO CAR <CASH!> 979-4256 Have something to sell? sales ~~~';:3~"· ••••••••••••••••••••••• JEWEUlY. WATCH ES, Wanted 8081 found. $9,SOO. 675-7104. <360KRT > TOP BUYER Call642·5678 Classifiedadsdoitwell. ESTABLISHED •PUILIC• ART On.JECTS, GOLD,•••••••••••••·~···~··•• 36' Commercial F!si11ng $5199 ~:;P~~lr'o~i~~~J~P --------ACCOUNTS •FURNITURE• SILVER SERVICE. Band Saw & 4 J oint.er. Vessel has all fishing '7I Hcrdtop COSTA MESA Smart for Spring! Spring Crochet · STEADY ••UCTIO .... * FINE FURN & AN · Gd working cond. & n o w.' $4 ,500. Call <611DW > EMPLOYMENT "' " TIQUES.645-2200 Reas.646"182lbef.5PM 714-836-120.5. $3499 DATSUN COSTA MESA OFFICE DEALERS WELCOME Diamond pierced ear· D L • 1.845 Harbor Bl vd. 1 979·4122 LARGE rings 1 karat ea. Aprox. Musical loots, Sail 9060 ltfllll Wi4 Costa Mesa 540·&110 Tow Truck o.;,., & FURN.DISPERSAL cost $2100. Bes t ofr. los-ols 8083 ....................... 011-· 1 Servic;e Sta. Attendants. R•po1/Consign1 675·3589 •••••••••••••:••••••••• 25' New~rt . w /md s hp . ; TOYOTA I P/tin\e & F/lime.No ex· I an k r u p t c i e s Machinery 8078 Fender Mus1cmaster deck, 7 sails incl 150 Gen · Autos, Imported per nee. Good driving S 6 VE SS SAVE ••••••••••••••••••••••• IASS GUITAR & Spin . lOHP, Mer e, ••••••••••••••••••••••• rec. nee. 18 or older. " Senco Nail Gun 160, 80 Xlltt concl. Mak• offer Head. Fri.ply. Ask $5600 •. 1966 Horbor. ~ M 6d6-9JOJ General 970 I Salary open. Apply in OPEN 9.5 DAILY nails. Must sell. Call 546-9933 Call Adams, 213·685·5217. '63 Scoutt Slant-4, Roll ~·•••···~·••••••:•••••• person, H arbor View MASTERS AUCTION 548-8676. Sol Cat 18• f'Jy race bar, everything works. 73 Austin _Mar~na.4-dr Shell, 2500 San "J oaquin 2075~Newport.Bl.CM aft6pm&wknds equip'd, Calif Regional $1,050.AM -833·9704 . AM/F~. M1chelm tires, Hills Rd, CdM 833·9625 & 646-8686 OLD GIBSON Champion Trlr • $2,000. PM-751·9949. 16M mi. $1.765. 644-7806. TOWTRUCKDRIVER Bicycles 8020 Misc.II.eon S080 ES-125. 1958 Collector's Terry,54l·228S. Toyota Land Cruiser '72. Audi 9707 exper'd. G & W Towing, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Item. XJnt cond w/case. Ba h 13' & t I I AC winch 11 x 16 mud ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1000lrvine,NB642·1252 ForSaleSchwinnBoys St· 7'Elec. basebrdhtr,alum ~.536-0403 eves. X~t e:ond. Fas~.r,$7~~ ti~~:$37so4'92-6303 Audi '70. r eblt eng, body .--------•I ingray 3 spd, Call aft animaJ·trvl kennl, cstm · kh 11 good s h a pe $1400 TYPISTS NowlsTMTirM For All Good Peopa. To Come To The Aid Of Their Country LET'S GO TO WORK! Copy Typing Repro & Statislical Strin Ba L Non·SUl u 640·7936 T ks a560 . • 6PM.644·5728 b ow 53lbs, fls b 'ng .g ss, new .ycon nlC 7 546-0486as kforDennis. rods/marlin lures, sea s trings. n ew bridge, ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------- Balavus 10 speed racing mstr tckle b x. scuba greatsound$300,492-6303 loats Sii / Really clean ·49 Chevy '66 Sprite. Completely b icycl e. Sew-ups, spear guns Voit, exer . M . D 'L-ps 9070 truc k . Best offer or Reblt. Gd cood. $1000or simplex gears,$100firm. equip, (714 ) 846·1017 ; So.ng wrtte r s ... USi· OC.Q trade 646-5373 after 5on bstofr.Mike.545-1024 548-4776 (213)592.1932 c1ans ... Bands THE ••••••••••••••••••••••• k d . Goodd 1, •--------------·----LYON RECORDING Slip wanted 32' Gaff. w · ays. ~a_.__ . DCMJ1 8040 AtrrUMN LANDSCAPE STUDIO WORKS F<?R Rigged Kelch Newport. 72 Chevy ~~ Ton P.U. IMW ••••••••••••••••••••••• orig oil, 46xS8 in custom YOU! $30. hr. +tape, m· Area 536-4405 Good condition. frame. $500. 495-1888 cl engineer & producer. 640-0945 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •PET WORLD• 2212 Np Blvd. Np Bch. loaf?. Speed & Cockers. Chih uahua. IrvineCoast 675-4790. Siu 9080 Economy, clean, s harp Po o d 1 es. S h i h · t 2 u. Full Membership ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dodge '72 pickup. ·~ ton. Maltese, G. She pherd, Call548·2473. ACOUSTIC guitar incl. INB/OB Monza. 325HP. 6 cyl. auto, P/B, Lraction 9712 Samoyed, Jap. Spaniels, S r .1 b case. XJnt cond. $75. Pat, Holman Moody. Mech diff. Sell or take trans. SECRET ARIES mini-Schnauzer, Poms. ter tng 51 verware Y 673-8819 perfect. $4000/trade for car. 645-4332 G •1 100 mixed puppies. Stud TMoodwle . ~Cpen ~topckt. Office Fun1itu-& late model auto. 673-801 1 -.,,-"'Ood_g_e_•L_to_n_Lo_n_g_Be_d-.• 1976 BMWs ARE HERE Executive & en svs most breeds. 2525 w. ~rn ~ntou. a · • • ,.., r.i l7th at Fairview. SA. tern. 9 servmgs, 46 pcs. E.,m,......t 8085 6 cyl stick, good cond., . CREVIER Long or short term locaJjobs av~U now. Check Out Temporary Work Al 3723 Birch Street (Between Bristol/MacArthur) 9·11AM or 1:30·3:30PM office overload 557°0061 Open eves. 531.5027. retailed for $1800. sac ••••••••••••••••••••••• Transportation $750. p / p , 642·8627. $600 835-7641 Elec typewriters. Sey ••••••••••••••••••••••• Black Lab puppies ' . . chrs S8~p. exc svl chrs Ccw...,..,-s, Sde/ 'SO Chevy Pickup. 6 cyl. 3 6weeksold,$25. Electric potters k1ln $15/35, scy dsks. Pierce. Rent 9120 spd. Ve ry good cond. 536.1743 bra~d new $275. 226 867 W.19lh. CM 645·74ll. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645·6460. Cabnllo 642·5056 eves. 7A K t ft 8' SI -, ---------• & I ST A lllOAOWAY SANTA AMA 835'3J7f THE UltllllA TE OfWINO ll:IACff!Hll AKC Be 1 3 • l ARCHITECT'S complete • en c~a eeper, m F250, ll4T, xlnt running All soo3~.ell~~e~r~e~: National Camera repair office furnishin gs & ~~~like new, S650· cond. $1,750. 536·4895. --54-B-M_W_l_S00-.-4-d,-.-- CaJl 640-5156. course, learn a good equipment. 9794373 -After lPM. new trans, $12.50 trade, compl take over · 7 3 w IL D woo D 8 · ---------494-1584 Dog OBEDIENCE Class $800, 492-6303 CONF. TBL, Credenza. . G~tC ~TON, 8' PICK UP. --------- to Start Thurs Jan22 . desk, chrs, draft tbl, camper shell for sale. TWENTY SEVEN 7.30 PM Newport./ Cake decorating classes: couch pvtpty646-5356 S200.5 or best offer. 333 THOUSAND M !LES . HAL GREENE l~ine area. 546-4928 6 for $12, call 962·5087, • .. 21st t. C.M. $1 ,655. 1679 PLi\CEN· BMW *UTOTEM* Jan. 19 Mon. P .M. & IBM TYPEWRITER. 20 Factory Direct Campers TIA. COSTA M ESA. EMPLOYME..iT frHtoY041 8045 Wed.A.M.2lst. CARRIAGE. LIKE $895. up. Shells $l79.so. 548·3414. & . " ••••••••••••••••••••••• • . ' NEW . $ 2 9 5 . 16 7 9 Sleepers. 858 W. 18th CM OPPORTUNITIES 3 male lab/mix puppies. 85 C~rvair Auto. 66 PLACENTIA. 548·3414. 64U47l Vans 9570 Full or Part· Time All bl k 8 ka ld Corvair eng. $200. Wood •••••••• .. ••••• •••••••• S3Jes It service a cd • w 1 °11 • poker tbl $20. 546·4792 Pimlos & °'9W 8090 ~f..ct:'I '53 Jnt'l Metro Cmpr Van. • .. • •--'s Lei 1111 ••ncJs blow _ tee No Exper. Necessary wea n e , part a y ... •••••••••••••••••••• .....,.,, ~ c1ut11 1 ttw Age 21·65 Eligible housebroken. Very affec-King size bed, new, xtra 9150 No lookers yet! .M /selJ ! Mewnt Dealff!'• co&.ut 1or"~~111~n~':ttl Go To The Nearest Uonate & healthy. Even· firm $1~ incl del. Usual· HatmrnedM~ M·2 ....................... Only$1400. 496·55l9. 7707 Firestone Blv<!:..i .. ends. trevel! Crochet upe O' TIC TOC MARKET ings 646--0163 ly bome835-221SS. $470. G6·S9l9 '78 KAWASAKI 900. On '72 Chevy Shorty vs Downey (213)927~ ~:~11~:11 ':!~cd ~n ~~·~:!· ~~~me<~~:~~-~~~ Rabbits & Hlltc:MI Craftsman Mechanic Tool MINI Baby Grand, mint ' i{i~!: :!!cier!~C::,,~t A.T., cpts, radio.' ta~ 3 Miles West or GOS L. ...n'M·,._ ...n""""i'.... Combine 1 colors. Pitten-TlcToc: Systems, Inc. 642-0176eves. Set. New. Valued at$700. cond. Walnut Fren~h fer. 962·5748/868-4111 . deck, $2500. • 646·9024 1973 BMW Bavaria. N.C; , "7 m~ Im mo. Slits 840 lnelvded. . asking $450/bs t ofr. Prov. Beauurw. Call aft. 75 ~e Van 13,000 mi. AM/FM tape. lmrllic. 'H'°_j' ... e:,'n ro',t~f:i-c~ Electnc dryer. Yo\l haul. 552-7286 6pm,675-5368 '73 Honda Trail 70. Mlot F\allyequlpped for camp· thruout 30 000 mi. Must 1~ ,... Waitress, exper. f/time. Wrks but nds. nu starter. · "'"" & cond. 300 Act. ml. $250. 1 ~ •-sell D · Gal 1323 ~v Belt panlsull or nott NII ind lllftdlin1. 5'" 101 Sid's Blue Beet, 107 21st Dial. 498·3818 C B I S B E C o n a o I e Walnut Wurliuer v,gan 581·9807 ng. -""" dwn °' take · ays • ' .. es Printed Pattetn 918-41 wom, MN..,. Pl,NBafter•pm. Sidebander w/digltal bench. mdJ. 4075. $900. overPaymts.552-3909 673-3028 tn's Slzesare~lla.tncllbwt t111f ...... IOI Adorable blck cocker elk, Bl-linear Amps . 962·7"93 Kawasaki KX·125 never f:;~=~~========~:=::=:=::::::;:=:;~ 4~111111:.1~\~f'~:i.wA ~~; ='•~OM a.-..., Waltreasu needed. Ex· crou P\f PPY. Has all Baae Is mobile units. UPRIGHT PIANOS raced • g d . <'on d . ST AR GAZER fl ... •o ((4 bust, ,6 lllpl; 42 c4E Mlw ,..._MT IHI I. Miit periencect and over :n. shots. loves children. Oelux mike. 751·6174 SUperlor qualit)'. Name '800/beslofr. 498-0271 ._... ........ .......,.._ __ .,,CLAY a. roUA bust. 48 h~I: 44 (48 bust. 5C .._........._Ii,. P .... ~1:saE. 17lh St. Costa 586·6826 Lane Cedar Chest. Stan· brands. Proressionally '75 &a1ultl RM125. Ex· ~ !:' .. ~~= ~ 111~1: 46 {5 butt. .S2 hlp)i ~ ....,._ · Dalmalion Male 3 yrs, dard aiJe. Xlnt cortd. $85. restored. Free benc~ " tenalvely Modified MIU. To dnelop -~tot frlday. ~:"$~:l.:Pliecfl ,.nn. MOltE tllaft..,., lltfortl 20C •WANTED·llveinperson xlnt w a tch dog. Gd. Ph·494·1781 delivery. Flnancin1 Very clean It screams. t'f0d-O.coi•f¥ildlt1oto,..,..,._ ~dd 26f for NCh pttte~.fof ;t'.S.PIUS1,.37 frt,:Clltfn£1c':i~ to care for 2 elderly w/chlldren.58&-0245 · available. $750.613-Js:ia :it:~~flulOt\. ,,1r flrst-cleU 11111 8"d llln4Jl11a. ~dt NEW . • f · toll ladles, m1.t11t'have Pract. CMcelled Contract. 2000 17741 BEACH BLVD. ~,,.,,....., n • ~0t1 s.• t1a =~U:·~z:i*·s~si Nunlnl exp., cook le Kitten. Blk/1rey tiger yda carpeUoi. below HUNTINGTON BEACH '11 8ultaco Purs ang3SO !Z ~~ ::!~ ...._.... Crtdl•t 1 W"*Mt · Sl ·00 s hop. Needed immed. atri.pe. 4 mos female, box cast. 5'7-8721 842·6411 nt'w Ure. many xtras, :~-J!~ ::::.,. ._.......... "l9'Y mcy-.lltl $1:00 can Cor interview & tramed. 546-5392. <wM--G--~ 8094 xlnt cond. $475/ofr. ',!~ ~~ ' .. 1!!~ ... ,... 11-1t CrecNt : $1 oo 1 .., pected 548-3688 Almo1t new lrt bouae u ....-,_,, --642-0544. ~--Ill" w ... t• It.. Mllw sf.+ llllit ..._ • ··-,1~5 18 a • ., ex · German Shep rem pup. rtfrl1, Gold . New••••••••••••••• .. •••••• ---------1 ,%~ :=t ff;;-:' 'f.,._ WI IHll. W "' .... """._ :_Sta woman co+. Fall Ume. Approx I •ta. Foand CaJQpertopforPUtruc.lt Prlmo wet suit, Joni "13Hond.aCL lll;"' ~"" ..... · .. t!.~ ........ , ··-,.._., CMlltW ..• ,1.IO a.rical/AR AP. exper. aNndooed.Needaaaoocl (Raacbero) $300. Johns J1ckel used $400. 11"' -n=:~'fl=Ciiil1 ...... IP ·= Cnclltt IM n UO Non1moker.Appty1tut bome.UM901. Maulv. Mtdlt. Bedrm timd,oorlps.559--13211 642·129'7 I;;;...._ ~=-' ~:-= = t:." -..: .... =-=--::: ard St. La1una Bcb, ,. ... , e 1050 DruHr 6 Armolre. 2 SUrfbo rdg'S" ,73 HOMX Yamaha, .~= .,,_ ;~:::_ JA#.tt .., ,_...., i:... l•.-t....., ...... :· ,.. 1-tPM. Wkdays. .. .... ";' ................ ~o:,r:~~ lamps . :.0 enCJM • traMm. over· n';~ ~= a~l2!1~QWI """'"'" flt Ctftlflttl llft '"' ua women needed tor my Shop fr S.ve · ne~ Ir ~ 640-0948 hauled Nov '75. Dutrt ~ ~~:,, 11 ~~ ~ """ •••· ="•=•,fr .$~': bouHcleanla1 11rvlce. furn , JHt•. mhc. Maple Dtnett.e Set. RCA TV•--tank Ir xtraa. ssaa. °' PHN ~c_...... , •• .... + W . 11.JI W tf 11 Wltl fl ~::IOc Call Robbla lla1 le Mop, Wllton'1 Barcain Nook . C.oo1oi. TV, 8 track tape H' 1::-5.:...__ IOtl m.aia. !E:-e~; tE:.... t.a.::"i...::n.l'Dll ·flllllt-trlftl IM --11111111112-•f · M.om. MSW.UldtSt.C.M. ~Orll illuminated 11r1, ~ ,......, g-.. .._ 19.!!~tSll ~ ,...._ ~ , .. 11--. tier TMIJ U ·-·' Kum.Willer, •ID· ....... ••••••••••••••••YAMAHA "72 MX. Koo1a..1 J:t..... %-w;..,,._., .-·~--ml'\ 1-........ -........ ,' YACHTSALESJIAN Cluallled Ada Mn fan lox ft&n, pant ~E ll01 AMP .• MA J.Qcl beJmet/booll. GQ """"" ~. =~ '9t":"' ' • ' llutti.!Qtr!tnc:ed. ltems, amaU llnaa 1ult1, drettu, knJck· Mdl C24 . Pre-amp. cond. Aakln1 050. ..._. ..,......_ '°~ ,.. ~-, •ltem.I0"1& "811CD,lll4lll. a1-2338orm.-MM14' t ~ ®.-.-() • .. CJI DAllVPtl.OT Thuradty.Janu11ye.1a?p ••••rW 1•u..4 .._UIH MIM.UIH · Aaie...ulH ~u..4; ..... I • •••••••••••••••••-•••• ••••--••••• .. -•.... --••••••••• ... -••• eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee• eeeeeeeeeeee•eeeeee•••• ••••••••••••••-.. ,....._ ... orW ....._ l .. orW Aattos. l .. ore.d Yoho t77J-... .__ • HJI C I.__ ..... tfJO b...1-t9JI Mer~y HIO t960 •• • ••••• ••••••••• •••• ••••••• ••• ••••••••••••• ;;a f1_-;f£ -· -.....,,. ·-····· ••••• I .................................................................................................................. ··········-····················· w t7t2 Rat t7ZS Ito"'" ' t757 '7&'S -,4 ~ "JUIX4lwt.~Jom1. P'~r Sale •as Dod.a& 'J.o Marqul1 ••J o& :i AT':AS l • ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4Door H•dtop load'd, mint. 22 mo lae Sportsman Van $1000. Seat. ~ue. rack. t ape L Fj .. -What'sa Rover !ABntlsb ..... . tr f ~. aampt.Pvtply67S-7311 xlnt.oond.53&·1390. deck,disc brk.s.&&>.5662. C •~"'7:--....u.. 4-dr 2000 Tc. 4·s pd radial VOLVO'S ..... auto. a m ., a..:"oey hrvl....-~ 'iAODLEBACK trs. Beaut. lealber int. alr co.nd., lull power , 197SCanlineot.aJ lhrk lV, fonl ·9940 t•t•g 9952 Open Oaily & • 'lil 10 BMW • '68. Ask $1850/best ofr. HERE r a d l o , h e a t e r ' new radial.a. S4150. (213) ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• PM . Before you buy • ...., ~1 wb.ilewaUIJ, vloyl roof, 923·9311 days. (7U) "70Ford Cortina gd. c:ond. llusL •n Convert. 37M 2929llarborBl•d., l Now tinted8}ass.Imm.aculalt &U41819eves. IN.I-wbls.1d. ml. au. ml a.lr auto P /S like CostaMeaa ' -..aon VlelO . Toyota 9765 automobile! Etc. Lie. Ures'82S.Ni.2073. new$2895 64S-Sss7.' 546-1934 '76 BMW's .. ern---ta .................... !.. iO&LPc.asse. eorwtt. 9932 _ _,;_,;_. _____ ,, ________ _ ,..._. • he To IBC,..•1• :~::~f~!ission $2695 ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• '69. Galaxlo ~ Wagon. '70. Xlnt. cond. Auto .. Pontloc 9965 Ow HERE Avery Exit, S.O. Fwy, In New Car Sales •New Colors '*TOP CASH! Aar/aulo/pwr. Re ally P /S, 50000 mi. 1 ownr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 831 17~ s-t. Aaa For Corvettes and other SUPER 1 $800. 675-6644. Mustsell. 497·2674 ,74 Oran Prix, Model J, 1-----·----We have become over-AJI J5'S ~._....._ M-ury· used can & trucks ! -G'"'a-1e CN\. PS/PB, d d M t 11 T t k d · 11 t --..,, ... •• .,.., .., ,,.,., """' 10•witang. N-ds work. loa e · us se • oo s oc e m exce e n 1301N. T\asUo HOWARD ~hevrolet, AM/FM atereo tape , uu• Bestoffer many ears. Pvt pty. ~~~TING PRICE AND DEMO'S s-t.AM 547..051 I Dove & Quails.ts. Near clean. 1 owner. $1450. C81l495-4606 aft6pm 846·1647 MUST GO Jamboree, Brastol. & Pvt Pty 644-1586 ..:..:.~------- $895 THIS MONTH CollliHtntal 9930 MacArthur. Newport . • • ,67 v.a, fully equip. lo mi. '68 FlREBIRD. 400 Cu.In. Buy • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beach.~ '74 Gran Torin~ full pwr, IJl Jewel. $1200/best orr. 325 HP. 4 spd .• Gd cond., HGECOUHTY"S 1973:i4 X KE 2 +2. Lo OLDEST mileage & m int cond. ~ A I C. AM/FM s t e reo. "' 8311· 7019. Sales·Servicc-Leasint{ Mcnda 9738 Roy Car. •er, Inc. • • ••• ••• ••••• • • • • • • • • • • ;Jtollshoyce BMW 73 Mazda RX2 Rotary, 234 E. l7th St. AM/F M, Tape Deck, sur- Cosla Mesa S46-4444 !board racks. As k For Ed. S40-31719·5PM Days Capri 9715 Mercedes Benz 9740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Capri. clean. xlnt co nd .. 43 .000 ma . ~14Sll. /orfer. 673-4289 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WlLL BUY YOUR DATSUN, TOYOTA. · OR VOLKSWAGEN PAID FOR OH NOT. Lease New-Used OVER 100 MERCEDES OM DISPLAY ANY REASON AILE OFFER will be acceptt.>d during this week's liquidation SALE 100% Financing & Extended Financing AV AJLABLE 0 .A.C. . DMlenM • TOYOTA 1966 Hotbor ( M 646 9303 '71 St. Wgn. Xlnt Cond. New radial~. H/11. $1395. Ph: 675-8038 . ----Triumph 9767 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TR6'S 73•5 & •74•5 OR LEASE USB> SPECIALS •74 Volvo 164 Automa tic , s unroof, AM/FM stereo, leather. Luxury at its besL #SOOS. . $6395 '74 Volvo 142 4 Speed, overdr ive, leather, AM/FM st erec cassette, s unroof. A sports sedan. 752LEQ. $5399 El~~~ 1966 Hnrbot. ( M. 646 9303 '74C0tttinental '740range.Auto,alr,P /S, ~;~e~e's~' bst ofr, 548-6778 ~~1~1l~~ b st oh·. Coupe P /B, pwr windows, , •s.s MUSTANG, 4 s pd, hot . v.s, auto. trans .. factory AM /FM, stereo tilt. whl. 60 Ford Wagon. Gd. Urea, rod engloe, new interior 110 .GTO J~dge L1mited air cond., full power, $7350. Ole 540-0636, hm trans. & motor $150. & paint, mag whls like Edition. Air, mags, new AM/FM stereo, heater, 557·7197. 548·2660 aft. 5 new. $1700./best ~!fer. tires, am/fm tape. $2000. ~hitewalls, vinyl roof, '7S P /S P /B P/W Auto Maverick 9947 642·2183 da ys , 963·68621_:.646:.;...:-ro!...:..59:..._· ------ tinted glass, ~he«:l cov· Trans. Air cond. Tilt ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• af\. 5 '66 GTO.Good cond., 400 ers, leather mtenor-. A Wheel. Lu g . Rack '7l 4 dr. Best ofr. 1911 '74 Machl.l2,ooo m i.P/S, eng.$650.orbstofr.Ask rea l b eau t Y ! La c· AM / FM ster eo, Silver Bayside Dr. in parking p /B, Am/Fm stereo . 4. for Sue, 968-09$8. 318KLE-8514. with s ilver leather 9m freeway mi. $8650 1otS34-3800 :.,~m ags , $3.ooo . '67 Pontiac Bonneville 9 $4995 Santa Ano Lincoln Mercury 1301 N. Tus tln Santa Aaa 547-0511 •7 4 Continental Marte IV 642·1999 Mere 9950 • pass wgn. PS, PB, Air, wy ~mobile 9955 $375. 962-8068. art 6 . Cougar 99 3 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,... ••••••••••••••••••••••• •73 Mercury Mont-•••••••••••••••••.•••••• '73. Pontiac Grandville • -"7-Sales and Servace 4.dr hdtp, nu tires, AIC. 168 Cougar 4·Door sedan, V-8, auto. OLDSMOBILE 60 40 pwr sea ts, pwr win- 2·Door Hardtop trans., air cond., power GMC TRUCKS do0ws & door locks, vinyl Auto. trans .. V-8, radio, steering, .PQwer brakes, RS t $2 400 6444 147 r a dio. h eater . Real HONDA CA op. • · · h ea t e r , white walls, wheel covers, vinyl in· sharp! Lic.OlSHGB. University Olds n..tderbn.d 9970 lerior. Economy special! $199~ 2850 Harbor Blvd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lie WXC791· 8344 J Costa Mesa 540·9640 '73 T·Bird. Loaded, auto, $1195 SantaAna Pinto .9957 pwr , A /C , s unroof • ·Lincoln Mercury stereo, etc. 1 owner. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ONLY 28 000 m i. Must Santo Ana 1301 N ·Tustin '73 Wagon, A/'f , new tires sell ! $449S/ono. 499·2380 TOP OOLLJ\H CALL House of Imports AUTHORlZt O MERCEDES DEAL ER 6862 Manchester, Buena Park 523-7250 On the Santa Ana Fwy. Immaculate condition .. Both lo males. Hard Lo find in Lhis condition. V-8, a uto. trans., faMory air cond., full power, s t er eo r a dio, h eater, whitewalls, •vinyl roof, tinted glass, wheel cov· er s, leather inte rior. Luxury bargain ! Lie. '75 164 E . Jmmac. Met· 837KJD. Lincoln Mercury Santa Ana 547·051 I & exhaust. $1750./offer. aft6. l.301N. Tustin 494·2593 or494-7918 V -=_.:.;..._------ 9 - 9 -7-4 SAL BERNADENE 5-10·0442 '67 280SL. AM/FM, air. immacu la t e. $8500. SAVES days, 559·0298 eves. · Santa Ana 547-0511 _"7_ allic blue. smso. 752-8954 $6295 Santa Ana IF YOU For Classified Ad '74 Runabout, 4 s pd, a ir •••••••••• ••••••••• •••• co!'ld , new tlres, 33,000 •74 Htc hbk, radial.s , m1. Xlnt cond. $2350. Gabriels, R/H, gd cond. Must sell '7412 260Z 2+2. 646-1514 sal ver w/blk. -1 spd., fly•--------- eqp'd. lo mi .. bsl ofr. '70 MBZ 250 4dr, auto. 645-42829·5 wkdys . brown. Ex cond., $4,900. Autos. Used CTION ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lincoln Mercury have a service to offer or A Call 3 NEWPORT IMPORTS 644-2676 must sell $1800, 548-6298 General 990 I 1301 N. Tustin goods to sell, place an ad Daily Pilot ••••••••••••••••••••••• SantaAna 547-0511 i n th e Da i l y Pilot ADVJSOR Classified ads sell big . . . --Call 497·1336. COSTA MESA •73 Pinto Sq Wgn or '73 Classified Sect ion • • • · items, small items or any SE~L 1~le ite ms. ~·th a Fiat 128 Sed. Both. xlnt CLASS I F l E D will sell it. Phone 642·5678. 642·5678 item. J ust call 642-S678. Dady Pilot Classifted Ad. DATSUN '69 280 SL. lmmac in & out, Bec·ker. auto, both tops. Sl:!200. 751-8771. 3100 W.Coast Hwy.NA 642-9405 cond. Call a n ytime. 9100 645·6941 Autos New 9800 Autos New 9800 Autos. Mew .. 9800 , New 9100 Autos, Hew t ••••••••••••••• : •••• , ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• P\.1.pty. ------------AMC 9905 ~··········· • • Large Selection of Previously Owned. LowMilea~ Datsun Z Cars 28-tS llnrbor Bl\'d Costa Mc~a 540-6410 '7.t 260Z. mag~. amdm stereo. l s pd . new :\hchelins. 25.000 ma. red. like new. S5500. 4!H -2978 or 196--8011 •. '71 210Z 4 spd. aar, mag::.. ,·ery clean. Nu paint. $3800. 552·3506 , ·;-t 260Z 2+2, xlnt coml. .\ulo. maj! whl">. ;11r , am/fm !>l<'reo. sun shield B-12 19'J6 ·71 P .U. <.:ampca ~h(!ll. 63.0-l5 m 1. Nds wrk. Sl ,200. 5:;7.3009 ---- Fiat 9725 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1W~ul~ lake .to as~_ume );our Volkswa«Jen 9770 leasc: on ) our 1.t or 75 -••••••••••••••••••. •••• 280 MBZ <.:an exchange COST• MES .a. lease on 260Z. For more "' A info call Mike847·6010 WEEK-END SPECIALS '75 MBZ 450SLC Limited product car. European dclav. cancel. 0111) 450 m i. Sun 'r . e;.i::.sette . allov whl·cb Lease or purc h~ (10H.18X l '7S M8Z 4 50SEL Exct. d emo lux :.t~cJ .\let !1n1~h . El el'l rool, clca r anct• 1.>rt l'cd. (040890). '7 5 MBZ 280 Sed. Exec. demo. Clearanted priced. Lease or pun:h 0190871. DATSUN '69 vw FASTBACK .i Speed. ra<.llo, hl•alcr. cx t r emcl) clean! 1=:rnoi . Priced to Sell 28-15 lla rbor lll\'d, Cos1a M e~a 540-6410 '72 MBZ 250C Cpe. •59 '1/W Va~. '64 trans. nds We!I equipped. S7 ,495. v.ork no n·a ... onable orr (001279). turned dn 1!13 1379 '75 MBZ 450SE. -- ••••••••••••••••••••••• '66 Am b Wgn. R /H. 327 eng. P /S P/B 1-'/Air Tit whl . 49m mi. $1050 557·7081 '70 J avelin. AC, 304 2 bar· rel trlr hiteh, lo mi., $2.000./bsl. Ask for Skip o r l e a ve m essage, 631·2786 or 642-8P.8 1. Buick ••••••••••••••••••••••• '&4 Buick Riviera V-8. auto. tra ns .. factory air cond.. power steer· ing. power brakes. ra dio. heater. whitewalls. tint· ed glass, wheel covers. D e ad s h arp ! A ll o rigi n al! Lie . PDTo46·827l. $AVE Santo Ana Lincoln Mercury 1301 N . Tustin Santa Alla 547-0511 2 To choose from. San• '72 Supc•r Hug. xlnl cond. "74 Buick Century. Mint. b i g on t h l!sc two . loaded xlr<.t:-. Call H11lye Only 15.600 mi. Ma ny (945MI M>. 6-lO 0140 ex t 40, or xtras. SJ30 under blue •7 4 MBZ 240 Diesel 963·3237 aft 6 RM. book at $3895. Pvt. pty. 581·4576 True economy and v<.1luc •73 VW Super Beetle yel ---------• i n t ha s hard to f1ncl ext. blk mt. AM/FM xlnt Cadillac mod<:I. Lease avail. eond. bfr 5 (7 J.1 )540·5940 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ( 022642). ;J It 5· (.71 .i) 832 7388 . '74 MBZ 450SEL Very low mal es! Mint cond. Priced for quick sale. <020598). '71 MBZ 280SE. Fully equip., ancl. sun roof New Year's special. (083675). MG HOUSE OF IMPORTS 523-7250 9742 ••••••••••••••••••••••• F or sa le 1H67 VW Squart•back. $800. 4101 "li" Hivcr St. Npt Bch. Aft Spm. '74 Super Beetle. sunroof. nu tires, late blue. S2600 497-2827 "CADILLAC" Quality & Price Onr70 to Choose From For the best prices. the lowest lease rates, & de· pendable service.· see NABERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 540·9100 Wire·s car. '74 VW Thing. OPEN SUNDAY Less than 7.000 ma. Like ---------• new! S2500. 499-2800 ·73 Eldo. f'ly eqpd. 38.000 mi .. lthr ml. s tereo. etc. S5300. Pvt pty. 499-2677 '71 VW Camper F'ACTO RY 68 :\lGC Healy Eng. Red Fact ory installed an - terior. lo miles. Ex cellent condition. May be seen at 1973 Coupe DeV1lle . lo mi. loadt!d. $4300. 556·6965 AlJTJI OIUZED v. wa re whb. 54.000 mi. Sales. s~r•ic~ like new. S2~..:_646·7925 Parts-basin9 Opel 9746 120 W. Warne r at Main ••••••••••••••••••••••• Santa Ana 557·2132 '74 Opel Manta 4 spd. Lo '69 F" l urn c-·d -C mi's. Real Clean! $3000. l;J '"~' • .,pa er on· C II 968 3426 SAVE$ 1974 Cadi l lac Coupe DeVille Metallic green while top. loaded, PP $6500, 833-9093 d ays 675-3655 a ft 6PM. \'ert. (ioocl cond. $10001 3 _· _____ _ NEWPDf\T IMPORTS '73 Eldo. Black on Black l mmac cond., 1 owner. ofr. 5'15· 1202. p c&.------or5m:' 9750 . 645-3334 aft 6 pm. F IAT 850 S1>ydt•r 1970 •••••• •••••••••• ••• •••• AM/F:\1 , maj!.,, orig i3%l Air. loaded. silver . llOOW.CoastH;wy.NA own er. S120o. rirm. xlntcond. Must sell. Best 642·9405 ~5619 art er 5 pm ofr 833·~264 --- ·10 Coupe de Ville. G cond. vinyl top. $1495. Ph: 645-3570 bef 4PM. '67 BUG . Original Owner. Fiat 9725 1967 Porsche 912 good $850. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. oral! yellow. PP 675·1058. Assume lease or for saie. '75 Cad Coupe. blk/w b ur g. in t. Loade '61 VW Bug . B ody w/cruise & stereo. Sl98. da m a~cd . G d m e ch mo. 963-4770 aft. 6 laAteMEW 75 FIAT 128WAGON S3500. 833-9093 days --------- 67~365.5 art 6 PM. '75 914 . Blue, 5 spd, cond. Nu tares. 545-0671. -----------1 AM_1FM, frnt spoiler, pin , . . CheYrolet 9920 s tripes. canva11 covr. 6.S VW Bus. Gd cond1llon ••••••••••••••••••••••• S7-l75. Ofc 540·0636; hm over a l l. Re blt e n g . 5.57 7797. Under 30M mi. 545-0671. -------Porsche '72 911S. Mant. Volvo 9772 S1lver /b l k lea ther.••••••••••••••••••••••• E .. cry optaon & detail. ORANGE COUNTY Must be seen. Sl0,500./of· VOLVO fer . 540-0995 d ays, 640-4917 eves EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO Largest Volvo Dealer '68 912 Por sche. Xlnt m OrangeCounty~ cond. Yellow & black int. BUY.or LEASE CONNELL CHEVROLET SALES le SERVICE 2121 Harbor llYd. COSTA MESA 546-1200 with cover. $4,995. Aft 5. 11JRECT • NOVA •327 4 d 673-3748: s 64 · · s p ' ~·,·~r~i~-~rJ!~I clean, runs good. $850. ·~. no rust. New paint. y Ph: 962·5304. ~n~. u ern:~ ~h~c:~· 1 ~o5n:• • '73 El Camino '!Ith shell. 496-2166 4.96-1030. 2025 S Manchester P /S, P I B, air cond. ---A heim 750-2011 $2,800/bes t orr. 642-4627. Por sche '63S. y~l low _na _______ _._1...;:.;..:.;..__;., ______ _ w/bllc 1nl. xlnt body '66 Super Sport. Auto, S4000/best orr 493-9181 '7 6&'75 Volvos P /S, P /B. air. $400 firm. '74 Por sche 914 1 8 . AM FM 8 track. xlnt rond. $5795. 962-8108. Roik Royce 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·· •1 DEALER IN U.S.A. IOY CARVER ROUS·ROYCE tJ.t l. l71tt Sf. CO$TAMISA u---......... -.... Q OSUNOAYS , luyorLeOM We Lease all makes. Good trans p. 6'2·2846. Cllryller 9925 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '87 Newport. $550. or bit ofr. Good mecbanlcal cond. 646-SZ21 . '69 Chrysler full power steering. windows, seats, real buy! $1SO 492·2023 / 498·2412 SA1ES .& S•RYICI 76's HERE WE ARE P~OUD OF OUR OUTSTANDING RECORD WITH THIS OUTSTANDING CAR! Before YOU buy · COMPARE OUR SAVINGS AND INSPECT OUR COMPLETE HONDA SERVICE FACILITIES BRAND NEW 1976 HONDA CIVICS READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY •· 1 In The Nailon ... l • I • . t • • • 7 • ·Lag•a/South Coast I ' EDITION VOL. 69, NO. 8, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's £1oslag N.Y.Stoe~ ' .. "l'HURSOAY, JANUARY 8, 1976 TEN CENTS •' ' • I ' • t Robinson 'Brilliant' in Tax Fraud ' ~ ' . ,, ! r !17 DOUG FR1T111CHE ' Of .. hltyP't ..... Davl4 G !en Robinson cut a broad, lavb h and expensive path through the Orange Coast for the P,ast alx months while be dispersed $565,000 -the· I;[rgest fraudulent tax refUnd if\ the history of the Internal ~venue Service. , Today, Robinson is in federal custody and the IRS ha s <Oftf11cated $300,000 in slightly used goods and is strabbling after as much of the rest as it can recover. This week. Robin.son. pleaded guilty to three counts of making false statements on tax documents that shook the l'Jloney loose from the I RS. He agreed to a five-year prison term, three years probation and to help authorities get as much or the money back as they can - penalties even hls prosecutor agrees are "stiff." Mike Moore, a pllot who was an associate in Robinson's Irvine business, described his former boss as "absolutely bril1iant." That assessment apparently is shared hv A ssistant U.S. Attorney Howard Matz, who prosecuted the case. Matz, a.lthough maintaining that ehanges have been ma4ie Si> Robinson's fiscal feat cannot be duplicated, refuses to give details on how it was carried out. Orange Coast dealers of luxury merchandise recall Robinson with a mixture ·of mirth and chagrin. One secretary, on learning the subject or the call, just sni ckered lor a moment, then said, "1'11 get the manager ... 11 He was a flamboyant ~non," said Bill Gremp, vice president or Ml.ssion Beechcrart. Gremp sold Robinson a $150,000 Baron airplane. Robinson paid with a check that was confirmed with the bank before it was deposited. But, as Gremp pointed out, it's hard to miss a guy who has a car for every day of the week. Not just any car s either. The inventory included twOl Lamborghinis, lhfee Jaguan, a Ferrari and a Mercedes. Some or the cars were sold to Robinson by Frank Marino of Jim Marino Imports in Newport Beach, who recalls Robinson as a ··screwball.'' Marino sold him a ne ~ Lamborghini worth $22,800. t used one valued at $19,500 and t. <See REFUND, PageA2) ,County· J Issues ( DeathPenalty Verdict u .. 1.T.._.... CHINA LEADER DIES Chou En~al, 7~ China Leader Chou En-I -~ ""' -' Dies of Cancer TOKYO (AP) -A Japanese news agency today reported the death of Chinese Prime Minister Chou En-lai, long hospitalized with a ..heart ailment. Death, however, was attributed to cancer. The U.S. State Department in Washington confirmed Chou's death. The Japanese news agency, 'Which monitors Communist broadcasts in Asia, said the announcement was made by the official Hsinhua Chinese news agency. Chou was either 77 or 78. The exact date or his birth was not known .• The Tokyo monitoring was. made by Radio Press which said the death was ' announced by Hsinhua in a Chinese language broadCast.· An English·language broadcast did not mention Chou's death. Chou did not see President Ford on his visit to China in December. He had (alked in the hospital with foreign leaders vis· ~ting tbe country over the last year and a hall. Mom Calls HBPolice 'Rutldess' By ROBERT BARKER OfllMDeltJl"I ....... A Huntington Beach mother J><tUred out her anguis~ and bitterness Wednesday, the day when one· of her som died after ·belnc 1truck down by shotgun , blast.I from a police officer. · A aecond son is in Huntington .Beach iatl charged with• attempted murder and ·murder because be allegedly fired shots 1'aat a tarted the chain of events in "t(hich hls brother's death r'eaulted. ' • Clemente Executor Guilty Newport Beach attorney Roland Stewart Barcume pleaded guilty Wednesday to one of 20 felony counts filed after the Grand Jury probed his alleged mishandling of a $103,000 San . Clemente estate. Orange County Superior Court Judge Kenneth Williams ordered Barcume, 39, of 901 Sandcastle Drive, Corona del Mar, to return to his courtroom Feb. 26 for sen· tencing, Barcume faces a possible state prison term or one to 14 years on the conviction. He admitted of· fering false or forged documents in connection with h is admini!Stration of the estate of ~l(.