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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-02-17 - Orange Coast Pilot7 Two Die in <:oast Cras ... DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * ( TUESDAY RNOON, FE BRUARY 17., 1976 WL. ..... ,, .. ~ ........ • ,. Hinshaw Asks Delay In Brihe Sentencing . . • • • . • ' . :: I l I! [l :'Cuckoo's .Nest' Tops Oscar List Nl'Dra.a ~'Cool' Banker Summons Police 18ae~ to Drawing Boardl Lyndon, Dog Day Named NEW YORK <AP> -A man wbo t.brealened to b'°" 't> a bent clfice and lat.er told police be 1ot the ktea from a televtaioft ahow was apprehended today alter a ~ bank officer preued a aiJent alarm button and delayed h1m untll police arrived. Tbe man, wearing a rake mustache and carrying a packa1e. entered the First NaUonaJ City Ba nk omce next door to Rockefeller Center and diacooaJly across Flft.b Avenue from St. Pat.rick'• Cathedral and demanded '96.000. police aaJd. "I have a bomb and I want money," police quoted h1m as telling the bank'a branch manaier in a note. "It wlll take me a while lo gel that together." she was quoted as replyinc. ··wm you wait?" HimhawAsb Sentencing Postponement Convicted Congressman An· drew Hinshaw'• sentencin& was delayed for one week today when the Newport Beach RepUblkan's lawyer explained that he has not had aulficleDl time to prepare bis motion for a new trial. Oran•e County Superior Court Judie Ro~rt P . Kneeland act Feb. 24 a1 the date he will sen- tence Hlnahaw to what could be ooe to 14 years In state prison on the bribery conviction ii ho de· nia attorney Marshall Mor1an's motion. Mor1an nplatned in court to- day that he baa bfff1 distracted rrom preparation of his motion by the HMOUI Illness of his 13- year-old son who rettnUy un· derwent an operation ror re- moYal of a tumor that proved to btbenlan. !Morgan uld be has ~en f\irtber handicapped by the re- appointment to the Superior bench of South i.a.una at- Y Robert Green who worked blm on the Hinshaw trial. Hinshaw, S3, was found guilty bar1es tbal he accepted ) equipment as bribes rrom andy Corporation while he eel as Orange Co.Anly's U· prior to his election 1n •He was found 1ulll)' cl aaecond tiribery count atemmint from al· ons that be a«epted cam· cont.ribuUona from a Tan· ecuti•e. obatlon Officer R. J . Uton baa sunesled a pruon term for Hinshaw since, he stat.ts, the con1ressman doe-a not belien that be committed any crime. ' Police said tbe mana1er, who WU aot ldenUlied. then atcaaled a ailent alarm wblcb ~half a dozen police cruiaen to the bank al 51st Street, tyin1 up traffic and drawing hundreds of onlookers. Tbe man's back was turned u the first rour uniformed officers entered the bank. Police signaled to the manager lo move away from tbe man. "Let me check on the moaey," s he said, pickln1 up a telephone and dialirig an extension lo an empty desh desk nearby. "Oho; I have to gel that," she said, quickly getting up from her desk and moving away .. The four police officers then grabbed the would-be robber. Police officers said the man later told them he had been influenced by a televi.ion show about a._ bank robbery, but did not ldentll>' the show. They also said he had read mumerous news stories about a bank robbery last year but did not specify which one. LOS ANGELES <AP> -"One Over the Cuckoo's Nest, .. the 11 a or on• man's fiaht. against tile 1y1ttm in an insane asylum, 1cored top honors in the 48th Academy Award nomina· • Uona today. The United Artists film drew nine nom inations. including those for beat plc~ure, J aci: Nicholson as best actor, Louise Fletcher as best actress, Brad Dourif for supporting actor and Milos Forman for best director. "Barry L yndon" placed second with seven nominations and "Dog Day Afternoon'' was third with s ix. The three films were nominal· ed for best picture. along with "Jaws" and "Nashville." Jn the best actor category, Nicholson faces competition from Walter Matthau in ''The Sunshine Boys;" At f aclno, "Dog Day Afternoon:" Max- imilian Schell. "The Man In t.he Glu1 Booth," and James Wh.lt· more, "Give 'Em Hell , Harry!" Miss f1etcher's opponents aa best actress are Isabelle Adjanl. "The Story of Adele H.;" Ann- o.ity ,. ... ,......,. o..,.i .. .,,._ ~argret, "Tom my;" Glenda The bank was evacuated and Emergency Service police tossed • rug over the package on the floor unlll the bomb section arrived. Corruiated steel work supporting an earth- Bomb detectives examined work bridge for the extension of Turtle 1>9ckage, which they later rui---..-~ Drive i Irvine crumpled under the contained only cardboard. weigh earl moving equipment Monday The man. wearing· checkered with this r e t. Driver or tractor wasn't panll, a brown raincoat and hat, hurt. however. Collapse or the bridge near Jordan Avenue and University Drive is ex· peeled to cause a delay or several weeks in the completio n or the project. Bridge was scheduled for paving next week . Jackson, ''Hedda, .. and Carol Kane, "Hester Street." George Rurns. whom mosl criUcs conside red Matlhau's co- star in "The Sunshine Bo13 ," was nominated in the supporting actor cate~ory. Besides DouriJ, had hla phony mustache torn off when police seized him. One police officer described the foiled holdup as amateurish. "If anybody was ever going to get ceuaht. it was this guy," the officer aald. <See BOMBE ll. Pale A2> SEAFORD , England <AP>-Despitethebestef· forts of ftlore than 300 couples, Paul Trevillion and Sadie Nine havt' pre- served lbeir world kissing record after tbe last of ~ challengers were dis- qualified for cuddling. "They got too pualonate," sa.id Paul, 29, who wilb lt-year-old Sadie Nine claimed a world re- cord .for kiaalnc 2SiOOO Umes ln two boun ul .May. Paul and Sadie. British pro(easional entertainers, took on all challengers here over the weekend, but only lhrff couples got as far as S,000 klsses. H~ntington ·crash Kills ·2, Hurts 2 -.. By ART HUll R. VINSEL Of .... Oell•rf ....... Paul Kanani Broad, the only chUd or Costa Mesa policeman Roffoe Broad. and ~ girlfriend were kltled In Huntington Beach early today when his small forei&n car craahed into the rear ol a parked van. Tbe cruti occurred on a lonely strmh of Pacilic Coast Highway one·batl mile u st of Warner Avenue along Bolsa Chica Slate Beach. Broad, 18, who lived at the family bome, WH pronounced dead at Ole 1cene. His pusen&er. Deborah Demont, 19, of 12982 Loretta Lane, Santa Ana. sue· cumbed from muJUple injwies abort.ly alter 6 a .m. at Hunt- ington lntercommunity Hospital. The victims bed to be extrlcat· ed from the mangled wrecbgeof t.beir amall sedan which hurled the van it struck SO feet onto the beacb, lnjurini ill twooccupants. Raymond W. Milter, 26, of Anaheim, and Diana Callac, 20, of 6462 Longford Circle, Hunt· I J I ln«ton Beach, were asleep in the van and su1tained only mlnor in· juries, police hid. <See Z KILLED, Pa1e A2) Thieves Take Boat Motors Three outboard motors-one of them owned by Democratic As· semblyman Richard Roblnson- were stolen Monday from boall moored al Dana Point Harbor, Orange County Sherifra officers reported t.od ay. Deputies said the mot.on were owned by Robin.ton, 32, of Santa Ana. achoo! PrinclpaJ . Richard Porter Shoemaker. 46, of TusUn and sales representative Joeeph Lawrence Riley, 33, ol 24871 Via Alvarado, Mlsslon Viejo. Olficera valued tbe total Ion at nearly Sl.400. They said the thieves snapped chains and padlocka connect~I the out. board motors to the boats. Bandit Gets $200 at Shop In Seal Beach A Sunset Beach store owner was robbed of $200 Monda~y o gunman who forced her male companion to lie down on the noor of the store while he made good bis escape, Orance County Sheriff's officers reported today. Deputie-s aald victim Charlene Ruth Marls. 32, told them the gunman entered her R and D Date Shop, 16371 Pacific Cout Highway. and purchased a SS. cent bottle of wine. Mrs. Maris told officers that the customer produced a gun as she was packaging the wine and forced her to take S200 from the cub register and place it in the bag. New Propoeal8 WASHINGTON <AP> -Soviet Amba11ador Anatoly F . Dobryrun will soon be beaded for Moecow with new U.S. proposals that could point lbe way to a long-• delayed treaty Umitin& offensive nuclear weapons. he faces Burgess Meredith of "The Day of the Locust;" Chris Saradon, "Dog Doy Afternoon," and Jack Warden. "Shampoo." The supporting actress race <See0SCAR8, PaaeA2) or~~a:~·8· Weathe r Su'nny with varia ble highs clouds Wednesday. Highs In the 60s at the beaches and allghlly warmer Inland areas. Lows tonight In the 40s. I NSIDE TODAY · Parm11' fanciful ~ tion1 about tht "bfrdl and the btt•" art uaufng ,,._ ltttU! Jodi °"' m l•f t /ltld ~ to where bcltM• reall11 do come from. Sq PQJJe A1. •••ex AJ ._...,...,_ M At _y,_,.. er All _..,,.. All At ""'"" •• .. ,t _ .... ,...... A• .. 0r..,.CIMl!t, . "' II ~· l~J Al ~ .... A6 ,._.Mlr~eU All .. ............ Alt Alt -. •• .. .... _ M It : Al DAJLYPILOT s TU!!!!V·'*U!IX'1',tl79 ' . . Tourist A-traet•on t ;· Hurulreds F'lock w Paity's TrUiL SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) - 'J'beo trial of Patnda Hearst was a tourilt attn<'llOO for tome of tbo hundreds w•tlina in Un~ to-by for aeata ln the court where th new1paper heir .. wu to tell el her life under1round with the Symbloneae LlberatJon Army Firat in llne was a youna man who declined to 111ve tus namt: and who said he had bl'en plan· nm1 lO come to the trial (or tome dmf'. "But J just procrutinated," he tald. "Then l decided 1 would eome today. It just happened that I ended up with thia day." He said he got In line about 8·30 p.m. Monday and spent the night 2 Handgun Proposals Defeated WASHING TON (UPI) -The House Judiciary Committee to- day defeated two oatlonal handgun r egl.atration proposals -one that would have required tbe states to enact their own plana within two years and another that would have created a national reglatration program. The committee action coin· cided w ith the r elease of a federal study which showed that in 4S percent of street cnmes in· volvmg guns. ··Saturday rtJght s pecials" were used largely because they are cheap and easy to conceal. The committee killed. 16 to 11. an amendment t hat would have establiJhed a national handgun regiatration program within the Treasury Department'• firearms division. The panel. working on a bill to toughen existing handgun control laws, also defeated, 18 to 13. an a mendment which would have reqwred the states lo enact their own gun r ealstration laws by 1977. The committee last week over· whelmingly d efeated a mend· ments which would have banned the manufacture, sale, importa· uon, or ownt'rsh1 p or handguns The federal ~un reg1Stration amendment was offered by Rep. Robert Drtnan. (l).Mus.), and Dan Edwards. <D·Cabf.l· The propos al to reqwre the s tates to enact their own plans - with the cost to be reimbursed by the federal government -was offered by Rep. Robert Mcclory, tR·lll.) ,,.,.. The study, by the Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and l'~irearms, traced 7 ,81 S handgtmJS se11ed by poli ce in 16 cities d unng in· ter vab over 32 m onths. The cities Included In the study were New York : Bo8ton; AUan· ta; Detroit; Charlotte, N.C : Dallas. Denver: Kansas City, l..o8 An1ieles : Louis ville; Miami and Dade Cou nty ; MlnneapOIJs. St. P au l ; Ne w Or l ea n s. Philadelphia, Oakland and Seat· tie. Bureau Director Rex D. Lee .. aid the s tud y also shows <'rtmlnals bought more guns from pawn shops than they s toic, and a larae numbe r of lhe guns u.-.ed in Northl'rn cities came frt>m statt's with lnx controls over gun sales The study s howed only 6 per· n•nt or the 1tuns had bt-<'n report· t'<I stolen to the f'RJ, Lee aald. A .. tudy of pawn shop Involvement tn four or the c1t1es showed far morr thun this percentuar were bou11ht m pawn shOPtl. ht' s aid Th<' atudy showed that an cities wllh svict gun sale law<i moet of the guns 11e1icd 1n rnrnes ramr from dealrrs in other stall's DAILY PILOT 11'W nt~ fn.Ht f'l•t!t flt ............. ""'°It'°' , •• ,,,,...., .. tN ""' • ,., •• , t t•IN1,.. ·• ti\ '"" I • l'U ,.,_ t • \ r I 11"'t"1f { ,...-..... "' o40'\ ,, II· •tl•I • th t • '' \"'fG •MO", ... '"'''°"" I 1 "'' ft• fl I .. ,,,,, I Nf'W .. •I\ ,.....fl tf. "1•'"'11'''""' I'• I t ""'°"'•·"' V•h• ~' ,,., "'• ,...,_ • ._ .... " '9" ,, , , ,.,., l '"""-' th• ' "',jtt'I f M t A • '""' • ,, oJ ....... , "" , ovf'•1'• ... ,...n,...,' ..,,. .., "•• ·~· 1,,,.. ,,_ ... ..._,,, 1.~ .. ~ r•_. ... 4'i •1.1 "''""l·•· -4"'' ( ...... w ,,.. .... "' ... ,., .. R~r1 N. Wefd ,... , "'*nt •-:S ~'""'" walttn1 outalde the P'ederel Mary Ddmlto and • frt~d Bw ldln•. rrom Mora1a were next ln line -Bob Sardi and two friend.a lcUl.nl to the Fednal BuUdi.ni wn-e oext in Line. They bad come _ about 10: JO p.m . Mooct.y. to California from Detroit, t.be)' ~ alx ot tbe Younc piople at •a.Id. "to aee the Wat." bead ot U.. line wen un· Monday nJ1ht, tbey left their d1J ayed by tbe weather. "'Maybe there wu a UtUe milt NEIQHBOR-PATIY -a Uttle driule, but It waa 'NIC!ST I EVER MET', A5 DOthinC." ooeaald. aear at a smaJI restaurant near Guarda aaid It wu by far the u. Federal Buildin1 and came J.ar1e1t crowd to turn out for lbe down to aee the trial. trial alnce it Mtan Jan. 31. "I\ wu one of the th.i.n1• we· It obvioualy would have been want~ to do," Bardl said. "The larcer except that othen turned fact that she Is going to be on the away when they arrived and saw wiLneu at.and bad notb.l.na to do the abe ol tbe line wa1Uni for with it. We would have come about 100 seats a vailable lo t.l\e anyway." public. Tiie • ..,,, ...,., .,..C&. •• YOUR VIEW ON PA1TY HEARST GUILT: I tlMalil Patty ........ O Will be found guilty of robbery d-.rge-s ~Inst hff O Wilt be found Innocent n Hung jury oroU.r COM PU Cl TY: I tN9* ... tty .... ,..... •• O Went wltllngly with her SL.A c;apton O Went unwllllngly but was b,..inw~ O Went against her Wiii ""'WIS kept egalnst her Will INTEREST: I fellowtM ,_tty Heantc.ase ••• O CIOsely, rHd most stories about It O Pretty closely Q Seldom Q Not at a ll COVERAGE : I thfnkU.pnu ••. O Is overplaying the Hearst case O Is covering It about right O Is underplaying the story Mail to the address btlow or drop by any of the 0.ll y Piiot offices listed on Page 2. Attach any comments on the Patty HNrat case If wish. Editw Diiiy Piiot Box 1.560 COSta Mesa, CA 92626 Sl11Nt1We and Acldretl (If yov wfstl > ......................................................................... Valhalla, NY Final Rites Held For Actor Mineo From Wire Sfnices MAMARONECK, N.Y. -Sal Mineo, the actor-singer who r<Mle to film stardom playing the role of a juvenile delinquent, WH burled today in Valhalla, N.Y .. near the town where be spent bis youth. Father Gerard DiSenso pre· sided at a packed funeral Mau at the 500-aeat Holy Trinity Church. in Mamaroneck, where Mineo lived for some time alter leaving his childhood home in the Bronx. • "Our church was practically full ,·' one of the priest's uslstanta said. "The family ls not lar1e, but they have many well·wilhers and friends ." He aald DiSenso's sermon touched on Mlneo's violent death. The J7·year-o ld a rlor was stabbed to death Thursday in the 1ara1e of bis Hollywood apart· ment building. ' Ant~abortion Umdidate'a Fwuling Hit WASUINGTON (AP) -The Notl<)f\al Abortion RIJthta Action LeDtue today asked lhe Federal Election Commission to deny federal campahln funds to Ellen McCormack , who is running as a presidential candidate on an a n- tiabortion platrorm. Mn. McCormack says she ha11 collected more than ~.000 In l'OC h of 20 States and asked lJic election commission to certify her as qualHled for matchlnJt federal campaign funds. "The maln Idea wu that one or the fact.a of death la the painful par.t of partins. but accordin1 lo the beUef1 of CbrlsUan faith the partl.o1 la Jml Cor a temporary period. The comin1 tocether and the llvlnc to1ether would be eternal." Aller the service, Mineo wu burled at Gate of Heaven C.metery in Valhalla. Mra. Grace O'Neill, 1peaklng for the O'Neill Funeral Home, stressed that aervicea for Mineo were "very, very private. 1be family did not want any fan· fare." Mineo la survived b y his mother, J oaepbln e, and a brother, Michael. Meanwhile, the detective in· vesUgatinl the death aaya the ac· tor's popularity b makln1 h1I job more d lrctcult. "I've not ruled out anything at thls polnt except suicide," Set. Ed Pia. a aberllfa homicide in· vntlcator said Monday. "The onJy dilClcult part of It ls where lO to next -he was a very popular man." Investigators say they are stymied about the motive for the violent kllllnJt. rla uld that as far as In· vcst11111tors know, Mineo had no seriouK cnemiH. lie said the lnvcstigatlon wu progreulng "with 360·degree vision,·· and lhal drup or a love triangle, motives mentioned In news a ccounts. were only two or many possibilities. Robbery appar ently wu not the motive. investlgators said, because Mineo's wallet and jewelry had not been ta.ken. Sul they llpttulated that a potenUal robber may have panicked and run after the stabblnJC. Blue is H appg Slayton Go rdon. 16, Newport Beach . frolics with he r dog. "Blue ... a fou r ·year- old English s heep dog who obviously as overjoyed at being out in the fresh air and sunshine. Blue got u combination romp and obedience lesson Monday at Manners Park in Newport Beach. Slayton explained that, although Blue may :,ccm a bit old for obedience training. he 1s a new member of her fami~y and needed a refresher course. f' ..... P~AJ OSCARS •.. features two from "Nashville, ' Ronee Blakley and romtidiennt• Lily Tomlin Also nom1naled Lee Grant. "Shampoo ... Syh1a Miles, "Farewell, My Lovely," and Brenda Vaccaro. "Once Ii. Not Enough.'" Academy voters will niow view the nominated fil ms and make their final choices. which will be announced to a tcle\•lsion au· dlence on Mond ay. March 29. in ceremonies al the Los Angeles Music Center. Although nom inated for best picture, "Jaws" was given only four nominations and none for · 'Cllreclion. The director nominees a·r e Federico Fe 11 In i. "'Amarcord"; Stanley Kubrick, "Barry Lyddon"': Sidney Lumet. "Doi Day Afternoon" , Robert Altman, "Nashville." and Forman for ''Cuckoo's Nest " f'rem Pflfle A J BOMBER ... The man was identified as Moote Mer cer. 36. of Bucldn1ham Road, Cedarhurst. Long I1l1nd. He la married and the father of two. according to poUce. They said be told them he had been under an analyst's care for sometime. KILLED IN ACCIDENT Paul Broad, 18 Dogs' Beach Rolllps May Be Banned Man's best fri end may lose his beach.going n~hts on Laguna Bearh and Orange County strands under proposals mulled both by the city and the Board or Su~rvlsor$. . F'1do's eviction possibly romes a'bout through a complica~ed tanJ(le of bureau(•rat1C' mlcral1011 commonly referred to as red tape . The Board or Supervisors IS meeting today and will consider a recommendation for banning dogs from county beaches. That law. if enacted, ordinarily wouldn't apply to Lagwia Beach city beaches. where the dog-on-the-beach issue flam ed into intense controversy about four years ago resulting in an ordinance whtch allows leashed dogs on beaches during au but summer m onths. E'roaPageAJ 2 KILLED .•. They were treated and re· leased at P acifica Hospital following the collision fi rst re· ported at 12: 15 a .m .. by a motorist who called from a nearby telephone . Investigators today said they are probing the cause of the tragic crash involving Broad's compact car and the van, which ""'they say was legally parked at the roadside. Police Lt. Gary Davis, night shift watch rommander, aa1d the Broad auto was tr aveling al an estimated SO to SS miles per hour when it c rashed mto the van. Huntington Be ach fo'lre Depart· mcnt paramedics administered aid at the sre ne as firemen worked to extricate the )'(lung couple, but their efforts were futile. · The double tragedy shattered the rle>!'C·kn1t family or Co~tll Ml'sa Police Officer Ro11co<'. Broad and Alunned lhe police d1· partment he has served since 19fl l. Pollce Chief Roger E. Neth was assigned to notify the Broads of lhe death of their only child, arn J<:agle S<'out a nd 1975 graduat1> of Muter Dci High School. Offlcl'r Broad, n1C'knam<'1l Rock for his days as an All Conference Hawaii Leal(ue pro fcss1onal football play('r as a 17S-pound tarklc 1n 1917, literally wori.hlpped his 11on. That compromise was reached after public hearings attended by ovrrflow t'rowds who both defended and attacked dogs. The issue remains sensitive with the council. However, as a result of an abrupt cancellallon or the city's animal control contract by the Society for Prevention of Cruelly to .J.nlmala (SPCA>. Laguna ls facing a March 8 end lo all animal control unless somelbln~ is done. A report to the council by Asaillant City Manager Teny Brandt recommends an interim contract with the county pendl.Dg study or establishment of a city-run program. The county ls willing lo provide the service at a coat varying fro m $3,375 to $4,38> monthly depending on hours or patrol, but 1t reqwres the city Immediately adopt all provlsions of county animal control laws. That would include the ban on dogs on be if approved by the Board or Su visors. The Lagun Beach City Council will co er the animal control dilemma when it m eel.'i at 4:30 p.m . Wednesday at city hall. Ford ta Air CIA Plans WASHINGTON CAP) President Ford wlll unveil has p la n to reorganize s upervision or the In· telhgence agencies al a televised news conference late this afternoon. press secretary Ron Nessen an· nounced . The pl a n Is fo r a s treamlined intelligence community that will put CIA Director George Bush an position lo control aJ I "PY agenrles. Admlnlstra· lion oUicinls say. Uespeaks atSp.m. The ofriclals say Buah will be chairman of aamall Inter.agency panel which wlll t11vc him the power to control the bud(le ts of other 8PY agencies, s uch ita lhol!le within the Defen11e Depart. ment and the National Security A1ency. Jack R Cvrlt'v "••"'....._ .. ,.,_.c;.._..~ .... - Thomas Keevll c o.to• l' nom,1' A MurC)t!llW' M.9~,..,... f 'h, .. Sarah Weddington. president of the National Abortion Rtahts Action League. said in a com· plaint filed with the FEC that Mn . McCormack has soUclted funds in a deceptive manner. Pellet Gun Warning Issued Offices flt ~u ))' Ill\• I "4y .. .._. I ... ,.. a.· fll. t 1 .. C,~,.-. \tr-t tfi\,.• t ..... ., ~ ... .. ' ••• , "-~ t ,_.... ..... .-«Jtt;«• "'~, .... u ..... ,c .. ~.,..._. •• "-"'o ..... ,,..,..., Tel~ (7141 .. Mnt Cluslfttd Adv.,11sl"t 642·5471 S...,...twc' V•'"'' Nir-M Off"f • Sil..,,. rrttf"I ~n(f'9mr-fllt. ••5-06l0 ,,.,. """"" 0.•-c.-, C-Mift S40-1t20 ~...... 1•10 Or• .... c .... _ ......... <»- """'' ~ .._.,., ,,,.,,., llfV'\Tt•t~· f'ft1l ... t•I "'•"'' t, .,. •• , •• ,,." '""''" ....,,.," -·· .. ,.,., ft~• •d -.10,ttiif \PfCt.tl PtlflfillOUff t t ,..,.~.,.. ,,...,..., )#(tf'lllf (,.,. " ............ ~·· .... .. C,..111 ...... ,. • ~"4"' ·••..-it •t t _,,.. \J It ~ ,fM• &• ""# I ~ J\ ~·~I• "'•H•'l' ~f1~'9"\ u l\""91"10' t She said Mrs. McCormack has given donors the impression that they are hetping fund a national televl.sed antiabortion campaign and hu minimized or made no mention that the funds actually are a donation for her candidacy. Auto Bits Hones SALOME, Arh . <AP) -A Rialto woman. Kal.hmne Dim at· Ua, 50, was kUJ.ed Monday nJ1ht when the car she was riding in s~k two horses on U.S. 80 near this aouthweat Arlaona town, the tll&hway pat.rolsaJd. . . A Ne1V1>0rt Beach man, whole dog waa slain last week with a pellet from an air g\m, warned pa~nt.a today that the runa are more dangerous than they may believe. "Tbe IUDS are a ru1 huard and parent.a should t.blnlr twice b4tfore buyln1 them ror their children ," said Arthur Powers of 2338 Port._ Lerwlck Place in Harbor View Homes. • Powers' year-old Jru h ntter, Kelly, wu ahot and killed lut Wednesday u she romped in a vacant field near the ~amllt. home. Kelly. who had gotten out of herown backyard, managed to crawl to • neighbor's yard after the shooting. The pellet had lod&ed in her lung and caused de· alb several hours later, Powen aaJd. Powers said he wants parents and children to realize that the gum, which shoot pellets usinl( compression, can easily kill. "It's bad enough that my doit was killed. She was loved by lhf' whole family. including my two sc:Mla.·· " I "Out <'hlldrcn also play in lht> fields and they could be k11Jed. too." he added. According to Newport Beach . Police Detective Tom Stewart, who wu called in oo the case, youngsters often use air guns to shoot birds and ducks in the fields. The guns are easily obtainable at "a ny S ancJ 10 store," but are illegal for persons under 16-year· old. Stewart says. Stewart, a Juvenile officer. was caUed m because authorities believe a younl( person 15 respon11lble for the 11hoot1na Stewart says he plans to compare the pellet removed from the dol( with iuns owned by people in the neighborhood. Both Stewart and Irvine Ranch Oeputlea, who patrol the un- developed land. uy that such shooting• are not common, even though hunting wild fowl la com· monplace. Srewart said It appears the do1 was Intentionally shot at, a lthough he dOC"PI not know lf the person knew the danger of the pelJet.8. .. .. DAILY Pfl.OT ,43 ·Bilingu~l Ballot~ Qrillg Big. Brouhahai SACRAMENTO CAP> -Gov. wit.b multlJtn1ual p.ampbleta. rta<llly H Eo&ll•b·lani uaie Many of lbt prot~i letters Wrote Edward F. Sund~'lf of UCLA. and all the explanaUocu •d mu o d Brown Jr. us d ../ The federal VoOna .RJcht.s Act. vottta. aay peraons w tio don 'l un· Wataonv,llt . "Ballnaual ballots differed " SecreU.ry ol Slate llattb Foes "'Quire.a mlttorlty laquap vot 11.n. Eu aald the~ ce»t to dentand E u b doo' -Poppy<'~k ! J spoke 5-.vedlsh Armida Nesrete Torres, a re. S. U.e beea ~ by pro-m, matenala lJl counu to.at local a.Dd •late IO"t~tlS.O cltti bi ':!u~ 1 t destrvo ~fore I went lo achool. My wlte alatrar or votns ln Syl.mar. told ~~ tupa)'9n wbodoo'\ want have the percent o/ ell11ble million mac.bt be C'ClnMr'Vative if Crane~/· h ess &.he votln1 ls • Spanl1h fn1ml1ranl . We bad Mn. Eu that he 1upported lbe ad· ~=~·to •pend ~.dra money on vottl'1 who speak and read only electSon otn.dal• a.re ullh;n.at.ely · to learn En1llsh to 1urvivc." ditional 1pendln1 to comply wtli m ... .....,,uaJ votln1 ma...-tal. Spanlsh. rtqulnd to bla.del jurlldktloos · · I r l h e 1 t r ore tan e r s the law. ·'I'm sur• you.,. fed up Mn. Eu hH decided to print The law app1tu to the entJre wtfh mulUftAtual bafl,oq. can't speak and understand our One criUc lndlcat.N ,that the to your ears with the luu~ olth ''capt.looed'' ballolpamphletl. ror stale ror th• bitllot pamphlet and SJse uld that her orislnal En,lifh laniuase." fl'h.~d• L. ballot pamphlets aren l worth minority. But uclUt!lon b not the tM J une I primary ln ltncU..h to 38 counliH for rnultlllnaual nllmate ot i i m il.lion flte1ble Weber of Calimesa wrote Oov. lraaulatlna. anawu." aald the lettt'r. Spullh and cblats.. U v~ ballots -37 in Spanish and voters for the presldentlal Brown. "they ahould not be 11. "I defy her <M rs. Eul lo OX· Batlcally, Mrs. D•nlets aald, want pamphlet. In s.>anah or Englis h and one, San Frandsc.-o, Primary June 8 b•• been revl.sed towed to vote... PI a In t ~ ~ o n es w rlt le n in crillca araue that clll1ft\S should Cbiaae,lbeytearolhnchmd in lnSp•ni8b,Cbme11eandEn1Uah. tonlnemllllon. En1li1h , Mynna Oreytr or undqratand English and that a poetcard.· "That 11 a sad fact for "Let them study Englll1\ ror Hollywood wrote the governor, multlUnauol rtqulrementa wute Thllcotllthe atateltuthanSl VRA supporters h ;ivc repreaentatlvect.mocracy,buta their prlvlleaos: t hey wlll ''because no one understands money. On the other a1de, sh~ million aboutS4mUllonlesatha.n threatened to, sue lh~ stat• ll relief to election oftlelall who become better Ame ricans,'' them anyway. Al the last elec-said, VRA auppo rtera uy it would be to blanket lbe su&e minorltlu do not receive have been extremely coo~med wrote Ruth 'E Solomon ot San tio('. I had to phone two at· mlnority-lanauage dUiena pay &~ \'?@lYJ [( ®@ rrwa ©® ne c:ol•m• a~an dally except Saa-da1a alld lleedaya. ot a prol>lrm, Tl1rn unit• l'ot 1112. Pot u.111 cut rl'd IOIJI' •14'1 tl1t' n ansu·ni and uc· rum 'ff>" nrrrl 111 SOit t' lllt"C/Ulllt'$ 111 !/IH't•rrtrrwnr and l>u ~1n>'H Moll yQur q1wm1111t 111 /> a I /Ju n 11 J\ I Y <iu r Si•r1·1t 1' fJ r n 11 Q 1• ('" U ,\ I /lot/11 1'1/ot I' 0 H111 /~;;i, C11~tu Ml'-'O. CA 9?6'!11 l ndurlt• 1111ur ttlephonl' numtwr '€ .. p•A·l'loat' DEAR PAT: There was an article in the Dec. 28. 1975, Fam•· ly Weekly magazane titled, "Seaworthy Companions," by Richard Reed. The author and desiper-engineer descnbed his project, "Camp-A-Tioal," but no refettnce was given as lo where one could contact eitheT Reed or Camp-A -Float Ca n you enlighten me., D.D .. Newport Beach FamUy Weeltly'1 ed.Uortal staff spokHmaa advises wrttln1 to Barbara Kebler a t Daalel J. Edelman, lac.. %21 N. LaSalle S.., Cbtu10, Ill. .... ,, for full ln· formatJo• about Camp·A·f1oat. Tile pboae n umber 11 (31Z> '11Z·tz5t. tt'ltle Part11 . DEAR PAT: I am planning to h ave a wint ·lasting party. A frtend told m e your column had · otrered a planning guide for this kind of party. Do you still havt' any copies, and couJd you tell me how many different kinds ot wine should be served? G. E .• San Clemente Copits of the A YS wtDe lastlftg puty Saide stUI are available, ud oee 11 Hlnl malled to you. Fhe different wines art rttom· metNled for novke wt.e tasters . VartetJts re~om mt'Dded are an appetlur wlae. dry rt'd and wlll&e dinner wl•ea, a aparkltag wble ud o•e deHert wtae. 84IM!Clk• ••% DEAR PAT: My daughter re c-eived a small music box as a Christmas gift. She just loves at, but she as .upset pee: a use n squeak hall deve loped while the music: mechanism is r evolving. I know that oiling ls nee ded. but I'd like to find out how this sould be done lo avoid ruining the music box J .M .CofltaMesa Experts rec:om m~ln« a watch·lubrtc:aUn1 oll. a &ooth pkk lnlo the oU. Sllake ot hf' f'• CHS olJ H d llShtJy tou<'b the worm of tbt' 1overaor <lM box'11 Necbanlcal "brain," whJd• con· &lola lu operation>. Thia oiling •etllod 11 rec:om mf'tlded for uae every 1b monU1a If the m1&1k box II la aood condltton. llfudttfl \"olM•n DEAR PAT. l start<'d purchas· ln1 tht' Jo'\ank & Waanalls New f;ncylopcdia lut summer al F ulo'a In Fountain Valley Ptnonal problt'ms lntt'rfercd with my purchaa:\anl( the entire Ht. Could you rind out If 1 <'Ould order them lsslnt: vt>lumrs At thus time? M A .. OunA Pomt Fado'a ts m allln11t a form to JO• tllat will enablf' yo• lo order tilt' "'malnln1 volumes for your et1c:yd opedla. materials in their lanauaae aa about c:otU, .. she uld. Die«io. tome ya, and a professor at taxes. loo. Rural No Longer The colHsion between urbanization and rural life, occur- ring throughout Orange County. is no m ore evident than in this scene in which farm workers pick crops almost in the back yards of residences. The photo was taken looking \\est from Bear Street. Costa Mesa with South Coast Plaza at the photographer's back. Co.untian' s Air Crash Death Eyed Troubled Wanderer Trial Set Travels On Again For Couple In Assault The Federal Aviation Ad· ministration is invesllgatang the crash of a small plane near Crestline Sunday in which a Fullerton m an lost hi.s life. James K. Fogo. 58. apparenUy lolsl his bearings and crash<.'Cl ·in the mountains. San Bernardino County Sheriff's deputies said. Fogo had taken 9fr Sunday from Fullerton Airport and was beUt'ved en r oute to Ontario, in· vest igators said. He <'rashes shortly before 12: 30 p.m . about a quartt'r-mile from the Crestline turnoff on stale highway 11. de· puliessaid. The single engine Bee<-hcraft Bonanza burst into flames on im· pact. said rescue crewmen who h1ked to the crash sate Sunday af. temoon Fogo·s body ~as burned beyond recognition The coroner's office latt'r madt the identification. deputies said. The F.AA is investigating tbe crash. but a spokesman had no immediate explanation or why the plane had gone so far orr course. Alarming Burglary A burglar alarm \'alued at $350 was reported stolen to Lagun a Beach !:ace Monday. , William Neall. owne Pacific Alarm, said the ul· tra·son1c alarm was miss· ang from the inaide or Broadw:.ty Pl11a Gems. 211-D Broadwa)•, l.:igun11 Beach The alarm. inoperable at the lime. had been m · stalled by a prevl<>U.1 le nant at the shop and lh<' n•w storekeeper wu mull Ing whether or not to have the device hooked up, Nelli said. -The store owener said he had h Ad ti buralary an Deccmbu and thought th.- alarm l'Ould hovt• bt'<'n taken then. Neill totd police By ARTHUR R . VINSEL Ol-0.lty~ ... - Somewhere out there on a solitary road roams a guy named Mike. memorable lo many only by ha s e mpty eyes, empty pockets and empty air of sad· ness. Mike. 29, tim idly ambled inl,4f Hu.nt1ngton Beach Police head· quarters 11 days ago, hungry, weak. weary and appearing little mort' tha n a bundle of broken hopes wrapped in old clothes. He passed through the downtown rt'gion with all the forcefulness or a tired sigh. Today. no one knows where he has gone. but many have ex- pressed wonder. One 1s Leroy Charles Jr .. 19, deacon of Philadelphia House. a chansmat1<' Chr1st1an youth mis· s1on sandwiched between a service station a nd a surfboard shop al Pacific Coast Highway and Sevt'nlh Street. Philadelphia llousewas M1ke·s last known semblance of home on the Orange Coast. "This is the Lord's House." declarN1 Deacon Leroy, black youth who heads a communal group an an old stucco haven where at tames as many as 20 re- sident male and female voices wall be s inging Hallelujah. "A lot of travelt>rs come in here. In fact . I'm a traveler:· 11:.iys Leroy. who arrived on the Orange Coast from Cleveland. Ohio. about four months ago IHacon Leroy now wishes for another chance to offer what he has found lo the guy named Mtkt', who stayed JUSl ovem1Rhl at Philadelphia llouse, lh•n vanished Police Officer Chns Schneider arranged for the night's lodging. a hot supper and breakfast after three hours on tht' telephone try Ing to get phy11cal help and counsel for Mike. The aad-eyed d riftt'r stood with d<lwncasl eyes at lhr fo'ront Desk <>ffit'er Srhnelder mans and con- ftssed he was Just 11 month out or Metro politan State Hospital Mlkt> had no home. no Job. no family. no money and hlB old C'lunker of a car wa11 out or !(as. Dll'Y "" ... -· 'I THINK I RECALL HIM' Leroy Charles Jr. some time after bre11kfai.t at Philadelphia House after the stormy night that sent him to police seek Ing help But Deacon Leroy does n 'l eHn remember Mike. "I think I re<'all him. but wt• didn't talk,'' hi.' expl:.i1n~ A second res ident l'<'hoe-. that re mark. Efforts to traek down the troubled i:uy named Make throu~h Mel ropolltan State Hospital. couoty authllnt1es and police agent'1es so far have failed One ironic: twist for the down- and·out Mike> came fo'r1day m a check of rcc:orcb at Oran"<' Coun- t y Jail. Authorit1ci1 noted 11 day11 aJ:o that while he might net.'d i.pcc1ul help under Sert1on 5150 or the California Welrarc and ln11t1lu· t1ons Code. M 1ke 1s not ll<'k enough yt't to ~el it, unlt•ss h1• :ugns has own voluntary commit ment papers They uid he must ~cl far worst', s uicld11I . or as11oull 11nd perhaps even kill another person before they can com mil him Dr. Anthony Orlandella. a pro· minent South Laguna urologist a nd Kis wife , Elanor. arc scheduled lo stand trial Wednes· day on charges of misdemeanor assault and battery on a San Clemente police officer. Orlandella. 46 . is a former Laguna Beach U nified School District trustee and former two· ter m ch1ef of staff at South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna. Patrolma n James Gular te stopped the Orlandellas' luxury car 1n San Clemente in the pre · dawn hours Dec. 27. Gularte al· leged in his report that the vehi- cle had no license plates nor temporary registration affixed to the windshield. Gul a rte claims that Mrs. Orlandella, 38, used abusive language and interfered with the conduct of his duties. She was arrested at the scene of the stop on suspicion of interfering with a police offi cer. Gularte alleged ·that Orlan- della sped away from the scene artcr his wife was placed In the rear of lhe police unit. T he patrolm an said h e purs ued Or landella from San Clemente to the physician's Dana Point residence al speeds or up lo 90 miles per hour. At the house, Orlandella surrendered lo San Clemente Police and Orange County Sheriff's de· puties A complaint later issued by the D1slrkl Attorney's Office charged Orlandella wtth assault on a police officer, battery on a poh<'e officer . '8ilure to produce a dnver 's license on dt'mand, reckless driving and resisting arrest. Mrs Orlandell a was charged wHh resisting arrt>st. a.'lsault on a police officer and battery on a police oHlc:er. The Orlandellas have charged that Gularte overreacted and wus abu1dv.-. They declined further commtnt in advance or the trial Vendetta Captures Regatta By ALMON LOCKABEY o.u,~ ........ ._.,_ Stout young crewmen are In demand In m ost yacht races, but Morrie Kirk of the Balboa Yacht ·Club. owner-sk Ip per of the 40-foot sloop Hurricane Deck, is wishing today tha t his foredeck crew had been a little less strong in the final race of the Sout hern California Yachting Association Midwinter R egatta al Los Angeles Yacht Club Monday'." Hurricane Deck was winning the Inte rnational Offshore rule Cius A division until It came tlmt' to douse the spinnaker. But the chute that had been muscled aloft by Kirk's forede<-k crew was firmly jammed at the masthead. By the time a man could be hotsted alo(t to free the sail Hur· ricane Deck's sister-ship, Ven- dttta. has moved into first place Hu r ricane deck settled for second. It was a breezy day in Los Angeles Har bor as Lo6 Angeles Yacht Club wound up the 471.h an· nual Midwinter Rt>gatla with 114 boats in 10 c lasses. Winds ror the rlnal race averaged between 15 and 20 knots. providing some lively sail mg in the are:.i or Point Fermin There were no serious mishaps, but Bob Garrison'• Regulus JI , out of the Newport Harbor Yacht Club. bounct'd off a rock near the Point Ft'rmin buoy with no apparentdamaJ?e. Results of the Llllle Ships division of the midwinters were reported Monday. Jn total. the M 1dw1nters drew 1,130 boats In 86 c lasses (or the three-days of saili ng. YlA-l•lY.ClllO. 114 .... h , ltcl••-IOR A 1101 -I, Vtn,,.11• .... rt lwt<l, CYC, I, ,..u,,t<•"-0.Ck, M Ortlt Kirk. 8YC. l, A0t•nt1 ....... , Mllc ... u. c YC tOR 8 'II l. ltu\, 8 111 Gil-I, PMYC; l, Col , _ _,,, OtMI\ Cllo•tt. 1.llVC. 1, '"'""'""'· !>i•n C:.100., I.A YC. IOR< "" -'· 0.chlon. P•ul "''-· ORY(, 1. JNQUln Mu,r••tt•1 John\On, Ol!•"ctorf •f\d Euler. VYC, >. C•n..tl.., RDIMn,JlmW•tml"910f\, NHYC, •. H•I Tri<-. a1u Ht-. ave. ORF·A (IOI -aru\hflrt, C:..M Tr...it, !>OVC; 7 Rt-. JIM l.•NH•M•n. av e. l, ...,,,,, !l!nt IW>r\Ofl, Clllt•90 YC ORF·a i.t -I, NO¥tMW. llol> All.., •NI H•,.••1 Kil1Ntrlc1', ~nl•tey Ptn.n~• YC, J. s...111, Jeo 1oMn1noroc11. ave. >. °'"'•"· O.<• "-""1"94o•" It HY C ERICSON·Ullll -1.ou1011ro.K-Sau9M•~. L\F, 1, Andlerno 8011 So<l••t, llYC, J Rt\Oklloon .1-rry H\lftttr. ICHYC, •. rr .. \IMrll Oon Mc ....... -.KHYC CAl.·.0 llll -I, ,,,.bird. R-1 Gr.on! S!IYC 1 Fl'"'lluoyof\I. St•,_., floM. l 8Y(. J. HOllO.f Toe, C..ry C•-, 1.AY.C. ONE TON IU I -'· e ......... Miit 8-ft•. eve J ''"' "••'-'•n. l •"Cl••n p.,, .... LAYC; >. -1 ..... yTf~ H ... ftR-•\.UlYC THREE OVART!R JON (Ill I El T ..... 11 arn ,.. .. ,...,,. cave. 1 .,..., , C:..••. "•• • ..,, lo"' Cef'bett. cave. J. S"•"· <rroftt lM.e•ti, PMYC \.Hl!"t.0\ ftJ) 1, TOUH"'f How••dWr1~ Jf • l.AYC ' n ........ Robo•l lloll UCl\A. l ••• ,, 0on M~r,.,.1, (IY(. •. (ftll~Jllt. ~ (. ~.,. PAYC. "'"'" ....... , .... ••-1> ....... u .. -PCC (JI -1. A1'1l9110 Ch11<-fo'°" ... ICHYC, I .. ,.,.,Tom"'" .. '· .. HY( PHIV A Cl•t I, AMl•fttl rd c.-P'ftlt•, 11'1'( 7, Ooll'lont, ""°'°"" Go•IM>ft, ~1 llYC, J, v .. 1111 C:..rv llurlt.e, SllYt , •.Horth M•f, llo1C..-4Hl- TOM \llHOl11. 1.8VC, S, 1'1-, Otclt. R•- 1.llY~ ,...,., 11 nu • •. ~101t11 "'"'· ao,, """'''°"· RYC, 1, H•wk, Don t4ucll•f, l\'1, ...... t.I Ill Gor<I"" c:,..,,., l llY(. •. C..•• YM"'. R-•I Albeth, HttYt, S, ftftn<•n, k1M (•\~M\O. lV l'HRr t nn 1, ,.,1, \I• .. f.ol• "nvc. 1 \o• ,, ....... , A ~ .... ltH Vt, >. I HuM, To ... ~hDO,NllYt COlUMllA lJ UI 1, lllllO l....ty R-ob They Got Goat But Goat Could Get Them He had llvf'd out of it where U rolled to a stop on CoaRt Hl.chway nur Warntr Avenue for ~ix days afterward. without food. becaust' ht' didn't know whert' to 110 and ~·hat to do and reared confine· ment again. Tod~. Mlkt and the car have vanished. apparently leaving Diplomatic Donneybrook Jail reC'otdll revealed a man of the rxact sam<' name. some al'<' and with a history M ment11I dill· turbance as there awa:ltmi? pro- secution on charge." of murder and armed robbery Out 1t was n different Mike. one who has been a prisoner there for 82 days. Judge J ohn Grirrin will prt"· side at the trial. It 111 IJC'hedulcd for 9 a.m ut South Orange Coun· t y M unlclpal Court, Laguna Niguel. PHRI' IM \fiM•hf\I Ill I. ot..-.. )Oft" f1-t •ftlJ •10 o·Mol¥eft~, IJIYC. 1 "7" , ,,.,.,.u .... ''"' UJ, l. l«-W•fttl Jim ,..,.._.,,lV DAY \•tll!" OOJ f, t r"' L.o¥P tt, Alt•" tle..,lelt C8YC. 1, No ,..-. R .. tt M11•""1 ~'VS< 1. Mio M.oc, llObtrl """°"""" rvc. From Wire Senicn LA HABRA HEJGlfl'S -Some thievt'S hert' have gotten Em~t Walsh 's goat-really And if they s laughltr t.bt pnze· winning animal, they may be m for a very unpleasant surprist'. According 1.o a spokesman for Uw Loi AngelH County Sherifr'a Office, the a oat . r aised by Walsh's dau1bter, was Hing treated for corycn I bacterium, 1weWng of the knees. The lOO·pound year-old doe was receht ng dally doses of a non·poisonous drug. procaine penlclllln a nd lht poisonous dru1. dehydroslrettonycln. Drui manufacturers warn that goals lrtaled with the drug should not be eaten for at least 30 days The doe. which i.s pr•gnanl. was kidnaped Monday from 1Li; pen at Walsh's ranch which it shared with five other goats. Walsh told deputies he heard a d.lslu.rbance, dlsc:overed the goat wu misalnc and sighted a car speeding away. The thlt'ves ap· par~nUy tried to lake two ol lhe youngest goats but one escaped "Some ethnic group$ Uke goal meal and they want t.bt young, tender ooes," said Mrs. Walsh. "She wa.s a beautiful, beaullful animal and on Feb. 2. her birth· day, she won 'best doe in show' al •livestock show " LONDON <AP) -The ass1s· lint air altache at the Sc>Vlet Em· bassy In London was t.aken to a poUce station following a drink· lng bout with a Brit.ash army sergeant, polic• said. One newspaper said lhe at· tache was asking quesUons about mercenariH In Angola and was so drunk he Ctll off his bar stool. The Foreign Office declined ~mment. a nd a Soviet EmbaSJy spokesman said , "I cannot be line this monstrous story ... ' 19 7!5 Federal and California personal Income tax returns prepared f ree of ch arae with a certificate savings account of $!5,000 or more. Full details explained in our brochure. A ppointments are limited. A ct n ow w hile c hoice is available! ••. lad-we'll show yoa ways to cit taxes on carrent income! '"" 1178 Tru•ln '"' 011 I R.A. •11d 1(90911 1c:c:ovnl1 OptMd 11111 lllOlllh, ¥ .... lftY c:,...,.Mta a v1MO• 210Fr/Cf5TOSCRVE'IOUSTA1£WID! .................. COSTA MHUUiWPORT IUCH: 1855 Htltlor81'td. • 645-4420 DAtLVPtlOT ON THE aOAD: &alety H · perts bye long addreued them.selves to probltms and vex· aUon1 fat'ed by American motori1ta. They telJ you lo brake' slowly on tee. You are advlaed to drive with your low headllsbt be1m1 ln toe. You are warned of road hazarde. Seldom, however, have you heard lhe experts come rtaht out walh a tr~ati5e on driving boredom. Oh yea. they talk about road faUaue. But rarely road boredom. Postal Official Charged BOSTON CAPJ -A PostOWce supervisor arre1ted after autboriUes found $Z'1 malhon in •1totiable securttaes at hl.J home laced arraicnment in j;helsu Oialrtct Court today. ( I NSHORT ) Pasquale Luuo · W8' t'harged on Monday with receivang stolen property and released later on $SO,OOO ball. Federal, state and local authorities said more 81Te&t:s are ex~cted in the case. v~11e1.r,.. Pa14'!sti•e Radical Student Slays 2 Beirut Deans BEl)tUT, Lebanon <AP> -A Palestinian student ex~llcd from ndlcal activlty abot aod killed two deans at tho American Unlve~lty of Belrut today, a un· averalty 1pokc1man announc«t. One or the deaa men w•• American. the other Lebanese. The asuuln. identified as a fermer engineer stude nt n•m~ Najlm Najlm. held the university vice president and five other officials hostaRe for three hours before he surttn· dered lo army &ommandos. Ho wu shot and wounded in the shoulder by' close friend or one ·of his victims as the troops led him from the university ad· rniniJlratlon building. NAlllll, A Jordanlao clllien ot Paleetlnlan ori1ln, wu om ot more than 100 aludenta ex:s*led from the university In 1114 followina lefllat campua di•· turbances. In Ji'ebf'\W'1 1"5 an anonymous letter to the school threatened the llro of UM pniai. dent, Kirkwood. Red Angola Gets Okay Of France Now when you are among the rommuter group, plying up and down the same highway every dJay of your workaday life, you sometimes see evidence of motorized boredom m the other drivers. PACIFIC COAST IDGHWAY is ;, good road example. Let's lace it; the same people go up Ws same road alone this best of all possible coasts every day. They see the same scenery. They travel with lhe same other motorists at the same hours, momlne and evening. CARACAS . Venezuela (API - Secretary of State Henry A. Kluincer told Venezuelan leaders today the Unit..t SUt.es will not tolerate anl'.'._ new foreign agereuion by C1ftia similar to the Angolan adventW'e. U"1T ....... MARUBt Nt CORP. EXECUTIVE HIROSHI ITO UNDER FIRE Japan Lower HouM Heare Lockheed Bribery Teattmony A UNIVERSITY spokesman said Dean of Students Robert Na· Jemy and Dean of EniiDeering kaymond Ghosn were slain by piatol fire at close raqe. Na· Jemy, 56, was born in Worcester, Mass., into a family ol Lebanese ori&in. Gboan, SS, was Lebanese. PARIS (AP) -France became the rtrst major Western Power today to recognhe the Soviet-backed Popular Move· ment -M PLA -as the legitlm ate aovernment of Angola. The Netherlands aaid ll would do so ·•very shortly." Personally, I've never been bored by all lhis because I con- sider getting a motor car from one place lo· another without dents a full-Lime occupation. l have trouble concentrating on more than one thing at a time. JG.11lnger met wilb Venezuelan President Carlos Andres Perez and other officials al a two-hour workin& breakfast. Kissinger told reporters later the meeting "was .very good and. went very well." Some Peanuts Japan Lockheed Airing Told After killlnl NIJemy outaide the university cafeteria and Ghosn on the steps of the engineering buitdin&, the gun. man went to the administration building looking for the universi· ty president, Samuel Kirkwood, a police spates man said. Belgium's foreign m1nilter In· dicated that the otber ae.en members of the Europea n Economic Community -Bri· tain, West Germany, lt•ly, Belgium, Luxembourg, Ireland, and DcnrJlark -would also re- cognize the M PLA within a week. ................. BOSTON <UPI > -Fighting wilb pol.ice broke out on Boston streets Monday night for the second t'onsecutive day over court ordered busing. TOKYO <UPI ) -A managing dirf'"'Or of a Japanese trading firm said today he signed receipts for ·soo peanuts" from Lockheed Aircraft Corp. w1thoul knowing the code words sagniried $1 65 mtlhoo. He did not find Kirkwood but took s ix hostages, including Louis Cajoleas, of New Orleans, La., head of the university ex· tension program, and Ernest Conlclln of Newton FaJls, Ohio, the university comptroller, of· !icers said. Hiroshi Ito made the statement dunng two hours of punishing testimony before the Japanese parliament. He said that neither he nor THE STOCKHOLM newap.1per Dagens Nyheter said today thal Swedtn would recognize the Luanda government Wednesday. Finland ia'alao certain to eJttend recognition. Others. however. do not seem to s hare this singleness of purpose. They get bored out on the road. Driving along in the humdrum of dally com· muterism, they loot for other d.tversions. DRINIUNG COFFEE is one of the favorite commuter occupa· tions. You spot these people, tool· ina along at 60 miles per hour. a steaming paper cup ln one hand and the steenng wheel in the other. You have to admire these drinking drivers for having cer· tain skills in band-eye coordina· tion. There are more daring types, however, who read while com· muting. You roll up aJongside them and find that the chap has the morning newspaper, careful · ly folded, so it fits n1o:ht in the l'eGter or the steerine wheel. He ls doubtless read.in& Lhe ac· cident report.!. I've never witnessed one of these chaps turning ~pages so nlaa, 1 cannot report how this i.s done. NOT WNG AGO I rolled up behind a male motonat who had the s1in or the fish in his rear win- dow. a ''Jesus Saves" sucker oo his back bumper and when I drove past, lo, he wu reading Lhe Holy Bable. I am uncertain If thls was the King James or Amen can Stan· dard version but at lenst you can ~ave him one point: He was .:et. ting prepared for where he was going. Lot.a of commuters comb and brush their hair while driving to work. Or take out rollers. In this 'day and age, the practice isn't ronfined lo lbe female drivers, ~itber. J UST THE OTHER morning I witnessed a real first in drivlng and buuty care. This lady ln • bi1ot limousine wns tootling up the highway while applying a brush to her eyelashes :at SS miles per hour. I don't think she was using either the side view or rear view mlrT'or. Doing 1t by feel. That's real skill. All things <"onslden.-d, rm not "'ure which Is tht' itroter hazard, clnvintt alongside these P''<>Plt: or watchana them. About 75 to 100 youths in small groups clashed with police in the c ity's Charlestown section between 8 p .m . and 10:30 p.m. Police said lhe teen.agers set some trash fires and broke a few windows. s,,n...l.raa Mer,,er'! TEL AVIV, Israel <UPI> - Syria and J ordan may form a federation called the •·united Arab States," establishing a joint ~titution and parliament for \~~'!two countries, a newspaper report said today. The federatlol\, to be headed by Syrian President Hafn Assad wilh Jordan's King Hussein serv· Ing as bis deputy, t'ould be set up by June barring "unforeseen circumstances," the English· language Jerusalem Post said. Large Scale Nuke Death Threat Seen BOSTON <UPI> -The poten· Uni exists for a large scale loss of llfe in the vicinity of the Millstone nuclear power plant sate in Con· necticul. Robert D. Pollard, former protect m anager of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Com· mission. warned. "There are some 200 ~eneric dangers of various degrees or signirlcance to all nuclear power plants and maybe SO of them app· ly to the Millstone plant in Con· nectlcut," he said. "There's the potential for a large scale loss or llfe if there were ever an accident Uketheone they had al Brown's Ferry," he "'aid during a news conference ar· ran~ed by the Union of Concerned Scientists. At Brown's Yerry In northern Alabama. the flame from o single undle held by a workmnn in· spertma an area of the plant re· 1ulted In the bumlna out of ele<:· trtcal wires itnd the failure or the coolln&syatem. the Marubeni Trading Co. ever saw a penny or the money. Late reports confirmed lfo re· signed after his testunony. Parliament hn1shed question· ang of eight witnesses dunn~ l'40 days of testimony anvolvmg al· legations made"1n a Senate sub- committee investigation that Lockheed s pent more than $12 million fro 19~·73 to promote aircraft sales to Japan. THE SESSI ON left the lawmakers frustrated in their quest to team who received the money Lockheed says it chan· neled through influence peddlers to Japanese polillcaJ and busi· ness leaders. Senate subcommittee In· vestigators have hinted publicly that Important Japanese were in· volveU in the payoffs. Prime Minister Ta.keo Miki said h.e will hold a news con· ference Thursday to announce his government's next move. He also said he may send a speciaJ envoy to Washington to ask for help in clearing up the case. Ito said he signed four receipts in 1973 and 1974 for a total of SOO "peanuts" at the request ol Toshlharu Okubo, another Marubeni director and Lockheed's official Japaoese saJes agent. Ito said Okubo told him he would never get into trou· ble. Okubo also resigned today. THE RECEIPTS did not men· hon dollars, but used codewords lake "units" and "peanuts." Ito said he was unaware each "peanut " was worth $3,333. Okubo testified he received receipts from J . W. Clutter, Lockheed's director of market· Ing and development. attach-.d to the aJrcraft firm ·s Tokyo office at the time. Yonkers 'Broke' YONKERS. N.V. <UPI> Yonkers, New York state·~ fourth lar~est city, averted an acl\lal financial derault today, but offacaals stall ml.L'lt sell some $2 million m tax anticipation notes just lo stay solvent through the week Flooding . in Midwest Heizvy Rain, Thaw Drive Out 75 Pa. Familia " .... ..... ··~ \t ,. -. .. ~. ,, ~, ..... ,. '" &-.vlltf ., .. ......... ., "' .,,.,_ ... .. (.1"(1.....,1 .. u ( .. ,.._ \I " 0.11•• " H ~ '6 " Ootrelt )0 )I r .. ,_, I ... -..... .. " 11.-.a 1, .. ,, ln~ u u NW_. 1• " ""''--•J 'IJ ""'""'---••• • "' -o.--.. t1 .. _ .. _ .. ,. 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" -, ......... --•• .._ O."•' , ............. , .. 11 (9'\00 ~ ""-'' w.i~ .. , _,. ,_ ... ,,. •• ,, o 'ft" ~ .. ,.,,.,,., 1 .... -· -·'"'" """ ...... bet-.. -,,_ ,..,._.,. •'-1"9 .,...,_,, ... ,,_ ___ .. ••twew!n,.11 """ --Irr , ... ~ .. -..... ._~ . ..,.......,.---,, s-.11 .. -. T fdn "-· n. --·-ti ... ,.,..~ lllt w~t'°" we\ "pr.tty b..t" llul nol .. TU llOA V trlfl<el n"' ltS. ...... Wflll• (-1· s.c.no-~ JS p"" .( • """""' __ . .., ... , ... , •• .,, ·-s.-.ct lllOfl 10 ... 0 "' ~ J T .. v ... en1orn\\ \P41Wft•O .... .,,, WIOlllSOAV --m-f\ter W-lflh fflnl-•..,.II\. 04 --.. ......... , "'"*..... 10 »•.... JO A - -... O'•• .. • -If\"'° ~ IOw S 01 faJft. 0 I clMIM of tllr .. c~llcl<tft •I i..h *-"'"' • 11 Up nt JA ""•'•· ''•· _,.. • ., ,,.., _,.. S..-tt,.•t J1 em , .. hJ ••~ . ::.,;W•K:i h "'INO cem..... -•IN•• UpM,Mbr;Pa."" The subcom mitlee s ays another $7 million went to Vosh10 Kodama, a wealthy bitcker or right-wing causes an Japan. Kodama was excused from teslimony today because of 111· ness. MeanwJ11le, Lockheed is threatened' wath the l02>s of a S950·m11Uon Canalj1an order in addition to the Sl 3-billion order Japan is reported to have can celed. CANAD I AN DEFENSE Minister James Richardson said that his government may call off plans to J>uy Orion patrol planes from the embattled Americ1tn corporation unless the firm can overcome Its financlaJ troubles. Richardson met with top Lockheed officials and said the company's new board chairman, Robert Haack, usured him a new financing arrangement could be expected later this year. But "the difficulty bas not bef!n resqlved," Richardson said. POLICE SAI D Najim threatened to blow himself and his hostages up with a hand grenade as troops and PaJesli· naan guerrillas rushed to the campus and surrounded the ad· mmislrataon building. He was re- ported armed watb a pistol and Lwo grenades. "He made all sorts or de· mands. He seems a little un. balanced,'' said the seo«esman. At first, the spokesman said, he demanded to be taken to the Israeli-Lebanese border so he could make a suicide raid into lsrae.J, then he asked lo be turned over to Palestinian guerrillas. As he was being led out after surrender, Najim was wounded by Joseph Cherbeka, a--rtiend of Ghosn, whojumpedoutofacrowd and opened fire. Soldiers grabbed Chubeka. N ajirn was taken to a hospital by Palestinian guerrilla policemen. The French Forelan Kinllt.ry said the Paris aovemment wu recognizing the People'• Repubhc of An1ola, pwlaimed by the MPLA laal November when the ~ig territory In southwest Al'\ica aot Its lndepen· dence from Portugal, "In view of the fact that the Luanda govern· ment exercises its authority over most of the territory." In Tbe Hague, a Dulcb Foretp Minittry spokesman said lbe situation in Angola h.c! reached the stage where the MPLA ap. peared to have rulfiUed coodi· Uons for recognition. AIDED B.Y HUGE deliveries of Soviet arms and an estimated 10,000 Cuban troops, the MPLA ln the past six weeks captured almost all or the stronlPQlntl held by lbe Two Weitem-iiacked Angolan N ationaliat factiona, the National Front -l'"'NLA -aod National Union -UNITA. A Great ·PlaCe for Kids on Saturdays In hundred• of homes •long the Or•nge Co••~ • S•turday morning tr•dltlon begins with a turn to Uncle Len's Corner. Thia regular feature of the Dally Pilot young people's page, of· fera a weekly art challenge to young readers. Uncle Len provide• lntereatlng art aaalgnmenta and f nvlte• youngsters to submit their work to the scrutiny of judges of hi• weekly contest . Winners are rew•rded and their art appeara the following week -apotllghted with the winner's n•m• In Uncle Len'• Corner. Look for Uncle L1tn'1 Corner •nd other apeel•I fe.ture1 for young readers -"Letters from Ellle .. , *'The Quiz" •nd '* Aak Andy" -In S•turday's DAILY PILOT 642-4321 ... .. , ' Hearst Cas tle NWLF ScraWled .. on Bombed Site SAN SUI EON (UPJ) -The in· tUal1 of the New World Uber•· Uon Front were at'raw&ed at the mtrance to Hearst CaaUe. ~ore a bomb wrecked a cuest house there. "by 1omeone wbo planted lhe device or knew it wu to be planted," the FBI said Monday. 1be NWLF. a San Francisco Bay Area radical group. hu claimed responalbillty for the ex· palon, demandlnt the Hearst family donate '250,000 to the de· ty 1uard when he lell an armored truck to deliver a case ol cbam· pqne. Richard C. Rees, 218. a Brinb, Inc .. employe for two yean and a Marine veteran of Vietnam, db· appeared with the money lut Wednesday when be entered lhc San Mateo restaurant. ru.c Lmlu Sal~ SANTA BARBARA <UPI> Ronald Rea1an 's ranch bu lls ( J good and bad polnll as a site for a s tale crub landing, as &llder pilot Stan Buller d iscovered. It's '-------------mountainous and secluded but fense of two Symbl~e Ubera· lion Army members 1lnd change the thrust of Pati"ic1a Hearst's courtroom defense. Jn a picture or the castle's main gate, publhhed m Friday's edition or the weekly newspaper "The Cambrian," the letters "NWLF" appear scratched into a redwood sign. T he photo was lakea 1bortly before the explosion Thunday, but the lnillals were nolnotked until later. IZS,188 llftNlr4 S n SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Tl)e Comm e r cial U ni on . Ins urance Co. has offered a $25,000 reward for information leading to the recovery or ssoo.ooo taken by a young securi· patrolled by the secret service. Buller, S2. bad beensoari.nl for about two hours Sunday oo "a beautiful day when I made a mis· take." The ml.stake was lo llide into a thick cloud and ~ bis bearings. He smashed into trees on Santa Ynei peak. %29 A ... IW ... ftl LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A new surveillance program at In· temaUonal Airport led to the ar· rest or 220 suspected illegal aliens in five days, immigration officials said Monday. Joseph Sureck said the aliens wer e apprehended while al· tempting to catch flights to cities in eut ern states, wbete they ap- parently hoped to find jobs. Guatemala Aid Director Quits Tep&.,..., ~ctress Angie Dickinson was named "Woman of the Y ear " Monday by Ho llywood Radio a nd Television Society for suc- cess of her TV ser ies ''Police Woman." She was only the fourth woman to be given the societ y's t op honor. T-.X. F.tlnl!IX 17. 