~ilson Eugene Luther Of ~nPKr-JiirY action was taken agaimt Batcume when he failed to satisfy Superior Court Judge Claude M. Owens on the validity of his actions in paying $52,900 to a creditor identified as "Harris Frank Robinson." The payment was made from the estate Of Luther, who died June 25, 1970, in a Capistrano Beach nursing hom·e after nam· ing Barcume to supervise his estate. Beneficiaries in Luther's will challenged the payments to "Robinson" who reportedly fSeeGUll,TV, Pagei\2) South Laguiia Woman Raped A South Laguna woman was robbed of $10 Wednesday night by a male intruder who forced his way into her home at gunpoint and forced her to participate in an act or sexual perversion, Orange County Sheriff's officers reported today. Described by his 26-year·old victim as "pudgy" about five feet nine and 30 years of age. the gunman fled from the home afler the woman' satisfied his sexual desires. Deputies commented today that the incident was a "classic example" of what can happen to women who open their doors berore the)' are satisfied as to the identity or the caller. Prime Rate 'Drops to 7 NEW YORK (UPI) - Chase Manhattan Bank, the nation's third largest, today lowered its prime intere&tJate to 7 percent from 1 V• percent in re1ponae to the easi~r monetary policy of the Federa.1 Reserve Board. Chue's reduction in the key interest rate followed by a day a similar move by .Cleveland Trust Co., a 1n~or Ohio !lank. ~"The Huntington Beach police ~re ruthless,." Mrs. Kay n1ste.rano declared after the tratedY !hat snulledout the Ille ol Jlet aonNicbolas, 23. "He never did anythJna to burl anyone,'' Mrs. DiSte!ano sMd. , "'He wu our rock -\he OJte we leaned on 1110111t." Attorney Bill Walltet was wllh the famllr momenta al\er the' 'SboOtinC broke· out shortly 11\er (lleeMOTHl!iR, Pa1eA2) ' It was expected"\hat First National City Bank, the nation'• second largest bank and a trendsetter ,on klternt rates. also would reduCe its prl me l?Y • quarter of a point to 7 percent Friday. ' , .a~· · <Ir • Elm rums 41 Singer Elvis Presley marks his 41 st birthday tQl!ay, and 1 his home town of MemP,his is marking the occasion with varirius celebrations, including a large crowd outside his Gi:acelan9 mans ion home. Dr. Orlandella Faces Assault, Battery Rap nr. Anthony Orlandella, a prominent South Coast urologi!'t, and his wife, we.re scheduled to be arraigned today on allegations of misdem eanor assault and battery on a San Clemente Po1i<'e offi<'er. Orla nd el l a is a former two·term chief of staff at South Coast Community Hospital and served as a Laguna Reach school trustee before moving to Dana Point in 1971. Orlandella and his wife were stopped Dec. 27 by Patrolman James Gularte while travellinJ? north on El Camino Real in a luxury car that police claim had , no license plates nor temproary registration affixed to the front window. In his report o( the incident, Gularte alleges that the couple (See DOCTOR, PageA2) First Since 1966 By TOM BARLEY OI the O;tlly PUDt 5UIH Convicted killer Glen Ellis o·conner. 19, drew the death ·penalty today for his slaying of an Anaheim woman who was robbed of $2 before s he was repeatedly shot in the head. The Orange County Superior Court jury that had previously found the Rivers ide man guilty of murder and then ruled that he was sane at the time of the killing deliberated exactly five bours before returning today with their final verdict. O'Conner , impassive throughout his tri~I and the resulting penalty phase, sliowed no emotion as the verdict was delivered in a hushed courtroom. Judge Byron · K . McMillan delayed formal sentencing until he could discuss the PreC'edent·setting verdict with the jur:y in the jury room. ft was lea rned that Judge McMillan will set the sentencing session and rule on a motion for a new trial later today. Jt was the first application or the deat h penalty in OranJ?t' Co unty since Santa An;:i. C'arpenter Frederick Saterfield. now 56, drew that verdict in 1966 ror the killing of his common J;:i"· wife and her dauJ{hter. Saterrield's sentenre '\\'as ht'ver carrit>d out. lie is 1.orla.\' held on San Quentin's prison death row. ()'Conner i!' the first man to he sentenced in Orange County under the new de::ath fW"nall.\" provision passed hy puhlir initiative. He was. arrested lai;t Jan. 21 after he shot and robbed Roland Nesmith. 64. in the yictim'::. Santa Ana Canyon home. It wa!I determined after the arrest that O'Conner "'as responsible for the slayin~ 14 days earlier of 1!!arJ{aret Raker I.issy, 56, who "'as ~hot and robbed of $2:. The jury found him ,:i:uilty of first degree murder, multipl<! counts o( armed robbery, first degree burit:lar.Y and assault with a deadly weapon. ~ty f'lltot SbH .._. PAUL PRESLEY WITH EISENHOWER'S GOLF CLUBS Nixon's Close Friend Displays Hli Mementos Nixon Souvenirs Shared by Presley Ry FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Ol tlle Dell, .. lie! St.tt ··near T'aul, ··begin.<> the nPally typed Jetter. "During the Christmas season. as "'e approach America's Ricentennial year, I want you to knOY>' how deeply grateful I am for )''Our loyal support over the years. and particularly during the rather difficult period since I left office. ''The most precious gin any person can J{ive to another is friendship and for the privilege of yours I shall ai..,·ays be in your debt ." The letter is signed Richard Nixon. It is dated Dec. 15, 1975. (Related photo, Page A3.) The Christmas note to Paul Pres le~•. o\\·ner of the San Clemente Inn. from Nixon. is amonJ? hundreds of items that "'ill go on permanent display at the inn !>I arting Saturda~·. following a private pre\'ie"· showing Friday night. The friendship between the two men spans only eight years, dating back to 1967 v.'hen Nixon was a guest at the Inn, but it appears to be a deep one. I There are photographs of Nixon and Presley, formal 1 invitations to the Presleys to state dinners and engraved cards congratulating the Presleys on their wedding anniversaries. "lt's a little bit of history, some things that happened at the Inn,"· said Presley as tel'evision C'ameras "·hirred softly in the background, logging film footage that will be shown. nationally this Wet>k. "I hope this can become the beginning for another permanent museum elsewhere in the city," Presley said. "There's a lot of interest.·· The permanent exhibition wlll be housed in what formerly was the coffee shop just inside the main entrance to the Inn. There will be no admission charge. About 90 percent of the memorabilia relates to the Nixon (See NIXON, Page A2) C:oast 'Tot· Sick, Battered' Weather Doctor Testifies in Child Murder Hearing The tragic .portrait or a child who had been·left malnourished, sick and battered was painted Wednesday at_ a pi;,eliminary hearing for a · San Clemente couple accused in the murder of 1their-5-year-old daughler. ' The hearing before South Orange county MwiclPol court Judge Blair Barnette opened with testimony from Dr. Frances Duda, • San Clemente pedetrician.1 Dr. Duda h ad dlr·ected attempt& to save Laur• Cr\11 from d•at.b Nov. 2'2 at Saa Clemente Oeder al H01pltal.1 Dr. Duda tatified thal severe malnutrition over a period of at least six monllll left tho cblld with a peril-11 low blood cell count. ~ t The severe anemia, the doctor te1tlfted, contrbut•d to • pneumonia which led to the child'sdeAth. Jqse Molina. 21, and his wife. Yolanda. 23, of 2723 S. El Ciimino Real, have been charged with murder of the child, born to Mrs. Molina through a form er ,marriage. Molina is a Camp Pendleton marine. Molina, wearing blue jeans and a short sleeve sweatshirt. sat stone ~faced as Dr . Duda described the cbild'1 physical condition. Mrs. Molina, clad in a white sweater and yellow s lacks, looked toward the floor and slowly shook her head. Both were bandculled. '. The preUminary hearing was expected to conclude today with a de<!Jion by Judce Barnette on wbethU the couple ahould be order<d to 1tand trial on murder dlaqes In superior Court. . •Jk',1Juda teslilled !hat burn marks were round over various parts of the child's body, including the feet. back and buttocks. Charred skin tissue indicated some of the bums were caused by an open name, the doctor testified. · Examination or the child also located thtee old.fractures: m the right' arm, rib cage and pelvis, and atropny or muscles in the rigbt leg from lack of use. Dr. Duda told the court. The doctor testified the child essentially was dead' on arrival at San Clemente General Hospit;11l, but was revived through cardiac massage and resuscitation. Tbe child lived for another seven houri before final death. , Dr. Duda attributed death to pneumonia caused when the child's lungs lilied "'1\h fluid, following a head injury the (See HEARING, Page.U> Sunny Friday but with increasing fog and low ' clouds Friday morning. It will be a Jittle cooler, with highs in the 60s. Lows tonight 38 to 48. INSIDE TODAY Nt>10port B~oeh bu:il.ding <leportm""1 o//icfolf "'ll they , haue .a 'three.prong .al.tack' plan to prewni .another fftt like the~ that took .siz liVf• in the city recently. SU story Bti. ) • I , 2 OAIL Y PILOT l/SC boclors Quitting . Insurance .. A tr<'nd is growing among cio<'lors in Orange County to· prat•t t ce wltho ut liability insurance coverage. Everc:tt Bannis ter. executive dlrector of the Orange County Medical Association, estimated to<hl) that from 20 to 25 percent ol the 2.000 physicians in the eount y n o lon ge r car ry Iftalpraetice coverage. Earlier to the week he sttggested only about five percent of doctors had dropped their coverage. (Related story Page AS>. He said doctors mstend were t urning t o · ·ins o l venc) planninjt. ·' placing their assets in family trusts :>O thl? asset!> would QOt be vulne rable to malpractice nuts. . Dr. T. M. Shaver. chief of staff Bl Mission Community Hospital. iSaid be did not know of a single 6urg e on sti ll carry in g malpractice insurance. He said doct ors at Mission Community had discussed the possibility of pooling thetr resources to assist any staff member who might be sued. In another indication of the t rend to work without malpractice covera~e. Michael Stephens, administrator of Hoag Memoria l Hospital, Newport Beach. noted the hospital no longer requires a staff member to provide proof of malpractice rover age. l 'nlike their colleagues in Los Angeles, phys icians in Orange County have not been on a slowdow n, but Dr. Charles Plows. president of the OCMA. this week sent a telegram to Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. warning that it was becoming diffi cult for doctors t o keep exercising rest raing in light of recent statements by legis lators that the crisis might take several months to resolve. From. Page Al NIXON ..• presidency campaign buttons. P residential cigarettes. a shtrays, pe ns, and official itinerari es prepared for Presidential trips . There are mementos of other Pres idents. too D avi d ·Eisenhower. ~1xon·s son-in-law. donated Dwig ht Eisenhower's golf clubs. While rummaging through the golf bag as photographrrs s napped pictures Wednesday afternoon. Presley discovered a 1969 edition of the "Rook of Golf.·· Richard Nixon'!) picture was on the cover. Presley said Nixon plans lo donate h 1s own golf clubs. complete with a white cover bag bearing the Presidential seal, to the mini-museum ''He couldn·t bring them by today. because he was using them." Presley chuckled. While Presley chatted with print and television r eporters. Col. Jack Rrennan. Nixon's chief aide since his resignation. placed items collected from Nixon's China trip in a special case just outside the exhibition area. Asked how his boss felt about the exhibition, RreMan said, "I don't know. 1 just told him about it last night.·· ' ''ll has his complete blessing ... said Presley. Belfast Bombed BELFAST. Northern Ireland (AP> -Three bombs wounded six persons in Belfast early to· day, and police found the body of a man s hot in the back of the bead in a Protestant section or the city. ORANGE COAST l c fhf °'"~ (1\.1\t O•ity Pifot w.t.,.....-n•tf\ ''' m• tu""'.od IM' Nevrrt Pr~\.\. I\ pU'bH\hrd b¥ thr 0~ tW.#' ro_.,, Pubti..t'l1f"Q(On"P•"• ~r"r•h t-dlh<-'' .,,,. (ttJnl1\hrtt Mon.d•Y '"'°"0" ftld•'f' tc•r C'o '" '""*'" ~· #tJ(.H'' 8".-<h. Hvntif'tQtnn &Mn I"""' '"in V•llt'f. trv1n,., '°'""Gil•t~" valh 'I ,..nd l •Q\lf'l.tl 8f'MP\ ).uuth CO•\\ A \•~ttr~~I• '1• l;Of" I\ PUbfl\.hf!d S-lutO•Y" #lid ~'"""""' Tn.- P"•••Ul)fl Wl>I""'"' Pl•"' I\ 41 ))I) WtU 11-!1 Slrttl '"~'• ~··· C•lllornl• •l•I& Robert N . Weed flt to1'.0en1 ond P\tbt1,.,_., • Jac k R. Curlev \'I''" Pr,.\t<ff>f\I •ntf r,..,._rAI ~rMQl"'f' Thomas Keevil [ll•lor 'Thomas A. Murphlne Mol!WICl•"9 ( 01!0< °"9rl.S H. Loos Richard P. Nall AU,l\IMI( NNi11"9 Cotton uwn• 8H<h Office ,., .. o .. ..-,,."',,.' ~~A4ld1H• P,O Do• .... •ltlt omus · C~te M•U )t0V.• I 11.oy\t-• tf ..... 1f!V1ilf' INKI> 111/J 8H<ll ~-~•O ~b•O \lell•Y 11101 l•IM11.,.W) •t Sot/I 0•"90 I,.,.,..., .. Thuraciay. January 8, 1978 O•lly f"llOt SIMI "'-l• 'POLITICAL MODERATE' Laguna Candidate Dawson CaTnpaign Aims Told By Dawson Fi s cal respo n si-bility, preservation of Laguna Beach's village character . and support for open space conservation are the base of the Laguna Beach City Council ca mpaign b y candidate Howard Dawson. Dawson, 57. is r esid e n t manager of Wagenseller & Durst, Inc., stock brokerage. He is one of seven candidates for two open council positions at stake in . the March 2 municipal election. In a prepared s tatement released Tuesday, Dawson s tressed bi s financial background, and described him self as a "politica l moderate." Dawson said he was alarmed at "staggering increases in local property taxes over the past few vears'' and said he felt he could aid the city in sound budgeting to avoid more tax increases. He said a leveling of the assessed valuation against which property tax is levied will soon produce a large gap between what the city is able to pay and what city services are costing. Dawson said he supports the open space concept to isolate the town from enonomic and urban sprawl; Dawson called it an "economic cordon sarutaire." ln addition. he said: "Small is beautiful. I a m devoted to the village character of the city. If elected. I will do everything in my power to preserve a nd enhance it." Dawson. a 16 year resident of Laguna Reach is president of the Victoria Beach Association and Chairman of the E conomic Committee. He holds a bachelors degree from UCLA in political science and history and a master of business administration degree from Stanford. He resides at 2694 Victoria Drive. He is m arried and has a daughter. Frona Page AJ DOCTOR. • • became hi ghly emotional. repeatedly s wore at him and interfered with his duties. Mrs. Orland~lla has charged Gularte overreacted. She said she and her husband will fight the charges. During the course of the traffic s top, Gularte arrested Mrs . Orlandella on s us picion of interfering with a police officer. Gu l arte c laimed th at Orlandella sped away after his wi fe was placed into the rear of the police unit for transport lo the police station. Gularte said he purs ued Orlandella from San Clemente to Dana Point at speeds of up to 90 miles per hour along Pacific Coast Highway. Orlandella was taken into custody when the chase ended at his Dana Point home. A complaint issued by the district attorney's oCfice charges Orlandella with assault on a police officer. battery on a police officer. failure to produce a driver 's li cense on demand, reckless driving and resisting arrest. Mrs. Orlandella is charged with resisting arrest, assault on a police officer and battery on a police officer. Fro• P(lfleAJ GUILTY· ••• · railed to come forward lo testify despite repeated attempts by the district attorney's office to contact him. Barcume was additlonally In· dieted on charies or grand theft, perjury. and preparing false e~dence. Judl(e Williams wlll rule on the diJPol'lition of those al· legations when ht sentences the Newport lawyer Feb. 26. Barcume w u to have raced trial on all 20 counts Jan. 19. Thill trial date was cancelled by Judga Williams. • · Desthlation: Mar.de• F .... PllflCtAI REFUND ••• Simla. Monka Girl Killed En Roule to Wguna .. Mercedes worth Sl8i~~o. Roblnlon made the purcnases with ''large down payments and be financed tbe real," sald Marino . Ker destlnatlon wu Laguna Beach but a 16-year-old Santa Monica ilrl's bltchhJldng trip ended in death, her seml·nude- body round sprawled on a South -C('ntra I Los Angeles sidewalk Wednesday. Detectives nt the Los Angeles P olic e Departme nt's 17th Division l abored through th~ night on the case. An autopsy is srheduled today to determine the exact ca u se of Wendy Blanchard's d eath and whether she had been sexually attacked. The gi rl had left her Santa Monica home Tuesday, packing her belongings and telling her mother that she intended to bltcbblte to Laauna Beach. La1una Beacb Del. Gene Broou said the local department h.a.s not been bTougbt urto the love Ucation yet, but w ill cooperate with Los Angeles PD it requetted. Jt la uo.ltnown wbythe ib'I was (()ming to Laguna. Miss Blanchard's body was ro~nd by three boys on their way to school at 7 a.m. oo a sidewalk in front of a house on W. Colden Avenue. Her coat with what appeared to be a blood·statned fur collar had been found four houn earlier in a deserted Compton-Carson industrial section by two Compton patrolmen. The ocncers were on routine 'patrol when they he,ard cries IOT help. They searched the area. and found no one but chanced upon the coat and a beach bag containina otb.er clothing and an address boo~ wltb Mbs Blanchard's nam• and address. A search by more th"1 a score. of sheriff's depuUes· and Compton police officers continued through the neighborhood of oil denlcks and vacant lots unt11 tho body was round in Los Angeles. The murder is the latest in a series of rapes and attacks made on !emal,e hitchhikers. Robinson had a suite or four offices 1n the Century 21 build.in&. 1 one room filled with law books be made nvallable to attorneys in the area. AC!cordi.ng to Moore. Robinson had an office staff that nt one time totaled 12. ''I really don't know what they did,·• said Moore. Fro•P.AJ Over Sycamore Hills The Irvine businesses went under the names ot Robinson. ' J.D.; The Robwon Group, Inc.; and Roblnson Air Taxi. The air taxi service never came to be. said Moore, but Robinson and the office workers went on almost daily flights in the Baron and a s malle r twin-seater that replaced il when money got short. The nights were "all over," said Moore, but mainly in the western United States . MOTHER • • m idnight at the Ocean View Mus hroom Growers Inc .• popula rl y known as the mushroom farm. Walker said that the young man was shot while running away from an officer who was crouched at the side of an automobile in front of the e lder DiStefanos' residence. Laguna Co~cil Assails Planners When Robinson began his spending spree about six months ago, ·he initially passed himself off 88 an attorney, according to Gremp, who recalls Robinson as something of a braggart. "He was unarmed and dressed' in just his pants. He had no shirt on or shoes and his hands were raised." Walker asserted Nicholas was shot in the back with the shotgun pellets coming out through his stomach. He said he collapsed about 75 yards away from the officer who fired the shots. Wall.er reported that while young DiStefano was running away from one officer he was running toward another. ''They had him surrounded." Walker said. A police helicopter also was overhead. · "It m ay n ever be known," Walker said, "if Nicholas was. ('Ver aware of the police officer in position behind the car as he ran out the door." Walker said he received hi s information from Nicholas' bride a nd the son of the mushroom farm's foreman who reported they witnessed the fatal shooting. (Police Chief Earle Robitaille· said Wednesday that police officers heard gunshots which they believed were directed at them. ·. <Robitaille said Nicholas was ordered to stop several limes bul he failed to do so. He said one of the officers fired a warning shot. <Robitaille said t\lat "under the existing circumstances and fear for their own safety and safety for the other occupants, both officers opened fire. Nicholas collas ped almost immediately.") Walke r, who said he was with th e Long Beach distric t a ttorney's office for 13 years, said he didn't want to point the finger of blame at anyone. · '"I've been around too many of these kinds of things to know that there's not enough evidence at this point to s ay it is anyone's fault." Walker said the day's tragic events began when an argument erupted bet ween the dead man and his brother Arthur, 35, who is being held on $250,000 bail. "They ha d been quarreling over the family business. appar ently a bout various r espons ibilities," Walker reported. "I think there was business jealousy involved and the feeling that one brother had invaded the other's province. "Drink ing, unfortunately, also was involved and one just lost his head,'' Walker said. He said that the older brother fired three bullets into the ceiling of the parents' home with his .22 caliber revolver . Walker related that Nichol as heard the shots a nd became apprehensive and was "just trying to get the hell out of the house" where be was to run into the police fusillade. Walker said that Nicholas DiStefano's wife of four months. Cindy, was looking out the window and s aw her husband killed. The son of the foreman also allegedly saw the blast and said· ··ohmy God, they'vekilledhim." Walker said that six expended shotgun shells were found and that Nicholas suffered massive wounds both in the front and back of bis body. An angry Laguna Beach City Coun cil l ambasted the city Planning Commi ss ion Wednesd ay after it was presented with a request for more funds and more time to study Sycamore Hills 522-acres of undeveloped land in Laguna Canyon. "How much more money are we going to spend and bow much longer is this going to drag on?" .Councilwoman Phyllis Sweeney said. ··1 thought we asked for a plan. and I thought we were the boss," Councilman Jon Brand said, decrying what he said was the ·'stalling, delaying and dragging things out. "I wish th e planning commission would do what we asked," Brand added. "We gave tbe planning commission clear guidelines," Councilman Carl Johnson said referring to a list of objectives drawn up after lengthy study by a special committee. The council had ordered the planning commission to draft specific plans developed around low density residential. ••village" commercial and country recreation uses. The theme was to be on the order of a dude ranch. The planning commission sought an expansion of the subject it was to study, and in essence wanted to start anew on developing potential land uses for the acreage. •'This is getting ridiculous. Either this is a deliberate delay, or somebody bas a use they don't want to talk about in public," Councilman Johnson said. Johnson said the request from the commission gave no justification for any expansion of the study. Mayor Roy Holm called the commission's i nact ion , ''disappointing'' and Councilman Charlton Boyd said contact with the land own er was being omitted. Through it all, three planning commissioners s at mute in the audience. Tow Truck Man Killed BASSET (UPI) -A tow truck operator trying to assist a man stranded on the San Gabriel River Freeway was crushed to death when a drinking driver smashed into the rear or the pickup truck on whlch he was working, authorities said. Frank Rodriguez, 30, of Montebello was crushed Wednes· day against his tow truck. F,....PaeeAl HEARING ••• 100rning or the child's death. ''When you're comatose, sick. burned, you throw up," Dr. Duda testified. She said the child, however. was unable to clear her lungs of the fluid. Not Dis Day 'Mutakes' Undo Texan Transient Texan John H. Young's first mistake Wednesday night, Orange ·county Sheriff's olflcers commented today, was to take several drinks too many before he left a Santa Ana bar and aot into bis car. YOUNG'S SECOND MISTAKE, they explalned, was to drive the vehicle in ' weaving pattern through downtown traffic and park it 1n a lot between 4th and 5th tll"eets. Thal area comprises the parking lot for the county jail, they told Young. And they helped the 52-year-old Texan to negoliat~ the fow steps bctwHO. his car and the jatl wheH he was booked for drunkeodrlvtna. BUT YOUNG, OFFICEJlSwd. made a third mistake. And that, they explained, was to be beblnd the wheel or a car that was listed as 1tolen earUer ln th day by Los An1eles County aut.bodttcs. . ' Commission Chairman Bill Leak did address the council, but only to say that commission protocol prevented commissioners from speaking individually at council meetings unless formal agreement and a position bas been agreed to ahead of time by the entire commission. Later, Commissioner John McDowell arose lo ask the council to hold off on any action pending an evaluation of a request by Great Lakes Carbon, the landowner, for a rezoning or the property. City Attorney George Logan said the request had not properly been filed, and that it was a legal tactic in the company's $37 million suit against the city. The council's final action was to order the commission to undertake the original study. Attorney Logan said that the council can force the issue by having the planning staff prepare the plan under the council ·s direction. and then submit ting that to th e commission for hearings. Logan said it was not possible for tbe council to entirely side-step the com mission. "The code doesn't envision a planning commission that won 't do what the council tells it to," Logan said. SC Co:rq,pl~~" Up for Vote' But when the businesses were set up, Moore recalls, they centered on non-legal aspects or divorce and bankruptcy and. understandably, tax consulting. Robinson had the background for it. He worked for the IRS during 1969 and 1970 as a tax collector. He resigned and went to live in Australia, but was extradited back to the U.S. after he was indicted for embeul.i.ng funds he bad collected for the IRS. • He pleaded guilty in 1973 and was sentenced to a ye·ar in jail and five years probation in addition to repaying $4,~. After serving the jail term, be was released:on probation. Last $pring, Robin.son ftled for tax refunds for the years 1971 through 1974 totaling $652,779. He used the name John D. Robinson and a phony mailing addres& according to the U.S. attorney prosecuting the case. He claimed he was working for a firm in Houston, Tex., during that period and that the firm bad withheld $652, 779 for taxes. He also claimed to have sustained $1.4 million in losses as a beneficiary of an estate. The IRS responded in June with checks totaling $565,340.31. That's when Robinson began to live it up. "I wondered about him all the time," said Marino. "He wasn't 1 real. When I first met him, be whipped this financial statement on me that said be was worth $7$ million. He had W-2's that said he n;\adaA\~illion dollars last year. ..1ff1'tt' '811 phony, but I guess the·bari ·bought it. That's where he goHhe loan.'' said Marino. Density will be an issue Feb. 2 when the South Coast Regional Zone Commission re·considers a six-unit apartment complex planned by two San Clemente de- velopers. At one point, Marino went to Robin soft•s home in Pasadena-a house Robinson bought for $84,000 cash-to collect an $11,000 · do\ivn payment on a car. The "'house was being extensively and expensively remode led, said Marino. He added that while he was in the home, Robinson was working out an agreement with an art dealer for several thousand dollars worth of paintings. . Dennis Sullivan and Gordon Peterson seek permission to build the $141,000 project of two and three levels, with 12 parking spaces, on land ~t 1525 and 1527 Calle Sacramento. The commission previously ap- proved it by a 9 to 2 vote, but the density question is being re- opened upon appeal by oppo- nents. Slide Show For C·hamber The Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce will hold its monthly breakfast meeting at 8 a.m. Wednesday at the Hotel Laguna. Speakers, O.W. Price and bis wife Elizabeth, will present a slide program of 1776 landmarks for the bicentennial. The showing includes West Point, New York, Valley Forge, Washington, D.C., Mt. Vernon, Monticello, Williamsburg, and ends at Yorktown and the New Freedom Train. All active and prospective members may attend. Cost is $2.50 and reservations are needed and may be be made by ca)~g 494·1018. Doctor Faces Rape Charge Orange County Sberlrf's officers are today inv~lgatinC an allegation by a 22·year..o14 South Laguna woman that she was raped by hu doctor in his office Wednesday while under the inrluence of drugs he adm1nistered. Investlcators Tefused to ld~tlf y the local phyllclan untll they bad examined tbe statement· they intend to take from bim" today. Officers said tho woman. rePorted the alle•f!d rape to offlc1 a ta at Soul Ii Co a al Community Hospital after abe left. the doctor's office. f?1\e waa otherwise unharmed, depuUes .said. "There were paintings everywhere already," Marino said. "But I heard the guy say it was okay if Robinson took 00 days to pay. That was in December, so I guess he got stuck." Marino fears that by the time it is all over, he may get stuck too. Gremp described Robinson as "a good braggart," prone to talk about his holdings in New Zealand and elsewhere. "But he was generally sort of a pleasant person, not at all the kind or guy you'd expect to be involved in something like· this;• Grempsaid. But about the e nd of November, said Gremp, Robinson began running out of money. The Baron was sold and replaced with the smaller Piper. He wasn't hiring employes anymore. "But be was really a flamboyant person during tbe time he was buying things:• Grempsaid. Things hit rock bottom Dec. 19, Moore recalled. He and Robinson had been out fiying and Moore left his boss off near bis borne. When Moore taxied to a halt at Orange County Airport, be was met by~ agents. tn the end, the agents drove Moore home. In addition to the ~lane, they confiscated Robinson's Lambor&hi.Dl that. Moore bad been drivina. The a.ir tad company never • really c.me to be, said Moore. 1 "It wu somethln& we talked about, but never really rot going." Aa he remembers his former bou, "He wu an tnterestln1 1\11, very up aod down. Either he wn very, very nice or very mad. J was reaUy 1orry to see him )()(ked up. ffe was a nlcefUY.0 •'Re was probably the smartest man I ever meL l've met some smart men, but he was absolutely brtlllant,''sald Moore, 28. - I r~------------------------·---------... Thur11e1ar. January 8. 1976 L /SC DAIL 'f PILOT 87 Thursday'8 Closing Prices. NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Egg DiSpute Fol~no vi:~~1.'{P~ · u; """' Yort "oo: Eu11tnee ,.t dose. 'Ill' S.lu Net ILE lllds> Cl°'• Cl\o ---A A- Abbot\ I,. .IO It m '4V.+ 1i1i ACFlllCI UO I '! 42 ~ lt ~'"'~" .SO .S I A -\It Mam 04 ' 2'1'1.,. '°' Aclll( nb . l 10~+ \It Adtfl'lt MllU • • .... + Ila Addf$Vph 13 I l \lt + Ill ,..,,, "'" .o.d • • )t lllt ..... At\NI Lf 1 Oil tA U0 2S .... ._ .r..ll'llLI pl 2 • 9 3'\lt .. iv. .t.Qulrre Co tt • Oio + 11t A~ 20 l U 10V.~ \Ii .1111 .. n lncp 10 a 1 av. . . AlrbFrht 60 1i '2 13V•-V. Air Prd too 1• 119 1211>-V. Alrco lncp 1 s 91 19\lt ••• A J lndlls11'$ 4 64 2'11 ... AluClfNI 1 20 ., .. 19\lt-\(, Al• Gu 1 ti • 4 14 + v. 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Hoff et.ctn 10 -"' Hol '""' u ,, 14 l Yi-\'II Ho•id A i: , U"'-t.c. =-Mt • t; 15" llVttl~ >ltR 4 ..,._, .. ,, 1,40 1~ s-.. Yo Hoolltr 1 )6 e >~ .. HPrllon. Co . • 100 l "-• • How>ltt .. t ·~ • J 1•~-"" HowltlCP .1• II 23 + YI Host 11111 .~ 11 '°' IOa+ .... Houdl .. -f .., '°"""-v. ~.t:ttu l¥ H~t·t\ HOuMF' I 10 t 171 17V• + 14 MQuM of1~ •• 13 ,, + \\ HPU5Fof111'> • , 14 S'l'llt .. ~ Hou,1.1> l,J+ t )11 2~-V. HOUNtGfj I I) IS7 S6"t• 2 ttOwatdJ .f4 14 76.ol 1 S\\ • V. Hubuf'O 1.20 1 '3 ""'-v. Hudh A .IO S 9 ISV.-Yo ~H ,40 1.0 3 S -V• HllelllttT .40 14 J02 4S .. 1'141 Mu~"41 .40 a 41 lH't-V. HUl'll CJ! ,)) 11 S 1i -V. 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I t't 1"1Ftay 32 36 339 2S\io+-'Ill lntHarv I 1 6 2tS 2•'111 Intl MlnCh 2 4 467 36""-"' tntt Ml11\ng 6 29 6'11 lntMultf v, 6 2s 26~ + 1 lntNck I 40a 9 141 26"11-'" Intl P•per 2 13 99• 60¥1 +-~ Intl Rac:tf 1 S 48 • • , Int T~T I 60 81147 23~~ t II• I T&T pfE 4 , zlO 71 +1 I T&~fH A " 6 47 -"-I TT I 41/1 • S '7 • I T& plJ 4 • 1 43"4-14 I T& T pfK •.. 43 U + ~ I rTfN 2V. • 193 19""+ 'Ao I T& pfO S 20 481/. lntrpac I 20 1 10 24 1n111roacpf s • 5 661/1 • 2 lntp;ibl Gr I 6 IS 17 V. + 'h lntSI 8tCI 80 4 11 11'4 -14 lnlstPw I <IO 9 38 1SVr + '"-Inst Und 24 6 37 4!1o+ V. lowa8eel In 3 108 24"-~ Iowa El I 30 14 3S 14"' low•llG 1 SI> 1 22 11"-\.\ low•PwLI 2 6 49 121fo+ 'la lowaPS 1 60 6 17 1e;v. +-..... lpeo HOspiu 11 101 4'4 • 111 ITE Imp ao 9 260 70 • "• lteR Corprtn S6 9"" • ITEL Cr ,10 S 146 6"+ 'lo 1u int es • ~9 10'111 • -JJ-Jamei F 68 10 60 IJV~-v, Jantten 70 6 66 14"' • :V. ~:r.~~~. 9~~ 12 1~~ m:: r; JCP pf I) SO 180 111 JCP pt 11 00 l3SO 102 J CnPpl 8 12 zlO 1111)-'h J CnPpl 1 88 Z 100 ~9'1'-11' Jewel CI 20 9 174 21v. + \ii .k'welcor In IOS S'h • v. JlmWaltor I 10 100 39'1' + I JlmWaltpl I zlSO 10'111-\w J lmWpf 160 23~ 4714 + I JHanln 12d 27 161'11-''" J Hnlv I 88b 21 20~1 JohnMv I 2013 S4S 2SV1 + l/• Johll&J 80a 19 630 QI~+ •;, JllSn Cn 80 8 41 13 -V. JhnCon pf 2 1 19 • "• JonLogn 40 20 78 14'1• +-l\ Jot\ttLplA S. zlOO Sl'l>-l 'h ~;fi:'1~c"': : 4~ ~~~;! 1~: JoyM19 I 10 10 228 J71/o+ Iv. Jusllce Mt9 36 3 + 'h ---4< K- Ke1srAl1 20 s 117 29~ + 'lo K.l11,I pf 4111 • ' 51 + "" KAI S7pf •V. • S S8 -I KAI S9pf 4~ l S8"4 +-41/o Kalserct so 10 28 6'4 + V. KCI pref I~ S UV.+ 'lo KaneMll 2~ 4 37 16'1• KaCPLt 2 28 8 92 161/, KanCSou lb 6 l 1111. + 'Ai Kan GE I 68 S 39 19"" + 'I• ~~~1U1l~~: I~ l~~~ t! K.llty ltldUSI 6 27 3•;, • • Katy pl I 46 9 12'/o Kaufm & Br 1874 6l• Kaul Bpi l'f> l 14 • • Ka-ck 407S 3 ~. KeeneCp 20 S 7 1 S 11. • ~lier In 20 2S 14 6"• ICellOQQ 90 18 307 12' 1 IC&lwood tlO 8l 20 12~ Kennamell a 73 21 •,. 