1979 OAILYPfLOT 4 § Neighbor Lauds Patty By lliCK DY BllOW SAN f''RANCISCO (UPI) ~utb Reaaan likes Patricia ~~~(. Like a lot or next d oor Mi1bbon, sbe can tell you more than lawy~rs about the personal babita of the folks who live ne.r her. Miss Hearst was one of them. On the JU.&ht of Feb. 4, !974, Mrs. Rea1an, now 76 and on crutches. was upstairs in her house neict lo lhe belrea' apart· meat and heard noi.se. "I t.bou1 b t lt w u Ch1Dese New Year's, "ahesa • She qwclcly r.amed d.Ufueot· ly. She and aome colle1e 1tudenta ln her home saw MLu Heant be· Ing carried ort screaminl by the Symbioneae LlberaUonArmy. Nothlnat could have shocked Congestion Stalls Mountain TratJel SAN BERNARDINO <UPI) -Hundreds of thousands of Southern Californians headed for the snow· covered mountains Moo· day, and most or them spent the whole day on the road. "It was utter cbaol," one U.S. Forest Service dispatcher said, "a solid line of cars." Dispatcher Bob Underwood said lbe worst congesUon occurred along the 10..mile road from the base of the San Gabriel Moun· tains to lbe Ml. Baldy ski resort. "EVEN WHEN the motorists got to the top they bad no place to park and no place to turn around," be said. "MosUy. they just sat there and their radiators overheated and the kids started lo cry. I don't think it was very enjoyable for a lot ol them." Travel conditions were almost as bad along the 3S-mile route from San Bernardino to Big Bear Lake', normally an hour's drive. Traffic look up to five hours to travel the same route Monday moving as slow as one mile an hour at midday. ' Several mountain roads were closed te mporarily during the day, but the traffic cleared s hortly after nighUall. the wh.ite·baired mont bttauae for tbe y•ar previous ab• had bad such • n l c • penoaal rel•· tloubip with ber. It •••• woman·to· woman kind ol thin1, Mn. PATTY Reaaan bad a bu1band and Mias Heant wu. llvtna with her then· nance, Steven WeeclW'Or'klnl and doln1 chores around the apart. rm.nt de1plte belnl an be1reu to millloos. In fart. Mn. Reasan t.bouibt Miu Hearst wu tenttlc at lreep-loi boule. .. I would see her oft.en." sakl the elderly woman. "She would wub ber UtUe NI and J used lOi teU her she wu oom, web a good Job she ouabt to eome over and help me, and lbe l•uebed and aaid she would. "She wu one of the nicest ones I ever met tn my lite.. I wi&b we had a few more lite her." Mn. Reasan liked Mias Heant so much that, after testifying at the Young woman's bank robbery trial. abe struggled from the stand on her crutches, paused before the jury box and gave ber a cheerful litUe wave. Miaa Hearst wa ved back, LOS ANGELES <UPI) -Jock Laurence, an American spokesman for the dnve to send aid to earthquake v1ct1ms in Guatemala. resigned Monday durin1 a confused news conference with the Guatemalan consul general, charging· 'the situation is absolutely chaotic." Laurence, local public relations director oTthe National Emergency Relier Committee for Guatemala. said the relief effort is crippled by a lack of coordination. conflicting reports, unreliable in· formation. inaction by both Guat~malan and U.S. of· ficials and the inefficiency of many volunteer workers. THERE'S SECURITY IN NUMBERS. -LAUR ENCE SAID that aner setting up a news conference for Consul General Dario Soto Mootene· 1trobe was forbidden to speak toreoorters. "Because I have been excluded from participa· lion·, l find myself on the questioning side," Laurence said, joining reporters in quiizmg Soto Montenegro . . THE NEWS CONFERENCE was marked by in· terruptions and Incomplete questions and state· menlS because or the language problem. involving the Spanish·speakmg Soto Montenegro, Enghs h speaking reporters. bilingual reporters using both languages and an official interpreter Laurence said be telephoned a U.S. A I 0 orricial in Wuhin&ton, James Lockhard. and was told the State De pa r tment no longer r egard!> the Guatemalan s1tuat1on as an emergency. SOTO MONTENEGRO disputed that, saying he did not understand such a statement and an emergency still exists. lie read a statement from Guatemalan Foreign Minister llcctor A. Mencos saying more food, clothing, building material and medical supplies are needed. The cons ul said he would comme nt later on charges by doctors and other Americanii; who re- turned from Guatemala chargin~ that relief aid is piling up In warehouse5, kept from reaching the peo- ple by bureaucratic rt'CI tape. Does indora think ~ ..... ·ngWeig is easy? It 1s not o simple to5k 101 o patient lo rooch and mo1n1a1n "loon weigh!" IOf lllo First lhe pottenl musl hove on honest desire lo cure his prOblem. then accept P<Ofou1ono1 guidance from trained Medico! Doctois. l 1ndoro's unique 10-woek treatment ond training program wlN looch patients how to reach and maintain their "leon weight" fOf life. A sole ond P<OCtlcol pion. with proper nufrlllonol d iet, ond continual emollonol support. New audio and sub-ltmlnof v1suol a id s ore used to mot1vote the pollent The enlire program is under the strict supe1V1s1on of Medical Doctors. spec1ot· 1sts in Bo11ot11c Medicine londOfo Onocs Of9 ~and odrTW'•\lerod by Medleol Oodorl lhol restnct ltletr ptOCt\C~ IO llo<KJ!r>a AU Onie ~CH ile«-.ed by the S.Ote °' c.at11C>mio. Coll for lnfonnotton Monday thru Friday 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. Lindoraf MEDICAL CLINIC NEWPORT BEACH COSTA MESA 645-3740 557~893 Poca Prdeuo-ot Mesa Verde Bldg. FWfessionol Bldg. Son lemordno • (. long leoch • Mlsllon Hills Howth<>m9 • 0ronoe • Newpot1 leoc:h Gorden Gfove • long a.och • Polodeno La Habra • WOOdlond Hills • Shem'lon Oob W.sl Covino • Fullerton • ~rslde • Santo Monico Costa Me$O • Pomona • Cerritos • Holtywood Over 500 offices and more than l 4 billion dollars in assets make Security Pacific Bank one of the 10 largest banks in this country. All of which is comforting to know if you're trusting us with your financial affairs. Why not join the . millions of Californians who've found security in numbers, at Security Pacific Bank. SECURITY PACIFIC BANK There's Security in Numbers - ";I A8 1::DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • .. • 1 •I : l • i '. Crucial Assign1nent A massive, 150-page bill whlc"h would make many of the key features ot the CaUforrua Coastal Plan part ol 1tate law bu been introduieed ln lbe Legislature. Tbe meuurc bl the outcome of a three· year s tudy that resulted fro m passaae of Proposltlon 20 In 1972. Underth•t initiative. the Legislature has until the end of 1978 to tnact the resulting coutaJ plan. or a plan or ill own . Otherwl$e, lhe provision& or the lniliative will expire. Wblle Ume is a signlficont factor ln this attempt :-to preserve and proted California's coastline ~fore controls expire, it cl~arly b not necessary to assume that the recommendations or the Coastal Plan are ca.'§t in concrete and must be rUAhed through in their entirety. Proposition 20 and it.s regional and stale coastal commissions probably ha ve generated as much con· troversy as a ny legislation in California history. Un· derstandably so, because this has been a pioneering venture in trying to develop a valid long.range plan tor the best use and preservation or our coastline. But the Coastal C.Ommissions have been and are no less fallible. than any other public bodies -and because of the lack of precedent for their efforts, pro · bably a little more fallible than even our sometimes bumbling Legislature . So pressure on the Legislature to adopt the coastal docume nt post-haste and as-is. with a s ugges· tion that any prolonged scrutiny or any changes would betray coastal conservation, is uncalled-for. Likewise uncalled-for are s uagestioOB that the various coastal commissions were unable to do anything o r value and that their proposals should be generally disregarded while the Legislature s tarts arres h on the problem. It is up to the Leaislatur~ to cart'lully son out and evaluate the complex Coastal Plan. It may be the most s 1gnlCicJnt action ot lbla SH$ion and it de ef'\•es lhorol.lgb and respomible consideration. Eiioogh Experts It's probat>le that nothing in Orange County has been studied as much as the controversial jct airport near the head or Upper N~wport Bay. Thousands ot pages have been written ubout every phase of that operation -particularly the im· pact of its noise on s urroundlng residential areas. A major -and very costly -environmental Im~ pact report on the airport is nearing completion but it apparently isn't enough so rar as county officials are concerned . The Board of Supervisors last week agreed to spend a nother Sll,400 lo hire yet another noise specialis t to back the county up in its appeal for a re- newed variance from the stale. The variance allows th-; airport to operate in excess or legal noise limits . Newport Beach will challenge extension or relax- ation of Utt variance with it.sown hired experts. so the county presumably does not want to be outdone in a battle or the ex perts. Yet the lact is that the count)} alr ead y has at its disposal all of the existing information on airport noise, since it operates the noise-monitoring -sygtem, and originates all of the information on airport opera· tions, revenues, traffic and other pertinent data. So it's hard lo conceive what information yet another ex· pert can provide that the county does not already have by the file cabinet full. by the mile or computer tape and literally by the earful. I \ ,. I N>rc. .,ob:Jy 1~i"ks of libtr~f ;"?, ~ trhile. 1 \i~etAt~ Afrit4 ." Study Has Backing For All Candidates Still One Tax Records Help Spot Prejudice The Ford Administration has gone and bought and paid for a ~tudy s ubs tantiating what its right· and lelt·wing critics have been beating it over the head with Reagan . Wallace and Harns s hould be able to make first-class use of this work com· missioned by HUD for the pre· paration of the 1976 Grow Report, which the executive branch is r e· qwred to give Congress every two years The Reagan people. who seem to be havin.-c some trouble de- fending their <'a ndidat e 's proposal to trans fer $90 b11llon worth of Jo·eder al ac t1v1ty to th<' ~tates. should enjoy the part whic h says that : " . f e d e ral policies (have> themselves been major contributors to many or the nation's domestic problems the proliferation of locaJ govern ment agencies, boards, com missions and departments, each with speciali~ed objectives which often seem to work at cross purposes a nd to be msulated from effective control by elected off1C1als , was in part a con5e qu.-nce of the proli(eration of <federal l categorical grants-In· aid. Rather than reduce the fragmentation of JlOVernment which results In c~tly duplica· tum of ser vices, parocfllallsm. and competition, federal pro• ttrams seemed som<'t1mes to foster 1t . federal asltlslancv lo states and locahlles distorted spending priorities as com· munltles •ought l<> obtain f~eral rlnllars and cncouraJ,?ed a pro· J<'Cl ·by·proJec-t a pprO#('h lo com· munlty problC'mll " THE R•:PORT wns prepared hy Pet(•r C Labovlh & Co. of Washington with U"''1~tan<'e of th<' 1oont con11ullinA ond audltln.: fi rm of Arthur 0 . Little of Ca m· hrldttt•, M 1.1b ( VON HOFFMAN ) destiny ... By the m1d·l9'70s the vast majority of American families .. found they were priced out of the new housing market Only the top 16.5 per· cent of the families · those with incomes over $16.000 . had the incom e to buy a new home of even the median price level co,n· pared with 21 5 percent one year before proputy taxes rose 63.5 percent from 1972 to 1975 Unlike the rich, middle-class famtlies do not have access to ta>. loopholes to c ut their tax liabilities Unlike the poor, they do not have subsulies Even if family income rises as fast as in· nation, the increased tax bite ot higher tax brackets results in a decrease in purc hasing power .. More and more, the nt\ddle class is finding that it has to rwi faster just to stay in place " George Wallace may say it stronger, but with no more clarity For Fred Harris. lbtre is am· munition too It coraes in the form of confirmation of a large jump in the number of families under the poverty line, u_p to over 24 million persons Who are the people being pus hed back down out of the lower middle class" "The bulk of increase in povert,y occurred among while persons, .. the report says "The number of white persons below the povert) level increased b) almost eaghf percent.. There was no s1gnif1 cant cha nge reported m bhack poverty levels. but the proportion of blacks below the poverty thret1hold remained substantlolly greater than that for white!! .. THE DISTRESS of the white fti;!l'd continues, f'vcn umontt those who own som.t_th1n i:t of value. "f:ven m any ol l'hc t'hlt r ly who ha\'e paid orr their mortgages find themse-lve!I una bl(' to m«'('t the rlsin.i monthly t'osts of utilities. property tous and upkeep and m1unten1mce out Gcor11c Wallo<'e c:in find <"On· of their low fixed incomes." .... firm at Ion rrom the Ford Ad · The ~cond R.-con!CtrutUon hu min111trnt1on of his umpali:n been over (or fi vl' or six years theme thnt tht> hiA& IMcrl' o( the now but not some of thf' most Im S<-vt'nt1el' nre middle·clas!I work· -Port~nt el('ment.a which t'llUICl'Ci lnA folk11 · "The ra1)ldly risin• the racial upheavals of a decade C'C1Kts or living nnd n drop In real 0110: "Tht' 1970!! have seen little dlspol'loble income since 1973 proaress In the reduction of black htt ve hnd m lljor efft'Ctis on the poverty In cont ru t to the sll{n1fl flnanC'rn l picture and outlook of cant downward lrl'nd obeerved m1ddfl class families . lhe11c ·Jurin«-the 19061 ... the overall In families have bef,lun to feel thal romc po11ition of black familitts tht')' have lost control over their relative to white families hu IC· Dear Gloomy Gus MaJpractice solution. The number of lawyua m the ~late Legislature should be limited to their repraen· tative proportion in the general population. Can you imagine a legislature made up almost entirely o ( Insurance agents~r doc· tors" D.J. .......,. o-c-•-'•...,.._w -------· ...... "".....,_ --... -····· ----_ ....... ,0...0.11, ...... tually declintd since 1970 ·· Even granting that '14 and '75 were exceptionally Md years, there's nothing about this report which can be called new news tx· cept Its source. It was handed-in In December so that the higher. ups In the Administration had time enough to kick it over to the White House for the State or the Union speech. If it had aotten there. it's comforting to hoPt ll would have had some effect on the fonnulaUoo of Ford's tero- lllch non-program. But lf It bun 't dissuaded the Ford people of the delirium that Mother Nature will cure us of whatever 1ils . ll 's meat a nd drink for his enemies: A word o( tautlon: trs one thing to agrtt with Rea(lan. Wall ace and Harris as to wh3t 's hurting, and another to thmk they hue any practical idea a bout what to do •bout It . President To Expose Selection ·by IRS My ace newJ1man friend : Milt.on Haberdasb, is working on a new book. It's called, "The Secret Sex Life of Cal Coolid&e." "Why Cal Coolidge?" I asked him. Milt shrugged. "Who else is lefi?" he said. "They've already exposed Nix· on as a crookr• JC>t!Ason as » 1Yffig, power· mad nut and KeMedy as a phony war hero with a bad back due. presumably, lo over · eite rclse " "There's Eisenhower," I s ug- gested "Kay Summersby," he said, arching hia eyebrows. "Take Truman," l said. "Too late," he said. "There's already 20 auys writing books de· bunking lhe Truman myth that 20 other guys just created And don't say Roosevelt. Have you read ·Ett>anor and franklin'? They should have called it, 'Eleanor and Franklin and Lucy and Mis- s~· .. WASH1NG federal prose utors have beeJl prying lnto pro pectivejurors' in· come tu recor in order lo lip the acaJea of JUSti i.Q the govem- ment's (avor. ' Tbe Justice Department's ac· «"II to the tax r ecords permits them t o screen out pote ntia ll y hostile jurors in c rimin a l tax cases . 'lllousande of un1uspectlng jurors have been screened and the prac· tice may have affected hundreds of cases. Some Internal Revenue Service officials became so oul · raged by the ~nfaimess of the practice that they lodged a stiff complaint within the IRS. As a result, the release of tax in· formation t o government lawyers has been restricted But sources with intimate knowled1e of Justice Depart· menl procedures say the snoop· ing is still "widespread." Here's bow it works: IN TAX CASES, U.S. Attorneys ( ] often become close confidants ART HOPPE with the IRS agents handling the Investigation The agent, of ------------" course, has access to taxpayers' • "You certainly haven't got anything on Hoover " files When the pool of potential (JACK ANDERSON ) Jurors 1s chosen, the names are turned over to i pro:.e<-utors and defenst> law rs Thl' de fense. at best, c only make u cursory check or them. Th e Jus tice Department. however, has an electronic 111 vestigator • the nearest lerminu I of the I RS computer We hUVl' learned that e ntire jury panels of more than 100 names have tx•en run through the I RS computer for a single trial on orders of govern· ment attorneys. When there 1s time, former prosecutors have confirmed. the US. Attorney may have an IRS crony pull an actual return for lO· s pectlon . although there ore strong rules against this prac tice. IF A prospective Juror hus been r ecently audited, tn · vestigated or otherwise hassled by the I RS. the prosecutor can strike him from the panel Without explanation. This, or course. weights the final 12 person panel with Jurors who have no reason to be susp1c1ous of government tax procedures Because the system gives this sharp advantage to lhe prosecu· Lion in jury selection. the end re· suit is an unfair trial and the de· fendant's rights are severely damaged. Footnote· A Justm.• l~part· ment spokesman told us that In formation can bt' ll'Rally ob tamed from lht' I KS about pro spcctive Jurors lie i..a1d M11ne U.S Attorneys do not ask for 1t at all, some 1nqu1re about only 11 fe"' Jurors and some serei•n c•n tire panels. An 1 RS spokt'i.mon said regulations only allow "y<'~ .. or "no" a nswers to whet her Jurors ha\'e been invcsllgat<..od GM JAM : In 1973, Gencrlll Motors said il was prepared to sell 100,000 Bwcks. Oldsmob1lcs and Cadilla<'s, equl pped with air bug:. to test whether the safety devices work. But a "Cat ch 22" situation has developed_ The lest has fallen through because GM hasn 't tiold enough air bag cars. The reason. they have not been advertised. GM told us they have done all they can to sell the air bag <iutos, but our own survey of 20. de alerships casts '1Qubt on their statement. Not or/r or the 20 had an air bag car on lhc lot, and eight didn't even know they were still ava1lablP Four recom- mended against the bags One dealer. confided honestly that .. GM doesn·t push them because they ljre an expcns1vf• option.'· Now. with only 10,000 of the 100,000 air haA cars sold, GM' is abandon in~ the experi ment in 1977. barrinl-! federal action. None of the olhcr auto makers even matched the abortive GM <'Hort "What more could you pin on a man who's alread) got a Great Depreu1on to h 1s <'red1t' Nope. Cal CooUdge 1s tht lasl Amen can President who remains unex posed " Success Kills Dairy Farms "WELL, maybt' ~." l s:ud. "But what mnkell you so s ure he had a secret sex life?" "Oh. l 've got half the proof already Ev('ry day after lunch he W<'nt into thta room. And you know whnl was in this room" A bed A iuy in a room with a bed Thtrt'1 half o 11candl\I riJth\ there ·· "He took o d1ijx_li11p," I said "He clalmod~ he took a dally nap,·· uid M llt "tic alMo claimed he slept el1rht to ten hou~ l':niaht. Can a norm11I m•n do bd\h" Then he'd dluppear from the Whit<-llOul\O for three months at A time ·· "Ht wtnt f111hlng. I've seen photoarapha to prove It." "You s4w photn1raph.'l of him wurin« hip boots and holdinA a Ions rod ln hla hand." uld Miit, noddin«i. "Now doesn 't that strike you aa a little bit klnky?" ''Kinky•" "And apeaklng of klnky photo· anphs." uld M Ill, "do you re· member that famou.1 one of him posln1 In an Ind Ian war bonnet"'. "What's wroni with that?" "A arowp m1<1n dressing up in feathers! Tbe only other person who did that was Sally Rand." "LOOK HERE, MUt.·· I •aid &narlly, "it' a m uctraken like you, dredglnf up every 1onUd de· tail oC our past President.a' lives, that are making the country cynical and apathetic." "Can I help It," 'a.Id Milt. "if Coolld1e had something In com· mon with every single one or thne other PresidenL'l" · · "What'• that"" I osked sus- piciously "He was human," said Milt. Cows don't give milk. City chUdren are taught that cows give milk. Cows don't gnJf milk. Somebody has to go out there to the barn and ta.kei1 awuy from them -twice a day~ And thoee somebodies are get· tin& fed up with havinJl to work seven .da y weelt1, d ark to dark, for two 1ene ra· taona for less than the na tional leRa l m i nimum wage! Twent y yean ••o our nation had 2 million dairy farms; today a quarter oC a million. They're 1tlll 1ble to nourish our nation because they havc.- bttome 10 phenomenally effi cient that our dairy farmers have doubled per·man productivity in the last 10 yHra. And increased per-cow production another 150 pounds last year. A HUNDll£D years ago on<' dai ry f armer could supply himaelt and four other people. Today orM dairy farmer sup·. pUis hhnulf and 54 ~people Yet he's &Olnl out of business -because of hi1ber wages, hllber taxes, hllhtr fuel costs. And because farms are being crowded out of city are.as where milk is most needed -by ex· pandln1 houalng developments, achooll and golr counea. I( the dairy farmer's son is left with a handful or udder and less than a dollar an hour, you'll drive that boy into our asphalt jungle That won·t help our problems, ( PAUL HARVEY J and won 't solve his BUT HE'S fed up Jk helped bwld a S6 billion indu.'!try, h1• 1n rreased his produt'tivity lhrl'<' times raster than WOrkl'r'I In other 1ndul\tries. Yet he's !N'.I up with shovelling for nothinJ: what city 1tian lawnscrapers pu y :c dollar a bag for in the store So 1n desp.-r"t lon he• lm<d b11< ger herds on lttss acrc>S and wvnt backward. lfe's tried dumpinl( milk In ditches and plerf'rn1·al ly1ytolli< an<t locul co op!I, anti h<"'I s till JI tht> mercy or a merc1ll•l>ic t'o"t pn<'e sqJeeze Recently I v1i;1ted lhc· Royt'r dairy farm on OreJton r1ke-out of Lancaster, P3 Holsteins, 60 he1fc>r'I and calves . Efftclt•nt Last year lS,4~ pounds or milk and 576 pounds of butterfat Fine herd. Won Outstand1n..i Breeder Award !11x tim<'ic But that farm 's being !lc1uec•u•ll out of busines11 Ameri<'a ns, we a ll have o lltJke in this. Every depre:mon in our nation's history has been farm bred and farm led. YOU STAltVE the farmer )'OU starve our nation ·s largest sup· Porter of heavy equipment -and all related indus tries. Dairy fa rms -only 260,000 left in our entire nation, scattered over all SO states -have no <'lout in Washington where Ult' name of lhtt iame 1s numbers Rut they arP, through reaional d1nry ('O-Ops, getting togeth(•r to , negot.1ate some.> fairer pnt't'S with lht' bottlers and prt>Ct'NSOr:O. Of milk • Th<' story goes thal Amt•ri<'On pr1 :100('rK of W ;1r Wert' being broken to harne1>s hy a c·unnln.: torture. Starving, thc•y w('rt' seat •'<I at a fully prepart>d bnnquc·t I:. blc• but the! food wnic in dc·c1> d1'lhc.-:1 and lh('1r handll w1•r1• ut'd behind their chl\11"11 All th11t food to "mell and 1tc1 way to eat llour:i latt•r lht• lorml·ntors r.- turned to d1:H·over t•at•h mt•n hod ~I fork 1n hus l••t•lh Und WJll feed 1ng thl' guy near hy Tht')"<t h:tvc• "llHrV<-<I tn death Ir tht>y 'd not J.(ot m 11un11c•cl llut toll<'lhc•r, .,:1l'h h1•lp1n1t lht• nthN, thi'Y mana~<·d ORANGE CO AST DAILY PILOT /(11/wrt "' ~ f'f'<I /'11l~11lwr Tht1rr1G, I\~,., 11 f drtor llnrlx11u ~ •~11111 h f.'tllt111111/ / '1111r ~rl1tor Tht• 1••hlor111I f1;1111' u( tlw l1a1h f'rlol '(•f'k' l u 1111111 m u 111I ~t1t1111lulf• """"'1' l" 111 • • 11lt111• on llH' p.11•1• di\ 1•r\1• 1 "mn11•n\11n IHl \llpll»• ul 1111 t I ,.,I h1 \ llillt'UI t'fl n1lum111'<h .11111 t Jrt•winl'I' h1 ""'' 1drni: ,, lnrum for rc·.1d1·1 .. v'""'~ Jntl b' 1>rl'c.••n11n11 th1' rw"' ~ll.tfl('r i. 11pin1nn~ .md irlr11' nn rurrcnt t11p1r" 1 h1· l'flr111n11I ht>tllitlfl'I <If thC' 0 1111\ l'il11t ;JllJX'<tr uni" 1n thf' f'fillnrrnl c nlumn >it 1h1• lop or thl' µ11 1(1' 0111n111ri" t•.11 pn•s11c"<l h\· thf' c•nh1mn1~" .ind r11rtoon1~1~ 1.11,t1 l1•tl"' lo\111•'" nr(' lht 1r ""'" Jntl "" 1•ntl11r'lt'm<'lll •11 1h1•1r """'' 111 lh•· Du1h l'1lol 'hnultt tw rnf1·rr1•1I Cute' Li s ' Ki<U Confwed I ~~~~~' ~~~~~~ome • from" Wuuld you bclte..,t-"from Gocf• place," a • ··tnib} itort•'' or t'Vt'11 ··., rluck ., " ' Thoae were some uf the 1m~.,n·r:. •leaned from • 100 )'OWlf;lleu by chrucul f*)C!wlogu1t Or Anne Hf>rni.tt'm, who r.;.)~ th~t· cui.· ;.inulo.i1es dreamed up by parenl't tu ~u1t1 fy 111quis 1t1vl' children h•ve f only conlu11t:d tht•m about whtrt! '""'°pie really rome fr om • IN 1 .. :R DOCTORAL 1.HSSERTATlON at UC ' lw·rkl'IC'l . Ur Hcrnahml trted to find uut exactly ~hat chtldren, ag,·d 3 to 1~. knuw about bubt<'S lh·r ft11dm.c". J?Ubl111h1..-d an f'sycholoity Today, 'how that most ch1hJrf'n hml u va.:ut· and incorrect understandin& cir reproduction. m0$t urten maxed ~1th 1dea11 th11t babw:. are "JUllt made" or come from ~namals Dr f\<'rn11tein blumcd purcn~ tind their "birds <ind ~es " approaC'b "A!> it r t>sull." bh(' sa id parl'nt~l descriptions of sex und birth oCt~n i.ound like niorrung roll·call on Noah's ark IN QUIZZING Tllt CtULDREN, DR. Berns- tein found the ir 1de.is on human reproduction varied according to age For instance, most cl11ldren between 3 and 4 thought babies were always alive and .... ere simply brought home by their pa rents, sh e said. Answering the question, "How do people get babies'>" one child said "You ~o to a baby store and buy one, .. while another sajd "from God's place " /\ third child ani.wcred: "It JUSt grows in· side mommy's tummy mommy doesn't have to do anything "Still another said. "To get a baby, go to the store and buy a duck .. Childre n bet .... ecn <i&l'l> 5 and 6 bebeved that babies were "manufactured by people as if they ~ere refn~erators, TV :-.cts, or a utomobiles," Dr. Bernstein i.a1d ONF. CHILD. \\1TU A KNACK FOR detail CX· plained · ··To get a baby to grow in your tummy, you must mnK<' Lt first You put soml' eyes on it. pu( the head on, and hair, and all curls You make it with h{\ad stuff you find rn the store that m akes 1t for you Thi.' momm) and ddddy then put 1t in the tum· my and then 1t ~oe~ qwc:kl~ out " Seven or 8-} ear old l'haldren reach a "trans1 t1onal" le\ el. said Dr &•rn~lean They realize father~ art.• 10\0h t•d in reproduction. but they don't kno" how Althnugh l>he rcc:ommend:o; dropping the ·birds .10d !wt•' .. appr0.1Ch. Dr Bernstein doesn't favor c:bnacal e xplanalloru.. either, betau~e children will JUSt process the information "through mental ;ungle J!) m'i" until tht') c-rc•uh· their o~ n version uf creation HERF. IS DR. BERNSTF.l!'/'S IDEA of an ideal 'introductory ll't lurt•" on the subject "Only peopll' can make other people To make a baby pe r:.on, you nl'<'<I two gro~n·up people. a woman and a man. to be the baby·s mommy a nd daddy The mom m y and dnddy make the baby from I an l'~~ in th\• 11111rnniy·~ hod\ Jnd n s perm m the J daddy ·~ hod_\ Platters Fight Use of Name ST t Ol IS 1;\P1 \1 rmtx.>r:-. of the sing- lnJ.t ~rouµ Thi• l'lallel"l. "hlC~h 'iold more than 0111' m1ll1<ln C'OJHI.'~ or . 'Thi• C.rl'at Pretender ' m the l~s . h:I\ e won a court order barring a nt'\lo ttroup from appeanng an St Louis under the name Pl.ittn1. ' The orri:mal Platteri. ~roup won the court order after fahnf,l swt charging the new group with 11legntly anfrini.:anJ.t on a trademark The on~ma l Plalleri; Jrc 1.chcd ulcd lo perform here March t 1.tFE INSURANCE TO HELP PAY BURIAL EXPENSE $500 to $5000* EVERYONE ACCEPTED BETWEEN AGES46·87 '0.0H"l•"'1"''- NO SALESMAN Will CALL Wille and give vs your date of l>lrtfl LIFE OF AMERICA INS\JRAN<:E CORP of 80STON •O BroMI St • Bo5ton, Mus 02109, Dept. <M·N 9 Or Call Toll Free: 800-225-1780 Henry Block has 17 reasons why you should come to us for income tax help. '6 ~ Reas0n 14. WP. rr> l111man and once in a q11' 11 wt11IP w~ makr• ,1 rr11c;1akc But 11 O.J' crrur n,'1.tns you must pay acJd11tona1 t.ix. yo u r><1Y only lht• tax We pay any •• 1ntr.rest or ptlnafty We stand behir]d our work H&R BLOCK~ THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE COSTA MESA I CORONA DB. MM I I 7 J ,_... -UJ L I 71• ,.. !tu L c:..t ....,. • 0,.. ._.,.. w ... ..,.. ... w .• s-~ .;..T--X=::..;;;i.~·'"""ebnl~'""wy..._1_1._. 1 .... m_._ __ .__ __ ....... 0A_1 .... L Y_Pl....;LO..;;..T.;....__.A~Z Law Student Loses Everything at Once WASHJNGTON <Urll -Btfore be wmt on vacaUon lasl JuJy, Amrncan Vnlvtnlt)' law student A. S. Caaky •ilbdrew nearly ~.000 lll •llvma~ from h1a b•n.k 1&od tumt.'d it onr to a commod1hl'1 broker with hopes or atriklna It rich. t'OmmoditiH trading and was ill· advtud to mvrat 1n whal even the~•· perts say ts • hi1hly apecuJaUve came tor "tliah rollers." CSAIC Y SAID Ht: went to bis broker, Hornbtowt•r & We-cu. fll"m· phlll, NoyH. Inc • but 1i:m no ull1f•c· tion He said llornblo~l'r demanded M pay up .iPlt ........ Be Ellff•rftl Newark, NJ., Mayor Kenneth Gibson, an avid jogger, complet· ed the N ewark 12. mile dis tance run through his city't; streets and parks lo place 296th out of 310 f1mshers When Cuaky r eturned to his Wa:shlniton a partment a fi'w week:s later, he round • ltttc-r from the broker stalinit that nQt only was hilt 12$,0001onl', but also he w1&:s $31,000 m debt. "My brokt'r told mv this was o way to make.a lot or mont'y ·come on, get tn, you'll m1&kc a lot of money.' Now hr won't talk to nw," he ~uid. "They take your money and dump you " "I CO ULDN'T BELIEVE it." Scaky. 2.S, told UPS ''Not only was rny money 1one, bul also I owt.'<I them more than I hove. flow did it huppen ., I still don 'l know and can't find out Cuky, who spent IO years 11<' cumulatine ha savings from summer jobs. lawn mowing and gifts from re· lat1vcs. concedes he knew little about Caaky fil~ a complaint with tho new Federal Commodity Futures Trading Commission seeking repara· Uons for has ~.000 los.s. • A commission spokt>sman said the case might set a prl'Ccdent for de- termrnlni! future ~t1t1ons ' With • anyone can save How to start savino: 1. If you kick a costly habit, 11ke smoking, eave the cost A two packs-a--day smoker ca.n w1nd up $400 a year richer 2 . When you get your next raise, pretend you didn't . And stash that amount in your savtngs a.cco\Ult. Every p&.yday 3 . Each evening. h.lde away your loose ch&nge. Once a month, deposit your hoard ln your savings account. 4 . If you buy your 1W1ch. brown·bag it several days a week 5. Spending a. lot on movies? How a.bout going to lower-0oet matinees? a. Spending a lot on recorcis and books? Visit your publlc l1bra.ry 7 . Spending a lot. at posh restaurants? Newspaper column1Sts oft.en cover inexpensive ethnic restaurants Dme m ID&J\Yl~es 8. Easy wa.y to be more rruserly: retire all credit ca.rds in a good, safe h.lding place one week each month. 9 . Save automatically. Tell UCB Even you. 18. Can you take your vacation aft.er t.he aummer peak has passed? .... ,......,--ii. And avoid peak prices as well as the crowds? 19. Nobodybudgets &1\Y more. Ex.oept some of the most suocessful savers. Try it. 20. Follow upcorn1ng loca.l events 1n the paper. Substitute things that a.re free and tun for expensive ent.ertaJ.runent. 21. Some retired couples put. all Medicare refund checks into savtn8s. ey've pa.id the doctor a.nd can ape.re the cash. 22. If you're del&yed turnt.ng in your expense aocount, ~you can ba.nk t.hat money when you get it. 23. Try a ''No" Week every so oft.en. No d1.n1ng out.. No socta.llztng a.ft.er work. No bowling night. Instead, curl up With a good book; eI\)oy a fatter nest. egg. 24. Can you embrolder. crochet., knit, weave. ca.rve. draw, pa.int or photog.raph your Christmas g11't.a? how much. how often. Ask us a.nd ~....;;::::::::::::::::::~ .... we'll take it out of your UCB checking acc0W1t, put It lnto saving.9 10. Save that wtnd.fa.ll money. Cash gifts from Uncle Fred. Ta.x refunds from Uncle Sam. Bonuses. Dividends. ~ertime. 11 . When you make the la.st payment on the ca.r. the t'u.rniture, the loan, con· tlnue the "payments:' To your UCB savings account. 12. Don't be a looeewa.d. Squander less ca.sh by carrying lees. 13. When you have lunch or dinner "on r.he company," save what you'd have s pent on yourself 14. Tr-y to geL up a car pool. Ba.nJt; 14¢ for gvery mile you don't drwe 15. Some parents save at. used cloth mg exch&nges. They swap what's gOod but out«rown for another kJd's good-but· ou~rown 1e. Read the Thursday paper w1th sct.asors in hand Cltp money·savtng coupons out. of weekend fOod a.dB. 17. Also, note which stores have t.he boot specta.ls on meat and canned goods 25. Family lc1ea: celebrate all b1rth· days w1th a contr1butlon to a specta.l savtfl8S t\md: for the ramuy vaoa.t.Lon. 2e. Bookstores have some neat. h ow· to-ftx·1t guidas. Even tfyou're a.11 thumbs, you ma.y be able to nx a leaky faucet, or weatherstrip a door. . 27. Pla.n~ boutiques have how·to- grow·lt. gutdes M8'}'be one of your t.humbe ls green. Start. your own pl&.nt cutttngs and save plenty of greenbacks 28. Plan you:r buy1ng to take adva.n· ~e of salee. Like winter clothes. linens. toyS aft.er Chr1Bt.mas. And fU.rs, a.tr-oondl· tloners a.nd summer clothee in August. n. Always eat beforo you go grocmy shopping. You'll buy lE188. 30. Have your se,vtngs account 1n a bank near your home or otnce. Like a.ey of UCB's 200 bra.nches up and dawn Cal.1famia.. QUEENIE By Phil lnterfOftdi "4lo sk1mg ror a couplt or w..eks. Bui you can Indulge 1rj all the apr~·sk1 you want." ' How much should you save? You know wl\y you should save-life has a wa.y of surprising all of us. _ How much you should save depends on what you-have salted a~ 1n gOOd investments. H ow well shielded you a.re with medical and life 1Dsura.nce, and. employee beneftt.e l1lce pension money. How easily your spouse oould get a job. And whether there's a Dadey Wa.rbuoks among your relatives. But enough hedging. Most ftna.nc1al experts think you should have at least two months' pay tucked away where: l) It's safe; 2 ) It's imrnedJ.ately reachable; 3) IL earns lts keep wtt.h good interest.. Where should you save? Consider a UCB Regular Savtngs .Account for your emergenoy f\.uld. Why? At UCB , your money ea.rns 5% annually, with interest earned and compounded da.ily. No m.1n.1mum opening deposit ts required. There's no charge for wtt.hdrawa.l.s. And you can ha.ve automatic deposits made regularly .trom your UC.B checking account. Annual Ywmum How Long Y<AJ Interest. Amount.Per Agree t.o Leave ~ Rate Ceruncate the Money. 5'!b asoo 30 t.o 90 d.&.Ys 51/..1% aooo 90 dl\Y8 to l year 6'lli t 600 l t.o 21/.l ye&l'8 61/A S500 21,k t.o 4 years 71/4% 11 ,000 4 t.o 10 yea.rs 7J~ •1.000 6 t.o l 0 ye&l"8 Pleue MtA I.bat. lntertat. t'&Le9 e&n be oh&l1'od W!Ulout. nouoe And that JJ'ede"1 l&w requ1rM • •ublK&ll~l&J llltel"OIR. pen&lt,y for tuly wtt.hdl'aW&I. What are you waiting for? We've tried tot.ell you more about savtng t.1'..a.n you ever found 1n a bank ad before. Why not. try some of tho tips above? Then, when you fl.nd you really can save. you mtgllt brl.ng some of the moola in to one of ou:r 260 bra.nohee. We're tryt.ng to get a.head 1n t.he world, too. rn UNITED CALIFORNIA B_ VBANK~rot r.. • l ' Get it straight from UCB. • , 0"'4 TOt'IOKT....O Uf'OIHTMIMT HlCUIMY •. .._ .... ..._. ___________________________________ _ J . 1 I ' County Solon Raps Ford SCOTT VAN SOYE D£flE8 HANDICAPS Orenge Youth 1178 &ater Seal Child OC Poster Child Active Yowigster Cerebral palsy has cnppled Scott Van Soye's body but not his mind. The bnght 12-year-old from Orange has been named the 1976 Orange County Easter Seal poster child -a symbol of thousands of county childre n and adults whose physical mob1hty as limited to crutC'bes and wheelcbwrs. By O.C. BUS11NGS .... Oe#r ......... Coatreasman Jerry Patterson ([).Santa Ana) la conlldent Prat· dent Gerald ford'• veto last week of a M . l billion. public works. bill will be overridden by ConiJ'fts. Patterson crttklsed ~ Presl· dent for bl.a veto, saylftl It la another lndkator that Font's Ad· mlniltraUon "lao't on the rl&bl aide of the bsuea." "This veto, •lona with last Tuesday's paauae by the House of an emer1ency e mployment bill ... once ataln C()Otra.st.s the complacency of the Admlnbtra· lion and the forcefulneu ol the c.origress, ··Patterson aueru. ••• SANTA ANA City Councilman Harry K. Yamamoto, 52, has an· nounced he'll run for Robert Bat· hn's Flrst District seat on the Oranee Count y Board of Supervisors. But because of Batltn's conla· nuing legal problems and the fact he's declared bis intent to run for state Senate. it still asn't certain if Yamamoto will face an incum· bent in the race. Yamamoto has been a coon· cilmao for aix years and also serves u a member of lbe COW\· ty'a Criminal Ju.atlce Council. He ORANGE COUNTY bu been active in regional gov- ernment aeencies such as the League of Cities and the Southern California AHociaUon or Govern· men ts. ••• CALIFORNIA ·s 500 indeJM;n· dent state regulatory agenC'1es have come under hre from As· aemblyman Robert Badham <R· Newport ~ach >. a candidate ror the 40th Di.strict congressional seat. Badham said the original con· cept of such agencies was to pro· tect the public from "shoddy and unethical business and labor practices." . But he said they have SttVed to 1t1ne the ftte market system Badham was particular ly crattc al of the fact that, wt th tht' exception of the state Board of Equa.lHaUon. none of the aeen de.a are controlled by elected o(. Oclals. Badham Is press'"' for a five· year "self-destruct" mechanism for regulatory a1enclee lbat will force each unit to jwstify iu. t>X lstence pnor to renewal. BADllAM HIMSELF wab the target ol some cnt1clsm from another candidate for the con· irt>Hionarstot now occup1~ by Andrew Hinshaw Alicia Cooper of Mission Vit-jo rapped Badham for t outing himself an state-financed newsletters mailed to voters in bis district Tuelday Evening Appl'I.. fOf Men Only ~--.. ·----~c-.... -,_,.__..,. In Lido Village 3400 Via Oporto, Su rte 6 -' .... ----·:C Newport Beetch ·~ .. !.~~-~~5-6 19~_,J Sh e said Badham's la tes t ---------------------"Report From SaC'r amento" menti on~ "st ate" and .. legislature" only a few tames wtule the assemblyman's >name appears 10 lime~ and the pro· nouns "I." "me" and "my" a total of 33 times She also notes that the newslet- ter C'Ontained two piC'tures of Badham, one or whkh was with his wire. Mrs . Cooper said she has written to Badham to protest the use of lax money on the brochure F. William Olson, president of lbe county Easter Seal Society, said Scott will represent tbe Ol'· ganizatlon in its annual fund C'ampaip , wbicb begins March 1 and runs through Easter Sunday, April 18. Sheriff's Reserves Sought ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~---------~ SCOTl"SSTORY IS oae of perseverance and a desire to keep his mind unencumbered by fear and depression over his illtaeu. Olson said the 1976 poster child is an avid re" ader who can go through two novel length books a day. His current interest is mystery stories. He also plays an excellent game of chess and likes to go fishing . Olson added. Scott is a student at McPherson Junior High in Orange, is a Boy Scout and active m the youth group al his church. THE YOUNGSTER UNDERGOES outpatient treatment three limes a week in the physical therapy facilities or the Easter Seal Rehab1lltation Institute of Orange County. He bas been under treatment for half his young life. The rehabilitation inslttute treated nearly 2,000 patients last year. OlM>n said the only criteria for acceptance al the ooo-profit institute is its ability to help the patient. Diabetes Talk Set The Orange county Sheriff's Department is looking for men and women wbo want to serve as reser ve officers in both the patrol division and t.he h arbor patrol. A test to qualify for re- serve officer training will be given Saturday at 9 a . m . at the harbor patrol headquarten, l.901 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach. Sgt. Edward Beach, Dear Friends Let me lnlroduce Mr . .Phil Evans a candidate fo r the Costa Mesa City Council. Phil is married and has one son. John. He moved his family to Costa Mesa t.birlffn years ajlo and since his arnval in our City has given freely of h1i. lime for bis rommunily He has been active in the Costat Mesa Uons Club particularly m lhe1r Youth Aruv1tJei. . Ill' has l>erved hlS City on lhe Trame Comm1ss1on ls currently s.erv111g on the OeMolay Adv1:.ory Board 0 He is a dedicated ctllu.>n ond will IX' 1an uset to the City Council or eo&ta Mesa A VOTE for Phtl Eva.Mon election day, March 2, will be appreciated Tbank you. 8111 John.son PHIL EV ANS .}~t Schick's New Weight Loss Program helps you lose it and KEEP IT OFF! A new method developed out of the same 6 million dollar re search that led to the famous Schick Stop Smok· ing Program. Eliminates your DESIRE for certain fattening foods so that once you have reduced to your desired we1gt\\ you won't have to use willpower to maintain that weight. CALL Now--558-8404 Newport Beach clinical psychologists Eugene Bleecker and Alan Levy will discuss lbe problems or coping with diabetes at an American Diabetes A.saoc\atlon chapter meeting March 2 at 7:30 p.m. coordinator for reserves. """Fo-..,. ~ =~ .. °"""'' N• ... ••Od said applicant.a must be ~~~~!!!~~~~~!!~~»~·~·~ldoloo~~~c.....~·~'-'""~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==-~~-~-=--====:..:_:~::::::::~::::::::=-DAILY PILOT Their presenta tion . entitled "The Psychological Games and Pains or Living With Diabetes" will take place at ChUdrens Hospital of Orange County, 1109 W. La Vela Ave., Orange. between tbe ages of 18 ;: __ _ and 40. in good physical condition a nd must pass a comprehensive back· ground investigation. Deatlu Elafm'lwre He said those who qualify for either posi· tion will reC'elve 100 hours or training at the s heriff's academy. LOS ANGELES CAPI -Funeral services were held today for television com edy writer Lou Derman, whose credits include the hit senes .. All in the Family". Derman. 61, died Sunday alter suffering a heart attaC'k while driving to work. OAKLAND <UPI) -A memonal !lerv1ce will be held We dneada y for Francb L. Lorence, 51, C'aptain o f the SS Mariposa. Lorence. who died at sea Saturday, join ed the M atson Navigation Co. in 1956 Those going into patrol after serving In the work will receive an ad· merchant !Tlarine dunng ditional 100 hours of on World War II. lhejob training. As reserve officers, • ..,. Neilra the residents wlll have to uuo110vu buy their own gun and .... 1 , T o " M o " G A " h d u1r Th d rt 1A11Ho110vr11. _ .... ,_........,. an c · s e epa · .,... ,..,,....,, ., u11 ..... a .. c,.. c.. ment will supply the rest ;',-;:";:!,~·::":~'.:.~::::•,,.!of their uniforms. Beach wl'9 Wln11'9d; t itler. M r\. S..-1 added . .._ (l.YC.11 .. 1 "''· -....._. ... e1111111<tC1 ..... T•"'''•" •• • He said appllcalJons -1<•1 .... ,,..., 1" ,.,. '-"' ,... will be taken at the Ume w•t<f\ end d•v•lottm•"' Mitmot .. f _,,, ... will.,_.,.,.,., T.,. uo..-of the test Further tn· <>-•"· d<ttt p..,., ... A,,_,,., formation is available by lly f ... Hapt-Society Wi ii\ llurltll al lli D-h 4"" t'>W\ -ca ng ocac at a.r- "111u or 831·9250. His ofnc• 11 IOWIH I. PlllCI, retldtf'll 01 . th h iff' ~ o.-. c.. o.1a o1 -"' ,.._,..,, m . e s er s su-.. a· u ,1t1•.Mvlwd1>111i.w11•.a..m1eu tion at 30143 C row"' "''« ""'¥10\ wi 11 lie he tel al • 00 AM V ti p 'J ........ J .. l"o<lll< v i ... ~ ,,.. a ey arkway PllUL HllS II DRlnKlnG PROBLEm 8Al TZ.aU.OlltON AJN!RALHOMa Ooronai d .. Mar 113-N50 to.ta Meaa &4&-2424 --flt, ll'Mltk Y-Me._111 P<irti. N••-' .. •<II. Ca P1<tl1< V•••jiii--iiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~j 11i119r1...,, •~ecten. HU. 8.-0ADWAY -.>"TUA"Y 110 Br~way Costa Meu &42·9150 Mt<:ORMICK MO"TUA"Y Laguna Beach 494-&41~ San Juan C.Olalrano 496-1778 PAC"IC VIEW llKMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3800 Peclllc Vtew ~ N.-.c>ort Beach. C.llfom11 &4•·2700 PHK FAMILY COLONIAL f'UHlRAL HOME 7901 Bois.a Ave Westminster 893--3525 IMITHS' MOftTUMY 827 M11n St Huntington Beech 53~539 Pl'IU.IC ~OTJCt: Goi l'ICTITIOU$ au""'" NAMI ITATE¥1Nf ,,,. ... ._ ... --11 dO't'IQ ...... --IQ.IDAY HO¥U. t«*! c.rti.14 •-. """'1.,.._ 11 .. c11. CA.,.. PIMI Ip H Mc"'""'"", t«*) Get'fleld A-·"""''"9t""Bo0<ll,CA._ O.te Slmbro. IOOU Gerlleld A-.H•••I0"9f°"le0<ll,CA.,._ n.ta ""'""' "'°"""(ltd Dy ........ 9Cl~lo Plllllp H Mcl'll-t Thts ""'-""'"' •• , ···~ ""'" '"' Cw"'y Cit•' ot O••n90 C-• on ~ ... .,. PSlt1• ~VAMAUOft TlllUA M. CAVANAUO'i, ,._, • _,,All<• l..a"8, Colla NltW.. C.. Dela •f ftolll faW1ttr'r U, lt1•. ""'-~ -.,, .. ,, ,.., .. !Nini. , ...... ,llC\11 ........ w .......... . ,_._._.. II, 7 • l'M, ••ttr -.. ..... c.. .. Mew O..oe• "-••• -S4 ftEFLECTIONS by Reyn Sh~rr~r -Ti.t la941tl ., """wleY Moo----- 4.M. tM•Nl'Wftt. All "°"h ~ry H'll l.ot ......... c.. ••llt .......... c.. .. .----- ltillaw ~r dlt-C•M•. IUl.1.IVAN MYllA H SVLl.lllAN. ~ ol ... ,,.. Oteir• M \vlltveft, '"....,.,' .. (•\ta Mt\e . C• O•t• •' dt•tfll .......... I~ ,.,. \ur•I-11¥ - _., 11-1 \.•""'°' ol CMle Mtw . • .,.. ••ve111t••. \of'ld•• Moo ot Mofll<lol• -, ...... M91111\,,, '°''" ...... .,......._,, Jtm Ml'9r9 of Cat• llM .... -"''""· ... , ..,.,_ • ._ ......... , .. -1111 t.911119 "' Arcadia , tfllt•• •'•"fll("ltctr•" c;. ... , .... ,.1<9' will 1M '--• " 00 AM II Toro, ........ , ... , ...... Tf\ome• Hemll•o" otttc•ef\t, 8 •1• .._., -r1wery d l'9<1on llYDMOUll llMllY C llYO>iOl.M ol "°"""""· e..=:: .:-:.;.:;~:In'.·~~ G "90 ol ~. Ar1,.,.1. ~ .... .,... .,.,,_r.q, P•<lll< \ltew Mtmorl•I ...... "'°"""'' ........... , ....... c. 911."'"' OOLOllU H il\IC¥ ol Cot,. Mtw. C• °""' .. dNlll , ......... "· .. ,. ~rVl"'fd tty f\,fr mot Mr. ll"IO"eft<• .. ,..,, S..•to• oro oendt..._ PMtli< Vi•• ¥•"'•"'•' "•'* Merh.t•"•· ... _. .. IK~,C. (41/( tht• "uu/-f1f·tlt•1wn• •• tkolt r for tht bt!st lt'ose roi1•t. k't try horJc:r. MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS S.m lltt1tu f"")' :11 Anry \11,..ion \'i<Jo 17 l~llB 1 -1 740 .......... . , .. ,., ..... .,, Ith ........... . .......,.,., .. ...., ...... ...................... ~, ....... Wt hne all had the• expnience dHcribed by Webster, an l;n1ll11h pl1ywrl11ftt . a c-o n t e m p o r a r y o r. Shake11peare Normally, our h elpln s hand la extended to someone who nffds aulstance, not ror any hope or peraonal 1aln but ~1ncerely, In thr 1te nu lne s pirit o f helpru1na<1 . Later. we are pleued to reellie that we, our selves, have 1lso ~a1 n ed rrom the nperience. There'• an Inner 1at11ractlon In kno win11 w e h ave practiced the Golden. Ru.le. It '1 always great to realize that we have ~flsbly done the riitht thioi We are proud to be able lo provide th11 community with a aeeeaaary ser•lce, performed to tbe very 1 belt of our ability. · ;:JH€FF€R mollTU,UY '76 SOlffii COAST ~AY vo..w. IE.AOi •iM-1535 SAN Cl.EMENrE ISll NORTH B. (.NIH) REAl 4'2-0100 _, ...... 0.lftqe (N\I 0.oly POol -11-.... J 10 11 "" J»7' -------- Paul is married, a father, owns his own home and car, has a good job, but he has trouble getting along with people ... at .work and at home. ALCOHOLISM NEED NOT DESTROY LIVES ... HELP IS AVAILABLE SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL 3 1872 PACIFIC COAST HWY., SOUTH LAGUNA, CALIFORNIA 92677 TELEPHONE (7 14) 499 13 11 BREA HOSPITAL 875 NORTH BREA BOULEVARD. BREA. CALIFORNIA 92621 TELEPHONE ( 714) 529-4963 (213)694 2139 .. Harbor Clubs Pick Officers Yacht eluba loc:at.ed In the Ntwport·Balboa area started off t.he me with new slates of n11.c of· licers wlalled du.rinl the pa>t month. Headlnl Newport Harbor Yacht Club'11late la Commodore Allen T. Campbell. Other na1 of· ficen are Wllliam L. Bents, vice commodore; Charles P. Cotton, rear commodore; Donald H McKibbon, fleet captaln, and Robert A. Garrtaon. port c»pt.ain NHYC ls the oldest club in the area. Balboa Yacht Club, lht' area's second oldeat club. wall be headed by Preston Burt ZUlgitt, commodore ; Morris P. Ktrk, vice commodore; William · 0 . Carlson, rear commodore; Phillip S. Glu1ow. fleet captain. and Terence A. Welsh, port cap· lain. IUAaNE £ "BJ" Ursln heads lhe slate a.a commodore of Bah1u Corinthian Yacht Club. Other of· ncen are James Emmi, vice commodore: Joseph Monlgal, rear commodore; Hobart 0. Den· ny, flfft captain, nd John F. Kim· ble, port captain. captain, and HarrUoo Breyer. port captaln South Sho r e Y acht Club <formerly South Shore Sailln1 ... Club) has named the slate or Uavld S . llarrilon, commoore . Robe rt Ca rolan, vice com- modore; Denoia Burnett. rear co mmodore : Ke nneth Batter, neet captain. and Dave Doane, port captain. Gerald F . Brame is the new commodore or Voyagers Yacht Club. Other flag olflcen are Paul R. Woods, vice commodore ; Ron Oecon , r e ar commodo r e : Will.Jam Rohrs. neet capUln and Howard Stevens, port capt.a10. OFFI CE R S OF OTHER Orance County yacht clubs .md organizations: Dana Point Y acht Club - David Mc Millan. commodore . 8111 Breue r. vice commodore , Lyle Surmeier, rear com · modore; Horace Noyes. neet captain; Don Fletcher. port cap. ta rn. BOATING commodore; Job.D Morrta. fleet captain ; Michael Delaney. port capuun. Capistrano Bay Yacht Club - Joe Whitelaw. com~; Paul f'ru1er, vice commodore; John BaJlew, rear commodore; Jack Mayu, fleet c aptain; Shelby Gott, por t captain. Aquarius Ties little America Cup Race, 3-3 • DA.IL V PILOT {\ 9 Top r achtsmen Compete Congressional Cup Has International Flavor The lineup for Lona Beat'b Yacht Club'a 12lb annual ConlreaM>nal Cup match ractna series ill complete and ruda like lhe "who's who" of world yacht rac1.nt. The international navor of the t'Vent la hlgbllllbted by the entry ol "Poppy" OeLCour of France. reportedly npresentina lhe col· orful Baron Birh, two.time challenger !or the Amer1cu's Cup. It ls not known whether Bach wlll be on hand for the series. Australia will aga in be rep""enUd by Hug h Treharne. Australian 18-footer champion. makina bis fourth bid for the Congressional Cup. DENNIS CONNEil. two-Ume Congressional Cup winner and l974 Yachtsman of the Year in the Martini-Rossi balloting. will be back to d erend hts tiUe to the match racing eve nt. Conner was the 1975 winner of Florida's Southern Ocean Racing Conrerence and is currently de· fending bis title in that evenL He is also an avowed candidate for the Olympic yachting games In the Tempest Class. Southland '~ t op salli na 1lra~1llt.a. THE SPONSORING L..BYC will ~ ~preunted b)' B:imcy Flam who has parth·tputt"d 1n l ht• aeries more times thwi uny otht•r cont~nder. fk w 111 tt£aln 5all hli. well known Cal-40 F1ambouyunt Grahan1 Hull , r('presenling thl? Eaat~m Nomlnt1h ng Commillct'. will sail under the burgee of lhl' U.S. Naval Acade my. Hall has placed third in two pre\'ious Congressional Cup !>l'ries Mark Ho ll erbo.1ch. another represent at&\<' from the Eu st Coast . most r<'centlv was lhe winner of the Richardson CUp. a Great La k es m atch raring s en es TED TURNER OF ,\tlanta. Ga ~ 111 bt> back for Im f1hh ti') for the famcd malch racing title. Turner. "'ho rerentl~ purchased the Atla nta Bravcl> baseball team. ls probably the tx·~t known ~ailing skipper in the \\Orld He J~ from one m aJOr sailing re- aatta to a nother, u illnlf In • whatever class suJls hls fancy ln 1974 h(' 11k11'Pt'r('d tht' 12 m\'ter Manner 10 lhl.! Amenca 'is Cup tr111 l1 He ls currt'ntly efli•tted In tht' SORC comp4!t1Uon in hla yut'ht Tenacious. Ken Youn1t of Cullfomiu Yacht Club "111 bt-reprei1entm~ th Unite d St ut t>11 YM'hl lbcina " Umon <llSYRll> by Virtue of his 1975 victory in the Prince or Wales competition for the match raring champ1onsh1p or the Unit ttd States. T h e Co n i:r t>ssion nl Cu p, scheduled M ar<'h l8 21. "Il l again be contestt>d in Cal-40 sloops loaned to LDVC for lht> srnes. Ch:u rm a n Dall Steuber s:ud tbe club has purchased Jib.-. and spinnakers for the bouts tu msure equallt} Sk1ppt>rs will draw for ooat:. and~ g1n•n t.,., 0 days o( practlCl' pnor to the commencement of the competllaon. The course will be 10 the occun off the Long ~ach breakwatl'r. Cup Regatta Slated Balboa Island Yacht Club. the youth club or the area. is headed by Stephen Mott, commodore: Huntington Ha rbour Yacht Club -Tom Kasaba ll. com· modore; Don Ha rtfelder , vice rommodor e ; Dick Begin, rear commodore: Pat Milano, fleet captain; Dick Footner, port cap- tain. MELBOURNE, Australia CAP> D1ck Deaver of Balboa Yacht -American challenger Aquarius Club will be making hu; first bid Newport ·Harbor Ynrhl Club to 1.ido·14S A and B: Lehman-12, Eric Raff. vice commodore ; and David LaMontagne, rear com· modore. NEWPORT OCEAN Sailing Association -Pr eston Zillg1tt. president ; G ii Knudsen. vice pre- sident ; Je rry Brame, vice presi· dent. Howard Martyn, vice pre- s ide nt a nd rac e committee t'hairman: J o hn Robinson , gcn!.'ral chairman. VoflbeCabrillo Yacht Club in Los for lhe Congressional Cup as a has issued invitut1ons for its an-Last?r A and B; Sabol A, Hund C Angeles -s kippered by Alex k" H ed his b"ill t b nual Spring Gold Cup Regatta E t rhells -22 : So lin g: St ur Kodoff of Irvine -drew even 5 tpper. e earn ~ e Y March 6-7. Fourtt>en classes are Rhodes-33 : Shields: Te mpl•::.t , winning the West Coast salloff Michael O'Brien is the new commodore of Lido Isle Ya~hl Club. His slate or flag officers In· elude Mel Grau. vi ce com · modore; David Tingler. rear commodore; James Stegall. fleet captain, and Donald Dabney, port captain. with Australian defender Miss against stiff competition. Deaver scheduled to be ~1ven sturts in PllRF' and Ludens·l6. Nylex today with one race re· is a two-time winner of the the lradilional classic in which o th e r c I a 8 s e 5 m ay b e· maining in the Little Americas· Rheem Serles in San Francisco all troples are gold-plated. established with five or more en Cup for Class C catamarans. and is considered one of the Invitations have been extended tne~. Sunset Aquatic Yacht Club - Wesley Bannister . commodore ; Robert Baron, vice commodore; Bob Heinsohn. rear commodore: Aquarius V won today's sixth ...---------------------------------------heat by 36 seconds after I06ing the lead when s he got e ntangled with a buoy c hain al the end or the seventh leg and lost one minute. BARNEY SADLER is the com- modore of Shark Island Yacht Club. the area's o nly all· powerboat club. Other officers are Stanley Shacklett. vice com · modore; Gordon Burrows. rear commodore; Walter Bnggs. fl eet F.arl Spengler . fleet captain . Wesley Winston, port raptain. Both yachts finis hed with pro- test fl ags flying. Miss Nylex put hers up s hortly afte r the start, de· layed by one hour. 59 minutes because the wind was only two knots at the scheduled starting tame. UCI Sa iling Association - R ichard C ummings, com · modore; Kort Orbach. vice com- modore; Gordon Marlow. rear 0 Free at ear.tornia Federal. Thr (;onrl Cltr<111 Foor/ cookbook ~iv<'!-1 you O\'('r :.!00 ways to fe<•d your family fan<'y meals ut hud~l·l pricPs. It'~ full of rich. ~ourmet rC'dpt•s -like Chirkl\n Calantine. Veal Marengo. Eg~ Florentine. Salmon Mousse and Breslaw of Decf. Plus elegant desserts, crisp salads and tasty sauces. International Food Favorites. Author ~1 iriam l ' n~c'rC'r travclc>d to the four curnc•rs of America. Europe anci the' Car ihhean to col· Ject these mouthwatering and in expensive eating adventures for you . You'll lo v<' ('Vc>ry one of them. So ('O tn(' in for l our copy of (;1111rl Cht ·n1> Foor:. It'~ all lroe. Ru t hurry. Th<• supply's limited. While tht•y last t heres one lX>Ok per fa mily. Other Money-Sav.n. \Vhcn you stop in ask about our othtlr ~rreat ways to save money: !) 14 % passbook accou nts. Certifi- ('all's that pay up to ?J~ %~And free t rn vC'lers chN"ks . money orders. t rusl cl<•ed note C'ollcction and more if you leave $1.000 with us. S<•e us now. You 're better off in Cal iforn ia Federal. •6.JO wea,. t•rnu. S.tnto11ttol i11tM"ut ~tw ryqwirf'd fo,. fllrill witltdrvul(I/ /rrm1 Cfrft/""tCd f Jl CTI>.,,,,, c CA!iJ2RN~F~ Callfoml.a FM.lral S11vi11t.!~ a11rl 1A111 A~-•AtiM • CO!\TA MESA 12 OFTJCF.SI: 2700 Ha..W Roulrvard li UI G-4~2300/ 33.13 Briru>I St. l'outh C'n&!lt Pl81..a t,.,,., r lt•v•I ne.xl tn Scars 17111 ~0-40Gli F:l. TOHO l.11k<· Fon><it :!I.IOI Mu1rl1nds Blvd.(m1~. ' r I WAREHOUSE TIRE SALE Save On The Pol~ster Cord General Poly-Jet ... N<NI Through February 28th. w111i.w1111 0111r U DO -" per 111• MEDIUM CARS SAVE! SAVE!SAVE! s19es 51lll'> /1.78 13 A ll78 1 I lo1111•14•· '• t•I tt • w;ill plu5 $I 74 ''' $ l 114 I f'll I • 1,,. dependrnq on s.1e BIG CARS SMALL CARS ... , ••• I ;11 14 A r 11\ 14 lut>f'I~· hlMk ""111 plu• $ • '• '" $7 39 Fed. lx. Tu t.J•\I,. nChruJ uo ·.1Jt• LUXURY CAR WHITEWALL $2695 $2895 $ SPECIAiS . ~'" G18·14/'5 ""'"' ""'"'' ~"' H1~1'1'5 ''""'" ""''woll 33 plus I? S~ or S2 !i8 frd (l . Te• dt· plu~ S2 7S nt S? 60 f od. I•· 111• lit• •.,,,. .. J/11" 3 L71l 1'> 1u111•'41'\ wllttll· pond1119 6n 5rte. pending ()(t •,1Z11. wnll 1Jhl'· S l 00 111 I I Oil f l•I (c, h t 0ftf.M\fH11nq Of\ -.111• I UPER TIRE SUPER PRICE! ALIGNMENT SPECI AL ~.~.~s1 1 ts cond1l1oned car•. aetllng IOrwon ban 1 nd oer• s .r COWACT&ST,,...... needed AMlltCNICAIS Don Swedlund Inc . COAST GENERAl TIRE ........ -'.., 2855 Harbor llYd. Costa Mesa "'°"' 540.5710 646-5011 ------Sooner or ~ you11 own Generals------'! . . AJfDM.YPtLOT TU!!!!!J.'*m 11.1m Llfl.B .. d Sultan Sellin Some ShOoter Nobody lnaofar as t. ~n has ever dia· patched a.n arrow fart.bef" lbao did the Sultan Sellm 111. It WH 178 yean ago that be sent a shalt t7J y arda.2\) Jncbea. Some shot. Wasn't President Andrew Jackson. u ·J wrote, but P~ld nt An· drew Johnaon who wH touabt to read and write by h11 wife, pie e note. tlop houus along lbe cott11lr)''1 skid rows report they've been geUin1 five limes as many customers , recently as 11everal years ago, and a lot more younger transient.I. How rape waa deaJt with In bibllical times 1s a matter or curiosity. tr it occurred in a city. both the man and the woman were judged equally gwlty. so punished by stoning. If it Cancer Flareup Prevented NEW YORK CUPIJ Achiever Patricia Crowder· or f'ountain Valley is one of 2.900 students recognized by Cal Poly Pomona. by being placed on the academit' honors last for the fall quarter or lbe 197S·76scbool year. A n e w t h r e e · d r u g n ==::ir===:::::;;:---- therapy arter breast sur· gery cuts r ecurrence of cancer from 24 to S.J per. l'ent. Italian researchers have found. Dr. Gianni Bonadonna at Italy 's ln stitulo Naz1onale Tum or1 in Milan and his associates reported on their work in the New England Journal of Medicine among Ame rica's most prest1giou!> IN AN EDITORIAL commenting o n pre hmmary f1nd1nf(s. Dr James f' II oil and. head of the cancer center at Mt. Sinai Hospital an New York, said Bonadonna et al report a work or monumental i m · portancc. ·· The research was sup· p()rted by America's Na· tional Cancer lni.tatutc. The drug combination in • the nt•w therapy ad· minis tered both by mouth and intravenously int•lu d ed cycloph osp ham1dc. metho trexate a nd S· nuorourac1l. called CMF for short T llF. STUOY of the us~ ofthedruA mix ,1flN11ur gt>ry i.t:irtt>d 27 month." ago Som<' "omen got the mcd1t'ane Others did not Money's WorttJ. SAVES your Money In the DAllY PILOT happened In lhe countryaide, ooly tbe man wu dtt:reed culpabl~. '° HOt~ced to death, and the woman wu set frtt Clun ru.aonlnt was that In • town, • woman's 11cream1 ror help would bave been he.rd, 10 II there were oo such cries, sbe wu rec•~ as a partner in the crim • But out ln the fields, wlUI nobody arCM.Lnd to bear her yell. llhe was ~rmilled the presumption or unw1LUn1 tn.nOCence Suicide •• u1d to be the major occupa Uonal hazard amonl( IM!ies or the n1ght A Sun Die10 acholar, who Interviewed 300 such pro· feuional women, reports exactly half of them say that at one tim e or another they had tried to kiU them selve:s This i.s an excellent year to point out that the famous battle of Bunker lllU m 1775 actual ly orcurred on Breed's JUll. Addreu mail to L M Bord. P 0 Bor 156Q. Costa MelO. 926%6 ( If you're thinking 'IO)tota,)1011 should read this ad. To get to us you hcJVe 10 -~\\' drive more. tha1's ,.::.lllJIJ. a --~ why we hcwe to do ' '-t:::Jilr" fJ1 mart:. 1n n11r pr 11 e::.. '-' cincJ 1n our ~rv it.t: Corne '>t:~ I 01 yu111:.l'l1 Marquis 1t111h11rt:!:t'd Ji11•11/u l kulr'r ),111 llt•i;" f w~.AH1y ~\11,M"''"" \'ti" 1 11 '•I. "1'111 . ------ Mobile Home loans are our newest spe- cialty I The knowledgeable loan counselors at Soulh Coast Nallonal Bank can help you arrange financing to tit your individual require- ments. with loans of up to 15 years! This custom loan service 1s designed to give you the finest fin1ncla1 guidance. and to help make possible your owning the Mobile Home ot your dreams• The members ot our friendly, highly-ex- perienced staff wlll be happy to make an appointment with you at your convenience. At South Coa~t National Bank, you could say that "You're 1ust a loan away from homel" Many other types of loans are also avail- able. Ask about these, too, when you visit us, ~ a')d we will put our expertise to C:•::' work for you! ~ SOUTH COAST NATI ONAL BANK U9 Sunftower SL; Costa MH• 111 the corner ol Sunnower and Bear "'~"'l>e' FOIC (714) 540•5300 DAILY PILOT Twenty.four percent of 179 "omt>n without the drug treatment had a later rt'currence or cancer Only 5 3 pert'tnt of the 2<17 "omen g1\•en CM F were attacked again wath more l' a ncl'r. ,__".-..... -11-11-,-. -., -, ,-, -11-t,-,-,-., -,.-,-,"-,-,-"-,.-. -,11-,,-,..,-,-"-,-, _____ _... ALL BREAST cancer patients in th<' study hud posiOve lymph node in· volvement · makanli( them high risks fo r sub sequent cancer flare ups. Man Wins Accident Reward ( DF:TROIT Ill Pl 1 C11rmen l.t>o. 27. m amt'd and a ftlh('r. hao; ~n award.-d $200,000 beraust' ln1ur1e, ~ur rered In an Al'Cldcnt fl\'(• years ago It'd h im to rt' Jt>('t h111 wlfo anct <'nJ:a.ic- an homo!IC'xual activity. a('cordlna t o court testimony fo'ollow1n~ a !llX·Wet'k trial, u Wayne County Circuit Court jury awarded $200,000 to Lc!o, of suburban Westland and $25.000 to hi!! w1fo. Ellen. 23 ATT O R NEY P('t('r earbara attt'mpt ed lo s how throu1th t"CJll'rl medical testimony that Leo had , l1.1lenl cbaracler neurosis which flared up as a re· suit or the accident. Four psychiatrists and th ree psychologists testified on Leo's behalf as to the Unk between his emotional condit1or\ and the auto mishap LEO WAS stoppt-d at a red light Oct. 8, 1971. and his car was s truck from behind by a vehicle owned by lbto Flennery Leasing Co. of Lincoln Park. Barbara uld Leo suf· fered minor back in· juries that healed within a yE"ar but also de· veloped emotional pro. blems for which he con· Unues to receive treat· ment. WHAT DO TOOi RAGINI AND MULTIPLICAND HAVE IN COMMON IN NEWPORT BEACH? The pdmting on the l\?ft was done 200 years ago in Raghogarh. Central India and shows a for lorn lady. Todi Ragmi singing to her forest crearure friends The one on the right is an oil on canvas painred 1n 1967 by the American. Jultan Stanczak and titled "Multiplicand''. Both have been en1oyed by parronc;, and visitors to rh e Newport Harbor Art Museum in craml)<:'d. t •mporary quarters on the Balboa Penin sula. Since 11 wile; founded in 1961. this remarkable museum organized bv Newport Beach residen ts and totally funded by private membership and contributioni;, has gnined national recognition for the shows it presents. the classes it conducts, the artists it encourages and the permanent collection the Museum has acquired. The Stanczak is part of the Avco Financial Services collection donated to the Mus<'Um. Soon. the Museum will break ground for 1tc; new permanent muse um and gallery in Newport Center. financed by the public. Funds for this building and for an endowment fund for the future are currently being solicited. If you would like to know more about the Newport Harbor Art Museum, if you would like to become a member, or if you can coQtribute to the important endowment fund. call NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM David Steinmetz, President &n Deane. Chairman. Building Committee Betty Turnbull, Curator 2211 West Balboa Boulevard Newport Beach, California 92660 Telephone: 675 3866 One in a series of public service advertisements sponsored by Avco Anandal Services. Newport Beach. California r Tonight's TV Highlights KHJ e 7 .00 -"The Gun of Navarone." One or tht• "big ones" or the adventure dromas <three-hours, 1S minutes ). this 1961 movie reaturee Gregory Pt?ck, Duvld Niven and Anthony Quinn. NBC 8 tO :OO City of At1gcts. The conclusion of tht> lhrc<'·p:trt drama "The November Plun." in \\hi ch private ~ye Jake Axmlnstcr <Wayne Rol!ers > butlles u plot to overthrow the government. CBS fJ 11 : 30 -"llow the West Was Won." An all-slur epic western about tho settling of the frontil'r. James Stewart( Debbit> Reynolds, Karl Mitlden. Carrol .. Baker. Gr~~ory Peck and many other top mov ie names are featured tn this first of two part~ <concluding Wednes day at 11 :30 > TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening t JO fJ ilT l I Oot Day It • Ti. Aon I "'1l1l111Cr Mf t "'1$1tb ill hu pt''"' 0111 lud\ lo w1ioln ''"'''"'"""' •h•• \ht " llWf\ll• ~·0 0, lht MCltt Hl'<IU Wll Clltlt1 ' 10:00 IJ J7 J re SWlltM lnn1t111t·I inc lht my\ltr•Olll duth ol • • Clltnl': b1olht1, Ptlt tlld Mtc: 11umblf onio • h•ahty prGlldtd • compound on tllt Sl4t111, 1 'ltlt¥i·; ''°" commcnltlOf •llo tCQlsn liht I OI bttnt I lllotl. Ind I 110\lp tf I men •ho flt N~1n1 ,a.ns 10 ..,.. • w1¥t Wotld W11 Ill : 0 '21 t•1 IOJfDCllJ 91 .... , T ht N0vtmii.r l'ltn" Coll<I Wiidt : l•Chl•nt lo ''" MtlJ IUnf1foe (Mm~hl-llt1tt1 B•1twr) DI 1 ,,.,.., •• ~ Chtl(t, 4<Jn1111lt1 Ull(Mlt .. Otl"la ~ t plot lo fl~t O\'tf lfM IOVtfNl1t~t t•d 11111 htl hit 10 Oii t••• lhc piool om"-• ,.,.., llttM Cl) Wif4~1t .,,,Hllltt EJ) IUd11 C.rt ,. i..t. Allltnc:a• Slyk • Et> MtlttJ trt!IM', flJVlc c.-. Wednesday 1 oo o ""'"' s.1 o..~ ,, ... , ·n - lo• HOjle, Mtrtl\J byt, DAYTIME MOVIES ~: :!. = ~=! 10 ,.JOO "'-...... 1111\'Sl ·o • UO O !Cl ....._...,(!lot) '62-c.I LOOI Cb1f7 Ix, Illa a.re1 ~ Ollm•, AIM! Sltyrlltf 1i1J Wt(' (_,) ·44 -8.11C CIM,. J:tO ~ (CJ "Ltd. s.t 9' "'"41"' 1..-(C) ....._ .._... '"'' (•u) ·11 -'"-llatl!tloll, lltt..;e• 'St-S.U. ..,,_._ SI .. ~ Mt'lle-iy : KOCE Television (50) t·• TM••Oll•TMCNllLlll~T t·• COltllll''Q.OTHINOCO•Hl•"Pnt..-" -1"91•1K-w tt:• llf•KMOOL P•OO•AMMINO lt0"'4ftl 11:• •t.•CT1ttC COMPAlf'I' tt:• SHAMI ST1t••T l .. mlfll t:• l""KMOOLPllOOllUIWllllllOC.Olftltll J:• llATIOflAL o•OOllA"41CINOAI. "M""-" NO~......_.. t:• WAStUllOTOtt Wl l lC lltll.'lllW J:tl YOT• ... Pl .. 11.INI "5ecr-ftto0t1et1,,.•• J:a MllTlll 1109USNllCN4~NOOO •:• HSAMISTllllT 160Mlfll t:• 11.ICT•IC COMPANY ••• CAllllAS<OLIHOAS •:• 110 81.UI MA •I LI •:a OllllllNSIO..S IH CULTU•l "Cullllt'•" Mllw"-~f l•locoutv 7:• COltNll'SCl.OTMINOCO•Nlll •'Ptt•I•.. ~ ...... r.1 .... ,,. .. J;a rMOtll llOltUM· MINTALL't' SP'«AlltliO ••e.1"9 Wo,,i.d, ....... 0.-: 0.-•"°"-AnJl..ty" *m•ftl t·• COMMIMllt SUllVIYAL IUT ··c.Meu.-<1 ,.. LOO\ •I '""'"'~ ,r,.~·· t:• THI AOAMSCMllONIC1.H 'JoMAo."" V><t "'n-1" taGmlft. tt:• MOVA "Nl~rtuu·· 1aom1t11 Tueaday's •. Afternoon Prieea NEW YORK ..... 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I 70 • 11•1 !'° • ... :ru :n -: ih.. ~ •""11• ft I 11 I) ... ·:.°'i .. ;: ~ ~ m:. ~ ~•O I Mt • I '9>o '• ..... , I 10 to II ;I" '• ::..r.111 ~11 ~ ....... ~.,. t )I 11'" '-W 1 .... U 1t ;.:.-I Cit ti U 16... llt ·: -~ l: .,.: ..... -·~ u " -S I .. I _,, ... It 1 I ... • ~ , -~· " .... ... ,~ ... Iii' u ... .... '~r. ~ ·; .: ,! • ~ ta-I ) 11t 11 .. -116 flt I » 4 11 I IV I Ill • •'•' tJ .. • \1t •w~ ... ' ..,. '1"' "' , • .,,wt ... "' '""",..,.~ . "'" ' _,...,.,,, JI ' ..... .. _ ~:~.·.:·1 ·~ !'"' . Kelli ..... I J> IJ 11' ttJ -'" ~~·~ ~ ...... -;:: Hetlcl-... " 41 ... • .... ~""''' , ft ..... \Ii ....... e.... ··-~ .._ t~. ...~ .... ~rtt 1 u -... ... -"" '""-"" '-"'tf91., JI )416 • '°' -·---. J 1• -.. _.,.,,' '°" t• ffS "' ...,..,,,_,IS "" ~ .. ,, ., , .. 111 Mlt<I .... 0 I 1) ni.-~ Ht""' 1 -• 11'•-... ._,...,, 1• I 14 n ... ~ "-!"ft A••I It I I~• "' ... ....-c. .. ., .... --'"' ·''' n .,.,.. "' --" 11 ,.., ., .... ""'-",,. " II .... :::~: ::'° n ~~ ... .. _ °"' , 11 • -"' lttll .. 1"1 .. II tit I I .. o .... -"-" ... ,, '"' ..... ... ... ' 1•1 --.. .... '"' J'.)>o "' """"" ..,., ' n '"'-• .. ....... ... s " 10\0 -"' ::-.:r::Ji. .: t .. " Ei:~\ l 'o:: ... HI N I lt'4 141"9'1+4 •.• t ··~ .11io .,_,.....,.' 11 .... "' Hllle<IC IO t• U t•"I "' ~ ... '" 1 ..... ~ ..... £flt<t" ,. ,, t • .... -1-n t• -,.,. _ "' w.l .. A.. J ~ -•"""':.. r n •" "' --I• 11 '" .,.._, ... STOCK '· EXCHANGE --ICYl->CM9w ~ 1 U ... 6.t\'\• ~ lilt••·~ .. u '"" Ytlff I,. 10 '1 It -I. 'f'"9Sl0r : • 1116-•• • 161 ,,-._ ... .. J ,. -1-. . . '"'• ... ~,. ... 11'• .. ,_ .... ,. ,. ,..,..._ ~. 1 .... 11 '"" JJ tJ .. """ • s DAIL y ... LOT A J I 2 Camera Firms Shooting it Out Ry Mll.TON MOSKOWITZ This Is the year trn.t F.a1tma.n Kodu will Clnally shoot It 'OUt with r ota r oad It .• D :showdown that hlll Iona bten In tho makln1. Kodak and P olaroid urt' lht dominant t ompanles In the multi million dollar photOtlrllPhlc bu."lne1:.. However. up lo now they have avotd1.od a raco w fac~ confrontation. POLAROID HAS C'ARV80 OUT ITS own nicho In th market with Insta nt caml•rn11 Kodak nol only toleratf'd that development but <tl3o hel~ P olaroid by supplyinar it with m:gatlvt• film. Kodak workt'd on the n11umpllon that anything good lor pl\otoiirt•ph~ was .rood for Kodak. This 1><•t1ct'ful cot'xl11tence Is a bout lo e nd. Poharold, a<1 or Jan l. b<oaan supplying ull IU own tllm needs 1t no longer buys anything tro m Kodak. And Kodak la 1ettln1 rettdy lo lntroduce> ~ Instant l'amera ol lts own to compote gainst ~~-utc nslve l'ol1tro1d ~ Kodak ha:s not di•· • clM t'd when It will brin1 ~ ~ out its new camera but ' everyone In the photo- graphic industry seems to expect it to arrive th» spnng. Money Tree 1'o d eta ils are available yet 011 ttie features of the camera or how it will be pnced. . . IF POLAROID IS NERVOUS, IT'S not s howing it. It stumbled a bit when It introduced it.s SX·70 self-developing camera ln 1972 but tt has just come through the second year In a row in wblch It told more than five million cameras. one million of them SX·'ros. It now has three diHerent versions or lhe SX-70 -and next month, heading Kodak orr at the pass, It wUI trot out• fourth version, the Pronto. The Pronto, like the other SX-70I, will a lso develop t'OI• or pictures automaUcally before your eyes without your having lo d o anything. It will weigh 16 ounces a nd carry a suggested retail price of $66. which means that discounters will probably be hawking It for $50. PRONTO, YOU WILL NOTE, IS beina shipped into :stores immediately prior to the rumored lnlroduch on of lhe Kodak Insta nt camera Kodak and Polaroid are a study in contrasts. Kodak is by far the bieger l'ompany, outselling P olaroid by 6·tO·l and outea min1 It by lO·to-1. Kodak has 200,000employes, Polaroid has 13,000. Koda k ls known as a ronscrvullvt'. do-1t-by-the· numbers company, a place where everyone 1s well groomed and where it's not uncommon for sons and duu&bters to folio"' their parent.s as employes. POLAROID TAKES MUCH OF ITS sptrtl from the rest · less energy of its founder. Dr. Edwin Land, who shit heads the t'ompany, who sUll serves as its chief scientist and who llll owns 15 percent of all the stock. lntt"rviewed last year by Forbes m naazlnc, Dr. Land wu asked whether it wasn't true that ht: had "created 11 whole industry baaed oo Impatience." He replied : "Look, af the picture you gel instantly b 11s beautiful as the pk ture you &el by waiting seven day~. then 1l 1:s absolu~e madness to sa y that there Is virtue in waaltnR." It's a virtue that Kodak 1s giving up this year, loo. UCB Bra1tch Due To Open in NB The Un ited California Bank will have a new single-story and m enanlne branch with drive-up facilities at 2750 Pacifil' Coast Highway in the Mariners Mile at Newport Beach by tale summer. The building, to be localed on a 18,900·square foot s ite '4'ith 4.468 squa re reel or bank floor s pace. will cost $235,000, u1d Stan Broekhoff, vice president-1eneral manaaer or <'onstrut'tion for the branch's general conlractor , Don Koll Company , Inc., also of Newport Beach. The architect is Wilson V. Woodman a nti Associates of Newport Beach. The landscape architect Is Flintrid1e Landscape or Costa Mesa and the interiors a re by Lalt- Jackson and Associates of Santa Monica. Firestone Planning I Ads on Tire Safety WASHINGTON (AP> -The Firestone Tare and Rubbt'>r Co. will pay at least $750,000 to broadcast and publis h Ure safely advertis ing lo settle a government complaint that previous ads misr epres ented tbe safety qualities of Firestone's tires. T he government alleg<'<i that Firestone violated a 1972 Federal Trad e Commi.li~ion order with ad11 l'lalmlng lh11t certain Firestone llres are safer under all conditions . The 11d!I said the tirt>s were of superior quality without having full proof for the claim, the complaint alleged. Rf!tUoble Boumes Sollflltt SCHENECTADY. N Y. (UPI) -Owners or portabll• radlO!l . i.tt>r cos and other equipment which use balterie'> muy not hav1• to di11card them once they l<>&e their power . \.f'nl'ral f:lel'trtl' Cn 11oyft It plan11 to market r echargcu bl ~ h a tt e r l<·~ anti t h11r.icn The a nllclpatN t ( J price ur ench sm all bat· TAKING tery will be a little mort- than t.3. but G E aaya 1l STOCK should be capable or -------------holding a new l'h61r&o l.000 times. Et1~la•• Ad• D..tJated SAN DIEGO CAP> Advcrtis inJC the pril'<' or ~yc1lasst11 a nd contact lcru1c~ •·tends to deceive the publlt'." lbe Callfornl11 Optomt'tric AHoclolion uld "The safely or a pen1oo 's vision cannot be le(l tQ tht• un1kllled clerk In a ma.~ merchandl~ln" outlet,'' said Jes~C' C Beaslty, president or the 1,SOO·member 1roup which wound ur, ita 1976 convenUon In S11n Dlcao. Buy ng alusea, he said Monday, "la not like buying a lo•r of brHd. • • AMto Rtt-all A"llOlme.d OETROIT (AP> -General Motors. Ford Motor Co. a nd Mert'ede!I Be nz have announced recalls affecting more than 120,000 vehicles. GM sa id ll I!! r e<"alllna 100,000 t urrcnl·mf'Xl"I subco m poet car• lo correl'l problems which could result in a lo!ls or front braking a ction . Ford ls reullln« nearly 15,000 ot lta 197S and 1978 Bron co rc.-crutlon vehlclet to replace exhausl mutnera which could overheat and create a fire hazard. Mercedes la recaJhng S.529 current·modcl can to cor- rect a defect In lht cruise control system which could Cotto the lhrotlle to slick open. Lett11ee Prfee Dropplr•fl EL CENTRO <AP) -Lettuce was sellin1 as low H 19 cents a head In t1o mc s tores and "arowe rs arc losing a dollar a carton," s ays Jack Cloth oC the Fede ral State Market News Service. . . "This Is the Lim e for tbc house.wUe to buy lettuce." AllDM.VPILOT ' • New flavor discovery for 9 mg: tar MERIT achieves taste of cigarettes having 60% more tar. Now there 's a way to cut tar without the usual loss in taste. That's the report from Philip Morris on a new taste discovery called 'Enriched Flavor'. A way to pack flavor-extra flat 1or- into tobacco with out the usual corresponding increase in tar. The kind of flavor that outdates conventional low tar brands. The cigarette with 'Enriched Flavor' is remarkable new MERIT • If you smoke -whether it's a low tar brand with a taste you can't quite get used to, or a full-flavor smoke you enjoy but with a tar level you'd like to drop-you'll be interested. . Smoke"Cracked": Key Ingredients Isolated After a twelve-year research effort , a team of scientists at our Richmond Research Center succeeded in isolating the "key" fla vor ingredients of tobacco as they exist in ciga rctte smoke. rM&.-m;;iiiiiiiiiiiili:;.::~ By adding only those ingredients which arc of extreme high quality as flavor producers yet low tar producers as well. we're now able to pack incredible flavor into a cigarette without the usual corresponding increase in tar. 'Enri ched Flav or'. It's extra flavor. Natural flavor. Flavor that can't burn out, can't drop out, can't do anything but come through. We packed 'Enriched Flavor' into the tobacco used to make MERIT And began an extensive 0 ~ M"'"' l11e. t97' series of taste tests. Th~ results were startling. Ustc!fested By People Like You 9 mg. tar MERIT was tas te-tested against five current leading low ta r ciga rette brands ranging from 11 nig. to 15 mg. tar. Thousands of filter smokers were involved, smokers like yourself, all tested at home~·, The results were-conclusive: Even if the cigarette tested had 60% more tar, a significant majority of all smokers tested reported new 'Enriched Flavor' MERIT delivered more taste. Repeat: delivered more taste . MERIT and MERIT MENTHOL 9~"Q7.~re In similar tests against 11 mg. to 15 mg . menthol brands, 9 mg . tar MERIT MENTHOL performed strongly too, delivering as much-or more-taste than the higher tar brands tested . ,. You've been smoki ng 0 low tar, good taste" claims long enough . Now y6u've got the cigarette. MERIT. Incredible smoking pleasure at only 9 mg . tar. From Philip Morris . *Al'Mronn ln1111u1~ t-.f c~ Opinlotl. S111Jy •-'•'* Inc un req..nt. Pl11hp Momt Inc .. IUdunu.S. VA 23261. 9 mo'. 'tar:. 0. 7 mg. nicotine IV. P9f cigarette by FTC Method. Warning : The Syrgeon General Ha s Determined • That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Heahh. A Formula for Growth 81 Dt!NNI MtLEUAN Ot ... o.ffy ........... "I see growth as no problem whaWC>ever," aald the k~ote speaker at a llunUniton Beach conlerence on lhe subject. ''How we Interrupt It la the problem. "Maybe tody we can perceive ounelves as being d.lKoverers," said Tim Tate, a Golden West College psycho1oay lnatruc:tor. "Awareness of c hoice t. only the bel\Mln1 or 1rowth. It df.iesn't occur unle11 we have ex- pertencu that alt41r our percep- tions." Those atten~ln1 the day-long conference, sponsored by Crislli Hotline at Golden West COLiege, certainly had &he opportunity for expenencea. The problem was choice. There were S2 works hops. ranging from fetCln1 therapy tot.be meanta1 of drHmt to behavtor mocUf1catlon and auertion traanlng. But because of conrtlctln& times, participanta rovld only take ffve of the 90-mlnute nu Iona. (Each subject i• planned to be offered as an all· day seminar during lbe year.) MEANING IN LJFE The theme of the conference, "llumian ... b~coming," accord· ing to planners. wu designed "to help people find greater mean- ing ln life through experiential and thouthl·provokini workshope." Two of the sessions -Sex Therapy for Kida and Emotional As pects of D isturbed Bod y Image: Real or lmagined-~re marked by frank and open dis· cuss ions. BEA ANDERSON, EdhOf' T'*'2ay, FebrUatY 17, 1m 81 ' "None o f ua r eally bas a perfect aelf·lma1e." "l crew up fat. Now I'm alim but I sllll tblnk of m)'Hll as ~n1 rat." "We all have our own aetf- imaae problem•.·· Th.o6e were some ofthe reuons participants cave (Of' attending the diaturbed body image workshop, by Roi Vilensky: a nurse in the psycblalric unit at Long Beach Memorial Hospital. Mrs. Vllensky has worked With physic ally handicapped and mutectomr patients. Discuuion centered mainly on her own ex- perience of h,avlng a· modlfied mastectomy. LOOK AT SELF "In talking about lbe heart and soul ol what you are, you have to think In terms of how do I look to myself," she said. "It does affect how you look a l others. A man s aid he had difficulty getting close to several people who are obese. Mrs. VUenslty~d people. with a disturbed body im· age <>tun stay clear of other peo- ple. .. It's easier to rejec:l than be re- jected. It's much safer to say, 'Don't come too close.' The very thing you want-you push away.". Speaking of the aftermath of her own surgery, she said, "until the reality of having a physical part of your body removed hits you, you don 'l realize the intensi- t y of what it's like to be in this society without all yourparu. "I discovered I truly missed my breast because it was an in·. timate part of me. I had to go t.broulb a moundn1 proeeu." VALUES CHANG SD Sbe Hld lb. nperieMe hu caused a tba.nse In her valUff and attitudes. Sbt hu lumed to see the beauty in people and •HS relationships rrom a &otally dlf· ferent penpectlve. She aald lf she were a1n1le, ror ex.ample, the spontaneity or meetina a man would be 1one. "I couldn't meet a auy, go home, 1et close and all ol a sud· den mention, 'Oh, b1 the way, l haveonebreast'," She said a person learns to modify. It takes adjusUns. "Isn't It a more real life.style lhan before?'' aomeGlf! asked. "Sure," she said. "'Ibis spon- taneity business really stood in the way or establishinl a rel•· lionship. I've become more selec- tive. "Everybody doesn't have lo like me and I don't have to like them. I now know I want to be at- tractive to the kind of ~le I'm attracted to." EMOTIONAL In learning lo adjust and ac- cept heneU, she •aid. there are emotional plateaus. When she goes through bad periods lt is easy to blame lt on her surgery. "I'm now more aware of the good days. I'm more senslUve to feeling and living." In addition to changing her values, there is another positive side. "A personal crisl.a has ways or modifying your 1tfeaty1e. "I bad a fear of flying and sail· ing because 1 reared crasbinR or TV Earns Poor Rating By JACKI E COMBS LAND Of .... D.t lly l"t IOC SI.off KNBC's ente rtainment critic John Barbour proved to be a very entertaining -guy, knocking what he knows beat : the world of television. He utilized bis caustic humor and cutting remarks to crillciie the stranglehold the NeilAen rat· ing has on the American viewing publk. the appalling lack of In· vestlgatlve reporting on television and the TV program· ming dec isions m ade by ad sales men. "Television news as not de· s ign e d t o inform . The newscasters are simply props to entertain yeu. They are there to ~apture your attention long enough to let advertiSements hit you "The least they could do is to make the commercials more en· tertalning. instead or stressing bad taate." 8 a r b o u r h a s a straight fo rward delivery and drops the funny remarks when rebuking the television industry. for its more serious slns. Rut he p11nrt11a ted has talk with JUSl enough sex to l1tlllat.e the ladies of the Newport Beach Tbur1'day Morning Club. Television news is all show and no depth. he said. "Almost no ·news story gets more than 90 seconds . Wben the president or Chile, Salvadore Allende was overthrown and assasmated and 3,000 persons we re herded Into a football stadium and shot, it got 47 seconds or air time. WEATHER TALK "Then they turn around and spend three minutes on the weather? In Southern California the weather could be Xeroxed '· He said that· '60 Minutes·· ls the only legitimate news show. He believes that TV news ~n·t go after the investigallve story beuuse it is intimidated by the FCC and by bag busmess where all the money lies .. The Toronto·born crilic·s philosophy of lire is that good things happen by accident and the bad things are well-planned. "My son was an accident. The fact that ·All in the Family·· is on CBS is an accident. It was made twice as a pilot for NBC. Among the bad things that Barbour said were well-planned are:.. The Committee to Re-elect the President, the Edsel, The Vietnam War, Stanley Kubrick's latest film "Barry Lyndon" and the new television season. "'If I am amusing, It ls an acci- dent; if I am dull, its when my re- marks are well-planned." An actor, writer and un- employed person by trade, Barbour s ays he became "a critic by accident." He started reviewing as a s mall ptft of his AM show on ABC several years ago ... At the time no one was doing reviews on TV except Judith Crist and no one was reviewing television." He has been at NBC for three years. "People hate me but they lune an to h3te m e." • Barbour said a critic should be honest. interpretative, entertain· 1ng and informative and "not that many are.·· PRODUCER'SGROUPIE "I am n ot a producers' groupie. They aren't writing for themselves and they are not writ· Ing for the public." Barbour disdained intellec· tualis m "I review a movie with the seat of m y pants. I use my head to interpret what my seat is doing.·· 1l is a "gut level reaction. I try to tell you exactly how I feel- what it is that I would tell my wife." His aim is to be "subjectively honest.'' In fielding questions from the audience. Ba rbour commented : -Tom Snyder thinks the news is on to bring you blm. -The new Sonny and Cher show proves that Hollywood peo- ple will do more to save a show than a marriage. -Kelly Lange got into TV news when the only way ln wu for women to be weather girla and blacks to be s portscasters. She haa perfected the innocuous de· bvery ("one that won't arouse the men or t.hrea t en the women") because it's complete· Jy natural to her. -Dr. George Fishback re· minds me or the guy on the Charmin' commerclal. Between his a rms and Kelly Lange's eyebrows I don 'l care what the weather as going to be. He treats the weather like a vaudeville act. -Barbara Walters ls okay now that she's had her vasectomy. -The CBS news team of Sandy Hill and Patrick Emory are known in the business as .. Jugs and Jaws." • 'Everybody doesn't have to like me and I don't have to like them. I ·want tci be attractivs to the kind of people I'm attracted to. ' drownlng. Since I resolved the business of dying those fears went away." Mrs. Vllensky, who is able to joke about her surgery. said If people can laugh at themselves "you're in a really good place. "ll'a all within your power. You can make yourself mlsera· bJe. but you can make yourself happy too." A discussion of the methods and pr~edures for handling sex- ual anxieties in children was the subject of the sex therapy for kids workshop beaded by L. Almeda De Cell. family and child counselor. HERE AND NOW She differentiates sex therapy and sex education hy explaining education is preparing for the future while therapy is .. for the here and now.·· The Huntington Bea c h counselor is a pioneer in the new field (she began about three years ago), and she sees herself as being something of a crusader in practicing it. "If I didn·t have extre m e motivation 1 wouldn't do il. J think one of the primary aspects Qf the rhlld Is his dc\'clopmg se" uatlty." And yet , s he pointed out parents are pleased when a babl discovers its nose by touching it But when at comes todiscoverin{ h1s gerutals, parenL<; immediate ly cover the baby with a diaper 01 change the subJcct. Through ~ex thcrn11y the child learns to understand tus sexuab- ty, she said "The a nxiety level of the therapist is high," she admitted. ··vou can't be removed and be '>bjectave. Ki ds wall get absolute- ly explicit. You must ~ome an· volved. It's a real here and no-.v concern ofthe1r!t." Mrs. De Cell helps the children problem-solve and gives them an formation. "l care about getting their needs m et.·• In setting up group counselin~. she ideally matches the children socially, deve lopmentally and in· tellectually. She looks at their motivation !level of intt'rest is one indicator. She will breuk a silence by telling stones of whai she went through at their age l She also looks at their previous knowledge, experience and prl'· sent needs. JOHN BARBOUR VIEWS OWN MEOIVM UCI Series: An EdUcafion Is cancer inevitable? Does a per5on have any control over whether he or 11he will be faced with the disease" These are some of the issues being examined m the current Biology of Cancer lecture s er1es al UCI. which waa put together laricely by Bruce Lavin, a senior at the university . He believes that education Is essentlnl for the prevention of cancer . ond that the public should learn to discuss the dis· ease without rear. To this end, nearly 40 promi- nent speakers from various parts of the U. S. have been Invited to apeak on such topics as Public Health Versus the Medical Ap· proach In Treating Cancer. Ab· normal Pap Smear-What Next, and Luna Cancer. The program was initiated by Lavin after he learned about a similar series which was given two years ago at the Unlvensity ol California, Santa Cruz. . ... "I wanted to see something like that at UCI." Lavin said. "And J felt that Orange County could really use the program." GOOD EXPERIENCE A year and a half ago he met with a UCLA profeuor to Ht up a joint pro1ram ror the two un- lverwllies , an experience JNhlch he said WH valuable for h1m because "It was an opportunity for me to aee how one f.Uts together a program like that. ' Lavin spent the next summer writing letters ·to prospective apeakera, doing research on what topics should be purtued and laying the groundwork. "We have some of the most prominent namea in the field," he aaid, "but the emphasls ls on local people, so people will re· aUse there are r.esou.tteS close at hand.'' Alter tbe C'burae is over, a. handbook will be compiled from the lectures. which will emer.ce as "a layman's guide tot.healudy olcancer." "Some or the myths, fables and Bruce Lavin, chairman of Biology of Cancer Series, learned what makes a lecture program successful -hard work. • .. folklore will be dispelled," Lavin said. Planning the UCI pro~ram has been largely a one·perlK>n effort, unlike those at the other cam· puses which have sponsored u similar program. Lavin was forced to cut his academic load during th1• foll quarter and says r ather ruefully that UCLA had a comm1ll<'1· or five or six students plunnin~ its program. llt.:PRESENTATIVE But the Thousand Oak11 rci>i· dent is accustomed to playing u.n active part in campus life, so the series was simply anoth er challenge to be m et. He ha s been a s tudent representative for two years 1md la chairman or the student health advisory committee. which hm1, under his direction, offered an in- creased number or health educa- tion programs to the students. The cancer series is open to UCI students ror credit, Lavin said, as well as being free to lhe public, so he believes the educa· Uonal thrust or his work is istill .being carried on. He hopes the series wil l motivate students who are con· slderlng health and medical careers to make commitments to these field.a. Lavin himself plans to either go to medical school or study public health, a nd will decide up. on the bas!& of which C)pportunity presents it.self first. He bas spent $800 in applica· lion fees for m<•d1ral 'l'ht><ll 'II far. but ha., not hl't'n .1r,·•·r1t1·d hy any to dot<' Lavin 1i. ph1l o,opl11t·al ahout hlS rutur<•, hOWl'Vl'r nt•hulclll'> II seems now. H h<' 1s n 't ac·c·c·plc•fl 111 a medical 1'«hool th1•, }l'ar. hl•'ll try Dl!ain next yc•:cr If 11wd11·al school isrtl po!ls1 hl1•. he·' II ••tilll v for onr of !ht· • •di v ~1·;11 1·1· pluccft 1n u sc·, .1 of 1111Ul1c health HOMt:TOWN Mcunwhllc•, 111• '" t h111k111~ about pl:111111n1i< "1m1l11r k1111h; c>f lecture proJ(rums 1111ullwr111111<''1, whlrh rould he• t akt•n to inner city areas, anrl he 1 .. c<in:.1'11•rlni.: or fennit II ('lln('f'r JlrtlJ(rllnl 10 hj'i home town. With th1• Un "''flt''-untlrr way. J,11vin so1d he ho'! h•anu•d 11 lot about what to do 11ncl wh ul nut to do In organlllnl! ~uch o C•1ursc He round, for 1•x11n1plf'. thut most of the Speake~ he invited were enthus1ast1c c1bout ronHnu. even thoujlh 1t wu' u 'lludent- organit<>d event. "The pres ident or Sloan· Ketteranf( M l'monal Cuncc•r Institute told mt• that the )OUth!! or today arc the researchers or tomorrow," La vln said. "They are honored to come.·· He said It will be "quite a Jolt" whcm it ·s all over, but he plan!i to begin work im mediutely on next ye:lr's program with the help of a committee, this lime. The final lecture an the series, wh1cb has been drawinl( 400 I"-'<>· <See SERIES, 82) @ DAJlYPILOf Class Draws ;Kids A Creative Art 'Workshop for Chlldr~n wUJ ~n Thursday, Feb \9, for on eight week session Pttaented at 3;45 pm. on Thursdays and 9 and 11 a .m .. Saturdays, the claun will be taught Ul Art Room S02. Corona CSel Mar High School. Instructors will be Sue Wilaon, a graduate of the Vl'liversity of Ohio and tbe Univ e r s ity of Ma d rid , and P enny McManlgal, a graduate of Pomona College with traduate work at Oakland School of Arts ,,Crafts. be sess ions will rnlnate with an ex· hlWUon from April 17.30 ~ tbe Corona del Mar µbrary . Sponsored by the Sales ~ Rental Council of the Newport Harbor Art MCKeum, classes are J mited to 15 students. Ar· rangements can be made by calling the museum at t7s-3966. """"-- Engrossed in creativity are Eric Axene (above) anti Stephen Caron who took art class last semester. ! '1 Camera Never Lies? DEAR ANN LANDERS: I see by the oewspapers from coast-to- c085t that you attended the wed· ding of Brenda Starr and Basil St. John. One or the papers r e· ported that you accepted the 1n· vitation because you wanted to lu¥>w bow a 23-year-old glrl had m,inaged to hang on to her virginity for 36 years. Pictures of you and Dale Messick, the author of "Brenda ~." appeared all over the cauntty, as well as in Time m9fliae. This is what I am w1'ttlilf about. FQr, years you have been say- ing you've never had a drink in yqur ure and describe yourself as a "total abstainer.'' Yet, in all tHe pictures, you are holding a cbam pagne glass and toasting the new lyweds. How do you ex- ~aln t his, Ann Landers?- WASfilNGTON POSI' READER :D E AR W.P . R E AD E R : ,. Re m e mber the old adage, "BeUeve nothla& yoa bear and oaly half of what yOQ Stt"! Well -la lbh can you cu 't even beUeve half of what you saw. Horoscope: Leo I declin ed the champagne but agreed to pose bet"'e<'n Vale> Messick and PrlscUla ol 8o~ton as they hoisted their champagnl' glasses. In the newspaper picture,, 1'1b., Meuick '1 arm ls raised in 1ucb a way that It looks as If It ls min<'. The photo In Time magal.lne. bowever, ls larger aJld clearer. It abows me with my bands clasped m front of me. which ls tbe way I u ually stand when others are en· joyla& the ol' bubbly. DEAR ANN : A reader asked what was the best thing to do if he is unlucky enough to be in an elevator that is crashing. He wanted to know if it would help to hang onto the r ails across the tor or lo jump up and down so when the elevator hit the bottom he would be in mid-air, th~ sustam- ing leas serious injunes. You replied. "I don't want to bother Dr. Jerome Wiesner, thl· president or .M IT, with that 0111· but my instincts tell me II wouldn't make much d1fCcrencl· what you did " Well , your m st1ncb "en: (Ann Landers (;)J u.Tonq l Just read a book on sur· '"al b> a man named Green. bank He !>ays : "H you are in ao elt'\'ator that is crastung, it is es· l>enltal that no part of your body touch the floor at impact. tr the elevator has a rail at the top or s ides , j ump up and cling desperately H there is no rail or ledge to chng to. or if the passenger is too old or weak to hang on, he should jump up and down, m the hope that tus feet are not on the floor when the Impact occurs BUTLER. PA. DEAR BUT : l don't know ·who Mr. Grcrnbank is, but I just hap- pened to receive a letter from Dr Jerome Wiesner, the president of MIT He 1s one or the most dist· 1ngwshed scientists m the world ;md has served as science ad- v1s{'r to three Presidents This is whalht>says. DEAR ANN LANDE RS: Your instincts are good! Have you evt>r t h oug h t of t each ing phys i cs! Sin cerely yours, JERRY WI ESNER Be Flexible 19 1 i R DRESSMAKING W E D NES D A Y , F EBRUARY 18 By SYDNEY OM ARR AlllES (March 21· April 19>: Accent on what needs to be ac· comphshed as contrast· t.'d to desire TAUR US fJ\pril 20 May 20 I: F1n 1sh rnth('r than begin tt(' l~c l'nds. Draw condui.1ono; Gt:MI NI <M ay 21 .J11n1• :!())· Strl'SS 101t1 a11 vt•. 1n <frp<'ndtnce. rn•aliVl' 1•11 d{'avors Stick to \our o"n 1.tyle. · ('ANCE R CJunr 21- July 22): Cond1t 1ons In "familiar plntl'!i" may undergo cha ng('!I. LEO (July 23 -Aul( 221: Key now Is willini:m'l4~ tn partu:ipate. to be nexl- hlt'. tu experimt'nt. Ac- cent o n relatives, mt'asagl's and short \'b · Ill!. VlllCO CAui:. 2:1 St-pt. :?2>: Emph us1s on money. how to obtain and hold on to It. UBRA CSept. -.23·0l'l. 22 I: What was routine 1s subJe<:t to quick cha"l(e. SCORPIO <Oct. 23- Nov. 211: You get ac~s to M~crets. backstage In · trliue, behind scenes re· velatlons. SAGITfARIUS CNov. 22-Dec. 21 )' Perfect te<'hniques. Friend who "ants to back you may be compe~d to do otherwise. CAPRICO R N (Dee. 22-Jan. 19>: Assume responsibility . act in authoritative manner. AQUA RI US (Jan. 20· Feb. 18 J: Lunar aspecl promotes UFFEll'S UPHOLSTERY ~., .... ...... • ,u ...... -.. C:.......__ • .._.JH transportation plans long-range tra\'cl dis cuss ions. PISCES l l''e b 19 March 201 Give full play to c reativr ur~es means dance to your own tune I • A ·• ·A. ' , s • A1tera11ons • Monogramming • Covered Bells ano Buttons • Bu11onno1cs 646-4 544 '4tH!l tC I ' I ' CHEESE OF THE WEEK BIG BARN CHEDDAR Reg. 20' lb. ON $ 259 2.79 lb. OFF W lb. OFFER GOOD THAU FEB 23 Working for Others VE ': llo:.t fam1bes are needed for cxcb&n&e studenll! arnvm& torthe~pnng semesh:r. Those tnlt're:sted may c:tll Youth Exchange Servi~. 492 7907 More information is av11lablo by wnhna to P 0 Box 4020, San Clemente 92672. SOUTH ('()AST J UNIORS: A food a nd clothing dn \'C iis bemai ipo~ur~ by the Jo'ountaln Valley atroup for Gu1tt•malnn t•o rthquake vlc· lJlllS Contnbullons #re being collected at the city's fire station No 2 unlll Scturd•y. Feb. 21. HlJNTI 'GTON BEACH WOMAN'S C'LU B: The annuul untlquc show will t ake place from 10 a .m . to 4 p.m. Suturday, f.'eb. 21. in the clubhou1>e. TOWN HALL: June Weir, fashion editor ot Women's Wear Uatly ~•II be thl' next lecturer in the series sponsored by Laguna Beach As· sistance League She will s peak at 10 .30 am. and 2:30 p.m . Monday. Feb 23, In the South Coast Theater. • Tlc~ets for afternoon orcsentations for the remalnderorthe sea.son, at$24, may be purchased· at lhe box otrace. COMMUNITY DEVEWPM ENT COUN- O L : Immigration Jaws and ~talus in Orange County will be discussed at a free workshop at 7·30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb 24, m the Westminster Community Service Center. Speaker will be Joseph Sureck, district director or U. S. Im'migration and Naturalization Service. Translators will be available. CHRISTIAN WOMEN'S CLUB: Bullock's Santa Ana will present Hats Off to Spnng for the membership tu wlll take place al 2 p m. Wed- nesday. Feb. 25, In the M:tln Loun~c or the Park Newport Apartment.a. SOROPT IMIST S : A Las Vegas E x- travaganza will be prescnll'd 11\ 7:l0 p.m. Fri. day, Feb. 20, In the Fountain Valley Civic Center . Sponsor ls the Newport Harbor Area group. Tlrkeu, at $7.50, may be rcm:rvt'd by c•llina Vlr1in!a Shaw at S$7-f)813 or 546-0660. BtJSI NESS ANO PROFESSI ONAL WOMEN: Newport Harbor m embers wlll select a Boss-of·the year dunna their m •tine ut 8 p.m. Yrtday. ·Feb. 20, Jn Mesa Verde Country Club. An outs landin& member al$o will b • honored. MVSIC GUILD: Capistrano B4y-Saddlcback Valley membcra will present a bicentennial luncheon and card party at noon Saturday, Feb. 21. ln the Comm unity Center. Proceeds will support an Oran1e County center for the performmg art.s. Tickets may be reserved by calling Mrs. Davld Polak 492·4263. • FOV NTA IN VALLE Y HIST O RICAL SOCIETY : Old Glory-flag of the Uniled States will be the topic or Marine Sgt. Stanley Hickman when be speaks al a brunch meeting at 11 a.tn. Sunday, Feb. 22. in the Crossroads restaurant. HOME ECONOMISl'S IN HOME MAKING: Ron Stenge will discuss Consumer Credit Counselors of Orange County at a 7 :30 p.m . meet- ing Monday, Feb. 23, in the Orange home of Mrs. Wayne McQuerry. Stenge is a pasl president or the non-profit management company which is the s ubject of his talk. entertainment of the Huntington Beach group .-------------------- foUowtni a noon luncheon Wednesday, Feb. 25. in the Sheraton Beach Inn. BRANDE IS WOMEN'S COMMITTEE: A From 81 • • • Series pie each night. will take place Thursday, Marc h 11. and then Lavin's work will be done. '.fhe series is sponsored by the UCl School of B1olog1cal Sciences. Campul> Committee on Lec- tures, College of Medicine, and the Amencan Cancer Society. The programs are presented in the UCI Scieoce Lecture Hall from 7to9:30p m. each Tuesday and Thursday. with special programs scheduled for Wednesdays, Marcb3and 17 Further Information may be obtained by calling theCnmpusCommitteeon Lcclures,833-5588. $55 1'wlll h. ~ . . 91ie tMagi£1an Soup. Sahd 6 Seafood Dinner ~ cup of Polase St Germain, m1de dt>ily in our kitchen. Crisp spinach salad wilh chopped bacon, hard boiled egg, sweet/sour drening. Crepe St. Jacques: Sca~lops, shrimp, and sliced $2 95 mushrooms in a sherry sauce ~· with sruyere cheese. Cocktails COSTA MESA SOUTH COAST PlAZA no rth side of the Bullock's wing Free Parkins 556-1225 AMEJllCAN Dl'tlDS•MAIT'E' CHAAOE•8AHKAM~O ... ~ ....... ... Don't miss the most spectacular MA TIRESS VALUE In SEALY history. For a limited time. Every Mattress in stock for a immediate delivery. IBUY TODAY -IN YOUR HOME TOMORROW.) Ho waltillCJ. SEALY AND MARTIN FURNITURE GUARANTEE. 1865 HARBOR BLVD. DOWNTOWN CbSTA MESA 548-5131 m Also Ow OWll •••ol•lftgC"-P IOOMR TUMILIWIBS RIMIY WMElllAM FIGMENTS NANCY M ISTER--- OOES Tl-iAT .JOB MAKE YOU NERVOUS? TDDAT'S caasmu PVIZLI • YHM!dey't Puult So!\19d: ACROSS '5 W~•- 1 'l'ou1>9 while 0 lllfcft bM\ !> Be,ome vood 49 HICI <Niily 10 Relonouilh !JO Plumbing frt· I 4 SpoclCI me11 llllQ lit., SI At1,.t'ttrl· I~ "Br~"' OCld 111 e.,.,.,.. INtnllt 17 f0<m ot chalt9dolly 19 OrttuM XI Oullew 71 Wide I P<W1 n., 12 Romangod 13 '"1 otl 1S f0tme1 fr ~ Haleld• Scot 56 T lie wllolf of SI Hoc•ey play· ., l11foomtl &1 8Clluw~ &2 "lldOt IO dO tOm•lh"'(I M Sh• PfO~ I 0t1Kh1'19 )1 let CtMlll 86 Ot'lct mott ~11u1 1111111 M OeM<ve t Wide-th 40 M..-·a t'leli.· CO"' 81 "Oii tel IUO 11eme 16 lnncK..,I M looh •lw 10 Tlwl Ut'l-•U 41 ~· 8' H .... 'l'on' 11 TllotouOfl ~ Sta<Nrn 11 hmbi lo• 4e G<omlMI l'tu10 OOWN -41 ~"'" JI (•pi.-1 1 8~ Ty 1J Concludn &1 fncom111m 041flMQn )4 Al\C..,,I c;, .. , COoftl l6 Ntc•t .. le CMt1eln ditll l•bt~ )9 Dou bit c rto t-h<O 2 WOidt 0 ACl!Kltvt aulfl• 4J 8u111!119 to1 llllU•l"Ct 44 T~i. 11 Aecom~ ~ ,.._ 1 ~... tel ~ Ctl'Ml llutlt 111 ,..... 14 O<W. ,,. UftN\141 3 V-ftf Of ~ lllt,,.'t loitt '6 "llloom 10 C>el•Oll 1001 le F 1>111olcl ""'ll'ICI • • " ~ 11 T 1 .. 1 bedly 57 AtlOf i.- 4 BrChtd, t O 29 Ptft'I' oftlC ... ~ Co11111'1utd to 29 ltttt• 61 Jtcob'• wife '"''"'""' 31 Wood of.,,. 69 "'tlle "" e 8•encfl of c1tlf"""' 01 , WO<Ot ... ,""'9 » 01n., eo hill" 11\0\rn· 1 Dotto. O< )l VQOYt tti!I ltw~ l J6 Trtf)O#\O dt· a (Cl'l"tltoca• -d• ...Cl llQft p<tll. 1tr Wa. F. •ow _. Mel Ce.- I J I 'Kfleeu ·~ byT• I. ay.. =~~1:°2lllM' byTomlolWi byEnie ...... lr NOT AS MUC~ AS MY LAST JOB---1 USED TO DRIVE SCHOOL BUS PEANUTS MISS PEACH I DO'fT CARE AN'rTHIN6 A!OJT PAST M ICIPLES DOOLEY'S WORLD GORDO we1-i.... ·n-teY 1"01..-P Me ,-~I S N>.OOP jql N<S W OUt.-P CMANGe COL..O"' ••• MOON MUWNS by~ A~TMLAlf, IN TM~ ~UICLE OF YOl.A,~ ~l'Ou1' MOO.ltN MEC>t,INEL YOU "4SIO TJ.4t w~o •TON+IL~" IN "fHE WJC()N~ CONTEXT. ON T'kE ~IAE~~ WH.AT1 MOM? TODAY M1t r C1.A TOOi< MY - OTHllt HANO YOLit~ IA~li OF TM& ~O '.ANHTl-E11A ' 11 VffY .AIATMOr1TAT1Vf ... DICK TIACY PUT JN "YOUR TEETH, PUCKER PUSS, ntd 1 <:AH UNDER· TMANO YOU . TON+IL~ O\A"T, wm-.otAr .ANeHH~l.4 ! by Chester Gould 1i--r fei>N!ry17 1976 • OAllYPl.OT ... by Rodger It odfWd ... OR '$02T'A l.A4 BACK A~D PLA4 ITCOOl.? THE GIRLS ... 'Tm "(raid we couldn't U\c two llckrt' to the ice \how, Rctty-lh1( u 1 lcnry\ day off and I ltkc lex him lo \lay home and rC\t " DEMNIS THE MEMACE " . ·1;&'~ .. ~ .. r'; ~ t t ' v, b ,. .. .. •[b(, I REALLY GAVF; HERTtlE RIGITT VALEWI~. • SHt MASNi TALKEU 10 ME FOR TMR!E ~'IS ." · H OM. y PllOT TU!!O!Y, F!ibN!fX t7. 1918 Laver Signs With WTI' SAtl OU:CO fAP) -TM San Dieco Frlan signed Rod Laver tO a contract )1 onday, makiftg tbe ftrmer Australian Davis Cup Ktar .. the b1aheat paJd playt'r ln tbe World Tum Tennlt hl1tory," iupohsman uid. L-.vtrr. 37. ls a rour·tlme Wlmbliedoo champion and the on· ly player to achieve two arand s lams, 1weepln& the United sratea, British. French and AutraUan titles ln 1962 and 1989. • Laver said be plans to sell his home lo Corona del Mar and Uve in Ranc ho Santa Fe, a few miles notthofSan O ieao. Neither has ialury nor the length of h1.1 new C'OOirart was dlklOled ··1 fttl hke a long wa,y from~ int put In 11 box," he told a new11 conltrence. "1 phayed 50me of my bat tennis laat yur •· There was apecutauon earlier that Laver m11bt coach the Friars. but president G. Allan K1n1ston uld that )Ob wiU ht! filled in a few weeks. The rust-haired Laver will pluy in the Friar-5· full 44 ·wrt-k su~on starting at home A1"1 4 aiatnst Pitta burgh. After a record s tring of Z3 Eagles' Quiet Man McCloakey Paces EstDncw By LAURENE KEYS Of-0.llyl'I ... - T all. quiet and a good shooter, that description 80Unds a little like Gary Cooper, but this shooter ts Estancia Hich basketball star Jlm McCloskey. "He'a a fantastic shooter," aaya Eatancia head coach Dave Carlisle. And Cal Stale (Fullerton) asslstant coach Mel Sims . who has taken a few good looks al tbe 6·6 senior, agrees. 8ul then you needn 'l be a basketball coach or an expert to figure that out-just take a look at bis atatistlcs. Averaging 22.9 poinlS per came this season, McCloskey set an Estancia record and a cueer high when he scored 45 qainst Long Beach Walson f'arUer this vear. And it was no '1uke he hat. 39 against Warren and scored 34 in the recent Santa Ana game. Good hand·lo·eye coordina· tlon is a must for a basketball player and lots of practice. McCloskey was born with the former and has worked in· cessanUy on the latter. "You've got lo keep h.im out of the gym," says Carlisle. ·•He's always practicing and because of it he's a tremen· doui offensive player." voes tnat s ugges t that McCloskey might need a l.JttJe improvement on defense? "Yes, J am needs to work more on defense to becomt: a complete player. but 1t will all come if be works on 1t hke he has on offen:.e ," s ays Carlisle. But recruiting colleges and universities don 't seem wor· ried about Mccloskey fitting in to their programs. Cal State <Fullerton) is on· ly one of many interested schools, but so far the blond athlete has not d ec1dl'd. or if he has, he's not saying much. "I'm not sure where I 'll be going yet," he says. "Right now I'm concentrating on making it to the playoffs "I do want to go where I can play though, it doesn't do you much good to sit on the bench. I 'II go anywhere. but I ~ 111 have to feel comfortable and feel that I fat in." McClos key doesn't seem too concerned about playin~ with the big guys , m fact he rather likes the idea "I play better against taller people," he s ays. "J Jump higher becaus e I know I have lo." FLlm star Gary Cooper may have won an Oscar for his good shooting, but it seems Jim Mccloskey is about to win a scholars hip for his. atralght match v1ctones in World Champtooatup Tenms play last )Ur, Laver lost Sunday•~. 1~. 3-6 to Ken Rosewall il Keabou· Kona. Hawe11 Rosewall aald later that Laver wu too wonied about utchanc a plane back to- Callfom1e. Tb• Yt'terao ~·8 left.hander complained rt"cently •bout burait11 but told reporters that he was out of practice and un· ramH1ar wlth the rules ln Sun· day·i; loss After 13 years as a pro· fessaona1, Lover ia one of the few lennl.a millionaires with court JIM McCLOSKEY Sports Clipped Slwrt Klein Accuses Doctor .. SAN DIEGO -Johnny San· ders baa been named the new g•neral manager of the San Oiego Chargers but a roelallon about a 1973 drug scandal s tole the headlines. The announcem~t that San· ders would re place Harland Svare came Monday at a news conference. Owner E~ene Klein made lhe statement. but what he had lo say next was that a peych\atrhl handed out more t.han l , 700 pills to the Chargers players -against team orders - in 1973. Klein said one player "re· <'t'ived 400 to 450 Of these dangu'Ous drugs.'' He added th&t t he psyc h iatrist who was responsible waa Dr. Arnold Man dell or th e Unive ra.lt y or California al San Diego The owner or the National f'ootboll League club m•de the 1 emarlts one month after he fired S\•are. Svare then i!!Sued a slate· m(•nt ln "h1ch he blamed Man· dell for the los~ of h1~ JOb beuuse o( statements made by the p~vthl1ttr1 11 t In a yet·lO·bt' t1·lc-1ue!d book . segment!! or v.h1ch have b<>rn publ.Jshed m a Sun D1cao nrwspa~r ....... 11.w" WEST LAFAYETTE. Ind - Top-ranked Indiana rallied from an l1 po1nt deficit in the Cirst hair Monduy nlaht and, I~ by All· American Scott Moy'l' 2G p<>int.'I, edged Purdue. 74 71 In BIR Ten ballketball act ion Moy, a 6 foot 7 forward, had Forme r Indy Driver Dies JUSt SIX points in the (arst period as Indiana's s tarters got anto ear · ly foul trouble agamsl Purdue's fired up attack. But the Hoosiers. no~ 22·0, bat tied back from a 27-16 def1c1t "1th four reser\'es in the lineup and pulled within t~o points late m the first hair. SCC IR C~aJ THOU SAN U OAKS -Th t> Southern California ColleRt' Vanguards ~ 111 try to rebound from a loss to Fresno Pacific when they invade C.11lforn1a Lutheran College for un 8 o'd ock t1porrtonight. The Vanguards foll one ~ame behind Blola in the NAlA DlstrH'I 111 buketball race when thev dropped a 71 -66 d ec1s1onto 1-'re~n;, Pacific. M11r.twf •~ R.•p• MILWA U KEE -S erond ranked Marquette, behind 23 points by Earl Tatum and 11 smothering defense. pulled away in the second half for a 75 63 rot lege basket ba II vartory oHr Tul•ne Monday n1Aht Bo Elhs 11dded 17 r>0an\..<1 a~ th<' Warriors.now2o 1 forthcseu on, ran th1."1r wtrlrlln,.: :drc•11k lo l ll games ............ tNDJANAPOLIS Notre Dame. paced by All American forward Adrian Dantley'll 27 points, rolled ovf'r Intrastate rivul Butler 92-79 Monday nil(ht in a col· lef(e ballketball gamt' The victory was Notre Dame's 13th In It!! I ast 14 contests 1111d raised the lOth·runked Irish' rr c:ord to 18-4 for the sea~on Mddw011t le~1!!lature. he said W111ter s aid a donfcd stadium as necess ary for the team because of cold wanter weather m Minnesota llft• A ppol•led RALEIGH. N C. -North Carolina State Monday gave Robert "Bo " Rem lhe difficult Job of following in the footsteps of departed football coach Lou Holtz Holtz SIJ?ned with the New York Jets last week. R<.'in. 30. s1J(nt>d a contract that school orr. c i a Is described as multi year at $25,000 lo $35,000 a yl'ar Rein s pent three years as Holtz's offensive backfield coach from 1972-74 lie was offensive t•oordinator a l Arkansas last season Metflft" A dl'a•~ S ALISBURY , Md.-Alex t.1u yer dt'feated Tom Kreiss, 7·5, 6 2. an the feature match of the Na· llonal indoor open tenms cham· p1ontih1~. here, Mondoy In other matches , Charles Paurt>ll lopped Gene Mayer, 6-4, 7 5. Steve Krulevitz downed Pavel Slotll, 7 6, 6 4 ; Peter f1em· m~ oustt'<I John WhlthnJ(f'r. 7·5, 6 l . Orlan Trac her tnpped Remae Milton, 7-5. 7·6 , and llnroon Rahim rallied for a 3-6. 7·5. 6·3wln nvt'rShcrwood Stewart Cotati• .... .,~cl .!':EW ORLEANS -Twelve· ytar Natlonul Bu1ketball As· ~ociation vetcrnn Mel Counts wtu1 placC'd on w:uve"" by lhe Nt>w Orlean11 Joz1 loday. After beml( drnrted by Boston in the first round or the 1964 col· lege draft. Counts played at Baltimore, Los Angeles, Phoenix and Phlladelphla before being purchased by the fledgling J au last !leason He waa ln eight NBA playoffs. earninp of ll.Ui,810 He hu CS. feated Arthur Aabe 18 tJme11 ln 20 meetlo11 and bu be•lon Rosewall IS timH. Laver'a Wimbledon (U\&la vie· tortes were over Chuck McK..tnley in 1961. Martin Mulllaan ln 1912, Tony R~he In 196'8 and Joh.n Newcombe ln 1961. In a memorable m•lch, Laver wofle down Roche lo the semlfinala of the Australian open int• aft.er 90 sames. The acores were 7·$. 22 20, 9·11, 1-6 and 6-l. Laver won four WCT evcnlS last year and played on the Australian Oavla Cup team tl 9:59·62 ) • Montreal Making Progress MONTREAL (AP> - Construction w orkens appear headed towards an Olympic re· cord in the "speed building" event, according to the latest tour of facilities to be used in the next Summer Games When the International Olym- pic Committee gave its last tour of the site of next July's compeli· tion. observers were presented with a stadium frame that seelmgly never would be ready m lime -not lo mention swim· ming and diving pools m similar situation But dunng a new inspection Monday. a different picture had taken form The mam swimming pool had taken rorm: the diving lower had sprouted and Vactor Goldbloom -the Q1;4e bec minister responsible for the Olympics matallaUons board said that work on the stadium had progrttsed lo such a degree that catastrophe plans . formulated on the poulbility that the stadium would not be ready. bad been scrapped ·'The stadium ls taking shape,'' said Goldbloom "Th e seating is beginning to be tn place -that is to say, the t'On· crete slabs on which the sealml( will be placed -in about one- quarter of the stadium ring at the upper two levels. "When we presented our new critical path to the JOC, we in· dicated that our nuibllity as far as the stadium Is concerned would be that we would be pre· pared lo put in the entire lower nng of seall on a temporary basis, simply with steel piping and boards for people to sit on." As far as aquatics 11 con· cerned, Goldbloom repott~ that "it ls our expectation t~·ithin approximately a month the ce ment walls of the main compell· lion pool will be in place," ready for tesu. which will be followed by installation of tiling. By the middle of May, he continued. the pool should be ready for tests on the circulation system. "So we have made appreciable progress ... and what we told the IOC we would be able lo do appears to be in the process of be· i ng accomplished," s aid Goldbloom. That doesn't mean condilioni; will be optimal when the Games open on July 17. The stadium will be incomplete and both athletes and officials will have lo use tem· porary dressing rooms. But at. least the track and field events will be held an the stadium as op· posed lo the provisional Sites of the nearby Claude Robillard Arena. I "We are able to say, and this is the anformataon I shall be giving to the IOC officials. at ls delinlte· ly the stadium as far as track and' field are concerned,·· bOld GoldblOQm. ANI'E4TERS FA.CE A.MB.4SS4DOR FI VE PASADENA UC lrvlnc'.s basketball t eam is favored to notch its 12th victory of the season t.ont1ht when the Anteaters take on AmbHsador College here al 8 o'cl(l(k. UCI. fresh from a 103·91 victory over LA Baptist Colleie, defeated Ambauador earhcr this aeason. 63-48, at Crawford Hall. Following tonl1thl's game, UCI (11·10) has four home games re· maJnlnc on the schedule. UP'ITei..- Contro'l'ersial Goal California's Gary Sabounn scurt>d a goal 011 I h1:-pla) as teammate Bob Girard went ~hchn~ into St L OUIS Blues goalie Ed Johnston m National HoC'kl'Y Ll'a~ue ~amc Monday night The Rlues mamtatnc>d that Girard went into the net before the puck St. LOlUs won the game. 4·2. Irvine Earm Split With UCLA Nine Gary Adams' magic was taint· ed just a b it at UC Irvine Mon- day Adams, who coachl'd UCl to NCAA baseball championships in 1973· 74, before taking over the head job at UCLA last year. saw his visiting Bruin s s plit a doubleheader with the Ante aters Coach Tim Spence 's L'CJ club won the first game. 3·2, then dropped the s e ven·inning nightcap. 4-3. l,;Cl captured the opcnt>r in style. getting tamely h1tt1nl! and again sohd re he r pitchin~. The Anteaters won it in the eighth when they scored two limes lo break a l ·l lie. Then, after the Bruins had pushed auoss a run in the ninth and had the tying t ally on base, patcher Russ Johnson came on lo gel the final out on a ground ball. UC l 's winning rally came after two outs. Scott Winters started it with a walk and singles by Ken Washinl(ton and Steve Morton scored the first run. And when a throw to third lo get Washington skidded into the third base dugout. UCI had a 3·1 lcad. The Bruins had plated their first run in the opening frame, only to sec UCI score in the bot· tom half of the inning on a tnpk by Washingt on and Stl'VC Carpenter's s ingle. Rob Dobey was the winmni: pitcher lie now hos all thrr1· wans for the Antt>s tcrs. And lhl' loser was ex (:olde n w •. ,t College star Curl l'etcrson, ~ho tossed the last 21 , 1r1tl1n~~ * * * ~llllTOAMI HCONOOAMC U'lr•I"° Ul U'lt•I ... UI •• , h " •• , h "' 9'1-•,tl ) 0 n 0 f;o.IM<O d 0 • 7 ~IH, 7l> 0 ' o Ht>\let, 1'b 0 0 0 Whttn.d, '' I 0 Whl-... 0 0 n (lpMr,dfl 0 I CrpM<,dll 0 n 0 t;11qle II 0 0 EflOIO, 10 0 0 0 [\PY If 0 0 hOY. U 0 0 0 Wl'llH ,J.b I 0 W.•••'·""' I 0 I n W\Mln,rf 4 I o wrntrt1 lb ' ' 0 0 Mor-lOf\,, ) 0 t W\N\IA, tf ' I • 0 Cooodyr , II 0 0 0 0 --.. I I 0 • 000-Y.P 0 0 0 0 O.•"·. 0 n n n ~,ft,O 0 0 0 0 JoMv1 p 0 0 0 0 , ..... ,. ) 1) , Tqlel• u ' ) ) KOltl IY INNINOS .. 1 .. 10. .... , h • UflA lOO 000 001 t • I UClr•1rw 100 000 O'l• J 17 I '-'l .... o. .... , .. • UC\.A 7IO 010 0 4 • I V(.1,.,,,... 000 °") 0 J J I - In the second ~ame. tht> An· l<'all'rs almost pulll'd it out with a sixth annang rally after trailln;: 4-0 A walk to Winters, a single by Washm~ton and Morton's walk loaded tht> bai.es. Alan Belasco then sini:led in two runs and Mort o n <'u mc h o m e when Helasco's hat Wl'nl throui:h thl' nghl f1ddl·r 's lcgl> Long Wait For Tickets RALEIGH. N C CAP > Although tic k e t s for next Tuesday's Norlh Carolina Stult• North Carolina haskclbull gaml did nol go on sail' until Tue!>day, students beAnn forming a line 111 get them last Friday Lisa 1.uare, Olll' or the rirsl to arrive last Friday , came equipped with a rad11J, television set and electric hlank<'t Others pitched tents hcatt'cl by lanterns. A few rented cumpt>rs or trucks. And some like I· red Needham simply bundled up an sleeping bags on the sidewalk m front of Heynold~ Colis<'um. Unlik e prev1oui. years, ho~t·v1•r, th<' ,tudent., have dt• v1 i-t•d a m ore soph1st1c alt>d system for procunng some of lh1• 6,233 tickets allottl'd student,. The cohsf'um scat-c ahout J2,400 The students s ign a notebook, then return period1rally for roll calls. a method that allows lhc·m lo attend class, 1•11t square mNtb, and sleep in tht•ir clorm1lories Rut 11ome 11t11l p1 t'frr to rou"h 1t hy Cllmpang Oul <11 ltw l'Oli!ll'llrTI. "Tht>re'll prob.1hly be mon• than 1,CKlll n11 m•'!> 1111 Uw l111t :ind about :JO() w1ll 11roh11hly camp nut h<'r(' tonal{hl ," snid llohfor'l Jorwx, who 111 re11 pons1bl1.