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LTV ~ • l• t<l'llt+ ~ L I 16 117 ;i."-+ \It L.uc:kyS t3 108 HM+ V. -..~ •• 41 6\lo-~ l..lllUISll 1.0 5 61 211~+ " lVllnJ1t.] 2 17 14"'*+ '-' ~llSY ~20 ii~ 2:~ ~ --MM-- M«AF '°II 1'l J 9 1W11<0ofttc1 a 21 a • "' JIM<.. .ao 1 IS 4~ ••• MKl!\111 .H 5 1.17 4'lt + '-' Mt.M pf uo . . I \21!• • Yt =y 1,10 10 1n """• ~ ,.~ .• r. le~:1~ MeatCCft .n 1» ••• Mltll•~C» 1 ii m 1 v.-\4 M9._H .5' II 17 ii\.'!-\\ #Nftlnd .OSI>. 6l ~ .. ~ ~;~~i~~E~~ Mlfwtll\( 11 ... " • -Mer<or of u ~ ni,., + ' • • 111 1 TMll-14 . • 11" ... ,,_, L • 10 1 Vt-\w lllW'laY AO It '4 ~ • 11 M9rCllt .400 1 tl -,~ ' Mertott 1\1\k t4 1SJ1 0 • MttM\ I • t2 ~ 60 t .. ~ .... M t!ldtl 0. ("9 ~I" 1.s.l l:t 41 14'1\-v, M.i01'411 -lfi ''°. 16' '*'-'l..\ JOtl m ........ 1 ... ".54 ., I 20h• ... =yP9,I 4 41 ~+ Vt •• ..._ ... J1 'm· \Ill h11.~ ••• n l' ... -.nv l.1! .,. I •·• MtlwE , 11 :ia 1 + 111 Mey ~ 14 l:ll 4911.o + 1 Mii.,. 1 10 19 tl\lrt'. :tit.Jt.~ it ,J ~'~ MBPXI .o 3 1 IO'h-\lo MCA tn 160 J 266 j"'•2~ Mc~t. ii 1 v. . Mc ry~ •• 19 _.,_I.- Mc m. 6 411t • ""+ 14 McOollfd p2t 1~1 S Ii+ lo\ McOOllQ .ao • I" ,. . . McCr e qo 1t fl 22~-v. Mc~ WI ,,.10 235 I~+ 'It MGtilot 1~.. 11 22\li+ " Mct11yr . ,S 12AO 3'~ \\ Mc"" A • S 7 22;\lo+ ,._ Mcl ... n 10 10 12 40..., + ~ Mel.UIS 16010 73 20V..+ V. McHell ao 1 11 10 + "" MMdC120 1 316 19~+ ~ Ml-'!>f 2 ao • 1 a?•A + 14 M9CIUY t 40 11 114 17~ ~ M E I Co<p 5 S3 31/a+ V. Mii si-.Al 13 541 191/t Meftlsc ,20f J n 9~ • Mlffc Sir ao 13 2 5S'h • v. Mir"' 1.4()H 708 11"-+ '"' Mer«tilh .70 J 14 11~-l'4 Mtrrlll.y ,60 1 141 I• + V. Mis.Pel OS2t 119 JI'!) .• MtsPpl 2 20 • I 7J~IV. MttPllf t 60 27 26¥.-'lo Me.Mb I 22b 9 19• I o:!4 + .... Mist• M .eo 9 3 11'4 + v. M (; M .7Sb 6 178 12~ • Mttrom 60 9 311 16\1\-v. MtEpf 1.32J , • llO 74 -'4 Mt~ e,17F • 110 7l'h +I MCE!llf l.111 •• i.60 n l!»+l\.'I MGIC In.ID • 828 12"'-+ 'h Mlc~ 1 10 1 13 12'°'+ v. MichST I 20 S 17 2'11.o + ~ Mc:hWpf 2¥o , , 236 27\'o + V. Mlcroclol 11 7 109 17'"'+ llt Mier-aw 10 21 1~+ '"' MldGont I OI 9 117 13"-+ V• MldSoU 1 32 9 691 1S\l'r-Vt Midi.and Mt • 10 IV. •• MICltd R I JO S SI 11\1'1 • MllHL.b I 21 8 21 23!1-'Ao Ml 11118r 36a 10 21 9V.-Vo MM&M 1 3S 2.S 137 SP/-V. MIMPL I S6 1 30 18'h • Mlrro Al 96 I 5 12~ '!. :::R~\~ : 21: 2~~ ~ Mo Pac pf 1 10 1111\-V. MoPrtC 160 1 21 22'11<+ It. =b~SH~ 6 f. 1g~+ ~ MobilOI 3 40 1 S12 49Vo+ 1'4 Mollolsco 60 23 S8 11v. + v. Mol'Wlwk 01 43 3'At-Vt Mohwk Rb 1 S 11 11'11-I/a Molycrp ,60 6 43 18~ • •;.. MotyCOI 2'h 3 29 + V. MonMh t 20 J 19 171/1-"-~"A 7,c:,,~ ~r ~~ ~ Monwin 2 60 10 1019 78>it.-1 MonlOk 2 08 a 2 211/• + 'It MonPw 1 ao 8 132 U>ot.+ ~ MOneS 1 eoa 31 22v.-"' MonyM I'll! II 73 8 -II• tN»r M< 80 4 222 J0'1' + ~ MorgJP I 90 11 617 SSV.-¥1 MorrsnKn t s 2'I 21 v. .. MO~ El Pr • • SI 3 + '4'o MonoeSh 30 7 94 11•1t-If• Mlge Tt Am 24 2~-.... MOnNor 8811 412 ISV.-~ Motorol• 70 37 267 4-4 • ,,., w Fuel 1 48 ts 97 34'" + 'It. MtSITel 1 s2 a 68 2ov1 • ~ MunfOl"d 36 s 20 7~ MunM\111 0811 1 16~+ ~ MurpCo I 20 1 13 11~+ 'I• MurphOI 60 6 q6 19 + ..... Murry Oh 1 6 29 141/o-'"' MutOm I Yl . 10 lS'"-, Myers L~4N_7_7~+ Ill Nabisco 2 30 1 S 179 40V> Ntlco Ch .n 10 123 32 + If• Narco Sc 60 6 16 10~-v. NaSh1>1C .6017 112 1211; + lt.o N•IA1rln SO 12 127 121'11-If• NatAvn 6'b • •2 13.., • 'h Natl C<tn S3 s 113 11;v. + \\ NI Cn pf 1V. 11 21'h -lo!. NChmsh 32 2S 38.l 39 + 1 Nt CllYI.. 90 J9 6V•-l/1 Nt0tlr1 2 11 $ IS 421/• + 'I• NUOlstl 1,20 6 140 111/o+ 11' NllFuel 2 0& 1 11 21\1. NII Gyp I OS 11 283 131h + 14 Natl Homes 37 3,,,.-Vo Nat lnc:lu 30 3 71 6""-11' Nal lpf8 1'1• 3 121/• + 1.4 N1Meel C.art114 221 14¥>-~ NePrs t 2oa s • ~ • NU Sa mt con JI 1387 43,,., +I N11 ~rv 74 8 9~ 10¥.+-~ Nt SUlnd 90 6 S8 13'14 +-~ NtSt.rcll ao 11 16 461/J + :v. Nal Stl 211'>1l q I lb 40 + "'• Nitti Tea Co 8 41, .. V. Na1oms 1 70 5 12'1 2•'"' '" NCR Cp 12 8 443 261/. • 111 Neplune so 9 S2 16.l.• • 1,. 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"" Willltl LI> 10 IS lo6 II~ •• Wilrd F-oon ,. 11 91/t + '"' WarMCO to . • 24 tl/t + "" W.mCm $0 J 9' It~ ••• W1Cmf>l4'4 •• I .. • .• waemot 11& ., • •v.-vt W.rLtm • ., 1• )ti 3)~ • • They She'l Out, for Ads By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Worried about heart d.lsease, Americans have cut way back on their cons umption o1 eggs -and this reJect1on bas prompted the nation's egg producers to ante up tor an ad · vertising kitty to change your mind. So you mAy expect to bo bombarded soon with pro- paganda on behalf of &ggs . But in launching this ·•eat egas •• campaign the pro- ducers have a serious problem. T hey are 1oing to have a hard time conlronti1'g the very issue that bas caused the sales decline: the alleged link between heart disease and foods high in cholei>terot content. EGGS ARE JUGU in cholesterol and a series of m e dical ~tudies dating back many years h as as- Money Tree sociated coronary heart disease with high cholesterol levels. The evidence 1s by no means conclusive but it is strong enough for many health orgaruzah ons and doctors to recommend that people reduce their intake of dairy foods. ·Consumers have certainly taken that advice when it ·comes to eggs. Jn 1945, the average American was eating 400 eggs a year, better than one each day. In 1975, con- sumption fell to an all-time low of 275 eggs per person. That a mounts to a dechne of about one-thtrd. Egg producers were polled r ecently on whether they would be willing to assess themselves to raise monies Cora promotional drive to counteract the anti-egg forces. Three out or four said "yes.'' THE PLAN NOW is to have each producer put up 5 cents for every case brought to market. A case has 30 dozen eggs, which means that, based on current production, the egg industry wiJl be a ble to assemble from $8 to $10 milhon for its propaganda drive. The referendum of egg farmers was conducted by the Agriculture Department. But even as the producers were voting to assess themselves for th1s advertising, another government agency, the Federal Trade Commission <FTC>. was warning the industry not to attempt to r efute the medical findings on heart disease and cholesterol. Judge Ernest G. Barnes, an FTC administrative law judge, ruled on a complamt filed by the FTC last year. af. firming that the National Comm1ss1on on Egg Nutrition (NCEN> had made "false and unsubstantiated claims in promoting the industry's views concernmg the role of eggs m heart disease '• NCEN, an arm of the egg industry. had run ads pro mot. ing the goodness of eggs and denying that there was a health hazard in eating them. Labeling these ads "misleading and deceptive," Judge Barnes said "there exists a sub.5tantial body of competent and reliable scientific evidence that eat- ing eggs increases the risk of heart attacks,'· and he asked that the industry be elljoined from promoting its product in this manner. IF THIS DECISION by Judge Barnes 1s to stand (it still has to be approved by the FTC), then the egg people will re· ally have their work cut out for them How do you persuade consumers that eggs are good for them when you can't reply to the allegations that they are harmful? . Watch the legend on your egg cartons lo see how the in- dustry handles this one More Energy Usage Seen by Year 2000 WASHINGTON <UPI> -Americans. demandm'g more and more eJectnc1ty to run households and businesses, will corurnme an a vcrage of 2 5 percent more energy per person each year until the end of the 20th Century, according to a gover nment forecast. Ry the year 2000. the nation will be usmg more than twice as ml•Ch energy annually as it does now, the Rureau of Mm mg predicted in ,1 report released this week The United States will need the eqmvalent of 163.430 trillion British Thermal Units m all forms of heat, light and power to meet its needs by the turn of the century, the report said. NEARl.Y HALF of that -coming mostly from coal. petroleum. natural gas and nuclear power -will be used in 2000 A. D. to generate electricity. The bureau said its report was based on assumptions that some su rface mming ot coal will be permitted, off· shore 011 leasing acceleral ed. energy res earch con. tmued, natural gas price con· trols relaxed and domestic crude oil prices ctcregulated Nuclear power con - sumption will rise from 1.6 percent of total U.S. energy used to 28.2 percent, the re- port sa1ct. Rut even with anticipated com merciat tn· troduction of the highly effl· c1ent "breeder" reactor after 1985, nurlear power can be "only a partial answer" to future needs. Plymouth's Newest Mini-import Debuts DETROIT (AP> -The Plymouth Arrow. the latest entry m a growing US. field ot small, low·pnced cars im· ported from Japan. debuted Wednesday on the West Coast, where the minicar battle is fiercest.· Chrysler Corp , which is st<:1ging the little car's mid- year preview in Los Angeles, plans to import 25,000 Arrows ~NHIGHGEA~ m the first quarter of the similar m size to the Arrow year. and Coll About the size of the The Opel had been built Toyota Coroll a, DatsUJl B·210 by GM ·s Adam Opel sub· and Chevrolet Chevette, the s1d1ary m West Germany, but Arrow becomes the eighth GM decided to stop importing Japanese car to compete m 1t last year because of r1s mg the US. market for 1976. and costs abroad that pnced the the third to be imported by a Opel out of the economy US.company. • market. THE ARROW willjom its CJfRYSl4E R , THE only look·alike Dodge Colt. which U.S . firm still without a Chrysler has been Importing domestic subcompact, hopes for several years. Both cars the Arrow a nd Coll wil! k~p are built by M1tsubish1. the C'ompany competitive in General Motors' Buick the s m all.car end of the Division is importing for the market until Chrysler can br· !arst time in 1976 a J a panese ing out a new U .S.-built Opel, built by Isuzu and minknr in 1978. w.-n~s 1 20 • u 17~+ lr----~~~---"f!""-....;. __ "'t':C----:;:::1------i::;;;;;----;...,;;:-wut•<k 1 ee 7 21 1' • ,.,, ,.., p 1 ,~.. ,__ •~ W."'Ntt IO 1 10 1l + "'* I' l (llO\) ~ Ch<! 1 PI (1ld>l (io!lf :<.!IQ '"'" ..._ "'"' W.Nt Ill 2vt 10 JI • >4 -W---'* w--W #- Wasll SU 1a 1 • Ill.It I ~ .... 17'1~NA Oif S 1)9 1514 + " wtWl1t•f :& • • 400 Ito\.. 14 WOOi pf UO 110 S.Vt +I =s~~;&5t : ~ ~ • 14 Wll P« Ind t 47 1 , , Wt'lltt ,) I J t'h-~ 'World Al""" 1 t O a • Wlt•11J 1• •1 t7 .. 1•~ .......... b to • t• 1• • .... 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C .ao. • 311 70 ·~ Pttrt • 1-l 14~ Wt.8.nc I <10 • 1• 1•Y.-\It Mlllt ,,-01.Gf , •O 7~ ~ 1.-Wl»IMI 1 20 t lf>l 1'~ \41 \ I t " . DAILY PILOT Thut'lday, January 8, 1978 • By Phil lnterlandi ·~ . . ~ .· . -.,.. . , ... , ... ·· .. · 1-e ···.~, "The meeting just broke up. It's going to be a long .Bicentennial!·· Lltl. Boyd. Watering Your Booze Liquor drinkers, check your bottles. Dis· tillers of m ore than 100 hard booze brands in re- cent months have silently dropped the proof of their tonics from 86 to~. simply by watering the grog. No price changes, no publfc an- nouncements. They're just squirting in more distilled water to cut the kick and pick up the pennies. Political campaigners who shake hands too much also can comedown with that ailment known as tennis elbow. Even to this day in Italy, as many as 1,000 people on any given sunny afternoon wend their way to t he grave ot fascist dictator Benito Mussolini. correspondents report. BACHE WR PRESIDENT Q. "Have we ever had a bachelor pres i· dent? .. A. Only one. James Buchanan. He gave up the notion of matrimony at the age of 28 after the girl he was going to marry killed herself. He did not forever live alone thereafter, however. You know that song called "Listen to the Mock- ingbird"? 1t was dedicated to one Harriett Lane, a violet-eyed blonde re- nowned as the beauty of the day. She was Buchanan's niece. She moved in with him and saw to it that the salt and pepper were in the right shakers, so on. So you always thought that Superman's real name was Clark Kent, did you? Wrong! His r eal name was Kai-El. His adoptive parents John and Martha Kent re- named the little tyke. ELEPHANT HAIR It's not entirely safe to pull the hair out of the end of an elephant's tail. Such a beast has been known to get testy about it. So the hazard in acqui ring such probably has something to do with why circus performers think nothing makes a better good luck talisman than a tuft of elephant hair. Address mail to L.M. Boyd, P.O. Box 15(,0, Costa Mesa, 92626. Teachers Fired For 'Box' Tactic BUTTE. Mont. (AP> -Two teachers who con- .'fi ned a retarded child in a small "behavioual modification'' box will not be rehired and the school principal will be demoted, school officials say. The fate of the three educators in the "boy·in· box., furor was a n·--------- nounced by School Dis· trict Supt. Forrest Wilson in a statement is- sued by the Roard of Trustees. The boy was not identified. THF. OCTOBER dis- dosure that two teachers at the Emerson School Jocked a 12-year-old re- t arded stude nt in a wooden 412 · by 41-'z· by J-foot box generated a He Was The Last Holdout SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The Assembly Health Committee has present· eel a baby's pacifier and a commendatory re- s o 1 u ti on to A s · s embly man Gordon I>uffy CR-Hanford), for becoming the last com- ,.mittee member to give up smoking. Then. chairman Barry Keene (D·Eureka}, or·· -deftd ash trays r emoved cWednesday from the < arinJ room where the :.a-member committee J eet•. 1 "Jt'1 embarrassing to 5ne that I have to be the 1~ut ooe on thil commit· 1M to quit,•• Duffy said, 1~mJa1ng to return the il"8~lller and re1oluUon i! 1~raumed the b1btt. ' public outcry. The box had no interior i l· lumination, almost no ventilation and just two small silver-dollar-sized holes for observation. The teachers claimed use of the device was re· asonabl e to control viole n t behavior. Relatives of the youngster said the treat· ment was cruel a nd caused emotional pro- blems for the boy. THE BOARD ruled the two teachers will be al· lowed to ser ve through the school year but their contracts will not be re· newed for next year. The principal will be demot- ed to a regular teaching post, effective next Sep- tember. Principal Don Her· rington left his office after bein g advised of the board's decision. TEACHERS GAYLE Slagg. 24. and Sallie Ulsher, 29, said they would consult an at- torney retained by the Butte local of the Montana Federation or Teachers. The teacher~ charged last month that they had b~come victims of a witchbunt a nd com. plained of receiving threatening tele phone calla and letters. They 1aid that the box was used u last resort for violent, uncontrollable tanll\Uns. /,-- Glidden Spred House · Paint Woven Yarn Plant Hanger • lttnictiff ~ ... .... •il'(i9'.rt ... ,.. ...... 11•·. Spred Satin Wall Paint • Gliddeti '°' quality latu ,.i..t • Dries quickly to 1 velvet Ii.. finish • T 0011 dean up wltfl water :; 6!~ • W"ther resistant acrylic I.tu finish kttp its beeuty • Quick lllryint on uterier weocl •M maSet1ry Reg. 876 11.79 Gal. Spred Semi-Gloss Latex Enamel • .._.,....._ ·-1..,,.vt4 ..,.lllty • 1..i fer "" a. •r4 w"r .,.., • hsy to .,. ... <even •11uttMly 9 Inch Paint Roller Covers • ·----·· ffltWller.....a •"''"""' '""'" • Tt.t .... kW Y" <• ... ewer ... ... , ... ... ~1; 9~~~~ -·------==-..... ___...__·_=--=----=--------~~....._~-==--""---~--••• _ ... _ -..... ~ 76' Tri-Color Garden Hose • ::-:· ... ,. & ...... ff is ,. ft. • R_eiwferct4 S.,.rlle1 """ S/I" clNlllMffr I 776 Delta 'Delex' Kitchen Faucet · • .,.. ........... '°""' •l•tn~._ ...... • C..v•••• ....... t.cot ..... 12* I 1476 Vigoro 6-in-J Dichondra Food • fte4s, ·-& '-' ...,.,., Hlstcts • c ....... ;,.. fw sell; .,.,,... .. ~L~ ... • , '>' J ... , Jl'l . ' • , ·~ :, Ptdnfn ' Piil 9 Shears .,, ... ~...,--~ ...... ,....,,..,~.&~ ""' • ...... ,. ,.,_, .., ...., ,..i-:.._ -...., ,,., ~ #576 • ....._.. 17~ Toilet Repair Flush Lever • 5""" .... --.c..,... ........ . a.-,..... ..... _ .... "" .. ......... ,....,msc 176 .. j ' ' Sadd.lehaek EPJTION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Closing N.Y.Stoeks THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1976 TEN CENTS .. l I BOIJinson 'Brilliant' in 'fus Fraud t1 B,Y DOUG FRITZSCHE I Ol .. DallyPI ....... I David G ten Robinson cut a· broad, lavish and ~xpenaive path ; through the Orange Coast for the •past six months while he , d ispersed $565,000 -the· largest fraudulent tax refund . in the history of the Internal Revenue Service. Today, Robinson is in federal ; custody and the IRS bas '. confiscated $300,000 in slightly used goods and is scrabbling after as much of the rest as it ean recover. This week, Robinson pleaded guilty to three counts of making false statements on tax documents that shook the money loose from the IRS. He agreed to a five-year prison term, three years probation and to help authorities' get as much of the OU Victim's Mother Bitter · By ROBERT BARKER OfU!eD•llyPlloUt.-ff . A Huntington Beach mother 1poured out her anguish and bitterness Wednesday, the day •when one of her sons died after 'being struck down by shotgun ·blasts from a police officer. \ A second son is in Huntington ,Beach Jail charged, with ~attempted murder and murder y,ecause be allegedly fired shots that started the chain of events in 4which his brother's death resulted. ' "The Huntington Beach police are ruthl ess,'· Mrs. Kay OiStefano declared after the tragedy that snuffed out the life of "her son Nicholas, 23. "He never did anything to hurt anyone," Mrs. DiStefano said. ''He·was our rock -the one we leaned on most.'' Attorney Bill Walker w~s with the family moments dc1 lb.e shooting broke out s.hc)r,tb~ ~r :midnjght at the <>ce~ View ·Mushroom Grower·s-Inc., :popul arly kn own as the piushroom farm. Walker said that the young man was shot while running away from an officer who was crouched tat the side oJ an automobile in front of the elder DiStefanos' residence. "He was unarmed and dressed' in just bis pants. He bad no shirt on or shoes and his hands were raised.'' . Walker asserted Nicholas was shot in the back with the shotgun pellets coming out through bis stomach. He said he collapsed about 75 yards away from the · officer.who fired the shots. Walker . reported that while young DiStef ano was running away from one officer he was running toward another. "They had him surrounded," Walker said. A police helicoptet also was overhead. "It may never be known," Walker said, "if Nicholas was ever aware of the police officer in position behind the car as be ran out the door.'' · Walker said he received bis information from Nicholas' bride . and the son of the mushroom farm's for·eman who reported they witnessed the fatal shooting. (Police Chief Earle Robitaille· said Wednesday that police officers heard gunshots which they believed were directed at them. : (Robitaille said Nicholas was ordered to stop several times but ' <See MOTHER, Page A.2) Prime Rate Drops to 7 NEW YORK (UPI> - Chase Manhattan Bank.· the nation's third largest, today lowered its prim~ interest rate to 7 percent' from 1 'A percent in ·response to. the easier · monetary policy of the Federal Reserve Board. Cba.le's reduction in the key interest rate foJJowed by a day a s1mllar move by Cleveland Trust Co.. a major Ohio Bank. It was expected that Fint National Ct~y Bank, the nation's secontt Ja.r~t bank and a trendsetter on interelt rates, also would reduce Jts prl me by a quarter of a point to 7 pe«ent Friday. .Elris Turn• 4 J Singer Elvis Presley marks his 41st birthday todar, and , his home town of Memphis is marking the occasion with various celebrations, including a large crowd outside· his Graceland mansion home. Board Waives Last Term For 89 Kids Although it will cost them about $54,000, Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees have waived the last semester of school work for 89 seniors at Mis- sion Viejo and El Toro High Schools. The financial consequences, money lost in the form of state aid, is significant, said district Superintendent Richard Welte, and something trustees should be watching. It could, he said, have some bearing on the number of teachers hired. But, he said, the practice of al- lowing students who have com· pleted all their scholastic re· quirements to graduate early is still "educationally sound." "There's no reason to stay)n if they can better themselves out of school,'• he said. Actually, 44 fewer seniors are requesting early graduation this year than last year. Many of the mid·year graduates indicated that they in· tend to go to Saddleback College. Trustee Loa Young asked whether the high schools could offer ·college classes as an at· tempt to keep the s tudents enrolled in the district. If this were done, answered Welte, "we'd have a college very un- happy with us." The college also receives state aid for 1tudents attending their school and they· have a program which allows the high school stu· dents to take some of the classes they offer. 82,000 in Jewels Stolen in Viejo Jewels valued at more than $2,000 have been stolen fr.n a Minion Viejo home by thle~es whote method of entry remai.rl$ unknown, Orance County SberUf't offlcen reported today. Deputies said the theft occurred at the home of accountant Robert Hugh Roberts, 47, of !S522 Gloriosa Drtve. Deputle• said the Jewel• were taken from a dresser in the muter bedroom while Roberts wu ablent from the home. money J>ack as-th'eJ>-can penalties even his prosecutor agrees are "stiff.•• Mike Moore, a pilot who was an associate in Robinson's Irvine business, described his former boss as "absolutely brilliant." That assessment apparently is shared by Assistant U.S. Attorney Howard Matz. who prosecuted the case. Matz, . a_lthough_ maintaining that cbeges have been made so Robinson's fiscal feat cannot be duplicated, refuses to eive details on bow it was carried out. Orange Coast dealers of luxury merchandise recall Robinson with a mixture of mirth and chagrin. One secretary, on learninc the subject of the call, just snickered tor a moment, then said, "I'll get the manager." Killer 'lnapassi1'e' Death Penalty County Verdict By TOM BARLEY Of tM D•llY "114 SUtf Convicted killer Glen Ellis O'Conner, 19, drew the death penalty today for his slaying of an Anaheim woman who was robbed of $2 before she was repeatedly shot in the head. The Orange County Superior Court jury that had previously found the Riverside man guilty of murder and then ruled that he was sane at the time of the killing deliberated exactly five hours before returning today with their final verdict. O'Conner is the first man to be sentenced in Orange County under the new death penalty provision passed by public initiative. He was · arrested last Jan. 21 after he shot and robbed Roland Nesmith, 64, in the victim's Santa Ana Canyon home. It was determined after the arrest that O 'Conner was responsible for the slaying 14 days earlier of Margaret Baker Lissy, 56, who was shot and robbed of $2. ''He was a flamboyant person, H said Bill Gremp, vice prtsident of Mission Beeehcraft. Gtemp sold Robinson a $t:S0,000 Baron alrptau. Robinson paid with a-ebeck that was confirmed wfth the bank before it was deposited. But, as Grerop p0intedout, it's hard to D\iH a guy who has a car for every day ot the week. Not just any cars either. The , :'I inventory jnclude d ht'~ Lamborghinis. three Jaguars, 4 Ferrari and a Mercedes. Some of the cars were sold ~ Robinson by Frank Marino o Jim Marino Imports in Newpo Beach, who recalls Robinson as" "screwball." ' Marino sold him a neJ._ Lamborghini worth $22,800, ~ used one valued at $19,500 and a <See REFUND, Page A2) s Radio Confirms l Reports TOKYO (AP) - A Japanese news agency today reported the death of Chinese Prime Minister Chou En·lai. long hospitalized " with a heart ailment. Death, however, was a ttributed to cancer. U Pl TeltpMt• CHINA LEADER DIES Chou En-lat The U.S. State Department in Washington confirmed Chou's death. The Japanese news agency, which monitors Communist broadcasts in Asia, said the announcement was made by the official Hsinhua Chinese news agency . O 'Conner , impassive throughout his trial and the County Tre.od? Chou was either 77 or 78. The exact date or his birth was not known. The Tokyo monitoring was made by Radio Press which said the death· was announced by Hsinhua in a Chinese language broadcast. An English·language broadcast did not mention Chou's death. • resulting penalty phase, showed no emotion as the verdict was delivered in a hushed courtroom. Judge Byron K . McMillan delayed formal sentencing until h e could discuss th e precedent·setting verdict with the jury in the j~ry room. It was learned that Judge McMillan will set the sentenciJlg session and rule on a motion for a new trial later today. Doctors Practice Witlwut lmurance It was the first application of the death penalty in Orange County since Santa Ana carpenter Frederick Saterfield, now 56, drew that verdict in 1966 for the killing of his common law wife and her daughter. Saterfield's sentence was never carried out. He is today held on San Quentin's prison death row. lmnates Want 'Porn' Rights VISALIA (AP>. -Sixteen. inmates at the Tulare County jail are suing to be allowed to read such magazines as Playboy, but a jailer is offering proof the prisoners alrea,dy have that right. A hearing is scheduled in Superior Court Friday on allegations that the inmates aren't allowed to receive magazines featuring photos of nude women such as Playboy, Oui and P-enthouse or the detective m ontbly True Detectives. Lt . Grant Matherly, commander of the jail. responded Wednesday that inmates can read anything they want except articles describing how to make explosives or weapons, and said some lockup walls are decorated with centerfolds. A trend is growing among doctors in Orange County to . practice without liability insurance coverage. Everett Bannister, executive dire5tor of the Orange County Medical Association, estimated today that from 20 to 25 percent of the 2,000 physicians in the county no longer carry . malpractice coverage. Earlier in the week he suggested only about five percent · of doctors had dropped their coverage. (Related story Page A5). He said doctors instead were turning to "insolvency planning," placing their assets in family trusts so the assets would not be vulnerable to malpractice suits. Dr. T.M. Shaver, chief of staff at Mission Community Hospital, said be did not know of a single surgeon still carrying · malpractice insurance. · He said doctors at Mission Community had discussed the possibility of pooling .tlteir resources to assist any' staff member who might be sued. In another indication of the trend to work without malpractice coverage, Michael Stephens, administrator of Hoag Memorial Hospital, Newport Beach, noted the hospital no longer requires a staff member to provide proof of malpractice coverage. Unlike their colleagues in Los Angeles, physicians in Orange County have not been on a slowdown, but Dr. Charles Plows, president of the OCMA. this week sent a telegram to Gov. Not Dis Day 'Mistakes' Undo Texan Tranalent Texan John H. Young's first mistake Wednesday night, Orange ·county Sheriff's officers commented today, was to take several drinks too many before he left a Santa Ana bar and got into his car. YOUNG'S SECOND MISTAKE, they explained, was to drive the vehicle ln a weaving pattern through downtown traffic and part It ln a Jot between 4th and 5th streets. That area comprt.ses the parking lot for the county jail, tbey told Younc •. And they helped the 52·year-old Texan to negotiate the few steps between his car and the JaU where he was booted for drunken d..riviDJ. BUT YOUNG, OJ'FICUS said. made• third mlltaU. And ~t, they explained. was tb be behlnd the wb"1 of a car th«l waa llli«UM stolea earUer tn the daY by Loi Anael• Oowaty ·~u •. . Edmund G. Brown Jr. warning that it was becoming difficult for doctors to keep exercising restraing in lfglit' or recent statements by legislators that the crisis might take several months to resolve. · C·anada Road Name Change . Wins Approval the name of Canada Road. first southbound freeway ex.it in the Saddleback Valley, will be changed to Lake Forest Drive. The name change was approved Wednesday by Orange County Supervisors at the urging of Fifth District Supervisor Thomas Riiey. Prime movers of the name change were residential development interests in the Occidental Petroleum planned community of Lake Forest and the l,600-membet' Lake Forest Community AssociJtion. Once all the"-necessary paperwork and planning is completed, the new name will be applied to the road from its junction with Moulton Parkway to Trabuco Road~ On the inland side of 'n'abuco Road, where Canada becomes a narrow farm road, the original name will remain. During a brief hearing, supervisors were told by supporters of the name change that it would give the C'OJMlunity ''freeway identity .. and would eod confusion over pronunciation of Canada by visitors. 'lbe Spanish natneiS supposed . to be pronounced "Ca·nyab-da" but eeveral speakers said visitors to the community teod to pronounce it like . the country north of the United States. Community Association directors. whose group represents about half the. bomes in the planned commUPity area. won approval of the name chute befOTe th~ Saddleback Area Coordlnat:lq QJWcU last year. Tbe lone di11entmc SA.CC vote wu loaitlme El Toro resident Ray Prothro, wbo also spoke aialut the cha.n1e at Wednesdl)' IUft"llon meeflQa. Prothro arpeid tbe road name • is biltort~ly tilniftc:ut. . <See C4N ADA, Pap AZ) Chou did not see President Ford on bis visit to China in December. He had talked in the hospital with foreign leaders vis· iting the country over the last year and a ball. During Chou's illness, his duties had been taken over by Teng Hsiao·ping, who also has been mentioned as a possible successor to the aging and ailing 'Chairman Mao Tse-tung. ' Chou became premier in 1949 when the Communists took over the Chinese mainland at the end of a long and bloody civil war, but was overshadowed by Mao. China's popular hero and philosopher and Chou's elder. Chou doubled as premier and foreign minister for many years. The sophisticated yet tough Chou ·fashioned a foreign policy that gradually shifted away from the Soviet Union toward the United States. ln 1972, Richard M. Nixon, then president, and Chou issued the historic Shanghai Communique pledging to promote friendship between their two nations and aiming eventually to the establishment of full diplomatic relations. Chou launched "Ping Pong diplomacy" in 1971 by inviting American players to tour (SeeCHOU,PageA2) Coast Weather Sunny Friday but with. increasing fog and low clouds Friday morning. It will be a little cooler, with highs in the 60s. Lows tonight 38 to 48. INSIDE TODAY .1 I >' f ~ J I ( ,., DAILYPILOT SB Jrvine I Woman • Raped A 19 -year-old lr\1ine iirl walking toward the University Park Sb~pplng · Center Wednesday night was kidnapped and raped by a man who threatened to strangle her unless the cooperated, according to J'rvine police. ' A police search of the area by Car and. helicopter following the 9: 17 p.m . attack proved fruitless, according to Detective Ron V'each. t' Veach said the girl, a resident ~f the Park West apartments, ~as walking along Michelson "-venue to14·ard the s hopping 'tenter \\'hen a man in a pickup · uck with a large cab.over camper s topped about 25 ya rds in front of her. As s he v:alked past the truck. the man, \\'ho had hidden in the 4hadow or the camper, jumped put from behind the truck and ·erabbed her from behind. The man drO\'C the victim to lhe dead end of J\tichelson west of ClllYer Dri\·e. where he raped her. Police s 3id the man choked his \•ictim . threatening to kill her unless she cooperated. Ve ach s aid police were preparing a composit e drawing of the rapist today. He was described as six feet~ two inches tall. about 20 years old \li'ith brown shoulder-length hair. H'e "·as wearing a red long.sleeve football jer sey with white numerals, one of which was an "g··. Veaeh sa id . He al so wore bh1l" jeans and suede desert boots. boots. Police said he was dri\'ing a brov.