• for chf'ck1m: ont·ofth1· rnll h1111k11 M11n1111v "I think 11 '' a htth· nulty," rhucklt>d Hiii Sm&l1., N C. Stnfr's t il'ket mo na.:1•r . .. Uul 11 IOI 111 thf'm fcc•I lh1•v h1J v1•n 't eum1•1I 11 d1plomu unh'1'K thc•v'v•· :1too•I in ltnf' :1t lea .. t '>flt'(' ror J C.:urohnll 11a m•• It'~ n tr111l 1t11111 11rou111I hrr t• ·• Jl'fDIANAPOLIS -P:>ul Russo, a veteran driver, wbo rac«l ln 15 Indianapolis 5QO.mtle races, died Sunday night In bis ~eep at Daytona Beach, Fh. He wasG. RWlSO spent 33 ye an raclng 1n • career tbat spanned midgets and the championship clttuit of lhe U.S. Auto Club His best finish at Indianapolis was second in 19SS, dnvlng relief for the late Tony 8ettenMusen. He was fourth In 19531 driving relier for: Freddie AgaoasbJan. He retired from ac- tive competition in 1965. LOS ANGELES -Jar k Nicklaus notified officials or thr Los Angeles Open l{Olf tourna ment that he would not be abl<" to play due to continuing business commitments in F1onda Nicklaus originally had en· tered the tournament, which starts Thursday. County Man Wins $7,180 Exacta A native of Kenosha, Wis., Russo had been hvlng al In· diaf\8polis in recent years and was working as a manufacturers ttpreseatative. Russo still drove pace rars at USl\C champiooship events. He was in Florida for the Daytona "500" when he died. \'Udllp •• M e1'e1 HONOLULU -The owneroftbe NFL Minnesota Vik- ings, Max Winter. said Monday niteht be may accept an offer to move bi! t eam to play in New York 's refurbished Yankee Stadium. Winter said that be may accllpl the offe r unless the Minnesota legislature agrees to build a domed stadium that the VUtincs could use. Such a measure ls un· dcr consideration by the ARCADIA-Apprentice Sam Semkan and defending riding champion Lamt Plncay Jr. teamed to produce a record $7 .180.50 ex act a payoff in the fillb r ace at Santa Anita Monday. Semkln rode 99·1 longshot Dateable lo a nose victory over 5·1 Our Markel and the6-10com· blnalion exceeded the p~vious exacta record of $5,747 set in 1973 ~nly 51 ticket.s we~ sold on the winninc exacta and one of the ticket holders was Bob ~nard. sports editor ot the Fullerton News Tribune. While most o( the 37,400 fans were buzzing about the exacta, an unfortunate incident occurred ln lhe seventh race when popular Diabolo shattered bis rlght hind lee on the backalretcb. Diabolo was third ln tbe 1975 Kentucky Derby and wu vie· torioua in tbe California Derby. 'tThe reco rd exacta and 1abolo'1 injury overshadowro a me.from -behind victory by An nouncer in the $65,200 San Luis Obispo Handicap at 1~ miles on the turf. Running fourth in the six horse field until the far turn, An· nouncer cam e flying on the out· side to catch favored Top Crowd ln mldstretch and gradually pulled away lo a ooe·lengt.h vie· tory. Top Crowd was second. ei&bt lengths in fronto.C Zanthe. R1dd~n by l't>rnan<lo Toro. 1 op Crowd ran the I ' / mill'-; ove.-.1 soft course an 2 304/5 and paad $9 GO. M 40 and S2 6() It was also an oflemoon when world c h a mp Ion JfJC kc y Bill Shoemakf'r ~cored two upsets, winning with La Joie Regal ot $31 8() and El Extra no et~ 60 Female Jockey R<>byn ~m1tn scpted hf'r fourth victory or th(• season when she rol11ed Privak Signal frorn third lo score a nar· row victory in the sixth race. ) Huntington Battles Katella Tonight T.-day. Fet>tu82 11. une DAILY PILOT •!i Tonlehl'• the ni1ht tnOll fiiured the Empire L.eaaw baallelball cbamplonablp would be dttlded at Kattlla Hl1b School where Huot- instan Buch Invades few a 7 o'cl~k start. Cypreu. bow ever, h 111 taken 1 one·1'6me lead on lhae l•o and appean lo be on llt way to the crown. But thc!re'a •till plenty '6t. stake tonlpt foT the Oilers of Hunt- lngton Beach itrul Kateil3'1 Kniabta. The winner alaJS alive far a lbot at 1 pe>rtloo ol the Ct'O'A11, the CIP' •·A playoffa will be vt.rtu.ally certaan and u ·a the fou.rtb Urot lhHe two bllve met, 11vln1 Huntloaton Beach a chance lo dalm superiority with a third triumph. Both toms are 9·2 in luiiae behJnd Cyprea (10.U and they ue both ranked ln the Oran1e County top 10, the ot len No. 6 and K a.ltita No. 7. Coach Elmer Combs' OU-.-ra have • •ell·rounded 1ttaek wUb forwards J\m Spowart (1-3) and Perry llartan <&-1 > OanklnJ uoter Clarit Suns <N). Kevtn Karkut and Paul flnc:bamp are at au•rd with Plnch1mp provldln11 Sood ouuide 1boolln1 and Xarkut lood pu1ln1 to complemcot ka.rbio and Spo• art. Katella features Junior C budi: Grt1ene . Rick Neubauer and Mike Domene ln lbe atlaclt a nd bu shown the abWty to hurt HunUncton Beach with a prua, althoucb ln the last outins lbe Katell.a tartlc didn't come mto focus u HB 1ot an early lead and kept the oruaure on KatcUa. Greoene leads the lcaiue ln sconn1 walb • 21.4 averace. while Harbin ts t «Ond wl\b a 20.'I norm. Neubauer. and Spowart arc close, too. with Neubauer blltlna ror a 17.l avera1e a s opposed to Spowai:t's 16.1 lnctrcult play. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tbe Oiiers. Katella aod eyp,-. atill b1Ve two more l•~es remalnl n1 on the ICbcdule Friday and 1" . day. but in each tnstanH the l.bree circuit powers are ~avy favorites lo win. Wllh tho 32-team ClF 4·A c11e playorra due to start Feb. rt and each ol the 12 leacuea coot'erned 1uaran· teed two entrlH, tt'a t'OO· celvable that tonlaht's l•er will be Invited, too. Season Neon South Coast Play Baseball Outlook For Area Preps The 1976 prep baseball season gets unde r w ay Friday for . Oranee Coast area teanu in an abbreviated fashion with Long Beach Millikan invadmg Manna, then Edison High plays host lo Mater Del Saturday afternoon before non-leaeue action gels buSier next week. The area's teams in the Cen- tury League include Corona del Mar, Costa Mesa and Estancia. Mater Dei is in the Angelus League a nd Huntington Beach plays in the Empire loop. Here's a capsule rundown on each of those teams: c.r... fld 1'f•r Ten returning lettermen, in- cluding four blue dup starters, give the Sea Kings of coach Tom Trager perhaps the best outlook in several seasons. P acmg the CdM outfit are seniors-Doug Johnson tssl. Monte Pries (3b-p>. Brad Greeley (oC·c) and Gary Gu1s· ness <c -3bt. Also returning are right· hander Gregg Miller. the most <"onsistent Sea Kings pitcher m 1975. and Dean Foes. a southpaw who led the team m slrikeoul.9 and e.r a. in '75. Both are seniors. <is are Bill Moore (of-lb J. Jeff llehrens (of) and Jt.'ff Johnson 1or1. alonR with junior CJ1r y Johmston (or."' on the squad, is a promising all· round pitcher, a nd combined WJth Fleming, Luke Griffen and Gary Robertson, the Ea1les ba\-e decent pitching depth. Infielders Glen Robertson and Gary Valiere started for the '75 team. Others in the Estancia stable include Corky Winder, Rick Taube and Ken Curran at c atcher. outfielders Tim Green and Scott Wilson. infielden Bob Donnally, Doug Payne and Dan Bressler. pitcher-lb Gary Robertson and first basemen Dan Angel and Bob Baltierra. ._, ....... ftle. Sineen of the biters' 15-10 '75 outlit are gone via graduation where Huntington Beach coach Don Terranove is building around returning lettermen Rob Wright and Jim Coleman. Wright is a ngbt-handed pitcher with a 2.9 e.r.a . Ul 29 LD· nings of work in '75. while Coleman figures t o start at catcher or first base Sophomore Shawn Gill ts a good prospecct at catcher. while right-hander Paul Sanchez lS a bfue chip candidate at pitcher Mall Ray hit .410 with the junior varsity and Phil Sutton has good range at s hortstop. SP't'AO KEMBLE Sea Kings' Kemble Sets Goals High ByLAURENEKEYS oi .. oa.,,11'1 ... ~ Spyro Kemble may be one of the best wrestlers an the slate. Ile as alsooneorthe most candid. The Corona del Mar High senior, recently named the most valuable wrestler at the pre- stigious Fountain Valley Five Counties m eel . finished fourth in the Cl F finals I ast year Additionally, Kemble holds the Ca ll record (20) at CdM and has a 31·1 record th11t season. And head wrestling coach Dick Morris feels that Kemble has an eitcellenl c hance ror the finals this year. LagunaBitb For CIF Berth The Artists of Laewui Beach ffigh can virtually put a lock on second place and a berth in the Cl F 2-A basketball playoffs tonltht wttti a victory against visitin1 University inSoutb Coast League action. Tipoff ls at 7, with other 7 o'clocll games involv- ing El Toro'5 third place Chargers (6-7) at cbam· pion Mission Viejo and arch rivals Dana Hills and SanClem eoteatrugclingatlbelatter'snm. Tbe Artlsll of fant-year coach Ed Burlingham have put together their longest win streak or the league campaign (three) and a win tonight would assure them of no worse than a tie ror second place . And an El Toro lou to champion Mission Viejo could clinch second and a playoffs berth. Laguna Beach has not been tolhe playofrs since 1973. · It may be an uphill baUle, however, as Laguna Beach ace Dusty Dvorak, if be playa at all, must do it with a badly injured band. He was injured in Friday's tiff with San Clemente. University counters with 6~ sophomore Roger Poirier and a tough defensive out.fit. Poirier is averaging 17.2per1ame. El Toro. wbicb bas lost twice to Mlssion Viejo, must beat the Steve Sawyer-Kelly Cox-John Ha t· trup combination for the first time lbis year to stay In contention. The Chargers or El Toro have sophomore Bob Charles back in the lineup al't.e r a three-game absence <nu >. but the Diablos of coach Pat Roberts own a distinct advanta1e ln hel&bl and s hooting performance. Should Laguna Beach l~e tonight it opens several possibilities for a seeond place tie -and that's what San Clemmte and Dana Hllls (bOth 5-8> are lookinJi for. The two have aplit two games and the winner has a shot at tying forseeond place. San Clemente bad four ln double figures the last lime to offset an earlier 59·57 defeat, whl<'h was triggered by Henry Mlkiewlct's 17 points for the Dolphins. Rustlers In 3-1 Victory Sophomore Tim Richards p lt c bl'd i.1x s trong 1nn1 n tc s an ti frt1hman Jerry \'l'lu . quez scor~ twice as the Golden West Collc~1.· SPOITS Rustler!! f'd~l'd LA Vallt>y. 3·1 1n collt·~t· 'Anita basebull action Mondny afternoon at Golden Wetit. Ra • Velasquu put thl• cmg Ru.atler-$ out In front 1 o in the third innln& wht•n . he scored on i• bunt hat by R ' u) And the fleet center ; shortstup John Leon~. es ~ . fielder put the wmmng ,.....,_,,a-a •: run across In "'the r1rth --. h ( .,,.,, •ACI 1111• "'""' • ..... coming ome rom -• ... c .. i...1,.. ..., ... ,,_,, second on a wild pitch . ·Velasquez bad doubled earlier in the urning. Richards tripled in the sixth inning and then c l.inched the win, sconng oo a sacrifice Cly by Mtke Selwood. Richard s, a ..._ .. tyl(fllttll ·~·I Kay R•090 IValcletl ~ ...... T .. ,, ll••-tl """' I,,...,, AIM ,.,_ Te.,to-..r~ 0,_ ..... ,.. _, .. tlow N•'•"'"· a. .... T••· A<ltOtt-<Y. Profl<l•ftl Blue '-lf\o. Ao,a.a ICe<• L•U Pf«t~•I, kr•l<Md -To,,.., .. , '-1 Of -righthander, pitched six ..!~=~~!~:·~-=~ innings before leaving the game in the seventh. He struck out five and gave up the only run. "-• ... Mel4 fY•~··· .MIMa F IMeN I 10.CIO > OI ho J <O , .. .uo ,,,.,,,,. ~." 1011••'"1 limo I 1011\ k•o•c--CotnhltColl...,, Scott Borle came in to relieve. struck out three and gave up one hit. a.u, ~ ...... " .... "''......,. •' J ........... ,,.. ......... .,,·"· Golden West, now 3·1 for the season, m et Orange Coast today, then ls idle until Satur- day when coach Fred Hoover's Rustlers test visiting Santa Ana College al 1 o'clock. o.tee.W.at 1U i.-.u --.111 Ill< ... ~.-~.­VIit ..... lb 9-.tt ~ ... f.«IH,.,,._rl Vel-t,U _....,, 4 ........ •• l ) ) J ) l f 1 I ] 0 ,.u .. l• k_.., ... .i .... .. " ... 0 0 I 0 0 c I I • 0 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 0 I 0 J I 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 l • J . " . LA V•lley 000 010 000 I 4 J (;ol-Wlt•I 001 011 00•-l c 0 Pro Scores IUt ...... _lleyLO- To<Ol'lto s. W•Wllr>O(Ofl t ~I LO"h •. C~lilornl• t "-"'ca" .... ., .. II L•- Ne• '°"' 100. KenhK•y., TMIRO RllCI -• tu•l-1 l _. Old ,,..icten 1111••• bl.cl h• C•lll. O•l-lftt l'\uM l,_, MllbMtASl•r (1'11\C.VJI I V.•and•C Ol•••l•I Dtvuw .. mt<• CN011w11 Tl--· ... ,., "''" ,... ~ ... 0 .. 11 • ._ ....,. ,.,._ H•,.,.. -· $tert111 $111~ ,, .. ,, Heoe. ,,_., c .... OlllM,., ....... -....... ""'<1•1, """ """' ··-Sualcl\od La !Ml,.., s.c..e 1 .. < ..... VIC-I ~t. Lh, ()I f ... V.-. .. OU.TM .,.('I"":'"',..,.._ )i ....... -1-.. <•11• .. ~· 0.1 .... ,.. """"' ,,_ LAJoMlte .. I ~·••I ,, '° •oo ~ <Jrll<tt Ste"'" (He•ley I l 00 ) • Kl"VS. ... \11.,. ICAl"'l'"\I I• Tomo 117 Jtt \ua1<,.C1 -Ono 811<<0, ,.,,..,. llt•trMmMt ~ T r•••fl\lre. MA,.,.rc • .... .... Pl .. TM llACI 6•11 l"tl.-.O>. l'lllle\ & tn•rt\, I ... , otch & .... Al• •~<•'-PvtN '14,000. Ool••Dlt '~"'';"' JCM '° 11 '° n oo Our Mart.•I IPll\C .. Jo I •• 10 f «I a....,,,, 'l;•tn• ISl\Oamah•) • 00 Tomo 111 "o•cra1cn.>. Others in the Sea Kings plans ;ire John Hughes (Jb-of1, Pat Ahern <lb-of). the mvp on the junior varsity in '75, J ohn Hanson (2b-of) und Dave Smiley <2bl Smiley, however. broke his \'Ollarbone ~rnd 1s n 't t•xvected back for eight wt>eks. Ahern and Gu1sness ore a lso lied up in basketball and don't figure to help the bast>ball cause u ({real deal bt'fore league play Bill Holst, Todd Stegen. J eff Rt>ed and Don Kerce are the ma· Jor outfield candidates. while Juniors Kurt Lundstrom a nd Steve Hjelstrom a re penciled m at second.and third Other pitching candidates an elude junior Troy W1ckJane and sophomore Ed Shute . Main-Oft "Spyro could be one of the best California wrestlers in the 178- pound we11th't c lass,'' says Morris "Ht> certainly 1s tops in Orange County.'· The dark-haired athlete. wbo came to the U S. Crom Germany about six years ago. views his s uc - ce&S rather mater-of-factly. Powell Paces SoCal Vanguards Split With San Diego u a ... u -.. oattalM• & 1.our Mll,.et, , ... \1,IM .M . \IXTM I ACI -•~turl-• l¥Oar old <Dlh & 1>411011\0\o lollOw--... l>vrwl!J.-. Prlv•t. SI0"4' •..:.. IS...'1~) 400 , .. ~ eo...rt Zn IS.m""I i fO f: C..taMna Jim G mur takes over the ('oach1ng <lulles at Costa Mesa "here only two returning 'tarters are m the fold as the Mustangs prepare 'for Century l.A'ague action. Infielder Guy Krikonan and outfielder Rudy Phelps. a pair of ~enlors. starll'd 111 1975 when lh<' Mustangs won tht•ir lust eight league games to share the tlllc with El Modena . Krikorian earned sC'<'ond team nll·league honors with a .333 bul· tmi:t average. Others that rigurt' to play a pro- mmt>nl rolt' 1n M csa'is uttuck or<' :o1r111ors Mark Tom1t11 lmf I, Tun Ho~auer (rh pl Jnd outflcldrr llob Ayt•r .... 111 11dll1t 111n to Junmr ()ave MolllcJ. ut catcher Ahw Ill (;mur'l' µInn.~ :Jlt' Jim l.aJeunessc 1or. Jr), Hnan Min lo (Sr or ), Slt'Vt' Chi.,old (Jr. inf>. Troy Vbarru IJr r1. Tom .. :n~lanc1 tf.ioph. Jh I Jlld 111tchel"'I f'Jul Mintn·r (H rhl. ('hn" Ft•rn11trom tJr. rh1 .ind Jdf C: rc•en1.• (Jr lh I. Eata•ri• Six rcturnln11 i.t1111 eni nnd lfi :1t•n111r!' ~1\f•s •:~111n<'ra ll11(h :1 l::nl(IN1 a V<'tt'ron lineup oi. tht'y 11n•1rnn• ror thi' '7G scuson Lt>adlna coach Ken M'\llurcl'11 ('rt'w nrf' rt•tur·111ni: All·l't'nlury l,(•u11ue select 10011 Moc· "1t"mtn1t (p of lh > {Ind lnrie~er Kalvh Ronquillo .Ji m l'tampbc-11, tlw only 1un1or Cage Ratings '"" l• ,_,,,, IH m\ II\ no. A•-IMN """" <-...... ••••••o•tt o••• •"" , •• ~ r•<•ro, ........... ~...,., , •b I I -tol•l poo"I\ 1 1.,.,,.,.. 11 O I >H 11 Wo\11 '" J , ........ ,. ' , 0.0 u " ( \I ... J No CM ,._, ... UC.•"<• It> • .... , .. " )I. t i\ U Ml\"""I JO.J ' VC.Lll t• J /Ml 1) .... (1\1-•• \ •No• ILVIH I •IJ 9' \t JeM, It l 1 ""'9rtf'ld ti f .01 U w M l(" tt t t ... , ()M II ' •tl It Va h<ll 1<L• • ,...,. 1• J J•I io u.. ., .. 11 c IO Ill-me 11 J lll JO c;..,....,,., l't • )10 ,,. ,,, .. , , ,. n H )I ,. .. Eight returning starters from a team that lost seven games by one run In 1975 <lhe Monarchs were 10·11 for the year>. gives coach Bob kkes a sohd nucleus to work with in bis second year at lhe helm. Pacing M aJe r De1 is All- An~elus League p1tche r Pat Pritzl. a right-hander with a l 92 er.a. and a .350 battm~ average . lle'll play at shortstop when he's not pitching. Outfielder Geoqte McGowan ( 280 > and infielder St eve McGowan ( .282 I both started for the Monarchs in 1975 as did Tom Eccles (.JOO inf I, Mark Macauh•y (.420), Mark Drazba ( 280 catcher I. Ni<'k llars h 14 ·4 pitcher with a 2.07 e.r.a.) and Junior Jim Schulu: <.320 ). Macauley. an o utfielde r , ('urned a ll-league credentials us ;i Junior and Schultz 1s mvolvt:'d m basketball. Reserve outfielder Mike Abeyta and a tno of pro 'Pl'Cts· Frank Martinez <6 2 J>ltt'her from the JV team). 8111 Kl'l ly (inf jr .1 an1t ~ophomorl' Robby Meacha m <1nf1<.'ld<'r) round out the squud Conquerors, MD in Action Two teams s te3mlng toward lht• n ... busk<•tb:tll i1h1yoffs unrt with lt'aauc c h omp1o ns h1p asp1 rat1o n 11 rt.>s ume action tonight. Mnter Oel lllgh'i1 Munurch1' trek to Bishop Amot IURh whcr<' a victory would clinch no wor111t> t hnn :1 lit' for th<' A n51cl u~ I ~·11auc• crown with St. Anthony with on<.' irame rematnin.:. Tipoff 11at7·30. Al Southern California College It's An 8 o'cl<><:k tip as Huntington Valley C hristian mee t !\ Maran atha in an Academy Leaa:ue tiff. llVC bas already locked up a portion of the-crown and ft ~'in tonight would 1t1ve coach Bob Linds trom 's Con querors the title. "l would like to think I'm one or the best, that has been my 1oaJ," he s ays . And ambitions seem to be a drivine force 1n his hfe "The higher you set your (itoals, the better you are going to do. and it's my goal to be No. 1 at whatever I do "S u re 1 · m se rious about athletlcii, I lhmk you have to be or you'r e not going lo put out as much effort U you don't put out everything. then it's not worth it to you." he adds. "I've thought a lot about it and maybe 1 shouldn't say it. but win· ntn(it is the most important thing to me when I compete because 1 guess 1t m"a ns J 'vt> ac- complis hed what I set out lo do," he says. .. Even In u friendly lt{lme where then"~ Ml much at Make. I'm thCf(' to Win .. That determined and ~ingular attitude> has played a big part in his succcsti as a wrestler where 3thle tes train rigorously and must be exl r<'mely disciplined. A sport of strenJ(lh and pain. Kemble feels a wrestler tS really two dlfforcnl peopk ··whf'n )'Ou &tep onto lhe mat you ch angt>. you hove to do 1·v~ryth1nf! fair to wan and 1r that mean" pain. we ll you do what you httvl' to,·· ht' fays grimly Rut upp:art>ntly Kf'mblt• follow'l his dunl J>('r'ionahly prC"lcrlpllon. ;,and '•<.'<'or dlnj! to Morn l4 hf' 114 v<>ry populor with h111 fl'llow com· 1>etltors ofr the mat "One of the b<'llt thin"!' about sports is the peoph• you met>t nnd the ntw plttCfll you Jl<'I to ~ee." irnys Kemble "Some or the frit•nd~hip!'l llist for :1 long t1mt' " lie toured J apon for three wttks on an AAU cultur•I ex chanite for wrc11tlt•rs ·• "I've traveled a itood deal. but there's still so much mor<' to see and do ... he says But that's in th<.' future. Right now he's concenlrnting on ac· t'omplishing his No. I goal. and that '1 being the best wrestler, and most people who know him wouldn't bet against him. T h e S o u t h e r n singles. and three rbi to C alifo rnia College boost his average to a Vanguards sp lit a mercurial .384 an the doubleheader Monday af. second game. tern o on w Ith the The triple came in the University or San Diego four-run second inning 1n baseball action in with lhe bases loaded Costa Mesa. and two out. Earlier in the lnning with one out. The Vang_uards w~re s hortstop Dave Horn edged 3-1 m the C1rst singl ed to put Stan game. but came back lo Thomas in scoring posi- blank San Diego 6·0 l1l tion. the second contest. Sophomore pitcher Junior left fielder Bill Gale Thornton went the Powell collected three dlstance, giving up only hits, a triple and two twowalks and lhree hils. De Anza Captures NoCal Swim Title SALINAS (AP) -De c hampion s hi p f inals An za Swim C lub or were· Cupertino scored an up· Women'11 1.650-yard set vic tory over a free -Patti Martinez. heavily-favored Santa Coronado. 16 · 43.50. C lora Swim C lo b, Men's 1,650 free Mike 600-644 . in team scoring n run e r, De An z a, during a three-da y JS 27.91 ; Wome n's 100 Northern California free -Kim P eyton, Senior AA U invitatlonaJ David Douglas SC, swim meet. Portland. Ore 52.08 Winners in e ach of the Men's 100 free Doug Frazier, 46.2!1 , Womrn's D--k lb U 200 back I.Inda J ezek, .IJne e 8 S1nt1 Clara SC. 2·0R.74 : ~I "°" J-St 11, H•-111' wtbtr \t ft, Alt '~r•al ~l\•1. C.• .. -Ml,..•11 f'v9tt '°"""•·\I Math" Ht lk<ldloy 11, (tt lt"IOft ti ()llt•OO (LOyOl•l II, lloWll"I~ Oo ... 111 n. Vl•O'"'• h<h U llllM4\ ... OfllO 'l•l• 7) 1"41 .... ''· Pvtd\Hl 11 ........ -... -...... .. M.t•-ltl J. '"'-"' Nllt l\1-... £ Mlt ,., .. ,.I• Ml,,,,.WI• .. , WIK..,tll\ 14 Hof,.. 0-'1, 'lot .... M Al.-,..1t . Ml"IH l"I 10 A-... Tl.,._,_ n IOTI 0 .-1 M, Wllll•"' & llM•y., F•«ip. ... 0.ortl• CM , ........ u. £ c.r .. ·~ ,. LSY•·"""''"'""'" " _,_ "· A~ll" .... , U ~., ''"""°"v111en ~e>-U,A""fal $f ,,..,...,NYtl S. .... Holltl St. ,,_I\, HY 11," ~ " s,.-.c.,.1t1, ,.....,. .. u Men 's 20 0 bock - Ml<'hat'I Stumm , Coronado . I :55 54 ; Women's 200 brca1-1t Lauri Siering, Modesto SC, 2:20.8. Mf'n'11 200 breast --Andy Nlcholis, Coronado, 2:07.81. Womcn'11400 fr~e r<-1 .. y Oe Anu, 3 .35.60: Men's 400 free reluy - Marin Aquatic Club, 3•1323. -KEEP COOL- IN A MEW SAAB °FREE FACTORY AIR .. Should~ buy~r Toyota in Mission Viejo? WltltPW t 111 fjfAll'( ...... ~ FIUUAITOM.Y We thtnlc tht>re are !.OmP e1<cPllPnt r«asonc; tn do j11c;t that We arf" An 011 1 of the way decJh.?r , thcJt \ whv wu wor le: h,11der to qet yo1Jr business . we have to. Corne 1n todJy tin<l M'e for y ourwlf. °"" .... Deltr,...,. ... .., ..... .-. .....-. new lft W'OUf locel COMfM!nlt, ... ...,,., Harbour V .W 11711 ~· ............... lck. SAAB Marcauis \'(II VO, I U\ \)I \ ').111 D1~111• l "'Y,-''"\' , . .,1. M"'1o.11\1..:111 171-418Jl;l8MO i 1t11ifiij!Ni \ Jn the first eame. the only Southern Cahfom1a run came in the third m· ning. Thom as doublt'd and then with one out, Hom sinl?led uo the mid· dle to score the run. "IRITGAMa --.eo1c.11.,.111 .. , " .. ~.cf ) 0 0 0 __ ,.. 7 000 ..._ .. ,,, J 0 0 0 -... 1.. l 0 0 0 ......... '° l 0 0 0 McGiii.< > o o o w ... •-.o.,, > o 1 o ""°"'~· r1 ) 1 ' 0 ""'"·" ) 0 I Total• n 1 • kwo •YI•"'"'' . ,. "' . U..IY S...0~ OlO 000 0 ) 1 O ~ Cal Colt~ 001 000 0 I 4 , HCONOG,.Ma s--.. Cal"'''-cu 4•." Ill 0--.<f • I 1 0 ,.,..._...,,lb ) 1 0 I "'>wtll, II \ 0 l l -1 .. lb 1 0 0 I ... ""· 'II> ' • 0 0 M<GHl,t I I 0 T-..'1 I I 0 -.... , 1 ' ' .....,,.,,,., • 0 I 0 n.o.nl"" D 0 0 0 0 Total\ )0 • • • $4Wo.., lllill"t' -=T~:7 ~~0.1t 41) S<relcM<I AftllQv.,y, \IVaNTH RACI 0... """'· e \fNr otef'\ & wo C••nlUtd elf....... • Pl><wU0,000 ll(l<t•- 1-mah•I A ""'t-IPl••••I /Nitti IPlflUY Jr I Tl..... I )~JI\ )0.0 .,. ,. ''° uo •• A "llH.,,.l owMOHllf'(. Notc.rett.M' U l.•Kt• -I II £.rtrtM II 1·A.- Mll-, ~•l<lt2U M llGHTH RllCB I'll mllftonl\H1 • , •• , olO\ .. up H.,""IC•C». P\,f"\.f' WO.ODO addod San '-"" Ot>I-!wr O•<•P Mnovntt' ITo•ol '~ •«> lAll 'Too''°""' !Olivar~•) l 90 1 40 Z..nll'lo IP111cay Jr.I l.<IO Tlrna 1 JO.Il l $< ••lcl'lod Oo Hal. NINTH RACI 11114 "'"•"'I ytal' otO• & 110 .t.llO*•l'ICe\, Pll•M •t>,OOQ, Kl"QW .. o IHowleyl 10 .0 •CO •ti) Ao110 IAI••,.., I 11 10 • CO ~·••Oo•• •S-mo e•I ,. Time I 0 41\ kr•fc.Md P•f•M•<o, r~w ' ,.e<IOf, (,1.,. 'M Tu"' 0••1 A l 4ML "IU<U -U ·KI ... Wo t & 1 ...,,._ .. ... ,..,l ... , " • ;:::=========--mil\' -000-011 ICO -10• • • 0 llVIN ADVAJfTACHI oua PAOD OFfDI th1t youri m1y not! 1 COM'Wi OIANGI COUlfTY co••u•• .......... ...,_ ..... . s.. c .............. Ylel• . ... ,... .... "•'-"' INU.M-.fLA.- 2 MONTH TO MOIC1H UNTAL IASIS 3 NO NPOSIT U9Ul1'D OH Al'PIOYIO Cllln 4 ONLY 111 10 I'll MONT.._ TOTAL COST ·-~,...., 5 NIW COM,ACT UNIT Siii II "• t 4 t 1 1 I 6 YOICI MDSA•I PAGllS Al50 AH ATAIWll 7 WU NP MAINTINANCI OR.\NGE COUNTV Rl\OIOIHlPHONl St !!VICI '"c ·11141 llS·llOS .. IO. l&llT• fl, '-""'"' •u -.._ ltMtl. ·-~ --· '"" c-• .. '"" -C--••Tort ull ... - ••4-UlJ 10% DOWN. J. INDUSTRIAL BUILDINGS t I· IW V' •II I 111 I My 11111• ••I rn1r '1 (llHl fl (lfJtJ 'oq11.i11 • lr111I 1rt1 llr.111 11 I 1111hl11111 , 1111 11rtl'( ltl d rtWfl, I IVf' lli<l111>11J 11 111111'> "•It Ill ,,, .... I Ill, HI 1111 lu ,111 r1I tho· I i.1111 II', l.1flj•" I 111.i•.l1•r J I 111111•!1 lr!d11•,t11 11 ,JI I' I l!I <>• .inyn r 111in1v I J11 11 •l•IPOll .ir1d lhtt 1r,t1•r',t •Cl1•111 r.t ' 111 1111· ~' .111(1 IJ1•w11 11 1!1 •'N l'(S :11•1• (1ljl 111• \11 •I , 1,1 I Jll (/fol) 'I/ I ti ; l'> <t 1: 1.11 hfl() 'J4 l!.i tvr tnleirm.iti• n. ICDLL/mYINE CIHIM :wio A Air port Loon Dr • CO'.la Me!>a, C:t 9?626 IRVINE . INDUSTRIAL .C:Ol\l1Pl.EX .. DAIL V PILOT Tu-1Aty, 'ebrull!Y 17, 1919 Sebastian's, Two Colleges Opening ' t "'Tbree n~ 1tue prod~tion ao on tbe boards th•~ v.eek u Seb1'suu.n·1 West Dinner PlayhOuse Jaunchn the Orange County premiere of a new com~y und two collegiate theater croups revive a paar ol llme honed dramas. At Sebastian's , lht• ribald comt'dy .. The Mind With tbti Dirty Man" opcn1 Thl.lT day for a two· month enica1ement at the San Clemente dinner the•\t·r. Mort 1bbrtv1111A-d rUJl1 ue scheduled by Oranae Cont Coll<'tttt and Saddleback <:oJlt"ce. ~tuch are muuntlnai "'Incident at Vichy"' and "Our Town" to play \Vt!dnCMlay tbrou1h Saturday only. M4luowhlle. tw<> othl?r local productions wUI b4- WV1ding up their rt'Spec..1ive runs as .. The National ~~alth'' closes al South Cout Repertory and "Gyp.sy" plays u fifth and rtn1tl weekend at the Westminster Community Theater. Enterlnl( its :;cQOnd of three \H'l'kcnds as the costume drama "CamilJe" at Golden West College. PORNOGRAPHY IS 'MIE aubJttt of Jules ';I'~ca·s "Mind Wtth the Dirty Man" at Sebastian's lleadmg the cast of Dan Verre's producU<?n are Aaron f1etchcr and Susie Scott as a conservative c:ouple Jolted by tht! goings -on of their son <Jason F1aa11 and daughter·tn law tBecky Gonules>. LA ltUIA •: WM.£ .. a.u1.-1t1 N ICI tu• ll09DAY ..... U TUllDAYa..... ......... 111'11·6• llltlO.n a leOUDAYI U :M e I• --*"""'·--SUHSHINI IOTS ,.. CAU fMURI •CM tHOWnMll -·-·----· -C tcon t -·· NO P·UIU TNI .. NDINIUIG ,.. ....... HITUli WT 10 DAYS '"' .... ,.. ... ___ _ 1UN1141H1 IOYS ,.. ' ...... ,.,_,. o---. 'AlllMOON.,. -c.-·-··-Mllllll .. ... M•l.HWAWO ..... ... ·-·---· --·---ll'Wfi· 1---z=.-· w-.r ..... , t U.UNCf 4 ~ WHITI a 7'DWAllS 111 C.r I l""l ..... e -.-........ ~-~· /• ll&AHD TOJ Of WOlU> .. -· -• llU eulf-0.UU a lOMIAIO • -Y.NOPAMU UNDftCOYUS WHO 1111 -< Kon e.-J.NOPMIO ntl NtHOINIUIO '"' _, .. .,_ TMI 0-IAT WAlOO Hml N -·-·_, lUCl'f LADT"' KIW I fOKl •1 -·-- '9CIO ...... CUIO U9e a CCkO<IU \An N-t\ NO llO ..... .... M04•-n Q The Devil In ~ MlssJones Intermission_ Tom Titus Completing the cost are AIJce Net.ten, lto~rt Wlm· berly ltnd l!1ld• Allen ··Dirty Man·' will~ on stage Tuesday5 throuah SUnda)'f •t v•rylnc curtul.ft umes throuah Apnl l ! at t.be dinner playhooae, 140 Aven1da Pico, Slln Clemente Rtsc:rv all0Clll t92·"50 FORM E R OCC STVOENT Hick Gob on is directing ··incident at Vichy, .. Arthur Mllle r'l> dramli of m oral respons1blhty st't In Ii Nau prai.oo camp. Amon~ the cas t mcmberis are Siandy Sampson . John PeieollS, Stan Tudor. Tom Smith. Ru·hard Rowland, M.uc~n AlJMblrv. Nick t-'urtu:ella and Jim Schelstrate Black Sorority Financing Movie • .... C:HlilD"S ~ • JCMMNIT IACll TO or tcil &.A. f "WY IMANCHH Tl lt ll(.) 0 .0 . f ltWY ICITY D". ()(.) '"W1MTmtHA wr .,..._ SUf'B IHYISllll" "WINTHHAWK" IN I J: I 1--4:00-1:10 7:J5-t:J5 n. Ttl"f"lfyl~ Metl" Plctw. ,.,._ TM T .mfy1oot #I .... ~ "JAW$" "GI J:IM:JS. 7:00.t:JO W9T'ftle.tty "SHAMPOO" ••• 2:00-1:45-t:H 1·~~ .. , I r OUNfA .. VALLIEV t "'9 .. """ •I .. ti ............ ····-,, ·-.... w•Dt.ey'• "NO DEPOSIT. NO RfTURN" {G) 1:1 ... :Jt 7:90+..JI ..... Ac:.ADIM'f c:.Aa'f~S ................ "'l DAYS OF THI COMDOt• (PGJ J:J0.7:10 RJ~AT l :J O.l!J .. t:JO .. THl ,AUUA'.X VllW" I :Jt•l :JO.,: J 0 F 11 /t A T J:40.7:20 ~ .... , ...• UOf ... U 1 •l.Ut4 tl ... l Mtl LAD'f' ) t•r•1t U luN LAOt , ........ a Pl.AIM J OM to.t• )I NEWfoRT CINEMlS:-=J •uto•""""'' &M4CUH ... • , ..... , ... ,.. 0 "'"--'! U4 11 H WAllfll llllATlHAU llllf t.CTOll IHA COMllOY lllCHAllO HNJAMIH( •ttf !IUl''Oll"flNO AC"fOll •Uf l'ICl UIU.c:c>MEOY edwards BRISTOL CINEMA I .. l)t(I\ ..... c .. ,...,. , .. , .. . ~ edwards BRISTOl CINCM •'"°" .. , -c..-.~ , .. , .... 0-- . Performanct-v.111 be aiven l 8 o·clod t Wed nesday throuch S uturd.My u'I the c:olle&l' aud1tonum. AclmU1s1on a Cree AT SA DDLE BAO< <.'OLLEGt;, a Joint produc lion of Thornton \\aJdu's Pul!t.tu Pnie wlllllm• drama "Our Tuwn" ll~ on suie Wednt>~day with a <'U!>l di\ 1ded betw n S.ddlt'back 1\udc:nt.s and rommun11v actors from the San Clemente Com· munity Thuter . T~ Pl•y will be movt•d to Sian Clcmentl' s Cabnllo Playhouu on March HI for a lour wetkt>nd r un 01rectt'd by War~n l>ea<'on. the 11ho" 1ndudos Gwenda Amy, Betty K1llon, M uynurd llathshelder. Lelslje Heidt', Mark Whihn&. Marie Armstroolt, Bob Steele. 8111 J ones and Karl Hanselman. Curtam Is II pm. m llwld1ng Hon the M1~s1on V1t•Ju t•umpu:.. IN OTHF.R LOCAL TH•:ATRICAl1 i.lt'llv1ty on thl' Oranae Coaat : -"The National Htnlth" headi. 1nt<1 its hnal week with performances tom11ht through Sund a) at 8 and a Sunday matinee at 3 m South Coast Repertory's Third Step Theiater. 1827 Newport Blvd .• Costa Mesa . Reservations 646 1363 -Two closin& performance of tht-mui.1cal "Gypsy" will be gh•en fT1day and Saturday a l 8 30 at the Westminster Community Tht•att>r. 7272 M3· pie Ave .• Westminster. Reservation:. 893-8626. -"Camille" will be on stage Thursday through Sitturday at 8:30 and Sonday at Sp m in the Actor 's Playbox Theater at Golden West College Reserva lions 892·7711, extension S4S t_MAGIC~FLCU~ STARTS WED ., FEB. 18 edwards LIDO CINEMA NEWPORT ILVO. AT VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH 673-8350 .,..... .... ,.,....,.._, ......... -........ ••ct.,."".......,...... ... *"90M .......... ~· ... ........,.. ~· .... ""-• .... -... ... ~, ""'.., ,. . ..,.. .... ,..,... .. ~~~~~lr~·.~... (X) #tTMl>tO .. n 11 UUUMQ llltCHMO ""'"""Utt ~' . " ''"" / '·-·· aK &. COter ..Oi•tt111 l.IT'IHnlllll llYAN 0 NlAl • llllAl'lllA lllt!HIOOI .. •0•1r1c1 "' ,.,,.,.,., .... un t U•PfUOUI l t.llM 00,rllOtOUI , f ,..ll HL t #Q ""U "ft NG UlA...,SllOfUl..O ,..._ vtl._.,. Hrff0 A •0 '9 l 0 0 ' lONO AGO AN O Olt.AfHrf() THC At..0 CW M6QIC ~ ..OV!'I ACCOMft~tlK •flfO 'IW Olllll ClO"I Af ,. .. _, I"' A lf'I " ... [£0~~~.~~~A lc:cnTAMOA _J~llU 114Tf0 X U ClUllVf tlHOWINO edwards BRISTOL CI NEMA ... ,,,,.. .. , ~"'"""' , .. ,.., THE LIFE~ &TIMESO XAVIERA BOLLAND ._Am'Q.DS (X) ~~ -~" ( .... .E..~!!!!-.. J wt UM• Cllfnll ttJMU f AY! DUNAWAY 1ilifflfttow~I:" CINEMA ClNffR tu.tlOt ,., .. •W\.CO~t•lllf'• ... ,. fUOfCAH'flil •rt 414t CINDIU£$J -· _.,,\,ww\M•'~'' .. .,,.,.,.. c-.wrte; n 1...ffO •• RUSSIAN BAllfT FILM FESTIV Al The WOfld'a fcwemo't S.ll•t~y 11IE BOLSHOI BAI.UT· MattnMt Sot. /Sun. Su1f • ,,, ,, \ ~ -.. ~ ~ . ,. . ' ., Jftd llC'i WlllC "ACAPULCO GOLD" '1E£FER MADNESS .. I - UTEO IGI U .25 All s.ah 8:00 Shewiltt We cover the weterfront In the i·tJUlgj{.)I 11111'"'"" -.STO CDCIUIN"' . ....... , ... ,,,..,.. ............... "UIOS AMt;O" ......... ~-, ,.,, .. CINfMALAND lllUt MM'°' l°'"'"' ") l .. I 11111w .. 1A• AflEIMOOM" •i .... ... .... ,"'* ''""' ' .... _ Wlft'POOl" .. ,,,.... .......... CINfMALAND lllUt ""'"' a.1 .. •&»llitl 1111 ..... "4 "SlOaY OF r 00 . u ..... . ... ,,_ ...... ,,~ 1M 1081 TUI£ .. ..... ,,....·-•--Mr•• 1953 Weis a Good Year for Leaving Home c1101 OOlO!N GLOBE AWAAO WINNER FOA HST fORflGN FILM, ENGLIStt LANGUAGE ..... -· ... lftlWK TOOnHfll '011 flf( lat Tlltlle n.. ur~ a1M1n111a ot GRIZZLY ADAMS 1'\.UI • lllllfll l'Ol!Cl TrlLY UVAt.45 l wmeaooa .. "......,, .... ,.UOllHV9\' ....... CUO'fl U .. U tl I I PUBLIC NOTICE ltlOf,HOlt •lll•f -•-e«u.s. ... l.M._.. .. CA .... , , .. , um,,,."" "*'-°'""°' Coo1 O•••v .,,,.. '"""-'' 11 J4, --.W•~ll I.'·'"• ' ,..,. · PIJ8t.JC N01'1CE PUBUC SOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUIUC ·oncE p BLIC N011CE , DAILY PILOT at Lead in 'Eqaas' .. Burton's Role Raises Price FronaWt...~eea Bltbard Burtoa toot ovt-r • IHdtn1 role in the Bro1d1ny produ.c tlon oUbe play "!';quu1." HlS wlte, EllHbtth Taylor, wax ln New York to watch his l>t'rforman<'f' as a psychlatrist who lfll•t.! a youq man who has killed teveral horns Burton rt'placed 1ctor AatMay PMkfftl for 10 Wttks ln the lon1·nwun1 show. Top ticket prtee~ were lncreaaed from $11 to $1S with Burton In tftt> cast. • . The V S. Defense l>fP•rtmcnt N!fused to pro. v1dt military equJpm\.'nt and manpe>wt'r for an $ll·mlllion Cilm about the Viel nam war being produced in the Phlllpplnea by Fr,nt'11 Ford CopPola, a coprodueer or tht film said. "l hove a reebn1 the Pen .U,on wants to rorcet Vietnam •• aaid Gra)' Frederil'bon. ' But he added, "The Pen. t.1on la not tryina to obstruct u' or prevent lbe picture from be: inc filmed. They want to bd neutral." H~. said Coppola, wbo directed "The God· father and "Godfather 11," lell ror Washington t ask Defen~e p~rtment officials :.i:un ff>i cooperatton m filmmg "Apoealpyse Now.•• • Billionaire recluse Howard Ha1bf'I hall ~; n~ed defendant in a federal court •wt In Portlud ~ Mame, but no one haa found hlm to tell blm so. • In a leeal advertisement, U.S. Dust. Judgo, Edward T. Gl(nou ordered Hughes to reply b~ March 16 or ri~k a judgment by default. • Th~. case Involves four Hughes ntms: "Hen•:( Angels released in 1930, ··Scarface" and "Sh;amq• of the Nation" in 1932, and "The Outlaw " a 11M9 film starnn1 Jarte ~u. ' Last ~pte~ber, ~ne or Hughes' companies,. Summa Corp., .filed. swt chargina copyright viola• lions by Classic ~1lr~ Museum, Inc .. of Doverl J'.OX<'roft, In its d1stnbulion Of the three oarllet fiJms. • Actress Sblrley MacLalae said fn Pari1 • would. not campaign for the U.S. democratic re.:. s1denl1al candidate thl5 year as · •' she did in 1972 unless Sen. • • Edward Kennedy runs. "I can't see muchdlfrerenl'e among t he others," she told a q uestioner at a press con. ference. Miss MacLaine. 41 , ls Jn Pans with a new show at Lon· don's Palladium. As ~or the Repubb<"ans, Mills !": MocLaine. a political activist, Mec'UINI •• said former California G?v. Ronald Rea1an ··wO\lli°: be really dangerous. He 1:. a true velvet Fu:.ciat re-• ally smooth.·• • • l Evangelist BWy Graham agreed to postpone -~ s~ries of crusades originally scheduled to colnc•dl• with the summer Olympics In Montreal. "' Graham earlier accepted an invitation from :i group of Montreal churches to hold rallies July 23 to 2S, i~ the m ldst or the Olymp1r games. But after ob-. jecti0ns from the International Olympic Commit:-; tee, Gra~am said he would postpone . a Montreal crusade indefinitely. • h National Airlines President L.B. Maytaj elped subdue a man who said he had a born!) ;::::rd a London·to·Miam1 jetliner, airline otnciul~.: Maytag and his wife were aboard the flight when a 25-year·old Lon· ( ) don man, P eter Jackson, PEOPLE asked to see the pilot and ________ _,. told him, "We're going to Cuba.'' police said. Maytag, the pilot and two passengers s ubdued Jackson af~er he SD;id he had planted a bomh aboard the DClO Jumbo Jet, police said. No bomb was. found. • ~adako Ogata, 48, will become J apan 's highest, rank!ng woman ~iploma~ as a minister in J apan '' mission to the United Nations, the Foreign Ministry• announced . . M!"S. Ogata, a professor at the International Christian University in Tokyo, did graduate wo rk at Gt!?rget~wn University in Washington and the Univer~1ty . or California. lier husband, Shljuro Ogata, ts with the Bank of J apan in New York . • Three American a.stronauL~ who participated f~ last summer's historic Apollo.Soyuz proJcrt pre. sented the emir or Qatar with a model of a future space vebicll· radio Ooha said ' The radio said the astronauts -ThomH Stafford, Va ace 8 rand and Oona Id <Deke> Slaylon -explalr1('(1 to Sheikh Khallf• Ben Hamad Al Thanl how the ship of the futurt" would be luunched like n rvc·kat ~ • and then landed like an ordinary airplant. ..0 H said t~e ast~auta, acc·ompanlcd by Jo;RYP tlan·born •l'1t'ntlst I' arouk Al-baz, al!.o i1rc:scnt{'d Sheik h Khali(o with th<• Qatarl flHI( ronrl phot11 Rraph11 of lhl· Pl•r:s1un Cull 11tatc of Qutar luk<'n dur tng lhl•Jr fll1iht • t~ormer San Diego Police.· Chief Ray lfooblf"r who resigned under pressure from City Hall, HI \h~ new security dlr.-t'tor for the At1011 Hotel t'holn Hoohll'r'i nppoantm<'nt wa11 announced hy ·Atl 1111 Hotels president (.'. Terry Brown, a day after Bnt Kolender wi1:1 nnmed to replace Hoobler 81 San Diego poh<"c chief. PUBLIC NOTIC£ P UBUC NOTl('t.: ., DAlt.YPILOT . Tlletday,Febru-x11.1m ~.~~ ........ ,~.~~ ........ ~~-~~ ........ ~:.~~ ........ ~~:!.~.~ ........ . ~.~~ ........ ,~.~-~ ....... ~.~.~ ......... j~:.~~ ....... !~::!~ .......... ~~~ ~~~!~ .......... ~?~~ IN LAGUNA ~~~~~ .......... !~~".•.•.•.l'I ...... • ••••....••. !~!~ Gt•r.i 1002 G ... 1.i 1002 G....-.1 1002 Gtw1el 1002 9111111 .. ~ .. w.:::-~-________ ._ ______ _ ofuJa !J~le ~ ~ .............................................. HAL '"I.AOC I.AST .. UH Thu; two story ha.-, a Connec:t1t'\Jt flavor Four hedroom1> upst:.urs .• 1 firt-plJ<.'l" in the down11ta1r:s dl'n. u ~P<tc1ous formal dtn mi.t room , a surmy breakfast nook with paned window!! und a 7100 "'I fl lot with lots of lre~. Oh ye". both pal1u:-. ore screen ed to kt:t.•p the bu~:. out ' In a ucll~htlul Ml'sa Verd<• neighborhood al $84.950 U~l()U t1()Ml:i REAL TORS 546 5990 1525 Mesa Verde Drive, C~ta Mesa VU> #Ulb<H 16'-1ttl. 613 4314 Mid Co1011• ~MM 615 6000 I ~.'!_~ ••.••••••••. l~ •••••••••• ~~~~1 aaoas: Ad.erll•en ......W clMcla "-fr ods dt9llf -ct report ft"· ,..,.. lwdiotefy. T1w DAILY rlLOT au.Mt • ...., for .... flnt ... cornd illMrffolt -.,. STEAL IT!' Sl4.900 I 3 ~room s turlcr .. de h1<ht (;ourm1•t kale hen. CO\t•rt•d p;rllu . h11t m.ai.ll'r w1lh :.!nd b.ath Pr~tti:e rummunrt) '" in~ '.'l;r vc thou~ .. nd:.' C..11 G4S OJ03 FOREST OLSON IHC ....................... .••.•.••...•.••..•..... OUll BAY ANO BEACH 675-3000 01401 ~ COA&T H~'-'' l.UU CH'" .. Ill' M·»~ CAMEO HIGHLANDS OCf:A.N VI £W PLUS POOl. lovt-lv '4 bdrm & family rm home. pro~rly 11s to top ('Ond1 t1on, vucu.nl & U\ a1lable for r1wck po~sc~Mon Ownt'rs have txn.tRnt unothl'r home & wanl action $9G,500 f;(><.·uted '1:'><'7 Cortlunct , opt•n Wc.•d & Thu~ <1flernoon. .... l SP M. BAY & BEACH REALTY oua 21ttt nAa '7'91000 Bt?aul. 4 BR, fam. rm Countr) English -~ ~, a tm os ph ere . endusl'd patio, t!2>lat>hshed trees. lx>at ~hp $245.000 Bemg remodeh.'<.l. l'U tom s an. 5 Ua 6SOOSQ ft homconpmnt, pool, dock Custom, c·omple<ely turmshed ti UH , 41, ba . :I ~u .:ar. On La6?()(l0 $325.<JOO Cw.tom S BR. 4 b<.1 View. 80 fl IUJ:OOn Bual bltp, $2'J5,000 on BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR .1 '' 11 ')'' .• O• .. r• K r..·~ t-lol ( \ 1.1. ' 1-. W t-: L I. F 0 K S• U ,(' f I' II 110\J t-:S • 1/1.:l 'l)\H 1•1w1•1-;1n 1~.~ HAllOR...NllW HILLS-SI 17,'50 M t: t ic· u I o u s I ~ rn a 1 n t u 1 n l' d ! 3 U H Suusultto modl'I by LU!)k Lon· & cure makes this the ~harpest. Lund mdudt'<I • IHI\! t-. \l'AltT\t 1';1' I' • t 11 ._ .___..... Hiib loed ""'u ~•mn: 1n:.,..TAL.S .. ~-_......... • l 11 u 1 <.' 1-: MIWPOIT CIHTIR. H.I. •44-4tl0 t \111-0H~l \ ANO :'<it-.\.\U\ll\l'lol'lll-:!lt GeMNI I00.2GeMf'111 1002 ...........••.•..•••••• ··•··••••·············· suraa L.AGUHA VllEWiH srANISH VILLA ltESTAUltAMT·IAlt CA.MIO HIGHLAND l)rum11t1t• 11 vlntot 1 oum 1002 G~el 1002 G...,... I 002 Gewet'.. I 002 ..•......................•.............•...... .........•...••.••••••• Onf' of 1.uttuna'5 nH)!;I U('o1ut1fuliv cl1•t·or•t t•J with 11r~11l1o&C'(' l1.1rd,•11 di,ttn11u1 ,h1•d rt•-.t.iunnti1 four l.ll'l'.lroom "1th 1wt•11n Vil'.,. kltdwu ,,, ,·rlooi.. .. oncl 1•01·kt111I loun11l·~ & ranyu11 \le" 111 lop h1•uut 1ful put111 N~111 Ofrl'I ~ lremt•11Jou' loelt<tun 1\lmoi.I fll'" 1\\'.,.C'Urpt•btluoutothl•UI tnVt':>tor po1t•nt111I l-'1n1 llln>\'ls 11nd ,Jrupt'b t\l\ '1'ot1tl pr1rt• only )11,!~I ...........•....•...... MEW LISTIMG! FAii • kd rmi. . :? b.alh•, on RENT AL qwet 1r1:~· lm1'<f c•ul dt• "n' l SUVICE m <.:tJc.t.-~'"'"' !'>11;rrk lrn11 1'o rh.if1t' tu 1..indlorcb or rleotn 1n!>1d1• & u ul lt!nJJll) 4 bdrm lam rm. l'nt"\"!1 .11 ~; !lOCt ind g.ardn t'r ~&oo 1,iJ le;.Ci.3 ~ 1fi173 i-;vi:i. ~ 17!Hur!lt.ll lJ71 associated 11 1101(£11 S-FIEA,•<"'l>S l Ql \ >A l o•b"• -. '' ?••' Walker 6 lee IHI f1l1te f11,•.-11un Wond••dul l'l'\-d P3tm . Hoom fo1 CMllOOJ67tl7 SPANISH ESTATE rtlME MIWPORT l'l"·nlt•ll' Thl' vla1·._. to 110 vool Pm JI<' bt>al'ht>i. • "' •· ·• 2 STORY OCEAN VIEW 111 l..11:u11.a • ~:~ c11't'i~~·~nCorma r ~ 1•~•i1!i.YI Wind1ngs41~7k5..,0J, 1hru UHDet s 7o.OOO! TEH UHIT •• · y. '()' -~~!!.!_, l'.1 st 111 a n co u r t ) .a rd Ptta.t111e. u pproa r h II ui:e i 0 U N I T 0 I-' F I C t: & [r.~:::;:::::-"'iliiitiiii~iift•jiilllllll~ .. ~llilllil le»<b to uuthenhc rt'<I 111 .. I l~l"l', St'\ ludt>d t•ntr)' A· I' \ R T M 1-: N ----··-··- r u u rand !-tpunt!>h lot) ll\tnl( ''"'°' "11h B l:I LDINC Pr rm aa.ooltlaftd 1006 balcony• !Wcluded t-nlr) r.ustH' brid .. lrrcl'l,u1· 11u('at1un Co.ast II"'> ••••••••••••••••••••••• tu adobe tile .. mid S w eepini: ltrtul.ar Lwitunil No \i1C.tnr1es OWN~RS7S.OOO 3Br.2liJ. R<1nch11 \'rlla Ir\ 111iel stJtl'C'Bsl' lt-ud' up tu loll Xl11l tn\l'slmenl S21S 000 ..,. ...... ...,........,.,,..._,,.-....--trh·~. pJllU UOOO dn 1 L· t .1 hbrur)' .,.1th m 1·n "'" of CUSTOM roqm • 1c?> u ~1n1n1: IHllll: room (.(l\IM \'I, I G mayllnam·e67S!!fil$ h11:hhiehtt'tl by t .. nttn.a Dl\li~l\._.l>LP\l..-W LEADING I.A UM.A. OCEAHVllW ktt~hen W .alh of i:luss 0 ·.-•0 'C I'. ,, r.. • & GALLERY IUILDIHG c L 1 F 1-· 11 A \.' t-: r.. 1.-.oo reftiftwto I 007 accent pr01 v~te r l'ilr l'A fALIN/\ ISi.A '\;U ' One of Laieuna ~ rmL~t Bedroom ht•aut). liwlt ••••••••••••••••••••••• OWNER c~urtyard SweE>.ping Unbehe\ably ,·h..irrning gallenes will sell bldg ~round ..i p.illo & pool I Door To Oce•. TUCl<ED AWA.Y TRAMSFl.RRH> ~~asesoarSlo~;a~ter Onti time uppl)rlun1t) and l eai.e back o :separate mother rn la"' i BR lloml.'"' dbl gar Among all the tr-cei. ,., STEPS TO GOLF m sanctuuy + an Call S46-2313 attra c t r v e term ~ urut 5147·500 ('LUS Bucht>lor Unit .ind lht:. lcHt'I• 1 tk..-troom 2 dido l>lte Bdrm i; ,,, •· i . •. • Si7$,000 PETE BARRETT u nobi.trurlt'd Ol'l'l•n J TAKE ADV AMT AGE Overlooks rolling hills 1 1 ram1I> room 1cum1.1lete io.ac strttl Around lhe ., co•ST HIGHW •y " "' ... ~ ~·~~~~~l~~~r~~~;:r~~c C~tom homl' 011 cul dc· ~~1~rapoossr. !~~nt~~~ [~Ii~~. ilfi.1 LAGUNA CORHBl 642.c2-00REALTY~5.4060 ~~~.oooi~e/~~c~~~ae,1'.~~· r M V d n~ · lh1s villa run be ' • --"''>Lt1·11 l·c>i"s·1· w p 0 u I t 11 b I e 1 :.i 1·omt>r rom l0:i.a l'r e " 1 ..,, " AHORDAIU ,. 1 ,.1 b 1 yours for SHOO tol•ll io.ooo ft bwldtnj( 1o1te, or IN\,•L:_s·i·•t L'N'I' Ftrt-"IJccs 6l'.iut1ful ... oun ry '-u m I H--'---VI HI r_ ""' COST.a. MES"' r I 1 d 1 down or tuke over ex1:.l ·---------1 pnme commcrc1a ...---ew-• • ...iu ,..,1., I Ho.Ms for w. I ••••••••••••••••••••••• GtMr~ 1002 A A l'pls •-dr~ An·hitu•· m 1H'U .1 c t•on 1 ion ..,..., ...., , "' ,.... '' , .. h • in.: lo;m al $325, mo. Ca II THROW "'W •y ,. 11el'11 en t u n 1 t s on 1-:xqwsitt-homl' 111 cho11·e ONLY $41,950 turall.\ do.'Sl"ned p.ilto uorooi: -OUI t:nJOX hug1: --S c.z 000 ,.. I qu1dt IW7 6010 THE L•WH MOWER property l.i • N H loeatioo Portafmo C--........ , M-I 022 Colo ... • D"'" M •R Collei;l' Park home on And much. mlX:h more s e Pa t a le ll a r or . _ _ _ ... -_ "• ~ -" '"."""Jrmou l·n11ly room ,.•'1 '· ''• '· mudet ~ho w~ l•k,· a ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l..ir)(e t"Orner lol, man> o ... nt•r mo\ 1ni: to r-n s a anden1oyrarefrct•ll\1ng COTIAGE ( d I With f1repl11··~ & wut bar [~' lt~~ll ~· 7.000 FT. ILDG. modt"I. thlb 2 :.tory 3 lg cxtra5 not oun norma · Sucramento and mui.t ·~ ~ . , . j ;; 111 this 3 yt•:i r "'-'"' New l111t1ng <1outh or lytn.JhOu.&l'al th1:.pnce ~di lx.m't mr:i.s rt " <.'.all Gourmet!> k1trhcn or --·-··-··-Townhouse 3 lwdroom CENTER LAGUNA bd. 3 ba, Ir.: r:im rm. h1&hway. Ellccllent locu Wtll .,0 r11~l. io.o rall for 546 Sl!l4() tomorrow+ formal dine. 2 bath, lar-•c P"' ..ill' Great act•e5.s. v1s1b1hty lorm.il dinins: on thi1o l n St and rd u .. lot " s I d d d .. L' 1 k O\l'litltl'<I pror landst··~• VIEW IRVIME TERRACE 10 . · a "' app'l to:.ct>' er u e i.:roun i. + palm, dble gara)(c +ten 1:,xcept1ona par 1ng lot !HS !~91 ,,.. wtLh great potential (;411 loacb of pn' acy Owner1 __________ 1 nis courb, poob J.o,·..it Suitable for retarl :.tore. t' r on t II ow t: u i. t o m I llome on Dolphin Ti:r ructi w •I Bit, J>t'l'lucfrd :..,.1mm11111 1)()()1, ncwl)' us for more mrorm1o1t1on 1 traru.ferred & must go' (-d close to South (.'oJ,1 frnance 1ns l1t ut1on Call 673-3SSO 833.~ Take lold\'antage Call J UNITS Plu.i ._.nd prtt·ed only lll'staurant, n1te dub ,.,..,. '' '· ' '· """"' ~ 2313 $33.SOO <.:all (or cuma>letl' Callror deta1~. [~HAii (cn~TES'1,h .. ~:~~~J~;!, .i [~·ma11 ¥E:~~~a~~::~. dmUHOO Walker C lee Rt11I hitata remodeled k11 rhen and PAr..Oll/\\tlC. NIGllT l.IGllT, DAY . <>C EA!" &- ISl.Al'oUVlfo:WS ~HERITAGE • . REALTORS TRADE THREE U ... ITS txl 2 ba formal din rm -"all elec tbr uout" In .... • .. YFRONT home I!> .. mu.'l rur beach CUSTOM EST ATE ('Orne SIOSO. tno 1-·u111---------1 EASTSIDI! ELEGANCE 111,er' 10 .,\.'(' 2 trg pauo:. pnce BLUFFS CONDO for othl'r n·~1tlcnn~ 111 l'om1: proper l). llolh llurd 111 frnd BO'l:IT/\ Ro)t·e, Ocnth') or •' COST ... MES• 1 mum ror b<•JI or tr.aaler + 2 STY GUEST -"" Then• r-s nothtn)( t'l,t• t<> • I I I HOUSE $90,500 IJOQ1eplll$duplex"'1th 1 do 111 lh1i. h1i:hl; up "'"" ~ 11 ,,l ct '"'I b~droom s . 2 llJth., iir.idt'<l i Wrm l>l•.iuty ;,.i:,~!ll S49,500 -~l~lt owner's quJrter., Will i-:~icpt bwld J slti• for A 10011 w111d1n11 t"ount1; ext"tla nf(e ~: Z le rm' ) 11 u r bo .at .! 11 , 1 n i: lane, i.h<tdt.'d tx•nc:ith an Start your 1nvel>trm·n1 room~. form.cl 1111110.: umbrl'llJ of to wcrin11 pr6gram now. or lt\l• toom, i~land kitctwn \ tl'('('S leild'I lo thti. rW!Ue there and let the• •h nb h.irtit..im Jt S:..'llS.<•lO ('Jll h1dt>aWJ)' Parking for S help p11y Lhe mort11..i1ee c·-·• L' ,73 7-... 1 cars li1g woodl'n 4 bdrm ... uu..t)' r.\l'!>. ti "' c·ustom plu• l>t:paratc 2 HESITATE- AHD MISS A-FRAME HOUSE "L'LI. pl.in m 1·hnu•1• Inc .cllon "'"" OF GLASS Uellghtf111 l'"t"' 1.11 ,., "" S 199,500. fee. ASSUME $35,500 QUALIT Y I.AG UNA th c .: rt· 1· 11 li 1'11 :1 Call 644 7211 Art1~t1r beach t•h,tlct Rfo~SllH:NTIAL Bedroom :ill on orw ln•1•I Till' entry tohv1ni: room t'ROPl-:Kl'IES .,.llh pr&\Ult• .1tnum ~ Wllh hrepla1·1: & view of 1J u t 1 u 11 I I m u !'I l c· r ' , lush ground!> ~ourml'l CHRIS AIEI. HOME I llt'druum t\11 th1" .rnd on ~ ,1 k!tchen & breJkflli.t b.tr Dram.tllc and t•harmmg I~ "tt·p~ to thl· pool - Family room lltdt"•~ay t'l!dar a nd Ria'!! with S7S.WO Con)fln 111•1 Mar fourple). masterrctr~at with "all brcJlht;i k1ng v11·w 640-6161 l'nl'l' Slfl7300 t'or salt· of gla s::. Win t.: lvr SllOOOO 1 , ' , • L· • •I I 1 l'htldn•n & )(Ul'Sl . •Y JWlltf .-.X~l' en ~ IJ. jQPlacuai•I ~ 675-7225 FaEHCH CHATEAU story 11ue11t chulct on 2 STORY-BEAC H · over11ted lot' A hurr a-....-t;itta POOL d Y m a n . :o. J r ., " m ' w "-r,s .. -19 .. 0 .. t 1 , m workshop. Swt't'p.1111( par •-, uramJ ll' IVllllo: 100 , 1"'! OUA11S1 Hlw~•r U ACH I or m ii 1 d 1n111 It room, ty patio with hul(e bnl'k totarden \11\·w kitc hen, BBQ! S<•parnt.c 111trdl'n This m odl..'I home , :!I stor y, 4 bedrooms. :! baths, family room Two 1 mas ter suites. new' carpeu thru-out, II & , .. 1 pool, prestige Hunt ml(ton lk1o1ch lo«allon Take advantage, ussume S••'. t'llA loan pay ments $255/m o <.'all 963~67 M ai;n1r1c~nt JO' i.tud111 LUXURY HOME l'ond Set• o~m·r at 420', loft with .of>t.•n ht·.1m1-.J MUCH MUCH MORE ~r~;~~r. t:dM or rull COATS&WALLACE re1linfl" 1 ukt· ovt·r 71 , • , • ' VA loun No nl'w lu..itt An tnll'l(rall'IJ work of art. REAL ESTATE . INC. C-0ron11 dcl Mur duplCll - l'Ml'l', $K2.llOO For .... 1(' by owner 1:-:xn•l lent <'l1nd Set' uwm•r at 4:.!01".l 1.ark~1>ur. t:dM or r<tll OM 7~; , COSTA MESA .artt:.tt<· open i.t airs to url'a for grttn thumbs. CHAIMHOMLY A..fflAME Hparat 1: rn:ist er & S torage r11 c 1l1ty or $4.2,500 l'h1ldn•ns 'ultl.' 22 P't playhouse for the lud GLASS CHALET dtM' Your uwn pnv1th.• J M11u1vc bt'droom' ARTIST RETREAT hallroom "7ed pJrly wuter well So11nn1t 2 !)Uper rlt'iln f:.1m1I)' hum•· II h T r o o in 11 v er I no k 1 n II .•l"ry au""'t ho"•e or r"n · h \'lt·~1·a O"l'fln)(A I II II ~v ,.,o -' wit l11rl(t' 1•11u11t1y courlyurc urry t'it lal S'huv .. l 'um out. kitchen llo)(t' ilou hll' fr,crrit· t'hlllt'I rtl',lll'<l m """ ~1711111 PJtnt'cm up~ .t~d you''"° f(.ara&c Assum.,hlo· 111,.. the tn'1'~ Cour I) .1nl ,.n , )> _ _.. d interest lo.an l'r tt·l'•l tn :I h\"<J1u11rn'< 1ndudc [~ f I l(u<uot'lilllte nc~-... trt ~.J~.~.· m;'l;~~! •• n,J~-$-1:.! ;.oo ~l~•;:,r1~t~· ~':.~.,~·r ~:~.:~ ll~fti;)1\ ~·~ wa:~rc::: ~~u~~~t ' lirn1lo11t· hlJ ndkrt<·h,•n _ _! .. _, ... ,== .,,, v· •" 11 ···• ~ ... 1 .. •111n1: ''-"rt a\l' to I [a 1Tuini LI ~:;.~I~~~ '11~1~0u~:~~~~ ... r:i ASSUME $32,500 ~f UJU\i qu .. hf) 101( "'~um•· i ' • Slll per"'° ,.ITI • =• lwn nt $327 month mcl Wa lk11t1t di.,t;rn<'l' to MESA VHDE lJW" Cull no"'' ~2 ~ South t'out Pliu.a 3 WITH .... , .,. ' ' " Ucdroom +-f,1m rm. 2 CAMPU SP.ACE r ~ ,lfJ~li u1 b..ith hnml· t.1or1t•· 101 und then ~ami' f\ w1•1l ~JjlJ)i~ :r r~:.'1:~r ,~::~.:~ 1~:~~ m,11nt.11111·<l .1 lilt --qtll h.1\l' ruo m f o r IJal'esetll'r on a rnrrll'rl .! 111-'0llOOM 2 h lilh n •1:1•t abl1• )(.crdt>n ur with 2 BOAT l:i\Tl':S 111111 wall'~tront a ii;i rtml•nt "'hut hJH· )'11u Only a 19x.\O + parktnl( :.luh lJ,tt•lully r!(-c•oH.cl••ll iSl:-,tl D<1w11' Or us:.ume lor camJ)t•r . hout. m11tor t\Jll ~1:(·urity. ri•iol. l>li.il 7' .encl $2811 l)l•r m11 l'U)' home. l'k Now lll•tni: ,.110 nvn%Si!l.54Kl nwm ullll'd for .1 Hiii<')' h.111 /? .-:z:;:> . ~ •~l\.lrt.l'lu"·"".iltl••r1 .. 11 ~a l'fD ~ t l'l·ltll yam l 1n OJddrtwn t '.111 REAL ESTATC 644·6397 ( 'J f 'L' 644·7211 . • ' • ... ~ r11cE •EDUCED 1sn w ....... c M Neat to Marl.et &a•k•t GREAT VIEW S49-80SS homt• h!l>i. lh11n t111>0 y1:1ir·s old with .a loni: h11t of u tras mcludm.i. dl'n, with wt't bur, l'll'l'trtl' ~ara1:c door, m1rrort·cl wJrclrnbe CIO!H.·~ wntl 11H11•h more ilall e\ l'n U \' ll'W or lhl' OC't•an from lhl' r••clwood <lt•t•k !-\ill pnre 574.5'10 C Al.1. [>5tJ 2tiOO C:SELECT T'PROPERTIES /Jn Nl(J[l. UAILl Y Ei, A~SUCIArrs CORONA DEL MAR Wunt ,.,, 11l1ftl1u11l.1h· J BABBLING ho·..ironm :1 b .. tti hom" OWHet DESrERA. TE! wuh i\nthun\ 11001'' l .all 5 IEOROOM + rOOL now ' ..-11101 111 "'11111..: VA MO DOWH .. 1011<• flrr11l.an• \ tt"w' 111 Whal ,1 hu~ • l>on t """" BR 0 0 K 1·.1 .. 11nJ from II\ 1n11 il' ,\h,1nclc•rw•I 2 i.lur~ .> 1111101. 1111111111 rclom •noi llu11•· lw1lr1111111" "'rt h mJstl•r ht.'droom 'urlt: m;"""' mo1,l1 r ""I•· ltu .. tit· I ht-.lroom two lltVl :-JI'; l't-:lllli\l I: 1•rw"1tf' 1ornn l111·1t11>n t-:,crv w11mlln .. •ht•.un "l llr)' nt•a r N1•\0oporl lllur 1.al(Oo n, rro1nn1I Tll1s h1"1l 11ll" \ndht•,t ktll'ht't\ +I+ I m ll1-.1C'h l'>•tult• 11rC'U ~thnt.:11nd lk•icl l'r11 .. 1n Pr 1 t 1• 1 n th 1' m1'<1i.1ll• ptla"'''""n 1 ...,,.,1ud1•1t l'ulh1·1lr.cl 11r1'11 1'hrf't' li.•1lr11111n n1•1 1:hhorh11od o .. rll'r' M .. um1• l11w '"'"''"'' 111,111 lllJ)tt·r .. urti• ... 1th pr1 v11tt' w1tll l'QUI. lmm1•d1.i11 ... .ant to i.:o r1 .. h11q: t 01 lll'W V1\ with no 1111 ... 11 l"IN'kl.111 PllllO U\'1•rlook •. ·~21 33 II m .ast1·rv1err of de:.r.:n 1:1~.... ...~ 11'-')ll "' and del'or To Ii(' -;old 9ti3 !~,i,., , ., cumplett-ly rurnr!ihl'd COHTE.MrORARY [ ~ IH&ll ;;~~:.:·=·· '.:·.~·r~;;~!~ .. ·;·;~ -= "' -I • -'<"re~ '>PCl'tacular \ll'W 3 Udr~i. . 3 hath ... view propt"rty s rPntal ripen bt•u m ' .,. Jll .. of Costa Me.a I 024 ---------•unit' Tr e m ~ndou ' ~l.i:it' 1-·orrn.1 1 d1n1n.: ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eastside Income ~~~~ml'nt voten11d1 ~::~10 c .. ,1 .. m '"'".:n wner Gone! 4 Bdrm:. + S.'am1ly HM 2 ~pa rate hou..'<'' "'1lh ptckl'l fcnr l' & dlill' l .ar g.ir .ai.:e $.S2.SOU OAK sTHET .C. F. ColesworthY Mesa Det M ar Nf·;ar town and br·ach-Rffltton 640-0010 llnh1•h<'vable prrcc at S A L E s· M E N o r BROKERS. sh;ire oHtre & receive 72'. 80'1 .90•i 400l1T9" rouu t'Om m . it's the way to C.M. AllU go. Call Sam or Gent'. ,..,,,...... PIJPT RJ::AL t:STATfo:, • •~-=---~~ Cla:.~•l' t.aieuna l'Ollal( S-IG.OI)()' f tnl' lot'utwn on ovt•r\11t-.I lot urt"t'lllt'l.ill----------1 n<"ur South <..:oui.t Plaza 1n rront l>v m.1:.,,t \11' CLJFFHJ.VEH V<t tant&rcadylorquirk 1 .. ndmark ,,·1ne Lovely N1·a1 a' a pin. rll'Jn us ,1 Pl>~'e111o1un U1g room:; ocean view J bt--droom, . .,. hr,llr' :1 HH dull hou'e t'Ulltom dt'cor. Largl' S40=05SS OUTST AHDIHG I LOCAT I ON h a11p) younic family 1s u nhapp)' I about leavmg this spac :! slOt"y home Nr p ublic & I parochial schools. c1v1c rntr. 2 rl'g. ishopp11 c·ntrs, 2 frwys. GW t·ollege 5 BR'!i. 3 ba. 2 patto::i. ll&F pool w auto 11oweep & I 1•hlrnlr Sl'll VA t1 1A Conv 1'1101eool1 In l.1~t $67.SOO Dultx•y Kt"alty. 9i9 ~963 20lJ SCARCE Jo:ubldc L'oe1l.i Mt'Su, 4 h!'tlr111>m!', 1111 bltns. f111:pl.•t'e. ~kr .:ar door drn1og room family "1th lrt•m,·ndoui.I;• lur)(e r.1m1lx room. ovcrt111t.'<.I room $97 500 :-undc•rk ov••rlooktnl( hvinl( rc111m with hearty est.ill' ~•ze yard $611,SOtr r1 rt•pl..ic·t• Fu II lll nrn)( 2 HOUSES TEMrLE HILLS lolboa Bay Prop. rn<im, hurlt 111' wow • . Realtor·s UKH , n 1ll ~o 1120 EASTSIDE Sp:mous 4 hl•droom h<>ml' COSTA MESA w1 lh while water v11•w. • 675·7060 • TARBEU. llUnlll:l!'o n11:ht ltl(htll 3100 _________ _ Sl4,450 EACH !IQ rt or ~rac·1ou:. 1tv1111: Srnl·e lh1•y r•· on urtc lot, Sl~.~10 FIXER "#I In Callfomlo'' we·ve 1:0110 :.l'll h•Jlh u:. a pat"ka~e ll••nl nul hoth, WOODS COVE Mt''a Vt·rcl1· l'11unlry Clvh orhverr!ont•aoclrcntlhl·Two dt•l 111htrul ~mall MEEDS Villas :11tr,21~h:11·1111d11 nlh1•r (1t•t .1 frtt'nd and hoiuc·~ II Inf k rrom TLC (hl.!">1111 llv 11.,.nc·r 1·.111 huy hnth On•• '' •1 ~ b c :.i r h "; u r h w 11 h Mr 1.umlt.11711 :r.1~,o ht'dro11 m 11 n•· 1" •1 2 ftrt•plun• S>C7.50IJ bc'<inrom FIXER · Sl6,950 I O°lo DM. ·LG£ YA.RD AC)llf. CoU 646· I 006 JIM." UA Y A It ~.A luti1 of lr~:. Owm•t hai. ---------- T••11•l1•1 lov1111: "'" 1• '' all lh ,11 r, r1·11111r1•1I 111 11Jc"f111 rn I"" 11111111· 111111 J ' h II 14-"I J l ,. 11 u It I' m."frr '111lc-with H11m.in ltJlh .! i,:u1• .. 1 l.Klrm~ amt honu' room l'rtc NI lo i.dlat ~.i.\11111 \! .u .inc 14! )'r old :Jllr :!11.c I• .1m1ly rm . l)uh I '" "·' :.!-1$'1 Nor 111· 5'18.!llKI l'lt IKl)..'\I !!67 10'.!I b<ll.lllhl unothn homt• (J\JH•k ptl!Jbl''~l<lll (°1111 11n)'Umf'Mll 11~1 ~~HERITAGE . • REALTORS LA.TIICE LUXURY COHDO ~ CALL NOW 3 BEDROOM ~/ 752 · 7315 I DONALD M BIRD $)9 '900. Au ocia••' •••''•" I ffft .1 lovt•ly lrt•t• llfH''' movr Ill 1$411\S.•rrmull"' Sll7.~l t'nllll731U..'..0 pntt' ht•lo"' 11\Jflt..t .ol 1ng 110111 t:.J.OUO l"Al.L c:~:~1~~r~[:RT [®'•ill ~~0 ~11 ;1 ·• ~':€:~~M .. 1---------1 ........ ooou-.. 1002 [ __ NJ , ... e~~ ~.~u?~w. Tht• :.trnnitl' "'ft liiiht In 11lcl \'111:1.i•• l'frur town. 4n>em1l lh1• l'nln tho· 11"· h .. .ir h Two 'l'.ar111u~ i.I l.111111· th" .:•11 1!t'"I" hrdr1111ms i 1'1 lo.oth .. i: a r cl t• n w 1 t h :...1•p1rull• d1111111: r11om l(rt•1•nh1111"'. ~'I\ 1• "" l)ft'Um k1l1 hc•n C:r1-.1t t•Uwrc.11 fc•••lrni: tu th" V11•w Vrry vrl\ .1lr• 'I lllS lhcrbor \'to·.,. 11111' ht111W WON 'T Wf\IT $11~1 1100 It's 11 2111 ft w11ll' lol ha~ 4 RH,:.! Ila . p111>1lr 1 m :• SAH CLfMEHTE frptn •. l1hrur y llt 111111·11 COHOO mo11· Now •inly Slll7 ,100 lllo< k lr•1nr an a In 111-.or h 111111 1111·r f\ d1111111ir1~. O('t'llll VIC1W :cpl With lar1:•· n111~11•r lll'd111•1111 on<I 'l bath~ f\ ~11·111 •• 1 s:n:i:io OWNER llll rlt· ~Ill \lll•c•I Wllh ,, 1.rr ii•• 'ard too 11 ·, JU~I llw 111ltt't' lo r111•c• ii I.um Iv k Z ll'rm~ IA•W 1h1w11 ;~:.~:~~;~~:,·~·~;~T:~:,:'. !!J5. i "1th .• 11, 1•li· "' 11w11··r ... t11p 1400 ou•rls,~-~~!~~~tH ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• noor '· nu·t· ,., ,,,~ &: dtJ", I HotJbu.., "''fhtnl!"' li'nrrd vnrli, dhl 11nr. «'I<' R•~.\LTitRS 644-7270 Sl0.000 DOWH •auvs THI S LARGE U COLONIAL HOME rn DOVER SHORES for the big family that likes lo e nte rtain. 7 Bedrooms. 6 baths, family room. large billiard room with wet bar. Master suite has HIS ANO HER baths + o !'ileam bath. Gym Private study 1 I <'I your t'Yt'll brow~<' 111 Nt•.,.,vt11 l ll\•1!4hh You I t.hr<i~J(h rhf•. llohh~ own 1111' l11nd Shop in tht• 1 1 .. "'"'••·<I JACOIS REAL TY ~rnn rai-h Wl'lln.'Ml•y & S:ltunlla~ 675-6670 1002 GeMrol .•..•...............•......•...•.........••••• fll<::~.~ EMERALD BAY Lovl'IY or<.'an v iew 3 bdrms . each with buth Beame d ce1h n1i'S . shutter~. 3 frplcs. l.argt' lot with room for expansion $142.500 , A COUWIU IAHIB CO. 644-1766 1002 GMH"ol 1002 rRESTIGIOUS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Trmpll' 11111\ Nt'ur towt1 ••••••••••••••-. und IK'o<'h Chrrsiie lot ...........•.•......... ' !Jtouutrrully lund~caped mecneb /lrvlne IHO drRr<'f' breathlakinR l)(;l'lln v1ew J hHRt' realty bl'llroa m '> S par1ou' family room, hvmic room drntnJ.: room Two p&lHll' and two J(rt•at v1t•w dt'rk-~ ILUFfS IEAUTY Upg r aded Dol ores m odel condominium w /super Upper Bay VIEW. Reduced $2600Corimmediatl' sale. Ready for occupancy! End unit w 13 bedrooms & 2\Az baths. $90.900. Belle Chase Lee 644-6200. <V66> '42 ... ll5 64.WJOO tot Daor9' Drive ~ MecAn ..... ..._,leech.~ t1ttJ All t h•~ for Sl2S.OOO OWNt-;tt MUST SELL 1.rll ,fwlt1•1 I ,1pi1 I\ .:.1111 'lll•Pl,.mo·ul 11111 fl lo I 11111 iJ( llJ" llfH'I ' C'iill ffll UJjjll Ill lll'lll'f( 546-4141 ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE , INC. POOL& J.ACUZZI <.:omplt·ment th" ~fr ... 1 Vt·nlt• 4 hr on 11u11•t cul dt 'a'· nrxl 111 lu'h i.:rM'n belt ar«'.1 llu.:•· nt fCJI enterta1nini: C'an bl' purC'h:i111'd 1111h1 lo r11111t 11111 v I\ Itron t.-til 7711 Walker C leu leal latete SEJ.J. tdlr 1t"m' ~rth 11 1Ju1h Pilot. CIJ?1~1fu-d Ad 1;42 ~7K NEWPORT HEIGHTS OHL Y $46.000. 3 fl(frrn, I fu fll rm & Ir I' y;.ard f'IC'.110-1 .. 111 C .M. DUPLEX $47,500 3 Ht•droorn h()u~•· plu' 1 bl•dr<>om r1purtmt•n l Show11 ~~nd1o1l>lt' too f\t lh111 prlrt' tl won t la11t loniz Jly Jl)po111tm1·n1 only IPmQuail ~ liiilPlac• Praptrrti•• , 1s2·1~no " 1600 OUAll \I Hlw.otil llA(H ' 1•H Ho.Mt,..,. s. ....... ,_ s-. HoerM't Fors. Ho.t.et FfH' s. °""" .... ...... OIMr .... ht..t• Tu.ad.., Feoruary 17 1916 DAil y PILOT .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• ............ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• •••••••• •• • • t C.-. Mne I 024 t 044 .......... .._. I 06' M.wport leodt I 06' Ca -u-cNll Loh for.. .2200 ..._... U•tw••d ..._.. UefwWIMd Duplean ~ HOO ........................ • ............................................. •••••••••••••• •• ••••••• ,.,.,.,., '600 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,., TWO STOIY ••••••••••••••••••••••• PVT PTY wanh tear Cost. W... 3224 .....-1244 humac. 2 Br or den. W /W ~~Ti,~RV~, FObW. l>tMI A ~ COST A MISA. down housot or '-IC. I~ ••••••••••••••••• •••••. ••••• ••• •• •• •• •• ••••••• crplJI, dfl*, bltm, W JD 3-CAR GARAGE s•f toot ·-~f n r 12.100 Sq. FT. !!. ~ or N U. t;v.,, 3br. 21>., den, !0cllJ' iu. 2 i'&nit ttme to r4!nl, 11uPt"r hookup Cov patio,h ~ UUCF: ~AM RM ! .. ' ,_, "' COMMBCIA.L .,..,_,.. fncd yrd~. Rm for boat or ru~ • br.:? bu. q>t, tlf'J)tl, yd, 11•1'. wllltt/tra.a .,... EXQUISITt:L V Ot;C'D 2 Story bariia1n' Pnme oftU, CJ Prime commrtttal cor· STEAL IT! ll'atler, cmr Jot. SS3S. lilt, S3t>S ' mo ~o :s. 4 ~ l.i9 Adil$ !'° JK°~· 1230. B~b FANTASTIC LDSCPG lnlOe locatlon Mu1c11n /f Ml.~' M V '108 000 lllll, dep 9'1»-2242. 963 1786 No n•nt41 I fee Blvd E. on Slater to Van NK. s COAST Pl •. AZA We entry. St.l!i> down llv harnt.~I' Mt &OOed C·l Nnt to Ol!rr m~. 1 ~ ACrt'll: -~k for Bev or Joe ~uren I blk lO 8l22 Opal lnl( room Spitrullh bnrk ban.Ir., uvllla1 &. loan, op. C 1 J 1, 0 " Sh O... 'oW 3226 -(.:r, HU. Av1ul Now. 16$.~ ftniplace •'vrmal c11mna ~lh: ma.JOr d~partment t;c 'u-T oi Bwkt op ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 Mos. l.t'U.M'. 3 an. :!Ill •• &....-i-.. ........... f'rtcedfotf~tuJe <11c<1 bu.b i.moltod JP" $110 000 lltOh' Valur prtt'ed •I . n ur t'n Sbr dupltic 27' hv rm b11 . l"rplc • fom r m A,Mwlstaa ,......__ • CILLJo;sPtt: r'On" l'Ork w1&llll lbndy , S3SO.OOO Comf}lt'lely l!:mpuniim. Ooldt1nWri.t ... · • fo'tlcd yd Avail :s1g Sub ••••••••••••••••••••••• Real Eet.tlC' ~ !Ulll .. • t.• h i . f l cnt'tl with lima I om"' " W11atm1n.t"'r Blvdli. w, mte WMtcr oc.ian Vlt'W, ml• "hlld. -•n •. ·, .... ··~· ···oo ........... _,_,_~ 1706 ___ <' ., c f ,. k 1 t e h ~ 11 c res ... open ec m g; newly de<'orated; "·"nt•rd 6U·29lll n<'d yrd. ~ •w-z:z:n. • • •• ...... .,, ~ -.. - .,. ICr~nery vluw Wwd beaUllfUI garden ent""' & IS"Urklit1••, llt!W wldtnlC & hghl •tan· ..-. Mu AICl .. Wik Cot Ouuw ••••••••••••••••••••••• o .. ,.. 1026 1n11 &t~tr\'llb" to 111r.ie k' 'J .. " dur<b Cull 7~·1700 lot Deterl, ,~. V91rf 3234 ~0020 Comp ""turbisbt'<l luxury ••••••••••••••••••••••• •t!!(!lud~ m u tt'r WIO" Jlchon. 2 Udrm~ +fc.am1ly rm dcl•lla. n !!:AL ES ·-~ ··oo ........................ . ..... ;? Hr. nu cbtld---1· .. LID R 'rA'fERS tNVL""TMEN'r --~ ... o t Id 2b ., b w.,. ..... OP..LIGH'fFL'l.I. Y COZY A.II marrorC'd rl0$el.i.. 2~-. O EAL TY "4(1 ••••••••••• •• •• ••••••• Condo. fpk. 4 UR. 2 BA. et'r le I . ",, 1t. Pt'b. Rl'f's req'd. ~mu 3 Br. 2 &, lu~1.1r~ t·~t.om lialhll S11d1ne ilaH doot 3377 Yl•Udo, H.I. 67.,7lOO DIVISION. ,. ~ c...-OW/RIO, <'lublue facll. frt>Jc. ~lio, crpi..., Jrps. )tly 1173 ~ home, blt11u & rcfriic. tu ~lu.<k<d wooddeekt!d r SUSI mo. llf3-4 S6V $3lll/ mo. )):l Hll), ----- 01.lar Manna, nf'C'Ci fut sl<1te l'ovcrcd P•llo No Sha~· g Center 1 BR, Air, Pool~.* 983·t7116 00 rt'nlal fee t'V~>s1wko<h S27~ Mu. 2Ur, mu. wnb 111.lc at '59.500.1"17-11957 m 1unlUtnt"n<'(' rard ' ~ L. 213-3!\iS·ZS«I Rl_!r A.la for &•vor Joo • --leoch--3241 l rcu &: µ.a t lo. 213 Won't llul c.il no w L.ocJllllta........ 1052 ... wporlleoch 1069 ott.MeMI PALMSPRGSBEAUTY -.......--U1amoml C..llttll>Wl$ 1~" 1700 WILL "'X'''llANG... • 0 r." ba, ···11rl,,.-' ba"k ••••••••••••••••••••••• f-='do V-''-y I 014 ""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .:. " "' 2B "0 Co do T ".. .. " -·ni .. 17"4 _ _. -. ..., 0 near enn&11 yd. Ulln11. tr plc:, e pla. RDCTALS Costo~M ., ••••••••••••••••••••••• I~ ...... N1'9u""'• $360,000. ~uull Place Club, pool , J acuul d . $360 I ·Gu ...... 11:.a.c ••••••••••••••••••••••• ', •. , '·' " ' ~·-" Pro!>"rllc11. love11tm1nt $411,SOO. Sell or trMde .rpa, nt~lt Mrea, -"" -H OPEN HOUSE [~I ti thechofacornmunity Ol \·la1on. or G11neu Owner.6'&5-SOOOut•Z9. C hild ren /p c t• ok In So. Lul(unn 1 kda·m . Sl7.50WISl"U' .u__ Jjj~:!!ft Ryan (714) 7$<1 lm MS· .. 71 llJ)t l.()('Oll'Cl l·blk . U00\'1! •St1id10& I Ilk Apt.~ rrtce ledllcnvw i\luil N t-: W I. I s TI N 1; • o..tof Stet. --~t ll w Ill l h •TV & M1ud ~r\' Av~H S64,000 _ - -•• --U n o b 1> t r u l' t l' d •m:=~ P,. rt. 2600 °" leoch ll•O wy • 011 011 •l'h<ml'~rv, lltd pool ---otN1 o•••••••••••• •••• ••••• p111.i und beach. All ulll. 11548 Ume Cfrcle whltcwulcr view of Uo1n11 .--••••••••••••••••••••••• ptJ. by owner ~'Oii Mo •Childtt'll S\'ctlun 3 bedroom. d1·n, pMI ORUMHOME Point11.nd Nii:ul'IShor\"> Pra-rtltl• H<.YTSl'RINGS Bt.'uullful 4 Br. den, hi~ ;t UOttM & HUMl'llS •Lowmonthlyratc:i . new shug curl)\!u . Ill'"' THI COLOMY Ucaut1rully IJHIJd . r'1i2·t•20 ARKANSAS t'am Rm,2sty, fo'ormal ttM . ho mt" burlt 1n •$!101-'l"weck's nmt no wax ltlc t•ntry, cul 1Jl' SS4 SQA plutl'r & 1n :.ulatc:d WOOOUAIUT HtW MJloCH $72.200 Buy this Lake Din& Uv Rm, Wtth frplc kitchen. dbl. l(llratH' "' .id 1>1tC &trc:et Quil!tlrvine '5trel'tu1.~idc walls, b1ult1n mu·rn. lrl( D<>CTOR 'S ATI'N! ! Resort. "'um upl.5, t rlr $495 mo. Avuil 311 /76, ~wet l'\"Stdeotiul 1tl'\'tluu. ::376 Nt•wport Blvd, Cl\t MEAD<)W JlOM !'.: corner Jot. Uel·orator's gas BHQ. rflllOY mure Medl<'al Office Bwldaog spares, etc Will trade. 963-4~1or 751 ·6461 $360 Month ~ ll7Mor 645 396T • ~.17 10 drl'am home Upgraded fl!Blure!I ~.000 i::lel(anl't' With famtl\ near Hoag. + penthouse l -498-046S ChannilbCJ c~· M.ISSIOH REALTY 2035 F.tlhrioll. CM .. living room. Crackllllg l.agunu Niguel Reully flair' t:ruoy 1.11ttmacy 0 ocean view a pt. Retinn& Near bea('h, • bd, ocean 98SS. Cst Hwy, L.ui:una t BR""· "I g cl t ..,.__, bnck !1rDpld"O. Xtra 830-5050 496-4040 {on' c' :. at lo n II 1 l . owner s~cnf1c• ..... ",000. ........ -., ___ 494 073 rurn," r o~r ~. ·~ ~ ' • t th f 1 * ~ _.,., view, $375. mo. .--• I queensiu· be d. prl•. • ASSUME 7•: VA . Total large garden kitchen ---oge crnc:os in am1 >; Su1teavaiJror younow! ••••••••••••••••••••••• HURIY! dressing rm, xtra lie p•ymenlS $3l~ rno. for pldus family r oo m ~~~;:~ou~l~1 ~~;,~nt~tl O~t.'r~~--~.~.~•••••• C8U968·5080or963_·~0?:'> <-;;1:e':r:n.~1;w~R$~·.'.';,ti::;~: roums. enrl . g~r . Qual 3Br. I ~. ba + Lg .. Cl'Orator pirnellng. I /T ~ /sto age Adults nMIV f)e(' r I d b •d 0 n --master l>c..Jrm !>Ulll' 1-:n Co11doMl11 .. .,., OWR• ,. ___ ..... _. M-31 •• Deluxe like new 2 8;; Broker . 4.99 2277 w r. · .,.,., • din area. fo'P. nuoehn~. u a c e r or !> B Ow •Ar 4 Hr 2 ba fullv "'-·---L-J.. --''-1700 j.___ _.. -6 ' • " no , ... ls .. plus s '"luded mil ter y r ... • • • , tcrta1nmt."nt l'trnter or _. .._. -••••••••••••••••••••••• Condo Cur·'"'rt atorage ------!"" . ______ _. ' 'OY natao. bltni.. , .. lul. . e .. _ Mli "rptd, rov'd P"llO, .V•r r I h 0 n EN . ""' ~ 2 n N ' -lk l boat &ate. $14.000 to all s e. a 0 c ose ner .lot. 831·1587 aft 5 JO HOUSE Dally 12 5 11S " · ""'· c yr · '~ w , , • • town & ~•H'h $360 mo "" · . . • ... "' wt Lo· ds f I ti> & ' * 'v J mi Y o m e . r ••••••••••••••••••••••• •BR 2 °-rd d ' blk arc~ pool law1dry no r · ...... guna, wu 0 .. .,10 Furn 2 Hr Gurafl: sume. $t6,VSO by owo cupb~ard&. Land -wkdys anyt.Jmcwknds . Pm hurst 810 Can'von IEAUTIFUL from Lillie Coron a pets . $25S mo. Res. 4944232 art tiPM green lawns, pur' ~~ ~""545 scaper s dream yard -· NBt: 1, :d· 'd·· LUXURIOUS beach. Now 't1ll June 968·2907or8us .$4B·llOlll --__ water. Adults, no pe~. He.ivy redwood patio · . rice un · t!r LSlh. ~-mo. Call blwn ----------M'--' 1252 2020 t'ullerton Av~'. '1 l'hO/oHOPOIHTS Enclosed do11t run. Sohd market.t>405l!i7 4 Bedroom , 3 b ath 4 7pm 6739419 Walk.. to ocn. 3BR. Zba, . ..,..... block t: of Newport.A~ Sharp 4 Br. So. FV work bench in I arge Tiburon Townho use. -· --· · crplg, drps, frplc, D/W, •••••••••••:••••••••••• & l block So. or Bay. Home. L~ sunny kit, 1tar11ge IMMACULAT~' EA.STILUFF Elegant indoor and out· CostoMeto l l24 pauo.$37SLse.962-6365 est Nine Condo on golf 642_8690 dramatic frplc. pvt yd, in Try S.S.450 TO BUY .903 Carefrt>e ln·ing in out door 1.tvrng at it's be11t. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l"Ol.U"Se. iB~. nt!dly de· ve r y de s 1 r ab I e lo11n. llurry-call 752·1700. standing BluHs Condo I .Quail ~ )140. I Br M H. h ulll. pd FREE ~~~;~c·y . n;'r7\ ;~ •Elm GardHK• neighborhood. s hort safe ~<:Orator sparc•d no ex-na--Kldsok Fl!e R...tal s.r.ic• 493_1666_ · l br Corn . $195. mo. 11c:bl walk, SlJ,400 dn, -~1·1 • .,. , "''' ti •,. ~'::frsll~~~~~~ut~~ui~ Prap';..'tr:. Mam Renlals.~O·S379 SPRINGDALE WEST ~~~t ~-:..~i.. 177 E, Oy()peuwnul87renpr'1:&.l~~OUllanuno:AlnySu~~lo~~n&9"'10 .. 1~2S·~~nB.y [ ~ li~~.,'lli:tl 7S2-1920 l'Wwport leoclt 3 I 69 Bolsa/Spnngdale Bd, 2 ba, Golf mursl' , ~ ____ ,, •• , ·-~1~~k at 11 and love 1400 OUA1l n HlWl'OlfT HACM ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 BH.2ba.dbl gar .•.• $345 view, school:. & :.hv!Jb. SUS CA.SIT AS M.-D tL.--3 BR 2ba fpk •·nc $425. per mo. 495·4~ or t.'U"N BACH." You can LEASE ttu~ lov-~Xl / •....,.. o•er _ ... , · · · .... · ..,,.., 831·2700. ,. " ·~ 988-5319 6428584 -------ely VA CANT 3 Btt - -W --cw:::. 1100 5BR,4"'1 8a,L1 v,fo'am, llUNTVlLL.AGE --ExcepllonallyN1c.! -------·--leach 1048 Garden Home until IY 0 NH ••••••••••••••••••••••• fo'ormaJ Din .. pvt maid Heil.Springdale wporlleoch l269 2110Nwprt81vd,C.M. BY OWNER · 3 Br. P·• Ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• esl'row closes Sec this lmme!'se 34<JO sq ft. 4 SUNSET B"'A''fi qtrs, 3 car +, nr pvt bch, 3 BR.2ba.fplc · · · · · · $33S •••••••••••••••••••••• - -~ Mile Squar e Pk area. By Owne r, a unique and pndl'-Of-owner.oh1p humt' UH . J Ba . i:am r m . FIXERUPPF.R view, lge k1tch & brkfat, 3BR_.2b~.Plll.1o • $345 •BLUfo'FS, 4 fir 2•~ l\l1, ~i'UNN!NG I Br G111-dvn schls&shoppmg.S47.~.1 eleganthouse inNorth· '"ato.-.1-anewowner L ib r ary. <.ounlry $1400moS483035 SOUfH SllOR &S t'am. Hm Pvt IH•ll•l Apt lool, llee. are!l, LH """"" Kitchen, Pool. Newport's soo.soo . 1"6·6486 . . . Garf1eld/Brookhur:ct . K3o 50SO x' $210 &'11-5147 endk. 38r & dfen, 21-,bda, now! .... $74,500. F ines t. for $130,000 l1>leV11lageProp. __ u----u-.a..-1-&......~ JBR.2ba.dbleg11r $310 ~30.644-l~/ . 7lOW ll.lt hSt CM l .... MJt•leach 1040 oa purquet loors, e-EitjoytMGooc:ILife! .--. ..-.--CENTURY l'AHK ~· • ~ ....................... s igner wallpaper s. 32325So.Co~t Hwy. bi3 ll·l.ll lncomeProperty 2000 ....................... blll'hard/Atlunta V1ewllomeonBack lt 1yJ O..roillt 372' IUILDERS ~~~e~1~~no:c:~u~~·c~e~ 499-4514 49 l·l~ l_l ....................... Cio1Mrd l202 4 lltt.21>11.fl>lc . $395 Br. $ 5 7 5 m 0 . ( 2 13 1 ...................... . , •• ,.O ... STR. s•LE b h II L I • VA Assumable LIOHS ESTA.TES ....................... 0<..'1'.:AN Vlt:w sm.2007 861 1867 L.rg 2br, nr bch & harbor. -" '"" 111 rs & 8 • OVl!Y 'I Builder/Broker sl'lhn~ ._, ... ,..DLORDS• Newland/Wurncr ' $225 . ''8 ''·25091 32-4 Bedroom homes lll secludcd setung. oen & I WATERFRONT T -" " 81 If C d 1 1 c l 494-6848 hlside vu, walk to mlUn I I , 1 a HOME property 4 o 20 units in FRH SEIVICE J BH,Zba.fplc ...... $325 u s on os; enci. .a res a. _ . __ Huntingt on Beach 2 be ch Sh b t prime areas in Hunt· SOL VISTA startm.i al $4!15 u.-41-4-leoch 37 .. 0 Blocks to ocean. Now 97;·48U d~~~. ls1~~6 SI 19,500 w lfft Dock ingtoo Beach. New & For fast action! C all • Beach/Hetl Ag1ml644-ll33 :!':'::?.":=: •••••••••• -:. ~-&bomestle reserva · eves. & week -end s . -lln·l761or ~09'l3 :t1~;:t~~~~~es~~i 53:_257·9 592_5010 Dorotb~.4~:;57 •Bft,Z~~_lJ>J~u~iT" S375 -Hu,geOover Shores BEAUTIFUL 1 br furn UONSESTA.T!S Sl:IA,SOO Principalsonly. U...lievabM lt'rs. kitchen & roof. By --------J\h'Fadden/Edwards Sct'L~!6930~!a:.s apt.s$170&$180.Spanisb SJG.~79 (213J .592·5010 Completely r e modeled, FURNISHED CONDO on appointment only. FIVE UMITS REHTHS! 4 UR,2bu,dble gar • s:M5 _,__ _ .....,. ,,,, style bid!(, "t/nd g,.r, -- Real Estate byMINAY 2br, 2ba Tt:mpl~ Ter· El Niguel Golf Course. 2 ~ew SJ)t!ciah~cd service SUNKI ST J Ur + Jen. 2 h(I. :! t'JI pool. ~uuoa . n ry, adJl.'I. II .Quall ~ Huntington Beuch to you Rentalll all ureas. s ti 1 M fo' dd 17301 Keclson Ln. 1 bUc race. Laguna Beach. BR. 2 BA + air cond. 5 Blocks to bear h·All pnng 3 t' c a en 1t11rage. Walk tu bl'ad1 w of llcal'h oHSlatcr. 494·11168 Wallt to pool _w /JllCULZi. Plactt with fireplaces. Alwoyb all pn res. Fee. Broker 4 BR.2ba,dblc gar .• $350 $450 mo U!lli 7KOU o r 842-71.148 -.... V-ESTM~T Only$43,950. Prop9f'tie8 rented. ZAGRODZKY. Cllll Dor1>t hy ~ 2956 -_..._ " "" 7'2•1920 l Rltr. 548-6457 lf L.ocJ-o leach 3748 OPPORTUNITY Mewporl leoch I 069 i..oo ooaiut H1w~ ~··°' _494-161 I L-.._leoclt.. Su~ Wcrte.-RNlal •••••••••• •• ••••••••••• ~ KMCks Here : 185 f"t. on ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT SHORES ----, ~.:S!'~J~!'e~ Canyon. ~569 ~1_3-1 786 BOATSLIPINCLUDED $175 Near ocean . Utll. Laguna Canyon Rd. With WA TERFROMT -BR r 2 LAGUNA UHITS Main Rentals, 540-5379 3 Br. den, frpk. children Beaut 2-S to r y Condo paid. Fee. -• (1 0 exis ting, s mall :l West Newport, 2400 !I''. 2·Sty 4 ' am. rm., FORS•LE ----ok ..... CA.l ··B~l' w1pvt entry & 3brs MainHentals.~0·5.179 b<l .. ba Newly decor Corner " C ~-• l" • ......,., ~ ~ .. l t th .. k MOIE SEHSE rm. house; over 21.000 f\. home on lhe water. loc .• view of canal . small Deluxe office bldg., view Ol'OftCI _..Mor .2, 898 17311 mas er sw I' w1 i>''C -3769 i.q. ft. ol M-lA property. Pier & slip, Xlnt. cond., of l'Oast Atr·cond . on· ••••••••••••••••••••••• • a-boo" Vlt."W vi walt'r & Newport leach LlSSMOHEY Wuuld you b t'l 1evc J.lrg bdrms. 3-baths. 2· sundybeacb.$00.SOO i.1t e parkin g & fully COZYCOTIA.GE 2 Sty 3 Br, q1t:. &_drptS , boa t s . Pvt put1u ••••••••••••••••••••••• · An uobeaUblt: value for $5.!l,!IOO' ! frpks . Pnced to l>ell fast. CAYWOOD REALTY leased. A safe invest· Laral! Z·bt!droom 2·bath, $385 mo. lst & t:st.. Ktdll & w/greencry. Boat !Shp for 1 or 2 Br, udults, no pelJI. - 11 dlC'erful 3 bdrm home $129,000. Xlnt terms * 548-1290 * ment for owner or user "inin.,, f i rep I ace. pet OK. Call963~ _ 36' boat included in lh111 $170/$190. 21121 t.:. ltllh St , Jn friendly well cared for 9 """"""-SIO 000 d JI ---------,. " . tease. Only $675 mo. Im N HI.Ii. 646-1.llOl neighborhood. Many ex-~~~ r ar.ry. -7, ~.~nis~wTn~r ;~Y * UDO ISLI * Seller wk_ill eSa60rryOOOCin11nc· enhol'losedS4.,~auo, block to $225. 2 Br near ocean. mac & sharp -------- lras, lg lot. cover ed ~"~ be assumed Hurry Call 2-Sty PolyncslBn 4 BR. 3 mg. As 1og l · • · s llS ...., mo. Fam1l1('5 ok Fee S40 WK UP 1&2 Bdr & paUo, <'lose to ocean. Call 499·2800 p R ESTI ti E If o MES, bu. ldeatrorrami!y & en lte:~o~~~~~ ~~rp HAL PIHCHIH M111n Rentals, ~0-5379 -WATIJ<ffi<>NT Ua ch. Color TV, m,aid tOOay 968-4456 --- --------645 6646 t er 1111 n 1 11 g t; x 0 l t (' ----------REAL 1'0 RS -·-- --, llOMI-~ 11erv. pool Tll E MESA. WA.LKllGHTIH MYSTIC HI LLS. 1475 watcrfnll & pool tn So. TRA.DEFOR 67S4392 4 BR, 2 Ba . n ear bench , REALESTATE 415 N Newport UI, NB Set ri1tht down in thut Pimfic Ave. lJnob!itruc * • VllW * * pauo t-:nJOY 1ndoor1out OC"'-..... ,.,_.0 ...,... ---------$400. first. $200. secunty, 631-1400 646·968l ~dorable l.aCucs\li hom<' table coas tline view. 11 b d 1 ~""' "' 3 Br 3 Ba. den & F'am + $200. l'le&ning. Call _ _ __ with ramily rm. 2 car 41Jrs. 2Ua. Fireplace. Newp0rt eig ts : im d~~~ou:.~ v~ ~e~~ii. n ~~; llave two Ouplexcs in Rm, V1cw. 2 frplc 's, Unda or !Jill. 962-2456 or J/Ull 2,lta din rm nr 2Br. 2bu. Wint.er rcnlal. 2 l(nr, 4 bdrm, 2 baths, red fo' am 11 Y H m · ONLY :~~-r!r!~··r~ bG.o~~~~t tratlc for l'Omrncrcial or sharp cc:;~:ll~n. J:°'{ In; bltns, S.S75 _m_o _67_5_·L9:i_7_ S36-Ml4 pooi & p~rk, ll a~bor ~~~1~0 P~~~~tJc~4 ~ brick put10. boat & ~·~jooo. C.111 4~412'7 uft kitchen. 2 rrplcs., :.hake indu:.tnal Hy app't. only :~e Call r:ra detai~. AJmost new&. beautiful 3 Sha'V 3 BH, 2 BB, Villa Vil'~-673-7601 ____ St. NB $325 m~. 675·0084' trailer acccu. Plumb-roo( & bnck pullo. $9.1,500 * 645-2425 • A 1 549 0812 Bil. 2"1 bath home. Lge Pacific Cnndo, clOlle to A Jo' 1 t 2 8 -ma. beallnit & eleclncal1•--------...ic 4 1 1. Q 6 0 .1414 I .ien · · hv rm w1rrptc. formal lhe bearh with Tenni.i. l'~nrva~~'; p~~:.·walk [~ <.keanr_ront-winter , ne~t 2 systems covered br l yr. 9 ~ ~ 12 UMITS dining, family r m . Very Court, Pool & .racuu1. lit-·h $400 A"' 548_1290 llH, i<ar, adults, no pct. .... warranty. 968-4456 ·~ close to beach. $756 Per Duutlrul parklike ;it-ac · _._.,._._ --$250. (21J) 7%-30111 ltllilY Cotta Mna Mo 644-0322 mosphere. $395. mo. San Juan Nu• .,_,,.P"" "0 •1 Offlco ALL2 bedroom sharp un-Eileen Hudson. Rltr C U H T I S R E I\ L C--'strafto 327 1 Br Nr. JloBg Hosp, $200. ~Ian ~1111 '/~ ~\1 1 1 1~ --- - -ESTATf' ..,.... dlts, no pets . 1481' it ~ Wiii exch a n ge CottoMeM 3224 •• ----•••••••••••••••••••••• lacentia , 646-61173 . Sll!UIOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• BEACll. 3br 2ba gar 4 Br 3 Ba home nr IJto;:Jl·h & mm<.>d. Occup. $41 ,500 REAL ESTATE QOO C.lt·nn <'l''' !>t •\9 4 94/l \49C'Jlt; For Big C(lnynn pro Boys a i.ul>('r .. harp J bedroom ~ l'OtlL humt• Unck flrl'plat't' <:lose to schools & "hopptnl(. t'all now. pertil.'5, c .. 11 111.: t'unyon ----------1 SUPERB Realty M4 11113 lkdwood ~idmi: & hn<'k 40' Boat llntk, nu 1ol1p l'ntry , rpll', YU O ( !t"eS :i Dr ('ondo \\ el)a~tlinl" & s unsets make Newport. Ju~t rt·du1·1'CI. lh1:s 'I. bdrm. pt:rfel't nwn1•r .1bktni: SK!l,SOIJ $al.500 fo'11111nc1n1? lh·~t11l 1• Newport H•iCJi'b CHARMER ~:x1·1•llt•nt loratwn on l.1ri;1• lot :! lkrlronm plan with UJlllt'r lt•\'l'I I ;.Hnll)' ro.un All tn ~u~r nrul n10\'t• in l'11111l1t 111n N<'w 1111 1111' ma rkl'l II•• :.ure ;ind M'I' ll ( '.111540 1151 1£ ·Quai~ Back Bay Condo. 4 Br. 3 Adil Condo, irn+ 1'. pool. Dana Pl. Manna $450 . . . --,- 1 Ba , new cpts, d rps , tennis. S315, 968·2613 mo '1!f.l 3059 2 Br Occ~nfront w /gar• p ac• t $425 545 2241 --fl:-£ ... 3280 bllns, $275 ltl June. Prap...tt.. pain mo.. · NEW J Br TwnhH, !(ootl ~0 .... na Bt>aul. furn. 673-2493 752-1920 loe .. many xlrai..•••••••:••••••••••••••• 1400 ouaut HI 11a0< COLLEGE PARK n t• 11 s 0 nab 1 c r e n l $140. Cozy dup. w /fp. Steps to bt:ach. Mod. 2&4 Coutlt'S.V t.o brokl'r'> w a SMART INVESTMENT ,.,. 7""1 K P S Fet: br, rrptc, beam l'Cll. All 1 3 Bedroom, 2 baths . .,..,, .,., _ __ _ M~t~ Rentals 5-1().:>3'7!1 bltns. F'tom $245. 642 3490 l' a r p e t s , d r 11 p e s , N' 3 bd 11 b C ti · IYOWM!R HAVIYOU SEEH.. A hnmf' to l'nl(•rt.110 1n b u y l" r . ~17 9 :i !i ti " o r t.i!>-4293 !1reptarl'. double car ~. + dei:i.tla6.1;'.~u~ s:iso Mu. Yrly bi: only. STUDIO Apt. 1'1011t .l~ Six 2 Bdrm Units Xlnt j(ara.:e. $375. 1>4.'r monlh or 751_0417 Spac 2flr. 2tia w/gar11ge water & boy. Pnv. c;ocp. rcntlll area. tiood in Wale r & gardener --.:.__ 00 tovl'ly rul-d·sac. fo'or rnun1ty. Dork & bo~ ~HERITAGE HARBOR VIEW lltJ.\t ES P1tll•rn10 Mvtll'I 41H', ;ilia, lam rm ll1 11 hly up 111 adt•d Fl'1' l11nil II) nwnt•r S97 -~"' tl44 111.:.15 RnHman.-McKowrn'" 3Ur. :Jllu, Saunu llii:h lutnt Sl'ubury h~t11111 ' ntop l..11(UnJ.1 with :IO milt· 1:abulou~ fumtl y rm wh1h·,.11ti•r & ('llY v1cw. w lh•Mvy tieumt•tl n·ll l.u ~h Cpt -., tlrupca , lnl(&, 1•ri11•kllni: ...... 11 wallpup1•r,, ~hutt .. n. brlrk fplr. hr'1·11 kr.111t rm Shown lly urpt (.hi)'" U( v1ew~bnl'kl·ov pu1w:tll l'V''" Sl5'1.ooo Cal l 99STEPS TOOCEAN r.rrv1•d uy u 11nurm1•t 4!M 2070 flc•n llrnwn Owm·r~ Ilona•-+ lnrum1· k1tchcm Sp3('1011~ lnrm • 1l1 i;h hl'11m 1·1·tl1ni: ... hv, M'I> l111.1ndry Low :111·, LaqMna Ml~· I os .. 11lcal r11r ltlU"'. hnrk .ind only Ill': down lt1-.l •• • ••• ••• • • •• •• ••• •• ••• I rµlr, :w11 11111 1111. :1 lit'· REALTORS Nt•w1•1rl Shor•'' 4 fir 21, ll.1, :! 'l). llH111y lllln,, I', lllk' to h<'11t•h I 1\lk 111 t'11111m 1 ·1 '. 2 1""'1'. frn II I.. t' I u h h 0 u "' II ~ < N<n1·r :..sH 11112:, Curpet on ll u1111lt11n E-1ceptf0ttal VClhM 1;11urm\'I lo.111 hl'l1 <\II !llr.l·!l..'1 I :1 Bdrm , I " buth, J><>OI, built In:; 111 yo' 11111 All an Clement~ I 076 l'c>mt· Mlt/TH COAST INVt:STM ~; T ~14!1 OKl2 JtntCo~ HtcJ lch Trip&nH 210l llunttnJ(lon St Open Oalty, I ·SflM lullcMr 539°6779 48 UMITS \'"'tHllph.'to p.·n m•1h•r pru tht)\ +-,,•p;arah' \Unny. ••••••• ••••••• •••••• ••• ~ C....,......,.. '".... 104 l\'t't11111 HY~lt'lll & fi rt• l'07Y l Ur 1\1>l l1n1·1•il In B H I N (; Y 0 ti ll _,_..,... -"r •• •••• •••• • •• •• •• • •• • •• ,,,n ... ur-. 111 1•11,•ry room 111•11 Sl'l l••r . 11ur1·h 11 •c•1I F 1 H Jo; W II 0 I> ' F 11 u r A L L 2 b " d r O o m IJX· t•I {•nd of 1•11] d<• "111' olhcr A~k lur :\f.1q11n1· ltn•pl.1n•, 111 thl'3 lldrrn to,.·11hou110 un it ~. <1 21 TUITLllOCK Up•·n~ tu t•\pan~t''I ul t:llm11n• tl4 !'> 11n :-i 1. '"'I •Im h" m ,. 411l1·x1•H m sr.p11r»telolJI TERR ... CE H.11wh11('11p1Jllrnno A-15 ;,:,;11 lfrh·n Ho<lm :111 l'a11111.111111· 11c·1-.111 ~11·w (Jll!lll 1'1110<' l'rnf,M'rtu·~. " lnve~ttnl'nt ()iv!luon or furnis hed for these lrvifte ]244 a1>pl<:11111l42 KllZ.'.i pnv'ti::.. Avutl. 3/1. ~. beautiful 11round~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~j5·0211 J<:xt Hl3Y Roy McCwd'-B EAUT San J oa~u1n Weshftfttster 329 8 ~ Rffltor 1110 M•wport. Twnhme Larg'• 2 Br, 2...., ••••••••••••••••••••••• Santa A.no 3710 Costa MesM 543.7729 Hu 2 !lly V•ew of S(olf Nire 3 Hit, J ·~ hiJLh t c•pt, ••••••••••••••••••••••• i---------1 l·o~r:.e & lake $5SO tlrps, l>W. fl./O . SJIO/mll A.MIA.SSA.DOR IHHS -547 7044 ~>:I 4569 00.1 I 7~i. nu rcn 3 Or, 11,') 1!11, cptd, nice tul fee A:.k for l~v "' ·oFA.MERICA. lmlio & encl v(I, nr lichls. * R•~•LS * Joi· TWO IA>CA'l'lONS ' ~''"" WEJo;KJ.Y lt/\Tl<:S 5:140 Wl-447 1 -I UNIVfo:ltSITV l'AHK ·1 11 ''" 11 t 2 ly Twnh ' l"lJl.t.s ~:HVICfo: 1 '1 llK, 2'"' ba. rurn s.~ · . r · " , "l. OCEAN VIEW 3 1m. fam rm. 2 ha $M.O S300 rno b~ ~ l:<t I ool, 2271 11:11 l>of, c.; M. 4 Br. 2 Ha. 2 car i;uru111" T lli':Tfo:RH/\C'E pulm 71017.1 itiHll 290!1 fln~lol , SA. bltn:s. cpt.,, dr~. $:1!15 j :i mt2 n3 . $4it0/43S HoulftFumh .... dor 1;.1~>41140&5402300 1161 Gtenea11lc 1.c' racc ot:f:ftPJlo:LI> Unfuntls.._d 1300 $48-~ or 548 llRKl j :.! RH, :.i•~, I.la . . • S:~.O •••••••••• .. •• •• .. ••••• ....... fment1 3Rr. Ll(t' fn111J bnrk yd J IJK. 2 ~ · · . s.t2.' l''rc..oe n •nlal 11t·rv1l'C llunt Unfwwli1 ... d Kid/\ OK IS32:> Mo TH1'.COL(JNY 1 n i.i t '' n 111• 11 <' h . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 556 2660 & S7!'i 3KOS :I HR -,2 B~, , , , S400 Wl'lllrnl1111tn, I rvuw We• lolboo l.imtd ll06 Gan.l<'n courtyanl t.1kr~ HORIHS REALTY Ht'1tl t::~tut,· $t:!li ooo Ken W ard,. n '7 14 I )'OU lntn th•• lkaut1tulf) 494-1057 "11-.W LISTl:'oi<i. 2 ,t., ~. 111 J; 7S2 19'.!0 38R. 3ba twnht1t• Nr pool tlt><~ntt•-<I hllllor1 h11111l' . 4 11.1. s1:.:;,ooo In· ()"'m·r A"CHORA.GI 1, IQ ii & clbh1> Durk Hn y $.'Iii~ with ro rc•\t•r vll'w IJ)Vfo,LY 4 lllt. f1tm rm, 1lll0 Anita 1.n, <>HiK111 IHVESTMIHTS UG ~ 837 -0:'130. Lee. 581 42111. Spartou~ fnmtly rnorn flfl QUl('t rul dt• "111·, hu~t· Appl Only Plac• eves _ with hrt<plarr 11nd "'"I t'lll'luwr:J }:1rd. prol ly C7 14t 496-7711 a-.,.-tl - bar, form11l 1hn1r11<. ''"'' ldo,qxl S:.9,!l~I. Try 11 u ro 1 Iv 1• 1 Ii• t ~ • -r752.m9!' Elegant 30r, 2hn, 1>1n CoHf>.f.N1 Hfo.I•. huve jusl th1• houM• you ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 llR. I Ila · · · · $.'li!O huve twcn lookinu for CAL.I I'' HOM fo:S " :tflH, 2 lln . $4~ tta ncho San JuaqWn 'I. Bil, 2 Ila . . . . . ... SS50 2 Hit. 2 b11. den $illl(l lt/\CQUF.1' <.:LUA ,, 1llage Real Estate 963-4589 • 963-1786 I llr, 11vull lot· yrly n •nt ul. Ch~t' 111 llay 073·~. 104 122:1 Mo ~111-. Ill». ~If h ll'el'' lllltl Jlltl 10 21:1 lh11morul l.'1111 fl'/!. !!Gill. Lry 11nd utility mom 4 IOHO RIA.LTY c 111i.:11fit'll Atl to hu). "'II Otti.t-R•af &tcrh 1400 ooa11 n Htw TllA<M rm. frplc. dll1hwu~hcr, Bdrma., 4 bnth~ 11nl1 J , • .., ll 1-9411 or rt•nt somt•lhin~: ••••••••••••••••••••••• p9ll0, $375 mo. Mc::rn ura11tt phi~ l'OOL .inti Mobl'e H~s 32 + Shurp Unit<.. Oran1te Verde. Pets 0 . K &i2·676G J ACUZZI. $1~.ooo For Mk 1100 County !Oni;. hit 11s Con-& 494 4117 Edinbur9 Plan In Viii I , J ll>t, ~· • h.1 . tam rm . orrt•nni; \uu all tht• amrn1l11•<. 01 " '1111lh' rJm hnrrw 17111 Sq ,, .It• I • ' rn1 t o.1rdr \'t• I LE R~1'" REALTY 4S23CampW1 l>r . lrv1nt• <.'ampus Valley Shop l'lr CAU.133 .. 600 C.. ff\) \l 4\" ,( -fJ t ~~.. •••••••••••••••••• ••••• 1jo,;) tor inromc> or try ~~ '1tJ ~,_ ~ cunver,lon. Trade up: Tliof /nfri9uing W ord Gome will. 0 CltucHe r. Stnr f'nm1ly 1'11rk. s J Submit . i\l(t ~40·7751 t'ap '7324xG02 flR, 2 nu r-:vt-~. 675·9066 Prine. t v .. ;s , ... ,.~ ., • 1.1,• \ r r l' r r r 1 .... , ••• , f .~"'"'fl) ' .... I I I I I I I SCRAM-l.ET SAM wen m Clauificcrtiat1 8080 ~1%00 f'n ptv 4llfl io:111 Only IYOWHER :? ll<'drm Ooublt• wide [)oil ffoU !;I.' m qu1tot adult rwt pork o .. nl'r muy f1nlln1·c <'al l Dotty 5..'14 2381 or !>JC f*"O I LIR Mobllf' Hnme. very rlrnn mlult park Asking $4000 5'8 5337 ---- 60UMITS .... l Charmln11 3 Bdrm. 1 ba house. Oct•un VIC'W $325 mo. 67S-I 094 2 Br Nwpt lig ht:\. 286 Knox Street. NO PETS. Jo'ncd yd. 1225. Gas & wtr pll!d. 673·2256. 3 HR. 2 Ru . P1X1I . .. $-t!\O NEWPORT HY.A<.:11 4 Oft. 2"'1 811 ........ $..'J()() c.;u1~VER !>ALI'.: 4 nn. 2 1111 .......... $375 'fill': WU.LOWS 3 en .. 2 n ............ $325 4523 CampuJ Dr .. Irvine Cumpu.s Valley Shop Ctr CALL lll-1600 S.'100,000 11111111 Spnniti. J.:11t ah• ror h•1111c• $1700 JJ1•r mu llnrurn $2400 JJl'r mu 1''urn Incl 1<11rifrnn & 1mol 11cr vin'.. C a ll llul W ll('{'f'1' 71'1 fur7 1176'1 tla y~ or 714 6119 !1116:1 11 H :> 1425 ••...•...........•..... 1111 :, 311r. <!1>11, tn·crs. pntw 213 IJrnn\lmc1, Call fi7!>-!llllS. 2 Ur, hvk. q 1l11 . d11». wd1r /rlry r , blln11, 11\tl d1<hw11hr, bl! yrly. ~ li7:1 3.'WI . lalx>a Pefthtwla 3107 . ...••........••.••..•• $19' Otil pd. On oo&l'JJ Shlllll'tl ok f'"oo Muln Rt<nl:il.s, 54()-537!> ConMIO cW Mor 3122 ........•.........••.•. -nw c:; ~..., ~ll'-'r_~•:: CORONA DEL MAR 2 Br Townhouse, frple. Pool, t.ennus. conlincoi.l , J bdrm. i t'l.lr gu fronlll bre11kf111t. Some ocean ft \ on park , wu:c h l dry, Cnl.llhna v1ew1'. Close lo rerrlg 1nrl S:utO m o. i1hopplnt; & fine beach..._ 962 6674' 963 7l08 eve 644·2611 F .V. 1-------- •Jf OAILVPILOT Add it ... Build tl .• Diaper il ... Hammer it ... Carpet IL.Cement it...Wtre 1t...Hoe it .•. Clean it ... Mo11e 11 ••• Pres-. 1t .. Paint 1t •. Nail 1t...Plaster it ... Fix It.. . SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb it ... Pat ch \. .. 1pe 1t... emo c 1 • Roof 1t...Landscape it ... Tile it...Trim it ... Sew1t ... Haul it .. Adel it ... Pla nt 1t... Alter lt...Learn 1t. • .,. .... .,. c:.,..t~ke Ca•ectw Senlcft ttuude 'I '-cCMllllTu •4•W"f P ..... /P•"'-t ,._....., ....................................................................................................................................................... , •......•....•..•...••••.•....•.•.••..•....•••••.•..••... APPUANC~ Rt:PAIR Wc CanCllrpetCleaocn RAJ>f'ORD•SON IDOIT AW WaetaR.:AJ.CL.:AN W 0 UL 0 N 'T V 0 \J catrn f\repl•l't's t>l1tnter1 My Won1C'S att Cetlln& MARV'S r LUMIHNO 110 &-rv1cd:.tll Steam dcH or shampoo UMODEL B~PAlR £le~tr&ul, Ph.unbloi. HOOSE' Call Cln~m RATHER ha\.\' a pro Bnck-Coacrctc l'allO Rusty House pointer, •i46-880t• <7H1~24Z2 AllOUphol AJJwork Add1Uool·Uc8t.Saa de tt.urat.es.14.2·U57 Girl.FreeesuWStZ:l fu11onal w / prfllltfC" Bl«kW11ll$ 88Qr1t.s nt"Wlnal"\!a 8yranpr/4 NOJOB TOOSMAU.! c.i't~ ~ tt;'!~~~1i;!t· Y.atlll)O sn..,s ANDVMAN Homta 1rHOUS£CL£ANING 11o ::~:;;:i~r!~<'~~:~~ ~ ... )its 646'0464 apra.y 4967212ChU<'k __ .._..., • .,....-- ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apla. C~e 1enl101u Our ~1111nes1 c.11 •ppt In )OUr hUmt' Mo • .., CclnsClt'nll~" Ntat. f ••••••••••••••••••••••• )(Jt.cb ublnet.s. ntro waJI C....t/C .-c ... GERWICK •SON cratt.smu . &.58 Janac. • R•l&t.ody AW PkL\t' t'all 9tlll llS2 ' ....................... a Pl!1nter w1lh4-se quaJ. 1'"rH Jo:at Pauo t'OVen., uolt•, latUt't-·l)allOll, boal ••••••••••••••••••••••• AddWoosfJKemodehnl --87~ --MOV ING'' Ll'l a rxpr. $tll-610'7 AIM>fliMtjobs Cement, Gullt'r &. Oown rmdJI M-~lll. Prft EM.Im.ala! Phillips Lac BLSlOIMJ JAY1iCUSTOM R.t:PAlR ---L.dtc.... men muve ,you. K"1u, • ----Spouta. lllk. wall», • Cement Co . Pat•o•. ~2a'l0 ~l Cabtoet 6 formlca wot\, •HOUSECLt:ANIN~• ••••••••••••••••••••••• td11~orll3331'44 PAPt.:tlt PALNT·20Yrs Sprlnkle r Sy'-\cm~. c.,. ... , d.nvewa)'I. Uc/ Bonded .... "'"'R TIONS R ad-aen'l u rpenlry Com By rdJ•blti t"OUJ>le Good Rocot.llhnJ ~ La~11p t expr. Need work S..ve SS ~1~ ....................... T'1M57al\0 all knda ._ ...... A ' m . mer/l\e1ldenl1ai 1>ay1 refereoces. ~nu Ula ~-81u~1tn1:\!lo Ii~ P ..... /P•"-t No Walt. SalWactaon # ---- R.EMOOP.l. Comm\:retal ---• w · dttkms, pauc.. ccml'Dt M...Sn,eve.'42-'808. ---Sq.j.'t Tom 960-Zt7u ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~~Free('lt ~ 3lrl9 Let Sam do\\. Wallpap1n. 11 Raidentuu. l.ic, l"rce 8RlCX •BLOCK writ L •e. SU-07H, ----~ cll'arun&. Pto:n :HS PAINTlNO ,.....,.11.,..,. leAture, tapln&. palnlin ... .,-ct g.u.34311 Pau~. Curb 6Guttc1' W-9203. P It 0 F C A R P £ l /1183 ~aru1 U CU~,-OM Df'-"IGNS ln\1 ~:i1t Kua Rall"S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Qual writ "8 36IZ aft Wayne642*"3 .. CLt:A.NING. Aho floor aoy me Sod lawn~. aprk lrs. Cal1Ct'neat$5.2·~ P•TCI' PLAST:.•uaNG 7p_m _______ _ D•YW.AU SU. ---caretn11\ndows.U'l·U08 e.e-Tu paUO$, CO\·~n. remlil'11 -" ' ,.,~ Sprayed •cou.,tlc, LEONITE CONCRET ••••••••••••••••••••••• oldtr yirda t r('l' rl' WA LL PAP~:R IN G ·All ••ALLTYPES•• 111. wallbrd \natal, litVll fc s TA Ill P INC . Cob ELECTRJCJ AN Sm111l Z prls lO r1~. cln .• c moval prun.ioa l It' d Kinda Work Gu11r11n 1-'rfl! Est ••••••••••••••••••••••• w.all l o . 636 411331 blestooe, brick ft l1l ,!Ot», m11lnl/rtpa1n . 22 for your born. Reas SAVE SS.It Reuonable contrattor.13 yr. ln.Hli tn-d ... 'rte t;at1malc11 VERY N~AT PATC H CERAMIC TlLF.. Now & d!S007 pallol,etc.IMCM349 yruJCprl1.33108.Ma~ '114/631·31171 ~~~~up CY 11.rea 1-~0RO Land1e1ap1n11 , l'aall Norm. IS3S370S or JOBS & REST\JCCO rmdl. ~ee esl. Sml.)obel Corpentry f1n1 s h • ttemodeltnl( " l<t•p111r Rell.Ii r~tn t:all 979 0379 Cowcuh W.tl ELECTBlCJAN. Resid/· Gilma --· -· 962·'18l7 6'7S·741i Pree est. 893-109. "-.lcome~J426 Comm 'l. No job too ....................... Tax CwisuJt..ant. 14 yrs ex PROF LANDSCAPING Painlln.: & P.t'1t.'thang. ,.. L T .... S.-.ke t'rCealesJtsB37. ~y 11nall. Call Bob 531'°°'3 Glass & 1t'rttn r tp1ur pr, 4 yrs IRS Bonded Dt'lna .. & roruttrucllon •nit 8ru.~h rollt'r i.pray rlL • 1i ..................... .. ....,... Low D T CarMO Wb.eaton983~~ .... , . o ... i 2 ~it:n •••••••••••••••••••••••., 1 •. b ----olte/ll l detectors pnces. ays, om,__ ___ _ ~·SUIZorS48 441>4 ... c. oat re s.64 .....-HOMESAVl::KS ntmova s, um 1n11. top. C.,.t ~I'• Coatredor r ' .~al ••--El-.. ' s.&-08l3 C If rfud Pl i •-H ti PI n a • Pf' u n In I(. ret .na .... ~ ""''· -----a•:ri•.. u-0~., l"i.tm P•lnt wallpun .. nn" wnb nu• e11 ng FIREWOOD r.s cord/. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........_ .....a .... , ....... 8 • ,,. . writ. n!llS. 6421022 ·~ TAX p EPARATION ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plllnl lntr S20rm. spec1ul f'rt.-e esUm.ilell, honl'~t & de I Ii c I bo n d II ns Sh.amP?U1 & ~t'um clean GENERAL •••••••••••••••••••••• By a profess1on•l lllx at' WILLIAMS & SUNS on exH•nor 968 1m reliuble i.ervicc Sl0.00 6'2·~ • rn.& <.;oor n ghwnt'rS, CONTRACTOR COW1tinufi.rm Qn••oye11r -hr. ll47·03U Oo(A & ----------wht CJrpls 10 min loW• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HaWing/movi.ng/cleanup round Esl b . ~ Oy M~onry/Bncktlilo.·k Custom Walkoviir\n gs & Ma.stereharge ble.-t'li.Clunltv r m,d111 Lawn & Gtu'Ckn Matnt S7UJ> ~repa1r.reas. a overl rs -~Slont'.Ca~IS8l 7829 PlllnUng L1c'd 20 yrs -----• loleresledinHobbles! rm & hull SLS. Avg rm Custom homes • addJ· Top job. Costa Mesa oo· Fut rree estM2-~ tn Westminster area Bnt'k Block Slone. Tile t:xpr Veryneal~8611 Phuober, rep:.1r. rep1pe, Theo you 'll want to $7.SO. couch 110, chair S.S. lions. 20 Yrs exp, in N.B. ly. l')-eeest. Mll-8422 ------Reu fees. !192·5.SOS • ' --:.erv1ce Imes & tnSlalla· check '"l'be tlobby Shop" Guar ellm ~t odor Crpt area. Financing avail. * f'R EE HAU LI NG o .. Work exPt'rUY .~one by Reuonable/ Re11pons1ble. t1on. C.Guiley 642·93lS lhat runs every Wtdnes. r~pa1r. l~ yrs expr Ltc. B ·l 207447 SoulhM .R .LAWN, Lawn junk m etal, o ld ap·'Jbe faslest draw 111 lhe ~c rontn~ctor9G26'!_l2 lnt1ex\ Fresu. V1cton a day &Saturdayinlhe work m yself. Refs Coast Inv estment ma1ot .• yard cleanup. plJan~.elc.Abplbuy West a Dully P1lolF't.nd what you want in lkhPainllng.497~ llavesomethmatosell" DAILYPILOT S31-0l01. 549-0812 Reas. ~-20ol8 al\ Spm Junk cars. 968-3086. Classlf1td Ad. SU-5678. I Daily Pilot Cl11Ss1f1ed~ L·LASSI Fl EU~ ill i.elfil Clas.s1f1td ads do rt well. CJau1fied Section Afatwc•tau..hnL AfelWi411h......_ Apetwww.t1.,.,_., Rftlhlhto..._.. OOOlusi.nsR ... al 4450 .... ......_. tls'--1 5100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••··~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·op, a Mtttr 5015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coroea .. M• 1122 t....__oe hach 1140 ..._. .... hoclt 3140 Newport hoch 1169 s-tG AM 3110 Li .. '-..,.1___ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost: Amu. Eskimo Pup- ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... ~ AIUllC' • STOIES * Wanted SS0.000 or more to py. 3\., mos old, Wh•lc a JP.TrY VIEW. a lge lu-'C C•hal~ for rl'nl or lease. On buy Gemstones over· male. Vic : Ora nge/ urlous 2 Bit ground noor ------------------P.ARI( NEWPORT FINO SOM EON~ Newport Blvd, Costa ~as. Dbl your inv~l. by Rochester. CM. Large unit of Duplex w 'Jetty & DEPENDABLE C l mo.CallMS.3440 reward.&4S-943S '~"'LE" APARTMENTS Me.t1. 2. Many usa&es. ocean view S ""' "' OPEN DAILY L0 1>hart' hou:.rn.: with Lotsofparlung. Call 1----------•1 PREFl-~HHl-:O SSSO Bacbelorlor 2 --CALL llOUSE ~1 AT1":..'i Lat' .. '•nmyerR•al'or la ~ II Bcdroomsand '"' ~ ~ •H-.-Pena11 .. 1 5150 ~~2~i N';g~I A II c n t . Townhouses 832·41~ i\1>k for Jim 64&-39'28 eves.673-4577 Miutde47 ••••;•R•':'••••••••••••••• BRIGHT NEW Fr $239.50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Malei. Set>krng Femall' FOR SALE : S0.000 Drinkmgproblcm! Nl::W DUPLEX. UcluM~ -Open 9 6 Daily THE EXCIT lNG Roommate Lar~c :\Br lftdllstrial R...tal 4500 +shar~ or Walker & Let' Call Akohol Helpline• i.phl·leHI 1300 sq ft, 2 br Sp.i-Pools Teruu5 PALM MESA APTS. hou:.e m Hunt Heh ~pht ••••••••••••••••••••••• Real t.:st ate Stuck t."t 34 hrs a daay 8JS.J830 w/den overloolong hvmt; Across from l"ash1on MINUTES TO NPT rent Call afl Sp m pnce. lnt'ludt'l>. •Sum------ rm&rrpk Plushcar~t •tM 1.sland a t Jamboree on BCll llll:l261S mil E.crow Corp . SPIRITUALREADER 1n11. Home hke i.lural(e Meadow .... Goff Co.rse San J oaqwn Hills Road Ba 8 AIRPORT •Walker&~ Morljiage Open 10 AM·lO PM w/3 lge w.Alkrn closets 1 • . (7' 4) 644· 1900 ch. l&2 n. GcrocJ--s for Rf'nt 4 3 50 4500 to 64QO Sq Fl. c 0_ •New h-Ouse s ales Advice on all matters, Bath & gue:.t balh Blln Adluro1,:". ~~~Pot~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• lll' t' Pei'Sq "' d1v1s1on , • Hesule of Jl2N El Camrno Real. •. :.• d Fm 94' aec"""°" f!I y_,. Doon'-3 "R 2 b t ..., 1~u ~ ~ o! Air cond1t1oned om ces. Sa Cl L' rnnite °'oven .-or1:e air '"-l" o , a. gar. pa 10. lS6\ Mesa Or North CO!>ta Ml''J i\n·.1. rices. • Markellng U1v , n emente . .-or 11ppl heat. Pallo det'k 2 cur block to bt.>ach No pets IS Olki. East or Newport Gun.1j(e $35 mu umple park mg. und many others. For 492.9034 4!12·1H311 encl. garaiie w1storage & Sdlook md ,. ,.,t i t-tWodls Yrly W Nwpl SU 1603 1 d l ~-06:'>9 Harbor lftHst. Co. more info write : po. l.tundry rm Pay only ~~~ lffffors 673.4400 BolC 12.W Tustin Cal l...osc your rool with you r electm-Adults. So of NOW AVAILABLE •DB.UXE-Offiu Reftfal 4400 ~ • duldren' Uelp 1:. avu1l11· Coast llwy SIJlock:.from Easlbluff 3 br, 2Yz ba •••••••••••••••••••••••i.!O i.q. rt lite lnduslnal1---------1 ble24h~l*-8!39 ~!~d0e"nr::.2 s,,h~~! • l Bedr oom , priv balcony $210 ~~. ·~~~s~:· ~u~b; RES 0 RT 1501 W•stcUff Dr. r~~:.-~.;g:.,.~;T~r.6.34 <714 )675·9337 • 2 Bedroom, lg enclosed yard $290 I? a rage. Au t o door Newport F1nanc1al Ctr 3 Bed 2JL. b /f I ..,..5 open er avail. Pool & LeoalftcJ Offlce Spoc• 2500 Sq n M·l , front of· lnve:stor wanted. Short & lonit term posi.1b1ht1l'S w / u bwlder/developcr who hui. an xlnl lruck re· mrd. 20'" return 1tuaran teed. Sccurt.'<I w1CM real estate. SI00.000 needed 642~.Jim MASSA«iE Fl«iUIE MODELS ESCORTS SUNNY 3 Hr 2 lid w B;1y • r oom, .,-~ a w PC ~• · reereation i.rea. Adults CallonS1te M11nJ.:er fin·. l~w rl'ar door. $39S. & Ocean \"u s of llw y All have bllns, and dishwashers only. no Pt'lS 1714 I M2 3111 ext 2411 ~1o 1240 Logan St . Unit ~et ne111hburhood $3.'X) •SlJ7• :t.o.~r ~o S710. ever; ver mo 67S H!ft! • CHtlHIM OtC * 86S Am•KOS w ay.NB LI v I N G WESTCLIFF BLDG. Outcall-AP1>t only Home (>fhl'l'· Studio 631-ll I I Sunny & lmm.il :i Hr :! Con:-.H.kr Small Pl:h 64H!064 or S36 1487 Rentms Want~ 4600 Ha , up v er Ht• I 11 w Managed by NEWPORT BEACH , •l'I•• 'A•~t I• (..;l•wf> ,.,..., "• "• .... FOXYGlaLS OUTCALL·MASSAG t~ MODELJNC Home-Om ce-Slud h> ~-4480 11 .. y /lrplc :.ol..irium. DRIVE BY : intersection of Will.JamW.illt'rsCo ./...,.c1n••*",.. ./~-"" ./- ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~y to Lo. 5025 (~ara&e Apl ·• fur \lWC\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11•ir No vet:. '"so Graham & Heil, Huntin gton Beach Ow11r Aj.,'1 645 ti1129 Attr. 2 Br. 1 ba duplt•JI WE'L L BE THER E TO TALK WITH Ylln.s & dlbhwshr. ~ YOU!! Month A.:cnt 644 7!183 ~e..to~ 3124 .......•••..•••.....•.. { 0.\SA Vll"TOIHI\ I 2&.:l I.Jr. lklu:u> l Jnfur or 1-'irn J:J ~ "'Ir pd 1\1lull~ ?\ti IM. h Sl•1 1<.il1· l'ool. n·1· rm.""'\ ..ilor' m Vll·\ona. M l 6!170 KENT ROGERS REAL TY 140·260 I or 848-8300 Colto M•sa 3124 .._HwC)tCMI hoch 3140 Off .. aft'ft .! oth • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• For ll'a.se Terrace apt. ro·I bay view Znd floor 4 Br. 4 Ba. 30· I.iv Rm, Om Rm. Brlr.fsl Rm, Air. &7~7030 OCEANFRONT new (no \'U), l Br upper. Cpt.s . drpe., bllns, gar. no Pt'L~ Yrly lse 1325 mo 6'l2 3443 I ERhJlf 3 Br 2 & Twnh.-.1• ow. tlt .. p. dbl l(ar .... OUlO door ol)flr l'ool & Rt'( l'\r, Adib only S3l2 m<J Lsc 1n·a1I 644-80641 5-411 0128 FrOM $ 170 Oakwood otfer1' lhl' flnest in resort h v1n1t at .1 price you can afford ./vo--,/, ... __ "'--..... ,,,_, __ ./ _ _. ... Coll Mr Howard 645· 6 l01 non-smoking v.ork1n11 ludy Approx 1125 rno , .. 646 1788 •BANK RATES NO BALLOON HELP ' Studio apt f'AYME:NTS dc:.pt'rately needed by Refmant'e to consolidalc reliable woman 67S·776S debts. Make hom1• Im· There's SI mrlhon in Eves _____ provements or JIJlSt bavc rec real1on fan It\ it·~ $140 up 1tore-0fficcs cpts a.iMs /1 t/ extra cash. Call NIGIIT l.IGHTt-:1> T .. :N rlrp'i <.ttr l:>alh _17301 I nns MfCH.AHIC$ NlSCOURTS /\full t1ml' !leach Iii, H 8 1142 22434 FNtmlc• NATION.AL 1.AHK 1H-t1v1t1es dtrt't-tor "'hll FtlH REHT ~··•••••••••••••• l714J631·3954 plun!> µarll<'l> lllH.J '· , ' _ _ __ lnpl & more' 1-'rt•C Sun I <J(fll't'i. J!> low a~ 35' l)('r Opportwtity 5005 ~ w-Jt.....~ 5030 t1uy brunrh !><t fl Mission V1l'JO & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-1 _....., · La1tun11 N111uel WO to a. T /.Food ••••••••••••••••••••••• , r l 2000sQ rt 831 1400 "' o•ern w l'ARTNER desired for l>lus beaull u "'"~les. $4600 P{'"° gross higtily profitable pnme 1&2 bedroom a 1ih. 60-PEtlSQFT Lots of par 1ng w1shop real eslate venture -~---~---~ •GU.WO OHNIHG• A·PARK M~SAGE f'r ee Body S ha m poo w/Ad l88S-B Park Ave, C M. 646·9944 M o n -Sal llam-4om PR~GNANT" Cannj! conr1denllal counseling & r eferral. /\borhon, adoption " keeping A PC ARE S47-2SG3 I. ~. & :1 ltr Adult\, nu 1wi:.. 11'h ... 1o tus, 'hai.: •·1>t11 d<•:>l'tl i:urJl:t' hplr. llll<J c>a, & ... Jlcr pcl l'oul I IR LOFT ONLY lmmed (kcupancy P\'l paUO. (rplc, l yr lst' HAYLOFT Ans 213 A•ocodo, CM lllCE TO IUCH 1 2 J liedroom Apt.' LJUNS ESTATES Bt.n Jbr. 3ba, frplc, palio, S36 2579 S92 SOIO J>OOI, adulls. no pcti. fum1sht>d & unlurn1slltd 1617 Wl':STCLIFF NII ping et•nlcr lnca t1on SI0,000 required Im· Renti.from$17U AGT ~15032 Presently help run. Bar medialely. lOO'I~ relum ABORTIOl'I C<>unselm11 & Referral Preg. lesls avail. wknds 24 Hr helpline S47·949S LA MANCHA APTS --I SJ6S. ~89. 646-bllO Spacious new tnplex 3 Ur 1 Model!\ open 10 t o 7 Sorry no pets or ch1ldrl•n Room ma l r "" r v 11' l' available Munth l O monlh occupaney. Ot.FlCE swte approx ~ s q ft. w /ent'I patio Completely furn , int•I draft1n1t ta hie w /plan drawers. draped, crpt.s. A1C. s terc.>o. ideal for ronlracto r . Uurglar Jlarm Ample parkrn.: $325 mo. 23111 Nwpt Bhd. C M S<t8 261fi o;e11ts 2iJ Come l·beck 1l guarantt.'ed and secured. 1-\l(cnl 531 4460 96S-0999 today 1 7711 ~1111 l'l1u·i· l'M 1'4:.1 5013 & 2 Br unrts Start al 2 Dr I Bu Yrly. Sl11l St. Ul k $2SO Sep. l(Jr w/lndry 1 ~o lk•uch SlJS ul.11 pd ('{Xm. ~ 5633 wknd-. or 6"6·9218 67S OMS llKEREHTALS Sl..!IOO. Cull pr1t·1: ------Mart~··'""' TMG..,.Toch For the llllle extras • lir I • ll.1 ltrun<I f ,.. nh~i· '"Ii-Fr pit ll\l J>JllO. II•"· s;!i:, 1-.lih·n !Ti'I lh'>I< 64s.oao 111,..._ Mon:l')-1 5pm to 7pm t.1ii·1 ~al sun IOam to 4pm 2447 ,N(•,., 3 br. 2 IJa apt "'rplc ~ ~~-;,\ VEHIH: \II.I.A.'> $300 mo 67S 1094 or 673 9%1.1 aft 6 2&lHDROOMS 21ATH,GAUGf From S2SO 646 114!1" 1.ur1:1• l&:.! hdrm 1lpls, •2Rr lBa Mt.'l>a Vt•n.le -- bi•1111l rnh·nor' npen lo upi~r G~raJ1e Adults· .. :x ll(c. 2 llr, 2 Ha. 1~1i.. lu,h .... ,,,., tund,1.ipin.: $2IS N t 833 8974 pools ide 11pl nr IH h f.\1•r\ n>nll'l\Jhh• ~lru r 0 Pt':-.:. dlt , no pt.·ls $1!1:. Mu~l 'l'•· '" .1p1m·1 $:.'7!'i !"OUR SEASONS Al'TS S36 8362 lo $-11>.~ 1:,;,•, ~11•'11 \'t•rtk sr11t•1ou:i 2 Hr Twnh.<ic. Odu1tc 2 llr. :! IU.. IJltn,, u' I\,. • ·''I I i I I I I , IJ.a. p\'\ patio. fiC)()I , 11ar Chtldr<'n \mJll peb .'4111111, I .111,1 \lo ur '11·,., atlults. no pets $205 7~ ok S27S fl46 ll4!l8 \ 1•rtl1• l tr 1111 11;111 • ., . J o.mn Sl 645 1\lJ:l Ill\ it .1111 lit l' M loolf & l ' l 'lult THE FRIENDLY PLACE NEW 2 & 3 llr Stut110 Afll" RM>, OW, 1-"tplc, 2 lln, • + + $335 $395 I MO. FHI RENT l&MW \\-1limn.CM 1-'ll l'l.C:. llltn,, bl•urn '"'1l'1ot 1·rvu. drt,... pool. I llr 1\1luh,., no Vt'l' Mwr ~ ~114. 10 .. m KPM to.ASTSID .. ; 2 YRS OLD 2 Ur, 2 Ua , n1c1• Jr1·a, no pt>h. Ch11il Wl'lconH' $175 mo 1'liJ I~ Sl.U Orcun llrt•t•u•. ~t .. / rn11 Kt1hyok 1'0t't• Mi.In l<.-n1.,1~ )40 !1..17'1 I if•or1tcou11 3 Ur, $21 •1. ;> II r , SI !JS , A 11 x I r ,1' Ch•hln•n wt•lt•ur1'l' I hlk W •1f Hr,1rh oH Sl.it"r Mi 11.12M & Wi 1011 NoSummf'r lnnt·u«•· 3 Rr unfurn, c-loi.t•tl 1tllr<11lt'" Sorry nu J><'h 1>r rh1ldn-n 4~" 12th ~t 1' n'm th•• j;IMlll hf•" l.l\e 2 llr :! It.a. llll!U. <ti.hw~hr, ,1 "'.,,..: m n to: n 1r,..,.n1 1·vt'. it Jr Adu I b l no Jl('lil 1 r r 1. , . , 1 r ,. ,1 rn , & I lllk to llulph .. M 11rkt•l. w,11t•rl.11l~ 111 .1 11u1l'I . s:Mlt1'0~t!°•71l<IG2 !if\<ll'M ftyl;w 1144 mount.tm hit•· ,..i1rn.-·11. NNIN<i t llr llM 2 ••••••••.••••••••••••••• CkibhouM, TY room & Br. S225. 3 Br S25S. $.JOorr Twtt. Rock pool toblu, social 1k11 "" ud , Ylato Aph ••e nt •. S unday 110W l8thSt CM You ·11 l'l\JOY '* rch1ic~-.1 w..c~ & potflH . 2 ,OVl'ly 3 br. 2 bu •Pl bft"'ll) ll' In lht• l''l(t°IUJI\ l' ••"""'"'9 poolt, IC1r99 w frpl<', pnt10. p~nlry & V1llR1Le uf Turlll' Rck pool. f1ulu. $300. m o l'hll1«t' or I lo 3 ~rm" 111 fouaul, 2 tauna•, r l. 2 ~tnry . 2 lld rm •oleyboil, llQt. 645 nu . lownhoml'"I $26(1 lo sou (Juullly 111lull npl .. rnim "'*lurt' :idull 11arden lype IJlj) nm..-lllll•kv1('W Ur . $';'(! l'u~lom clt•l·11r •llcd l <11lL"'. 2 Br. I Ba, 2 Br. lrvme l'.lJ 040CI lldrm I H1lrm&1h•n, l1 1 dt•n , 2 bu w t pal lo •--•-h Jt•• hnth ;,i ltd1tn. 2 h.1th Ha r ht>lor Hl'1tul --r---ac -'-p.111ou"' c l1"1'l" & cup l<ind,caped ... pool Nn ••••••••••••••••••••••• b1•.1nh I-11rn 1turr '& pl'I~ Drop a P\'hhlt• tnlO lh<' mJtcl "''" 11·1· ""''"'hi••. Martini .. Aph #2 Ol'can lrorn )Our /\pt Sm11ll ix•u IH"t'•'Plt'll 2'7S E llllh St c M Lease Luxury, ~ecunly, Oftll•' hour:-~ 101, 631 3003 Mature a.dull~. 317~ Cal ~ Fu1r-It•,...(" M Hwy 4!1>-2835. 545-2 300 NEW 2 BR, ll• ba, pauo, ~ hec.ll--31-6' --1tan.len. adlt.s. no pels. r--•SM G _..1t1 • S22S 642 1603 ••••••• •••• • •••• •• •• •• • 1 Hr' unfurn $1110 rno -UT1UTllS PAID Adults. no P.'ls li7 ~: Qu1~t lBr , colla'1t apl. BU)CKTOOCF.AN 22nd St 642 Jf"'5 inc s ulll s. pvt PBllo. Delwct' Private 28r, 2bll 11ar. shat crpt.s. S204 oo Lite walk 1n cloHt•-. Ql.l~:T aardc.-n l)pe Jdull pets ~-2240 bllnS. garaae. cable TV, tmch. 2&3 bdrm :ipL' ---Adults no pets $350 mo 1&2 balh..~ P\l p11l10, 1 Rr. stove It i-eCni. prl'f on yearly len5e. Stt to some w frplc~. pool. malure person. no pet.a apprtttate Call ror appl wo1lk1n1t dti.lan«' lo <;lw>p 0~ t'hildren Sl60 Util m SSl~ after6 PM pin~. beaut landscal)('d c d G42·SM8 _____ 1,=;;;-_-::,-:;;;=-------.= Attract•\ e renl. Mortildque Apts B..1ch, partly furn. patio, S145 inr ul1I. Mature fM ~or 631 3003 pen on 261 Mesa Or --646-734.2 Adult deluu. l Br. 01 W. ------- rcrnlo!. frplr, Rar. pdol MtSa Del Mar. Large 3 No pets 197~ Pomona bdrm. 3 ba Newly de 64.2 4435 coautd 1295 7Sl.a704 : For C-luSlfled Ad ACTION Call a Dally Pilot AD VISOR 642 S$78 2 Rr or 3 Br,~ or $.Tis I ll:>e lo Ue~un on 29th Sl Yrly lsc 673 7UJO Bayfnmt Pvt Bt·h & pier. 2 Bd or 3 Rd. from IMO rno IYl9 oo:n 01 644 45 lo lbr. Pr.irk N,.prt. ttonni"'. 'p11 , belo,. mrk\ JI $2411 mo. Avail :J I. Oakwood Ga.rden Apa.rtments ................ 880 Irvine Irvine at 16th ~or~2-8170 1133 'l'l:!:J z or 3 brl <"omlo" (kt•an Jbr. j!IJJ. ('l>k SJ75 mo \llf.'W , len1l01~, Jllt'U//I Yrl) I~. ~l4 Clubhou~e S11u 11~ 4lJ:l 4t.71, or 1>1 K..l4 1120 213 MZ 112:1~ -t!t> mo:i ., B 2 b •'-'r d"I Nr Rooms 4000 ••fRHREHT• • Garden oHtcc!> from 4~ 3723 llireh SI. Newport Bea<"h t al a1rporl1 !17H.1166 •I M O nn:i-; ttl-;N1 . I 2 3 Hm o<fit·c<i fr11m $125 v .. r mo 1\1.lJ A1rµ11rlcr ll1Jtd No lt·a~c It.-<\ KJJ :IZZ'.l!it1I noon ~ rh. ...!, up,..,; 1, .,. " ••• ••. • • •• •• •• •• •••••• • IJr _.,., 2 1., rm pN1 1~4708or~ll!112 Room' $25 "'k u~ Store •If•'. nr. Nt•wpurt w1kltchen. Apt-. $.11 .. u l'O!ll ()fr & <:r1•v h11und 111 0rt'JnV1t·w:1 HH.re wk up. S411 !175~ or dl'flOI :1:!2 ~ fl ~lllOMu ud )' M 11rr h I 76. SJ7 ~ 00 3967 A~enl tAG 2411 mo . r 1:?) V.ir aot 2 Dll ,..1th 11 2000 ~torr :1p;H'l' & 7~ n till) t1t•1•.in µi•i•k $.1Z~ fin· ~pt1c•1· fttr lc•a,1• rrw ('omn llarbur & ll.1kn JACOIS •ULTY Call J•lhll Wuli.h , C.:1l111•n' 675·6670 Uunk,!111142\JO R.onm, hh• kite h & lod1 y :'<INr llo.i• ll~p1ll\I II(•• 'l (lll•ll Hef11 k1•q'd, t:M ltH. 11, ba luwnhoww art'll~ 1372 Eucuti•• SuitH I-' u I I ' " r v 1 t' 1• I'•· r""' ;1l111·11 11hon1• 'I' r ~ If 1• f 1111 ft• ( c• II l 1· rom11. ,,.r .. , I\\ .111 111 111r1111rl Jr 1•11 1 N II . I ..,la rt IOI( $200 ll'l!) Jl'40 *IDEAL • Fllln•. 11tcw ... IJW, pal1Q!I, ••nrltl 11ur $2!>0 /mu /\dull" ~:.! 4~7 lwom In pvt hollll' l'flm•· lm·11t11111 fM lll-:A I. II 8 llH' Nc.n ~mok1•r f: ST/\ ·1 1-: 0 FI-' I!' to;. Hf'fll $l2:'imo ~!1'11t:I .iround fluur, .11r 2 Ddr. c:.u. l-'1111' Yrly t'<lrldllt•JIWtl . n•modt•l1•1I $:150 1110 CJI ii ind N1l·l' St1nn)' rno rrr for he1111t1Cully •l•·l·111.1t1•1l 111.J 1102'1 nr Oven 2 '14. I~ 1•11h•rly man or wom1rn Pl.l!S flllwr orr11·•· 'IU\ti.:i. Pru:e inrludel> SJ,500 :.lock Some· :.:al~i; & :l('r'>ll'l'. Net<d hvt• wire 11pera1or. Xlnt beach area A~ 837·4200 __ _ D.edi 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• in out call mar;,agt· LOANS u to 80% ean ll3S- 4s19 I st TD J..s..ll•% Es¢.:?! lACITD ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mig. Pldure fnns Fairest Terms since 1949 ~ W..e.d, 7075 Sl77.000. saln 1975 Sattler Mtc). Co. • ..................... . lnrludes plant & 2 rela1I 642·2171 ~5 0611 outlel.:I Owner or 6 yni want. .. tnrclarc. ~.....ts/ Selective Household, A.:cnl 531-4460 Penottals/ Nursmg & Family Cue -Lolt Is FoURd Personnel MOTORCYCLES ••••••••••••••••••••••• Employer Pays 1 .. ee Nl"ls SI00,000 yr Lott & FOWKf 5300 4SCJOCampus Onvc N .H. l of Oruni;ee Cly's best ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call S46·150S ~~:ir~.;~~~~~!i&s~~r~~ry Found. Money .. 9/7Sk.hShori· WorkmR mothers helper. 75M down w 0xlnl termi. P,.!nVg C~tr ~r ';.~00V J>~rst. Your ironing_. mendinii A·" K.17 4200 onlac1. "· · ..,.t'C' p1hnR up7 Call Anna, .,. _ l>t>Pt 962 4444 UJ8tu Mesu. 642 ~ZJ. L>~i'.:Ss shop for 1 .. Jlc• Top F o u N u ; w h i t (' MA&.. W..t.d 7100 I M lnn1tton l'a uJ. ... dill k I • ....,. 6,.,, '.1\1)() l oC'flmoyc u~ y m J t •••••••••••••••••• ••••• ~! 141MI or .,,, ~, 11p Vir Slatt•r11lcad1, ti II AD TAICER SANDWICHES l'wl:I $2.l!OO m•1 All h1•lp run• A1.J.,olu1r l((lld mttW for Mnm & l'of> /\11 lllkl' OUl 11111{~11 '" only r1•11.,on 'hop fol 11 .1 I 1• T 1• r rYl " • A 11 t 113'1 4200 1142 3744 For busy i111 lc:1 otr•<'I'. FQUnrt black r uhhlt v1r Musl be n1:.il . pll'a~unl & l'omonu & lllth C M enjoy workin.: w/th1~ ~ 98711 pubhr. Apply m pN..,<m. -----Pl'nny 11avc t . 1 !>4 !1 l''OUND Jmo, fl•nl rut Ncw~rt lllvd, C M Pun Sia ml'1!<' l.n < 'u1•11t11 II y Th t• Se ,, . II • H . AMwtrifHJ S•nlu 111111 l3'11 14 l.ot· 111 OrnnR'' C.1. lli!•iHll)' Sr.ilon 5 ~1.1 II ),.nund lll11t'lc rlnl( w/~ llilrbour Jrc•.1 1n llU whth:, (r•t•l, «hl''t &i no:,r ~·>lM> 114/i 40411 ufl IJ l'M fem fW> Zl22 l'HX CJIP<'r. p11•f°fl. f'll•m~ tndud wk11d11 t:Ot: M:I 7787 IZl<ltilhSl GoOd food. 251111 Jo: Sunla f'ro111 1145 to $:i:.tl C.111 llST<Htto:S SANTA AN/\ An11 AH!' C M IW2 2006 fi7.'J 7000 1;11"'~ $11h0 Fwnd 11 mo. puppy tan & ASS~:Mlll.~llS wht J.l(IOrll1• v1c lrvlnl' :it 2 Hr. <!'• ha bro1nd ne <' 11 n ti o w I 11 m 1• n 1 l 1 c ' IHtoi. '11trlll(l'. pal lo $370 mo IZIJ)439 6417 o 675 50t1'1 ROOM & loord 4050 .Mto;IWEl.I. Rl-:Al.TY T1•rml'I 0 Wt• SRS.000 Ilk r 21317113 1000 ••••• •••••••••• • ••• •• •• lutNta Retttm 4450 SIC"C"p 1n l.J:abyljltl('r I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Flow~Anti.,ea nlllht' 1.1 wt>ck in e" STOHi'! OFJo'J<'Jo; SllOI' ...._owner S9SO "'° rh11111ce l nr room & Newportl!tllayCentcr Open 97. ll c:t11yic, <"IO!lcd Nf;W 2 Hr , 2 Ba. frplr, twrnrt1 I dllhl Hrontl 2ft>2Nl'wport ljlvd CM 20th !~7 71161 f'ounrl <.:0111 kc•y1·halll w/farn atyh· p1(•tun.•11. 011t•1rlc• Thrl fly Uro'1 Slor(' II n rbor Sil op ·.i <.:nlr. C:M fl7~·2173 bllr1'\. ponl We'\t<"lrf new Conrto w !lwirnnunl! .,.,, l2S2 ,,.4 ..,..... Sonrlny 1-low('r dt•11111ner $375 ms 1957 ""° .,.. ~ Wiii r.\nV Jl si !lO 1>1hr H«ward' Sm c:IOI( lllkl'n url'n ' mo ' · J'IOOI, o ... n rumn & pn Aj.Jcnt 531 4400 fr-um t'ttr "' Slult•r II No Walk lo beach, 2 + cl('n. hllth ti-tl' 3399 IDEAL SHOPS '1llt':1l1on~ 00 ~ n -I • ...," ov111l m th~ m11ll 11\ lhc1----------•I ..... itarai:t'. yr Y· .......... c;..,t HofM 4150 c 7~ Of>44 ••••••••••••••••••••••• F 11t•t11 r y • u n n t> r Y D .. i & Lu&t a1rr11 Nuvy <'ottt rt.od Vlllagl'. N B 673 9600. s.cfwi h S~ 7.lpoul lln·I( days 833-M86 ---------• Loving ure for elderly 673 9393 c t'Vct 642 S232 STtrS TO IUCH male or rem Ba I d1et.'I, SI0.000 to S3o, ____ _ l A lb f I ..,.," homey. patio. S44·3833 SllOP Hldit. F·ort"cd air 33',; N~"T PROt'IT F'OUND· Ynl( malt' Germ r a. um. y r Y _.,, - -heat C2 tone ldc.>al for ON GROSS Shep. Fairview & llaker PRODUCTION ASSEMBLERS Wt'. 11re look1n11 for u n d1rlalt's with 6 monthJ electronk usHmbly ex· penence, to Include PC board assembly and n ow aolderina If you are re· U•bll!. raponslbl<" and lookln11 for full time woe It pleaac apply: 3Hr.2ba.,unf,ytly$3$0 Yecattot.R.-a11 4250 auto rep1ur. boil mamt Call now. u11k for J oe, C:M Call7St -5061 41lr.2ba .y1_>arly$45Cl ••••••••••••••••••••••• s how room ur d11.pl(ly Uu11inr11" Opportunity ---STANDARD 3 Ur. 2 ba, wntr. $3.:j() R 1-; NT A , R A N C ti /\ppro~ 1500 S'I ft w /of S~1:ihsl 1.AJ8t gla.1111t'll in rtd <'fl!'I<' SU WINO SJlver~-ood l.31tl' 2 BR. 3 rit'<' & .;toreroorn 11012211 ~ Vic ot Arches Cate Condo, 2 bdrms. :z ba . AC $70 Wknd. $140 Wk \!Oil~. smgh• & 3 ph..ist' l 'PEH n Reward 548-4:179 art• MEMORIES unfum Yearly $400 633-Q04 Air, \\at1.•r. C"lt•C ji?ll'I In 0 l\'1 E"' S Reward· Lmt II( f{·male BIG BEAR CABIN. 2Rr. cludt."d l>surn l'oml aru t~SS w .&ohr.c ,,,,_... Germ. wlretuurcd vie, f....,1,., ~"'•. 11 .... 8 w~'-C311 Art or Bruno ot c p l •· M K ht INC • .. " .. ,...... ,,..., ... -.ca •""' enc" 92 """" H••• •• Mo'11el la"'-et rown om • c mg orwknd (71067S-6773 """_,.,, 4 """" S49 ·86 5S Dr. L.B 494·1.26: • .__.__._to .L.-:.._ -4 lOO Un.ique Shop. LaK Bch Ar1 LOST d , <An Applied t•--~~~~~~~~ _.,.. (.\r 200sqfl. Xlnt estab. Lo YI' Diamond ftf a&nelics Corp > r ••••••••••••••• •••••••• IOC' 4lM 11622 & 494.3613 H 0 T S P R I N C S Ring, Corona del Mar or 2221 So Anne St 2br. p .,ba twnhse style', Fem a I e to sh a re J ----ARKANSAS. Lake Com Ba I bo1 I s I a nd .,. r l. SAnta Ana Ca 92704 bllnS, crpts, drps. Incl bl'droom home 1n CM SMALL COMMERCIAL mttc1al At're, Good ~pot 13th.67S S9« pal.lo. hitaltd pool. adults 64S.966.2 SPACES for Slw>ps & Of for manna . Fum apt, -----An equal no pets. $21S Bachelor r1rt-s Frnrn SGS mo l r Ir sp are !I. t' tr Sc>ll lhln(l~ fast wrth Daily opportunity employer $110 s.48 2682 Want ads Coll 642 56111 S48 7249 71H98 04680"'nr Pilot Want Ad!i 1---------• associated ll110 •£11 S &IA• u, ' : .,.. 91 ,. • • . • • ... ATTIH'TIOH! l4 Mo'• Wort. II & O•et" w, wm 1rjj1n )&u 1n our bus~ Nu aLMkt'~ ur layotf11, plml) ol ••JI k If you ·,,. "mb1t 1nu~ & •oWd hk\' 1o1 poallivn nul or lht' urd1n11ry l'ull t.twn ll JO~ J pm Sl9·1 IU Auto Genf'ri.I off1n~ & biUID& 10)\Jr~n,.\' mm ~an.lt.!11, rot Uo<Jy Shup 11eu11nt work1111C tvmJ1 BOYS Alll GIRLS If you .!re 12 lo 16 years old and would like to ~am S20 to SSO and more per wet:k, with M chance to win a Lnp to Phlludelph1a, Cape Kennedy or Wu hrnl{t.on. D.C. and cash awards, bake~ and other prizes. I have a JOb for you. H you arc wlltin" to work bard, team respons1b11Jly nnd lbt: value or mQney. eall Mr. Scott , 549-8956 . Transportaltoo will be furnished. This is not a paper route. Equal Opportunity Employer ~.~~ ..... ~!.~~ ~r.~~:~ ..... ~!.~~l~~~ ..... !!.o.~ l'TIC Al. COl\Tl:R TRAINl::f. l'rnduc uan Place N H 642 ~ tomt'tnc Aul Mui.I l)pe, h1ne rar ll\t' 111 an.'a Will tn1111 11411 ~ plometrtc AHl Ofc- )Ct:mt IA.\pt"ru1n11 t., pt'r desarttd I" t1m" ~'7 2020. c.: ' PilTfTIME Galht'nna 1ugnalurt's for NO\<fmlx'r b111lot SS OOlo Ill 00 pt'r hr ~I 4407 SALES MANAGER TRAINING Newspaper promouon company has opemngs for Pf Opie w1th \•nns or station wagons. Earnta~ $150 to $300 or more per w ee k . Good chanrc for advancement. MlL-.t be able to work Wllh teenagers. TI\is IS not U paper routf> Call Mr. Scott al 549·8956 for a.ppoi.ntment. EquaJOpportw11ly i-:mplover DAii. Y Pit.OT 8 j f i---------Mcwlnc w Alaska • Mu•I ~JI II rms of new Mc.'<111 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS •UTOTEM• IM,lOYMINT orroaru ... mu t'\IUor Part·Ttme Nu J:::xper Nl'c~sury Ace Zl ~ ElttOble lio To The Nearttt TICTOC MARKET t '(l( Appbcauons & Info on CALJ.1114>w1102 'l'lcTodiystl'ma. Int' WAITllSSES t;Jll)('r'd. Full or pit. '""'· Ind fotmal din rm lune bdrm, ltv rm & m1$C IM0-290'7 ---- Solas. 8' & 6' matchlllll bl11e1 crwn, $10 S..0-121S --------K1nical1e watt>rbtd pd $300, one mu 111(0, now S'l$O or b~l. ore Mlkt- M2·&.\l ----- Bamboo Wo,~n ~llllll' llornJ WISDOM Th" old,•r ,,.n.•ratl•HI • lhal''\ al"" ays .Cl\ IJ\1' •d \ice \u the ynunult>ni to~ld be-rt.!mlnd<'d tha• I( ray trnlr " 11 111.:n of ace, nol WISIJOM, POOLTA8l,E.4'xlr . !'tb&nO\(ll( R11dio •ltm'U One year old phooo ~ f1&htnl( rod 110 961 61n.11 B &. SS, lt'.1d A111111e". t••f'd ~nlu Ll1aun11 l~·.,th W..t.d 7100 Hefp W..t.d 7100 tlON. Larry llunl Auw I 4.M J322 •••••••• •• ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Part T1mt \'\ l'' It Sat AM l'trft.oct for s tu dl'nl11. 1n ~1d.-work c:u1m1nltt-d w:.al(r C11ll Al. 11ll 4pm. s /\ ~ lllllJ orGG.~W TELEPHONE SALES WOMEN Good hn NtiAt appear. Ovt'r2l ~rl &i Sirloin ~w. Co.ail Jlwy, NB No PhonuCallA --1.1hl1• &i • cbr11 S8. ih<>l)- Uny:t 1pacf·UYC'r bed, panit curt~.~ 11..M~ $45 Tl1·rorner table ~ ---~ 0lll37 Rike aal'I'& ~lln1tr11y, $22 Aulo M' ham<' Tune· up & Cenen l hnewurk n .. 11,. A Smog Hcct•nl eit~r. top p3y .. t>o•m•fth App ly, Oran1w <:11unt y Au lo ~nlt!r 2401 N Tu,1111 ~anta l\ma AUT0~1CYrt\'Y. Ml\ICl"llt: !'ARTS SALJ:;st• ~:K~U:-.i l\ctaun 11ale'lpenm1 w11ld r o r I\ u t o M " r 1 n t• ~11rehou"e d1~1nbutor ~:xp an aulu part' pre lt'rred ~rYtll' rurrt-nl accounh an i:ro"' 1n1t JUNIOR SALESMAN 10To15 Years Old urn $20-$40 per week working after school & Saturdays. Hunllngton Beach & Fountain Valley areas only. Leave name. address & phone number on tape recorder. Call 536-4298. tompany (;OAST DISTRIHU fOltS Hefp W..t.d 7 1 ool ....... W.tecl 7100 _ ___!.14 540 7063 '· ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• "XOPHATOR AJ\.SW\•nng ~n ll'e t' ll p only, rvr lull or parl llmt• 3 11 !ihlll ~2 1 lllJ ---Tape rurordt•r. ('iphor a-.,. s• 1055 t1ni1l trk $1~. U4e l~ OVEI 20 Women O\"<!ded to work ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---- for ho u lit' cl eon 1 n fl Uabt blue Sofa, Dinctle 19" 1•or111blt' TV llave fun selling Oran~e County's ~l'fv tce Pleaac eal l se1, Rechpina Choir, Play11n•ry11ooJ MEN leadin g newspaper along w1lh :in .c:l37:tl0dft6PM Bfd l\, M'a i:nu vox ~-64tll~ Perfed important charily driv<' Conso~t. & m.•~c. Feb. For SMlr 3 Sludtnl d~k,, W-'-'--UCRUMT UlHIMGS Men:h..ciM 17-20,t14H'709ldM 2 boat i:as tonll.11. ~ ... "'--J Two three hour shsf\s •••••••••••-•••••••••• J.wetry 1070 rrumc, :t s1tlc bench Howl I 0 30 I 30 S 3" • 30 ........ ~ 1005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lt•\('I, 'tc'i!I frame "'ork 9..,.z:JOpnt or : • : : v-.: •••••• •• •• ••• •• • ••• •••• t.able w rett top. luaa•~e l:l 0·9fM" RIU OR rART TIME •AHHOUMCIHG * WANTED rack, car tuv :.kt rllck. f.;am $t hr vu1t11\1t )our Come an prefern•d, or t·all .Mike TheOpen1ng TOP CASH DOLLAR map ftlt, card rack. rt!· per..onahly lo ,.utl.. All Jqtulson. 250 E 17th Street, Sutl" O, oC O\lr :>.ew Anllque Shop PA I D t• O R \' o UR \Oh mi: & l oblong st1t· .i.vrk done from uur nt•"' &tf-'1lOO, Costa Mesa, Ca Newport &>ach JEWt:LRV. WATClt ~. twnary 646 38"8 ::;~:. ~f ~lt.!1~·:~1 ~1~:: ~n''C~~I~ I\~ ~:~~ ~rz v ~8j{ EffiR ~~CL~: Misc.lklMcMt• ---- '01ce&at'onl1dcnlman AmencanAntiques rrom FINE FURN&. AN W..t.d 1011 ner Pt'rfr1·t l11rllluden~ HelpW.+.d 7100 He4pWC11tted 7100 lhe 18th & t:arly 19th TIQUES.645 2200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------·,U EL I V 1-: ll Y MAN • Lady needs "'oman to do & how.ewtH'S No ut1u~I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• (.;('flt1*Cl:'........----------SSCASHS$f01 'YON J)t'rmanenl parl ltmc, Ille housekeeping, cook ~elllnjt tnYoh ed For RETAIL AdmttiltCMIM/Mpt. Aquamarint.!, i.apphtre . Good U!it'd rurn1rffnl(l> ft Nrly morn LA Tam~ 111g 6'&2·7920 aft 12 mon.• info gJJ 800its bct,.nl oi••''Nl.''GS L'Ull ~h.ak I ee D1i.l r1 hu le r:. :JtW \'a Ila Way, NB. amethyst, rub1e:s. opals '4r~. :.tovt•s !>16-07611 l>chvery to Cm.la t.h.':SJ -'-- -· 9 ~ 1 c.. ·' .. ,. unh·d Tr:.1n111.: p?\I pu Th & tJJ'COn Burguin pnce1. -humc' :\o collec11ng LEGAL SECRETARY o1m ... pm ASST. MANAGERS vii.led b31 3271 ttA!'tJ-4 "' ur·Sat The Onen~I Jtwel, 336 Wanted by Pvt f'ty. 3 ~. ~4481 Part ttmc for 3 lawyers PLUMIH:R M1n1mum 5 With expand111.i Nat'I Jr 673 -ll~I 8J8-07(2 t:. 17th St, CM. 645-344 curved i.ect tonal in Ut·ltn.•ry mrn over 21. "" .. ' • " h d d d U•ew Up Your Life & Earri Money Too, m Nwpt Center llr!t )rsexper.1nplumb1n1:&1 S•w•c1ally ::,hun l\d\an t----------11,\nlt'IU" .-.m l Uprroht or673'9l40 B row n l ctt th er o r l'erm 1~ 1 E.irly morn nexrblc Please send re hc;it111i: )~f\ lt:e & rt· cemt•nl opportun1t1c" SHIPPING l'tano. 1btrd l'ai:e ueuonl ~ IOI nall):u Y 0 In g l'Oll • I d LA Ttm\.-:. dt'hv. 10 c :\I sum~ to r 0 Box 154, pairs. &l2 ~7 I l(enerous bcncf1b Apply Uurlt'd W;ilnul, atlached •••••••••••••••••••••• 646-2652 ~~II qua tty pro ut'l3 Ualb a Isl n<J "''6'"2 PL'Tf<IL'" 1'7 I di h I J madt' by thh u 11rld .• homt"" $250 mo. Cull o a • "' u o-~ b k • m ~rsun, ,., ... .,, " 'i•t:or i;aa c o' ers. WANTED "'anted • Comb1n1.1tlo1l , " .. Alln !\Ir .Brandon """!>S ra eopt.•rutor l:.x We!tlm1n::;tcr Mall . CLERK• "'I l I l d Mk " lafi(est cosmellt·~ l'11m Mii 1740 penenrl'd 8-15 W 16lh Weslm. "j •·i:~~ ~ co~ frd 1~1~ Sink, RdriH & Gas Stove. Pany I l e 1 d • C 11 LOCAl Conlr:.ac·lor t't'k Newport tk-:.a1·h '1 r Ii-I • or . 11 TOP CASH DOLLAR All tn I unll ~ 1404 · n ~r b e a UJo::'\Ti\L IN~U lt1\:-IL'E . ' . " . --L._ ..... ..,........,_,.._.,._.......,_..-! all ,; PA ID I'' 0 R Y 0 U ll ---- !>40-7041 or Zenith 7 1359 Per,on for l>usy oll tl't' tnt( top workrni: Supcnn· Qualified mrchl.lntr w re . ff JEWELRY Wi\TCL1•·s WANTl-'D l::xecut1ve ()( •. d .., 1 le ndenl 10 run "'ork S..Jes Enar1 E~; to SWK \\e arc o c1111i.: Jll op l'"t •··tote Sale. Antique · • "-· • • ... itpr n ·11wrc ..,a J.f\ f"r ''omn' ·"·· .. J11ho ... r~ ART OBJECT' GOLD r•~tJ L'urn11urt• P\•t . , 7., .. • Mu,,1 be quahhed mall ~ '"' • "" c; ()fr T)pti.t lo5651J pnrtu111t) lnr a11 111 I b t k S, " " • llabyst tler. M alurt-upcn IH .. 77 "'• .nt:i" phases Slate quahfic:a Jt!lO llarbor,l'M I' ltml'T)pl~l , SJhr dl\tduJI lo t•\p.tntl ht> ~~'~cr~th.~a~:.~ ~c~~e;~ SILVER SERV ICt-: ply.Ca~h Calll!toSPM. "'oman tn "'atc h :,i l J Ont':-. lloo.s&m1n1mumwa11e:s HEAL.t:ST\'flo:SAL.ES ln-tnel't>n.onnelA.it•ncy knowlt'll!(t•u11d"'11rl.rl· pleasl!''497·2930. FINE f'U RN & AN 979-<!ml(RW!) chlldrcn,a11c.,ll&lla~tr tH::\T,\L A~Sl!:>l'i\:>.T . Reply Ad 611. Uatl)' i\TIE:'\TION 4881-: 111hC.:oi.1a}1c:.J l:.tt'<.11•\pt•nt•rt1t• In our TlQUES.645·2200 Offke,.,rnihre& noons Own lraru.p \tc Ch d r plot p ()Box 1560Co t !:>t.ttte~ ~l 1-1711 :.h1ppt1111 1l1•µ.1rlml•nl AppUClltCfl 1010 ------lqlli 1015 llrookhr..t & llJmtllon I' . d1"6"m' ~ x~mr e"'-m;\<'l •t'~a· '~""''"' !>" l Ll(.'f:'\~~;a; 1-.....___~---~~------.-Tht• po~1t11111 "'h" h hu., ••••••••••••••••••••••• King site bed, ni;w. xtr1 ,......+ SISO hr. 9bll6()75 11fl ";a~ llHo~~~O.,., "·~ """"" ':'\LIC£NSEU. -=-·=-=-=-=-becomt• ina1labl1• r1• W1llbu):.