•n 1972 Dodge truck with white wheel spokes and a large rab-over camper with an unfinished interior. Veaeh said the man released his victim following the rape. He was last seen driving southbo'Und on 1\-lichelson, Veach said. Ve ach said th e re was no apparent connection between the Wednesday ni ght rape and other kidnaps and rapes that have .occurred in coaslal cities in the ,past week. • Dr. Orlandella Faces Assault, . Battery Rap Dr. t\nthony Orlandella, a prominent South Coast urologist. and his wire, were scheduled to be arraign e d today on allegations of mis demeanor assault and battery on a San Clemente Police officer. Orlandella is a former two-term chief of staff at South Coast Community Hospital and served as a Laguna Beach school trustee before moving to Dana Point in 1971. Orlandella and his wife were stopped Dec. 27 by Patrolman James Gularte while traYelling north on El Camino Real in a luxury car that police claim had no license plates nor temproary registration affixed to the front window . In his report of the incident. Gularte alleges that the couple became highl y emotional, repeatedly swore at him and interfered with hi s duties. Mrs . Orlandella has charged Gularte overreacted. She said she and her husband will fight the charges. During the course of the traffic stop, Gularte arrested Mrs . Orlandel la on s u s picion of interfering \\.'ith a police orricer. Gularte claimed that Orlandella sped away after his \\ife was placed into the rear of the police unit for transport to the police station. ORANGE COAST " DAILY PILOT ;:r..:t'.~~~~~,·,·;r, i:i.::i;:; ;,h;~ :;, ~;. c ..... 1 Pl>Dlo\ll;ft(I ,,,....,.n. s.._ .. r ..,,.1....,.. •'" p~tm .... 11 MOl><I•' tl"-1' r<loil'11 !<>F t•"I" I.ho ... , '°'"'P0<1 ....... , MVft\Woql"" llo'""h I""'' ••+n V•"••• tr•1n•, !>•<l<llfl••t• V•H• ~ ~"<I L+t9'IM .. ;oc,.~n C-•t. ,. .. ,...'"''"""' "'" hon 11 _.t.,,.. Selurll•Y• -w.µ,, lne p<in< ..... ! l>UDll ... lftQ ~l""t IO -' :l:ICI ..... II S., ~t•MI. C:OH• ~ .... C•ht0<1•it"1•:i.. Robert N. Weed ,.,., ...... , ,.., p,.ftl.,,,., Jack R. Curley ""'~P·~110<n•-Go-.. w- . Thomas Keevil f.dol<it Th0mll5 A. Mu!llfllne -........ £<1- Qfrles H. Loos Richard P. Nall A\\l\1.ft\ M.llllQl"V ~!St~~ S.ddMHckValteyOffice n>01u1>•1ll..,.11~~,, ... .., Offk" c ... 1.-... ·)JfW•\I 8'1fi.1'"1 . .,....liflttOfl BeKll, l "lj lleK" e..M-tl ~INK"' ll .. C.INlt>rt .. 51•111'1 -. ·-·---·-. • • . . ... _ ....... ,. Mortuary 1 8 565,000 REFUND ••• Meeting Planned Mer.cedes worth "stli~OO . J\oblDSDD made the purenuea with "Jar10 clown payments an4I hf: financed the rest:• said Marino. ~ Robinson had a suite of four offices in the Century 21 building,. one room !Wed with law book& be _mada avallable-10_ altomeyl In O.lly Pllol Staff Pl>ol• PAUL PRESLEY WITH EISENHOWER'S GOLF CLUBS Nixon's Close Friend Displays His Me mentos Nix on Souvenirs Shared by Presl ey By F REDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of UM 0.llJ """"Matt "Dear Paul," begins the neatly typed letter. ''During the Christmas season, as we approach America's Bi centennial year, I want you to know how deeply grateful I am for your loyal support over the years. and particularly during the rather dif(icult period sinee I left offiee. "The most precious gift any person can give lo another is fri ends hip and for the privilege o( yours 1 s hall alwa}'S be in you r debt." The letter is signed Richard Nixon. It is dated Dec. 15, 1975. <Related photo, PageAJ.) The Christmas note to Paul Pres ley, own e r of the San Clemente Inn, from Nixon, is .among hundreds of items that "rj lJ go on permanent display at the inn starting Saturday, following a private preview showing Friday night. The friendship between the two men spans only eight years, dating back to 1967 when Nixon Spouses Put In Dutch By Computer . CHICAGO CAP) -Hundreds of surprised spouses found themselves with some explaining to do after a mailing foulup by a computer firm sent them letters · thanking them for staying recently .at a downtown hotel. A letter intended for regular gue,sts of the Oxford House, a Chicago hotel, was sent in error to about 4,000 city and suburban residents because the wrong computer tape was used to produce the letters. It wasn't long before the switchboard at the Oxford House lip up with aboUt 500 phone calls from husbands end wives sus picious of extra·marital activity. "One woman whdse name was on the letter had three children and was pregnant with a fourth," s aid Jerome Belanger, hotel vice president and general manager. "She said her husband was mad and doubted the child was his." was a guest at the Inn, but it appears to be a deep one. There are photographs of Nixon and Presley. formal invitations to the Presleys to state dinners and engraved cards congratulating the Presleys on their wedding anniversaries. ··It's a little bit of history, some things that happened at the Inn,·· sai·d Presley as television cameras v.•hirrcd softl y in the background , logging film footage that will be shown nationally this week. "I hope this can become the beginning for another permanent museum elsewhere in the eity," Presley said. ·'There's a lot of interest.·· The permanent exhibition will be housed in what formerly 'l-''as the coffee shop just inside the main entranee to the Inn. There will be no admission charge. About 90 percent of the memorabilia relates to the Nixon presidency -campaign buttons. Presidential cigarettes, ashtrays, pens , and official itineraries prepared for Presidential trips . There are mementos of other Presidents , too . David ·Ei senhower, Nixon's son-in·law, donated Dwight Eisenhower's golrclubs. While rummaging through the golr bag as photographers snapped pictures Wednesday afternoon, Presley discovered a 1969 edition of the "Book of Golf." Richard Nixon's picture was on the eover . Presley said Nixon plans to donate his own gol( clubs, complete with a white cover bag bearing the Presid'ential seal. to the mini ·museum. ·· "He couldn't bring them by today, because he was using them," Presley chuckled. While Presley chatted with print and television reporters, Col. Jack Brennan, Nixon'& chief aide since his resignation, placed items collected from Nixon's China trip in a special case just outside the exhibition area. Asked how his boss felt about the exhibition, Brennan said, "I don"t know. I just told him about it last night." ' "It has his complete blessing," said Presley. tbearea. , . According to Moore, Robinson had an office staff that at one time totaled 12. ''I really doo:i know what they did," said Moore. The Irvine busines3,es went under the names of Robinson , J .D.; The Robinson Group, Inc.; and Robinson Air Taxi. The air · taxi service never came to be, said Moore, but Robinson and the office workers went on almost daily flights in the Baron and a s maller twin-seater· that replaced it when money got short. Tbe flights were "all OVEtf ," said Moore, but mainly in the western United States. When Robinson began his spending spree about six months ago, he initially passed hiinself off as an attorney, according to Gremp. who recalls Robinson as something of a braggart. But when the businesses were set up, Moore recalls, they centered on non-legal aspects of di\'Orce and bankruptcy and, understandably, tax consulting. Robinson had the background for it. He worked for the IRS during 1969 and 1970 as a tax collector . He resigned and went to live in Australia, but was extradited back to the U.S. after he was indicted for embezzling funds he had collected for the IRS. He pleaded guilty in 1973 and was sentenced to a year in jail and five years probation in addition to repaying $4,m. After serving the jail term, he was released on probation. Last spring, Robinson filed for tax refunds for the years 1971 through 1974 totaling $652,T79. He used the name John D. Robinson and a phony mailing address according to the U.S. attorney prosecuting the case. He claimed he was working for a fi rm in 1-louston, Tex., during that period and that the fi r m bad withheld $652,779 for taxes. He also claimed to have sustained $1 .4 million in losses as a beneficiary of an estate. The IRS responded in June with checks totaling $565,340.31. That's when Robinson began to live it up . "I wondered about him all the CHOU ••. China . With Henry A. Kissinger, then Nixon's adviser, Chou secretly arranged the Nixon visit. Chou, a moderate, survived Mao's overhaul of Communist party machinery in the 1966-69 Cultural Revolution, and his power grew steadily. Chou carried out the purge of £ormer Defense Minister Lin Piao in 1972, branding him a traitor and reactionary, then · moved up to the No. 2 spot in the world's most populous nation. A few months later, Chou's diplomacy won a seat for Peking in the United Nations, £orcingout the Nationalist Chinese govern~ ment based on the island of Taiwan and led by Chou's bitter foe. Chiang Kai-shek who died last year. In the fall of 197.3; Chou found himself riding the cres~ of another cultural revolution, this. one politically aimed at Lin Piao and the ancient sage COnfuclus. Some Westerners saw it as a veiled attack on Chou himself. Six months later, Chou's power seemed lading. Jn May of 1974 he said: '"I am n ot very well beeause I am old now." Chou was born in 1898 in the village of Huai-an, just south of Shanghai. The son of aristocratic parents, he studied in France. England, Germany and Japan before returning to China. He was on t he 8,000..mlle Long March that look Mao's forces in- to the mountains of Yudnan 1n 1934-JS. Ume 1' 1ald Marino 11He wQll"t ' ' . h ttal. When l tint met him, e whipped this financial statement on me that aa1d be waa worth $76 million. He bad W -2's that said be made a million dollars last year. "It was a11 phony, but l guess the bank bought it. That's where ..he a:ot the-loan," said Marino. At -one point, Marino went to Robinlon'8 home in Paaadena-a house Robinson bought for $84,000 cash-to collect an $11,000 Fifth District Supervisor Thomas Rlley bas requested and been extended an-invttatioR to at- . tend a meeUn1 Monday between the Golden Rain Foundation board and McCormick Mortuary. • down payment on a car. The house was bein·g exterisively and expensively remodeled, said Marino. He added that while be was in the home, Robinson was working out an agreement with an art dealer for several thousand dollars worth or paintings. ''There were paintings everywhere already,'' Marino said. "But I beard the guy say it was okay if Robillson took 00 days to pay . That was in December, so I guess he got stuck.·· Marino rears that by the time it is all over, hl"may get stuck too. Gremp described Robinson as "a good braggart," prone to talk about his holdings in New Zealand and elsewhere. "But he was generally sort of a pleasant person. not at all the kind of guy you'd expect to be inYolved in something like this," Grempsaid. But about tbe end of November, said Gremp, Robinson began running out of money. The Baron was sold and replaced with the smaller Piper. He wasn't hiring employes anymor~. ''But he was really a flamboyant person during the time he was buying things," Grempsaid. Things hit rock bottom Dec. 19. Moore recalled. He and Robinson had been out flying and Moore left his boss ore near his home. When Moore taxied to a halt, at Orange County Airport, he was met by IRS agents. In the end, the agents drove Moore home. In addition to the plane, they confiscated Robinson·s Lamborghini that Moore had been driving. The air taxi company never really came to be, said Moore. "It was something we talked about, but never really got going." As he remembers his former boss, .. He was an interesting guy, very up and down. Either he was very, very nice or very mad. I was really sorry to see him locked up. He was a nice guy ." "He was probably the smartest man I ever met. I've met some smart men. but he ~a s absolutely brilliant, "said Moore. 26. "I-le had an inct-£.i.bte· Btillit~ to -just on the sPur of· the moment-<'ome up with solutions to things that really worked, really made sense," said Moore. Robinson's acquaintances recalled him as about riYe feet, ·six inches tall, thin, with Yery light blonde hair and "Coke· bottle glasses''. "The glasses weren't real thick, but they were the kind that magnify his eyes,'' Gremp said. "I remember a time he drove up here in a 12·cylinder Jaguar. Now, a man does that and you have to notice him. He had the money. He always paid for everything. Why would you suspect where he got it?" said Grem.p. School Story Corrected . A story in Tuesday's Daily Pilot dealing with Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustee Dennis Smith's reactions to the formation ot a committee opposed to the district's proposed tax override contained an error. -The story said that Smith said William Zogg, the district's former superintendent, told him the district was on the brink or financial disaster. Correctly. Smith said a top administrator in Zog1'a administration had told • him this after Zogg left the .superintendent's position. The Daily Pilot regrets tbe error. Riley's request was prompted by a number of eallsOOm Leisure World residents, angry about the McCormick funeral home soon to be built at a gate to the Laguna Hills retirement community. "'They might as well plant a big tree at Gate 3 and put vultures in . .it," one resident told Tuesday's meeting of the Golden Rain board of directors. ' The Golden Rain FOWldation administers Leisure World com- mon property. Kenneth Mc Ewing, 227-D Ave. lofajorca, told board members at Tuesday'&. meeting a petition campaign is mou.nting to piytest the proposed mortuary. About 350 Leisure World res i- dents have signed the petition ad- dressed to the McCormick firm. It states that persons who sign the petition will add a clause to their wills, instructing that their funeral arrangements not be made with McCormick. "We're not having any trouble collecting signatures," McEwing told board members. · Roland Smoot, president of the Golden Rain Foundation, told the meeting of about 40 persons he is well aware of the controversy. He said he has received many phone calls and letters of protest . He added that there is not much the board can do, pointing out that McCo rmi c k has already purchase<f the property and drawn plans for the mortuary. Robert McCormiek Jr., who eould not .be reached today for comment, has said his firm is •·open to all possibilities.'' Fro• Pllfle Al MOTHER • • he failed to do so. He said one or theorticers fired a warning shot. (Robitaille said that ''under the existing circum~tances and fear .rortheirown safety and safety for t he other occupants, both officers opened fire. Nicholas collasped almost Immediately.") Walker, who said he was with the Long Beach district attorney's' office for 13 years, said . he <!idn't want to point the finger of blame at anyone. "I've been around too many of th~~'e. lri.b.d~ Of things to ~ow that 1 thefl.!·?1'riof enough evidence at thi.!1 'POilit ~to say it is anyone•S fault .... •·~·- W8lker:,s0aid the day's tragic events-'be1:an when an argument erupted 'b~tween the dead man and his brotber Arthur, 35, who Is being Heltf Orl $250,000 bail. ''They had been quarreling over the family business, .apparently about various :res ponsibilities," Walker reported. "I think there was business jealousy involved and the feeling that one brother had invaded the other's province. "Drinking, un!ortunately, also was involved and one just lost his head,'' Walker said. He said that the older brother fired three bullets into the ceiling or the parents' home with bis .22 caliber re'volver. Walker relatP.d that Nicholas heard the ··shots and became apprehensive and was ''just trying to get the hell out or the house'' where he was to run into the pa lice fusillade. Walker said · that Nicholas DiStefano's wife of four months, Cindy, was looking out the window and saw her husband killed. T he 11on of the foreman also allegedly saw the blast and said "Oh my God, they've killed him." Walker said that six expended shotgun shells were found and that Nicholas suffered massive -v.·ounds both in the front and back of his body. The elder ·Mrs. DiStefano expressed bitterness also at the alleged. treatment of ber husband Victor, at the hands of police. ' The Jetter . announcing renovations at the hotel, included e)lch recipient's name ih the greeting and in one paragraph. The" me.s1age, which arrived with Wednesday 's mail, be1an, "Being privileged in having you as our recent guest .•. " F,....Pafle A I CANADA •.• Destination: Murder Belanger sa.id one Woman called in tears and begged "'Please explain to my hu.sbtnd that I was not a guest there.·' . "I was amazed at some ot the calls," Belanger said. Ooe woman who had berlPI divorce proceedings was upset to find the letter waS a mi.stake. "Sbe 1ald she had hoped to use the.letter aralo•t bet buaband, .. Belan1u 1a1d. All who received the Oxford flou•e letter will be mailed retraction notices by the computer firm, Compuletter Inc. Gary Ross, company prnident, seilO a random t.pe fOf'- aample mailings to areas 1oulhwe1t of the. Loop wa1 lnadve~ently fed lbrot.lib the computers. He said it ls an extension ot the old farm road that hu been used since the Spanish and Mexican Santa Monica Girl Killed En Route to Lagrma day11 of the county in the lfms. Her destin ation wu Laguna Prothro also noted that the El Beach bul a 16-year--old Santa Toro-Lake Forest .,ea wa.s once Monica airl'a bitebbik1D1 trip part of the old Rancho Canada de ended in deat:b, her aemJ-nude l.os Alisos, a Spanish land grant body fo und s prawled on a ranch of the early years. Soutb·Central Los Angeles A spokesman for the new •idewalk Wednesd&J. Canida B111lne11 Center, one of Dotecllv• at the Lot Angeles the few developments lritb a Police D epartment'• 77th Canada Ro1d add""'•· f•-"Dlvl1lon !•bored through the retaining the old n1me for .nl&hl on the cue. All autOl)By is Identity pUl'pO&es . scbtdul«I today to determine the Riley said that although tht.re e it• O"t ca u 1 e of Wendy ii hl.atori c::al slgniflcan~ Jo the' Blanchard'• death and whether Ca·nada Road name 1 )be lhtbadbeen1exuallyattacked, d evelopers and Community 'nae tl11l had left her Santa asaociat.ioo bad a1reed to aha~ Monie• home TundQ', JM1Ck1n1 the full rost or changing all street her belon&inp and telling her aod freeway 1i1na. mother that abe lnteoded to hitchhike to Laguna Beach. Laruna Beach Det." Gene Brooks said the local department has not been brought into the lnveatlgation yet, but will cooperate with Loa Angelee PD it requested. It 1a unknown why the &irl was comln1toLa1una. · Mt11 Blancbard'S boCiy was found by three boys on their way to "bool at 7 a.m. on a at dew•lk tn front of a bouae oa W. Colden Avenue.. _ _ Her coat wlth what 1ppeared to be a blood·st11ned Nr cOllar had been fOWld four boun nrUer ln 1 d.e1erted Com p ton·Caraon industrial aeet Lon by two Compton patrolmen. The officers were on routine ' patrol when they heard cries for help. They searched. the Bl"ea, and f6'Jnd no one but chanced upon the coat and a beach bag oontalnln( other clothing and on ad d ret1 book with Mias Blanchard'• name.1,od addreu. A aearch br m ore than 1 •core· of sheriff 1 deput.iea-and Compton poll ce ofClcer1 continued through the Mlsbborboocl ol oil derricks and v•cant Iota until the body was round tn Loa An1eles. The murder u the latest in • ffrle:s or rapes and attack• made on , female h1tcbhiker1. I . ·' ' ' I I I ' 7 I I ; I r lrVine EDITION T oday's CloslJIC N.Y.SteekB ; ;' VOL, 69, NO. 8, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA TN URSOAY, JANUARY 8, 1976 TEN CENTS Rofrinson 'Brilliant' in ·Tax Fraud \ I I • B1DOUG F RITl.SCHE ,. I Of1111eo.1"" ....... David Glen Rot>inson cut a '· iroad, laVisb and expensive path hrougb the Orange Coast tor the aat six months while be ispersed $565,000 -the· largest fraudulent tax refund m the history of the Jnternal Revenue Service. '. Today. Robinson is in federal 1!UStody and the IRS bas confiscated $300,000 in slightly used goods and is scrabbling after as much..o! the rest as it can recover. This week, Robinson pleaded guilty to three counts of making false s tatem e nts on tax documents that shook the money loose from the IRS. He agreed to a five-year prison term, three years probation and to help authorities get as much of the money back as they can - penalties even his prosecutor agrees are "stiff." Mike Moore, a pilot who was an associate in Robinson's Irvine business, described his former boss as "absolutely brilliant." That assessment apparently is s hared by Assistant U.S. Attorney Howard Matz, who prosecuted the case. Matz, a_lthough. maintaining that changes have been made so Robinson's fiscal feat cannot be duplicated, refuses to give details on how it was carried out. Orange Coast dealers of luxury merchandise recall Robinson with a mixture of mirth and chagrin. One secretary on learning the subject of the call, jmt snickered tor a moment, theo said, "l'U get the manager ... "He was a fla mboyant person." said Bill Gf'emp, vice president ol Mission Beechcraft. Gremp sold Robinson a $150,000 Baron airplane. Robinson paid with a check that was confumed with the bank before it was depolited. But, as Gremp pointed out, it's hard to miss a guy who bas a car · for every day of the week. Not just any cars either. The OU uecu UPI Ttlepflolo p.,u T11rn• 4 1 Singer Elvis Presley marks his 41st birthday today, and , 9i5 home town of Memphis is marking t he occasion with various celebrations, including a large crowd o utside his Graceland mansion home. ·woman ! 'f(idnaped In Irvine A 19-year-o ld Irvine girl walking toward the University Park Shopping· Center ·Wednesday night was kidnapped . and raped by a man who ·threatened to strangle her unless she cooperated, according to Irvine police. A police search of the area by car and helicopter following the 8: 17 p.m . attack proved fruitless, according to Detective Ron Veach. Veach said the girl, a resident of the Park West apartments, was walking along Michelson Avenue toward the shopping center when a man in a pickup truck with a large cab-over camper stopped about 25 yar<b in front of her. As she walked past the truck, the man, who had hidden in the shadow of the camper, jumped out from behind the truck and grabbed her from behind. The man drove the victim to the dead end of Michelson west of Clllver Drive, where he raped her. Police said the man choked his victim, threatening to kill her . <See RAP E, Page A2) (Prime Rate !Drops to 7 t, NEW YORK CUPI) - : Chase Manhattan Bank, I the nation's third largest, l today lowered its prime t interest rate to 7 percent I from 7 ~ percent in response to the easier J monetary pollcy of the Federal Reserve Board. l Chase's reduction in the key intereet rate followed ' by a day a 1imilar move by • Cleveland TN st Co., a • m«JorObio Bank. f ti wae expect4=d that F1rat National City Denk, · the n.atlon'• Hcond lariest bent and a trends~tter on lnlernt rates, also would reduce it• prime by a quarter of a point to 7 per~nt Friday. In Anaheim Slaying OC Verdict-Death By TOM BARLEY OfllltO•llY PlletSUff Convicted killer Glen Ellis O'Conner, 19, drew the death penalty today for his slaying of an Anaheim woman who was robbed of $2 before she was repeatedly shot in the head. The Orange County Superior Court jury that had previously found the Riverside man guilty of murder and then ruled that he was sane at the time of the killing deliberated exactly five hours befo re returning today with their final verdict. O'Co nn er, impassive throughout his trial and the resulting penalty phase, showed no emotion as the verdict was delivered in a hushed courtroom. Judge Byron K. McMillan delayed formal sentencing until h e coul d di sc u ss th e precedent-setting verdict with the jury in the jury room. It was learned that Judge McMillan will set the sentencing session and rule on a motion for a new trial later today. It was the first application of the death penalty in Orange Cou nty si nce Sa nta A n a carpenter Frederick Saterfield, now 56, drew that verdict in 1966 for the killing of his common law wife and her daughter. I Saterfield's sentence was never carried out. He is today held on San Quentin's prison death row. O'Conner is the first man to be sentenced in Orange County under the new death penalty provision passed by public initiative. He was· arrested last Jan. 21 after he shot and robbed Roland Nesmith, 64, in the victim's Santa Ana Canyon home. It was determined after the arrest that O 'Conner was responsible for the slaying 14 days earlier of Margaret Baker Lissy, 56, who was shot and robbed of $2 . UPI Tt"""9to CHINA LEADER DIES Chou En-lai Bomb Found In Irvine . Victim's Mother Bitter Proves Dud Marine demolition experts were called in Wednesday when an employe at an Irvine firm showed up for work with a bomb. But on arriving at Sterling Power Systems in the Irvine Industrial Complex, the Marine bomb squad determined that the 25-pound military device was a practice round incapable of exploding. According to Marine spokesman Capt. John ShotwelJ, the man found the bomb next to a mailbox near Dyer Road and Red Hill A venue, t hen carried it to work. Police theorized that the bomb ma y h ave fallen from a helicopter on a training flight. But Shotwell said there "is no evidence that it fell from a helicopter . There is no evidence of how it got there at all." Shotwell said the practice bomb could not detonate. The explosive charge in such devices is a smoke flare, he said, that · could burn someone who was • holding it when it went off, but would not cause harm otherwise. Ininates Want 'Porn' Rights VISALIA (AP) -~ixteen. inmates at the Tulare County jail are suing to be allowed to read such magazines as Playboy, but a jailer is offering proof the prisoners already have that right. A hearing is scheduled in Superior Court Friday on allegations that the inmates aren't allowed to receive magazines featuring photos of nude women such as Playboy. Oui and Penthouse or the detec tive monthly True Detectives. Lt. G rant Math e rl y, c ommander of th e jail, responded Wednesday that inmates can read anything they want except articles describing how to make explosives or weapona. and said some lockup walls are decorated with centerfolds. Wreckage Search BAHIA DE LOS ANGELF.S, Mexico (AP> -A ground party today prepared lo cUmb a steep canyon wall to reach the charred wreckage of a pl ane believed to be that of 60·year-<>ld George Peck. Calls Huntington Betreh Police 'Ruthl,ess' By ROBERT BAR.KER Of Ille O.lly f'llll SUH A Hunt ington Beach mother poured out her anguish and bitterness Wednesday, the day when one of her sons died after being struck down by shotgun blasts from a police officer. A second son is in Huntington Beach Jail charged with. attempted murder and murder because be allegedly fired shots that started the chain of events in which his brother's d eath resulted. "The Huntington Beach police are ruthless," Mrs. Kay DiStefano declared after the tragedy that snuffed out the life of her son Nicholas, 23. "He never did anything to hurt anyone," Mrs. DiStefano said. "He was our rock -the one we leaned on most." Attorney Bill Walker was with the family moments after the Marriages Periled By Computer Goof CHICAGO (AP)-Hundredsof surprised s pouses found themselves with some explaining to do after a mailing foulup by a computer firm sent them letters thanking them for staying recently at a downtown hotel. A letter intended for regular guests of the Oxford House, a Chicago hotel. was sent in error to' about 4,000 city and suburban residents because the wrong computer tape was used to produce the letters. It wasn 't long before the switchboard at the Oxford House lip up with about 500 phone calls from husbands and wives suspicious of extra-marital activity. •·one woman whose name was on the letter bad three children and was pregnant with a fourth," said Jerome Belanger, hotel vice president and general manager. "She said her husband was mad and doubted the child was bis.'• The letter, anaouncing renovations at the hotel, lncluded each recipient's name In the greeting and in one paragraph. ~ The message, which arrived with Wednesday's mail, began, "Being privileged in having you as our recent guest .•• " Belanger said one woman called in tears and befged .. Please explain to my husband that I was not a guest there." "I wu amazed at some ol the calls,•• Belanger said. One woman who had beeun divorce proceedin&1 was upset to lLDd the letter was a mi.stake. "She said ahe had hoped to use the letter agalnst her husband,•• Belanger said. All who received the Oxford House letter will be malled retraction notlcea by the computer firm, Compoletter Jnc. Gary Ross , company . . . . . . . . pres1aent, said a random tape for sample mailings to areas southwest of the Loop was inadvertently fed through the computers. Belanger said the whole iQcident just may go to show "husbands and wives don't trust each other much these days." . More Doctors .Will Scorn Insurance A trend is growing among doctors iq Orange County to practice without liability insurance coverage. Everett Bannister, executive director of the Orange County Medical Association. estimated today that from 20 to 25 percent of the 2,000 ph)tsicians in the county n o l onger carry . malpractice coverage. Earlie r in the week he suggested only about five percent of doctors had dropped their coverage. (Related story Page AS). He said doctors instead were turni ng to "insolvency planning," placing their assets in family trusts so the assets would . not be vulnerable to malpracUce suits. Dr. T.M. Shaver, chief ot staff at Mission Community Hospital, said be did not know ol a single aur1eon 1till carryi ng maJpracUce lnlurance. He said doc:ton at Mission Comnnanity had discussed the pou lblllty or pbolin1 their resources to assist any staff C1ee DOCTOR, h&e A2) shooting broke out shortly after midnight at the Ocean View Mu s hroom Growe r s Joe., popularly known as th e mushroom farm. Walker said that the young man was shot while running away from an officer who was crouched at the side of an automobile irt front of the elder DiStefanos• residence. "He was unarmed and dressed' in just his pants. He had no shirt on or sitoes and his hands were raised." Walker asserted Nicholas was shot in the back with the shotgun pellets coming out thr..ough his stomach. He said he collapsed about 75 yards away from the ·officer who fired the shots. Walker reported that while young DiStefano wa;; running away from one officer he was running toward another. "They had him surrounded," Walker said. A police helicopter . also was overhead. 0 1t may never be known:• Walker said, "if Nicholas was ever aware of the police officer in position behind the car as he ran outthedoor.