-0merefnl(s.ap-farmSl95ml'ldel Usual ••••••••••••••••••••••• vm . LVN $35 Pl'r Shirl GETTllt: H~:o ~ALf"S qwn" I''"'' rt•1••n1-.J11p pl1an"••s runntn" or not· lybome~2263. t:lec typewrtlt'r:. Sey (.' \llf>E r · -tJ .. " chrs $8/up, exc svl chni U b -; W 1 J l>ental Recepl1on1st Good I Bay\'le"' Con' llosp TREAT~tt:~T· 1 Het.ul nur~•·n man So µ111i.: un rl'l t'I\ 1n1: i.'\ Jbo,crap metal 675·~ ,...wood-Stock Up si~i"<, sry d.'>kJS Pan-e, J )'St ll•r .in, . ., oppor .for rtl!hl ~r-.on ais.5Thunn,('!'tl6-123505 I CJltf':i rnu.,l un1qut 1>1•n••nt1• ll)ouf1ttht•rt· -----"~ ••• Wom;an tu bJl>~,11 ~ ~ plea,anl Jit'f~on.ihl\ We tr.;1n \OU to '<t"ll l<(Jrdcnt't'nkr,:.P<o'l'IJh1 qu1r1•mrn1 .. Jrttl .ir .. 8l'Hlc Kenmo.re washer _£5Cordt~l6422624 1167W.19lh,CM645·7411. Js,mall c~1tdrcn in ~.1' rn bU\\ ~pertJlt> ofr tn -I home' ~1th :111 onelerat llll: Ill col'1r b;,,..kct.... i~1 ln11k1ni.: for lull l1m•·1 S~~ ".or!(\' l:::lec dr.yer Wanted Juke Box or Pm fJianos & Omens IO•O ., .• • ,, , ·'~·" ,.. •A,,.. • 11o·1m1tnt•n \o.Of P l'J\C "";..~· J • " .,~ J ball Ma<'h. Worklllll or ••••••••••••••••••••••• arbor \It'"' llom1· ~ l .... \ ·i·u·. ltn ar~J .L al.ar• I M1\Clll:\ l:ST I'd courw th.ti -.tan~ 1m •.•• .,•tn" ~v""nenc"d rt• 1 k I ~-.. Wa•l"kann "-h"''hr · ~- llJys a week ~4 llJJl1 t up.•n "' corp ht•ndit ~ Aut S M h mt'<11 .. tch If )l•U arc in 1.i1l nur..en men "'h1l ;in• appl) 111 11\'r"m S:·" J:-enmote tlce dr) er not, also i.erv. 6;Jll 2162• UPlllG ll1' l'IANO Sl\LF. (jabv:s1tter WJnlt>c1 ~" l'Jll ~ '.,~. bel\o.n Ill ~1 0 crew ac ten•!>tl'<.I' tn t'ilmmi.: btl( t•reUll\l' & tndui.lnou~ ~ (,u11r ~6-8622_. --839-1946 •'Hi\.~I''". LtAN l'IANO ho,.;;e for l8 mu' ti.•b> :i ll.1m&-&Jpm 1\cmeGndle) ei1p monl'Y rom lhe :.l3 rt. Xlnl :.alury, <'omm &. " " •"' i.:el 1ndt\tdual1tl'd fr<'t' bendtts Send complell' STANDARD S1·11rs Kt'nmorc elec PAC 1 F' l C V 1 L' W--1 111111 11 l<1• II•' :.toc k of tla)S "'eek O"'n lrJll!> ·~· Turret Lathe l In oo th b n ' d A 0 d 2 ... • r-tor~• U 11r1 "hl l't•r"-11 R ' • 53 Of OS 1.1\.·ntJI i\J1:.1,\ant \IJtu11· I ra in., n t' JO t ur.t•l rt''Umeto r)er. \ ('a o, )rs Cemetery Plot (6spar<'s) ~·' ""' ,. "' ~· a ~c J II , '"'per 11 1 h.1t"t1lc t.n 1 or mun) topolf1ce!> ((){JI ROGJ:::H'SGi\RDE;'l;S nit! . tOO. Call all 4 , Lot 332 . Ocean View 11lartln1t 111 13$() <includ· l·ves"' n ' ihuM.1,11r s.&8 llH4 t General Machinist I ~. l~:~uf~~r~~~~.~od~ ZJU1 !:>an Joaqwn 1111i,.. MEMORIES i ~. u....,1 ----s.1200. w111 11e11 separate. ~~.~a~ur~~1~g~1!'~',\'"~~:i Bankmi:. e.'Vl'f 1..i.i.·; ""I UE!"TAL1\SSIS1'\'\;'I' St.'l up opl'rJtur. o""n t111b Arlene , c 7 t~ 'I ltd , Ne"' purl lk•ach, CJ ~' ull. !>Ilk uy !'i1d1•. l:ntl· CallSSl·~2_____ 1!3tl OliOO for frtentlly MO Slllll • IWl'l'"•lfY "II 1'11 ~1:!11 per t\llll (ieorl(e c:rJt•lwr I $:!.~ti l'\o.r !\lower. $3!> Ffnwood-l:uc/ C:H1\1''1 S Mi\N l'IAN() ly 1\mt.:n~an MJl~ I a11i.. ch •11 r~111 l'. t', I>,. r tools. mrn 3 10 5 > r:. 1•x I Ml! lli~2 ~1 INC I l'<i C.:vmrnercaal HernR telephom• 1nf1lrm·,11mn Applyln Pl'rson 111--Al.to:.'i'tl\rt:S.\Lt:S-CJll l714 ri;iiu!'>lloolur<1n • t...M>ll79 S75cord .:.i M • "I\ l\nnkmt; l,,11.rn ~t·t r•·t .ir' I llE:'\ I' \I. i\...,Sl'T \ '\;T SHUR Low dppointmcnl !1\11 Apphl••l -----$42.SO hcord/dt'l 830 9740 :ms~ tlln, s :'Ill'"' put I "'"'' h .11 i•a I ~;,,,.., ti, :! :I d.1\:. '"'"' •. "CORP Jo'1n # 1 M.11(nt'l11' l'orsi I ~'tctl(hl Damlll:l' llolpoint 2 111k~ So ors I\, Jo'rwy 1\mt•r11·an MJlt• 1\,1111-~·tt •lf'llll l:l<Jtlfo:Norrn:indyl'IS,\ 1t SALESWOMEN 2221Sl\n1w~t ~al1• 362.1 W WarnC!r.,VACUUMS $2995 ut MamSt. llANKS ' fl.\O Sim I · • ·"' • · II l>lk 'in of MC' F adden. TarbeU, RHiltor' Minimum :1 >rs npr Santa Ana. Ca !J;!io.I neur Harbor. Santa Ana . VACUUMS RF:Pl\llti'~I) tli'rll.al H1·1·111t11111"1 . 'tblkWnf(;rancl) •Frt'l' 15 IJJY lra1n1111: Salary+Comm s..i1tn11, EXCHANGt:D&l'ARTS .. •.• ...,,.,,. J••rl 11c., .. h t.1•1wr.tl l-4oal Uppor 1-:mplo) rourH' t'Ontl'mporJry t:uro11e1111 l\n ('(1unl llcyc!.t 1020 BLK/WHT TVs $29.9~ "'l.>U. IX'nlr~t Xr.tv ('('rt nl'r .(_"11d11lat'earprOl(n1m fa~h1oni. Aµ1•I) 1nl oppnrtu111ly.-.mployer •••••••••••••a.••••••••• OOL()R TVs SIB9$ Yamuha t:l1•rlonl' U7l> Or1111n ltnll t rip. l't•rt'Ull~ton ~l'l'l 1on $SUS. ll73 3IS:n lllAHCH MAHAGlR thor11ui:hh 1 JJl.•lik rrn01 ~!AIDS Full & parl llnw. •llu"'"'"· ,\c,1pu1,11 tn1>:. pt•r:->on ,\ prnpu' :!!1 75. 25" Rale1Jth. Top of JAKE'S. 460 N Nwpl UI r l &lwl. K.LIUtl!#'.11•H•,&1.'l:prl prt·rurrcd own •li.t Pl.an•-.ult·' 10 Fashion Island Al>t..fvr .:>: CK ll\H ~\I~.., 1.hl• Lane 4!3ib!t All N.B.OpenUaaly'lll7 Wantcdl'rano l'l'\o.ants -A Jo't.'dt'r al s,I\ 1111-!' "' wk111I• lr JI" &n Bro"' n ~ 3 llt)f Oranfh' Lounl\ Juunne I~· .\ I • , • • t fl•nch. Hcynold11 ~31 Call 64~1 lo huy J>lllllO ror C'<Alih.• 'n< 1.1l11m '" 'l't'I.. 11111 J DONUT SHOP Cuu."t. llw S L.i .~~ll 'I •bl pla<·t• h'ttnll' takrn 1 · ---1 r~alurl" "'om .. n I hur I lrJffil'. hkt· nu. mu~t !.et' •----------838.Q®J, 835 7566 m.an.al(•'r fur 11' ""t'\o.~trl l , • • . . ).. ~ 1nOrun~el'ount) ~-t·reta~ ~n Ii< 11 Hro"'n 11, :tllOh l'o~l O\C!r SS.00. Sac, SJ9S MATTRESSES ---· lil•a 1·h offtt l' lrull\ 11111 . .i, I .1r1 & ~ ull lt•tH ;";o 1" :\I Jd •. '.'tl d ~·.. •1st plDl'I' lhltnll\ ~oltf 111 Sale!'I & MJrkrl111i: A gen to"''""' Y • ~, l.Ji:un.i or trade for lrans t'ar. TV. Rodlo, .. ~ .. 11 h f I 111 111·r \\.11rn a11 ,, .. ,. • J s "'-' 31 .,,.,pc-rvi~or . · _.... • t • • · Br and new from model Hie St-A"" ''""' 1 d\1• 1n.1n11.1 111 "' & houst"kl'<'JK'r Thl' Inn I Or.1n1t1•Cuunl) I <Y n._~, tXpt r 1 ~r!lon Stdrt Sow l..rn ii l\mwa\ (,rrl ~ N1s h1k1 lOspd. "• ..-.~ hui.mcl>!> l•'l<µt•r .. 1111h .!.1,I• \11J1I" '!' 1wr"111 Jt l..ti:una 211 No t'oaM •!st pla1•cJd\erl1~1n11 111 to handle I 1o11rl ufftt·c ·u ,,1;1hulur .l;lfpr, '' $100 5J6.~ homes. All makes & ••••••••••••••••••••••• r .. ndh·1l1H•l)'t1111ulat1• 1:1 .~.l.th~t t\I ll"'v \µply Wed 21112 tahrorn1J l duttl.'lt Plea:>e1:allfor1n j 1 1 f 1 P sites. Bargain pnc,s! Coln r TV w /1•11mb. 1ww hu,tn<''' tit·\ l•lup I DRIVr.""S W AHTED tu~ I'M :-;0 phone t:ull~ •bl pl11n J1h lrll"ni: in lt•f\ 1ew r,1~, u~~/J~~:~l 1:;..0:·~rpr\ luildinc) Materials 8025 ~-8636. AM, F!'t1 !-.lt·rro le rec•ord rnenl. ·""'' , u,111rn1·r' ~ thf'll s ;\ Wl~lm~1rk & A'~'"' j •.: ,.. • . a.> ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 · chanl{cr Ht·.iul. ll:t' & mutn alt• l>t'"1111n1·l , 1 "t'our \\unwn MAIHTIEHAHCE , • ..,, pl,11· .. "'•nMr H~:Lu 3975 lltrt:hSl SU1'1' 11 1.ill .. .l l•l\6 GilrJI:<' work bench. hvy ~!twma~s~1'1 ls 1f~ i.s Lake scr een, all ,·honnci.., '<Int "'orl.m1: 111111h & U'l1 111•:!.'l'." "'"r PERSOHMEL llom•· Bu\t•r .,('11nlt•'l Npt lkh ~Ui h-1\41 STUDENTS 1lu t y cnnstruct ion ~ a · pm S2!l~. ur tic~t offer. l>t>neflt, •'Pll} 111 1 •'1'1111 ,If 11nlt\1·nwt1. kt u' '" 1:1\:!'>'. 675 87251 --~2!117 8098 Yellow C ob ~tale or ft•maf" ~•~I )OU 1111•htu1ntn" '"Uf SECRET ARY l'.trl 14-12 KX().l N.B. Tennis Mem~rsh1p. Ht'ply 111 Mr l\1•rr, 11.:·11 ')IJlt'r \\C·n111• C".ill &W I027 bc:l~ci•n H\'JI ~:.,lak llCl'n'~~ t 'all For N1·w1x1rt Cenlt'r d1• C"h'.in t:ul OH·r :!I 71 1 5.?'' tM'lu ~ ount.un \ alh•) noon & Spm for info I 't'htll''' Sh & t > p111i.: fl' ltmt• tu ht )our '''hl'tlul1• Cah 1035 Sacnft<'e! Besl offer. .. I L,'qu"IOppor L,"mployer LHCOLllHS "'Om" n1orn111•• uvrk 963-45111&962·6115 Equal l>P"'lf ~ m1>lov1•1 " • r. II ti S4..ntl resume lo \Ir ~ • "' -••••••••••••••••••••••• 2.5" RCA Color TV ~ ) 1 w3rranty. full rt•mott• rontrnl fret• rld1vl'ry $2111 r· ' r~1rn Sll~l "'t'"" &o up \lt•n 962·5566 1\mop l'U k ox 19110. ·•~atl · ltll' b.tr ll<'dnup Persian K1ltens. show 111 I 11l1o ' Fullt•r Br u'h Mana11cment Nl'"'lx1n lkarh c·a !Y~i..l W~kt•nd & 111i?hl ~url. qualtly. Stud Service Cant'elled Contract 6'1~27_6 __ _ 2000 Yds. Carpeting l'OftTAULE COLOH 1'.V. II.tr M.ud, p11rl tun" "'" II.in•'} " 'I ,1\ 1•rn Iii ~. 17th St ('\I Mx ''1111 ~ 111•~ 'lllli K17K 1·1-:UPI.E r 1-:1tSON U\311, bJr ll'lllll·~ tratl1l't' J'\;Jllablc. 638·9308 ·' 1':\l't' lo11k111i.: for part St-c·n·t.in,11 S3 00 PN hr. 1"11 t'llll<'f -~"''l111111Salo•,'l'r111· no•·\ l1111t• <I'"'"'·"'' in 1Yl'IST F.nl & nr nt'l',Cutll...tl.6451137~ Doqs 8040 fto·r \t.1lu11• li'li Kii.! ur ~holl·~alt·~upjlbt'' ~\lll) , 11,,1,,. l'nu,u.ll. 111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bf'lowCostS47-8729 Sil.'> OTORCVCLE Leather 548·652!1 panlS, jacket, bool11. 1· ~&-M'"H -­ Motor cyde t r lr, I. S-.0--6 BEAUTY OPR I 'MAI .'lhl, ~1' Md .111• 1".lj)tlalt/l'c1 lii:J :!4!23 t1•n•,11ni: ulf H •• $.l:!."1 mo Tl'lt•phont• r:.a ll\ :111' fr11low I r "'I REAL EST ATE F 1 T • · o & up. ro;1k1· .11111h h!turlv t ~alo~,..11~:1~;~:;1\fl~ ICt ' ; ., 1 c :,111kr11•1 1111 I\ pl tom MAT U H t: WO M i\ N. S •Lr.SM ... .._. •Gr.R · orn .>Hll llll:l hnnus C;1ll Thoma~ Gun: !..IOH.tli. 1111•\ :1•.· Ila~' I"'' "'II JI ltmt• lo ~fl l'h mt• "'"' "'""' "' 4!1tH.Klll r.7:tK:IOO Jll ~I~>:~ .. ~.~!~'~··· ''•·"" p•·r rnonlh l'.111 rH'"'rom1·r~ & 1·11n1;11'1 WANTED 1.t • uu merc·h.Jnt" ~1··"hl1• hr~ c·omrrn,;111on nt•i:1111.1 SECURITY OFFICER G~ERALOFC I•'•'" l'J1tl '\lrlt 1·h•rtri1l N1·1·1I 1•11r, hit• l)JllOI( hit• ll•ll l'11ron.1 ll..I Mar \o1tt' "'ttrk . lt•a1l1ni: -.,,7 31\!I!> otftt'•' "'1lh lul' nl "'.Ill. 111 ~,.,,. porl llt•;u h llnlt'I 1r.tll1r Hl•tth 111 ,.,.0 n11t r.1<117t10t1fl II :10 1'M , f11kO<'t' to \ti :!:1•1 1>.11h .1,k for('h11•f 11( St•1·1ml\ l'tlot, I' 0 1111\ 1:1tiO, I ·,,...t.1 \t1•,a l \1 '''"-'" TYPISTS •PET WORLD• Yamaha 100. 1·8f't. ........ ,.. ....... Pit Bull s, P e ke s. Dingy w /oars '&sails. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ch1hu:1 hu;i. Poodles, Br 3 nd n e w C 0 mP1 loat1, Moint.,.ance/ Shih t1,u. Maltese, G. Bed 1 (Q bed Serviu f020 Shepht•rd. !'oms. 100 roomsc · ns7. ) ••••••••••••••••••••••• mt,.Pd puppieio. ~tud svs I Brand new Couch & Chr mo!>I hreeds 2525 W. 17th Sel. •9J.._l_982_· ___ _ <.1t Fairvww. SA. Open l\RPET·Deeoralor ha~ 1·vr<,. 531 5027 250 yds choco brn. Mu~t GOOD NEWS B o at l'a1nt 1ni: & lleftni11hing l'ainlinl!. Varnr~hin.:. & t'lt:unup. Also ma~l work. jorN· l'StrmJll'i.. (i7:. Jl7S I\ 1'1lot llrlt\I" r111111"' Ill.I\ 111• •I\ ,1d,1hlt• tn \OUI .111•" ~;.1111 llf11f1I 1111 do• II\ l'rlt'' f.. I ,l\h 111 f' Ill m1•11 h1tn(lh1' fo•I , 11111~ H t'" '1ltf""lt'l1Jtllt•ft"1 I"' 111lorm.1l1u11 p(. "' • .111 pu,1111111 l•• lt .1111111· a M1'd1t·:.al 11rl11·,. 1 l1·rk \ .1111 I\ 111 tl11111 ' Al"' !\nu" l1·lli;1• of at·rounh I•• .1111" ( .111 t 'ontrol payahll' uni.I 1tl'n1'r.1l nf t .111 1•r I-m11f•I\ fl\•·111 f1t·1• 'kill• ln,11rvnc"· l11ll \1••111 \ .• , .. ,..,111 11110 1n11 r1•qu1r1,d . S.tlJq l•---------•I •Sec't /Gen'I Ofc F/C I kpr/Corutr A dmi1t Auistont •Stat •Didophone •Technical • Rqwo \ 1l11'l s'•1cn11f1cally liulan<'NI for your doi: sell. Shores lnter1or:-.. 2460 Avon, NB 642 2255 or 67$-5548. ------loat1, Marine Equlpnwnt 9030 lr"m' ~11•111~ 'II 11111,·11 r-111<~n-1 hi.! .l .L!l I 1 u 111 .., I ll 1,. n I lllt I Jlt'I""' t 'Ir• 11\ 1 11l1• '.111 .I 11 .111 I o 111,11111 t 1111\ 1 ~I• Jt11•f 11 l olJll'll olntt otl I ol I tll l'lt ,I\ llll ldq1ltnrll' lll,lll l'h ll •lll .111<1 \1"""11 \II' 111'1 l/111d. lhtnl.1•1 l\p '" l-1 1 .. , ... .,,,, 1.111 111i•,1. .. 1m1•hl.~po1 "''"'' •14• 1:-.~· ·tl•I"• ,, .1111' "'"" '"'"l."1 h1u.1I 111'1'"' ~ 1111•'"' r·r 1•1 •I ii t .111 "'"'"' ht•l"' n I( 111,1. 111.1111 & ~ .•• IM•l\o.11 ----------·'I 141,\lloHlll ~>lll ol'>I loat llectnclons GUARDS \ll'ST h:l\t' h1111l hutl1l ~\ill A p.111 1111w 1"'"1 111..: •''l"''r \\,• "'" 1.~.a.. 11.111, ·""" I 111f11rn1 .. 111..: l11r 11o·11t1 ,.,, ... 1 11 1111111,111·11 < ·.1r ,'I, 11h11m• ... lt•rlfll lolll' f1H l.1 •1 r1·•1 \\11tk f1111o111•111 lhC' i.:ru\o. Ill): 111 '\ lnl 111 t.111 I r11.111l 1111lf1t' lrt lht• 111• n ,. , , t ' I rt I I 11" In a; 11.1111111 I IH''I' J"I" tlf l' 1n m.~hr.11{(.111 .. 11"'" .1n1 •. 1h1· .J.1mhor1·•· l<tl . !II II l'a1itw.1lh .tr••I \',1ll t.'l.l11t4 .• l.'1~ l\lllll>t'I \ ;to hh "'~'MW 171h'I.( \I ll111t,l)lt~I l'11mm or ----------•! to11h r1•11t.ll, v. 1 l1t•nll•I (),1111 .. 1 ·~ Uc•n IOOKKHrut K4i i••1:1 A'k fur 1>1m \lt"<ht·JI l\,tc k Ot C' JlCl~I t1nn I t1mt• ,..,J>t•r'tl nn ly lot I, I' 1n l..1111111...1 llt-.H h t11t-a"' '"thm11 '" 'Ulllt' In ('.1rl II W1•l>1.•r \I (.) l:r.!'i :-.<1 l '11.t'\\ 11 .. \ l.uRuna lk•arh l ·J tllli.'>I <11H 9721 M..tal SpitwMrt f'l.l ll & 11 ltml' hto.JH'r'd ~11 pr1·nH' Jo:nl(tnt•t•rtnl(, 19:111l'la•1•n11.1 1\\1'. l M t;4h till.1!1, "40 27 :it I Mi.;nil ( '1111pl1•, 1'111 vour un11111<hll'll\1' 1111)1· l•1 ~of k {(. '<t'I llfl' )Olll tulun• 1,10 lllf17 Moun.-; ~tA.'iSEl'st:s Jo'lt.!1111· M111h'I~ joJ.rol'h nt>t'<h'<I l'vp 11111n('y ""w ~I llfl tu G:ll :lit 11 tlc'.11 1-:,1.111 NOT TOO LATE! Thi' ,,.,,, "''' ,,. t'\lh 11 I "'" ""' 1 .. ,, Ill 11\ II\ Ill rt''idt 1111.11 " '·"'' \ d 11•1 1-'1•1· l'.1111 1.11 lt1•1111k1' \J.:•'rlf')' 111-'0 Jim h St . Sl1 llH :\1•wpt1r1 11c.,1r h it.It 11 l'Wl t .tll fof \Jlpl t-:\1.th ti!t 1'\llc'r11•n1 t•d 111 I h• "'''""' "·•ltflll ';1lt"11rl:.a11 'l'"' f"tr I ll.1 rh .. r \ 1>'t.1 '"' ~·' ·'"'"·•rtl ,h1fl M11,1 !'til''ll .trl"' I h1·1 ,. 11rt·I 1 .. • "'I" r .ll~J llJrl1<11 l\o.11 mon• ltc>'1t11111' 11 llh1I ( \1 111.110tnl( In fill 11111 our . '<la ff ('.tll II.ti ('.,, ..,. ,,,,.,. :-1.1111m l\ll1•11rt.1n1 ~ ... Ill '1.12:! 1,1 m.tl.•• ..,1 ,111111 lull ur 11.11 t 11111t• 1 .q1ph l.t'lnwtle1n11111<t1.11 .. h11"' :''""'11 1' ~~··II !''II ... 'll<IOI: MIJl(lltrl lrnm .. , llJ,11 "') "'Ill H1 h 1>1•111•111· .. 11 mun.1~1 nlt'nl !'.1•n 11·1· ..,1 ,1111111 \tl1•11 11111 1ert '""' p 11•lt11111111 1111111, t'~Jl••r ti ll.I\ & 1(11111~· q1111 Id\' Wr• Ill' 111• Evl'!I t 'ull & I' tirr11• Ap )llU lttp.1tl11 q1.1l•" Ill\, ~IWJI !'\l.1111111, 17th fv lrv1t1t'. t-1 II IA'l your ")''" hr11wu· thrnuRh '1 llt: llUHOY ~KW" in tht• l1a.u1f1~I !lt't11Ul'I t'ilCI\ Wf'(lnt.,,f11y & Saturday VOLT ta~A•V Nt:.1Vfl ._, 3848 Campu1 Drhe 546-4741 I ,, '"" Ft 11111 I l ( l\1rp111 I I t-:qu.11 C1111•11 l.mplnH·t :-..n i.upplrments. less ..olf Membe~hip for sale "'·''t" jo'rrt'dehv<'ry. Irvine t:nast <.: (: &·1ente 1>1el l'rodurlS GM>-1538 or 5111-7800 l'aul ~ 1140. Moms. ' L>ni: 0 1n:u1 f:NCE Cius lo StJrt Wt'cl t"l'h IM FIREWOOD 7 30 I'~ N<'wpon/ S41l-li250 Irvine l\n•a :>46 492:11 -----. l'mbersh1p, Irvine \KC Mr n 1 u tu r r~·oun try Club $6~0 1>11chshund Mall•8wet'ka M4 ll~or99:1<i:H2 11ld, PHP<'r tra1ntd $100. - 11:11 :iztil< a n l c d : c; r r m 1.1 n . ----.Japanese War llellt''· 1 11'1 FL COi.LiE PUPS & i;words, dllllll<''"· u11 TYPIST/RECEPT ~~CIT!l,t:t.t. SABLt: & iform~.h,lm1•t:1 1W~'>i'll• ,·,.111 ·111ur11 • "tll I \.\1111 ~. !\:JI• 2451 ·" · • • 1 · "' 1' Irvine Coai.l C11untry l 'luh 11,rnm01ur , •·~p .. r ti t1nlv lr1~h St'lll'r fl mn. /\II m emberithip fnr i.alt• l. tinl.~~t Mr ' ,\lt'l)nwdl ~11111~. 1:ri•11t hou,e pct $1i00 + lrar111 fr1· 1111\ 11h Mil Uh;!(I ~141 <.:11 II 111:111:m1 8.'111·6~ 11 . l\fl :. :io. t •'II Wilham l'••rt•11a 1\""'' Mr11·Anh11r ut .. 1trd, l'<I \I "~111:.I 011por ~.m 11loyf'r i\ K C: I ,. m 11 l 1• c 11 l I l <' 1139~0 'ahll'/Whlll' $2:, to 'ml flora( dr.lp(Oy'i l lM•d Irr N'<1rr :.:16 2451 l'M. rum. Out~f lh<' ordlnuty 1-"cir NII lit·' 1•111111111•01 to , C'itpahl" ol nrnrnt111n H~t•tl•.,.r Moll•I 1•>.pN ,1 m111d ~ hf"I i------------1 prr dJy 111 O<'hani.:c• for Fr" to You lo. 45 1tttrlll. 1865 Nt•wport Blvd, Sul le(; l'M .•.•.......• ,.......... . SllK & flND' 1111! '""'"' thtmo•h 111.11 I' ltrTIC'. "'klh• llRYYll'W halonn• :-.t1m1• t\ pmi: 1 '1111\ 111 .... 11 ~-oe.:. Thunn. h') Jt'C'•llllll' J'.t\,1hh• l \I f•I' J.:,11,1 dl>• :Hl4 •17~.:, M<mlFR Sl'BSTITl T t : Con,lrut ltun h1><1kk1 •'I' llO( ::o.F.Kt't'l'l''H I ll •nil . "'fl n1•1 ~.1t.1n I · · • ·, ' ·'> etpt'n Jlq1h '" I' II 11 ..... "'C'c'k I rt r.~t ""' ll t \GO . 1' 111 1, I' 1 I ut lrJll'flllrtlllton t..1 OflS2_ Wor kin~ molht•r nt'l>(1' rcµl.1 r 1•mfnl .11 hor111• Can• for I lcwlltr & kc.-cp howi.-Mon h1 Her~ & ('184'4'1flf'il \11 ,., :Hit t'c'!!\ta \1<',J. '.1~'1..'t• llou.•c mn1tr "'ntd. motion 0"' n Tran, r I' Q d ptrturc lhutrr :\r"'pon i52·61().l d.1y, fii:. 3~7 Jlnokki'ci'lt•r 11111 t hJfl:t' UH"' ~·nl1 romplete re ('\ M 'lll'Tll' to \\t•,tt•m Amu~e "' Hr.11 t-:'l,;11• .1n1I '" rni·nt 1.0 ,1100 Sun .. t't '-u"e k 1\ulr A SA I' 1·nnqru h •11·ki;r1111ntl BIHi L \. 9CIOro UH' m. on Laj?unJ llt'h 1·,1p11hh' 11! prucl11t1n~· for M lllhrr .. r.m rinancrnl 'IJltmt•nt~ fur(•---------•( ph)5t'ma t:,11'\J rt•f' \mllll ~ Clr.1n11•· ('n INSPECTORS Goort pn' Collt•1 l nr, •·tnpmc·nt (."11 213 3'127479 711 i;im or K33 llf.l \'k for J 11hn pm CASHIER Over 20. f· ttmt'. i;11orl a,>11)' 51"'te11t11111' METRO CARW45 H 2P64.l II <If h1>r 1\1 l \I :\l;)chrnl' ~h1111 lnspec ;\"UR.C\ISG 111>11 1\h1l1ty to read lM Sup~isor h I 11 t' i1 rt n I !I , U S C' r ltme day ~ht fl 1t11rromr11•r, t. ,·entt'r LVH 1·.111 pt·r~ M 1n 2 ) r~ t>'I: p •time cl11y ~ha fl 1wr 11' mnrhtnt• ~hop A t p k S i CL"RIC •L pp y a r u per or " ,.. npt·rutor or lll'Pt'<'IM 11 taIlh<'11 r <'. 11 4 s ,\ P. 1\ H \\p111i: 1\ltt't ,\pph lnP\•f'un Suprrtnr Ave , :-; B H t: Al'T SAU.~ t:,.111hh•hnJ J~IHi''"" I" off1M' '"''' 11111111111 in 111 \l''tmc•nl riro111·rlll"t & c" r h ;i n It,.' n 1· •·ch 'J h11thl) mot I\ .1l1•d It I'' 'alt~pt'l"'<OO' "Ill tr.11n t or appotntrnl'nl. • Jll 5.56 tllil RECEl'TIOHIS T Jo'or rl•I'' I hru ~.it Rll'hard Oul'lll'llt' S.1l11n, 20ll !11 r~ pun l't r ll r 'Ii R R t· S31t1 Cl ltTIS R Jo" '' 1•,p.ind 1 n 11 1 t ' I n \ 1• ' l m 1• n l D1•1~1on our ln\r~l mc.-nl Sall'smrn arc .n rra1ttni;? 1n ritrf'!I~ of $."t()(l.000 p mo t .l'arn hu"' eu\ll~ )"II ran in rrrase your 111<)(.luctton bv calllni: !lti2 24:.8 ror cimfl<1t'nt111I 1n1rn•1ew A~k for V1nn• f !BER TYPfS H C A M ( ( J U T N N H A A I M A R W 0 0 J U l H U T [ 0 £ C 0 M 0 T T 0 C H T £ H R [ M H 5 A C R C S [ H 0 P H A U A N I M A L U l l A E H l r M l A W J U T H l N U J 0 P f P M H [ M C I K l l A N A 0 0 l C A I M [ H P N A R C A W H H V C C A T A B l ( [ ~ V l M R A M 0 [ R 0 M T Y P E S A C I A V A N 0 T l 0 C E N A A I R l 0 V H I C C A ~ 0 6 0 L T C R C H A I 0 C V A I H ~ I R H A l E M A C 0 C M 0 S S 0 T 0 N l A M A l A M P 0 U 0 T I H H M U H 0 I A P R H 0 M l N 0 T L M E T U J E R C L H S A C C A M £ K ( H A I R U l L A M U C l V H L I S R 0 0 W 0 H R lntm.ctlcw>i H1<*Mn WOf'dl bet-fOPI., fo<we<O, beck t wwct, 11p, "-0< dl~ally. 1'111<1 tedl 9"d bo• ti In, r Al paca Hemp Rami,. ; Camel Hair Jute Silk ~ Cashmere Llama Vicuna • mn pup •., Lab. a.; M11pll• Cortc•r lahlf' $10, !-.ht'vlw1 d. 11holll. nN•ds Wotnut t•nffee tal>l1> $.'1 > 11 lu\ ,., k ub 645-1<098 Small woorl d1•11k J:i. l! track lope dr<'k, l\rlmiral 2.'> l'ortul>le hr oiler oven SIS, fM In d11,h radio for II trnrk < 1ar player $15. 645 '711S7 To <;111•! llome. I yr old ~r.11 l'c11nl S1ameH·. t'l'mnlt· r..is R094 c; 1• r m .1 n 11 h n r l ha 1 r l'otnlt'r. Male AKC.:. 2 yr!> 11111 Love11 k1& 837 ~36 Shdtre. frm. spayed, II Y"· n~5 l{ood homt' 968 L396 INTF.RIOH !>OURS $10 fo.111·h 11/\HY <:AH st-:1\T XI.NT ('ON JI S20 846 8579 aft ti -------,.,mtw. 1050 CARPET. Never us ed. 145 •••••• ••••••• •• •••••••• yda orrmge nylon plu~h Shop&. Savt ·new & u.sed furn, 1:1ft s, mi sc. WtlM>n's Unrftatn Nook 54S W 19th St. C M ----- Musi sell 64&866S POOL TABLE. 4'x8' One year old. 961·611'7 **I BUY** Baby strollt'r, hke new Good U11ed turnitu" & Call Cheryl i\ppll11ncM-Ok I will ---~--4221• $20 Sdl for You WATERBEDS nt•ct·:>'~ \\Ill Ln11n l1ir C l.A-VAL CO. 00~10 F. O 1-: C()mputl"r ln,11r.1n1 ,. 11r li411'1JC't'lll•·• l' 111 Ciuo.1f1('1I ad' '<'II b11t Cotton Mohair Wool Tomorrow: Robin Hood MASTHS AUCTION 646-1616 ... llJ.'625 Complete S129 95 d<'h v NEVER UNDERSOl.D :iulum11t1-.• h.1t'lq•r.1un•I f".qual Oppor Fmplo)f'r 11.a'e !'Omet./11n2 to lll"ll ' 11~. ~mall tll'm«. or dO) helpful t' \ h .~u :?111 1----------•I CLb~1hf.'d ad' do 11 ~I'll rl<'m Jlbt ca.11 •·t~· .'>67H Aft '-Call 142-1542 AquaJleaven 83().'7002 ....................... 225 II P. ()~I( t:n.: w /1)111 · dnvc•. '>lt ••rin1~ & 1n:.tr u mrnh. !'<l,1tly "''"'• 5:17 1W! 1111' Ml"n urv 11ulbol!r•I. nt•w 1•r11. 111'\1·r u"'iJ 1;.11 o1:ii,o. nt ;-211 d.i)'\ (114 2K.'.:l c•YI'' "'kmh 9040 .............•••••••••. 111· ll1rt•hrr.1ft. nu ~tt11h fur 6. nu 70111' t'hr)'i.lt·r t·ni: w/trlr. K•l fm ~k11111• 1>111 •·nnu~h for f1~h1111• 11111·rH1n• SI ,Cl(i<1. 911:! 2Utill ~rt Sl'M (.;ho1Me l!)llO <:hr" ( 'rutl 1111 rn tt h o ltl I II. , tit ti 111n11h1111t V 1< Si!t111u ~l.'>1111101111 11-1011 n ;G!' l:rnncl .ll.11111 .... S:H %11 N1•wlv tlt•c 11rnt1•il . 1,. ... u1 c 1111 ii 11 o·' I h 11 )' t 11 I\ 1• w I' 111 I II 1 11 k 1· r , trt:. :.:. 70 ur ~. Ut ""'~' SPEC I Al! l!.i'Sk111J11rlt •5~:t $!1 :,o11 ~·· Jt•ffrtt'' S r 1:,3 I $11,(l!NI :.r CJ""""' r · <inrurtl !'. /1 ••.:.lfl $.10 t•Jtl <Ill ('hn' (.'unnt('. llrn1lnl l~I. ~11.!.INI 46' Al11,k11n 11;,;,·1 SH9.101 lJA\.11> I. l'/\HKl-:lt Y J\(.'llT SI\ U :S li3 l llil I 25' Tri>Jnn. nu, llht hlk bow & )lr 11 tov . cl1vor1·" '"llltmrnl, rnsl i.l'll SoWOO 11fl S pm 840 19!18 or (213 )9311 3GG6 ----- ldel.11 live :.ibnard. llarc11 1 <W i)(•N)r, rov<'r:., & Shfl Stawand &12 6607 Xtr11 dean 18' Gla5spar w1Vr11\o I O & Tra1lei Only "14ll~ M fo:SI\ BOAi CF.NTlrn.&t6 4012 .,!.!S,jlul~.DAIL:::;:::.:Y:.;Pt:..::l::O:.:T:,__~ _____ T~·=ieed=:::!Y;i...;f..:eor=uwt~....,;1.;..7:..· 1;.;17&;.;..;; ~~.~~::!!:! ....... !~!-.'!'~ ....... ~~·.'.":r.>.~ ....... I~·-~~ ............ ~ ............. !!.~~ ~~ 9940 IMh.W 9060 Mwt. ..._W.tecl 9590 IMW '1tt~4tdHleta 9740 Yoho '772 eo.6Mat.. 9'10 ................... . ....................... ,.,..... 9160 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... , •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ll08tt 1e wJt.rlr, mWtl ....... -............. -WAMTTOsa.L ~ICOUMTY"S Le.-OtlAHGiCOUKlY i'2 lark IV Xlnl cood., f 'ly equp'd. 30.000 at1 nu • ~.000 firm Pn. ~Y m -411111 /coklrUil.ID&Q)'ntru. WANTED youae.ur OLDUT Mew-U1_.d VOLVO I Put. cood. llUO Mo .... Ha•H Let \Ii Mil It for you, ~ V t' Cl.l ~l\ l'.l.Y \ OL\ t) II !;.~Ttl11 a.fl 5paa. Pvt Pbooe Mr GrUtll.b CASH! We lake ln tr~ ~ 0 Ht t 00 I ..rt:t<~t \ "'"' U~·..tl .. r ~ •a 'I m •Ii: e or MHCEDE:S 1110r.mi1tlvulll\1 ___ 5_4_0.._2_6_6_0 ___ , modcl ••. un, truc k». SalesS.01~Leasinic OM DISPLAY lll '\ or U-.A.'>i'. I , SllCIALI vana, recrut1oul low c .. er. a.c. House of IMoorh UIHl-n t>5 l.1ncoln. like nu, l o"' rwr, ruru. J>"Tfr<1 . illl P""'r ~ 492~77 I 2t' Jt llbc R• l 1 n · Eaupade. Whlter vebic:lu lcnporla • Rol1'\\oyrt BM\\ lm Pr~· I ~~=tS:=·m~.:. _r_r!:'_rru_· ~_m._· -~.:...~ __ '-__ -' ~O:!:~~~~i: ~:. ~ta ~n~ l7lh s~ M~tili;~~~~~~~.ut , ~~J N~J '9l2 •...................... I •'blander t>&l UM, Of. RDIT·'l'ltan 21' SIPll 8. all ata.nd&rds. 97 l S H!'l'n.1 r .. rk 202S S M -..l.~ fen. xt.ru. Hy d•Y oc • ElC•Ul.IQOA"toSA.les 52l-72SO a11\.'J~ter ·40• M•rin« Hlt, SSl.000. 1145-JllO.JU PM. al-1400 Dul'-"r '72 Capri Vt>. 1t1.1l0, .air, On th~5ol'IW ,'\na fwy Anaheim 750-2011 !IO' Rhode9 Yawl H41. YB, 22,500 m1 , al~reo ------ ' ~10L.PAAAER WANTED %&~~~~~~a: ~-·----'73 Mercedes i( .~:~~1~.0r 1~~ :~~~ ~)~~. ·7~ T top LOADED.Un W-.tr. J ual hkr n1•w, :.1ht<r111lht•f, 17911$ &U IW!I ·oo <.;or vl'ltt· tonv. St..•t• ut ll46 Ch11rh'aton, CM. ~ YACHT SALES MW....._........ FOREIGN, DOMESTIC •J>ri. 14. s:JtOO, AM Jo'M 2 200 11"' 1111 ' ~-1'1.'I 6-1..' ~1133 Ql·llll Pbooe Mr. Oritnth or CLASSICS Tiape, 4 apd, lo m1, xln I s•-540.%660 If )'OW' car" Cllltrl clean cond. 00-0016 DIES!l i.I \'uhu 11-1. I ,,I(,, r11d10, fflS I' 32' Claaak South ...... p.,_________ aee us Ont. G • Kettenbura Dealan. •-•--• l"'U-IUICI 9720 r cut "coM>m'' 1lrk ~r .... 11 t·xt,·rl1H . &romefutefled,v.,.nia p ~""""• 9 •00 "'5"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Aulomall\'trun .. 1111~1<11>0 p 11 .. 111 111 ,.,, ,\L"IT 'bi l>nd~wStatlon Waawn In wood ~hllPt' A1>k11111 SSOO 631 2790. ' teak trim Ab1olulel .ta .. 2925 Jlubor Blvd WlLL 8 UV YOUll 1ur rond1t10111ni.:. rJd111. l ' \I 'I IJ • ) ;1 I ~II brlatol. Wlll eontlder •••••••••••••••••••••,•• Co5ta MH11 Vl"ll·2'00 DATSUN, TOYOTA. tw:itotr. iSt>r lti-1 1•H H4 :.:ti :..&JI, in llninK\' trade.Aakin19IOOO. Yt.l ... , •. Fat.a l28 •. on VOLK.SWA(i!-;N $7895 U 'I" Flberalau Sal Uke new. Call al\.. ~m. TOP DOLLAR PAlll t•o R di ma1n\alnt•d '69 1 ... \uhn ;>1• t.1 OH'r C.:ur onl'l. Ourable , w/trlr. New l&Jla, llle1-~--------1 PAID Uk NOT ~~t ~1ww1 ~ ;acke.ll, feoden. ~ ... ......___, IMMEOl .... TB.Y TOP OOLLAK ' ~ f AiWous. -e;:;;;c, '510 ,. CALL 1 .lnH, ~u11 111,1f 1·,,., rt' t'<'onom1c:il tS cyl Air, I rul.11 ,_ ... , "'" .!O~~ ur I' ::, Qwet. t'Om fortable :,O\ll i \11.! fam1I~ l'ar. sgS$. l\9 l°JhnlloSt . CM 644!-2543 :::;;t;;:'• Y•cb ....................... JO.::~ ... s SALB=~i'ENt-; 'l111•1UW! _.::..:_.,;;.__..;.... ____ -1'S9 Ponll•c Bonntvlll«".I 1111 ,911i A&ltos. Used 69 <.'hJr11t>r New eng. HOISE lZ, blue a. white. V-8. pwr 1teenng, pwr CAUC>aCOMEIM 8210, AM t'M :.terco. J•1;11 11 ::-rb<11 llhJ r*'8provea,c•U846-17 brakes, 83,000 orig TO$HUS 10.ooom1.1974,forS24!15 lu~tJ\1•'-' ••• •• • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • r~bll. 4..W tu tn. Brand Buick 9cp I 0 ne"' p.i 111\ Job. $1000. or 7939 miles . Super clean Great&rl(am ~25835 631-1276 en11ne/ ante n or $$00 2S' ~tter, Clau1c dbl Ca.lhller6,&45-J2169. ••••••••••• • •••• ••••••• .. !M t7W -----iJ l <ntunun I tlr h1dtp 9940 ender. $2900. 80 ~ 95 0 ReltOred. 53&-8S40 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEUJPlH~T lMPlJgTS Maliiu ovlri&-20' comp. eep, late '74 CJ5, V8, wlilils a. trailer. $400. Many extras. llxl..5 Ure1>. 3100.., "--•-.,. 'l»telr.968--0008. very lo m1 , conside r ... ~ ..... , . ._. ....._ 51.,_1 uade._898-_52S2_. ___ , __ 64_2_·94_o_s __ D9dls 9070 '68 FORD Bronco. ···~·•••••••••••••••• Sacnf1ce ru. ls $1000. DOQl FOR RENT, for Calls.80·6247 bod up to 22'. $2S mo L-9560 Nw'pt Bch. 645-6680 NCaa _____________ ,; ..................... . Wls'9 to buy on shore '76 Oat.sun P .U. 3000 m 1, mot.rlne. B•lboa I sle MustSell wlttlfwitbout boat. Call 492-9739 col5ect btwn S·S, 1213) -----11494165 1 .67 Datsun P.U. Hard to find. Looks. rWl5 grut. SUPS tM M.I . Sl,150 839·~ • Call~-8616 ---- ----------'68-1 ton Chevy, 10' nat TOP s Paid FOK Used VW's Paid for or Hot Harbour V. W . . . . ' ' I ~Ir 1 bed, Sl~S 90 I 0 837 -8119:> :>42·6108 I lunl &_h ___ 1142 4435 ----···-rc················· '89 CHEVY ... T Pick~ • TOP IUYER Ski at For S•le, 1976 Long bed. Camper shell See us r1rst. & last I Top ~ Cruuer.1 Soulhwmd MZ-4145. dollar paid for 1mporh 20 .Jhnoneng, 997-42211. --COSTA MESA '72 Ford Couner Tr ; airlaffolt Must sell DA TSUM • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 640 8247 art 5PM 2!MS Harbor 81\ d ! Motorcycles/ -;;;---'570 ~ta M:--a __ S40 6410 Scoohra 9 I SO••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 ORAHGE COUMTY'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• '15 Ford Van, all xtr.u; Lo Harley Davidson Baskets rru T 0 P m trade for HIGHEST for sale. Call John , \ransp car or money 673-S744or67S.S462 556-6185afl 5 JO ___ _ , BMW '74 R90/6 Cull dr~s '71 VW Bus Nu ente. Jtd , + Jtras. Day 673 SJOO. tires, bed. tble SI K50 I evt .. ·l636 Laguna497·1037 ____ 1 t Motw-Hoftws. 5*/Rewt 916 \. .. ;: ................. . s BUYER OM IMPORTS FOR LEASE uns Oat.sun 2.tlO.l 2 + 2 Aulo mallc. air l'Ond . s t e r eo & m11¥• l~IHFM I Cort Fo1 LHSlftCJ 251!6 Ne"' port Bl , C M 645-3661 :\lo l , "n tt 1 n t•' t-r) •••• • ••••••• •••• •• ••••• fe;)J't'l't l"ll II} 4'1IUI l>Jk'<I -s L•t Wh l h t 1.97J~l e~·~ei.;!80 1 s 10,.,ncr l'l' ti75 !1~'6I 1 ~·Ile 1 eon w 1 e, l duor ut•am t·olurt•t.1 l11adt<d. $411 $0 P P t2H lll;C1 Sel! ~t ar> Codllloc 9915 ti73 6631 FOR LUSE ttol"'1ck ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·71 LTU. 4 dr, xlnl cond. Cort Fo1 Leosin9 l ·' r.:l·'t :..,,.,, .. t inn: H I'S p u At'. nu w I w. 645·3661 l\>UJK" l>t• \Ill•··., 7Sl 5003 1 2:580Not"'portHl .C \1 •1975Codlllacs• rud1als, S3450, PP 0 73 240:l JO 000 --:-.t•tlJJl u ... \ 1lh· ., auun · · · "11 • 220 ·-11 W " I'"' l L'.I I >11r.11111 • 'Iii\ LTO S roURham. Xlnt rond 2 dr. Fat· air, p /s, taken on de bl Pt'rf el.'t ' ••• •> r. ' Nu paint, Mit·hehns. a (', PVT f_"r~ ~ ~ t:o'll} ,'(. l·kd11;00J ., AM FM. whole::.ah.• book _075 1393, 1-:VES !).Ii, 7:MI In OranCJ« COUttty $4400 54ll·38il81SS7·1955 •73 4sosL. s iJ\otr i:rel·n .\II \\llh '"" rn11 ... , & w ' beige int Wid e XI }l'.111,11'111n \Oo.lffUOt) 1!164 Oabun Wugon. runs ,1 h 1 644 ..,~26 ' I ALLEN j(OOd $250 675 9755 aft " IC t' ins ..., -tP\t ' I , t ll•1'11111l111t· l'.111111.n· • 1 ·ss 250S. lll·an, ~oud 1 •• \I,\ '"' ,1<;\'1':1. 73 240Z Air . ma11~ c·<md ,iuto. IU:!.0011 rn1 495 6430 A M F M • c I '-' J 11 Pn l't> c.7:J 42!>1 • S4JIJO Slit uffor 644 W41, MG 9742, 67S·4007 ••••••• ••• •• •• ••• •• • •. • fiat 9725 I~ ~IGJ\ HoJ1hll'r \Inti •••••••••••••••••••••••' l·n~ bod) 1nt \\'1n· "'hi~ $11)5() 675 8~ I "CADILLAC" Quality & Price O•~r70 p b $850 675 180ll __ _ 1 ·73 LTD. pwr. i.teer , pwr brak11:., air, gd cood. $21~ 4~3-7241 72 Country Sqwre Wgn. all 11tr.1s . i2.000 m1. 'xlnt rond $1650. ~·0725 M4ateg 9952 ............•.......... 7:1 M u.~tan~ l'pe a /cond. p b p S, Vtn roor Xlnt t•ond $319!1. 644! 4_033_· __ Fia• Rolls Royce 9756 toChoosek-om 6b MUSTANG , ti <'YI. 6ef0f8 YoU buy seel Mlaalon Vlelo .•.......•...•......... •1 DEALER IN U.S.A. ROY " CARVER hu tht 11 •. ,1 1inu·' lhl• JUlo, V~ nice cond lolA< 't ll"l"' r .1h·, .1. tk SIS!J4J t>4S 1792or64og109 f't"nd.1 IJh' .,,.1 \ 1n·. '"'' NABERS CADILLAC 1 ~~~Jt• t 1.1rhe11 Ill\ d ·;4 Ghia \"6, auto. P~. l'H .• ur. SlSOO firm. 496 81177. ~ ROUS-ROYCE 2l4f 171hSI lrnpot1a lO~I \.., ~~ \ .\.IU !Hilu OCdaMObile 9955 COSTA M fSlo s••-•u• 0 1•1-• ...,:.,t :'-ll\Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• AvfKY Ea1t S 0 Fwy I 831·1740 7.,Fl l 1 !I , 73 Toron:ido,-1mmar 1..__ ________ __,, ClOStO WNOAYS I ~ · 1 "1 '" 11 1" 11111a~1"' Act·eplln.C orrers or tr:idc I l\t•1c" ~.11tcll•· 1111 'un IToyoto 97651 rocrtlunu l'I' !1:11 .!Hiii loreqwty 496 3165 -- ••• •• • • • ••••• • • • •• • • • • • ~· . , '70 Cull ass 442 enjit. :ur. l.att· '71 ToyulJ Cor1111.1 •·1 \ ''"l"' ifr \ 111' 31.,llOll I' s. P1 H. l'leun. m!il 4 dr J\tr. OJutn I.wt \\I '111 ! "Jilt l 'utl $lK~J I dnv1· lo uppreriale SIU!IS rad1u O\c•rtwad 1·an1 1~lll.ll•ld."'"''" ·-··u \l "u1r t•1s · I '" mcl(.l o • • • <'nl( :W(ll.IU 1111 I v"1wr Chevrolet 9920 I' 11. dean. rl'11able "" 7pm !"l.'17 11;r1;1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -11i.oOO m1 $:.!500 4~·1211 1 or I!» 721'.17 MISS THIS! GALORE! 1976 SURFERS FROM'4376 s124 .. LOOK AT THE EXTRAS" f,,11., cmf·fllf• d Hu\.>t fiMW1 1tu11h1J1(Jr1 f1•e loin«" G ont"1 ol 1u~" • h PER MO. J ,, .. '9 f"' -t,., •• ''""" l 1.1•f t"OC.• ... t f' I I& •h-.t 1b.t 2S' 1975 Open Koad, fully self -~on\. 11\ps 6 II Wlnter Rates &44..8JBS GMC Van. 1974 4 wheel dnve Terr a Van 350 eng. auto PS1 PB u1r l'ond t.:stm 1nleno1 + many l'Xlras ocr road eqwpped Must see to ap prrc1ate SI 3.000 Pvt pl)' 642-7113 & 494,:.9853 - BILL MAXEY TOYOTA ................ d ft1 1\\\ HUNflMC.tOH HACM '71 Curolla l°JH' 1.11 m1 I I ~1w1wr. d~·ck 1.111.. ~lut SI ,11.% 1r,1 ol r. 1117 1rn11 CONNELL CHEVROLET 7:J Old~ t'ulla~!I !->u pn•mt' .,__ ... _·--·_'_"_••_'_'_•_•_••_•_J_•l_·._u_•_• __ .,_ ... _, .. _,_°'_•_·_1_-_,_. __ ,. Jl<IWl'r !>ll't•ranw. pO\\'l'r hriakei.. fa t·tory air , i.lcn•o mull1pl\•1t. po!.1 tn1c11on t'U\lom 1ntenor. x1nt l't>nd. mu<;l s11cnf1cc :i.3.200 ~ 63.'>0 Hine for How! : 1, 11Th-.1~ .. lll« ... -r.- • lllH{ roa NOW-lhtS drt .... ~lrllt wardrobe 111ellldf\ p1•11Ctss d1eu. eo11 11ehl botero. lun<c, Plfth \llol'h c;.Vtltt. colllrtltt •II ruy 'Sew In ftl<llty bltndt l'rtnlecl P11t11n 9084 CM dr-111 s Sim l •. 6 3. Sitt 6 Cl'U I 1-Jllcb 4!).t..cll $tlld SI 00 tor tKll Pltltm Md lSf for -* 111tte111 tor fir$t<lus linNil, lllndlll\I. ...... ,...,. ....... ;;" ........... a ..., ........ ··-..... ~ ....... , ...... ,,.. .. ~ .....SS. DP, 1111 -..-snu---. .. '" '"'" litw 1J ftl I f1"9rt trttr $"' ... lo• . ""' ..,, ftll·Whlttr P'•lttr~ "1atlt-cU, tt•• 1 .. 1 .. ,., h P.1t111 tf "" clltkt. 15f ..,., + a.It .... "15 lllHty CnftJ SI 00 = '"*' .... "00 --'""c Ifft St .H I UUY J UNK CAllS 847 9637 !>40 Sl25 ----Wanted EMI)' so·~ Ford PU F:ur pn1·t-for J!O<id truck &J6 1117 art S I'M Sat Sunday a11 da) WANTED .•.•............••.•••. !'>\l.~:.-.ICtSEH\.ll'~: 2828 Harbor ll•d. l'O:o. l I\ \H;s \ 546-1200 Pinto 9957 .•..•.............•.... '76 PINTO $2976 $82 PER MO. "AMERICA'S ECONOMY CHAMP" S~:" ,,. ._,.. -' .. '" P", .. _, )•' '• , • ..., \" t t 1• ' w f' ' ,,I 111t II' f • ...... ,Of ...... ,. TrtK·k!. l-"ACTOll '1 Al TllOlllZ f':U Sal~• •SHvice Paris •LHsirtCJ .7l l'O I' 1111' l \ti 11 \1r11 I mul \\ 10'111 Ill~ I' I "~ •• m Im" tlJl l. '\('I l'I' :i.J.t~'lll !ti:! '-!:!:! '''"' S.·11 ' ymouth 9960 ........•••.•••••...... -------------------------------------.. Owl and Butterfly i,~13~ I Show olf pl"'h 1111 new way wtlh tn11 11111qut peir 811111\ blltttrfly lftd ow4 II.Mil 1n1 pllflttn -clever llosltn 11fts. blt~r Jelltn. QUICll c10CMI ol cue ytrn, ta1111dlt!O!I " 111 '"'" \hell. Patttm 7213. d1fteltOllS. ' ,, 00 10' tad\ patWll. Md 15, ... pettwl f• first .... .,.., -llllldll'I. '* It! .......... ,, .......... .. ...., .... ... 161. OMC....16&. ..,_ f-' NY IHI I . .,.. ..... ..._xi,. ....... ...... t.l()a( tllaft -" betoir• 100 cltsip~ ptlR 3 ffte pnnted 1n-\I~ N(W 1916 IC[[Ol(CllAH CATAlOG1 Hn rftrytfhnr 7Sc trtdttt wllll ~es SI.Oii CNCllft I w.-me $1.00 111ny nny b •lt1 s1.oo a1,,1e CltUtt \l,00 Sew .l-""11 IN' S 1.25 """'"''" .... \1 00 ,,.,,., trteltft '"~ ~, ,00 M1i,.,t• Crteiltt 1..-S t.00 l111tat11 Clldltt leet SI.Oil l1sta11t ...,._, .... St .00 tut.t Mont• .. ,k . Sl.00 C.•pltl• l lft .... s 1.00 C 11t1tt1 Al,.._s 114 SI.DO ,,.,. AflllH1 :12 SOt tf 1' Qlitts :I 50c ....... l tllt ...-:1 soc 15 l tlltl far Tt..., :) soc ...--.111 Jiffy •"1 50c Van) \"an Con v(•r-;1011' 4 Wht<el On\e Phont.' Mr GnCflth 540-2660 AaltcK. IMport.d ...•................... GarMral 9701 ················-"····· 120 W WJmcr JI ~1 JIO Sanla Ana S.'17 2132 J""'°" 9730 ......•••.....•..•..... '71 XKt:. Comt, ht·11 ut1ful rnn1I :11 111111 m1 ~Oii Call~7 ~i~ ·n 411 "'~11 ''"1 , ..... 1 17 l)IMJ n11 on 111.. 1 n.: li22.'>0. 642 Jh7:! .di :. '63 VW. Good trans St•'Jl.l Fl IOI '""' :.! 1.111 ·74 t.~TUS • last .one Ju.: 3 4 Marie I 4 tlr . !i "i'.. \ W H \l\Hl'I' c~nl\ .,..w made. 11 mo. new. 16,000 ~pd . 1101111 ,.00,1. nt'w m 1. \\I f' \1 .1 ,, ·•·t 11· m1.soldnew o_vers10.ooo. paint Sl:KKI l'1'5-ll>41122 4().1 1;.:11,1 .11:.1:.~1.1 11;1•1.1 sell for $74SO, ti4G 517 1 9707 Jettteft 9732 ·n ~11p1•r 11< .. ·tl" W •.nrl ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jm fn1 nu tin''· h1 ,tkt·' 7.! :\1111111• I .11111 l mmJt' •Ill .M~1h t:.X <"h••\ \ M,1 \\ J!O. h'•'t 1·uncll11111l $1111 & J>"'r t1•1h 7:.1 ;!11.! 1.•1 '111.1 l.101111 11 ··yl, It ll .111111 11 ,11" I'!'. 11lnt rru·1 h l uu11 \ ,., \ 'h·lft\ ~1101 111111 I'll llilll .1ft f, ATLAS Chrysler /Plymouth <>ix·n Daily & Sun. 'Lil 10 l':i.t ~~I\ arbor BIHi , cc ... tJ M l'b;J 546-1934 ;;: 1Ju1>lcr. 340 V 8. R DC'· Chrysler 9925 11111 t-.1m, h1•aders. aulo, ••••••••••••••••••••••• J m lrn $2,24.Kl 559·4026 "' '''"l'"rl nu tar(·~ • -11.11i.:ht ' 11i .. 1n, xlnt Pontiac 9965 nuld ~,_-, ti I..! 'IH7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Jens l•n 1n11•rro•11t or II ...., ...,. " ' ''·' · ·n Co~t ....•.•..... .. •. .•... .. I .... , ·1c..i1 •11 I I • 11 1 ... '7S Fox 2 dr 12,000 m1 · . , .. ~ 9927 :o,•1 l'onli:11: Honnev111e, \ H power ~l1•cr1n~. pwr hr.ik'''• HJ ,000 Ori 1: rntl'''· Sopl•r C'IPan 1·111.:1nc/ rnl«rror. $500 t'.11\ IA!°> J:..'00 Jfl 6. AM ·.-·M. s led bt>lttd 1.971· i5.ooo mi $1• •. t:l!i li1 \\\ ! ·'"'"''' il 111.11 tires. tlnll"d 11la ss S1t\I' 675 :r7l5 I 1•111: It lr.111• "1•· • • p1 SIOOO + Xlnl cond Set' to KCIM'IMINI Ghio 9735! 1" 14 '''"Ill' >1 '·'11 "' 1 a ppr &12T9l8R ••••• • •••• • • • • • •• • • • •• • t.i • \M lt. Allstilt-Heat.y 9709 fil K.irm.inn (;t11.1. run'"i'l \ w 1 .imi><•r """ 1.11 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11rl'J\ lt.1rl1•\ 1 .irh ho1h int ,1111 1111 ., 101 m1 ltl.• 66 Mooey savm.r Spnte woocl r o" d • S1,011 I nu <11111' 1.1k" ""'' I" Good runn1n1t & 11ood 646 l5K7 pm 111"'11' Kli 11;.1 loolung 1n & out !168 0958 Merida 97 3f 1;; \. \\ :-..111,,1 ("11.11 i.. 1 .... 1 IMW 97\2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 r,1n~pu11.ttlnu '"'" ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·73 Munl;, u':t "'.•.: "" ,,.,., r. •t \ltt·• ............•.•••••••.• , I I 101111•1 I, ( \l11l 111n1J "l••ll\ \111' .... ~ tlll'~ I 1111' 'IK ~I to.II l'l 111 ····················•········•················ :1111 f m ,, ut<1 lu 1111 ' s1:J!>l1 Al 11 .. ~, 1.11.1J11Z>C I ·~·'\' I ""''' t.4..! 1111~1 . I• I )11N1 1.rk•' .• Su, ... , ~tlll ( .11 ,,,, '>_,j M«-cedu lert• 9740 SADDLEBACK BMW SlOi'• & ZOOZ Avtomatfcs HERE MOW IESTCOLOR SEUCTIOMIM THE SOUTHLAND SADDLHACK IMW 131·2040 495.4949 HAL GREENE BMW & Soi It!!' & service •\..A. Ana's Hewnt DHlef'!" 7707 Firestone Blvd Downey 1213 19Z7 fi63S 3M1les Wn t oC605 CREVIER &I ST A HOAOWAY ,,.,.,,. ,.,.,. 835·3171 114( Ul.flfU Tt O'IMIOO lllJICHfNl T3 BMW 3 OCS. leather AM1FM & tape, 26.000 m1. lmmac. 7~2·1230. 631-3171 '74, 2002 AM 1FM, 11ir. 4 spd. roc:o malS ~hke o( fer 544 ~23 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fif, \ \\ ltl '\. v. tu ti \I••' FOR LUSE 1 "''" h.11111 " I •rnil \'• oll 1 •n4 :\11•rrNh•-. 4'10 lo.~. 1 '11 ~).l 1 Joli I ~1pl'r l·l\-;1n ' "·" .1111111 Vofvo 9772 1•xtt .1'< (l~l!ILDY I l \ti \1"1J111111'' Cort Fo1 ha•lnq ~. ~ .. 11; purl Ill , C ~I 645-l66l I.ten r• fwy er 6HiN aYOLVO •H IKE IMPORTS ·73 Ml'rr1•1ll•s l\4.'111 2XOS~: 1 ~ Lou1f•«I :\I nl 1 omJ S7~ r,12 10.13 19'6HAllOI 64'-tlOJ COSTA MISA I ~ M1'7. 1011 ~I. :\Int rnn l d1t10n l'nr 'alt• to ,c ~!1•id '63 Vol\.n Xlnt runn1nl.' homl' (146 14 ti Jf\ ~pm t·onc1 r.!'141 l J\l Jll cr I Sat Sundav .all d.1 ) I ~ ~ f:rl' TAR GAZER""~ I .. • I " , I .. ---T""---J ' ,."'~'•'" )'1_ ,..,_.. o.,.t, A~••,,_ • ~ t ""l ": ,-' V A t•"fl ""• t.er tlti• ''"'' • .,\\ :••,' T t~vrhc~'tt(,,,.-t ,.,._~~. • 41 ,_.\I 1ro1t • •rt t ptr :t .. J'•' ,.J t ,_,...c, t '•"'"'' ;S. ...~ ,. \.-.: ., .. ,. 7 A l) \l 1\ ... r~t ..... ,, l:", ' llif • •,l) JI ¥'.' -:· t0 'J I C.•t<•• • 'r\V I •1•JC htth' .,,... .. . -. ·-. ...._ .. ,.. .. "' .. .. ., .... ~ ... . .. ... . • n~ 1•· ,, ... .-,;, S.G•TT,_t \.l •f"\• ".I,• '" ,, [ ;4 4 ,,. ..... )• "• .. (•"~Ot• e1 11 , , .. ~-·· ''" .... , \ t I) I• .... ,.,. ~ . ., ....... . ... ' . .. . . ,. -. .... • ,.,~.1 ..... t ., '~•'') ~ AOV•••U$ .. " :~ • ''J ,,, If ..,. • >~~:=n ·.- (Owned by drivers particular enough lo trade tor a Mercedea Bent) "75 vw BEETLE DELUXE ;I 1Joor low rr1111,s $349!> (GO~CWO) '74 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO Autri lrans nrr cond1lion1no. oower sl&ftrrl'IO. bf>aut1lul qrl'Pn with swivol buckel seals a oon'°I". '4 19!> 16~8KKEI "71 FIAT SPYDER CONVERTIBLE 4 "loeed 111d10 haoter one OWfl"' red with t>ldck vinyl 1nterror s 189~ ( 160EKW) '75 MERCEDES BENZ 450SL COUPE ROADSTER Auto trans factory air cdhc::t1t1on1ng POWer st1>enno radio. heale< beaultful red with matching int erior less lh&n 7000 adual m11es. Siu 2',0 (~7NDSI '76 --41~- GRANADA ~ISJY, $3976 s11 0 ~~. .. LOADED WITH LUXURY FEATURES" l l l(J ]~J , .. , ., f .. .ii._,,• l m>· 1·• ,. \ f"I "'vf 1•1 CJ..I.,,,,. f t"'•••\H9Y •l • 1tV'1 11 ,,l .,.,.,..,0, .. ,1..,,_,,, '76 . ./~~. MUSTANG ~ $3676 s103 =6. ''THE SPORTY NEW ADDITION" 'IQJ'°)I 11•· ~ I e f .~I•• 'ti.lb r t & fw.., .•• ....,,.._.... \\t ft, "I <1 • •"I ·~ •1.,., ... r '>'-'' , ..... ,.. 'AVERAGE DELIVERY TIME -5 WEEKS 7 I t • , 1 1 Huntington Beach Fo1•••tiiln Valley • EDITION Afteraooa N.Y.Stoeks VOL. 69, NO.•, 3 SECTIONS, .c4 PAGES OflANGE COUNTY, CAUFQANIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1976 TEN CENTS ·$tate Begins .Probe of ·oc Jail ·neat~ 1 BJKATMYCLA.NCY death ot Don Ne1'on, •.over to ••ordered b7 Deslut;yAUianey· ud caadldate In llllt •llriu'• Griffeth aaid Nr. Neboo wu lf Mr. Nelson was conscloul'\ • .. .. .....,,....... an attorney c•aeral'• ta· Gtmral Dan KNm• ol the Su O~aD View Sebool Dlstrfcl examlnad by a re~ nunci -'t~hefelleach time. vesti&atoron Friday. Dte1ootnee, be nJd. tnlltMei.dlooa, w•llel"Vinl the on duty, then seemed to be fine He aald jail ofllclals did try to• Tia• California Attorney Nellon died Feb. 2 at Ora.ftp Kremer could not be reached flnt weekettd or nvo on a andwureluf1ledtohisceU. help Mr. Nelson andprobabtydid' o..nJ•s office bu Mcwi an in· County Medical Ceot.er ~ iY· for comment today but ao ll· clrunkftl drivlD• com'idJon. He suffered anot.Mr sel1ure the best they could IOI' him. ; Qlalr1 leto tbe death or a lftl lD a coma there (or a week torney for llr. Nellon'• widow, Griffeth aald today the about 4:15 p.m. ln the cell and Mrs. Nelson's attorney has 1 fllllt.lnlmter man wbo may have followlni aursery for a skull Bo~~t aald Jut weelr he would aberitrt tovest.i1at.m l'ftealed ... a&ain taken to lbe medical tlatmed Jail officials did UtUe to · 111111...Sfatalbeadinjurieswhile fracture. dkootntbeattomeysenttataad llr. Ntllon nnt became Ul dur· office, then was transported w aid Mr. Nelson, who reportedly ~1aweekendjailterm. Mik• Serio, senior lnvest.11ator Diat.rict Attorney Ce.c:U Hicti-to iq lunch in jall on Jan. 2:5. He OCMC about 8:1S p.m., Griffeth was vomiting and quite ill Ca,&.. Robert Griffeth ol the for the attorney een.eral in investisate. aald be sulf•red ''•Mill.IN of one coatioued. throufhout the day Sunday. 0r_,e County Sberlfra affice Orance County, aald tbe inquiry Mr. Nelson,• bartender at tbe type or anot.ber and feU and bil He explained he does not yet Gri fetb uld bis report ln· said be tumed bis nport CID the is "vu, Uml&.ed at this point." It Karlin Ion lD Hu.ntiqton Beacb bia beadoe the coaCR(e." know what caused the seilures or <See PROBE, Paget\%) ' 2 Teens Die in Huntington Crash Crash of Plane • .. Investigated Officials of the National Trauportation and Safety Board uid today it may take six weeks to complete a report about a Fri· day ftllbl plane crub which killed two Fountain Valley t Finklea Suspect On Trial BYTOlll8AIU.EY _"_...., ........ Aented ~iltt:r Cbl1es Dennis Be&rJ weat GD trial to&lay ill tbt aama courtroom where •I"'>' ,... C(MBlbfDded bit tlder brother fet the death penalty for l be HaJJoween ni1bt sla)'in1 ol huaoc' student Stephen "Mike" Flnk.lea ol Fountain Valley. Bean, 12. like hls brother, Hugh Daniel Bean. 24, faces the death penalty for his alle1ed role in the ktllln& or Finklea, 19, oa Oct. 31, 1974. Tbe Orange County Superior Court jury in the elder Bean's trial voted for the death penalty Jut Fr'lday after deliberatin& for more than four days. Judge WUUam Murray will sentence blm Marcb4. Lawyers be11n ar(Uing pre· trial motions today while plans were made fo• the start of jury selection poHlbly later today ._ Wednesday. .I · The defendant waa arTested with his brother in Sanla Ana 24 hours alter Finklea, a gifted stu· dent and the caplain of the Oranae Coast College wrestling team. was shot to death while he wotked aa a clerk in an all night Fountain Valley market. It waa sutceaafully alleged in the elder Bean'• trial that FlnJde• wH shot In the mouth u he confronted t.he two brothers at tbe~nter. Jt wu teatirled that Finklea wu shot flve more times u he ran ao the rear of the store. Pollet' found him lylna race down In a pool of blood. Motk>nl beln1 araued today ln· clcad-a motion for auppreu&on d evklenc• and • mot.kin for dls· mlllal of the cbaraes. Coa8t Weather Sunny wJtb variable htlhe clouds Wednesday, Hf tbs lo the 808 at the betcbes and slightly warmetlnl1nd areu.1.o'tt'S co.Us tat in the 40s. IN81DE TOD~ Y Porfft.tl' ftlftdful apanc. fbla abotd tM "birds and the flea" .on IH.otng tlw little a.di M M l#ft fWd GI to _,,. bobN• r~ do corn. fro& SH PO(lf A 1. i.•ex .. . , an .. ~ .,., .... All ... .. A4 tOUples and orphaned their 12 children. Guy Moshier, air safely in vesUgator, said today it appears the plane became caught in a . violent hall, sle't and snow storm, then plunged straight • down into the ground. Victims of the crash, 40 miles northwest of Prescott, Ariz . were Matthew P . Leonard, 47, the pilot; bis wife, Martha. 44: Roy N. Torr. 47, and his wife, Joan, 46. They were all en route to a Biblical Pentecostal Marriage Retreat ln New Me,dco. Moshier said the Casna 172 wu equipped with a radio, and be will be cbeckina during the next few clays to see If Mr. J,.eonard attempted to make l1ld&o contact. He aaJd the craft wu followlng the route of a flight plan toward Santa Fe., N.M. Moshier said the fli&bt plan called for a refueling stop at ~eacott. He said it will be bard to de· termlne exactly what caused the plane's straight plun1e into the muddy mesa on the Yolo Ranch Friday night. But be .said it could be that Mr. Leonard was trying to slow lbe plane down in turbulence, then lost hls speed and put the nose in a dive to re&ain air .sPffd. Then as the plane plunged through tbe cloud cover, about 200 feet off the ground, the pilot didn't have sufficient time to level the craft, M oshJer sajd, He explained there appeared to have been no attempt to pull the (Sff CRASH,~) 'HEALTH CARE' USIED TODAY A special 20·paee revlew of health facllltles and services available to Orange Coast resi· dents Is lnch.aded in today's Daily Pilot. This special section ronlalns Information on area hospitals, specialised care and medical education alona with stories and plcturn on supporting medical lndustriea and services. Look for "Orange County Health Care" in today's Dally PllOl. SCENE FROM OSCAR NOMINE£ 'CUCKOO'S NEST' LoutH Aetchet. Jlldc NlcholHn Both Nomlneted 'Cuckoo's Nest' Tops -Oscar list LOS ANGELES <AP> -"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," the saga of one man's fight agairult the system in an insane asylum, scored lop honors ln the 48th Academy Award nomina· tions today. The United Artists film drew nine nominations, including those for best picture, Jack Nicholson as best actor, Louise Fletcher as best actress, Brad Dourtr for supporting actor and Milos Forman for best director. "Barry Lyndon" plac ed second with seven nominations and ''Dog Day Afternoon" was third with six. The three rilms were nominal· ed for best picture, aJong with "Jaws" and ''Nashville." Jn the best actor category. Nicholson faces competition from Walter Matthau ln "The Sunshine Boys ;'• Al Pacino, "Dog Day Afternoon;" Max· lmlUan Schell. "The Man ln the Glass Booth," and James Whit· more, "Give 'Em Hell, Harry!" Miss F1etcher's opponents as best actreaa are Isabelle Adjani, "The Story or Adele H.:" Ann· Mararet, "Tommy;" Glenda Jackson. "Hedda," and Carol Kane, "Heater Street." George Burns, whom most cnUct con1idered Matthau'1 co- star ln "The Sunshine Boys," wa.s nominated in the supporting actor category. Besides Dourif, he faces Burgess Meredith of ''The Day of the Locust;" Chris Saradon, "Dog Day Afternoon," and J ack Warden, "Shampoo." The supporting actress· ~ce features two from "Nashville," Ronee Blakley and comedienne Uly Tomlin. Also nominated: Lee Grant, "Shampoo;" Sylvia Miles, "Farewell, My Lovely," and Brenda Vaccaro, "Once Is Not Enough." . Academy voters will now view the nominated films and make their final choices, which will be announced to a television au· dience on Monday, March 29, in ceremonies at the Los Angeles Music Center. <See OSCARS, Page A%) Rezoning Pondered By Valley Council The Fountain Valley City CouncU will hold a public hearing at 8 o'clock tonight on the proposed rezoning of 2.44 acres of land from commercial to slngle·famlly residential. City officials said the land is on the aoulh side of Ulac Avenue, east of Harbor Boulevard. Group Fights HB Taxes Petition Drive Ainu at Charter Amendment Members of the Committee Atalnst New Taxes <CANT> were rountlhg up sipatures to- day ln lbeir bid to put a charter •meidment before tbe voters on April 13. The sroop mounted a citywide petition drive over the weekend and llooday in Hunttnaton Beach wt\b t.M coal of 1at.berin1 t ,000 •lsnaturn of reslatered votn'I. Tbe committee ls trying to mate ll more difficult for lbe Ci· ty Council to raise taxes by re· quhins a three fourths majority oa all tu issues. Montana Schultz, an attorney spe~adln& the drive, says ii the petJUon campalg:n appe.rs head.in& for 1ucce:ss he may ask the city council tonllht to pul It on lbe ballot. Councilman Don Shipley took the hardHl line agalnsf the pro- ~ amendment wben It came before the cfty council last Moo· day. ''This would straitjacket the council. It. would confuse tfte election Hd l' m not even run· nio1." be satd. City Attorney Don Bonfa gave the opinion that the three-fourths provision would actually require slx of the seven council votes on tu i9'111Jel. "Why don't you tell t.be people what three.fourths really means'?" CouncUman Al Coen asked ShJrley Com mom who s>n· sented the propo11 l. Coen and Henry Dub both jot- lntlY said tbey would support the amendment if it meant the city touncll could rtlnsUtute the pro- perty transfer tu on a three 'tourlhs vote. (The transfer tax waa defeated tut year in citywide voting afUr being put into effect by the city c:.ouncU.) Mrs. Commons said the amendment was not intended to tie council bands. "We just want you to look more closely befe>tt you spend," she said . Councilman Ted Bartlett cut the only vole for pulling the amendment on tbe ballot. Mayor Norma Olbba was away at a mayors' workshop in Albuquer· que. N.M., and Councilman JetTJ Matney wu recoverin& from ~eat surgery. Car Hits Parked Vehicle By ABTHVR R. VINSEL OI .. o.ttr Pl ... SUH Paul Kanan! Broad, the ooly child of Costa Men policeman Rolcoe Broad, and his airtrriend were killed in Huntington Beach early today when bis small foreign car crashed into the rear of a parked van. The crash occurred on a lonely stretch of Pacific Coast Highway one.half mile east of Warner Avenue along Bolsa C1llca Stale Beach. Broad, 18, who lived at tbe famlly home, was pronounced dead al the scene. His passenger, Deborah Demont, 19, of 12982 Loretta Lane, Santa Ana, suc· cumbed from multiple lnjurtes shortly alter 6 a.m. at Hunt· 1.nrtoalnlercommunityffospltal. the victims had to be extricat· ed from tbe man1led wrecta,e of their small sedan wtaicb burled the van it struck SO feet onto the beach, tnjurint lla twooccupanta. Raymond W. Miller, 26, or Anaheim, and Diana callac, 20, of 1462 Lonsford Circle, Hunt· tnefon Beach, were asleep in the van and sU1tained only minor in· juries, poUce said. They were treated and re· leased al Pacifica Hospital following the collision first re· ported al 12: lS a.m., by a motorist wbo called from a nearby telephone. Investigators today said lbey are probing the cause of the tragic crub Involving Broad's compact car and the van, which they say was legally parked al the roadalde. Police Lt. Gary Davis, night shift watch commander. aaid the Broad auto was travellng at an estimated SO to SS miles per hour when ll crashed into the van. Huntington Beach Fire Depart· ment paramedics administered aid at the scene as firemen worked lo extricate the }'oung couple, but their efforts were futile. The double tragedy shattered the close·knlt family of Costa Mesa Police Officer Roscoe Broad and stunned the police de· partment he has served slnce 1961. <See Z KILLED, Page A%) KIUEO IN ACCIDENT Peul Broad, 18 Hundreth Try For Seat At Hearst Trial SAN FRANCISCO <U PI) The lrial of Patricia Hearst was a tourist attraction f'lr some or the hundreds waiting ln line to· day for seats In the court where the newspaper heiress was lo tell of her life underground with the Symbionese Liberation Army. First in line was a young man who declined to give his name and who said he had been plan· ning to come to the trial for some time. "But 1 just procrastinated," hci said. "Then I dedded J would come today. It just happened that I ended up with this day." He said he got in line about 8:30 p.m. Monday and spent lhepighl waiting outs ide the Fei:teral Building. Bob Bardi and two friends were next in line. They had come to California from Detroit, they said, "to see the West." Monday night, they left their gear at a small restaurant near the Federal Building and came down to see lhe trial. "It was one of the things """ wanted to do," Burdi said. "The <See P/\TTY, Page A2) --~~--~------~--~--~* * * l1ae Dall Pli.t .,aata. •• YOUR VIEW ON PATTY HEARST GUILT: I t.Nnk Patty Helm .•• Q Wlll be found oullty of robbery charoes aoaln1t her O Wiii be found Innocent n Hung jury or other COMPLICITY: I thl'* htty H .. rst .•• Q Went wllllngly with htr SL.A captors o went unwllllnoly but was brainwashed o went against her will end wes kept .;ialnst her will INTER EST: I follow tM Patty H•rst UH ••• O Clos.ly, read most stories abOut It O Pretty closely Q Seldom O Notat •II COVERAGE: I tl'llnk tN prns .•• O Is owrplaylng tt. Hearst case O Is covering It •bout right O Is underplaylnQ the story Mall to the ~,.. betow or droe> by any of the Dally Piiot of fie.es llsted on Page 2. An.ch env comments on the Patty Hearst ~se If wish. E41tot Diiiy Piiot Box tMI Cotta Meta, CA t'2'2i SlgUtwt lftd Add,..1 Of wou wt"') •·•···•··••···•••·•·······••···•••••··••···•·•······•····•·····•••·· 4'Z DAILY PILOT H/F Proposed Regbtratlea . . WASHINGTON <UPI) -Tbt Uouae Jud1c1ary Comm1lt.e to- day defeated two national hand1uo re1lstrauon p~ala ~one that would have required the, stales to enact their own plans within two years and another that would have created a nallonal registration program. . The committee action coin· Sal Mineo Last Rites Held in NY From Wire ~Ices MAMARONECK. N.Y. -Sal Mmeo, the actor.singer who rose lo rilm stardom playin~ the role of a juvenile delinquent. was buried today in Valhalla, N.Y .. near the town where he spent his youth. Father Gerard DjSenso pre- sided at a packed funeral Mass at the SOO·seal Holy Trinity Church, in Mamaroneck. where Mineo lived for some time after leaving his childhood bom e in the Bronx. "Our eburch was practically Cull,'' one of the priest's as.sis tan ls said ... The family is not large, but they have many well-wishers and friends." He said DiSenso's sermon touched on Mineo's violent death. ., he J7-year-old actor was stabbed to death Thursday in the garage of his Hollywood apart· ment building. ·'The main Idea was that one or the facts of death is the painful part of parting, but according to the beliefs or Christtan faith the parting is just for a temporary period. The coming together and the living together would be eternal." After the service, Mineo was buried at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Valhalla. Mrs. Grace O'Neill, speaking for the O"Nelll Funeral Home, stressed that services for Mineo were "very. very private. The family did not want any fan· lore." Mineo is survived by his mother. Josephine, und a brother, Michael. Meanwhile. the detective in- vestigating the death says the ac· tor's popularity 1s making his job more dltflcull ··1·\'e not ruled out anything at this point CX<.'epl swclde." Sgt. Ed Pia, a sheriff's homicide in- vestigator said Monday. '"The only d1fft<.'ult part of it is where to go next -he wai. a very popular man." Investigators say they are 1-tymled about the motive for Lhe violent killing Pia said that :JS rar as in· vest1gators know, Mineo had no serious enemies. lie said the in vesligation was progressing "with 360·degree vision," and that drugs or a love tnangle, motives mentioned in news accounts, were only two of many possibilities. Robbery apparently was not the motive. investigators said, hecaus<> Mlnf'o0s wullct and 1ewl'lry had not hl•en taken Rut they speculated that a pot('ntial robber may huve panicked and ron after the stabbing Pony League Slated A hoys' Pon)' flaschnll Lea1tue for 13 und 14 y<·ur olds LS now ht•1n.: or1111niud in Fountain \'alll'}' ThM<' lnt<'N'llled in pla,\ m.i or t"oarhini.: !ihould t·ontart Gl'nl' liranl, 003 6173, hy Feb 2.'> ORANGE COAST H I '""'" , .... "',,.. < .. u 0.11, ,... .... tn *'"• l'I " 11-.., I '"""'f ,,_ ht tllt\ I'• I ''• I'll '""·i~t h• ,._., f,t_,,l)t ("• t t vf•I "'"'' f "UW+, ..... , ... , .. , ifl"'if•'''"'' ,,,, '""''~ ~ ... ,,,, ..... , .,., ~, t ••• ,, ~~=/~ !•.-n.~t~.·, ~·.·~ ~" :.· •. ~~ '.':.";..,t;~~ """'" ._. .. ,.., l ·~ ,. .. t' '' fll ,.-•If"''" I A "~h ,.,., ... ,,.'1t 1 ... t1 "'•I •h,.~1•\¥1.Q,. .... , t•. ,.. ~ •• '.,t t '"' , .... ,. ...... )~ Y'ilof ft._, ,. ••I l I• "'I'• • I •'tlol'"'•• ~I\ Rut)(•r t N W('l'd • • • \to"'' "'"" •"\tMIV..- . ... , .. ThOm.n A Murptii,... ~ 0 •• , ...... Ch.ir •r~ H LOO~ Ro<"-'rd p Nall "' ,.,. ~-, ,. ( .... Robt•rl Rarkrr Vw•tl 4.~h• "" t-tuntlnqton 8e•d10tflce , .. \ ............. .. ,,,...,."'O•••n ro IM·1"""•1'M Otho~ l,A.O~f\•A•f\ 1t .. t.;.,,.,.,..,..,,~ ... f c "'"'• ..,...w nr "\• ,, '"'• ,,.,.... ~~ .. t ti V•ll-fY 't\NI t.• '•1 ,.._ etW.D-itH- Tei.MM t714) ... ~t ctasMffld Advertfstlnt 64H'71 rrorn "*°''~ Or•~q• re""•• (il"'"'\f""'...._ SI0·1220 , • .,,...,_. '"' (W~ Cn4'\t ~1-.,... (IWT' ,,_"'',,..,,..,.,.,.,,tr••'\ .u._,,,,,..lof'l't,,.,fl'~ ""•"'' ,,,. •fl••'""·~~t\ ,.,. ,., rt•~~· , •• ,.60VC •If •Hf'l~l.lt •& or11al .... '"'"''"" t f (CliP"fr•Of't4~•• "'9<0ftd t I•\\ O•'"O• P••d At CG\•• .._.,,. ,,.,...,..,..,. ~ ''"'"'~ ,.., ,.,,,,., '' n ,....,. ~~~~~~"' ltl"'*"Wy "'-.,,._..,WWI,..,._ cide.d with the release or a ff'deraJ study whlcb 11howed that m 4$ pettent o( street crimes in· volvlng gunJS , '"Saturday night spettals" were ut~ lar1ely bt'cau.se they arc chea~ and easy to conceul. The committee killed. 16 toll, .an amendment that would have established a· national handgun registration program within the Trt'aJSury Oepartmt'nt's firearms division. The panel. working on a bill to toughen existing handgun control Jaws. also defeated, 18 lo 13. an amendment which would have required the states to enact lbe1r own gun registration laws by 1977 The committee last week O\'er· wbelmangly defeated amend· menlS wtucb would have banned the manufacture, sale. import&· tion. or ownership or bandgwis. The federal gun registration. amendment was offered by Rep. Robert Drinan, (D.Mass.), and Don Edwards, (O.(.:aJ1f. /. The proposal lo require •be states to enact their own plam - with the cost to be reimbursed by the federal government -was orfered by Rep Robert McClory, <R·Ill. ). The study. by the Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms, tr a red 7 ,815 handguns seized by pohce in 16 cities during in· tervals over 32 months. The cities included in the study were New•York; Boston; AUau· ta , Detroit; Charlotte. N.C : Dallas; Denver : Kansas City. Los Angeles: Louisville; M1am1 and Dade County; Minne4po~. St. Paul ; New Orl~a . Philadelphia, Oakland and Se - Ue. F,._PogeAl PATTY ••• fact that she is going to be on the witness stand had nothing to do with it. We would have come anyway." Mary Domito and a friend NEIGHBOR-PATTY 'NICEST I EVER MEr, AS from Moraga were next in line - lt'lling to the Federal Bullding about 10:30 p.rn . Monday. All six of the young people at the bead or the line were un· dismayed by the weather. "Maybe there was a little mist -a little drizzle, but it was nothinJ." one said. Guards said it was by far the largest crowd to turn out for the trial since it began Jan 26. ll obviously would have been largt'r except that others turned away when they arrived and saw the size of the Line wailing for about 100 s eats available to the pubhc. Fro..PageAJ OSCARS. • • Although nominated for best picture, "Jaws" was given only four nominations and none for dlre<.'tion. The director nominee.oa are Federico Fellini, "Amarcord"; Stanley Kubrick, "Barry Lyndon"; Sidney Lum el, ''Dog Day Afternoon" ; Robert Altman. ''Nushvllle," and Forman for "Cuckoo's NC3t." Pilot Averts Air Tragedy DENVF.R !UPI > -Capt Rill Eaton saw the nastung "amini: lights •nd heard the blast of th£> r1re alar111 just in Ume to pull out of h1~ taken(( pattern and ~crcerh lo a slOJl on runway la ut ~toplcton International Airport Two mlnutu later. f':aton would huve been flying over tlw Color ado Ro<' k 1es, headed for Chicago in a flaming Doemf( i27 "'1th 112 passt>nger~ on board Instead, he wns slandinl( on lhl' runway Monday night with fellow crew members and passengers watching firemen pul out a minor fire in one oC his plane's two engines. There were three minor injuries . Bolsa Chica Group Meets on Thursday AmtlOS de Bolsa C'h1ca. a group advocatin& preservation or tbe Bolsa Chica marshlands. will mttt at 8 p. m . Thursday in Room fl-8 of the Huntington Beach Civic Center. 2000 Mala St. The public is invited. Officials or lhe organization wd the group Is now recom mendlntt public atquisillon and plannin~ to rest.ore the marsh lo 1t.s natural stale. The group includes homeowners. concerned tax- payers and coftservat.iooiats, they said. (;advert Crumples Corru~ated steel work supporting an earth- work bridge for the extension of Turtle Rock Drive in Irvine crumpled under the weight o! earthmoving equipment Monday with this result. Driver of tractor wasn't hurt, however Collapse' of the bnd;;:c> near Jordan A venUl' ;rnd l 'nH·c·rsit \' Dri \'C is ex- pected lo cause a delay of sc\''cral weeks m the completion uf the projl•ct Bridge was scheduled for paving next week E',....PGffeAI PROBE ••• dicates Mr. Nelson was shaking but there was no report of vomil- mg. OHicials at OCMC did not dis- cover Mr Nelson's akull fracture until Jan. 26 At first. doctors thou&ht he was suffering de- lmum tremens and did not find the fracture until he failed to respond lo treatment, hospital of-ficials said. Mn. Nelson did not locate her husband until Jan. 27 after re· peated calls to the jail and OCMC, she said. Hospital ofriclals aaid they erred In not contacting the fami- ly, while Griffeth said sheriff's official! tried to call Mrs. Nelson Jan. 25 but were unsuccessful. Jury Picking UnOOrWay For Vallerga Jury selection began today in the Kern <.:ounty Superior Court trial of former Oranie County assessor Jack Vallerga. Offtrials at the Bakersfield courthouse which was selected as the site of VaJlerga's conspiracy trial when he successfully demanded a change of venue from Orange County County said Judge P.R. Borton was assigned to the case this morning. Orange County Deputy District Attorney William Evans Is prosecuting conspiracy charges contamed in a grand jury Indictment. Vallerga. 54, is being defended by Santa Ana attorney John Cahill. Evans predic-tcd ~fort' he left for Bakersfield Monday that the trial of the former assessor would lake at least three w~ks the length of a lnal in Ventura County last Au~ust that led to \'all<>q?a ·s ronv1cl ion on multiple cnm1nal c harges. Valler«a was fined $1.000, rt'movt'rl from county ornce and Metered to 1cr\•e a 60-day jail lt>rm aftrr that conviction. Th(' fine and Jail term h11111• bttn stayed pending a ruUng on his appt>ul At l.'lsue In the Bakersnetd trial 111 the allegalJon that Vallerga wu:1 one or a rwmber or employes in lhe essesaor's omce who perm1tlttd county manpower, mott>nals and time to be used <lurinl! former county USM'Ssor Andr(IW ll111i.huw's succes1ful Ind for C'oni?re~s • Bandit Gets $200 at Shop In Seal Beach College District's Boundaries Aired A public bearrng will be con ducted In Costa Mesa Wednesday evening to consider new trustee areas for the Coast Community College District. wh1ch opernte; Orange Coast and Golden We:.l colleges The reaJlgnment 1s reqwred &s a result or the annexallon by the> district of about 60 percent or the· territory of the Garden Grove HimhawAsks Semencing Postponement Convicted Congresllman l\n drew Hinshaw's sentencing wa-. delayed for one week today wh<'n the Newport ~ac h Repubhran·~ lawyer explained that he has not bad sufficient tame to prepare h.-. motion for a new trial. Orange County Supcnor Court Judge Robert P Kn~land si•t Feb. 24 as the date he will St!n tence Hinshaw lo what could bt· one to 14 years in state pnson on lhe bribery conv1cl1on 1( he de· nies attorney Mars hall Morgan ·s motion. Morgan explained in court to day that be has beffi distraclt>d from preparation of h1s mol1u11 by the serious illness of his 13 year·old aon who re<'enlly un. derwent an operotion for re- moval of a tumor lhal proved lo ~benign. Blue is Bappg l n1fled School Oistm1 The· heann~ before the OranJ.'(c Count~ Comm1tteeonSehool Di.-. tnrt Organ1iation 1s :.rheduled for 7 30 p m in the c•ollege das- lnct board room at 1370 Adams Ave Thl' change will arfect all fl\'e • currt'nl tru1'tee a reas in the rot· lege district Exec ut1,·e Vice Chancellor Correltan J Thompson said lo· day that the college district will propose that all five trustee areas be realigned on a popula· tion basis f'rOMP~AJ , CRASH •.. plane out or the dive, noting a Juniper tree right behind the crash s1lc hud only one limb lorn off lie s:ud all four passengers died immcd1ately on impact Moshier said his final report mu'>l be channeled through Wash1ngton. D C before 1l can ~ rel('ascd Mr Leonard "as a trarftc and safrtv inslrurtor at Fountain Valley lligh School and a former track coach Jlis wife was a home tutor with the Fountain Valley (elcmenlary J School Dtslric:l. /\ ros arv for Mr and Mrs . Lt•onard will be recited at 6:45 JI m Wednesday and funeral mass will be held at 9:30 a.m. Thursday, both :it Smnls Simon and .Jude Church in Huntington Bt>ar h Banker Foils Robber NEW YORK (AP> -A man who threattn~ to blow up a bank omce and later told police he sot the idea from a telt~llk>n abow wus apprehended today alltr a ~I bank otncer pressed a 1Uent ul11rm button ond d hayed him until police urrlvcd. Tht-man. wcuartnt a fake must:iche and carrylna a pockagr, entered the First NaUonal City Banlc otnce nex\ door to Rockefeller Center and diagonally across FU\h Avenue from St. Patrick's Cathedral and demanded "6.000, police aaid. "I have a bomb and I want money." police quoted him u telling the bank's branch manager tn a note. "ll will take me a wl\lle to get that together," she was quoted as replying "Will you wait?" Pobc:e said the manager. wbo was not identified. then signaled a silent alarm which brought hall a dozen police cruisers to the bank at Slst Street. tying up traffic and drawing hundreds or onlookers. ·• The man's buck was turned as the first four unlrormed orficers entered the bank. Police •lanaled to the manager to move away from the mun. "Let me c heck on \he money,'' she said. plckini up a telephone and dialing an extension to an empty desh desk nearby. "Oh. I have to get lhal," she said, quickly getting up from ber desk and moving away. The four p6llce officers then grabbed the would-be robber. Police orricers said the man later told them he had been innuenced by a television show .ibout a bank robbery, but did not 1dent1Cy the show. They also said he had read mumcrous news stories about a bank robbery last year but dtd not specify which one The bank was evncualed and t:mergency Service police tossed a rug over the package on the noor until the bomb section arnv('d Bomb detectives examined lhe package, which they later said contained only cardboard. The man, wearing checkered pants, u brown raincoat and hat.· had his phony mustache tom off when police seized him. One police officer described the foiled holdup aa amateurish. "If anybody was ever going t.o get caught, it was this guy," the oCCicersaid 2 KILLED ••. Police Chief Roger E . Neth was assigned to notify the Broads of the death of their only cl\lld, an 1'.:aglc Scout and 1975 graduate of Mater Def High School Officer Broad, nickna med Rock for his days as an All- Conference Hawaii League pro. fessional football player as a 175-pound tackle in 1947, Uterally worshipped his son _ _,,. A SuMet Beach store owner was robbed of $200 Monday by a jlunman who Corcf'd her male companion to he down on the noor of the s tore wtuJe he made good his escape. Orange County Sherirf'1 officers reported today. ' Deputies said victim Charlene Ruth Maris. 32, told them the gunman entered her R and D Date Shop, 16371 Pacific Coast Highway, and purchased a 59. cent bottle of wine. Mn. Maris told offi~rs that. the customer produced a gun as she was packaging the wlne and fol'ced her lo take S200 rrom I.be cash reg1Ster and place il l.n tbe Slayton Gordon. 16. Newport Bea ch . frolics with her dog, "Blue ... a four year old English sheep dog who obvious ly is overjoyed at being out in thc fresh air and sunshine. 8lue got a combination romp and obedience lesson M?nday at Mariners Park in Newport Beach. S!aylon explained th.al, althou~h Blue may seem a bit old for obedience training. he is a new member of her family and needed a refresher course. b••· 7 EDIT ION l Today's Clo hag N.Y. toeks J yoL. 69, NO. '8, 3 SECTIONS,~ PAGE~ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOAV1 FEBRUARY 17, 1976 TEN CENTS Hopefuls Blast Student EndOrsementJ . Student endorsemmta of three rvlne City Councll cand.ldata have prompted a backlaah or thar&et that the Student Coali· tion of UC Irvine and the Irvine Tomorrow ciluen.s forum are .. tryina to cram subsidized hous· in• down our throat.." Spokesmen for Irvine Tomor- row denJed any collusao11 between the groups maklng Ufe endorsements. And the three candidates ~­ doraed -Mary Ann Galdo. Basil .. Bill" Vardoulis and David Siila-denied the charee. One candidate. Carol Morris, cbaracteri'¥ed the student en- dorsement u meaniniless. "J know at least three ot the people who interviewed me do not ev~ live in the city." sheaaid.. In a letter to the Daily Pilot, she candidates charged that the lrvlne Tomorrow rrwp and the student 1rou_p were malcinl a concentrated push for sub&idlzed housing. Patrick Bonner. Bruce Runer, William Crlsell, E. Ray Quigley. Robert Miller and Geor1e McClure bued tbelr charge on the tilinl or housinc related lawsuits a1ainat the city by some members of Jrvlne Tomorrow. Irvine Tomorrow Director Sharon SlrNllo responded. "His· lorically. we have endorsed can· dldate& with many varying views. We have not attempt~ to control them once they are elect· 'ed." The only common qualification among the candidates backed by the croup, she said, "is that they all att independent." The croup, Mrs. SirceUo &aid, has taken no official stand on the boulin& suits. Irvine Tomorrow CbaJrman Marilyn Vauos commented. "We have not even discussed houslna with them (the can- didates>." Both denied any relationship between Irvine Tomorrow and the student group. Candidate David Sills termed the reaction "sour grapes." '"They all sought the endorse- ment or lhe same groups,·· be Sa.id. "They bad nothing bad lo say about lhe groups until the dorsements were out," S!Uuald. On subsidized housing, SU said, "I oppose using lrvine t dollars to make mortgage pay· ments.•• Mrs. Caido said she also o~ poses use of local taxes for sub.I( sidlt?$. However, she supports US"\ mg federal and stale subsid.Y'.1 programs in the city. · Vardoulls said he 1.S opposed to! subsidies, reaardless of theiC'~ source. 'Cinq0e' Said He'd Kill Patty?· Culvnt Crfllllples Corru~atcd steel work supporting an earth- work bridge for the extension of Turtle ~k Drive in lrvmc crumpled under the weight or carthmovmg equipment Monday with lh1s result. Driver of tractor wasn 't hurt. however. Collapse of the bridge near Jordan A venue and Umvers1ty Drive is ex- pected to cause a delay of several weeks in the complet1on of the pro1ect. Bridge was scheduled for paving next week. Irvine Awaits Word On Ballot Changes lrvin<' officials will not know until federal gu1ctehnt>S are pnnt· ed next week v. hctht·r a lobbymR e!rort in W ash1nl(ton. D C , to C'hange b1hnRuul ballot reqwre· ments was successful Following his return from Waahington. City Manager WUllam Woolletl said today that he and City Attorney James Erickson met with a vant'ty of federal offir1als to d1scu.'is the matter. CRelatt'ctStory,A3> Tbe city 111 rt•qu1rt.>d under lht.> VoUna R111hts Art or 197~ to pnnl C'andid•tes 11ttJ tem<'nt11 of quallricat1ons in both En11li11h nnd Spanish, t"V<'n thoui.th a Nur vey or Span111h-surn11mt"d voters in the city Culled to locate a single person who could not read the Coast \\'eath er Sunny with variable highs clouds Wednesday H1gh4l m the 60s at the beac hes and s lightly warmer inland areas. l.ow11 tonlght in the •05. INSIDE TODAY Pannt1· fanclf11l aplana. tioM about t~ .• bt rdl Ol'lld the btt1·· ore ~omg t1w lat~ #Qdi ovt rn left It.Id a.s to tDlwrw bctlM• recllJI do~ from See Pogt A7. ••••• MT--1<• ~ ,_ ...... _. .. ., -u-n •• ., UL~ . ,. ,_,,..,,.n• "" ~· "' -.i •• •• ~ ... ., ........ , ... .., c.Mkt ., :;;r.c.-a. ... _.. •• IH ....__left .... '-"' . ... ............. .... "-'"""'"'It• All • .....,..,.cwt .. h-U. AN ......,. All ,,....,.. .. ,..,.-.c..ie .... -.w-.... -,, statement!! in English The City Council already ha.'I authorized a suit against the federal government attempting toovertum the reqwre ment. Woollett and Erickson were dbpatched to Washington Wed- nesday for a last try al getting the proposed guidelines changed and averting an expensive suit. On the same issue, the League of California Cities la,st week vot- ed to take the same pos1t1on u lrv\ne in opposing the federal guidelines, Woollett said. A league dele&alion is scheduled to make another lobbying er(ort in Washlnirton March 14. Dellcribing the city's position. Woollett said ... We are in favor or the intent of the law, which is to make the ballot information available to everyone." However, the city considers lt a waste to print bilingual state- ments. The federal flUidellnes re- quire bilingual balTot materials be printed for all elections in counties with more than ~ per rent non·En"lish·s peakln" population. Orange County has 14 percent Spanish-surnamed population, wh1c b requires Irvine to print bilingua l materials. The cost is twice the cost or English printing plus the cost ol lransJaUoo. Voice Exhibition Slated at College Anna Bjamson. a 20-year-old operatic soprano, and Giovanni Bendandi. a 78-year-old tenor. will give a lecture-demot13trat1on on vocalism al Saddleback College Thursday. The public ls invited to the 3 p.m. demonstration in BuildinC G for which there is no admi.ssloo cbaree. 9 Nominations For 'Cuckoo's Nest' Luted LOS ANGELES CAP) -"One flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," the saga of one man's fight against the system in an insane asylum. scored top honors in the 48th Academy Award nomina· t1ons todllr. • The UnitM Artists film dre• nine nominatlon5, including those for best picture, Jack Nicholson as best actor, Louise F1etcher os best aetres.."J, Brad Dourif ror supporting actor and Miios Forman for ~l direct.or. "Barry Lyndon" placed 11ttond with sevt'n nominations and "Dog Ony Afternoon" was third with sue. The three mms were nominal· ed for best picture. along with "Jaws" and "Nashville." In the best actor category. Nicholson faces competition from Walter Matthau ln "The Sunshine Boys;" Al Paclno, "Dos Day Afternoon:" Max· lmlllan Schell, "The Mao In the Glass Booth." and James. Whit· more, "Give 'Em llell, Harry!" Mias Fletcher·s opponents as best actress are Isabelle Adjanl, .. The Story of Adel<' If ... Ann· tSft OSCAllS, Page A%) ... 'HEALm CARE' USTED TODAY A special 20-page review of health facllltles and services available to Orange Coast re5l· dents ls included In today•s Daily Pilot. This special section contains information on area hospitals, speciallzed care and medical education along with st.orfes and pictures on supporting medical i.nduslrlea and services. Look for "Orange County Health Care" in today's Dally Pilot. Wouldn't Give Up To FBI ' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Patricia Hearst, resuming her testimony at her bank robbery trial. said today her terrorist kid· ~pers planned to kill her and fight it out lf any or their hideouts were surrounded by federal a&ents. S~aking firmly and with no visible trace of emotion, Miss Hearst said that Symb1onese Liberation Army leader Donald "Cinque" De Freeze t.old her or an incident ln Oakland a day or two aner her Feb. 4, 1974, abduc- tion in which the FBI stormed a house where agents suspected abe was being held captive. NEIGHBOR--9ATTY 'NICEST I EVER MET, AS U"IT• ....... "Cinque told me they would have lilied me and rouaht it out with the FBI lf we bad been in lhe house, .. Ml.la Hearst said .. "He PRESS FOLLOWS PATTY HEARST OUTSIDE SF COURTHOUSE Newspaper Helreu Become• Tourist Attraction said tltey would newr have sur- rendered.'. Kern County Her chief attorney, F. Lee Balley, then began asking her questions about a closet she and her jury saw on a tour Monday of two SLA "safe houses" where the young heiress was held captive. The defendant has testified that her firs t taped "communi- que" was made from a closet in a house in s uburban Daly City a few days after her kidnaping. She said today that DeFree~e and other SLA members then left her more or Jess alone unUJ they or- dered her to make a second tape, recieved Feb. 12, in which the SLA Issued a demand for $70 worth of food for each or California's needy. Jury Pick Begins In Vallerga Trial . . ~ • . Clad in a navy blue pants suit with large whjte bow, Miss Hearst testified that she was kept blindfolded except when allowed to go lo the toilet and take an ~­ cuional bath. She said an SLA member was always present when her blindfold was off, but was wear. ing a ski mask. Misa Hearst began relaUng her story of capUvlly by the SLA in her first wltneaa atand ap- pearan~e before her jury on Fri· day. That was followed by the (SffClNQUE, Page AZ) Jury selection began today in the Kern County Superior Court. trial of former Orange County assessor Jack Vallerga. Officials at the Bakersfield courthouse which was selected as the site of Vallerga • s conspiracy trial when he successfully demanded a change of venue from Orange County County said Judge P.R. Borton was assigned to the case tMs mom Ing. Orange County Deputy District Attorney William Evans Is prosecuting conspiracy charges contained in a grand jury indictment. Vallerga. 54, is being defended by Santa Ana attorney J ohn Cahill. Evans predicted bef0tt he left (or Bakersfield Monday that the trial of lhe former assessor would take at least three weeks * . * •~---------------------... 'l1le D.U rli.t ., •• , .... YOUR VIEW ON PATTY HEARST GUil T: I think Patty HMnt ••• O Wiii be found QuUty of rOC>bery char;es against her O Wlll be found Innocent n Hung jury or other COMPLICITY : I thfnll Patty HMnt.,, O Went wllllnolY with.her SLA captors o went unwllllnoly but was brainwashed o went against her Wiii Md was kept against her wlll INTE1t•ST: t followtM PattY H•rst use .•• O Closely, read most stories about It O Pretty closely O S.Jdom 0 Not at all ClOVEltAGE: I tlllftll tM ........ O Is owrplaylng the Hurst case O Is covering It •bout right O ts underptavlno the story Mail to th• address below or drop by any of the Dally Piiot offices listed on Page 2. Attach eny comments on the Patty Hearst case If wlSh . Editor 0.lly Piiot lox 1560 Colt.a Mesa, CA '2'26 Sllftl1ure .ct Address (If,... •bit) •......•...•....•........•...•.••..•.....••.•••••..•••••••••.•••.•.• -the length of 3 trial in Ventura County last August that led to VaJlerga 's conviction on multiple criminal charges. Vallerga was fined $1,000, removed from county office and ordered lo serve a 60-day jail term after that conviction. The fine and jail term have been stayed pending a ruling on htS appeal. At issue in the Bakersfield trial is the allegation that Vallerga was one of a number or employes in the assessor'-" office who permitted county manpower. materials and time to be used during former county assessor Andrew Hin11haw·s succeasrut bid for Congress. Hinshaw will he tried on identical conspira<"y charges· Morch 1 m Orange County Superior Court. The· congreRs man will bo i;entenced Feb. 24 by Judge Rohe rt P. Knee I and on hla recent' bnbery convlct1tm. * * * Himhaw ·ee111 Sentencing Postponement '._ .. Conv1C'tcd Congrcs11man An• drew llmshow's scnt~ncinst wu.-c delayed for one wt-ck toduy when the Newport Heach Re publican's lawyer explained that he has not had sufnctent tlme to prepare h1s moUon for a new trial. Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert P . Kneeland set Feb. 24 as the date he will sen· lence Hln11baw to what could be one to 14 years in state pmon on the bribery conviction 1r he de- nies attorney Mars haJI Morgan's motion Morgan explained in court to- day that he has been distracted from preparation of bis motion by lhe seriou.s illness ot hla 13· ye•r-old son who recently un· derwlnt an operation for re· moval of a tumor that proved to behenlp. . \ Al DAJLVPtlOT Banker Foils Robber NEW YORK (Ar) -A man who threat~ned lo blow up a bank otlice and later told police be got the idea from a televi.too abow wu apprehended today after • cool bank officer pressod • stJent alarm button :.nd delayed hlm until police arrived. The man. wearing • fa.Ice mustache 1tnd carrying a pacluaae, entered the Fll"lt NaUonaJ Cit~ Bank office nut door to R~keleller Center and dla11onally acrou Flfth Avenue from St. Patrick's Cathednl and demanded $96,000, poUce1aid. "l have a bomb and I w1nl money," police quoted him as telllng the bank's branch mana1er ln a note. "It wlll Uke me a whUe to get that tDgether. ·• she was quoted as replying. "Will you wait?" Police said the manager. who wu not identified, then signaled "sU~t alarm which brought hall a doien police cruisen to the bank at 5lat Street, tyinJ up traffic and drawing hundreds of onlookers. The man's back was turned as the first four unuormed officers eot.ered the bank. Police al&naJed to the manaaer to move away from the man. • "Let me check on the money," !lbe said;\ picking up a ~lephone aod diaung an exCensioo lo an ernpty deah desk nearby. "Oh, l have to eet that... she said, quJckly getting up from her desk and movine away. The .four poUce ortleers then grabbed the would· be robber. Police officers said the man lat.er told them be had been influenced by a television ahow ~bout a bank robbery, but did not 1dentity tho show. They al.lo said he had read mumerous newa stories about a bank robbery lut year but did not specify which one. Tbe bank was evacuated and Emergency Servlce police tossed a ru1 over the packa1e on the noor unlll the bomb section arrived. Bomb detectives examined the package. whlch they later said contalned onJy cardboard. The man, weartne checkered pants, a brown ralncqat and hat. bad bia phony mustache torn off wben police seized him. One police officer described the foiled holdup us amateurish. "If anybody was ever gomg LO gel caught, it waa this guy,'' the officer said. The man was ldentiOed ns · M onte M e r ce r. 36, ot Buckingham Road. ('edarhurst. Long Island lie ts married and the father o{ two, according to police They said he told thttm he had been under an analyst'!! care lor :.ometime &mbSpree Continues BELFAST , Northern lrdand <UPJ > The Irish Republican Army kept up ila revenge bomb- ing campall{n in downtown Delrast today, blowing up at leaat two depurtment 1torefl and set- llnl off a fire thl)t lhrcatened the entire bloc-k Thret" gunm1•n •nlered the t•ooperaU\•e department store• on r>oocaal Street. planted a bomb on tht! ground fluor and ten shout· 1ng ll warninll while pan1r- !!.lrickcn customt>rs ru.~hcd to lhu doors. Cypriot Talb On VlENNA. Austria <UP I> Roth Grt.-k and Turktsh <;yprint leadfrs cxpreued pt·~~•mtam nver the 1><>11slblllt y or uny settlt mt•nt (rom lhl' fifth round Of talks on the Cyprus <l1spute open inti In d11)' ORANGE COAST fM("llt'9f'09 C.N \1 f"tllftV f1'1t.nit,_.ftli ....,,.tt.,-.<..,.. ""',_,t,.. ,.. __ , ,.,.\\ 1,.,_,.,.,.,....,.,.,,..(\I,.,. t .. \I ('\f'Ol•U'I•""' t """ ••"' \.,..,,.. .... , .. ~ .,, ~;'':: .. =~~,~~::'..:i~~ !~ I•"' ~•It•'· tf-•"• \•flttl•M~ II; Vtt ... ,,. \4'1f~ .... ~~~'\lt"lOi\t A'~'~I..,. lk.11\ "' '''"'u,,..ct \••~•fl~'' ...t """,._,, '""' 9"""t tfWf """"'' ,..,"" lt ""' ·~ !tt ~ .,,, ·~ \U-..._.c....u,.,..u (.•,•fwlf'ftt•""1' Robrrt N Wf'«J t • •\.ot l\I 4t,,_, ftVO'•tl"iH Tl"lomu ~ttv•• ,.,,,,, Thom IS I\ M urphlnr ~ ..... ~to.t• TeletlflOM (114) M2.4.J21 Oaslfl..r Advertl1fftll'42'WI 1.MOl•ttM• V61tf'¥ ..._W\Otho Stt•llO '·~ ~·" ( ........ ""' O~)O ·~.,,.. l•1• o..~ .. (h •I """''"""" ,_ ,._,. Hie ,..... _.,., .. , tU~tl4tf~ •W'4tl ff\•ti•f •t ••-••tfW"°'•"h ""''•1"' """•t ~ , • .,..,....., .... ,..._,., ~c••t _.,..._."..,. •• .... -..w-. lil<H't• ctU \ ... ~ t•9• e••ct .. Cft\1e .,...,., c..&...,... ~"'1• .... ,,.,., u t1 ~ ......... , ... w 11-1~1,, ....... ..., ... ,_ v u-... , Ford to Air CUPlam WASHlNGTON (AP> - PretkSeot Ford will &mveU bl• plan to reorr:aohe aupervlsloo of tbe ln· lt!llli:t'OCC •lt'Dcles at • Wievised news conlCTt:OH lat.e lha altemoon. prua attnilory Ron Nttasen an. nounced. Th~ pl<>o u tor a strciamlfoed lntelllgence community that will put CIA Director George 6UAh an poa1hon to control all spy :it~ncies, Adm11u.stra. Uon 0Cfieluh1 sa)'. J It spew at.5p.m. The officials say Bu:ih will be chairman or a small Inter-agency panel which will 1lve bitn tbe po~r lo control the budrets of other apy a1enc1es, such as those within the Defense Depart- ment and the Nallonal Secunty Agency Sal Mineo Last Rites Held in NY From Wire Senice. MAMARONECK. N.Y. -Sal Mineo, the actor-singer who rose to tum stardom playin& the role o( a juvenile delinquent, was burled today in Valhalla. N.Y., near tbe town where be spent bia youth. Father Gerard DiSenso pre· aided at a packed funeral Mass at the SOC>-aeat Holy Trinity Church, in Mamaroneck, where Mineo Uved for some time alter luv1.11g his cbUdbood home in the Bronx. "Our church wa.s practically full." one of the priest's assistants said. "The family is not large, but they ha\re many well·wi.sbers and friends .·· Many of the mourners wept openly. Several actors and ac. tresses were present. He said DiSenso's sermon touched on M lneo 's violent death. The :n-year -old actor was stabbed to death Thursday in lhe garaee ot his Jfollywood apart- ment building. "The maln idea was that one of the facts of death l.s the painful part of partine. but according to the beliefs or ChrisUan faith tlle parting Is Just for a temporary period. The coming together and the living together would be eternal." Aner the service, Minco wus buried ut Gote of !leaven Cemetery in Valhalla. Mrs. Grace O'Neill, speaking for the O'Neill "'"neral Home. i.tressed that services for Mineo were "very , very pn vate. The family did not want any fon- fare." Mineo 1s s urvived by his mother. Josephine , and a brother, Michael. Meanwhile. the detective rn \'estigating the death s<iys the D(' tor's popularity is making his JOb more dlClicult. "I've not rukd out anything at. this point except suicide," Sgt. Ed Pia, a sheriffs homicide In- vestigator said Monday. "Tho only dl/ficult part oC it L'I where to go next -h{' was a very popular man." · Investigators uy they arc atymled rtbout the motive for the viole nt killing Pia said that os fnr as in· vesligatori; knnw. Mtnt'<> had no serious enemies. Ile u1d lhe lnve1>Ugallon was projtr~ulng "with 360-degree \'ls Ion ." ;earl tbial druJi'i or a love trianalc. motives menuoncd In nt•\lo :\ t1(·ro11nt-;, "'en• only two of many poss1b1ltlies. Police Seek Oemente Man In 2 Murders ll1vfrsul1· Count.v Sht>nH'.~ Office dcl<.•ct 1 vt·:1 Wl're an San Clemente today trying to track down tht.tir prime !'lU.t;Pf"('l in th1• exerution !ilyl<' murdc:'rs or two mt•mtlt'r!' 11f a lt1vt•rs1de·arc11 motorncle dub Soujothl hy in vc-~li~:it.o" L~ Pnul Joe;f'ph Soulard . :l3. a former San Clt'mente rt•!<ult•nt, who Wll!\ h\•mg tn Trabuco Can)'on until hours pnor tn lhi.' Sunda\' moming murder:. T"'n nwmht•r' of the Renc5illd<'' ;\1otorc) clc C'lub. ldenttf1e1t as John t>utt<>r. :l.'\, or Pedley. and Dav1rl \'auJ,:hn. 2f;, or Ru bidoux. "'"r" shot t'olo1 <'<' throu5ih the ht':Jd after two cunmen fnrred 10 J>('Ople go\Mred at the Rene(!ades' Clfn Avon clubhouse to lie on the floor W1lne!lse~ !'Sid lhl' two men entel'ed the clubhouse Saturday night and talked and drank ln a friendly m anner with Reneude mtmbers uotil moments lx'forc the shoot in~c; Wttnesse., told d<>putl~ the t'i''O rnen lc>ft tht' b;ir bnl'Oy about midniRht and returned with r.islDls. Tht-y ordered everyone to 1e on tht> floor. then shot Dutter ~ Va u& hn, w I t.nesses said. WASlllNGTON <UPI> -The Jlouse Judiciary Comnutt.o tOo <lay defuted two national band&un r\•.:1t1trat1on proposals -ooe thut would havt r\oquintd the atalea to enact their own plant w1th10 two )'Urt aod ~r that would bavt created "national reg111tratjon program. The fQmm1tlee ac;tlon coin· c1d~d with the release or a Cederal 1tudy which showed that tn •$ percent of street crimes In· volvln1 auns. "Saturday ni1ht i.pectals" were used larcely because they are cheap and euy to conceal. Tbe committee killed, 16 to 11, an amendment that ~'OU.Id hav• established a nalioo..t bandeun registrauon pro1ram wilhln the Treuury Department's firearms divLSlon. The panl'I, working on• bill to toughen ex1s\1ng handgun control ~ws. also defeated, 18 to 13, an amendment v.hich would have reqwred the 1tates to enact their own gun realstration Ian by 1977. The com mitt~ last wed over· whelmingly dereated amend- ments which would have banned the manufacture . sale, importa- tion, or ownership of handguns. The lederal gun relistraUon amendment was offered by Rep. Robert Orinan, <D·Mass.). and Don Edwarda, <D·Calif.). The propoaal to require the states to enact their own plans - with the cost to be reimbursed by the federal government -waa offered by Rep. Robert McClory. <R Ill. I. The study. by lhe Bureau or AJcohol. Tobacco and fo)rearms, traeed 7,815 bandgwtS seized by police in 18 cities during in- tervals over 32 months. The cities Included in the study were New York: Boeton; Atlan- ta: Detroit; Charlotte, N C.; Dallas: Denver: Kansas City: Los Angeles; Louisville; Miami and Dade County; Mlnneapolia- S t. Paul : New Orleans, Philadelphia, Oakland and Seat- lle. Bureau Director Rex L. Davis said the study also shows criminals bought more 1una from pawn shops than they atole, and a large number or the guns used In Northern ciUes eame from atates with lax controls over gun u JH . Dana's CofC Seeks Coast Panel Demise Blamin1 the CaUfornJa Coutal Commiulon for "Irreparable dama1e to the economy of the California coast," the Dana Point Chamber oC Commerce bu called for the end of the com· mission. The chamber also canie out strongly aealnst the proposed co3.11tal plan that ls llOw awaiting action by l egislators In Sacramento. Mike Saeltele, chamber proal· dent. said today copies of the re- 11olullon enacted by the cham- ber's Board or Directors have been sent lo all elected ofnclals representin1t South Orange Coun- ty and to Governor Brown and to county supervisors. Saettele s aid the resolution wa!\ prompted by lhe com· mission 's on~oklg actlvitlu since Its t'rf';allon ln 1972, when CaJlfornla voters passed Proposi- tion 20. Saeuele said the county has no lon.:-raoge pl•n• or intentions for the south county area, ~rt1ally becaWle of lnte.rference by the coaAtal commlMion. In tho retolutlon, cham her d1rt'rtor:1 charKe lhl\t the coastal rnmm1s111on "is not ti~ mocrallc:ally elected and wields nrbltrary pown without the 11u1dance or standards otMr than the mem~r·s own 1.nd ahlfUng t.istes. · · • SCENE FROM OSCAR NOMINEE 'CUCKOO'S NEST' LoutH Fletcher, Jack Nlcholaon Both Nominated E',.._l'-..Al 0C Farmers OSCARS ••. Opposing Prop. A Directors of the Oran1e County Farm Bureau are oppostne the a1rkultural perpetuation pro- gram outlined in Proposition A on San Juan Capistrano's March 2ballot. Jn a letter to the Dally Pllot, Dur Thetford executive manaier of the Farm Bureau, said, "We aslt that iood fiscal ruponalbillty be eurclled by tbe City Council and not be uu1ht up lnto the expentlve 'fad' oC city ownership of •lricuJtural Cum land." ·•Many cities throughout the state are cultln1 many vaJuable services, especially for our young people, bec1uae they no tonier can afford their put rtacal policy and priorities." he uld. He said the CO$la will not atop with the purchase of the land bul alto Involve the urlceep, main- tenance and loss o tax revenue lhat 1ovemm ental ownership of the land produces. Thetford aatd that tr the city wan ta to perpetuate a1rtculture. "It muat provide the coatinuint mvtronment for tbe farmer lo re- main ln aartculture." He said the CalifomJa Land Conservation Act has been beneficla) ln belpln1 to preserve prime aertcultural land. His organization. he said, will work lo strengthen this act. The Farm Bureau oCCicial said lhe group does support open space where the citizens recel ve some recreational benefits from the land. This type of land, he said, can usually be purchaseed "at many dollars less" thnn prime agricultural land. Anti-abortion UmdiJate's Fundi,ng Hit WASHINGTON (AP) -The National Abortion Rights Action League today asked the Federal Election Commission to deny federal campaign funds to Ellen McC-0rmack, who Is running aa a presidential candidate on an an- tiahortlon platform. Mrs. McCormack laYll she has collected more than $5,000 In each of 20 atatea and asked the eleclion commiulon to certify her u qualified for matchinl( federal campaign funds. Sarah Weddington. president of lhe National Abortjoo Rights AMlon IA!ague, said ln a com plaint tiled with lho FEC thol Mrs. McCormack hu solicited funds In a deceptive manner. Margret. "Tommy;" Glenda Jackson. "Hedda," and Carol Kane. "Hester Street." George Burns. whom most crltJca considered Matthau·s co· star in "The Sunshine Boys," waa nomlnated in lhe supporting actor cateaory. Besides Dourif. he races Burgess Meredith of "The Day of the Locust:" Chris Saradon. "Dog Day Memoon," and Jaclt Warden. "Shampoo." The 11upportin1 actress race features two from "Na.shville," Ronee Blakley and comedienne Lily Tomlin. Also nominated: Lee Grant. "Shampoo." Sylvia '11lea, "Farewell, My Lovely,'' and Brenda Vaccaro, "Once Ill Not Enough " Academy voters will now view the nominated fllms and make their final choices. which-will be announced to a television au- dience on Monday, March 29, in ceremonies at. the Los Angeles Music Center. 2 Teen-agers Die in Beach Auto Crash 81 ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI .... O.lly ~Mil 9'afl Paul Kananl Broad. the only child or Costa Mesa policeman Roscoe Broad. and his Rirlfriend were killed in Huntington Beach t'arty today when his s mall foreign car crashed into the rear or a parked van. The crash occurred on a lonely stretch of Pacific Coast Jljghway one-half mile east of Warner Avenue along Bolsa Chica State Beach. Broad, 18, who lived at thP family homt'. was pronounce<1 dead al the scene. His passengt'r. Deborah Demont, 19, or 12982 Loretta Lane, Santa Ana, suc- cumbed from multiple injuries s hortly after 6 a.m . at Hunt- ington Intercom munity Hospital. The victims had to be extricat· ed from the manRled wrecka~eof their small sedan whi(lh hurled the van il struck ~feet onto the beach, injuring its lwooccupants Raymond W. Miller, 26, of Anaheim, and Diana Callac, 20, of 6462 Longford Circle, Hunt ington Beach. were asleep in lh(• van and sustained only minor In · Juries, police said. They were treated and re- leued at Pacifica Ilospitul following the collision hnl re· ported at 12: 15 a .m., by ;1 motorl11t who called rrom o nearby telt',>hC'ln(' lnvcath(ators toduy !luld they are probln~ the CllUlle Of the t rnstlt' cras h In volvlng nroa<l':i t•ompart rar anl'1 the van, whlr h lht•y s11y ·was legally parked ot the roadside. Winter Fest to Begin 17 Day8 of Exhibitll, Fun in Laguna Beach LA1tuna Beec h 's Winte r Festival , 17 days of crafts :\nd arts exbib1ls. a parade. u rodeo. blueJ?ras!\ mu!\IC festJval, and dnncc and other city activities, opeM Friday. Running daily (beginning Saturday) vom 10 a.m . to dusk lbc Laauna Crall Guild Show at the Fe:aUval of Art.a grounds will lncludc the works of lSO artista and craftsmen. Admlssion is f're-e. Contiaulng throuehout the run or the festival Is a photottraphy contes t ~pon s ored by the Oarkroom. 274 Broadway. The St-cond Annual All California Photoaraphy Shnw will be open Crom JJ ·30 a.m. to 4 ~pm. dally at the Laguna Beach Mi.neum ol Art, through Feb 29 The first event ortbet.UT&l ls .... Che Canadian Visitorg Tea from Z to 4 p.m. at lhe Lumberyard Plaza. The Patriots' Day Parade honoring "The Splrit ol '76" will step off at 11 a .m . Saturday from Laguna Beach Hl•h School. The Bluegrass F4!Stival will be held from noon to d\Sk Saturday and Sunday on Ocean Avenue. Sponsored by tbe do#\\town merchant.a, lhe festival will in· dude music. danclnl( and coun- try-style vittles. "Kin«ri•h ind County J oe McDonald" headline the Irvine Bowl Concert •l l p.m. Sunday. The concert will feature San Francla<:o style tolk mu.-.lc. Tb• Wut Coast Chamber Ensemble wlll ~rform at 3 p.m. SundaT at the Vo:rpeJ GaJJcry,m Glenneyre St.. Lagun11 Ueach Events the followmll weekend Include La)ituna Sports Duy Feh. 28 and 29 at M aan Beach Park with skydiving, a Paciflc Cat Reiatta. basketball. volleyball. tennis and t1 huffleboard tournaments throughout town. The "Oldfashlon«t Hoedown and Squared1nce" will be hf'ld from noon to dusk Feb. 28 and 29 at the Art Center. Also on tap for following weekend& are an antique show. the lawn bowling f i nals, akltteboard races, a gourmet din· ner. and concerts 3l t.he Irvine bowl. The WLnter FesUv11I will con- ~ 1 ude wlt.h the l RA Cham pionabip Rodeo-By-The-Sea March ' and 7 at lhe l rvl.oe f:ciuatrian Ceot.er. State Probing Death By K \THY CLANCY Ol ... 0.11,111 ........ Th c C 11 I Horn I a Attorney Gent>ral'a otflce hu ~aun an In· qulry Into tho doalh o f a Wntmlnstrr man who may have i;uCfercd tat al head lf\Jurte>s whllc ser\'lJli a weekend Juil term. Capt. Robert. Orltfetb of lhe Oranae county Sherill'• ottlc11 said he turned h is report on the death df Don N~laon, 39, over to an attorney aeneral '• Jn . vtsllgator on Friday. Nelson died Feb. 2 at Orance County Medical Center after ly. 1ng in a coma there for :a week following surgery for a akull fracture. Mike Serio, senior Investigator for the atto rney 1eneral in Orange C'ounty. said the inquiry 1s "\'ery limited at this point." ll was ordered by Deputy Attorney Ctneral Dnn Kremer of the San Otego off tee, he Hid. Kremer could not be reached for comment today but an at- torney for Mr. Nelson's widow, Bonnie. sold lt1sl week he would ns k both the utlorncy general and District Attorney Cecil Hieb to investigate. Mr. Nelson, a bartender al the Marlin Jnn in Hunllnetoo Beach and candidate In last sprlnc'• Ocean View School District trustee elections, wu aervtn1 the first weekend ot five on a drun\cen drlvlne conviction. Griffeth said tod ay the sheriff's lnvestleaUon revealed Mr. Nelson first became lll dur- mg lunch In jall on Jan. 25. He said be sulCered "a seizure or one type or another and Cell and bit. his head on the conc~te." Griffeth said Mr. Nelson was examined by • reitstered nurse on duty. then seemed to be line and wu returned to his cell. He suffered another seizure about 4:15 p .m . in the cell and waa aaaln taken to the medical OfrlCe, then W •A transported lo OCMC about 8: JS p.m., Griffeth continued. He explained he does not yet know what caused thesclzuret or tr Mr. Nelson wu conscious when be fell each time. He said jail officials did try t.o help Mr. Nelson and probably did the best they could for him. Mrt. Nelson's attorney has claimed jail o Ulclala did llttJe to aid Mr. Nelson, who reportedly wu vomiting and quite Ill lhroufhout the day Sunday. Grl letb said his report ln· dlcates Mr. Nelson was shaking but there was no re part of vomit- ing. Officials at OC MC did not dis- cover Mr. Nelson's aktdl fracture until Jan. 26 . Al fin;t, doctors thought he was suffcrina de- lirium lremens and did not rind the fracture until he failed to re11p0nd to treatment, hospital of- ficials said. Mrs. Nelson did not locate her hus band until Jan. 27 after re· vcatt'd r alls to the jail and OCMC. shl' said. Hospital officials said they erred In not contacting the fami- ly. while GriHeth said sheriff's officials lned lo call Mrs. Nelson Jan. 25 but were unaucccssruJ. F,....Pflflf!AJ l CINQUE ••• tour Monday or the terrorist h1deou~ . The pale newspaper heiress hroke into tears on seeing lhc apartment closet where she was kept bltndrolded for 4'h weeks Just before the Aprll J5, 1974, bank robbery for which she is on t r l a r. defen11 f' nt.torney A I Johnson sale! Ntllher chief deCcnsc counsel F' Lee Ballt>y nor US. Alty J:lm('A I,. JlrowninR Jr . took part in tho tour. Ttw tillrlldpunt~ wfr<' the JUry . M111" lfear11t. other auorney11 anl'1 U.S. l>u\trlrt Court Jut!l(t' Oliver J . Corter. N1•ws rcport<'rll W('r<' not 111towc•d mslde with M11s11 Hearst at ci.iluir IO<'ation. Joh03on 11nld the 11evcn womtn Md five men on the jury st,.pprfJ Into ('ach c loset whilo M11'" He11r~l 11tood by the door. The judate was t he only on" whll ~IX)k1• to the jurors, pointing out dimension!\, 01r v1•nt." und thl" hkt" nl Johnson'111 requ~l Miss J1":1rst hos ll."ll•fi('ff thut st'vc>rnl (If ht'r tuP<'d commun1 qucs Crom th1• und1•r 1tmu111t wc•r 1• mad<' In I hr rloiil'I!> and lllllt i.hr· v.as sexually ""saullcd 111 th1· cramped cubicles. The jury must dccido whcth1•r she was a w1lllng participant tn lhc bank robbery or a scared khl nap victim acting in rear or ber Ufe. 1t wu in the stucco house and the apartment that, s he claims, the SLA kept her and taunted ber with threaL" of death. Jewish Push Urged BRUSSELS. BelJrium <UPI) - Sf'n. t'rank Church, (I)· Idaho). opened the World Conference on Soviet Jewa today by uriina ~ldent Ford t.o pnuure tho Soviet government to 1ivc bcUu trea~t t.o lta J~ I 7 ... Laguna/South ~oast * Today' Closlag N.Y.Stoeks VOL 69, NO. "8, 3 SECTIONS,~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1976 TEN CENTS , Dana Cha·mber Urg~ End to Coast Unit ByBILAaY'KAYE Ot•o.11,,. ....... Blamln1 the California Coaatal Commluioo for "Irreparable dama1e to the economy o( the Caltfornla coast." the Dana Point Chamber of Commerce bu called for the end of the com· mi.sion. . The chamber also came out atron14' against the proposed coutal plan that is now awaiting action by Jegislaton io Sacramento. P.atty Relates Tactics SAN FRANCISCO <AP) Palnc1a Hearst. resuming her testimony at her bank-robbery trial, said today her terrorist kid· napers planned to kill her and fight it out if any or their hideouts were surrounded by federal agents. Speaking firmly and with no visible trace of emotion, Miss Hearst said that Symbionese Uberation Army leader Donald "Cinque·• DeFreeze told her of an tnc1dent in Oakland a day or two alter her t"eb. 4, 1974. abduc· · lion in wttich the FBI stormed a house where agents suspected she was being held capUve. Mike S.ette1~. cbainbe:r pres!. dftlt. Hid today ~ ol I.be re- 80lution enacted by tbe cham· ber'a Board ol Direct.on have been nnl to ~ elected otnclals repttsenlin1 South Otan&e Coun· ty and to Govtrnor Brown and to county aupervi.son. Saettele aaid the ruolutioo was prompted by the com- miaslon'a ODJOlnl adlvitlea alnce ita creation 1n im, when Call!ornla voters paaaed Proposi- tion 2JO. s.etide laid the couM)' bu DO toac-ruae plan• °" 1D&elltloas ror the aouth county area, partJaJzy becauae ot lntaftl'alee by the coastal comm.Luloa.. In the retolutloo, eumMr diroc:t-0n cbarae lhat the couta1 commllalon •·ta not de· mocnUcally elected and wields arbitrary power without lbe ~or sta.nd.,.. other than the member's own and ablft1nC tastes.·· "Cinque told me they would have killed me and fought it out with the FBI if we had been in the house," Miss Hearst said. "Ile said they would never have sur· rendered '' SCENE FROM OSCAR NOMINEE 'CUCKOO'S NEST' LoulH Fletcher, Jeck Nlcholaon Both Nominated Her chief attorney, F. Lee Bailey, then beogan asking her queshons about a closet she and her jury saw on a tour Monday of two SLA "sate houses" where the young heiress was held captlve. 'C1ickoo's Nest' Tops Os~ar List The defendant has testified that her firs t taped "commun1 que'' was made from a closet in a house in suburban Daly City a lew days after her kidnaping She said today that OeFreezc and other SLA members then left her more or less alone until they or- dered her to make a second ta~. recleved Feb. 12. in wtucb the SL.A tssued a demand for $70 worth o r food for each or Califomaa's needy Clad in a navy blue pants suit with large white bow, Mias Hea rst testified that she was kept blindfolded ext·l'pt when allowed lo go to the toilet and take an OC· cas1onal bath. She said an SI.A member wus always pres••nt when her blindfold was off , but was wear- mg ask• mask Miss Hearst began relating her story of raptav1ty by thf' SL.A in her first witness stand ap- pearance before her jury on Fri- day. That was followed by the tour Monday of the tvrrorist h1d~uts. Tht" pule n<'wspapcr heiress broke Into ten t!! on seeinJ: the npartm\'nl clcJsl't wherr i.he wa11 kept blindfold!!d for 41 'l weeks Ju.'\l btfor~ lhc• April I~. l~H. bank robb<-ry for whtt·h sh1• 1s on t t I a I • d t' ( •' n :H• D tt or n c y A I J ohnson suu.I. LOS ANGELES <AP> -"One Ftew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," lhe saga of one man's fight against the sys tem in an lnsane asylum, scored top honors In the 48th Academy Award nomlna· lions today. The United Artists film drew nine nominations. includ10g those for bes t picture, J ack Nicholson as best actor, Louise Ftetcher as best actress, Brad Dourif for supporting actor and Milos Forman for best director "Barry Ly ndon" pla ced second with sev\•n nonunations and "Dog Day Afternoon" was third with six. The three film s were nominal ed for best picture, along with "Jaws" and "Nashville." fn the best actor category, Nlc-holson faces competition from Walter Matthau in "The Sunshine Boys:'· Al Pacino, "Dog Day Arternoon ." Max· lmahan Schell, "The Man in the Glass Booth," and J amt'S Whit· more, "Give 'Em llell, llarry!'' Miss Fletcher's opponents as best actress are lsabcllc Adjam, "The Story of Adele H . " Ann· Margret. "Tommy ," Glenda Jackson. "Hedda," and Carol Kane. "Hester Street " Georg~ Burns. whom most <'rill rs considered M otthau'A co star in "The Sunstune Boyft," * . * *-------------nw Dall Pllel .,. .. , .... YOUR VIEW ON PATIY HEARST GUILT: I '"Ink Patty HNrst ..• n Wiii be found Quilty of robbery ch1roes aoefnst tlor I )Will be found Innocent r I Huno Jury of other COMPLICITY: I thi,. Pttty H .. rtt. -• was nomlnated ln the supporting actor category. Besides Dourif. he faces ~urgess Meredith of "The Day of the Locust;" Chris Saradon. "Dog Day Afternoon," and Jack Warden, "Shampoo." The supporting actress race features two from "Nashville," Rooee Blakley and comedienne Ldy Tomlin. Also nonunated : Lee Grant, "Shampoo;'' Sylvia Miles, "Farewell. My Lovely," and Brenda Vaccaro, "Once Js Not Enough." Academy voters wiU now view the nominated films and make their fin al choices. which will be announced to a television au· dience on Monday, Marrh 29. in ceremonies at the Los Angeles Music Center. Although nominated for best picture, "Jaws" was given only four nominations and none for d1rect1on. The director nominees a r e Federico F e llini , "Amarcord". Stanley Kubnck, "Barry Lyndon", Sidney Lumet, ''Ooit Day Afternoon" , Hobert Altman , "Nushv1lle, '' and l"orman for "Cuckoo's Nest." 'HLUm CARE' USTED TODAY A 11pectal 20-page review of health fa cilities and services available to Orange Coast res1-. dents la included in today's 11aily Pilot. Thi5 s pecial section contains lnforrn1tion on area hospitals, 11pecialhed care and medical education along with stories and pictures on supportmg medical industries and services. Look for "Oranl(e County Health Care" in today's Daily Pilot. The niaolutJoct al.lo dalma that coastal commlaaton membera and at a ff la ck economic knowhd1e. losl1ht aod relPQftllblUty and have no ex- pertiH ln plaonin1 tbe use ot land a.lon1 the eout. Saettele eaid that. while small developers bave been allowed to develop small paruls with ••no foreal&bt, .. Jari• developers who ~~:Jropou d benertcial, communities~ have been · sbulout. Saettele pointed to U.. $&.8 mJWon Lantern Bay project by Ed and Chuck Smyth. whieh was stymied by atate coastal com- miallonera. The project was to be a 115- bome development on the 28-acre s ite al Golden Lantern and Del Obispo Street. The Smyth brothers carried their proposal back and forth Crom Ule regional to state level three times. "The coastal commisslon bu Irreparably dama1ed tbe economy of the California Coast by Ila arbitrary repression of the use o( land for residences and buslnesses in futile and useless resistance to the westward Ude ot rriifration. ··the resohrt.loo reads. Saettele said he bas not yet re- cel ved ·any response to the chamber resolution Crom politi· clans. Cycle Ga·ng Rivalry Police Seeking SC ·Mart in Mt1rders ' Riverside County Sheriff's Office dete<'tives were m San Clemente today trying to track down their prime suspect in the execution-style murders of two members of a Riverside-area motorcycle club. Sought by 11\vestlgalors i.s Paul Joseph Soulard, 33, a former Slill Clemente resident. who was living in Trabuco Canyon until hours prior to the Sunday morning murders. Two members or the Reneeades Motottycle Club, identified as John Dutter, 3S, of Pedley, and David Vaughn, 26. of Rubidoux, were shot twice through the bead after two gunmen forced 10 people gathered at the Renegades' Glen Avon clubhouse to lie on the floor. Witnesses said the two men entered the clubhouse Saturday night and talked and drank in a friendJy manner with Renegade members untU moments before . thesbootlors. Witnesses told deputies the two men left the bar briefly about mldni1ht and returned with pistols. They ordered everyone lo lie on the floor, then shot Dutter . and Vaughn, witnesses said. The apparent motive for the slaying. according lo deputies, is Thieves Take Boat Motors Three outboard motors-one of them owned by Democratic As- semblyman Richard Robinson- were stolen Monday from boats moored at Dana Point Harbor, Orange County Sheriff's officers r~ported today. Deputies said the motors were owned by Robinson, 32, of Santa Ana. school Prmcipal Richard Porter Shoemaker, 46, of Tustin and sales representative J oseph Lawrence Riley, 33, of 24671 Via Alvarado, Mission Viejo. O!ficera valued the total loss at nearly $1,400. They said the thieves snapped chains lmd padlock~ connecting the out- board motors to the boats. CANDIDATES TEU J'IEWS A pubUc forum for can· didate11 in the Laguna Beach municipal election will be held at 9 :30 a.m. Thursday ot the Laguna ~ach City Hall chamber.1. The presentation Is sponsored by the League of Women Voters ot the Orange Coast. rivalry between the Renegades and another motorcycle group. San Clemente Police Lt. Ray Hartman. detecllve division commander. said Riverside investigators talked today with people who had known Soulard during his stay in San Clemente. Soulard is described as a husky. bearded, red-haired man. He ia known lo have frequented the municipal pier ~a. Hartman ~aid that Soulard, at the lime 'he lived in San Clemente. was carina for • 3·year-old daughter. City, County Plan Dogs' Beach Romps ·May Be Abolished Man'a best friend may le>M his beadl-1oin1 righa on Laguna Beach and Orange County atrands under propouls mulled both by the cJty and the Board or ~~ctiOll possiblf comes about through a complicated tangle of bureaucratic interation -commonly referred lo as red tape. The Board o! Supervison ls meeting today and will consider a recommendation for banning dogs from county beaches. That law, if enacted, ordinarily wouldn't apply to Laguna Beach city beaches. where the dog-0n-the-beach issue named into inleDBe controversy about. four years ago resulting in an ordinance which allows le..,hed dogs on beaches during all but summer months. That compromise.was reached after public hearings auended by overflow crowds who both defended and attacked dog.s. The issue remains sensitive with the council. lfowever, as a result of an abrupt cancellation or the city's animal control contract by the Society for Prevention of Cruelty lo Animals (SPCA>. Laguna 1s facing a March 8 end to all animal control unless aomething is done. A report lo the council by Moist Air Dampens West SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A westerly flow of moot air con· llnues over Northern California, promising rain or drizzle for m09t dlatricts through WednC!11-d1y, with snow In the Sierra. Rainfall has been heavy aloni the North Coast since Sunday. with two incht?• reported In some area.a, tapering down r adically toward the aoulh. Assistant City Manager Terry Brandt. recommends an interim contract wit.b t.be county pencttnc study or establishment of a city-run program. The county 11 willing to provide the ae"lce at a cost varying from S3,375 to $4,311> monthly depending on hours of patrol, but it requires the c ity immediately adopt all provisions or county animal control laws. That would include the ban on dog.s on beaches if approved by the Board of Supervisors. The Laguna Beach City Council will corusider tbe animaJ control dUemma when it meets al 4:30 p.m. WednesdBy at city hall. Teen Filing Claim Over Road Mishap A 19-year-old Lagima Beach youth paralyzed when the truck ~ wu riding in toppled over a 100-foot embankment ha.1 lodged a s.i million claim agaipst the cl· ty of Laguna Beach. Christopher Smith, or 2455 Temple Hills Drive, paralyzed from the waist down in the Nov. 11 accident. claims the s.i million figure u general damages and also aeeks $15,000 for present medical expenses. The City Council will con.sider the claim when It meets at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday. It ls recom- mended by the city attorney that lt bo denied and referred to tho <See CLAIM, PaaeAZ) Coast Weather [J Went wllllnoly with her SLA captors n Went unwllllnQly but WIS brainwashed o went against her wlll end was kept against her w lll INTEREST: I follow the Pttty H•m UH .•• O Closely, read most stories about It []Pretty closely Winter Fest to Begin S unny with varia ble highs cloud a Wednesday. Hiahs In the 60s at tho beaches and s llghtly warmer Inland areas. Lows tonight In the 4011. rJ Seldom O Not at all COVE RAGE : I think Uta press. •• O Is overp1aylr19 the HNrst use · O ts cowrlnQ It about right O Is underplaylno the story Mall to the address below or drop by any ot the Diiiy Piiot offiats listed on Paoe 2. Attach any comments on the Patty Hearst case If wtsh. Ecltor Delly Pllot ~x two C.'31Mesa,CA9162' Si..-we Md Addnst (It '" ...... ) ·•·••••••·••····••••••··················•·•··•·•···················· 17 Days of Exhibilif, Fun in Laguna Beach Laguna Beach's Winter Festival, 17 day• of crafts and arts exhiblta, a parade. a rodto, bluegrass music festivaJ, and dance and other city activilia, opens Friday. Ruanjng daily (be1lonlng Saturday) from 10 a.m. to dU$k the Laguna Cran Guild Show at the Festival of Arts grounds will include the works of 150 artists and craftsmen. Adm..,sion Is free. Continuing throu1hout the run of t.be festinl is a pboe.oeraphy contest s p onsored by the J>atktoom, Z74 Broadwq. 'J'be Second Annual All California Photography Show will be open from 11 :30 a .m . to4:30p.m.dally at the La1una Beach Museum of Art. t.brougb Feb. 29. Tbe fint event or the festival I.a •the Canadian Vlslton1 Tea from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Lumberyard Pitta. The Patriots' Day Parade honoring "The Spirit of '76" will step off al 11 a.m. Saturday from Lacuna Beach High School. The Bluqrass FesUval will be held from nooo lo dusk Saturday Md &mday on Ocean Avenoe. S,Ouored b~ tlae dowatowD merchants, the festival wllt In· dude music, dancln1 and coun· try-style vltUea. "Kingflsh and County Joe McDonald" headline the Irvine Bowl Concert al 1 p.m. Sunday. The concert will reature San Franclaco style folk music. Tbe West Coast Chamber Ensemble will perform at 3 p.m. Sunday at the Vorpal Gallery, 326 Glenneyre St., Laguna Beach. Events the following wttkcnd include Laguna Sports Day Feb. 28and291\ Main Beach Parltwith uydlvin •• a Pacific Cit Re1aUa, <See WJNTEa. Pace AZ> · INSIDE TOD6' Y · Port'flt•' tfcmdJW ~ tioru obout 't~ "binl. and tlwt beta" ore ~ovbsg the llttt. w. out 1n l~ft fuld a. to wlwre bcbie• reallJI do come from . Set Pog~ A7. l••ex •• ., AH .. A4 .. •••• 944 All Ale .. ... ,ti DAILY PILOT L/SC IUBIES SHOIS . -':SET TONICHr A low·eott rabte1 YllC- dnaUon clinic wlll bo held from 7 o'clock to 1:30 Wnl£ht al the m11ln t.aauna Buch Firo SUHlon, ~ Forelt Ave. Rabin 1hots wlll be $2 .$0. Th e clinic Is s ponso red by loc 11I veterin arians and the UonsClub. Sal Mineo Last R i tes Held in NY fiom Wire Servttt. MAMARONECK, N.Y. -Sal Mineo, the aclor·slnger who l"O$e to Cilm stardom playing lhe role of a juvenile d elinquent, was buried today in VaJh:illa, NY , near the town where be spent hJ5 youth. Father Gerard DiSenso pre· sided at a packed Cuneral Mass at the 500-seat Holy Trinity Church, in Ma maroneck, where M111eo lived for some lime after leaving hlschUdhoodhomeinthe'Bronx. .. Our church was pract.lcally tuJI," one of the priest'aassiatanta satd. "'!'he ram 11y i.s not large, but they ha ve many well·wishers wid friends ." Many of the mourners wept openly. Several actors and ac· tresses were present. He said DiSens o's sermon touched on Mineo· s violent death. ·1 be J 7·ye ar·Old actor was stabbed to d eath Thursday in the garage of his Hollywood apart· ment building. •·The majn idea was that one of the facts or death is I.be painful part of parting, but according to the behers of Christian fajth the parting as j ust for a temporar y penod The coming together and the Ji ving together would be eternal." After the service. Mineo w as burie d a t G a le or Heave n Cemetery in ValbaUa. Eatery's Sign May Ge t Boot In San Juan San Juan Capistrano City Councilmen will consider la.ldni ltlal action Wednesday to aet a aiien re moved from the roof of El Adobe Restaurant. Ag8.Ulst tbe restaurant owneT's objections, the council upheld a planning commission decis ion last month and ordered the 110. ~uare-foot sign be removed Roof signs are illegal accord· ing to lhe city's sign re1ulaUoos, but the counci l granted a variance to allow a 27·square· foot sign on the roof as a replace - ment. The larger sign was lo be takc-n down by lhl' end or J anuary. It ls 21Ull standing. however. Larry Lawrenre, the city's act in~ director of planning, hu rc- <'om m ended tha t the council •hrt>rl the city attorney to begin lt•1ta l a rt ion fie said letters from himself and the attorney have been sent to the owner , Edwin Cronwell, ;md a cita tion has been l.llsucd to tht rHtaurant manager. l>uring Wednt>sd11y's meeUn.r. the c-ouncll also will rons\der h1r· mg a coMultant to prepare a plan for the hi~tonr Los Rios aroa. Other Ite ms on the Ol f'nda In · elude cons1derat1on of proposed rcoqra n11ut1on of the county lnteriovernmc nti.I Coordinallm: <'ounrll nnd an agn.'f'ment with t he South Ens t Rc a1 o nal Kt>rl amatl on Authority 4SERHA> for op<•r1llon o f l1 wutewater treatment plant. Thl' m~lln,; bcgln."1 al 7 p m. al dty hall. ORAN OE COA$T I /'4 DAILY PILOT .~'::.=t.~7~ ~~~11:. 7.~;.!.:.: '~ :~ ~ , ... ,. "'4;lt1"''"" ( "'"••"• ~ ..... ,, lld4t"""" .. ,. f"Vt. 11\"'-'4' a.Y~H'f 'f\tc°"'Q~ , t•Mi tWO' t •~'• ~ .. Nf•p.i.t f\p~"• H..,Mt~ ....... '°' ·~' '""" V•lf•t h ••flll9. t...CIV ...... • \r'•ll#• .,.., t...,.......l••fll 'liiM;U,(W\t • .......,,....,..,_..., t ... " """"'".....,. \•tv•tM• .,.. ~' '"'-,,-:;:,_;' :~;;:~.!.1.~~:~,~'.:,.. U0 ~'I Nf Robt'r1 N. WHd Pt"'•"'' •"4 l"v0t1~ J8<k R. Curlcry ~ ..• ,...., ...... ,.,.,c;.,_.,~ 'Tt'Om •s KeeYll .. , .. ~ l homes A MUf"PhllW' ,,,,..~ ..... ···~ Ch.arlt'S H Loos Rlc"-rd P. Natl A\\•\t~tM.t~"'41,~ UllU"41 .. 