•• Walker said be received his information from Nicholas' bride and the son of the mushroom farm's foreman who r eported tlrey witnessed the fatal shooting. (Police Chief Earle Robitaille· said Wednesday that police officers heard gunshots which they believed wer~ directed at them. <Robitaille said Nicholas was ordered to stop several times but he failed to do so. He said one of the officers fired a warning shot. <Robitaille said that "under the existing circumstances and fear for their own safety and safety for the other occupants, both officers opened fire. Nicholas collasped almost immediately.") Walker. who said be was with the Long Beach district attorney's.office for 13 years, said he didn't want to point the finger of blame atanyone. • "I've been around too many of these kinds of things to know that there's not enou1b evidence at this point to say jt is anione's fault ... • Walker said the day's tragic events began when an arpment erupted between the de8d man and bis brother Arthur, 3$, wbo la beina ~eld on 1250,000 ball. 1"Tbey bad been quarNllnC over the family bustness , ,apparently about various :reaponslbllitles, •• Walker reported. ..I think tlMu'e was bu&lness jealousy lnwlved and the feelinC that one brother had invaded the other 'a province. <See MOTHER. PapAJ) ' f ... inventory include d two Lamborghinis~ three Jaguars. a t Ferrari and a Mercedes. Some of the cars were sold to J Robinson by Frank Marino of s Jim Marino Imports in Newport Beach, who recalls Robinson as a .. screwball." • I Ma rino sold him a new Lamborghini worth $22,800, a t used one valued at $19,500 and a <See REFUND, Page A2) s Radio Confirms ' Reports TOKYO (AP> -A Japanese news agency today reported the death of Chinese Prime Minister Chou En-lai, long hospitalized with a .heart ailment. Death. howe ver, was attributed to cancer. The U.S. State Department in Washington confirmed Chou's death. The Japanese news agency, which monitors Communist broadcasts in Asia, said the announcement was made by the official Hsinhua Chinese news agency. I I Chou was either 77 or 78. The exact date of bis birth was not known. I The Tokyo monitoring was I made by Radio Press which said , the death ·was announced by Hsinhua in a Chinese language broadcast. An English-language broadcast did not mention Chou's 1 I death. Chou did not see President Ford on his visit to China in December. He had talJced in the hospital with foreign leaders vis- iting the country over the last year and a half. During Chou's illness, bis duties had been taken over by Teng Hsiao-ping, who also bas been mentioned as a possible successor to the a.iing and ailing Chairman Mao TsNung. Chou became premier in 1949 when the Communists took over the Chinese mainland at the end of a long and bloody civil war, but was overshadowed by Mao, China's popular hero and philosopher and Chou's elder • Chou doubled as premier and foreign minister for many years. The sophisticated yet tough Chou ·fashioned a foreign policy that gradually shifted away from the Soviet Union toward the United States. In 1972. Richard M. Nixon. then president, and Chou issued the historic Shanghai Communique pledging to promote friendship between their two nations and aiming eventually to the establishment of full diplomatic relations. Chou launched ''Ping Pong diplomacy•• in 1971 by inviting Amer ica n players to tour (SeeCHOU, PageA.2) Coas t Weathe r Sunny Friday but with • increasing fog and low clouds Friday morning. It will be a little cooler. with hichs in the 60s. Lows tonight 38 to 48. I NSIDE TOD~ Y NetDpOrt Beach bullding deportment ofliciah 1aJ1 tMJ! have .o 'three-prong .attock' pl.on to ~t .anothn-ffre ~ tM one that took dz livu in thf cit11 recmtl11. Sn dory 86. ---- I I ' DAIL. V PILOT Executor Guilty ~ t' W PO r l fl e •lC.'h a ttor OE') Roland Stewart Barcume pleaded guilty Wednesday to one Q/ 20 felony counts filed after thl' Grand Jury probed his alleged mishandlin~ of a $103,000 San Clemente estate. Orange County Superior Court Judge Kenneth Williams ordered taarcume, 39. of 901 Sandcastle Dri\'e, Corona del Mar. lo return to his courtroom f.'eb 26 for sen· tencing. Barcume faces a possible state prison term or one to 1-1 years on the conviction. He admitted of· fering false or forged documents In connectio n wit h h is administration of thC' estate of the late Wilson Eugene Luthl'r of San Clem cntl' Grand Jury aC'tlon was taken against RarC'ume when he failed to satb fy Supenor Court Judge Cla ude ~. Owens on the validity of his actions in paying $52,000 lo a creditor identified as "Harris F'r<rnk Robinson." The pavrnl'nt was made from the estate of Luther. who died Jnne :!5. 1970. in a Capistrano &>aC'h nursin g home after nam- ing HarC'ume to s upervise his est<llt• &>neficiaries in Luther's will challenged the payments to "Robinson" who r eportedly tailed to come forward to testify despite repeated attempts by the district a ttorney's offi ce to contact him. Barrume was additionally in- dicted on chargt's of grand thert. perJury. and p r1:1paring false evidence . J udge Williams will rule on the disposition of those al· legations whe n he sentences the Newport lawyer Ft>b. 26. Barcum e was to have faced trial on aH 20 rounts Jan. 19. That trial date was cancelled by Judge Williams. I F rom Page Al RAPE ... unless she rooperated. Veach s a i d polic e were preparing a composite dra\\ing o(the rapist today He was descr ibed as six foet, two inches tall, about 20 years old "ith brown shoulder-lenJrth hair He was wearing a red long-sleeve football jer sey with white numerals. one of which was an ··s ... Veach said. He also wore blue jeans and suede desert boots. boots. Police sa id he was driving a brown 1972 Dodge truck with white wheel s pokes and a large c ab -over ca mpe r with an unfinished interior. Veach said the man released his victim following the rape. He was last seen driving southbound on Michelson. Veach said. Fro111 Page A l DOCTOR. • • member who might be sued. In another indication of the trend t o work without malpractice coverage, Michael Stephens. administrator of Hoag Memorial H os pital, Newport Beach. noted the hospital no longer requires a staff member to provide proof of malpractice coverage. Unlike their colleagues in Los Angeles, physicians in Orange County ha\'e not been on a slowdown, but Dr. Charles Plows. president of the OCMA this week sent a telegram to Gov: Edm.und G . Brown Jr. warning that 1t was becoming difficult for doctors to k e ep exercis ing restraint ira light o( recent .rtatements by legislators that the crisis might ta ke several months ~resolve. ORANGE COAST '~°'anti" CN~t o ..... P1l(JI ... ,,,...,,.,,."'"' " b4f'WllG thf M~\ Pt,.\\. I\ 0Ut.H1~(1 bf' It .. Of' M" JI CO.\t PVC>l1'1'\tl'MJ C.OmoMtY ~DM.-t•·~·l1.-"' "''' puCh\"f'd MOnd• ... O''fCIUQf\ rr1d•V fOt ( M NII"~. N~Wpoft 8t-•th, Huf'llnQfM f-lit1hh ft>\lf\ '''" V•Ut"y, lrvm•. \•ddltbdfk Vallf'y ""<1 l•qvM 8U<lllSnulll Co.\I f\ \onqlf •1'9•~1 •0• ''°" I\ ouotl.,..•d !o~h1"t"Y' ....i Sunt.l•t' ln• .,, ""''""' pu1>l1>111nu pl•nl '' •• llO w."1 So !tlr1tlt, C0>I• M~H. Colllornle •1676 Robert N. Wef!d P r•O<k.!1'11 Ind Publ1~r Thomas Keevll EOllOf Thomas A. M urptiine N"•,..u•nq F dttOf Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall •U••l•n• M•n.tQtn<I Co.10-• Offices (8\l.t""•P lJOVllUI l\<ty!ll~ LA ... ,.. II•~ n It .. C.i.-1•• ~\' .. , HuJll 1>91on ~.,,, • 1'11 flt .ttll lllt<•" •••d ~ .. .,... V•ti.r 1U01L•""'"-ol S.n 01.,,.. f ,_, • Bitching ·Girl, 16, Murdered Her de.sti nation was Laguna Beach but a 16-year-old Santa Monlca alrl's hitchhiking trip ended in death, her semi-nude body round sprawled on a South-Central Los Angeles sidewalk Wednesday. Detectives at the Los Angeles Police D epartm e nt's 77th Division labored ihrough the night on the case. /Ui autopsy is scheduled today to determine the exact cause of W e ndy · Rlan<'hard's death and whether she had been sexually attacked. The girl had left her Santa Monica home Tuesday, packing her belongings a nd telling her moth('r th ~t s he intended to hitchhike to Laguna Beach. Laguna Beach Det. Gene Brooks said the local department has not been brought into the investigation yet , but wi ll cooperate with Los Angeles PD if requested. It is unknown why the girl was coming to Laguna. Miss Bla nc hard's body was found by three boys on their way to school at 7 a .m . on a sidewalk in front of a house on W. Colden Avenue. Mesa Bank Bandit Her coat with what appeared to be a blood-stained fur collar had been found four hours earlier in a deserted Co mpton-Carson indus tria l section b y two Compton patrolmen. Bank camera photos released by the FBI today "caught" the robber of the Fir s t National Bank of Orange County with the ca!)h in his hand as he left following the robbery Jan. 2. The bandit. who simulated a weapon, got away with $831 from the Costa Mesa bank at 1650 Adams St. H e is described as five feet. ten with reddish brown hair a nd weighing about 150 pounds. Anyone with information m ay contact Costa Mesa police or the FBI at 542-8825. The officers were on routine pat~ol when they heard cries for help. They S('arched the area. and found no one but chanced upon the coat and a beach bag containing other clothing a nd an a ddress book w i th M iss Blanchard's name and address. A search by more than a score of s h e riCf's d eputi es. and Co mpton pol ice oCCice r s co ntinued through the neighborhood of oil derricks and vacant lots until the body was found in Los Angeles. The murder is the latest in a series of rapes and a ttacks made on female hitchhikers. Doctor Tells Tale Of Child's Death The tragic portrait of a child who had been left malnounshed sick and battered was painted Wednesda y at a preliminary hearing for a San Clemente couple accused in the murder of their 5-y('ar-old daughter. The hearing before South Orange C'ounty Muniripal Court J udge Blair Bar nette opened From Page A 1 MOTHER • • "Drinking, unfortunately, also was involved and one just lost his head," Walker said. He said that the older brother fired three bullets into the ceiling of the parents· hom e with his .22 caliber revolver. Walker related that Nicholas heard the s hots and beca me appreh e nsive and was "just trying to get the hell out of the house" where he was to r un into the police fusillade. Walke r said that Nicholas DiSteCano's wife of four months Cindy, was looking out th~ window and s aw her husband killed. The son o~ the foreman also allegedly saw the blast and said "Ob m y God, they'vekilledhim." Walker said that s ix expended shotgun shells were found and that Nicholas s uffered massive wounds both in the front and back of his body. The elder Mrs. Di Stefano expressed bitterness also at the a lleged treatment of her bus band Victor. atthe hands of police. · She said they ha ndcuffed h.im and kept him outside for more than an hour and he couldn't take his medicine. She. ~aid he is s uffering from phlebitis and another illness she declined to identify. "They a lso used terrible language on him." she said. Spain's Army · Mans Subway MADRID. Spain (UPI> -In a first m ajor test of its power, the government has restored partial service to Madrid 's strikebound subway system by sending in army engineers to take over the operation. At the same time, riot police used rubber bullets and tear gas to break up a n assembly of 2 000 i ndu st rial worke1r s demonstrating their support for the 3 ,800 s trl kin g s ubway empJoyes. Thfl government's declsM>n to order in the army enclneers Wednesday oJght was 11een at a rompl'omlse that would leave the workert and subway company more time to reacb an agreement. with testimony from Dr. Frances Duda, a Sa n Clemente pedetr ician. Dr. Duda had d irected attempts to save Laura Cruz from death Nov. 22 at San Clemente General Hospital. Dr. Duda testified that severe malnutrition over a period of at least six m onths left the child -wi th a perilously low blood cell count. The severe anem ia, the doctor testified, contrbuted to pneumonia w hirh led to the rhild 's death . Jose Molina. 21, and his wife. Yolanda, 23, of 2723 S. El Camino Real, have been char~ed with murder or the child, born to Mrs . Molina thro u g h a former marriage. Molina is a Camp P('ndleton marine. Molina, wearing bluejeans and a short s leeve sweatshirt, sat s tone -fa ce d a s Dr. Dud a des<'ribed the child's physical condition. Mrs. Molina, clad in a white sweater and yellow slacks . looked toward the floor a nd slowly s hook he r head. Both were handcuffed. The preliminary hearing was ('Xpected to conclude today with a decision by Judge Barnette on whether the couple s hould be ordered to stand trial on murder charges in Superior Court. Dr. Duda testifi ed that burn marks were found over various parts of the c h ild 's body ini:-luding the feet, back a nd buttocks. Charred skin tissue indicated some of the burns were caused by a n open flame the doctor tes tified. ' Examination of the child also located three old frartures in the right arm, rib cage and pelvis, and atrophy of muscles in the right leg Crom lack of use, Dr. Duda told the cour t. The doctor testified the child essentially was dead on arrival at San Cl emente Ge neral Hos pital, but was revived through cardiac m assage and resuscitation. The child lived for another seven hours before final death. Fro• Page A J CHOU. • • China. · With Henry A. Kissinger , then Nixon's adviser, Chou secretly arranged the Nixon visit. Chou, a m oderate, survived Mao's overhaul of Communist party m achinery in the 1966-69 Cultural R evolution, and his power g rew steadily. Chou carried out the purge of former Defense Minister Lin Piao in 1972, branding him a traitor a nd reactionary, then moved up to the No. 2 spot in the world's most populous nation. A few months later, Chou's diplomacy won a seat for Peking m the United Nations, forcing out the Nationalist Chinese govern- ment based on the island of Taiwan and led by Chou's bitter foe, Chiang Kai-shek who died last year. In the Call of l 973, Chou found h imself riding the crest of another cultural revolution, t his one politically aimed at Lin Piao and the ancient sage Confucius. Some West erners saw it as a veiled attack on Chou himself. Six months later, Chou's power seemed fading. In May of 1974 he said : "I am not very well because I am old now." Chou was born in 1898 in the village of Hual-an, just south or Shanghai. The son of aristocratic · parents, he studied in France. England, Germany and Japan before returning to China. He was on the 8,000-mile Long March that took Mao's forces in- to the m ountains or Yunnan in 1934-35. After the 1949 revolution, his was the skillful hand that solved organizational problems whiie Mao guided party philosophy. H e held the h if·hesi posts in C h i na , inc uding secretary-general of the party. Politburo and chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Committee. Not His Day 'Mutakes' Vndo Texan Transient Te·xan John JI. Young's first mistake Wednes day night, Orange County Sheriff's omcers commented today, was to take several drinks too many before be left a Santa Ana bar and got Lnto his car. YOUNG'S SECOND MISTAKB, they explained, was to drive tbe vehicle tn a weaving patte rn throu1b downtown tra!Oc and park it in a lot between 4th and 5th streets. That area comprises~ parkln1 Jot for the county Jail, they told Young. And they helped the 52·year-old Texan to necotiate the rew steps between h1a car and the Jail where he was booked for drunken driving. • BUT YOUNG, OF'n CERS sald, made a th,rd mlstake. And that. they explained, wu to bo behlnd the wheel of a car that was listed as stolen earlier In the day by Los An•eles County authorities. O.Uy l'tlet Stall !"Mt• PAUL PRESLEY WITH EISENHOWER'S GOLF CLUBS Nixon's Close Friend Display• Hi1 Mementos Nixon Souvenirs ., Shared by Presley By F REDERICK SCHOEMEHL OI th• Dally Pilot 5t•ll .. Dear Paul," begins the neatl y typed letter. "During the Christmas season, as we approach Ame rica's Bicentennial year, I want you to know how deeply grateful I am for your loyal s upport over the years. and partic ularly during the rather difficult period since I left office. '"The most precious gift any person can give to another 1s friendship and for the privilege of yours I shall a lways be in your debt." The letter is signed Richard Nixon. It is d ated Dec 15, 1975. <Related photo, Page AJ.) The Christmas note to Paul Presley, owner of the San Clemente Inn, from Nixon, is among hundreds of items that will go on permanent display at the inn s tarting Saturday, following a private previe w s howing Friday night. The friends hip between the two men s pans only eight years. dating back to 1967 when Nixon was a guest at the Inn, but it appears to be a dee p one. There are photographs of Nixon and Presley, form a l invitations to the Presleys to state dinners and engraved cards congratulating the Presleys on their wedding anniversaries. "It's a little bit of history, some things that happened at the Inn ·• s aid Presl ey a s te levision ('ameras whirred softly in,,the background. logging film footage that will be s hown nationally this week. Front Page A·l $565,000 REFUND • • • Mercedes worth $18.000. Robinson made the purchases with "large down payments and. he financed the rest," said Marino. Robinson had a suite of four oCfires in the Century 21 building, one room filled with Jaw books he made available to attorneys in the area. According to Moore. Robinson had an office staff that at one time totaled 12. "I really don•t know what they did," said Moore. The Irvine businesses went under t.he names of Robinson, J .D.; The Robinson Group, Inc.; . and Robinson Air Taxi. The air taxi service n ever came to be, s aid Moore, but Robinson and the office workers went on almost daily flights in the Baron and a s maller twin -seater that replaced it when money got short. The flights were ''all ove r,"' said Moore, but mainly in the western United States. When Robinson began his s pending spree about six months ago, he initially passed himself off as an attorney, according to Gremp, who r ecalls .Robinson as something of a braggart. · But when the businesses were set up, Moore recalls, they rentered on non-legal aspects of divorre and bankruptcy and, understandably, t ax consulting. Robinson bad the background for it. He worked for the IRS during 1969 and 1970 as a tax collector. He resigned and went to live in Australia, but was extradited back to the U.S. after he was indicted for embezzling · funds he bad collected for the IRS. He pleaded guilty in 1973 and was sentenced to a year in j ail and five years probation in addition to repaying $4,~. After serving the jail t erm. he was released on probation. Last spring. Robinson filed for tax refunds for the years 1971 through 1974 totaling $652,779. He used the name John D. Robinson , and a phony mailing address accord.Inc to the U.S. attorney prosecuting the case. He claimed he was workinJJ ror a fl.I'm in Houston, Tex., during that period and that the firm had withheld $&2, 179 for taxes. lie also claimed to have sustained $1.4 m illlon in losses as a beneficiary of an ~state. The I RS responded in June with checks totaling $565,340.31 . That's when Robinson began to live it up. "I wondered about him all the time," said Marino. "He wasn't real. When I first met him, he whipped this financial statement on me that said he was worth $76 million . He had W -2's that said he made a million dollars last year. "It was all phony. but I guess the b~nk boug ht it. That's where he got the loan," said Marino. At one point, Marino went to Robinson's home in Pasad~ house Robin son bou,gtlt for $8.1,000 cash-to collect~an $11,000 · down pay ment on a car. The hou se was b ei n g extensively a nd expe nsively remodeled, said Marino. He added that while he was in the home, Robinson was working out an agreement with an art dealer for s everal thousand dollars worth of paintings. "There were paintings everywhere a lready," Marino said. "But I heard the guy say it was okay if Robinson took 00 days to pay . That was in December. so I guesi; he got stuck." Marino fears that by the time it is all over, he m ay get stuck too. Gremp described Robinson as "a good braggart," prone to talk about his holdings in New Zealand and elsewhere. "But he was generally sort or a pleasant person, not at all the kind of guy you'd expect to be involved in something like this," Grempsaid. But about t h e e n d or Nove m ber, said Gremp , Robinson began running out or money. The Baron was sold and replaced with the s maller Piper. He was n 't hiring e mployes anymore. "But be was r ea)ly a nomboyant person during the tlme he was buying ~ings," Grempsaid. . Things bit rock bottom Dec. 19, Moore recalled. He and Robinson had been out flying and Moore left his bou off near h1s home. When Moore taxied to a ttalt at Orange County Airport, he was met by I RS acents. In the end, the agent.a drove Moore home. In addJtion to tho plane, they confiscated Robinson's L•mbor1hlnl that Moore had been driving. ) ' VOL. 69, NO. 8, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ByltOBERT BARKER l CMtMO.l"PI ...... A Huntington Beach mother poured out her anguish' and bjttemess Wednesday, the day ~hen one of her sons died after being struck down· by shotgun ~uta from a police officer. · 1 A second son is in HWltington JJeacb Jail charged with: attempted murder and murder because he allegedly ftred shots that started the chain of events in ·' * * * UPI Te......_ Deis T11r11• 41 Singer El vis Presley marks his 41st birthday today, and • his home town of Memphis is marking the occasion with various celebrations, including a large crowd · outside his Graceland mansion home. County Teen Killer Draws Death Penalty l By TOM BARLEY 0t ... o.11ritti..,..... • Convicted killer Glen Ellis O'Conner, 19, drew the death penalty today for his slaying of an Anaheim woman who was robbed of $2 before she was repeatedly shot in the bead. The Orange County Superior Court jury that bad previously found the Riverside man guilty of murder and then ruled that be was sane at the time of the killing ·deliberated exactly five-hours before returning today with their fmal verdict. O'Conner, impassive throughout his trial and the resulting penalty phase,· showed no emotion as the verdict was delivered in a bushed courtroom. Judge Byron K . McMillan delayed formal sentencing until 1h e c o u 1 d d i s c u s s t h e precedent-setting verdict with tbe jury in the jury room. It was learned that Judge McMillan will set the sentencing session and rule on a motian for a new trial later today .. It wu the first applicatian of the death penalty in Orange County since Santa Ana carpenter Frederick Saterfield, now 56, drew that verdict in 1966 for the killing of bis common law wile and her daughter. Saterfield's sentence was never carried out. He ls today held on San Quentin's prison death row. O'Conner is the first man to be ientenced in Oranae County under the rtew death penalty provl1ton passed by public lllitiaUve. .. -. . l He wn arrested tut Jan. 21 Eer be shot and robbed Roland smith, N, lJl tbe victim's ta Ana Canyon home. . lt WU determined aft• the .-rrHt that 0 'Conaer w11 reepomibl• for tbe ~ 1• lla)I UrUer of Mar,._ Baker LIUJ, M, wbo WU ahot aod robWoltz. ,,.. ,., foancl blm pllty of •ftnt --mur~multtple .~ti .. ed ,.,..y. first ..... bur~ and ..... wtth : a ditadly wtapon. wblcb his brother's death retUtted. .. Tbe Huntington Beach police are ruthless.,. Mrs. Kay DlStefano declared after the tragedy that snuffed out tbe Ule of her aon Nicholas, 23. "He never did all)'th1ni to hurt anyone," Mrs. DiStefano said.· "He wu our rock -tbe ane we leaned on most." Attorney Bill Walker was with the family moments afte1' the * * * sbootlng broke oat ~ after m.ldni1ht at the Ocean View Mushroom Growers Inc .• popularly known aa the ·muabroomfarm. Walker said that tbeyouq man wu abot while nmning away from an officer who waa crouched at the side of an aut.omobile in front of the elder Di.Stef anoe' residence. ''He was unarmed and dressed. in just bis pants. He bad no shirt *' *.. * an or shoes and hls bands were raised." Walker asserted Ntcbolas was shot ln tbe back with the shotgun pellets coming out through bis stomach. He said be collapsed about 75 yards away from the officer who fired the shots. Walker reported that while young DlStef ano was running away from one officer be was running toward another. ''They bad him surrounded,'• * * * -. y Feud Probed in * * * * * * .* * * Policeinen Backed ~Not Gun Happy,' Officer Says By KATHY CLANCY Of .... Dally ...... ,..... The two Huntington Beach policemen involved in Wednesday's fatal shooting of Nicholas John DiStef ano were described today as first.rate offlcers by Lt. Bruce Young. "They a.re not what you call gun-happy cops," said Young, who serves as day shift watch commander for t he Huntington Beach Police Department. "They would rather have been someplace else," be said of Sgt. Phil Oliver and Officer Lee C~p. Oliver, who bas been on the force for four years, and Camp, who's been in Huntington Beach three years, are both assigned to station duty -rather than field patrol -until an investigation o! .the incident is completed, Young said. But be said he is confident both will be cleared of any wrongdoing. . Young said Oliver and Camp were the first to arrive at the Ocean View Mushroom Growers, 18196 Golden West St., at 11:33 a.m. after women in the DiStefano family home there phoned police. The women reported shots were being fired, YoWlg said. When the officers arrived in their separate patrol units, Young said, Sgt. Oliver saw a young man (Nicholas) burst Labor Aides .Quit Over· Ford's Veto WASIDNGTON (AP) -The nine labor members of a key presidential advisory committee on the construction industry quit today in protest over President Ford's veto of a bill expanding union picketing rights. The union chiefs, representing· the nation's major construction unions, accused Ford at a news conference of · doublecrossing them. They vowed to withhold political supPort from Ford in the 1976 presidential campaign. "We have n either the disposition nor the Ume to play charades with a management which bas indicated lt is merely a proxy for the most virulent anti-union forces in the United ·States and a president who is ·overwhelmed by that group,'' declared President Robert A. Georgine· of the AFL-CIO Building and Construction .Trades Department. from the f root of the family home as shots were being fl.red from inside the house. Young said Oliver thought Nicholas was doing the fuing. He didn't see a gun in bis band, Young said but be couldn't see the young man's left band. Oliver ordered the man to halt, the watch commander continued, but Nicholas kept running. He turned and looked at Oliver then turned and kept running -toward Camp who had Angola Pullollt Offered From Wire Services W ASlUNGTON -South Africa bas i nformed the Ford administration that 1t is prepared to pull its troops out of Angola in the next 48 hours, according t.o authoritative Administratloil sources The administration bad IJ<>ped for such a development, which it feels may put the Organization for African Unity in a stronger position to bring pressure for Cuba and the Soviet Union to withdraw their forces from Angola. The OAU meets next week in Ethiopia. The 1,200 South African forces have been helping an anti-Soviet faction in the Angolan civil war. Publicly. the State Department would say only that it bad not been informed of the South African decision, leaving open the possibility that the word went totbe White House. U.S. officials say the pullout of • South African troops would pose no problem in the strif e·tom Portuguese colony. These officials expect the Organization of African Unity to co nsider a resolution condemning South African intervention in the Angolan, civil war. If it is accepted, the Pretorian government is not . expected to resist. Friends of the United States, which is backing anti-Marxist forces in the African country. cling to the hope that the African summit will ultimately go on to call for a withdrawal by all outside powers. Chou Succumbs BULLETIN TOJ[YO (AP) -A Japawe · news •lelleY reported today tile deatla of Cldae. PrbDe la.lster 0.0. Ea·lal, loag ....,ltalbed wttb a bean ail.meM.. lWot Bis Day 'Miatakes' Undo Texan . . Transient Texan John H. Youna•• first ml1take Wednesday night, Orange ·couuly Sbertff'• officers ec>mmented today. WM to take ~veral clri.nb too many · before be left • Santa Ana bar and got into hla car. YOUNG'S &•COND IOSTA.KE, tbq explained, ••to drive the veblcle in a weavin& pettern throucb dowDtown trafflc and park lt ln a lot between 4tb and 5th stnets. That area comprbel the park1Df lot for the count, Jall • t.be7 tot• Youn•· And they helped the 52-year-old Tuan to i;Wtotlate the few 1teps between bia car and the jail where be ••booked for dnaakm drlvln1. . arrived in anoth'er police unit, Young asserted. Oliver then fired a warning shot, which Young said is normally against police regulation. Usually, he said, officers don't fire into the ground but fire to hit fleeing suspects. At the same time, he continued, Camp heard the shots and heard Oliver ordering the man to halt several times. He then saw the fleeing man running toward him -and again couldn't see bis left hand. • By this time, Young noted, Sgt. Oliver bad fired two or three times at the suspect with bis shotgun. Then Camp also fired one shotgun round in Nicholas• direction, he said. Young said tbe yoWlg man also glanced toward Camp, then ran a few feet before collapsing. By this time, be said, Officers Mark Waite and Pat Mikel arrived, and they began edministering rirst aid. Twice they turned Nicholas over, Young said, clearing his mouth and used external heart massage and mouth -to -mouth resuscitation to revive bim while paramedics were en route. Nicholas was pronounced dead at 1:16 a .m. at Huntington Intercommunity Hospital, Young reported. Young said it may be hard to determine from which Police shotgun the fatal ftre came -it police fire did kill the young man. He explained Oliver fired two (See YOUNG, Page AZ) More Dociors. Will Scorn Insurance A trend is growing among doctors in Orange County to practice wit'1out liability insurance coverage. Everett Bannister, executive director of the Orange County Medical Association, estimated today that from 20 to 25 percent of the 2,000 physicians in the county no longer carry malpractice coverage. Earlier in the week he suggested only aboutfivepercent· of doctors bad dropped their coverage. (Related story Pa,e AS). He said doctors instQCI were turning to .. insolvency planning." placing their aaset.s in family truats so the assets would not be vulnerable to malpractice suits. Dr. T.M. Shaver, chief of staff at Mission Community HospiW. said be did not know of a single surgeon still carrying malpractice insurance. He said doctors at Mission Community bad dllculSed the possibility of poolln.i their resources to assist any staff member who mleht be sued. In another lndJcatiGD fl. the trend to wort without malpractice coverage, Michael Stephens, admlniltrator ot Hoag Memorial Hoapltal, Newport . Beacb, noted the holpltal no lanler requires a It.aft member 'to provide proof of malpractice covera&e. Unlike their colleaiuee in Los Ancelet, phyalclans ln Orange County have not been on a a lowdown, but Dr. Charles Plows. president of the OCllA, this week sent a telep-am to Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. wamini that lt was becomln1 difficult for doctor• to keep exercislns reatrala1 ln U11it of recen~ statement.a by le1lalaton that the crlll.s mt1ht take several months toresoln. · Walker said. A Police bellcopter also wuoverb6ad. · · "It may never be known," Walker said, "if Nicholas was ever aware of the police officer in position behind the car as he ran out tbe door.'' · Walker said he received bis information from Nicholas' bride and the son of tbe mushroom farm's foreman who reported they witnessed the fatal shooting. (Police Chief Earle Robitaille * * * DlltrPIMt ...... VICTIM IN PLAYING DAYS Nick Distefano Principal Remembers DiSte/ano Nick DiStefano wore No. 60 for 'the red and gray-clad Mater Dei Monarchs as a guard be!ore he had to sit out bis 1971 senior year d~~-~<:>a football injury. "Nick was a very, very good kid," says Assistant Principal John Merino. ''He was really a good kid." Merino remembers the young man who was killed by a police shotgun blast in Huntington Beach early Wednesday as a typical kid. DiStefano enrolled at Orange Coast College in the fall of 1972 as· a general interest major and attended two semesters. According to a campus spokesman at OCC, Distefano ·took courses in business law and agriculture in preparation for entering the family mushroom farming business in the Talbert Valley of Huntington Beach. The shooting victim was married just four months ago in the new sanctuary of Sts. Simon and .Jude Church, one of Huntington Beach's oldest congregations. A few hours after giving Nick DiStef ano the last rites, Father Thomas Schroedei-broke the news of his death to the. congregation at early morning mass. Gasps of horror and disbelief filled tbe sanctuary and then . Father ·'6"c-tiroedei-led the DiStaf a nos' long-tlme coogregation in prayer. Ford Slowing .!nGal,lup -Popul,arity ll7ft&.&1Mda&ed ...... President Ford'• campaign officials say a poll showing a seven percent drop in Ford's popularity l1 a temporary setback reaulUn' from voter apathy. But a spokesman for Ronald Reagan indicated he thouiht the f i1ures mean tbe country la look.ins ror leadenhip. P'ord. wbo bu yet to make bis ttnt 1976 poUtical trip, went by motorcade WedJlesdl)' from the White House to his cam(>llip headquarters ab bloca •••Y· He met about 1)0 campalp workers and expressed continued confidence la his campalp manaier. Howard H. Callawa7. After•eo• .Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS said Wednesday that police officers beard gunshots wblch they believed were directed at them. . <Robitaille said Nicholas was ordered to stop several times but he tailed to do so. He said one ot the officers fired a warningsbot. <Robitaille said that "Wlder the r existing circumstances and !ear for their own safety andsatetyfor the other occupants, both officers ' <See MOTHER, Page A2) * * * • Brother. Wounded Victim? By ARmUR R. VINSEL OttlleDellylttMtlUff A minute search for hundreds of tiny lead frag~ents in the body of Huntington Beach mushroom farm heir Nicholas DiStefano continued today, to determine if he was possibly wounded by his enraged brother before police responding to a gun battle at the family home s hotgunned the youth fleeing the family home. Orange County Coroner's deputies said today they have no formal findings yet in the tragic case of a family feud that left Nicholas, 23, dead and bis brother Arthur, 35, facing murcher charges. No certain ruling will be released until various tests are completed, they said, adding that all these details will also only come from police or district attorney's investigators. They would include the number of times Nicholas was bit by either .22-caliber fire or shotgun pellets when slain at 18196 Golden West St., site of the family's Ocean View Mushroom Groers Inc., where he and his wile of four months lived. One official said, however, that he was definitely wounded several times as he fled the alleged murder attempt by his brother. District attorney's investigator Tomas A vdeef said eight members of the family who were present at the time of the tragedy were being reinterviewed today about the circumstances leading up to the Wednesday slaying. No specific motive bas been offered but it is known that Arthur recently returned to the family farm to work and a dispute reportedly developed over farm duties between the eldest son and Nicholas, next to youngest who was destined to take over the operation. Arthur R. DiStefano of 6232 • CSee PROBE, PageA2) HB Duplex Okayed South Coast Regional Zone commissioners have approved the construction by owner Robert Krebs of a two-story duplex with detached three-car garage at 616 19th St., Huntington Beach. Coast Weather Sunny Friday but with increasing fog and low clouds Friday morning. It will be a little cooler, with highs In the 60s, Lows tonight 38 to 48. . . INSIDE TODAY ' I I f j I , t\2 OAILYPILOT H/F Newport .Attorney Guilty Newport Beac h attorney Roland Stewart Barcun1e pleaded gutlty Wednesday to one 0( 20 felony counts filed after the Grand J ury probed his alleged mishandling of a $103,000 San Clemente estate. Orange County Superior Court Judge Kenneth Williams ordered Barcume. 39. of 901 Sandcastle Drive, Corona del Mar. to return to his courtroom Feb. 26 for sen- tencing. Barcume faces a possible state prison t erm of one to 14 years on the conviction. He admitted of- fering false or forged documents i n con n ec tion w ith hi s administration of the estate of the late Wilson Eugene Luther of San Clemente. Grand Jury action was taken ,gainst Barcume when he failed to satisfy Superior Court Judge Claude M . Owens on the validity of his actions in paying $52.900 to a creditor identified as "Harris Frank Robinson." The payment was made from the estate of Luther, who died J une 25. 1970, in a Capistrano Beach nurs ing home after nam- ing Barcume to supervise rus estate. Beneficiaries in Luther's will challenged the payments to ''Robinson" who reportedly failed to come forward to testify despite repeated attempts by the district attorney's office to contact him. Rarcume was additionally in - dicted on charges of grand theft, perjury. and preparing false evidence. Judge Williams will rule on the disposition of those al- legations when he sentences the Newport lawyer Feb. 26. Barcume was to have faced trial on all 20 counts Jan. 19. That trial date was cancelled by Judge Williams. , Youngsters' t f Arts Program ~ Set in Valley t , A "tiny tot" program of music, art. creative play and social • interaction will start Monday for 31'z to 5-year-olds in Fountain Valley. Sponso red b y the city Recreation Department, the <.'lasses will m eet Monday, Wednesday and Friday at Los Alamos Park. The fee for five . weeks is $18.50. Enrollment is limited to 20 children in each of three classes beginning at 9 a.m ., 10:30 a.m. o; 1:30 P.m . R egistration may b e completed at the community center from 8 a .m. to 5 p.m. weekdays and questions may be . referred to 962-2424. l ' Doctor Held For 'Threat' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A physician has been arrested by the FBI for allegedly telephoning' a threat to House Speaker Carl Albert, <D-Okla.), after his office refused to accept a collect caH. Dr. Robert Earl Anderson, 35, who resides in Daly City and practices medicine at San Francisco General Hospital, was arrested Wednesday without incident. He appeared before U.S. Magistrate R ichard S. Goldsmith, who set bail at $50,000 and ordered a ps ychiatric examination for the doctor. ORANGE COAST H /F DAILY PILOT r""' a.~ ccwut O.lly Pilot, wttll wn1<h ,, comb1Md t~ N•ws-Pr•ss. I• publ1\N>O by '"" Or-C.oaJI Put>Chll•"9 Compcltly. S.par•t• tclltlOM 1rt publlS~ Monday tllrou9h r rtd<ty tor Co•I-.. ~SI. NtwpOrl ll<-Mh. Hunlu'lltt>n 8••"1/Fountlll'I Val Irv. trvlno. S.Odlr ba< k Valley erd La9une 8~ach !>outn Coo•t A >•n91~ r"l-1 edition I\ OUt>il•htCI S.tU'"CS.Y• ...0 Sull CS.V' lll• pr1nup•I ou1>tl'111r>y e>l•nl Is at 330 \Ne$1 S.Y Strut, C.O>ta M"'"· C..lt10<nla'2•26. Robert N. Weed Preolaent •nd Pu~l- J ac k R. Curley "''• Pre,iff"lt ttf\d Goel"Mtf'•I M.tn.a~r Thomas Keevll Editor Thomas A. Murphlne Mil""Q'"9 Ed1t0< Char1es H. Loos Richard P. Nall Asr.lit<MI ~na9lnQ Edi~ Robert Barker Wot<><•-Covfl4y Edtto< HUfttllMlton 8eadt0ttk• nefJ &ea<ll 8ouwv•rll -lllf't.MICl••t\· P.O. Boa l'IO, t?~ OfflCel U.911'\8 n...c.11, Ilk Gi.llMv" \f~­(Mta Mn• JJO Wetl &r ~tro•t s..Ntfba<." Valley-U1DI U Pat R_, at Seft Dle9ll lltwway Thurectay. Januwy 8, 1918 Prime Rate Drops to 7 NEW YORK (UPI) - Chase Manhattan Bank. the nation's third largest. .today lowered it., prime interest rate to 7 percent from 7 '1'• percent in response to the easier monetary policy of the Federal Reserve Board. Chase's reduction in the key interest rate follow~ by a day a similar move by · Cleveland Trust Co., a major Ohio Bank. f',...P.,,eAJ YOUNG ••• « t.brH times. while Camp fired only once -and ea.ch sbot lK'Odueed a 1pray of rt pellets. But be aaid off icer1 alao recovered a .22 cllber revolver from the hom e, allegedly used by Nicholas' brother, Arthur. Young didn't rule out the chance that Artbur could have fired the fatal shot before Nicholas 1.a.n from the boUJe but he also said it is likely that aome of Oliver's shots hit lbe young man. Oliver has been in the news before. In August. he was credited with rescuing a 'fat.her and son from their flamlngbome when he spotted smoke curling f"rom a housing tract. while on patrol. .. It was expected that First National City Bank, the nation's second largest bank and a trendsetter on .. interest rates, also would reduce its prime by a · quarter of a point to 7 percent Friday. 3MenShot Whale Herds To Death in. 'Harassed' .. By Watchers SAN DIEGO (AP > -Scientists fear that the growing sport of whale watching may be hazardous to the well-being or the whales. E ac h winter h er d s of California gray whales migrate from cold Arctic waters to Scammon's Lagoon in Baja California. Hundreds of people in commercial and private boats rush offshore to view the spectacle at close range. But the National Marine Fisheries Service is making a whale count o(( San Diego, trying to determine if all the boats cruising back and forth around the whale herds are affecting the giant seagoing mammals. ,. And som~ experts are already c onvince d that the whale wat~hers are do_ing just that. .. The w hate s are b eing harassed. no question about it," said Dr. Raymond Gilmore of San Diego. 'Tm inclined to think we have to stop it." Carl Hu bbs. p rofessor emeritu s at th e Sc ripps Institution of Oceanography. agreed with Gilmore. "A lot of boat operators get excited and dash up at full speed to give their customers a thrilling closeup look,'' he said. "This disturbs the whales and there is some evidence that they are moving further offshore, off of their natural migration route, to try and avoid it.·' Others, like Dr. Theodore Wa lker. don 't believe the problem is that great, yet. "If they know what they are doing, there's no reason why everyone can't go out and look at the whales." But he cautioned would-be whale watchers not to sail too close to mating whale or come between a mother whale and her calf. Coast Panel Rejects Plans Sunset Beach residential construction projects estimated at $253,000 in value have been bounced back to would-b e builders by the South Coast Regional Zone Commission with a demand for revised plans. Commissioners meeting in Huntington Beach ordered the property owners to re-submit blueprints showing structures would comply with a state rule requiring 1.5 percent of buildable lot space to be s aved .. The property involved is being developed by Robert D. Long, at 16784 Bayview Drive on Sunset Beach's tiny inland slough island and Blaise Subbiondo. at \6791 and 16795 Fourth St., on the seaward side of Pacific Coast Highway. -·Paris Villa PARIS <AP> -Three men. including a member of a well-known singing group and the group ·s impresario, were shot to death in an isolated villa in suburban Bures-Syr·Yvette, 20 miles west of Paris, ear(y today, police reported. -The caretaker of the villa, a North African Arab, was the only person on the property to escape alive. Police said he fled and raised the alarm following the shooting. The dead were Jean-Louis Feneglio. 51, owner of the villa and member of a song trio known as Les Menes trels (The Minstrels); Patrick Chort, the trio's impresario; and Kamel Mazlout, a young Tunisian living in the house. The two other members of the trio , Maria Sandrini and Raymond R y c ker, arr ived grief-stricken at the house after learning of the killings. Ballet Set At FVCenter The Ba llet P acifica from Laguna Beach will present a one-day dance workshop Jan. 17 for 7 to 13-year·olds in Fountain Valley. The session will be from 10 a .m. to noon a t the cit y's Recreation Center, Brookhurst Street and Heil A venue. The fee is $5, and questions may be ref erred to 962-2424 or to the city Recreation Department, 10200Slater Ave. Traffic Light Request OK'd South Coast Regional Zone Commission members have speeded up the slowing down of motorist s on Pacific Coa st Highway in Sunset Beach by a pproving a city request to install a $44,000 traffic signal. The safety device will be at Sharkfin Lane and Pacific Coast Highway on the inland side of the highway which Huntington Beach annexed not long ago and adjacent to a 12.9-acre complex of new condominiums. City officials said the condominium builder will pay for the light. Gas Station Hit for $300 A pair of bandits escaped with $300 late Wednesday after holding up a young service station attendant. Raymond D. Maltby, 17, was discov«ed bound and gagged in the Exxon service station at Brookhurst Street and Garfield Avenue by a late evening customer. The youth told investigators he never got a clear look at the armed robbers who grabbed him from behind as be worked alone. . .. o.itr "''°' 51aff Piiot• PAUL PRESLEY WITH EISENHOWER'S GOLF CLUBS Nixon's Close Friend Displays His Mementos - Nixon Souvenirs Shared by Presley By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of t11e Dellr PllOt Staff "Dear Paul," begins the neatly typed letter. · ·'During the Christmas season, as we approach America's Bicentennial year, I want you to know how deeply grateful I am for your loyal s upport over the years, and particularly during the rather difficult period since-1 left office. "The most precious gift any person can give to another is friendship and for the privilege of yours I shall always be in your debt." The letter is signed Richard Nixon. It is dated Dec. 15, 1975. (Related photo, PageA3.) The Christmas note to Paul Presley, owner of the San Clemente Inn, from Nixon, is among hundreds of items that will go on permanent display at the inn starting Saturday. following a private preview showing Friday night. The friends hip between the two men spans only eight years, dating back to 1967 when Nixon was a guest at the Inn, but it appears to be a deep one. There are photographs of Nixon and Presley, formal invitations to the Presleys to FV Baseball League Now :Recruiting Boys from 6 to 20 years old may register beginning Saturday for the Fountain Valley Baseball League's spring and summer teams. Registration will be from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. this Saturday, Jan. 17 and Jan. 24 at Fullen.On Savings and Loan Association, Brookhurst Street and Talbert Avenue. Teams will be divided into six age groups: Pinto, 6 to 8 years old; Mustang, 9 and 10 years: Bronco, 11 and 12; Pony, 13 and 14 ; Colt, 15 and 16, and Tborobred, 17 through20. Registration fees at $15 to $30 depending on the age bracket. Questions may be referred to Bob Pirtle, 979-8712; Bill Tittle, 554-2738; Sue Devinna, 839-1743, or Mary Thompson, 968-694.1. state dinners and engraved cards congratulating the Presleys on their wedding anniversaries. •·It's a little bit of history, some things that happened at the Inn,'' sa.id Presley as televis1on cameras whirred softly in the background, logging film footage that will be s hown nationally this week . "I hope this can become the beginning for another permanent museum elsewhere in the city," Presley said. "There's a lot of interest." The permanent exhibition will be housed in what formerly was the coffee shop just inside the main entrance to the Inn. There will be no admission charge. About 90 percent of the memorabilia relates to the Nixon presidency -campaign buttons, Presidential cigarettes, ashtrays, pens, and official itineraries prepared for Presidential trips. There are mementos of other P resi dents, too. David Eisenhower, Nixon's son-in·law, donated Dwight Eisenhower's golf clubs. While rummaging through the golf bag as photographers s napped pictures Wednesday afternoon, Presley discovered a 1969 edition of the "Book of Golf." Richard Nixon's picture was on the cover . Presley said Nixon plans to donate his own golf clubs, complete with a white cover bag bearing the Presidential seal. to the mini-museum. "He couldn't bring them by today, because he was using them," Presley chuckled.· While Presley chatted with print and television reporters, Col. Jack Brennan, Nixon's chief aide since his resignation, placed items collected from Nixon's China trip in a special case just outside the exhibition area. Asked how his boss felt about the exhibition, Brennan said, "l don't know. I just told him about. itlast night." ' "It has bis complete blessing,'' said Presley. Thieves Hit I Woman's C·ar r ..... ri,,...t.i , PROBE ••• Chinook Ave., Weatminater · remained 1n Jail today In Ueu of $250.000 ball as police put together paper work to submU to the di1trict attorney aeeJdn.a complaints cbarfinl murder and assault to commit murder. The tllder brother was formerly a loogbaul truck driver. Crucial to the case are examination of lead that riddled Nicholas• body and whether it might include bits of .22-callber ammunition from a pistol believed wielded by Arthur. A OO·minute drama ensued after first officers arrived in response to telephone calls from DiStef ano women of a gun fight involving brothers. After Arthur DlStefano barricaded himself in a greenhouse, the situation reached crisis proportions as the police helicopter circled above. heavily flood.lighting the scene. By then, paramedics wte,,e · crouched over Nicholas' stilt . form sprawled in the compound, fighting to save his life. Sgt. Phil Oliver and Officer · Lee ·camp, cruising in the district, were the tlJ'St policemen on the scene. Sgt. Oliver arrived seconds ahead of Camp. Inves tigators say they jumped from their cars and received a sudd~n burst of gunfire either from the doorway or through the walls and took cover, each with a shotgun at the ready. Seconds later, Nicholas DiStefano fled from the doorway. "Initially, he was running s omewhat toward Officer Camp." Lt. George Renek said Wednesday as bits and pieces of the entire tragic story were compiled for evaluatioo. He said Nicholas then veered away but ignored several commands to halt and one warning shotgun blast was fired into the ground before officers opened fire. Officer Camp fired one blast. His partner fired a reported four to fives shots at the sprinting figure knocking him down at about 45 feet range_ Family members and police officers today were undergoing repeated interrogation following sessions on Wednesday before district attorney's investigator A vdeef and his men come to any solid conclusions. * * * Fr .. Page Al " MOTHER • • opened fire. Nicholas collasped almostimmediately.'') Walker, who said he was with the Long Beach distri ct attorney's office for 13 years, said he didn't want to point the finger of blame at anyone. "I've been around too many of these kinds of things to know that there's not enough evidence at this point to say it is anyone's fault." Walker said the day's tragic events began when an argument erupted between the dead man and his brother Arthur, 3.5, who is being held on $250,000 bail. •'They had been quarreling over the family busine&S9 apparently about various :responsibilities, .. Walker reported. "I think there was business jealousy involved and the feeling that one brother had invaded the other's province. "Drinking, unfortunately. also was involved and one just lost his bead, .. Walker said. He said that the older brother fired three bullets into the ceiling of the parents' home with bis .22 caliber revolver. Walker related that Nicholas beard the shots and became apprehensive and was "just trying to get the hell out of the house'' where he was to run into the police fusillade. Walker said that Nicholas DIStefano's wife of four months, Cindy, was looking out the window and saw her husband killed. The son of the foreman also allegedly saw the blast and said· "ObmyGod,tbey'vekilledhim." Walker said that six expended shotgun shells were found and tbat Nicholas suffered massive wounds both in the front and back of bis body. The elder Mrs. Distefano expreued bitterness also at the.· alleged treatment of her buaband, Victor, at the bands of police. Destination: Mt•rder Burg1ars who used a rock to smash their way into a locked car parked in the Sunset Beach area Wednesday night carried off a woman's purse containing • rings valued at nearly $9,000, Orange County Sheriff's officers said. She said they handcuffed him and kept him outside for more :than an hour and be couldn't lake his medicine. Santa Monie(!, l;irl Kilkd En Rowe to Laguna Her destination wu Laguna Beach but a 16-year-old Santa Monica glrl's '-bitchblldng trip ended 1n deatn. her semi-nude body found s prawled on a South-Central Los Angeles sldewalJc Wednesday. ' Detectives at tbe Lot5 An&eles Police Depa rtment's 17th Dlvl1ion lebored through the night on tbe case. An autopsy is scheduled today to determ1De the exact cause of Wendy Blanchard's death and ~ a.be had been sexuallY .u.ack.ed. . Tbe girl had left her Santa Monica home Tuesday. __ ~kinl her belongings and tell.In.I her mother that s he intended to I hitchhike to Laguna Beach. I Laguna Beach Det. Gene Brooks said the local department has not been brought into the investigation yet, but will cooperate with Los Angeles PD :tf requested. It is unknowp why the &lrl was oominl to Lagi1na . Mias Blanchard's body was found by three boys oo their way to 1cbool at 1 a. m . on a aldewalk ln front of a house on w. CoJ~n Avenue. Her coat with what appeared to be a blood·st.a.lned tur cOUar had · been fouod tout houri earllc ln a deserted Com pton-Caraon indu1trtal aectloa by two Compton patrolmen. The officers were on routine • patrol when they beard cries f Olt' help. They searched the area, and found n.o one but chanced upon the co•t and a beach bag containinl other clothl.ng and an address book with Miss Blanchard'• name and address. A search ~>' more than a scott. of aherlff's deputies· a nd Compton police officer&. continued throug h lhe neiahborhood of oil derricks and vacant Iota until the body was found In Los Angeles. The murder la the latest 1n a Mrles of rapes and attack$ m ade on female bitcbhiken. Deputies said the theft was reported by June Lorrain Myers, 60. of 120 Pearl Ave., Balboa Island. Mrs. Myers, owner ot Myers Electric Products Inc. of Montebello, told deputies the tbert occurred from her car parked at 16th Street and Pacific Coast Hi1bway. :Reno Firm Hit RENO, Nev. (UPI) -A bomb exploded at the rear of the Dean Wlttet brokerage ~ Wed· Deida)' nlJbt, but did relatl~ miaor damaee to the bulldhl1 located In a primarily nsktenuai area. She said be ls suffering from phlebitis and another illness she declined to identity. "They also used terrible J~aieon him • ., 1be1ald. Fotomat Burgled In Bontington HulJt.1.nft.on Beach Fotomat film proce11ln• attendant MarilJD Stuart called Police Wednaday after •be fOUDcl her Waner ,Avenue boaUa bl.tr11ect wttb an e1tlm1ted '"5 loai ln~ludlnl a •battered wtDduw. laveltll•ton 1ald Cbe trQB of praceued holiday ••••on IDIPlbota wattlq t. a.. plcbd up. bf doAm ol tamW. allo wen ato1en bytbe bur~. • .t I ,, Orange Coast EDITION ~l • VOL 69, NO. 8, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ' B)' DOUG F RITZSCHE ' I Of tN 0.11., ,.. ... IWf David Glen Robinson cut a broad, lavis h and expensive path t~ugh the Orange Coast ror-tbe pjtst six months while he ·d jspersed $565,000 -t he· largest fraudulent tax refund ila the history or the Internal Itevenue Service. • Today, Robinson is in federal custody a nd the IRS has .. tonfiscated $300,000 in slightly used goods and is scHbbllng after as much of lhe rest as It can recover. . This week, Robinson pleaded guilty to three counts of malling false s tateme nts on tax documents that shook the m<>MY · loose from the IRS. He agreed to a five.year prison term, three years prob ation and to belp authorities get as much of the OU ·- Killer 'Impassive' .Death Penalty County Verdict By TOM BARLEY OttMD•llr Pli.tS&aff Convicted killer Glen EJlis O'Conner, 19, drew t he death penalty today for his slaying of an Anaheim woman who was robbed of $2 before she was repeatedly shot in the head. The Orange County Superior. Court jury that had previously found the Riverside man guilty of murder and then ruled that he was sane at the time of the killing deliberated exactly five hours before returning today with their final verdict. O'Conner is the first man to be sentenced in Orange County under the new death penalty provision passed by public initiative. He was arrested last Jan. 21 after he shot and robbed Rol and Nesmith, 64, in the victim's Santa Ana Canyon home. It was determined after the arres t that O 'Conner was responsible for the slaying 14 days earlier or Margar et Baker Lissy, 56, who was shot and robbed of $2. money back as they can - penalties even his l)rosecutor agrees are "stiff.,. Mike Moore, a pilot who was an auoclate in Robinson's Irvine bualness, described his former boss as "absolutely brilliant.'' That assessment apparently is shared by Assistant U .S . Attorney Howar d Matz, who prosecuted the case. Matz, a.lthough. maintaining that UPITt ......... CHINA LEADER DIES Chou En-lal O'Conner, impassive t hroughout his trial and the r esulting penalty phase, showed no emotion as t he verdict was ·delivered in a hushed courtroom. 'Poliee Ruthless' Judge Byron K. McMillan delayed formal sentencing until h e could discuss the precedent-setting verdict with the jury in the jury room. It was learned that Judge McMillan will set the sentencing session and rule on a motion for a new trial later today. It was the first application of t he death penalty in Orange County since · Santa Ana carpenter Frederick Saterfield, now 56, drew that verdict in 1966 for the killing of his common law wife and her daughter. Saterfield's sentence was never carried out. He is today • held on San Quentin's prison death row. Mother 'Bitter' In Son's Death By ROBE RT BARKER Of tM O.lly ...... sc.tf A Huntington Beach mother poured out her anguish and bitterness Wednesday, the day when one of her sons died after being st ruck down by shotgun blasts from a police officer. A second son is in Huntington Beach J a i1 charged with· attempted murder and murder because he allegedly fired shots that started the chain or events in which his brother 's death resulted. "The Huntington Beach police are ruthless ,'' Mrs. Kay Distefano declared after the tragedy that snuffed out the Hfe or her son Nicholas, 23. "He never did anything to hurt anyone," Mrs. DiStefano said. \ "He was our rock -the one we leaned on most." Attorney Bill Walker was with the family moments after the shooting broke out shortly after midnight at the Ocean View Mus hroom Growers Inc., popu larly known as the mushroom farm. Mesa Woman Saved By Pair in Ocean Walker said that the young man was shot while running away from an officer who was crouched at the side of an automobile in front of the elder DiStefanos' residence. ''He was unarmed and dressed· in just his pants. He had no shirt on or s-uoes and his bands were raised." Walker asserted Nicholas was shot in the back with the shotgun pellets coming out through his stomach. He said be collapsed about 75 yards away from the By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of lht Dally Plltl St.tff An off.duty Anaheim police officer and a Marine Crom El Toro Marine Corps Air Station were credited by police today with saving the lire of a Costa Mesa woman who fell off the Newport Pier Wednesday evening. . Officers said Hector Robles, 32, and Guadalupe Montellano, 22, jumped into the 5.5-degree water and held up Christina Robinson, 25, for 30 minutes while firemen and harbor patrolmen worked to get her out of the water. Miss Robinson, 2182 Rural Lane, was taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital where she was treated for exposure and shock. She was then transferred to Orange County Medical Center where s h e w as treated and released. Robles, the policeman, and Montellano, the Marine, were botf\ treated for cuts and bruises at Hoag and released. Police said Miss Robinson was climbing along a loading ramp (See RESCUE;, P age AZ) ·officer who fired the shots. Walker reported that while young DiStefano was running away from one officer he was running tow aid another. "They had him surrounded,·• Walker sajd, A police helicopter also was overhead. · "It may never be known," Walker said, "if Nicholas was ever aware of the police officer in position behind the car as be ran out the door.•' Walker said he received his (See MOTHEJl, P age AZ> changes have been made so Robinson's fiscal teat cannot be duplicated, r e fuses to give details on how it w u carried out. Orange Coast dealers of luxury merchandise recall Robinson with a mixture of mirth and chagrin. One secretary, on learning the subject or the call, just snickered for a moment, then said, "I'll get the manager.'' Radio Confirms Reports TOKYO CAP > -A Japanese news agency today reported the death of Chinese Prime Minister Chou En-lai, long hospitalized with a heart ailment. 'Death, however, was attributed to cancer. The U.S. State Department in Washington confir med Chou's death. The Japanese news agenry, which monitors Communist broadcasts in Asia, said the announcement was made by the official Hsinhua Chinese news agency. Chou was either 77 or 78. The exact date of his birth was not known. The Tokyo monitoring was made by Radio Press which said the death was announced by Hsinhua in a Chinese language broadcast. An Englisb·language broadcast did not mention Chou's death. Chou did not see President Ford on his visit to China in December. He had talked in the hospital with foreign leaders vis· iting the country over the last year and a half. During Chou's illness, his duties had been taken over by Teng Hsiao·ping, who also has been mentioned as a possible successor to the aging and ailing Chairman Mao Tse·tung. Chou became premier in 1949 when the Communists took over the Chinese mainland at the end of a long and bloody civil war, but was overshadowed by Mao, China's popular h e ro and philosopher and Chou's elder. Chou doubled as premier and (See CHOU, PageA2) DOW CLOSES ABOVE 900 NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices dosed at their highest level'in 26 months today in active trading on the New York Stock Ex· change, despite some late profit taking. The Dow Jones industrial avera,:?e. off two points at the out· set, added 9 .29 points to 007.98. At one point it was ahead 12. Including a 7.87-point advance Wednes day, the blue.chip average had gained 46.28 points in the previous four sessions. Advanres led declines by about a nine·to·five margin. (Tables, B7). Prices were higher in active trading on the American Stock Exchange. ••H e was a flamboyant person,•· said Bill Gremp, vice president of Mission Beechcraft. Gremp ~old Robinson a $1SO,OOO Baron airplane. Robin.son paid with a checfc that was confirmed with th~ bank before it was deposited. But, as Gremp pointed out, it's •\hard to miss a guy who has a car for every day of the week. Not just any cars either. The UPIT....,_.t Dms' T11r11s 4J Singer Elvis Presley marks his 41st birthday today, and 1 his home town of Memphis is marking the occasion with various celebrations, including a large crowd out side his Graceland mansion home. Ford Slowing In· Gallup Popularity J\y The Associated Press President Ford's campaign officials say a poll showing a seven percent drop in Ford's popularity is a temporary ·setback resulting from voter apathy. But a spokesman for Ronald Reagan indicated he thought the figures mean the country is looking for leadership. Fo1·0, who has yet to make his first 1976 political trip, went by motorcade Wednesday from the White House to his campaign headquarters si" blocks away. He met about 130 campaign workers and expressed continued confidence in his campaign manager, Howard H. Callaway. But a s hor t time later, a campaign spokesman said the Ford election Committee had been told the results or a new Gallup poll showing a decline in Ford's popularity to 39 percent, only two points above his all-time low Gallup r ating. As Ford was making his first visit to bis own cam paign headquarters, Reagan, his rival for the Republican presidential nomination, ended three days or campaigning in New Hampshire and flew to North Carolina. 'What Chicago Hotel?' HELPED SAVE WOMAN Marfne Montellano hlfr ................ JUMP~D INTO WATBR Anaheim Otftcer Roble• . Computer F oulup Puta Marriagea on Rocb CHICAGO CAP)-Hundreds or surprised spo uses found themselves with some explaining to do after a mailing foulup by• computer firm sent them letters thinking them for staying recently at a downtown hotel. A letter intended for regular guest.a of the Oxford House, a Chicago hotel, was sent in error to about 4,000 city and suburban residents because the wron1 , computer tape waa used to produce the letters. It wasn't long before the switchboard •t the Oxford House lip up with about• pbflle calls from hu1band1 an4 whes susp lclous of estra~marttal activity. "Ono woman .,...._ DaMe wu f on the letter had three children and was pregnant with a fourth,'' said Jerome Belanger, hotel vice president and general manager. "She said her husband was mad and doubted the child was his.'• The letter, announcing renovations al the hotel, included each recipient's name in the greeting and in one paragraph. _ 'lbe message, which arrived with Wednesday's mail, began, uee1n1 privileged ln having you u our recent guest ... " Belanger said one womao called in tears and' begged, ''Ptease explain to my husband tbat I was not 1 guest there." "I was amaied al some or the Hlls." Belanger sald. OM woman who had begun divorce proceedings was upset to fmd the letter was a mistake. "She said she bad hoped to use the letter against her husband," . Belanger said. All who received the Oxford House letter will be mailed retraction notices by the ·computer firm, Compuletter Inc. Gary Ro ss, co mpany president, uid a random tape ror sample '!"&ilings to areas southwest of the Loop was lnadvertently f'ed through the computers. Bel•n,u 11id t he whole incident uat may go to show ''husbands and wives don"t trust each other much th edays." N TEN CENTS .. inventory included two' Lamborghinis, three Jaguars, a Ferrari and a Mercedes. Some of the cars were sold to Robinson by Frank Marino of Jim Marino Imports in Newport Bearh, who recalls Robinson as a "screwball." Marino sold him a new• Lamborghini worth $22,800, a ' used one valued at $19,500 and a <See REFUND, Page AZ> s Capizzi Rapped In Trial ~ A surprised Assistant District Attorney Michael Capizzi was called to the witness stand today by Congressman Andrew Hinshaw's lawyers and promptly accused or being "paranoid" in his proserution of the former county assessor. · Defense attorney Marshall Morgan used the term to describe the trial prosecutor as he repeatedly urged Capizzi to admit that he allowed several bribery c h arges to be aired publicly at a time when they still were secret and under discussion by the grand jury. Capizzi just as repeatedly de· nied the suggestion during a heated exrhange in the Orange County Superior Court trial of Hinshaw. Capizzi pointed out to Morgan that a number of affidavits waved before the jury by the de· fense lawyer this morning became public because they were delivered to county supervisors by a lawyer who represented one of Hinshaw's political rivals. The nine affidavits discussed by Morgan and Capizzi contain allegations that Hrnshaw, while county assessor, accepted bribes or stereo equipment m ade avai l a bl e by the Tandy Corporation. It is additionally alleged in rharges contained in a grand jury indictment that Hinshaw ac- cepted a $1,000 campaign con- tribution from Tandy and solicit- ed a bribe from a lawyer representing Beckman Instru.- ments or Fullerton in an assess· ment appeals hearing. Capizzi was preceded on the witness stand by public relations exerutive Frederick J . "Chip" Cleary, who challenged earlier testimony that Hinshaw kept a list of campaign donors before him when he reviewed assess- ment statistics. Cleary, who is now Hinshaw's 40th District administrator, told Capizzi that he kept Hinsbaw's campaign data in his Santa Ana office for use in connection with fund raising dinners that Cleary organized while Hinshaw was as- sessor. Cleary's testimony directly ~ntradirted that of convicted (See CAPIZZI, Page A2) Co ast Weathe r Sunny Friday but with increasing fog and low clouds Friday morning. ll will be a little cooler. with highs in the 60s. Lows tonight 38 to 48. I NSIDE TODA V Newport Beach building deportment of#ciail 30y they have o 'three-prong .o.ltack' plan to prevent .onot~ Im li~ the one that took rix lives in the cit11 recently. See story 86. l a dex ~ Z DA.IL Y PILOT N , Fro• P-.,e AJ CHOU .•. fdrelfn mlnlster for rn.any yean. 1.tle aopblsticated yet tOlllb Chou rashloned 8 for~lgn Policy that gradually s hifted away from the viet Union toward the United tes. )n 1972, Richard M. Nixon, then J(esident. and Chou issued the hbtoric Shanghai Communique Wecf ging to promote lriendshJp between their two nations and afming eventually to the ~ablisbment of full diplomatic relations. · Chou launched "Ping Pong diplomacy" in 19'11 by inviting Ameri can players to tour Cl'lina. With Henry A. Kissinger, then :'tixon 's adviser, Chou secretly arranged the Nixon visit. Chou, a moderate. survived ~ao·s overhaul or Communist party machinery an the 1966-69 Cultural Revolution, and his power grew steadily. Chou earned out the purge of former Defense Minister Lm Piao in 1972, branding him a traitor and reactionary. then moved up to the No. 2 spot in the world's most populous nation. A few months later, Chou's diplomacy won a seat for Peking 10 the United N11tions, forcing out the Nationali!'~ Chinese govern· nlent based on the island of Taiwan and led by Chou's bitter f<X'. Chiang Kai·Sht>k who died last year In the fall of 1973, Chou found himself ridinl! t he crest or another cultural revolution, this one politically aimed at Lin Piao and the ancient sage Confucius. Some Westerners s aw it as a veiled attack on Chou himself. Six months later. Chou's power seemed fading. In May of 1974 he ~aid . "I am not very well because I am old now." Chou was born in 1898 in the village of Huai·an, just south of Shanghai. The son of aristocratic parents. he studied in France. P!ngland, Germany and Japa n before returning to China. He was on the 8,000·mile Long March that took Mao's forces in- to the mountains of Yunnan in 1934·35. •After the 1949 revolution, his was the s killful hand that solved organizational problems whiic ¥ao guided party philosophy. i' Fro• Pase AJ RESCUE ..• .. ~derneath the pier, apparently searching for starfish when she tumbled into the chiUy waters at about6p.m. Robles. who was fishing with b,is family on the pier, heard her streams and jumped into the water after her. Montellano. who was also fishing with his family, called the fire department and then jumped Into the water to help Robles who police said was having trouble holding the struggling woman. The three people were battered against the barnacle-covered pier pilings by waves. authorities said. Firemen arrived and tried to lower a line from the top of the pier and hoist the woman over the side. but they were unable to do so because she had lapsed into lDlconscaousness. The firemen called for assistance from the Harbor Patrol which sent out a boat piloted by Officer Ken Doesburg. · When the boat arrived at the pier. fire Capt. Ray Toggweiler also jumped into the water to help hoist the unconscious woman into the boat. The s mall craft was driven into the shallow water next to the pier, and the fireman and the victim were taken ashore through the surf. Robles and Montellano were hauled over the side of the pier by life lines manned by firemen. One fireman . Bill Trinkl, suffered a back injury in the rescue of the two men. He was also treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital and released. ORANGE COAST N TIW Of-Co.1t D•ily Pl l01 '"'" -•<II " (()fT'lf)1rwd '"" N~w\ p,,. \ I\ °"°'' .1'itO Oy o"" 0•-C0." P\lbll-"•"O ,...._. "'"""''" f'O•llOM trt pUllll\l>cd MONl~Y INOuQI> f "d~V to,. (O'\\.t .Yf'W, Nf'WP0'1 fl-M.h, ·~t.lflt•f'QfO" B••<tt1J.-Ouftt••n V•llt·• ff-win_., ~•Odh f)df>. VtlHl'Y end ltoun. !l•t<h South c;.o..,1 A "nrito• t"QMINI tdltoon 11 pUOl•\hm Wturo.on ..,d ~U'I ..... Th• pt•ntu>•I ""' '""'ng PIMll " ... lXl ~·· Bey SUMI. C.o11t ,.. ..... C.ellfo• .... 47•16 Robert N. Weed PrHldfnt •nd r Ul>lllh r Jack R. Curley 'V·c~ Pf .. \id•nt •hCI Gt~nf'••• M.Af\.11,.' Thomas t<eevll l<MOt Thomas A . M urphlne .MAM91"t (OllOt O\lt'ftS H. LOOS Richard P. Nall oll\•1'161\1 •"''"' ~··*' \ -------------- Thul'9day, Janu!!Y !, 1m Delly PllOt Statl PllOI• ,,...P.,,eAJ -,. MOTHER • • Jnformatlon from Nicholas' brlda and the SOA of lb• muabroom farm'• foreman who repe>rted they wit.netted lbe fatal sbootiq. (Police Cblef Earlo Robitaille said Wednesday that police omcen beard iunabots which they believed were directed at them. , <Robitaille sald Nicbolu was ordered to .atop several timea but, he f alled to do so. He said one of the officers fired a warntngshot. CRobltaUle said that• 'under the existing circumstances and fear for their own safety and sa!ety for the other occupants, both officers opened fire. Nicholas collasped almost immediately.") • Watker, who said be was with the Long Beach district attorney's office for 13 years, said he didn't want to point the finger of blame at anyone. "I've been around too many of these kinds of things to know that there's not enough evidence at this point to say it is anyone's fault." · Walker said the day's tragic events began when an argument erupted between the dead man and his brother Arthur, 35, who is being held on $250,000 bail. ·'They had been quarreling over the family business, apparently about various responsibilities," Walker reported. "I think there was business jealousy involved and the feeling that one brother had invaded the other's province. PAUL PRESLEY WITH EISENHOWER'S GOLF CLUBS Nixon's Close Friend Displays His Mementos "Drinking, unfortunately, also was involveQ and one just lost his head," Walker said. He said that the older brother fir-ed three bullets into the ceiling or the parents· home with his .22 caliber revolver. Nixon Souvenirs Shared by Presley Walker related that Nicholas heard the shots and became apprehensive and was "just trying to get the hell out or the . house" where he was to run into· the police fusillade. Walker said that Nicholas DiStefano's wife or four months, Cindy, was looking out the window and saw her husband killed. The son or the foreman also allegedly saw the blast and said "Oh my God, they'vekilledhim." By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of I.II• De It r PllOC SWff "Dear Paul." begins the neatly typed Jetter. "During the Christmas season, as we approach America's Bicentennial year, I want you to know how deeply grateful I am for your loyal support over the years. and particularly during the rather difficult period since I left office. "The most precious gift any person can give to another is friendship and ror the privilege of yours I shall always be in your debt." The letter is signed Richard Nixon. It is dated Dec. 15, 1975. <Related photo. Page A3.) The Christmas note to Paul Presley. owner of the San Clemente Inn, from Nixon, is among hundreds of items that will go on permanent display at the inn starting Saturday, following a private preview showing Friday night. The friendship between the two men spans only eight years. dating back to 1967 when Nixon was a guest at the Inn. but it appears to be a deep one. There are photographs of Nixon and Presley. formal invitations to the Presleys to state dinners and engraved cards congratulating the Presleys on their wedding annjversaries. • 'lt 's a little bit or history, some things that happened at the Inn,'' said Presley as television cameras whirred softly in the background, logging film footage that wm be shown nationally thls week. "I hope this can become the beginning for another permanent museum elsewhere in the city," Presley said. "There's a lot of interest." The permanent exhibition will be housed in what formerly was the coffee shop just inside the main entrance to the Inn. There will be no admission charge. About 90 percent of the memorabilia relates to the Nixon presidency -campaign buttons, Presidential cigarettes, ashtrays, pens, and ofCicial itineraries prepared for Presidential trips. There are mementos of other Presidents, too. David Eisenhower. Nixon's son·in·law. Radio Stolen From Fireman In Newport While Newport Beach firemen were trying to save a Costa Mesa woman from the waters around the Newport p ier, someone helped themselves to Battalion Chief Phil Hayden's walkie talkie. According to police, Hayden set the $300 band· radlo down on the pier while working on the r escue of Chrtatlna Robinson, 25. of 2182 Rural Lane. After the woman was broueht ashore, Hayden said, be was unable to find tbe 1et and assumed it had fa.lien into the water, A short time later firemen heard a juvtnllc voice comln& over their radio network. PoUce today are looklne fOC' a )'OUDI thief • donated Dwig ht Eisenhower's golf clubs. While rummaging through the golf bag as photographers s napped pictures Wednesday afternoon. Presley discovered a 1969 edition of the "Book of Golf." Ricliard Nixon's picture was on the cover. Presley said Nixon plans to donate his own golf clubs, complete with a white cover bag bearing the Presidential seal, to the mini·museum. "He couldn't bring them by today, because he was using them," Presley chuckled. While Presley chatted with print and television reporters, Col. Jack Brennan. Nixon's chief aide since his resignation . placed items collected from Nixon's China trip in a special case just outside the exhibition area. Asked how his boss felt about t he exhibition, Brennan said, "l don't know. I just told him about it last niizht. · · "It has his complete blessing," said Presley. Man Confirms Raid on Cuba WASHINGTON (U PI> -A former ambas s ador has confirmed that in 1963 he navigated his personal yacht to the Cuban coast with a raiding party bent on spiriting two Russian missile technicians off the Communist island. The diplomat, William Pawle y, former U .S . Ambassador to Brazil and Peru. said in Miami the raid was attempted because Sen. James Eastland CD ·Mi ss .). had reported there might be Russian missilemen remaining in Cuba although the Russians by then supposedly had removed the weapons. Suspect Freed NEW YORK CAP> -A former mental patient and demolition expert questioned by Police in the Dec. 29 bombing of La Guardia· Airport that killed 11 was escort· ed home today without any charg~s against him, police said. Walker said that six expended shotgun shells were found and that Nicholas suffered. massive· wounds both in the front and back of his body. The elder Mrs. DiStefano expressed bitterness also at thE. alleged treatment of her husband, Victor, at the hands of police. Smoke Alarm Prevents Fire In Newport Newport Beach firemen have credited a smoke detection device with alerting a Corona del Mar family of five to a fire that was just beginning to burn. Fire Department spokesman Art Morton said the William Thornton family of 1207 Portside Way was awakened at 1:48 a.m. today by the alarm, and escaped unharmed. He said a cardboard box stored next to the home's forced air furnace in the garage ignited and the smoke was being circulated through the house in the heating ducts. Morton said the detector's alarm was activated by the s moke which caused an estimat ed S250 in damage to contents of the house. Thieves Hit Woman's Car Burglars who used a rock to smash their way into a locked car parked ii) the Sunset Beach area Wednesday night carried off a woman's purse containing n ngs valued at nearly $9,000, Orange County• Sheriff's officers sa1d. Deputies said the theft was reported by June Lorrain Myers, 60, or 120 Pearl Ave .. Balboa Island. Mrs. Myers, owner of Myers Electric Products Inc. of Montebello, told deputies the tbert occurred from her car parked at 16th Street and Pacific Coast Highway. Not Bis Day 'Mutakes' Vndo Texan Transient Texan John H. Young's first mlstah Wednesday night, Orange County S heriff's offlcera commented today, was to take several drinks too many before he left a Santa Ana bar and got into hls car. YOUNG'S SECOND MISTAKE, they explained, was to drive the vehicle in a weavina pattern tbrouih downtown lraf(lc and park it in a lot ~ween •th and 5th 1treell. That area comprises the parklna lot for the county jail, I.My told Youn1. And they helped tbe S2·year-old Texan to negotiate the few steps between his car and the JaJl where he was booked for d run.ken dri vln1. BUT YOUNO, OFFICERS said. made a tt\lrd mistake. And that, they explained, was to be behind the wheel of a car that was listed as stolen earlier in thP day by Los Anaelea Co\,lnty aut.boriU • ' Newpo~t Attorney " Guilty Newport Beach attorney Roland Stewart Barcuine pleaded pilty Wednesday to one o( 20 felony COdDU filed after the Grand Jury probed hls alleged mlsbandUng of a $103,000 San Clemente estate. Orange County Superior Court Judge Kenneth Williams ordered Barcume, 39, of ,901 Sandcastle Drive, Corona del Mar, to return to his courtroom Feb. 26 for sen· tencing. Barcume faces a possible state prison term o( one to 14 years on the conviction. He admitted of- fering false or forged documents i n connection with h is administration or the estate of the late Wilson Eugene Luther or San Clemente. Grand Jury action was taken against .Barcume when be failed. to satisfy Superipr Court Judge Claude M. Owens on the validity of his actions in paying $52,000 to a creditor identified as "Harris Frank Robinson." The payment was made from the estate of Luther, who died June 25, 1970, in a Capistrano Bea('h nursing home rafter nam· ing Barcume to supervise his estate. Beneficiaries in Luther's will challenged the payments to ''Robinson" who repartedly tailed to come forward to testify ·despite repeated attempts by the district attorney's office to contact him. Barcume was additionally in· dieted on charges or grand theft. perjury. and pre paring false evidence. Judge Williams will rule on the disposition or those al· legations when he sentences the Newport lawyer Feb. 26. Barcume was to have faced trial on all 20 counts Jan. 19. That trial date was cancelled by Judge Williams. CAPIZZI ••• brlber Geol'ie Upton wboworked for Hins(law aa ao audJtor- appralser at the Ume ol the al· leged off en.ses tor which Hinshaw Is being ~ed. And Cleary pointed out tbal Upton was responsible for tund raiainl activities in 1972 when the Tandy Corporation paid $1,00 in- to the Hlnlbaw political fund. Upton bu admitted that he picked up several stereo sett from Tandy 's Radio Shack warehouse in Garden Grove and that sets were passed on to Hinshaw and his son and former assessor Jack Vallerga, among otben. Morgan said today that his next and possibly fmal witness for the def eose will be Hinshaw himself. RTDPanel Decides Line LOS ANGELES (AP) Southern Calif~nia Rapid Transit District rectors have voted to concent ate on the proposed· Los Angeles.Long Beach rapid transit starter line rather than study a corridor running from the ha(bor to the San Fernando Valley through the downtown area. The board Wednesday also voted to set a limit of $820 million on the cost of the stjlrter line to keep it "within realistic available revenues." I Budget a Scream? l WASHINGTON <UPI) President Ford's plans to keep spending for fiscal year 1977 below $395 billion but his budget might still bring "screams of protest" from many, according to his ajdes. f'ro• Page A·J $565,000 REFUND • • • Mercedes worth $18.000 . Robinson made the purchases with "large down payments and he financed the rest,·· said Marino. Robinson had a suite of four offices in the Century 21 building, one room filled with law books he made available to attorneys in the area. According to Moore, Robinson had an office staff that at one time totaled 12. ··I really don't know what they did," said Moore. The Irvine businesses went under the names of Robinson, J .D.; The Robinson Group, Inc.; and Robinson Air Taxi. The air · taxi service never came to be, said Moore, but Robinson and the office workers went on almost daily flights in the Baron and a smaller twin·seater that replaced it when money got short. The flights were "all over," said Moore, but mainly in the western United States. When Robinson began his spending spree about six months ago, be initially passed. himself of! as an attorney, according to Gremp, who recalls Robinson as something of a braggart. But when the businesses were set up, Moore reca lls, they centered on non-legal aspects of divorce and bankruptcy and, understandably, tax consulting. Robinson had the background for it. He worked for the IRS. during 1969 and 1970 as a tax collector. He resigned and went to live in Australia, but was extradited back to the U.S. after he was indicted for embezzling · funds he had collected for the IRS. He pleaded guilty in 1973 and was senteiaced to a year in jail and five years probation in addition to repaying S4.~. After serving the jail term, he was released on probation. Last spring, Robinson filed for tax refunds for the years 1971 through 1974 totaling $652,779. He used the name John D. Robinson and a phony maiUng address accord.inc to the U.S. attorney prosecuting the case. He claimed he was working for a firm In Houston, Tex., during that period and that too firm bad withheld $652, 779 for taxes. He also claJmed to have sustained Sl.4 million ln losses as a beneficiary of an estate. The IRS responded in June with checks totaling ~.340.31. That's when Robimoo be1an to live it up. "l wondered about him all the time," said Marino. "He wasn't real. When I firat met him, he whipped Ulil flnanclal statement on me tbat aald he wu worth $76 mllllon. He had W ·2'1 that said he made a million dollars last year. "It wu all pbOny, but I su•s the bank bou1bt It . That's where be aot the loan"'•• 11ld Mari.no. At one point, Marino went to Robinson's home tn Puadena-a houu Robinson boucbt for $84,000 cash-to ~ollect an 111,000 · down pt,yment on a car. · \ The house was being extensively and expensively remod eled, said Marino. He added that while he was in the home, Robinson was working out an agreement with an art dealer for several thousand dollars wortlrof paintings. ''There were paintings ever ywhere already," Marino said. ''But 1 heard the guy say it was okay if Robinson took 00 days to pay . That was in December, so I guess be got stuck." Marino fears that by the time it is all over. he may get stuck too. Gremp described Robinson :is "a good braggart,'' prone to talk about his holdings in New Zealand and elsewhere. "But he was generally sort or a pleasant person, not at all the kind of guy you'd expect to be involved in something like this," Grempsaid. . But about the end or November. said Gremp, Robinson began running out or money. The Baron was sold and replaced with the smaller Piper. He wasn't hiring employes anymore. "But he was really a flamboyant person during the time he was buying things," Grempsaid. Things hit rock bottom Dec. 19, Moore recalled. ~e and Robinson had been out flying and Moore left his boss off near his home. When Moore taxied to a halt at Orange County Airport, he was met by IRS a gents. Jn the end, the agents drove Moore home. In addition to the plane, they confiscated Robinson's Lamborghini that Moore bad been driving. The air taxi company never really came to be, said Moore. "It was something we talked about, but never really got going." As he rememben his former boss, "He was· an interesting guy, very up and down. Either he was very, very nice or very mad. I was really sorry to see him locked up. He was a nice guy." "He was probably the smartest man I ever met. I've met some s mart men, but he was absolutely brilliant, "said Moore, 26. "He had an incredible ability to -JUJt on the 1pur of the moment-come up witb solutions to things that really worked, really made sense.'' said Moore. Robinson's acquaintances recalled him as about ftve feet, six inches tall, thin, with very li1bt blonde balr and "Coke- bottle 1ta11et ". "The 1la11es T1eren•t real thick, but they were the kind that mqnUy his eye.,'' G..._mp aaid. ''I remember a time be drove ~here ln a 12-cyllnder Jatuar. Now, a man don lhet -6 )'OU have to notice Mm. He bad the money. He alwaya paid for ever~thlng. Why would you suspect where he got it?" Hid Oremp. ) J Thursday'• Closing Prices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Year'• High-Lowe Appear Every Satu1'day ~= vo1tec • cu1t11 • -w. .... w. .... .-.... !t:._Y:l f.':t~~~ ~ pt~ '1. Qoo. J.,l l>*! 0-~ PHlldl) 0. 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January e. t978 N CAIL V PILOT 87 Egg Disput~ They Shell Outfor·Ads By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Wonied about heart dJsease. Americans have cut way back on their consumption ot eggs -and this rejection b&b prompted the nation's ~gg producers to a.ate up tor an ad· vertislo1 kl tty to c bange your mind. So you ma.y expect to be bombarded soon with pro· paganda on behalf ol egg.,. Bµt 1o launchin1 Uu.s "eat eggs" campaign lhe pro- ducers have a serious problem. They are going to have a hard tlme confronting the very issue that bas caused the aales decline: the alleged link between heart disease and foods hlgb bl cholesterol conteot. EGGS ARE RJGll ln cholesterol and a series of medical ~tud les dating back many years has as· Money Tree ~lated coronary heart disease with high cholesterol levels. The evidenc-e is by no means conclusive but it is strong enough for many health organizations and doctors to recommend that people reduce their intake or dairy foods . 'Consumers have certainly taken that advice when it comes to eggs. Jn 1945, the average American was eating 400 eggs a year, better than one each day. In 1975, con- sumption fell to an all·time low of 275 eggs per person. Thal amounts to a decline of about one-third. Egg producers were polled r ecently on whether they would be willing to assess themselves to raise monies for a promotional drive to coWtteract the anti·egg forces. Three out off our said "yes." THE P LAN NOW is to have each producer put up 5 cents for every case brought to market. A case has 30 dozen eggs, which means that, based on current production, the egg industry will be able to assemble from $8 to $10 million for its propaganda drive. The referendum of egg farmers was conducted by the Agriculture Department. But even as the producers were voting to assess themselves for this advertising, another governm ent agency, the Federal Trade Commission <FTC>. was warning the industry not to attempt to refute the medical findings on heart disease and cholesterol. Judge Ernest G. Barnes, a n FTC administrative Jaw judge, ruled on a complaint fil~ by the FTC last year, af- firming that the National Commission on Egg Nutrition (NCEN) had made "false and unsubstantiated claims in promoting the industry's views concerning the role of eggs in heart disease.'' NCEN, an arm of the egg industry, had run ads promot- ing the goodness of eggs and denying that there was a health hazard in eating them. Labeling these ads "misleading and deceptive," Judge Barnes said "there exists a substantial body of competent and reliable scientific evidence that eat- ing eggs increases the ris k or heart attacks," and he asked that the industry be enjoined from promoting its product in this manner. IF THIS DECISION by Judge Barnes is to stand (it still has to be approved by the FlC), then the egg people will re· ally have their work cut out for them. How do you persuade consumers that eggs are good for them when you can't reply to the allegations that they are harmful? Watch the legend on your egg cartons to see how the in· dustry handles this one. More Energy Usage Seen by Year 2000 WASHINGTON (UPI> -Americans, demanding more and more elcctricily to run households and businesses. will consume an average or 2.5 percent more energy per person each year until the end of the 20th Century, according to a government forecast. By the year 2000. the nation will be using more than twice as much energy annually as it does now, the Bureau or Mining predicted in ~report released this week. The United States will need the equivalent of 163,430 trillion British Thermal Units in all forms of heat, light and power to meet its needs by the tum of the century, the repart said. NEARl .. Y HALF or that -coming m ostly from coal. ~troleum, natural gas and nuclear power -will be used in 2000· A.D. to generate elrclricity. Market lndexe• l'I Uftlled "'"' lftl«Ntltnel NYSE lndu S0.08 up 0 33 .ASE Index U .S2 up 0 « Oow·JOMS Ind 907.'8 UO t .29 S & P SOO Stocks 94,SI up 0.63 The bureau said its reparl was based on assumptions that som·e surface mining ot coal will be permitted, of{. shore oil )easing accelerat- ed, energy research con · tinued, natural gas price con- trols relaxed anct domestic crude oil prices deregulated. Nuclear power con- sumption will rise from 1.6 percent or total U.S. energy usect to 28.2 percent, the re· port s aid. But even with anticipated commercial in- trodurt ion o( the hi,!!hly effi- cient "breeder" reactor after 1985, nuelear power can ~ "C\nly a partial answer" to future needs. New l'ork 15 Jtlo•t Artlrr NEW YORI< !UPI) -Tht' 1S ~I tc.tlw sl1Kh lrtdtd on 11'11! 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MIJtt1t*t'lin ....,,,_ • •• •• U) •'70 0tc11nes us m Ul!(htngotd , • JI I 1'4 Tol•I • • • "' 1037 C Pl'tllmlnery covntl ,.,, PI "'~1 (It¥ (!IQ ---WW- Wool pt 2.20 •• 110 34\l't+' 'NOrld Alrw 1 7 ·~ , ~IQly,.0.10 31 61Vt-IVI VtVly Coro .. •I 2~-" -)(VI-X•~•• CD I 1~ )4llt U~ • 1 >«,. l11Cor1110 t U I\\ • ,_ VMft llldvt 11 11t 1 + 1't YftOSIDr 60 • 11 ,_. '° .. s tl~ . '° 1• ... .JO l la 1)111 • f"I C«D U3 t' -'' ~"""" I tt }}'It-"' ri;,., Ind •• 10 n 9'11 + 1• I . Thurlday, January 8, 1079 "The meeting just broke up. It's going to be a long ·Bicentennial!" LM.Bogd Watering Your Booze Liquor drinkers. check your bottles .. Dis- tillers of more than 100 hard booze brands m re- cent months have silently dropped the proof of their tonics from 86 to ~. simply by watering the grog. No price changes, no public an- nouncements. They're just squirting in more distilled water to cut the kick and pick up the pennies. Political campaigners who shake hands too much also can comedown with that ailment known as tennis elbow. . Even to this day in Italy, as many as 1,000 people on any given sunny afternoon wend their way to the grave or fascist dictator Benito Mussolini, correspondents report. BACHELOR PRESIDENT Q. "Have we ever had a bachelor presi- dent?" A. Only one. James Buchanan. He gave up the notion of matrimony at the age or 28 after the girl hew as going to marry killed herself. He did not forever live alone thereafter, however. You know that song called "Listen to the Mock- ingbird"? It was dedicated to one Harriett Lane, a violet-eyed blonde re· nowned as the beauty of the day. She was Buchanan's niece. She moved in with him and saw to it that the salt and pepper were in the right shakers, so on. So you always thought that Superman's real name was Clark Kent, did you? Wrong! His real name was Kai-El. His adoptive parents J ohn and Martha Kent re- named the little tyke. ELEPHANT HAIR It's not entirely safe to pull the hair out of the end or an elephant's tail. Such a beast has been known to get testy about it. So the hazard in acquiring such probably has so~ething t~ do with why circus performers think nothmg makes a better good luck talis man than a tuft or elephant hair. Address mail to L .M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa,92626. Teachers Fired For 'Box' Tactic • BUTTE. Mont. (AP > -Two teachers who_con- :nned a retarded child in a s!Dall "behav1oual modi!icatiOh" box will not be rehired and the school J principal will be demoted, school officials say. The fate or the three educators in the "boy-in- box"' furor was an- nounced by School Dis- t rict Supt. Forres t Wilson in a statement is- sued by the Board of Trustees. The boy was ' not identified. THE OCTOBE R dis- closure that two teachers · at the Emerson School locked a 12-year-old re- tarded student in a wooden 41"2-by 4 1~-by 3-foot box generated a He Was The Last Holdout SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The Assembly Health Committee h as present- ed' a baby's pacifier and a commendatory re- -s ol u ti o n to A s· sembly m an Gordon · Dotty <R-Hanf ord), for becomina the last com--·m1ttee member to give :... up smoking. ,, Then, chairman Barry Keene <D-Eureka), or-· ~ dfttd ub trays removed Wednesday from the htarinc room where the ll-member committee meets. ~ "'It's embarrassing to me that I have to. be the last one on this commit· tee to 'full." Dulf y said. promising to return the pacifier and resoluUon tr .. be rnumed the habll. , . public outcry. The box had no interior il- lumination, almost no ventilation and just two small silver-dollar-sized holes for observation. The teachers claimed use of the device was re- asonable to control violent behavior. Relatives of the youngster said the treat· ment was cru e l and caused emotional pro· blems for the boy. THE BOARD ruled the two teachers will be al- lowed to serve through the school year but their contracts will not be re- newed for next year. The principal will be demot- ed to a regular teaching post, effective next Sep. tember. Principal Don Her- rington left his omce after being advised of the board's decision. TEACHERS GAYLE Slagg, 24 , and Sallie Ulsher, 29, said they would consult an at- torney retained by the Butte local or t he Montana Federation of Teachers. The teachers charged last month that they had become victims or a witchbunt a nd com· plained or receiving threatening telephone calls and letters. They said that the box was used aa last resort for violent, uncontrollable tantrums. • Spred Satlr:t Wall Paint • GIMWea ro, .-lity lett1 ,. .... • Dries .Uckly te a velftt ''' fWih • T 0011 cl"" "II with water Glidden Spred House Paint • WMther rtsistoftt acrylic latex fiAiih kHp its ~eauty • Quitk clrylnt on txltrier wto4 anti maSHry Rtg. 876 11.79 Gal. :19 6?.~ Spred Semi-Gloss Latex Enamel ...... , ....... -......... -..Ulty • 14"1 fer ne ilt .. ~ weer ,,..., • hsy te ne ·-<ftln ~HatlWy 9 Inch Paint Roller Covers ..................... ., ..... .... .,.. "'8en •TMteMkWJ"CtlltVH9"1' ... '"''•· l~i; .9!~ 76' Tri-Color Garden Hose • Itel, wliltt & W.. hese . 76 ft ..... IS • • ~•ictftntcl S...rllu •Y'-S/I" , ..... ,., , 776 Delta 'Delex' Kitchen Faucet • Dtdi t..cet wtlli r ctlltw ....... ....., .... ....... .c ....................... ,,,. 1476 . -_........_.__ Yigoro 6-in-1 Dichondra Food • Fttcls, wttcls & ... ...,.,., IMtcts • c .. ..., ..... ,.,. sell; ..... ,,.. '976 I 2s1'.1a1 Pruning Shears . ,,,.. ...,,,, ...... ,., "'""" •114 ,,._., YNr ..... & '~ ''"' ..... • 11.d.s •r• <Wfttf fer .. sy f"-'--•"4 '"-r ,,., .... ,,. IS76 ... ......_,,, 176 Toilet Repair Flu1h Lever • s-... ..... -.... ,. ........ ,. • a.-........ _ .... ..., .. """' .... ,..,... f422K 176 _ I • Orang~ £oast 'EDITIO~ ·-+ ~ ... VOL. 69, tfO. 8, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES Today's Closlag N.Y.Stoeks c TEN CENTS A ished Mona Grieves for Slain Sotl. I · B.Y ROBERT BARKER ou11eo.u,,.. ... ..., J A Huntington Beach mother poured out her anguish and bitterness Wednesday. the day {Wben one of her sons died after lbeinl struck down by sbotgwi blasu from a pollce officer. 1 A second son is in Huntington . Beach Jail charged with. ·attempted murder and murder 1 because he allegedly fired shots that started the chain of events in whicll his brother 's death resmted. "The Huntington Beach Police ar~ ruthless," Mrs. Kay Distefano declared after the tragedy that snutf ed out the We of her son Nicholas, 23'. "He never did anything to hurt anyone," Mrs. DiStef ano said . "He was our rock -the one we leaned on most." Attorney Bill Walker was with the family moments after the shooting broke out shortly alter midnight at the-Ocean View Mushroom Growers Inc., popul~rly known as the mushroom farm. walker said that the young man was shot wbUe running away from an officer who was crouched at the side of an automobile in front of the elder DiStefanos• residence. "He was unarmed and dressed in just ~ pants: ~e bad no shirt OU '· Death Term !Given L By TOM BARLEY Of tlle O.lly ...... SUff Convicted killer Glen Ellis O'Conner, 19, drew the death ;penalty today for his slaying of an Anaheim woman who was 'robbed of $2 before she was repeatedly shot in the bead. • The Orange County Superior ~ourt jury that had previously found the Riverside man guilty of 111urder and then ruled that be }vas sane at the time of the killing <!eliberated exactly five hours before returning today Wfth their f'mal verdict. . o ·conner, impassive throughout bis trial and the •utttng penalty phase, showed ~ emotion as the verdict was • ·delivered in a bushed courtroom. Judge Byron K. McMillan delayed formal sentencing until ti e c o u 1 d d i s c u s s t h e· precedent-s etting verdict with tht Jury in the jury room. . It was learned that Judge McMillan will set the sentencing session and rule on a motion for a new trial later today. I It was the first application of the death. penalty in Orange ¢o u n ty s i n.ce Santa Ana ~rpenter Frederick Saterfield, now ss. drew that verdict in 1966 for the killing of his common law wife and her daughter. Saterfield's sentence was never carried out. Re is today held on San Quentin's prison death row. O'Conner is the first man to be sentenced in Orange County under the new death penaity provision passed by public initiative. He· was arrested last Jan. 21 after be shot and robbed Roland Nesmith, 64, in the victim's Santa Ana Canyon home. It was determined after the arrest that 0 'Conner was resPonsible for the slaying 14 days earlier of Margaret Baker Li ssy, 56, who was shot and robbed of $2. Parrot Problems SAN DIEGO (AP> -A San Diego man has been indicted for allegedly smuggling 139 parrots from Mexico into the United States . Co ast Weather Sunny Friday but with increasing fog and low clouds Friday morning. It will be a little cooler, with highs in t he 60s . Lows tonight 38 to 48. INSIDE TODA 'Y Ntt»p!'rt Btach building dipartmnt Of/1Cfall IOI/ tMJI haw .4 'thre.·pr'1ng .attack' pba to pr.vent .anotMr-ttre ffu tu~ that took m lit~• In IM cftll rtcntlM. Sn rt~ 88. HELPED SAVE WOMAN Marine Montellano Diiiy " ... SUIH·....._ J UMPED INTO WATER Anaheim Officer Robles Mesa Woman Saved By Pair in Ocean By J OA."JNE REYNOLDS Of tlle Diiiy Pll« SUH An off-duty Anaheim police officer and a Marine from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station 'lhree CM Rec LeaOOrs Eyed The Costa Mesa Department of Leisure Services needs three more men recreation leaders. Youth activities supervisor Pat Sanchez said that the minimum age is 17, the boars are from 3: 30 to S p.m. Mond ay through Friday, and the starting pay range is from $2.43 to $2.68 an hour. Recreation l eaders run activities at playgrounds. Sanchez acknowledged that the search for men recreation leaders sounds like sexual discrimination, but pointed out that the city presently has 12 women leaders and only nine men. were credited by Police today with saving the life of a Costa Mesa woman who fell off the Newport Pier Wednesday evening. Officers said Hector Robles, 32, and Guadalupe Montellano, 22, jumped into the 55-degree water and held up Christina Robinson, 25, for 30 minutes while firemen and harbor patrolmen worked to get her out of the water. · Miss Robinson, 2182 Rural Lan e, was take n to Hoag Memorial Hospital where she was treated for exposure and shock. She was then transferred to Orange County Medical Center where she was t reated and released. Robles, the policeman, and Montellano, the Marine, were both treated for cuts and bruises at Hoag and r eleased. Police said Miss Robinson was climbing along a loading ramp underneath the pier, apparently searching for s tarfish when she tumbled into the chilly waters at about6p.m . (See RESCUE, Page A2> Marriages Periled By Computer Goof CHICAGO CAP) -Hundredsof s urprised spouses found themselves with some explaining to do after a mailing foulup by a computer firm sent them letters thanking them for staying recently at a downtown hotel. A letter Intended for regular · guests of the Oxford House, a Chicago hotel, was sent in error to about 4,000 city and suburban residents because the wrong computer tape was used to produce the letters. It wasn't long before the switchboard at the Oxford House Up up wlth about ~phone calls from husbands and wives suspicious of extra-marital activity. "One woman whose name was on the letter bad thr~ children and waa pregnant with a fourth," said Jerome Belanger, hotel vice praident and general manager. ''She said her husband was mad and doubted the child wu his.•• T be letter, 'announcing renovations at the hotel, included each recipient's name in the 11"eetln1 and In one parasrapb. · -The message, which arrived with We dnesday's mail,. began, "Being privileged in having you as our recent guest ... " Belanger said one woman called in tears and begged, "Please explain to my husband that I was not a guest there." "I was amazed at some of the calls," Belanger said. One woman who had begun divorce proceedings was upset to find the letter was a mistake. "She said the had hoped to use the letter against her husband," Belanger said. All who received the Oxford Hous~ letter will be mailed retractio n notiees by the computer firm, Compuletter Inc. Gary Ross , company president, said a random tape for sample mallinis to areas southwest of the Loop was inadvertently fed through the computen. • Belan1er said the whole incident Just may go to tbow "husbands and wive• dca1 trust each other much th .. daya." "-• h I •ilo\u• • on or Sl¥>eS and his hands were raised." Walker asserted Nicholas was shot in the back with the shotgun pellets coming out through his stomach. He said he collapsed about 7S yards away from the ·officer who fired the shots. Walker reported that while young DiStefano was running away from one officer he was running toward another. "They had him surrounded," Walker said. A police helicopter . also was overhead. · "It may never be known," Walker said. ••if Nicholas was ever aware of the police officer in position behind the car as be ran out the door.'• · Walker said he received his information from Nicholas' bride and the son of the mushroom farm's foreman who rePorted they witnessed the fatal shooting. <Police Chief Earle Robitaille said Wednesday that polic~ .officers heard gunshots whico they believed were directed rf them. . ~ . (Robitaille said Nicholas w ordered to stop several times b ·he failed to do so. He said one of the officers fired a warning shot. 1 (Robitaille said that "under th~ existing circumstances and real for their own safety and safety for the other occupants, both officers <See MOTHER, Page A2) uccu s C·ancer Claims Premier TOKYO <AP> -A Japanese news agency today reported the death of Chinese Prime Minister Chou En-lai, long hospitalized with a heart ailment. Death, however, was a ttributed to cancer. The U.S. State Department in Washington confirmed Chou's death. The Japanese news agency, which monitors Communist broadcasts in Asia, said the announcement was made by the official Hsinhua Chinese news agency. Chou was either 77 or 78. The exact date of his birth was not known. The Tokyo monitoring was made by Radio Press which said the death was aanouaced by Hsinhua in a Chinese language broadcast. An English-language broadcast did not mention Chou's death. Chou did not see President Ford ion his visit to China in December. He had talked in the hospital with foreign leaders vis- iting the country over the last year and a half. During Chou's illness, his duties had been taken over by Teng Hsiao-ping, who also has been mentioned as a Possible successor to the aging and ailing Chairman Mao Tse-tung. Chou became premier in 1949 when the Communists took over the Chinese mainland at the end of a long and bloody civil war, . but was overshadowed by Mao, China's popular hero and philosopher and Chou's elder. Chou doubled as premier and foreign minister for many years. The sophisticated yet tough Chou fashioned a foreign Policy that gradually shifted away from the Soviet Union toward the United States. In 2gi2, Richard M. Nixon, then president, and Chou ~sued the historic Shanghai Communique pledging to promote friendship between their two nations and aiming eventually to the establishment of full diplomatic relations. Chou launched "Ping Pong <SeeCHOU. PageA2) UPI,........ Slnpr Elvis Presley marks bis 41st birthday today, and 1 bis home town of Memphis is marking the occasion with various celebrations, includln1 a large crowd outside hls Graceland mansion home. ' '\ .... ··"'" Mesa Bank Bandit ·sank camera photos released by the FBI today "caught" the robber of the First National Bank of Orange County with the cash in his . hand a~ he left following the robbery Jan. 2. The band~t. who s imulated a weapon, got away with $831 ~rom t he _Costa Mesa b3!1k at 1650 Adams St. He is des cnbed as five feet, ten with reddish brown hair and weighing about 150 pounds. Anyone with information may contact Costa Mesa police or the FBI at 542·8825. · j Binshaw's Lawyers Quiz DA Assistant A surprised Assistant District Attorney Michael Capizzi was called to the witness stand today by Con gress man Andrew Hin.shaw's lawyers and promptly accused of being "paranoid" in bis prosecution of the former county assessor. Defense attorney Marshall Morgan used the term to describe the trial prosecutor as he repeatedly u'rged Capizzi to admit that he aJlowed several bribery charges to be aired publicly at a time when they still were secret and under discussion tribution from Tandy and so)j cit· ed a bribe from a la wyer representing Beckman Instru· ments of Fu Berton in an assess· ment appeals hearing. Capizzi was preceded on the witness stand by public relation~ executive Frederick J. "Chip' Cleary, who challenged earlier testimony that Hinshaw kept s list of campaign donors beforE' him when he reviewed assess ment statistics. Cleary, who is now Hinshaw·~: (See CAPIZZI, PHe A2) ' bythegrandjury. D()IF/ CLOS Capizzi just as repeatedly de· w 'ES nied the suggestion during a I heated exchange in the Orange A.IJ()Jt'E 90() I C?unty Superior Court trial of r Hinsb~w: . NEW YORK <U PI> -Pri ces~ Cap1n1 pomted out to ~org_an closed at their highest level in 26f that a n umber;-.of affidavits months today in active trading waved before the llJ!Y by the _de· on the New York Stock Ex- fense lawye~ this morning change despite some late pron~ became p~bhc because they taking.' were _delivered to county The Dow Jones industrial supervisors by a lawyer w~o • averaie. off two points at the out, represent.ed one of Him haw s set, added 9.29 points to 007 .98. A~ political nvals. . one Point it was ahead 12. I The nine affidavt~ ~scuss~. IncludJng a 7.87 -polnt advan~ by Morgan and Capam cont~ Wednesday , the btue -c h 1 allegations that Hinshaw, ~~le average had gained 46.28 pom county assessor. accepted bribes in the previous four sessions. of s~ereo equipment made Advances led declines by about• av a 1 lab le b Y the Ta nd Y a ·nine-to-five margin. (Tables " Corporation. 87). 1 It ls additionally alleged tn Prices were higher in active. charJes contained ln a grand trading on the American Stock jury indictment that Hinshaw ac· Exchange _cepted a $1 ,000 campaten con· ____ . ------- ' " ' . . ' • .. • OAIL\' PtlOT B1 DOUG FRITl.SCHE Of ..... .., ......... .Da\•id Glen Robinson cul a broad. lavish and expensiv(' path t-.ro\llb the Oronae Coast for tht> past six month' while he ·dts pers cd $565 .ooo the· h1tgest fra udulent tax refund 1" the history of the Internal ~venue Service. Today. Robinson u in federal t C<f\stod y a nd th e I RS has confllrated $300,000 In sllpt)y w.c1 loods a1ld ia scrabbUnt after u m~b otlbe n!llt u It can recover. This week, Robt.Non piaded guilty to three counts of makllla fals e sta teme nts on las document! that s hook the money loo.e from the IRS. He qreed to a five-year prison term, three years probation and to help authorities get as much or the JDOA•J tiaek as the)' ean - peaaJtl.. •••D bis ~utor ..,,... .... '8tttf.•• Klte~wtiO•uan lmOClat• In ., lnt.ne bmina1, dncrtbed bll former hon u "absolut.l)l brilliant." Tb.at uusamHt appa.rentl7 ls 1hared b y AHltt ant tf.S. Attorney Howard 1ilat1 wbo itrotecuted t he ease. Mats, altbou1h. m alntaining that -cban1es have been m~de ao Jlohi--'• ~al fut ca.mat be dufUeated, refuses to 1lve dltlllll cm ..OW lt was can1ed out. <>nille C.O.t dealers ol lU%ury mercbaDdJH recall Roblo100 wlt.b a mixture or mirth and c~. One aeeretary. ou 1eamlna tbe eubj«t of the call, just snickered tor a moment1 then eal~ "I'll aet , the manager. ' , t. , ' ' • Portrait of a · Rapist I I \ Mesa" Police Vse Composite in Area Search ~ y DOUG Lt\$ FRJTZSCHE OI uw 0•11'1' l"llee si.tt Costa Mesa police believe a 'l"estaurant wor k.:-r kidn apped and raped a woman at kn1fepoinl in a vacant ap::ir tment at the> Vista del Lago t•om pl~x. A composrte drawing of lh(' man has been prepared and Police have been C':Jrrymg it to t b e better c l a ss coa s t a l r e staurants in a n effort t o identify the 17 to 20-yt.'<Jr old 3-'Sailant In the vacant apartment wherC' t~e victim grabbed the kn ife from the man and stabbed him as he raped her . poli ce found a jacket and T-shirt he left in h1!> flight. The long -sleeved whtte Jackel is the type worn by restaurant empl oy e s. a cco rding t o Detective Sam Cordeiro Analysis of stains on the jacket indicated they were vegetable oil rather than mechanical oil. Cordeiro said. A restaurant cook qµestion~d by police sajd the oil '4'.as of a type used in better restaurants. Cordeiro said. : '"The vegetable oil stains are definitely the kind that would come from w o rking in a 1$1tchen." Cordeiro said. . t: Fro m P a ge A J r ~ : RESCUE •. China Eyes Sky BUDAPEST. Hun,garv (AP > - China has 1nd1cal<'d 1t might he· thinking of launching a manned space vetY\.cle . the Hungarian news agency MT! rl'Ported from Peking today. - ORANGE COAST T,,. Or•~ CH" C>•t1¥ J:.iuot w1U\ wrT'h\P\ ., <O""OMwd lhf'! Nf•• Pt.,, '' rol>tt\hflod by ltw Of~ Col\t P"t>lt\f\1tM.i Con "'·W\¥ 5.r'Of'r~tr "''"°"' ert 1>vb1t\~• d N·ot O·•'f ltuOUQI\ f"ndot¥ t6'" C,o\t• M~\lt NPwPt ti fWM.t'I, ._.unlln<;t.on 8«.C.ft FoUft1••n Vftlt If H-w1Af. ~+"'ddltf\-'' l, VAtlfllY •nd t..AQul'\• A1-.vPl \n\;t~ Cri•\t A \•PMll• f4"QK>MI f'd•hOf' I\ VUOll\f\MJ ~"'"'·'f ) #\ft \un ~~'¥\ T,,~ C)f1n<1P•f OU0"'"'•N°J ('IMt '' ~I \#. ~lt\1 Rc1y Str\f~t (O\t• Mt.''" (•lt'v"""' lf7ft4' Robert N. Weed •·r-\1d~nl And P...t>l•W r Thomas Keevll f rhtor Tl-iomas A . Murph1ne M41 ... 0 11\Q [ dllOf Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall A\\1,t~t ~t\tt1n9 rd1ton C.Oita Mesa Office 1'4•hno ~=,~~:• ~·J ~·,~ *' .,, 1• Offlc." LA.-.. ~,. 1196 "'"""'ff• \trHt """"llO'"" e.e c" 1117\ ~ ... h -""'" McMlt-• v•1 .. y Utot ~-Aff llo.r! ., !Ml\ 0 .... ,:,_., c...irrtQ'>t ,.,, ()u ... o• c .. I ~""''"° """ llM't NO ,.,., \fOOf't •JIW\f.-4'~\ .... Ot-1•• It •'"' 0' H••tttt•1¥tfl'I(\ fiH!tftrt M•Y .,... r•OfOCh•t •O ••tftOWI \Pfl •• , ,.,,,.,,,l~f' et 'Qif'ft19M O..nf' t \iliie•"'4 flf '' po•••on t•••d •t Co'\t• ._.,., .. (.Atit&ffllt• ~VO'\C'ffpU&f"ll Or t '*"••' '-1 1\ fnD~ .. "' .,, .... ,, .. ""'~"''"'• """"·"• ...... -...... \.))\,.._,.,,., Co rdeiro s aid he ·hoped someone would recognize tbe man in the composite drawing and phone police. Me anwhile. efforts lo check hospitals to determine whether the man s oug ht medical attention for his knife wounds have drawn a blank, Cordeiro said. Cordeiro said the man apparently was cut on the hand or arm. Officers followed a trail of blood from the apartment where the rape took place. At two s po t s. the fl eeing rapis t apparently sat doWn, leaving a .. significant quantity" of blood, said Cordeiro. The 25-year-old victim was kidnapped Crom the parking lot of an apartment complex al 425 Merrimac Way at 12:52 a .m. Tuesday. The man forced her to drive her car to the construction site at 1555 Mesa Verde Drive East, where he forced her into an unfinished apartment, police said. As the man raped her in the dark apartment, the victirti grabbed his knife and began stab- bing at him, Cordeiro said. The victim ·s screams and the sounds of the struggle alerted a Mesan Held Mte r Crash Injuring Two A Costa Mesa man was arrest- ed and two women hospitalized in the wake of a four-car collision near Harbor Boulevard and Victoria Street in Costa Mesa Tuesday. Police arrest ed one of the dri vers. Donald W. Hoyt, 20, of 2049 Federal A venue, on sus- picion of driving while under the influence of alcohol. He is Cree on bajl today. A second driver, Rhonda S. Kirscher, 26, and her passenger, Helen Lape, 66 , both of 1250 Adams St., Costa Mesa, were re- ported in "satisfactory" con- dition today at Hoag Memorial Hospital. The other two drivers. Winston Romine. 21 . of 1003 Oak St., Costa Mesa, and Randy L . Scott, 17, of 2853. Drake A venue. Costa Mesa. escaped serious injury. police said. From Page AJ CHOU ... diplomacy·· m 1971 by inviting American players t o tour China. With Henry A. Kissinger, then ~bcon's adviser, Chou secretly arranged the Nixon visit. Chou. a moderate, survived Mao's overhaul of Communist party machiner)' in the 1966-69 Cult ural Revolution, and his power grew s teadily. Chou carried out the purge of former Defense Minister Lin Piao in 1972, branding him a traitor and reactionary, then moved up to the No. 2 spot in the world's most populous nation. A few months later Chou's diplomacy won a seat f~r Peking m the United Nat ions, forcing out the Nationalist Chinese govern· ment based on the island of Taiwan and led by Chou 's bitter foe, Chiang Kai-shek who died last year. In the fall of 1973, Chou found himself riding the crest of another cultural revolution, this one politically aimed at Lin Piao and the ancient sage Confucius. Some Westerners saw it as a veiled attack on Chou himself. Six months later, Chou's power seemed fading. In May of 1974 he said: "I am not vuy well because 1 am old now " Chou was born ln 1898 ln the village of Huai·an, Just south of Shanghai. The son of aristocratic parent$, be studied In ftance, £b.lland, Germany and Japan before returnlni to China. He was on the 8,000..mUe LonJ March that took Mao's fOl"C'eS ln· to tfte moun1a\n$ of Yunnan in 1934-~. Al\er the 1949 revolution, his was the itkillful hand that solved orpnizatlonal problems while Mao guided party philosophy. security guard at the complex. When the guard went to the apart- ment, the assailant fled on foot. The victim was treated by a doctor for what Cordeiro described as "slight" cuts she received in the struggle. The assailant was described as l 7 to 20 years old and about five feet, six inches tall with light brown to blond natural curly haii' of collar length. Because of the darkness of the apartment in which the struggle took place, police are unable to say where the man was cut or how badly. However, Cordeiro said, a piece of clothing the man apparently used to stem the flow of blood became saturated as he fled the scene. SOUGHT Costa Mesa police believe a man whose face resembles this one may be the rapist they are seeking. T his composite photo was constructed by police from description supplied by victim. Nixon Souvenirs Shared by Presley By FRE DERICK SCHOEMEHL Oftlle 0.11'1' ..... SUH "Dear Paul," begins the neatly typed letter. "During the Christmas season, as we approach America's Bicentennial year, I want you to know how deeply grateful I am for your loyal support over the years, and particularly during the r ather difficult period since I left office. "The most precious gift any person can give to another is friendship and for the privilege or yours I shall always be in your debt.'' The letter is signed Richard Nixon. It is dated Dec. 15, 1975. (Related photo, PageA3.) The Christmas note to Paul Presley, owner of the San Clemente Inn, from Nixon, is among hundreds of items that will go on permanent display at the inn starting Saturday, following a pri vale preview showing Friday night. The friendship between the two men spans only eight years, dating back to 1967 when Nixon was a guest at the Inn, but it appears to be a deep one. There are photographs of Nixon and Presley, formal invitations to the Presleys to state dinners and engraved car~ congratulating the Presleys on their wedding anniversaries. "It's a little bit or history, some things that b41ppened at the Inn," said Pres ley as television cameras whirred softly in the background, logging mm footage that will be shown nationally this week. E'ro• Page AJ CAPIZZI .•• 40th District administrator, told Capizzi that he kept Hinshaw's campaign data in his Santa Ana office for use in connection with fund raising dinners that Cleary organized while Hinshaw was as- sessor . Cleary's testimony directly contradicted that or convicted briber George Upton who worked for H inshaw aa ao auditor· appralaet at the time of the al· Jeeed orrensea for which Hinshaw ii belng tried. And Cteary pointed out that Upton was responsible for fund i:aislng activities in 1972 when the Tandy Corporation paid $1,00 in· to the Hinshaw political fund. Upton has admitted that he picked up several stereo sets Cro m Tandy's Radio Shack warehouse In Garden Grove and that sets were pasaed on to Hlmbaw and hls son and form• as1euor J ack V allel'fl. amon1 otbera. KID Panel DeciJa Line LOS ANGELES CAP) Southern Callfornla Rapid' Transit District dindcn have voted to concentrate on the proposed Los An1elu-Lon g Beach r.pid transit starter llne r•ther than 1hady a corridor · runnlns from tbe barber to the . San Feman'do V •Uey t.brouO the downtown area. "I hope this can become the beginning for another permanent museum el_:;ewhere in the city," Presley said. "There's a lot of interest." The permanent exhibition will be housed in what formerl,Y was the coffee shop just inside the main entrance to the Inn. There will be no admission charge. Abou t 90 percent of the memorabilia relates to the Nixon presidency -campaign buttons. Presid e nti a l cigarettes. ashtrays. pens, a nd official itineraries prepar ed for Presidential trips. There are mementos of other Pre sid e nt s , too. Da vid Eisenhower. Nixon's son-in-law . donated Dwight Eisenhower's golf clubs. While rummaging through the golf bag as photographers snapped pictures Wednesday afternoon, Presley discovered a 1969 edition of the "Book of Golf." Richard Nixon's picture was on the cover. Presley said Nixon plans to donate his own golf clubs, C?mplete with a white cover bag bearing the Presidential seal, to the mini·museum. "He couldn't bring them by today. because he was using them," Presley chuckled. While Presley· chatted with print and television reporters, Col. Jack Brennan, Nixon's chief ~de since his resignation, placed items collected from Nixon's China trip in a special case just outside the exhibition area. Asked how his boss felt about the exhibition, Brennan sajd, "I don't know. I just told him about it last nieht." "It has his complete blessing.·· said Presley. Mesa Coed Wins Honor Susan Wright, 14, a freshman at Costa Mesa High School has been selected to play with the All Southern California Honor Band. Membership in the band is open to s eventh, eighth, and ninth grade students from throughout Southern California. The band will perform March 6 and 7 at Magic MOWltain and Santa Monica City College. Miss Wright, a clarinetist, was the only Costa Mesa High School 1tudent to be selected for the honor band. TONIOJrr OCC DRAMA -"The American Dnam •' by Edward Albee, OCC Drama Lab Theater, Jan. 7·8.~p.m. Free. FmOAY .IAN.I OCC DRAMA -"Olive r Halley & Friends," OCC Audltor1um, Jan. 9-10, I p.m. rr. FRIDAY NIGHT FILM SEIUES -"Drive, Ue Said," OCC Forum, 7:15p.m. Adm.SJ . "He waa a flamboyant said. "But I hear<llbeauYS&Y It ~. •• eaJd BW Oremp, vice wu okay if Roblmon took ~ president of Minion Be«hcraft. days to pay. That was In Gremp sold Robin.son a $150,000 December, so I iuess be aot Baron airplane. Rob(naon paid 1tuck." wt th a check tbat was C'Ollfirmed Marino !~an that by the Ume it witb tbe bank before it was is all over, he may (&et stuck too. . deooslted. Gremp described Robh:Lsoo as But, u Gremp pointed out, lt ·s .. a aood braaaart,' • prone to talk bard to mlu a auy wbo bas a car about bts hold ings In New !or evf!ZY d.ay of the week. Not Zealand ud tlaewbere. just any cars either. The "Buthewngenerallysortora i n v en t o r y i n c l u d e d t w o pleasant person, not at all th~ Lamborghinis, three Jaguars, a kind of guy you'd · expect to be Ferrari and a Mercedes. lnvolv~ in something Ukettm," Some of the cars were sold to Oremp aaid. Robinson by Franlc Marino or B u t a b o u t t he e n d o f JimMarlnolmportsinNewport November , said Gremp, Beach, who recalls Robinson as a Robinson began running out of "screwball." money. The Baron was sold and Marino sold him a new replaced wlth the smaller Piper. Lamborgbln1 worth $22,800, a He wasn't hiring employes used one valued at $19.500 and a anymore. Me rcedes wort h S18.000. ''But h e was really a Robinson made the purchases flamboyant person during the with "large down payments and time he was buying things " he financed the rest," said Gremp said . 1 ' Marino. Thi!'is hit rock bottom Dec. 19, Robinson had a suite or four Moore recalled. H e and offices in the Century 21 building. Robinson had been out flying and one room filled with law books he Moore left his boss off near his made available to attorneys in home. When Moore taxied to a the area. halt at Orange County Airport, he According to Moore, Robinson was met by IRS agents. had an office staff that at one In the ehd, the age.nts drove time totaled 12. Moore home. In addition to the "I reallydon'tknowwhatlhey plane, they confiscated did," said Moore. Robinson's Lamborghini that The Irvine businesses went Moore had been driving. under the names of Robinson, • The air taxi company never · J .D.; The Robinson Group, Inc.; really came to be. said Moore . and Robinson Air Taxi. The air "It was something we talked tll?'i service never came to be. about. but never really got said Moore, but Robinson and the going.·· office workers went on almost As he remembers his former daily flights in the Baron and a boss, "He was an. interesting s ma 11 e r t w i n -seater t b a t guy, very up and down. Either he replaced it when money got was very, very nice or very mad. short. 1 was really sorry to see him The flights were "all over," locked up. He was a nice guy." said Moore, but mainly in the "He was probably the smartest western United States. man I ever met. l 've met some When Robinson began bis s mart men, but h e w as spending spree about six months absolutely brllJiant,"said Moore, ago, he initially passed himself 26. off as an attorney, according to "He had al\ incredible ability Gremp, who recalls Robinson as to -just on the spur of the something of a braggart. moment-come up with solutions But when the businesses were to things that really worked, set up, Moore recalls,· they really made sense." said Moore. centered on non-legal aspects of Robinson 's acquaintances divor ce and bankruptcy and, recalled him as about five feet, understandably, tax consulting. s_ix inches tall, thin, with very Robinson bad the background hght blonde hair and "Coke· for it. He worked for the IRS bottle glasses". . during 1969 and 1970 as a tax : 'The glasses weren't real collector. He resigned and went thick, but·they were the kind that to live in Australia, but was magnifyhiseyes,"Grempsaid. extradited back to the U.S. after "I remember a time he drove he was indicted for embezzling up here in a 12-cylinder Jaguar. funds he had collected for the Now, a man does that and you IRS. have to notice him. He had the He pleaded guilty in 1973 and money. He always paid foe was sentenced to a year in jail everything . Why would you and five years probation in suspect where he got it?" said addition to repaying $4,~. After Gremp. serving the jail term, he was released on probation. Las t spring, Robinson Ciled for tax r efunds for the years 1971 through 1974 totaling $652,779. He used the name John D. Robinson and a phony mailing address according to the U.S. attorney prosecuting the case. He claimed he was working for a firm in Houston, Tex., during that period and that the firm had withheld $652, 779 for taxes. He also claimed to have sustained $1.4 m illion in loss es as · a beneficiary of an estate. The IRS resPonded in June with checks totaling $565,340.31. That's when Robinson began to live it up. "I wondered about him all the time," said Marino. "He wasn't r eal. When I first met him, he whipped this financial statement on me that said he was worth $76 million. He had W ·2s that said he made a million dollars last year. "It was all phony, but I guess the bank bought it. That's where he got the loan,'' said Marino. At one point, Marino went to Robinson's home in Pasadena-a house Robins on bought for $84,000 cash-to collect an $11,000 down payment on a car. The hou se was b ei n g extensively and expensively remodeled, said Marino. He added that while he was in the home, Robinson was working out an agreement with an art dealer for several thousand dollars worth of paintings. "There were paintings everywhere already." Marino Old Man Has · Close Call TUCSON, Ariz. CAP) -An e ld.erly_ ~lind man escaped senous 103ury when he stepped out of the back of a camper traveling 60 miles an hour on Interstate JO east of here the highway patrol said. , Rafael Martinez, 78, of Viola Calif., was taken Wednesday night to Pima County Hospital for x-rays . His condition report was not immediately available. Patrolmen said Martinez had fallen asleep in the camper with three children, but awakened, and thinking the vehicle bad stopped, stepped out· the back ·door. Drunk Penalty Plan Squashed SACRAMENTO (AP) - Legislation to require a 48·hour jail sentence for first·offense drunken driving was curbed before it even got started in the Legislature. (Six state legislators were arrested for drunken driving in a recent 11 ·month penod. > E'r,,,.Page A J I ANGUISHED MOTHER. ••• opened fire. Nicholas collasped almost immediately.'·) Walker, who said he was with the L ong Beach d tstrloJ attorney's office for 13 years, said he didn't want to point the tlnger of blame at anyone. "l've been around too many of these klnd1 of thing.a ~o know that there's not enough '•vldence at this point to say lt ls anyone's fault." Walker said the day's traiic events befan when an argument erupted between the dead man and his brother Arthur, SS, who ls beina held on $2.50.000 bail. "They bad been qunrelln1 over the family buslneas, apparently a bout various responsibilities," Walker reported. .., think tbero was business Jealousy involved and the reeUna that ooe brother had 1nvaded the other's provtnce. "Drtnkinc, unfortunately, a.lSo was involved and oneJuat 108t hb head," Walker said. He said that the older brother fired three bullets into the cellin1 of the parents' home with hjs .Z caliber revolver. Walker related that Nicbola! heard the shots and became apprehensive a nd was "just trying to get the hell out of the house" where he was to run lntc thepollcefualllade. Walker aald that Nlcbolat DiStef ano's wile of four rnonthl, Cindy, waa looking out tht window and saw her husband klllect The son ot the foreman al90 allegedly saw the blast and said ''Oh my God, they've killed him." Walker tald Utat .a expeqded ahotlUD 1bells were CC>Wld and that Nicholas suff~ mualve wounds bot.b ln lhe front and beet of hit body. The elder Mn. DISterano 11p~essed blllemas also at t.M allfged lc'utment of her husband Victor, al the band.a ol police. ' 7