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The transportation department hu aareed to sell the p1:1rcel nur V10& S.n Gorao nio and Avenida Vaque ro for $144,000, con· slderably less than tho St00.000 to $500,000origlnally demanded. 1be San Clemente Clty Council wtu consider the state'• offer at a meeuna at 7:30 p.m . Wednetday at City Hall. City Manqer Kem· neth Carr has recommended purchase be approved. The city initiated action to ac· quire the site in 1972 when the land was declared surplus by the t ransportation department. The parcel bad been acquired as right-0f·way for Lbe San Dic10 Freeway. · But the city and state couldn't agree on price. The state sought an appraisal price ol $400.000 l.o SS00,000. The city wu willing to pay the state's acquisition cost. wh.lcb was sligbt.J.y more than $100,000. The city was successful ln hav. ing legislation approved to re· quire surplus property be sold at its acquisilioo cost. 1be matter wound up in court, with the state challengin1 the constitutionality of the law. ·Tbe case r epeatedly was postponed. Finally, the transportation department of. fered to sell the site foe $144,000. Carr said be will propose that money from the stat.e's park bond fund and the city's park ac· Quisltioo fund be used to pay lbr tbe parcel. How development of the park would be paid for would have to be determined later by the coun· cU, Carr said. WINTER ••• basketball, volleyball, tenniA and ·ii hufrteboard tournaments throughout town. Tb.e .. Oldfashioned Hoedown and Squaredance" will be held from noon to dusk Feb. 28 and 29 al the Art Center. Also on tap for following weekends are an anUQue 1how, the lawn bowling finals, skateboard races, a gourmet din· ner. and concerts at the lrvlne bowl. The Winter FestJVal will COD· elude with the IRA Cham· plonsbip Rodeo·By·The·Sea March 6 and 7 at the Irvine Equestrian Center. Hinshaw Gets Sentencing Postpo1iement Convicted Congressman An drew Hinshaw's sentencing was delayed for one week today when the Newport Beach Republican's lawyer explained that he has not had sufficient time to prepare his motion for a new triaJ. Oraue County Superior Court Judge Robert P . Kneeland set Feb. 24 as the da te he will sen- tence Hinshaw to wh11t could be one to 14 yoars In state prison on the bribery co11vlct1on 1f he df'· mt>s attorney Marshall Mor1tan's motion Morgon explained m court to dav that he hns been distracted from preparation of hi., motion by the serious lllncs.<11 of his 13. yur old :son who recently un· derwent an operation for re mMl\I of tt tumor that proved to be benign. Mor1tan s aid he has been rurther handicapped by tht re• eent appointme nt to the &.rp.rior Court bench of South l~guna at torncy Robert Green who worked with him on the Hinshaw trial. lllnshaw, 53. was found guilty or charges tbal he accepted s tef'f'O equipment as bribes from the Tandy Corporation while he worked as Orang(' County's as- 11essor prior to his electloo 111 J972. He was found guilty oh attond bnbery t'ount stemminl from al· legations that he accepted cam · pa1itn contributions from a Tan· dy execut1,·e. Probatio n Officer It. J . Hamilton bas suggested a prison term for H inshaw uoce, he states, the congressman does not believe that he committed any crime. Pauenger Killed SAN FRANCISCO <UPI> -A Sausalito woman was tilled and 11 Sunnyvale man waa lnJUT'ed Monday when the car they were in was struck by an auto that was eoing lhe wrong way on the busy James Lick Freeway. Kill~ wu Jane DeluJte, 28. who wu a pa.ssen1er In a car driven by Charles 1i1 )UC, 27, Cul1'ert Cnaaples COl'TUJtated steel work supporting an earth· work bridge for the extension of Turtle Rock Drive in Irvine crumpled under the weight of earthmoving equipment Monday with this (,fsult. Driver of tractor wasn't hurt, however . Collapse of the bridge near Jordan Avenue and University Drive is ex· peeled to cause a delay of several weeks in the completion of the project. Bridge was scheduled for paving next week. Lawyer Negotiations Jury Picking Pondered by CUSD Vmler Way For Vallerga Capistrano Unified School Dls· trict trustees will be asked tonieht to approve a recommen- dation that private attorneys con· duct salary ne10Uations with school employes. Under a proposed contract, the law firm of Biddle and Walurs would be perm ltted to charge a maximum of $1,400 in services before seeking further authortza- tfon from the board. It would be the firm's job to conduct all employe salary negotiations and perform other speciaUzed legal services that cannot be handled b,y the Oraqe County CowiMl11 omce. Tbe swltcb ii viewed as a means for the board of ID:lprovt.ni it.a :strfli&lh lo Ulla Year'I lalary Group Tells Council Picks The names of city council can· didates that will have supPQrt or the San Clemente Homeowners Association wm be announced at a meet1n1 at 7 o'clock tooi&ht al Concordia School. Thomas Youngerman, as9ocia· hon spokesman. sald names of "two or three" candidates will be announced by a committee thal interviewed the 10 hopefuls. Tbe election ts March 2. Youngerman said the announ· cements will not constitute formal endorse ments, but will r e flect candidates whose philosophies are compatible with the association. The meeting is open to the public. Voice Exhibition Slated a t College Anna BJarnson, a 20-year~ld dl)(•rulic soprano. and Giovanni Bendandl, a 78-year~ld tenor, wtll ttlvc a lecture·demon.•trallon on vocall11 m at Saddleback College Thursday. The public la Invited to the 3 p.m. de monstration In Building G for which there I~ no admlasion charge. Spain Amnesty? BARCELONA, Spain CUPJ) - A t'hurch luder publicly uked Kinii Juan Carlot today to grant an amne~ty that would free Spain's remamina 1,000 political prisoners. talks with teachine and non teaching employes in the district. Tbls year's talks will be con· ducted under rules of a new col· lective bargaining bill sl&ned In· tolawbyGov. EdmWldG. Brown Jr. 'the intent or the bill ls to give employes more power at the bargaining table. Up to now , district ad · ministrators have carried the school board 's pos ition an negotiations. School officials have s aid that negotiations were consumini: loo much of the administrators' time and that the new collecti ve bargaining bUI presents special problems best addressed by at· torneys. The private firm also would be permitted to negotiate contract:. on behalf or the school district and advise and asal.st In lntroduc · tion or legislation. Approval of tbe contract is re commended by Supt. Jerome Tbomsley. Several s chool construcllon matte,.. also will be con5idered by the board at the 7:30 p.m. meeting at San Juan Elementary School, 31642 El Camino Real. San Juan Capistrano. Trustees are expected to re· view plana for the new Harold J . Ambuehl Elementary School m San JuJQ and discuss guidelines for the purchase or new school .,ites. Ford to A ir CIA.Plans WASHINGTON <AP> -· President Ford will unveil hi• plan lo reorganize supervision oC the In · te!Ugence agencies al a t.elevlaed news conference late lhls afternoon, press secretary Ron Nessen an· nounced. The plan 11 for a streamlined lntelllgt>ncc community that will pul CIA Director George OUllh ln position U> t'Onln>I llll spy agencies, Admlnlatra· Uonofllclaluay. llcsJ>('aks atSp.m . The Ofrit'lals say BUAh will be chairman of a 11mall Int.er.agency panel whlrh will give him the power to control the budgeta of other •PY agencies, such a11 1..hoec within the Defense Depart. ment and the National Security Agency. J ury selection began today in the Kem County Superior Court tnal of former Orange County assessor Jack Vallerga. Officials at the B.tkersfield courthouse which wu selected as the site of Vallerga's conspiracy trial when he successrully de manded a change of venue from Orange County County s aid Judge P.R. Dorton was assigned tu the rase this mornin6(. Orange County Deputy District Attorney William Evans is prosecuting conspiracy rharJ(es l'Ontained in a grand jury 1nd1ctment. Vallerga, 54, is being defended by Santa Ana attorney J ohn Cahill. Ev:ins predicted before he l<'ft for Bakersfi eld Monday that the t rial of the former assessor would take at least three weeks the length of a tnaJ in Ventura County last August that led to Vallergn 's conv1ct1on on multiple criminal charges. Valle rga was fined Sl,000. removed from county office and ordered to ser ve a 60-day jail term alter that conviction. The fine and jail term have heen stayed pe nding a ruHng on his appeal. At issue in the Bakersfield trial 1s the allef(atlon that Valle rga "as one of a number of employes in the assessor's office who permitted county manpower. materials a nd time to be used during former county assessor Andrew Hins haw's successful bid for Congress. F r o. Page Al CLAI M. • • c1t y '11 Insura nce CJrner for litigation The arrtdent occurred just off Sum mit Way, a dirt road just orr Summit Drive. The c laim ulleJ(es that nlthou i:h t he r oad m ;,ay he privatl', ll l:'I Wll'cl by the vublir and lht• city foiled to ln11tall Jl uurd rails, hJ:hhn.: ur any other w otectlve or warning devke!I. In oil rour pl'oph• wt•n · in1ur{'(f an lh<' art'id<'nl The other three• r('re1ved le:rist>r IOJUnrs und were r 1'l t•:t:'ll'd <1fl c r e m ergency ho-.pital treatmt-nl. 1·pt1 W<•ntworth. Smlth'11 ;it torney, said to<l ay other :.wts nl:'lv sN•kini: m ill1ons 1n damai~S nrc pending a~aln11t others In· volv('(f in the accident. Banker Foils Robber -~ NEW YORK (AP) -A mu who threatened to blow up a bank office and later told police be lo& the Idea from a t•Ylidoa •bow was apprehended todlY IAer a cool bank officer preued a silent alarm button and delayed him until police arrived. The man, wearint a fake mustache and carrytai a packa1e, entered tbe '1rat. National City Bank office next door to Rockefeller Cet« and dia1ona1Jy across ntut Avenue from St. Patrick'• Cathedral and demanded M,000, pol.le. aald. · "l have • bomb and I want money," police quoted blm u tellin1 the bank'• branch maoa1er In a note. "ll wLU take me a while to let that together.·' she wu quoted as replying ... Will you wait?" Police said the manager, who was not Identified, then Sl1Daled a silent alarm which broucht half a dozen police crulaen to the bank at Slst Street, t.ytn• up traffic and drawlo1 bundreda of onlookers. , The man·~ t>ack wu turned as the first four unlrormed offtcers entered the bank. Policesl1Daled to the manager to move away from the man. • "Let me check on the money," she said. plckln1 up a telephone and dialing an extension to an empty desh desk nearby. "Oh, I have to set \hat... •he aald, quickly getting up from her delk and movlna away. The four police oUlcers then grabbed the would·be robber. Police omcers saJd the man later told them he had been 1nlluenced by a television show about a bank robbery, but dJd not. identify tbe 1how. They a.lao 1atd he had read mumeroua news stories about a bank robbery last year but did not specify wblcb one. The bank was evacuated and Emeraency Service police tossed a rug over the package on the floor until lhe bomb aectlort arrtved. Bomb detectives examlned the package, which they later satd contained only cardboard. The man. wearing checkered pants, a brown raincoat and hat, had his phony mustache tom off when police sel1ed him. One police ofCicer described the foiled holdup aa amat.ewisb. "If anybody was ever golna io get caught, It was lh1s cu,y," the officer said, The man was identified as Mont e Mercer. 36, ot Buckln$tham Road, Cedarhurst, Long Island. He is married and Lhe father o( two, according to police. • They said he told them be had been under an analyat'a care for sometime. Board Weighs R esults of School Tests A progress report on the high srhool proficiency test given to students at Laguna Beach High School will be reviewed by the board or education meeting at 7: 30 tonight at district head- quarters, 550 BlumontSt. H passed, the lest grantt 1tu~ dents the equivalent or a high 11chool d iploma. Eight Laauna Reach High school student.a took the u at and s!x passed It. Oflhe six, rour have enrolled in Saddlebnrk College and two bavo left school. Another tell is scheduled for March27. Other school board butlnesa In · eludes: · · -A rcPort on goals evaluation nt Top of the World Elementary School. A resolution or appreeiatlon M lht' hillh tlChOOI booAtl'rx club for Its support or student ac- tivities. -Final approval or modular cla.ssrooma 11l Aliso Elementary School. • Farmers Oppose SJC PropOsal Directors or the Orantc County Farm Bureau are opposing the a,rlcultural pe~tuaUon pro- gram outlined in Propocltlon A on San Juan Capist.raoo'a Ma.tth 2 ballot. In a letter to the Dally Pilot. Dur Thetford, executl\re manager of the Farm Bureau, !latd. "We aak that good fiatal reaponalbUity be exercised by the City Council and not be eaughl up Into the ell~nslve 'fad ' of c ity owneuhlp or acrtcullural rarm land." ''Many cities throughout. the state aro euWn1 mMY valuable ur;vicea, upedall7 for ob.r 'younc people. because they no lonJU can alford their put flscaJ poUcy and priorities.'' he said. He uld the costs wiU not stop wtth the purchase of the land but al.so involve lhe upkeep, main· tenance and lots of tu revenue that 1ovemmenul ownership or the land producea. Thetlord said that U the city wants to perpetuate agriculture, "it mu.st provide the continuing environment for the farmer to re· main in agriculture." He utd the California Land Coaaervallon Act has been bend'lclal in belplnt to preserve Jld.me aaricultval land. .. I hs organ1utson, he ~;mf , wall work to strenl{then thts act. The Fa rin Bureau offirial :said the group does support open space where the citlrens receive ll<>n'le recreational benefits from the land. This type of land, he said, can us ually be purcha.sttd "at many dollars less" than prtme agricultural land. San Juan's plan, he said, would produce only a n "eye·appeal re· suit " wh ich would benefit only the fe w r csjdences located around the preserved land. '"The Farm Bureau Policy will also continue. to auppon. local land control by county or city over any other reaJooat enUty. but 1overnmental ownership over the Individual farmers'· righU cannot be 1upport.ed," he saJd. Thetford aho said his or• ganliallon would support lhe pro- gram 'a propoted right of Ont re~ fusal tr a reallstk, prcarranied contract can be established. 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UWJ~h Pfl U 171'• t I \Jtl'1ri 1 l) tO 01 , ... • ,. UNTtl wh U 1'• UN tot A t• t tO 11';, • -... UN f •lpf I • ' 1f' I • I un•ttoo OX! t) I.. • .. ~·v•r IM • 1r 1'1/t • l/'4 l,Jn1,..l T t ll 1 10 Jll,, 'i't UOfJ IMCNP 11 11' tn-. I • ~tri:", ~ 'f l:; ~:": .. DAIL V PILOT A J J 2 C801P ~~ Firllls Shooting it Out By MILTON MOSKOWltt This i• the yt>ur thut 1-:a6.tman Kodak will f1onll y shoot 1l out with Polaroid. lt':1 u »howdown lhut bas Iona be<>n in the making. Kodu.k ;and Pol11rold ure tht• domltu1nt companiN~ in the mulli·million dollar pholo~roJ1h1c bw.mess. However, up to now they have avoided a ra~·e-to (aec confrunt11tlon. POLAROID 111\."i ('i\RVF.D OUT ITS own niche In thf! market with ln~taot cam~ras. Kodak not only loit'rntcd thul dC'vt•lopmt•nl bul ulM> ht•lpt-d Poluroid by supplyinic it with negative film Kodak worked on the ussumptlon tha\ unything ftOod for photography wl\~ i;tood for Kodttk. Thb Pl'G<'cful <'ot'Xish:ncl' ii; about to end. Polaroid, as of Jan. 1. bt>gan supplying all Its own tum nffd1. ll no longC"r buys anylhin.i from KOduk . And Kodak Is 1cttinC ~ady to introduce an instant camera of its own to compete agalns-t :f:c. extensive P ol:iro1d ~ Kodak bas not dis-r. closed when 1t wUI bnng \i~ ~ out its new cam era but t everyone in the photo· iruphlc industry seems· w ex-peel it to arriv~ this spring. Money Tree No details are a\'ailuble ye~ on the features of the camera or how it will be priced. IF POLAROID IS NERVOU , IT'S not showing it. It stumbled a bit when iL introduced its SX·70 setr.developing camera in 1972 but it has just come through the second year in a row in which It sold more than live m1lllon cameras. one million ol them SX-70s . ll now has three different versions or the SX·70 -a nd next month. heading Kodak off at the pass. it will trot out a fourth version, the Pronto. Tbe Pronto. like the other SX·70s, will also develop col· or pictures automatically before your eyes without your having to do anything. It will weigh 16 ounces ~nd carry a suggested retail price or S66, which means lhut discounters will proba bly be hawking it for $50. PRONTO, YOU WILL NOTF.. IS beini: 11hlpped into stores immediately prior to tht' rumored introduction of t.hc Kodak instanl camera Kodak and Polaroid arc a study m contrasts. Kodak is by far the bigger «1mlpany, oubl.'lhng Polaroid by 6 to·l and o'utearoing It by lO·lO I Kodak has 200.000 employ~s. l'olaro1d has 1:u>oo. Kodak Is known as u rnn:-:er vativt'. do it·by-the· num~rs com pan)". a place whert• everyone 11> \H•li groosnt>d and where It's not uncommon Cor sons and daughters to follow their parents as emplOyes. f'Ol.AROIO TAKES MUCH OF ITS spirit from the rt>St· l~s l'nergy of Its founder, Dr. Edwin Land, who still h1•uds tht> company. who still serves as its chief scientist and who :mil owns 15 percent of all the stock. Jnlerviewed last year by Forbes magazine. Dr Land was Mked whether it wu~n ·t true that ht' had "created ;t whole industry based on impatience.'' It<' rE-pl1cd : ''Look. If the picture you get instanlly is a s beautiful a~ the picture you get by waiting seven days. then It is absoluk madness to say that there Is virtue in waiting.·' It's a virtue that Kodak 1s giving up this year. too. .UCB Bra1ich Due To Open in NB The United California Bank will have a new single.story and m ezzanine br anch with drive· UP facilities al 2750 Pacific Coast Highway in the Mariners Mile at Newport Ilcach by late summer. The buildln~. to be located on 3 18,900·Squarc root Sltl' with 4,468 square feet or baok floor space, will cosl S235,000. said Stan Bro{·khoff, VI<'<' president·general manager or construction for the hr:rnch's general contractor, Don Koll Company, Inc .. also of Newport Beach. The architect is Wilson V. Woodman and Associates or Newport Beach. The landscape architect is FlintridRe Landscape of Costa Mesa and the interiors are by Latt- Jackson a nd Associates of Santa Monica. Fir~stone Planning Ads on Tire Safety WASHINGTON (API -The Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. will pay at least $750.000 lo broadcast and publish tire· safety adv<>rt1sin~ to settle a government complaint that previous ads misrepresented the safety qualitic~ or Firestone's tires. The ~overnment alleged that Fire5ton<' violated a 1972 Federal Trade Commission order wilh ads claiming that. l'er1 aln Firestone tires are saft>r under all conditl<Jns. Thn itds l\IUd the t ires were O( Superior quality without having r1111 proof for the claim, the complaint aJleg<>d. R etunblf» Baumn Sought SCHF.N l':CT/\OY. N. Y CUPf> -Owners of portahlc radio~. :-.lt•n •ns and other t>qu1prnent which ust: bu.tterlt•s may not tlllV(• lo discard them OOCl' they IOllC thfir power. <;l'lwrul J<:lectric Cl). says 1t plans to market r1:cn11r~c11 - b l t• bu.tt c riel'i and chargers 1' h \' II I\ t 1 rl JI ll I(' d price or each !!mall bat· f\'ry w 111 be a It 1111' morl' than S3. but G 1<: says It 11hould be <'.apuhlt• o r holdlnl{ 11 new ehargf' t .OOOtlmf'~. ( TAKING ) __ S_TO_CK_ ~1v1t•la '6 tt '' 111 ••• VW Pf 1 10 . I tt-.. • • ~h ll\11 le ll IOI \!.. , ~~ti ~ ~~~; .: Ey.-gla•• Ada Debofftf ~~1~":r~ v, U....,._ "'' SAN. DJ E GO <AP) -Advt'rtlsing the price of y,:" 1: 1: ,fl :~-:=: eyeglasses and contact lenses "lends to deceive the public," 1 .eo 1 ,, """. v. tbe California Optom«.>tric Allsoclallon said. ~. °' u • '" •·· "The safety of a rierson's vi~l<m canl'IOt be left to \he -11 '°"' ,, '"" .. v-.. .. 1.01b 'f 4' 11.-. .... UMkiHed clerk in a mass merchandisln" outlet," said J esso v.~ 0t1111 ,.. n~ .. .. v~ Qw> 1 10 10 " 111.11--. C. lic:u1ley. president of the t ,900·member group whi«h ~~~ ~2 ,.. ·~-"" wound up it.s 1976 convention In San Die.io. ve.l~i:'ii • ,J " .. , Buying glMlle!I, he said Mondoy. "Ill not like buulng :' V•I!~ 2.t0 . . j& JO\lo • •• ) ( I Vel!Ppl "70 •. tl9 0 • VI • oar 0 bread." \leElK " t .. rt00 ,..,., • .... ~~11:i•'= tt:·"" l.,eUH~f» PrkP Dropping Vfol (Mp ... 1 14 1HU 1't V1Acet1~.,!_-EL CENTRO 1/\P> -Lcttuccwasselllngas low as HJ wa11AD1 •• ,.. .. 1120 .. •.• cents a head in some 11lores and "growers are losing ll dollar ::;...~,-~~ 1} :~""::,14 a carton," sayli Juck Cloth of the F eder al·Statc Markt\. ~· c .. " ·~"' New~ Service. :r.,..,..~ !: ~ j1~ ~ "This Is the tlmo for lhe hous cwile to buy l~ttucc." ""-11 llltAOll $ ~t -"*' ""1 ~ ._, ~ ""' WllllNw Miii 4 to 14W'-\4 • FI 1"'1JI CltN ("Q , I ~I Cl.. ("O P.f ("*f 0.. {~ :!."'tl:lft n n~-; ~ -,._ -,._ __.,, .,_ . _..-,, ... ,.16 I• .,.._~ ~ 7J • 1' 71 '" ¥M,t,.AOll M .-.+ _., ~--11 1l f" . , W-.. M ., ti '°"'-"' \ltlt\ltltlli.~ F119 'M 6 » ""' • '" WN9PIO Sil 2' .. ti-Ill ._..,co M 11 1U 1i + V. •-?! .•. l«z 211v..=1~ Wll' 11.oso10 I " '"" ,... -154 pf• . 00 tl'lil v. W.00C,,, ..-> >U ... • -. ~ • 1 -.re. 4 uv. -. Wllrl~ fO 11 U1 11\1'1 • loo -,._.,, 1 4l 1• -'9 114 ·, • ,. _ _. •wir.Tt I io I 11 2•IMI • --lll(;al .tO I 11• 2lYt • lot """"°'""' l 10 t "' D" '-.JO S) S .... 14 '#fl9Ppl •l't 140 H -1 -.ic DIC) , • 34 -"1.10 •. ' M~ ,,_ W•Ylll .,,. m u~ -5=:""p) .• » UV.-... -l•Mow . 10 I~ Ill Wll<lf Altw' t• ...... V.mrS 1.20 t n 16'4--.... JO 1n 10•" . Wllillff• C'# 4' ,~ ~ + "' w.1111y 1.• 10 n ., 11 . Wei-Gt 1,.19 j7 ,,.__"' Wt I 40 6 ta 20'~ + '4 WI(~ 1'~ 10 200 114•-'• tllNf'IU. 20 .. • 1"--I<. WtlflNlf M I ft IJ~ • .,, -NA .O 1 11 IJ"' V. WI-ti 11 I )~ • " Wy17 Gotp .. Q 4\" •• w-S.I I• 10 • o~-.. Wiii Pet 11\d ll " ..... "" W1111..,,,(. 1 ~ m 1614-loo -•Yl- Wa w.i ' ,. • "" fl'4 • 1<11 -u•ve eo 1 '1 ""'. "' w11w• O)<I 10 o 1 ... Ol( (,p 1 n m uti.-,. -Ml'9t 10 M II;,• ~ '#Uflk!ll I ~ I 200 11-. ~. 'M11110• I .... U IOI ~'I ...., !Ute l~pl) 6.t 10''-• '• _,,..., .tGb,. u ., .. _ " .,,v.. "'. . l 6? ..... -baOO . ,.. l tn ......... ,.. '"°"' 1411 ., .... _ .. --0 Al"' D 1'-• V. ~ i t0 s •• WltEIP f t1 11 n ,..,._ \II Y"!AIDr ~ • • 11\G Y. WftNf UO • • a ""' + ~ -Ill El ,91 I IJJI U\1)-~ 'Wl•E,,,. I tO 1110 10111.-1~ Z.~ IO I 114 '1V. f • W.lnUft fftC I 60 •tn + Iii \lllllllElpf ) 10 t ftq 4) -t Wlt<O. I 10 I JO 1.-0 ~ AO • • ' II -I~ ...., "u2t . h , •• 14 _,.,.,. ,..., ,, n ... -"'1 WI~ i,ss ra ,, -·~ ~ .10 • n ,,.,. .... -"-·"° I J '"' + IO ~ l,Jt • • ,... ·Wit< I • 10 2S 11\l lityrw Corp t:M 2t1 '"' • _, ~ c,p ft P ,,_"" -~.IO 1t 4Jl .,_ '" Witco 1.io n ;. ,....,__·~ :z..;iU,Rlld 1 • 1'1 ~-~ IMt!MU. M J4 ut ,.,_"' ...., JI U1 •• .. "'-, .. :'°" W ., I t,i •I tw1'I 1111 .ll 1.3 H 11,._ Mt A'' OM. v PfLOT Tu!!d!y. ll'!btu!ry t1, 1118 ' New flavor discovery for 9 mg. tar MERIT achieves taste of cigarettes having 60% more tar. .. Now there's a way to cut tar without the usual loss in taste. That's the report from Philip Morris on a new taste discovery called 'Enriched Flavor'. A way to pack flavor-extrafla1 1or- into tobacco without the usu.al correspondin g increase in tar. The kind of flavor that outdates conventional low tar brands. The cigarette with 'Enriched Flavor' is remarkable new MERIT If you smoke-whether it's a low tar b rand with a taste you can't quite ge t used to, or a full-flavor smo ke you enjoy but with a tar level you'd like to drop-you'll be interested . Smoke"Crackcd': Key Ingredients Isolated After a twelve-year research effort, a team of scientists at o ur Richmond Research Center succeeded in isolating the "key" fl avor ingredients of tobacco as they exist in cigarette smoke. ..-~~~-~=:;;~:::.'! By adding only those ingredients which are of extreme high quality as flavor producers yet low tar producers as well, we 're now able to pack incredible flavor into a cigarette without the usual corresponding increase in tar. 'Enriched Flavor'. It's extra fl avor. Natural fla\lOr. Flavor that can't burn out, can't drop out, can't do anything but come through. We packed 'Enriched Flavor' into the tobacco used to make MERIT And began a n exteJ!sive C ftillp ........ lllC-I t7' series of taste tests. The results were startling. 18.ste-Tested By People Like You 9 mg. tar MERIT was taste-tested against five current leading low tar cigarette brands ranging from 11 mg. to 15 mg. tar. Thousa nds of filter smokers were involved, smokers like yourself, all tested at home~·, The results were conclusive: Even if the cigarette tested had 60% more tar, a significant m ajority of all smokers tested reported new 'Enriched Aavor' MERIT d elivered more taste. Repeat: delivered more taste. In similar tests against 11 mg. to 15 mg. m~rhol bra nds, 9 mg. tar MERIT MERIT and MER IT MENTHOL ME OL performed stro ngly too, de ivering as much-or more -taste than the higher tar brands tested. You 've bee n smoking 11low tar, good taste" claims long enough. Now you 'vc got the ciga rette . MERIT Incredible smoking pleasure at only 9 mg. tar. From Philip Morris. • Am«>c.:8'1 lnJltlutc of Co.isumer Optnlu!I. Sc~y evail•Nc free on 1tq1Ktc PM1p Mum1 Inc .• RK"hmond. VA 2.3261. 9 mg'. 'tar:· 0.7 mg. nicotine w. per cigarene by FTC Method. Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. I l 7 Saddlehaek EDI TION Today's Clos tac N.Y. Stoek.s VOL. 69, NO. 48, 3 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORN IA T U ESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1976 ~tate Begins ~robe of oc· Jail_Deat By KATHY CLANCY Ot-0.•ty .......... The California Attorney GeneraJ's office bas begun an in· quiry into the death or • Westminster man who may have auffered fatal head injuries while serving a weekend Jail term. Capt. Robert Griffeth of the Orange County Shertfrs office said be turned his report on the dutb ol Doa Neboo. •. over to ao 1Uoroey 1eoeral'a io· Vesticator OD P'l'ld11. NeboD died Feb. a al Oruce County Medical CnM!r after ty. lnl tn • coma the.re for a week loflowtn1 au.rcery for • null li'actu.re. M!ke Serio, senl« bm:ltieator for the attorney 1eneral In Orance County. said tbe IDquiry I.I '"Wery Jlmlted at tbil point." It and candidate ln last •Orin1'• Oc.aa View School DlatrlcL CNltee elect.ionl. was aervinC t.J>e llrat wed:end of five on a clr\l\ken drivinc convld.lon. Grlffe t b 1ald today the lherttra inve1U1aUon revealed Mr. Nellon fl.rat became W dur· Ina lunch in Jill oo Jan. 25. He aaJd be suffered "a aeizure ol one type or 1DOther and fell and hit bil bead on tbe concrete." Griffeth aald Mr. Nelson was examined by • re1lstered nurse on duty, then aeemed to be fine and was returned to his cell. He suffered another seizure about 4:15 p.m. in the cell and was a1ain taken to the medical office. then was transported to OCMC about 8:15 p.m., Griffeth c:ootlnued. He explained he does not yet know what caused the seizures or l( Mr. Nelson was consclo when he fell each Ume.. J He said jail olficla.ls did try~ help Mr. Nelson and probably dtdt the best they could for him. ~ .. Mrs. Nelson's attorney ha claimed jail officials did little aid Mr. Nelson. who reportedly~ was vomitin& and quite Uh throughout the day Sunday. ' Grl(feth said his report ia.t' (See PROBE, Page AZ> ~ ~ 'Cinque' Said He'd Kill · Patty?: Banker Foils Robber NEW YORK CA P> -A man who threatened to blow up a bank office and late r told police he got the idea from a televtS1on s how was apprehended today after a cool bank ofhcer pressed a silent alarm button and delayed him until police arrived. The man. weanng a fake mustache and carrying a package, entered the First National City Bank office next door to Rockereller Center and diagonally across Ftnh Avenue from St. Patrick'• Cathedral and demanded $96,000. police said. "l have a bomb and I want money," police quoted him as telling the bank's branch manager in a note. "It will take me a while to get that toeetber.'' abe wu quoted as replying. "Will you wait?" Police said the manaier. who was not Identified. then alanaled a silent alarm which broulht half a dozen police cruisers to lbe bank at 5lst Street. tying up traHic and drawing hundreds of onlookers The man's back was turned as the first rour uniformed officers entered the bank Police signaled to the manajler to move away from the man "Let me check on the money." she said. p1ckin11t up a telephone and diahnfi( an extension to an empty desh desk nearby. "Oh, 1 have to 11tet that," she said, quickly getting up from her desk and moving away. <See BOMBER, Page A.%) School Chie f Slates Talk Dr Richard Wf'lte. "uJ)<'nnten - dent or the Saddleback Valley l 'n1rled School District . will speak at the r<'~ular monthly meetmg or the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council Wednesday nt 7 .30 p m in th<' community room or People':. 1-'<'d<'ral Sav- ings nnd Loan, 23688 El Toro Road, El Toro. Dr. Wt>ltf' 111 t'Jt i11.·rted to discuss the dl11 tri c t 's budg<'t pro· blems and how 1.1clm11U1trators and trustees a re attemplini: to solve them Thert "111 be a questJon and answer period followtnit his talk. The public l.H 1nv1ted lo attend. Coa'tt \\''e at h e r Sunny with variable highs clouds Wednesday Highs ln the 60s at the beaches and s lightly warmer inland areas. Lows toalSht in the 40s. I NSIDE TODAY Parrnt•' /aftclfvl ttplcmo. lionl obovt the "btrdl and the btt1" b1't l~g the lUt~ kidl out in le It f teld ll.f to wM1't babtn really do romt from Set Pogt A7. l •dex •• ., All .. A4 AA .,.. M>J All A" .. M (. SCENE FROM OICAA NOMINR 'CUCKOO•t NEST' LoulH Fletcher. Jack NteholMn Both Nominated 'Cuckoo's Nest' Tops Oscar List LOS ANGELES (AP) -"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," the saga of one man's fight against the system in an insane asylum. scored top honors in the 48th Academy Award nomina· lions today. The United Artists film drew nine nominations. including those for best picture. Jack Nicholson as best a1..1.or, Louise Fletcher as best actress, Brad Dourif for s upporting actor and Milos F·orman for best director. "Barry L y ndon .. pla ced second with seven nominations and "Dog Day Artt'moon" was third wath six The three hims were nomtnat ed for best pi cturc. along "'th "Jaws" and "Nashv1lll'." In the best actor category. Nicholson faces competition from Walter Matthau in "The Sunshine Boys ;" Al Paclno, "Dog Day Afternoon:" Max· lmlllan Schell. ··The Man ln the Glass Booth," and James Whit· more, "Give 'Em llell. Harry!" Mlss Fletcher's opponent'! as best actress are laabelle Adjanl. "The Story of Adele JI.:" Ann· Margret, "Tommy;" Glenda Jackson, "Hedda:· and Carol Kane, "Hester Street." Georee Burns. whom most critics considered Matthau's co· star In "The Sunshine Boys," wos nom lnated In the supportlnlt actor category. Bcsides Dounf, he races Burgess Meredith or "The Day of the Locust:" Chris Saradon. "Dog Day Afternoon," and Jack Warden, "Shampoo." The supporting actress · race features two from "Nashvtlle." Ranee Blakley and comedienne Lily Tomlin. Also nominated: Lee Grant, "Shampoo:" Sylvia Miles. "Farewell, My Lovely.'' and Brenda Vaccaro, "Once ls Not Enough." Academy voters will now view the nominated films and make their final choices, which will be announced to a teh.•v1sion au· d1ence on Monday, March 29. an ceremonies ul the l..()C) Angeles Music Cente r. Although nominated for best picture, "Jaws " was given only four nominations and none for direction. The director nominees are Federi co Fcllln1, "Amarcord"; Stanley Kubrick, ''Barry Lyndon"; Sidney Lumet, "Dog Day Afternoon" ; Robert Altman. "Nuhvllle," and Forman for ··cuckoo's Nest." ·The nominated aong1: "How Lucky Can You Get" from "Joun· ny Lady"; "I'm Easy" from "Nuhville": "Now That We're I n Love" from ''WhlUs"; "Richard's Window" rrom "The Other Side or thf' Mountain," and ''Theme from Mahogany." Viejo Schednles 7th St. Patrick's Parade Mission Vlejo's Seventh An· nual St. Patrick·s Day Parade. scheduled March 13, promises to be an American tnditioo with an lriah navor. In observance of America's bicentennial, the Mission Viejo Activities Committee has addtd a new award for this year's parade -a bicentennial trophy for the best portra,yal o{ the bicentennial theme . As in the past. there will be tropbJes for the best portrayal or the St. Patrick's theme, iotf cut noats, equestrian units, Wormal walkinl entries. com· mercial entries, high school band.I and drill teams, and the best overall entry. H{gh schools which have already entered the parade in· elude M1s1ioo Viejo. John Glenn, Mayf1lr, Elainore, La Mirada, El Toro, La&Una Beach and Norte V.iat.a. Entries have also been re· ceived from the Mission Viejo Beautiful Committee, the MIS· sion VieJO rfl:reatioo centers. the 'Girl Scout s, the U.S. Army. McDonald's Hamburgers, the Te Manu Dancers. Movieland Wax M~eum. Keystorre Savinp and Loan and the U.S. Navy. Groups, businesses or clubs can enter their names by ccot.at'l· inc Ole Mlaston Viejo Acllvltles Committee, 131-4050 Ext. 647, or Betty Noble, SM:-5998. Wouldn't Give Up To FBI SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Patricia Hearst, resuming her testimony at her bank robbery trial. said today her terrorist kid· napers planned to kill her and · hght it out if any of their hideouts wve s urrounded by federal agenL'I Speaking rirmly und with no \'lsible trace of emotion, Miss Hearst said that Symbionese Liberation Army leader Donald "Cinque·• DeFreeze told her or an incident in Oakland a day or two alter her Feb. 4. 1974. abduc· · tion ln which the FBI stormed a house where agents suspected she was being held captive. NEIGHBOA~ATTY 'NICEST I EVER MET 1 AS "~.,......... .. Cinque told me they would have kllled me and fought It out with the FBI if we had been in the house." Miss Heant said. "He PRESS roLLOWS PATTY HEARST OUTSIDE SF COUATHOUS~ New1peper Helre11 a.comet Tout11t Attraction ;:i~:cr_.~ou1d never have sur· Kero County Her chief attorney, F . Lee Bailey, then be1tan asking her questions about a closet she ·and her JUry saw on a tour Monday or two SLA "sare houses" where the young heiress was held captive. The defendant has testified that her first taped "communi· que" was made from a closet in a house in suburban Daly City a few days after her kidnaping. She said today that De Freeze and olher SLA members then left her more or less alone unUl they or· dered her to make a second tape, recieved Feb. 12, in which the SLA issued a demand for $70 worth of food for each or Califomla·s needy. Jury Pick Begins In Vallerga Trial Clad In a navy blue pants suit with large white bow, MISS Hearst testified that she was kept blindfolded except when allowed to go to the toilet and take an oc cas1ona l bath. She said an SLA member was always present when her blindfold was orr. but was wear· ing a ski mask. Mlss Hears t began relating her story or captivity by the SLA in her flrat witness stand ap· pearance before her jury on Fri· day. That was followed by the tour Monday of the terrorist <See CINQUE, Page A.%) Jury selection began today in the Kem County Superior Court trial of former Orange County assessor Jack V allerga. Officials at the Bakersfield courthouse which was selected as the site of Vallerga's conspiracy trial when he successfully demanded a change or venue from Orange County County said Judge P.R. Borton was assigned to the case this morning. Oranfi(e County Deputy District Attorney William Evans Is prosecuting conspiracy charges contained in a grand jury indictment. Vallerga, 54, is being derended by Santa Ana attorney John Cahill. Evans predicted before he left for Bakersfield Monday that the trial or the former assessor would take at least three weeks -the length or a trial In Ventura County last August that led to * * •~~--~--~~~~--~--........ ~ D•f PHet ..,_ta.. . .. YOUR VIEW ON PATI'Y HEARST GUILT: I tttlnlk Patty HNnt •• , O Wiii be found ;ullty of robbery charges against her O Wiii be found Innocent n Hung jury or other COMPLICITY: I thlnll Patty Hearst .•• O Went wllllngly with her SL.A captors o went unwilllnoly but was brainwashed O Went a;alnst her will end was kept e;alnst her will INTEREST: I follow u. Patty HMnt UH ••• OClowly, read most stories about It O Pretty closely O Selctom O Not•t •II COVE RAGE: I tMnlktN PNSI .•• O Is overplaylno the H&arst case O Is covering It about right O Is underplaying~ story • Meil to the address below or drop by any of the Daily Pilot offices listed on Page 2. Attach any comments on the Patty Hearst c.ase If wish. EclW Dally Pflot Box U6t C.t. Mesa, CA ttm Sltftltwe .ct Adctrn1 (If yotl Whit) •·•••••·······•·•·•·•···················••··············••·····•••·• Vallerga's conviction on multiple criminal charges. Vallerga was fined $1,000, removed from county omce and ordered to serve a 60·day jail term after that conviction. The Cine and jail term have b«n stayed pending a ruling on his appeal. At issue in the Bakersfield trial is the allegation that Vallcrga was one of a num bcr of employe11 in the assessor's office who permitted county manpower. materials a nd time to be used during former c ounty assessor Andrew Hinshaw's successful bid for Congress. Hinshaw will be tried on identical conspiracy charges March I in Orange County Superior Court. Fre e-standing Gas Station Signs Opposed Free.1tandln1 Rervlce •lotion sl1ns have bet'n declared un• welcome in M llls 1on V1eJo by th<i Municipal Advisory Councl~ <MACL • In a triple-barreled blast at un-· slahtlineas MAC officials calle<( for a county planning com· mission amendment to prohlh1t; free-standing service !>talion. !lians In Mission Vu~jo, a unifornr, signing program from the Mis· slon Viejo Company, and action. by Supervisor Thomas Riley 10: behalf of a m ore restrictlvu. planned community program. The vote was 4·1 with Coun1 cllwoman Kathleen Kelly castlnl(. the dissenting ballot. She did noC: explain her vote. 1 Councllm~ look the actio~ because or their unhappiness: over a recently approved Mobi~ service s tation s ign at the come~ of Trabuco R oad and Ali cia, Parkway. • Gary Stoney, chairman of the MAC planning comrruttee, said the restrictions, if adopted, would only apply tofutureslgns. Exillini 1lgn1 would only come under tbe jurisdiction of the ban lf they were to become dama1ed or modified to a ai&n.lfl· cantdearee. Al DAIL y PILOT SB Proposed llegbt.rat.fea House Def eats Handgun Plans WASlllNCTON <UPI) -Th., Hou&e Judiciary Comnulttt to. day defeated two natlonal hudaun reautrollon proponla -ooe that would have required the 1tate11 to enact thdr own plan& wit hin two year• und another that would have created a naUonal re1ialration proanm . The committee action colll Sal Mineo Last Rites Held in NY From Wire Sttvltt$ MAMARONECK. N.Y -Sal Mineo. the actor·singer who rose LO film s tardom pla)mg the role Of ll JUVeniJe delinquent, was buried today in Valhalla, N Y , near the town where he spent his youth. Father Gerard DiSenso pre- sided at a packed funeral Mass at the 500·seat Holy Trinity Church, in Mamaroneck, where Mineo lived for some time alter leavinR his ch.ildhood home in the Bronx. "Our church was practically fQJI," one orthe priest's assistants said. "The family is not large, bat they have many weU·wisMrs and friends ... Many or the mourners wept openly. Several actors and ac· tresses were present. H e said DiSenso's sermon touched on Mineo's vlole.nt death. '!'be J7·year·old actor was stabbed to death Thursday ln the aarage or his Hollywood apart· ment building. "The main idea was that one of the facts of death is the pamlul part of parting, but accordmg to the beliefs of Christian faith the parting is juat for a temporary period. The coming together and the living together would be eternal.·· After the ser vice, Mineo was buried at Gate of Heaven Cl'metery in Valhalla. Mrs. Grace O'NeUI, speaking for the O'Neill F\lneral Home, s tressed that services for Mineo were "very, vuy private. The famtly did not want any Cao· fare." Mineo Is s urv1v~d by hl'I mother. Jose phine, and a brother, Mich3el. Meanwhile, the detectl\•e 10· \•csllgatlng the death :mys the ac- tor's p<>pulanty ls making his Joh more dirfl<'Ult .. I've not r uled out anvthinJ.? at this point except swc1de, .. s.,rt F'.d Pia, a sheriff's tK1m1cide m· vestigator said Monday "The only d1mcult part of 111" ~here l•> llO next he was tt vety popular man " lnvest1&otors say they ore 'tymied about the motive for tht• \'lolent killing. Pia said that as far as In vesligators know, Mineo had no serious enemte11. He said the Investigation was progressing "w Ith 360·degree v111lon ," Bnd that drug.'! or a IOvt' lrianglt', moth•es mention<'d in news aceounu, were only two or many pos .. lbthtil's Voice Exhibition Slated at Collf",ge Anna 8Jarn11on, a 20 year olJ 4'P4'raUc soprano, und Cilovt1nn1 lkndand 1. 11 711 ) c•ar-0ld tenor, \\Ill ~IH' a kcturt··th•mon.'4trnlion on vorall!l m nl !-,11ddlebUl'k <:olluc: Thuradny The puhlle 111 1m·1I NI In thl' ·1 t• m J1·rnons1rutlnn 1n llwld1n1t <:for which there 111n<>11dm111slon ('hari:t' ORANOi COA$T DAILY PILOT Robert N. WHd ••• ,.,,._, ... f"~i ........ J<'l<k R Cvrl~y ..... -... ·-··f\411~flllr•••M.-..· Thom•' A Mvrpf\1M .... ,...."', .... CNr1" H Locx Richard P Nall ,.," , .. " ..... ,... ........ ...., S.tdcHtbKll Y•l~Oft!Q '''°''. ""'' ·-.. \#'-'-... Offkft , .......... Jlt_ .. ~,..... ,_._ ....... ,,..,, ....... ...,_ ... La_ .. ""',, .. ~_..,,,_, ·• Tt ..... one <7W M2~ a.ulfltod AdYtrtlllft9 M?-5671 ...,., .. ""'1. "''""' .. "''°'' • Slt-4Jt0 ,.,""" ....... ,.,,.,.,.. O S.a.JO ~, ........ ,. °'~ ... (W-\1 """""''"'Hf'O ,,._ .,.,..... fJrw\ "11191 \t ... JU UtwllU4flttl""\ -01.,..1•1 1n•ttff ., .OlfUl•lt.•~•f'l,h f"t''" lt••'I ~..­t•~9"fvt ... •l lPl•vl \~C ••• C:-tff"'liO·...,. et _...,._ t.tfMtt c••u o-o••••• •• 1 .. CMh w w CM........ '-MH'41rtMI" ... ,..,........ \) 1\ ....... :i. ~"':.!, M.JJ~tN'• MUttlr .W.._....,. <'adcd "Ith tht rclc•••t' of 11 fedual atudy ~ hlch showed that In 4' percent ot ~lrtel <'rimc:s 111· 'olvlng guns. "Saturday rught s pecil.111" were uiu:d larftly lX'<'41 U5e tht>y ure cheap and easy to conceal The committee klllf'd, UJ to 11, an amendment thal wouJd have established a national handgun registration program within the Treasury Department'• farearms clivlslon. The panel. working on a bilJ to touchen eusting handgun control laws. also defeated. 18 to 13, an amendment "h1eh would have required the states to enact thl'ir own iun registration laws by 1977 The committee last week over· whelmlngly defeated amend· ments which would have banned the manufacture. !!all', Import&· tJon, or ownership or handguns. The federal gun registration amendment was oHered by Rep Robert Orin an. < D-Mass.), and Don Edwards. <D -CaM.J. The proposal to require the states to enact their own plans - with the cost to be relmbuned by the federal government -was offered by Rep. Robert McClory, <R·lll.). The study. by the Bureau of AJcohol. Tobacco and Firearms. traced 7 ,815 handguns seized by poUce in 16 cities during ln· tervals over 32 months. The cities Included in the study were New York: 8-0lstoo; AUan· ta : Detroit; Charlotte, N.C : Dallas: Denver; Kansas Caty , Los AngelH; Louisville: Miami and Dade County ; Minneapolis· St. Paul : New Orleans, Ptuladelphia, Oakland and Seat· 'Ue. Bureau Director Rex L. Davis said the study also shows criminals bought more guns from pawn shops than they stole, and a large number of the guns used in Northern cities came from states with lax controls over gun sales. f',.._P~AI BOMBER ••• The four police officers then erabbed the would·be robber. Police oHicers said the man lalt>r told them he had been mnuen('Nf by a television show <ibout a bank robbery, but did not identify the show. They also said he had read mumerous new~ stories about a bank robbery last yur but dad not specify which one. The bank was evacuated and f.mereenC)' Service pahcc t05se<f n rug over lhe pa<'kage on the noor until tht-bomb section arrived Bomb detectives c·xamined th<' package, which they later said contained only cardboard. The man. wearing checkered pants. a brown raincoat and hat. had has phony mustache tom off when ooUce seized him. One police officer det1cribcd the roiled holdup as amateurish. "JC anybody was ever going ~o ...:et caught, 1t was this guy," the orrieeru1d The mwn was 1dentlf1ed as Monte M ercer , 36. of Ruek1ngh11m Road , Cedarhur1t, l.on11 lllland He is marnt'd and the father M lwo, accordmg to pohcc. They said he lolc1 lhrm he ha'1 been under 11n anal)~t·s earc for ~omf' t1m1· f',....P~AI PROBE ... cl1ralN1 Mr Nelson wwo; 11hnk1n~ hut thrn• w u~ no r1'po1t of vomit In" <>ffidal!I :1l OCMC dirt not di!· rovu Mr. Nelson's ~kull fracture 110!11 J11n 26. /\t f11"1t. doctnf"l!' lhou"hl he wa ~ "uffl"rinjt dl· llnum tremcns ond did not find the frocturc until hc failed to respond to treatment, hollplt ul or fkinli1 smd Mrs. N<'l-;on d1cl Ml locnte hl'r· husband untll .ran 27 aft er r €' pealed call" to the J•il and ()('MC. !ih<' ~:aid. Hoo;p1tal offic1nls s:ud they rrrcd in not <'ontactmg the fama Iv, "h1le C.riffrth ~:1ld sherirf'!I otrk1alo; tried to call Mrs. Nelson .Ian 25 but" l'r1• unsuccessful 'HEALTH CA.RE' USTED TOD.4Y A special 20-page review o( health fac ilities and serv1C'es 8\'a1lable to Orange Coast resl· dents as included lll loday's Oatly Pilot ' This spt><'ial section eontain!I informntion M arta hospital:r.. spe<'inhzed eare and medical edu<'nllon along w11h stones and pictures on supporting medical industries and serv1<'e-> Look for ··or anite County Health Care·· In loday·s Dally Pilot cu1..,ert c ...... ples CorruJ{ated steel work supporting an earth- work bridge for the extension of Turtle Rock Drive in Irvine crumpled under the weight of earthmoving equipment Monday with this result. Driver of tractor wasn't hurt, however. Collapse of the bridge near Jordan Avenue and University Drive is ex- pected to cause a delay of several weeks in the completion of the project. Bridge was scheduled for paving next week. Laguna's ·'Winter Festval' Set Friday Laguna ,Beach's Winter F'eallval. 17 days of crafts a nd arts exhibits. a parade, a rodeo, bluegrass music festival, and dance and other city activitl6$, opens Friday. Running dally (beginning Saturday) Crom 10 a.m. to duak the Laguna Craft Guild Show at the Festival ot Arts grounds will include the works or 1$0 arUsts and crartsml'n. Admission is free. Continuing throughout the run of the festival is a photoaraphy contest sponsored by the Darkroom. 274 Broadway. The Second Annual All cautornia Photography Show will be open from 11;30 a.m. lo4:30 p.m. daily at the l.alUl'\ll Beach MYMulD o! Art. through Feb. 29. The first event or the festival is the Canadian Vis1torg Tea from 2 to 4 p.m. al the Lumberyard Plaza. The Patriots' Day Parade honoring "The Spirit or '76" will step off at 11 a.m . Saturday from Laguna Beach Hiah SchooL The Bluegrass FesUval will be held from noon to dusk Saturday and Sunday on Ocean Avenue. Sponsored by the downtown Del Cerro's Fund Raiser· Set Saturday Tickets are now being sold for 11 pancake breakfast sp<>nsored by firth grade students at lnl <'t'rro Elt'mcntory School in /\eJtean flllls to help them fin;mce 11 trip 1<1 Sacramento In Ma\, Th .. hreokru11t of panrakes. <111wsa1e11, juice. coffee and milk wlll tW" prepared and served by ten<'hl'r"'. parent" and student.! S11turd11y from 7:30 am. to noon 1n 1.(ls A 111011 lntcrmediate &hool f'ost or 1h1• m1·ol UI Sl per person. , The trip hu bten pl11nned to build enthu1lasm and provide n rurpo11e for th~ •tudy o f J\meriran dcmocrttl.'Y und gov· l'rnm('nt. Under the direction of firth tcrad~ teachers Warrf'D Gruenif(, Jon Mark11, Kothy Brittingham, Steve Sherry and Bob Birtja, 11tu· denl'i will visit lhc capitol, gov· ernor'a mansion and Sutler's ~·011. merchanl.5, the festival will in- clude music, danclni and coun· try·style vittles. "Kingfish and County Joe McDonald" headline the Irvine Bowl Concert at l p.m. Sunday. The concert will feature San Francisco style folk music. The West Coast Chamber Ensemble wiJJ perform at 3 p.m. Sunday at the Vorpal Gallery, 326 Glenneyre St., Laguna Beach. Events the following weekend include Laguna Sports Day Feb. 28 and 29 at Main Beach Park with . akydivlng, a Pacific Cat Regatta. basketball, volleyball. tennis and· shuffle board tournaments throughout town. T~ "Oldfashioned Hoedown and Squaredance" will be held from noon to dusk Feb. 28 and 29 at the Art Center. f'romP.,.eAl CINQUE. • • hideouts. The pale newspaper heiress broke into tears on s~ing the apartment closet where she was kept blindfolded for 4~ weeks just before the April 15, 1974. bank robbery for which she Is on trial, d e fense attorney Al John.son said. Neither chief defense counsel F. Lee Balley nor U.S. Atty. James L. Browning Jr .. took part In the tour. The participants were the jury, Miss Hearst, other attorneys and U.S. Dlstrlct Court Judge Oliver J. Carter. News reportl'rs were not allowed Inside with M 1111 Hearst at either IO<'allon. Johnson said the seven wome n and five men on the Jury stepped Into ea<'h closet while Miss Hearst stood by the door. The judge was the only one who spoke to the Jurors, pointing out dimensions, air vcn\.S and the · like at Johnson 's request. Miss Jloarat haa testified that several of her taped communl· ques from the underground were made in the closets and that 11h1• wu sexually auauited ln the cramped cubicles. The jury must decide whether 11he w .. a willing participant In the bank robbery or a scared kid· nap victim actln1 in fear of her life. rt wu In the stucco hoWlc and the apartment that. she claims. the SLA kept h<'r and taunted hClr with threat.a of death. Hinshaw Gets Semencing Postponerrwm. Convicted Congressman An · drew Hlllshaw's sentencing was delayed for one week today when the Newport Beach Republican's lawyer explained that he has not had sufficient lime to prepare his motion for a new trial. Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kneeland set Feb. 24 as the date he will sen· tence Hinshaw to what could be one to 14 years in state prison on the bribery conviction if he de nies attorney Marshall Morgan·i. motion . Morgan explained in court to· day that he has been distracted from preparation of his motion by the serious lllness of his 13· year-old son who recently un· derwent an operation for re- moval or a tumor that proved to be benign. Morgan said he h as been further handicapped by the re· cent appointment to the Superior Court bench of South Laguna at· tomey Robert Green who worked '41lh him on the Jhnshaw trial. Hinshaw, 53. was found guilty or charges that he accepted stereo equipment as bribl's from the Tandy Corporation while he worked ns Orange County's as- sessor prior to his election in 1972. lie was found guilty of a second bribery count s temming from al - legations that he accepted cam- paign contributions from a Tan-· dy executive. Ford to Air CIA Plans WASHINGTON <AP> President Ford will unveil his plan to reorganize supervision o r the in· telligence a gencies at a televised news conference late this afternoon, press ~crctary Ron Nessen an. nounced. The plan I S ro r a streamlined inlcl11genee community that will put CIA Dln•ctor Georitc Ow1h in position to control all spy aaeM1l'S, Admtnlxtrn tlon oftlclals say. lle11peaks at5p.m. The officials uy Bush wi ll be chairman or a 11m111l lnter·agency panel wh.i ch · will give him the power to control the hud~el!I of ()fhrr 11py n51encie11, 1rnrh a'i tho11<' within the Dl'f<'n!\c l>f•parl menl ond the National Security Ag£>ney. Suspect t Sought in Slayings n1vt-rs1dt• ('ounty Sheriff's OHkc detcctlvu Wl'r• ln San Clemente today trying to track down their prfmc •USP«t ln the tl'.t'cuUon·atylo murders of two members ot a Rlverslde·area motor<' ye It• dub. Sou(lht by inveatlaator11 ls Paul Joseph Soulard, 33. a former San Clemente re~idcnt. who was living in Trabuco Canyon until hours prior to the SU.Oday momini murders. Two m~mbers of the Renegades Motol'<'ycle Club. 1denllhed as John DuUer, 3S, or Pedley, and David Vaughn, 218, of Rubidoux, were shot twice through the bead :itter two ~unmen rorC'ed 10 people gatherl'd al the Renegades' Glen A\on clubhou:.e lo he on the floor Witnesses said the two men entered the clubhou.se Saturday night and talked and drank ln ;a friendly manner with Renegade members until momenl.5 before the shootings. Witnesses t<Sld deputies the two men left the bar briefly about midnight and returned with pistols. Ttiey ordered everyone to lie on the floor. then shot Dutter ru1d Vaughn, witnesses said. The apparent mot.lve for the ~layin~. 3C<'ord1ng to deputies, h~ nvalry between the Renegades and another motorcycle group. San Clemente Police Lt. Ray Hartman. detective division l'Ommnnder. said Rlversidc 1n\'est1gators talked today with people who had known Soulard cluring his stay in San Clemente. Soulard 1s described as a husky, bearded, rcd·haired man. He 1s known to have frequented the municipal pier area. Hartman saad that Soulard, at the lime he lived in San Clement<', was c11ring for a 3·year·old daughter Saddleback Music Fest Tickets Set Tickets arc going on sale today for the Saddleback Valley Unified School District's third annual Music Festival which will be held In the Anaheim Conven- lJon Center on May 6. Joanne Harris. district mualc supervisor, said she and t he school music teachers hope to have all 6,000 tickets aold by March 1. About 3.000 students from the d istrict 's elementary in- termediate and high school~ will participate m the event whlch will feature American music In keeping with the bicentennial celebration. The fes tival ill a self. supporting project. Last year. however, Mrs. Harris said, ticket sales lert the festival about $2,000 short of the $12,000 c05t. Becau5c of that deficit, Bhc said, ticket sales arc beJ:inning earlier than in previous years. She said contracts will only be signed if they arc within the means of the amount received from ticket sales. Cost11 of the festival include renlal or the convention <'enter, sound system and spaUlghts and bu., transportation or litudcnta to ti dress rehearsal. Order forms for llckeL'I are available at each school and th~ <.h:Slrkt OHl('Cl'l. CofCWomen Plan Lunch June> Woodard, pres1dcntortht Sadd lchllrk Valley Cham· l~rMold11, Is inviting bu11lnet111· minded woml'n l<l ollcnd rcl(11Jyr luncheons ~von sored by the womf"n 's division or lhe Chamber <1!Comrncrcc. The ChamhcrMultlR m<'et the third Th11r11duy of cach month 11t various lo<'al rf'•tuurunlJi. Mec•t· lnR pl:i('c Information 111 ovuila hie hv rolling th(• <.:homh<'r or Comnwrl't'. 113'7 4753 Farmers Oppose SJC Proposal Directors or the Ora.nee County Farm Bureau are oppo11ing the aarkultural perpetuallon pro- gram outlinl'd ln Proposition A on San Juan Caplslrano'1 March 2baUot. In a lf'tter to the Daily Pilot, Dur Thetford , executive manager of the Farm Bureau, said. "We ask· that good fiscal re11ponslblhty be exercL'ed by the City Counc il And not be cauchl up Into the expen.1lve •fad ' or ('lty ownership o r airicultural rarm land ... "Many clues throughout the 1tate are cuttina many valuable services, espe.clally for our ( . . : young people, because they no longer can afford their put fiscal policy and priorities," be said. He sald the costs will not It.op with the purcbaae of UM land but. also lnvolve tho UPkeep, main· tenance and Jou of tax revenue that governmental own~rsh.lp of the land produces. Thetford said that If the city want.s to perpetuate agricultuN', "It mutt provide the contlnuin!' environmtnt for tht farmu to re· main tn a1rtculture." Ht aaJd 't.ho Caltfomla Land Conaervatlon Ad baa been bentndaJ ln "-lPlnl to prwerve • prime aa.rieuJtural lad. . Ha orl(anualion. he said, will work to -tren«then t.hl3 act.. The Farm Bureau official said the group does 11upport open space where the citizens receive some recreational bf-ne_f'IU from the Jsnd. This type of land, he sald, can usually be purchaseed "at ml\ny doll11rt1 less" than prime agricultural land. San Juan's plan, hesald, would Jlroduce only an "eye.appeal re. suit" which would bcMflt only the few residences located around the presl'rved Jarid. land control by county or city over any other re&lonal cnUty. but eove.rnmeolal ownership over the Individual larmera' rights cannot bo supported," he said. Thrtford a l.,o said hi s or· ganltation would aupport the pro- gram.,. proposed riaht or first re· rwsal if a realistic. prearranged ('()nlrnrt can be establi~hc<I. The value of the land. he aald, should be hued on Lhc preaenl land use allowl'd. the average density or aurroundina property a( the time of sale and the "The F&rm Bureau Policy wlll average density of the already also continue to aupport local • developed aru1 ot the clly. 7 Orange "8aSt EDI Tl.ON VOL. 69, NO. 4, 3 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES -. ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A • • I . Today'tiJ Closing } .N.Y. Stoek..'i TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1976 c State Begins Probe of OC Jail Deat ~ . I IS llATBY CLANCY death of Ooa Nellon. 31, over to wu ordered by Deputy Attomey and candidate in la.st sf:rin1's Grtffet.b uld Mr. Nelson was If Mr. Nelson was consci 1 .... ....,,..... an attorDtY 1eoeral'a io· Geoual Daa Kremer ot &be San Ocean Vlttw School D strict examined by a re&J,st.ered nurse when he fell each Ume. Tbe .California Attorney v..U,atol'cm l'Tiday. metootflce, beaaid. t.ruateedectlons, wuaervtni tbe on duty, lb~ seemed to be fine He said jail officials did try t Gefteral't office bN belUD an la· N.r.o. died Feb. Z at <>raace Kremer c:ould not be reached fint weekend of flve oo a and wu returned to bis cell. M.lp Mr. Nelson and probably did, qui ry into th• d••" of a eo.ty 11..tkal Cea&er' after ly· for comment today but ao at· drunken drivinc coovlctloo. · He suffered another seizure the best they could for blm. • Westminster man wbop:layhave mi '8 •coma tbete for a week torDe)' for Mr. Nellon'• widow, Griffeth staid today tbe about 4:1S p.m . in the cell and Mrs. Nelson's attorney ha$} suffered fatal head llliud• wblle foDowU.c 1Ufltf'1 for • Mull BoMJe, uld last week be would sbertff's lnvestieatioo revealed was again taken to the medical claimed jail officials did UtUe to,\ aervtneaweekendjallterm. fndure. ukbot.btbeaUomey1eneraland Mr. Nellon first becmle ill dur· office, then was tramported lo aid Mr. Nelson, wbo reportedly: Mike Sedo.Nlllor'in~ator· Dlstrtc:t Attorney Cecil Hlcu to inc lunch In jail on Jan. ZS. He OCMC about l :U p.m., Griffeth was vomiline and quite illJ Capt. Robert Griffeth of the for the attorne1 c•eral in inveatl&ate. said be suffered "a seizureol one ~tinued. · throughout the day SW>day. Orance County Sberitr'• omce Ora&• County. aald the inquiry Kr. Nelson. a bartender at the type or another and fell and bit He Hplalned he does not yet Grilfeth said bis report ln-t said be turned hi& report on the 1:1•"vsyllmil..sat&bil~"ll Marlin Inn in HunUncton Beach biabeadoot.beconcret.e." knowwbatcauaedtheselzuresor (SeePllOBE.PageAZ) ~ Mesa Officer's Son DieS in Crash ~ . . 0. Feed Gi1'e..,Gfl ·Patty Testifies Of SLA Wrath SAN FRANCISCO (UPI> - Patricia Hearst te9tified today· that her lddnapen were fwioua becaUH her fat.her put up "only $Z million 1 I ro~ a free food Finklea ~pect On Trial B1TOllBAaLEY Ol .. Delfy ___ pveaw~ and told her •·be was Just playtna with my We." Tbe pale. 1aunt newspaper heireu resumed her day-by-day descrlptibn oflife u a captive or the Symbloaese Liberation Army for Lbe jury of seven wom.en and five men at her bank robbery trial. "They 1ot. really mad because ·my fat.her a ave only S2 million,'' she said. ''Tbey said it was total· ly wrone and be was Just playmg wit.b my life. ll didn't mau.er to him what happened to me.'' Sbe said SLA chieftain Donald .. Cinque" DeFreeze said the S2 NEIGHBOR-PATTY •NICEST I EVER MET, A5 SCENE FROM OSCAR NOMINEE 'CUCKOO'S NEST' Lout•• Fletchef, J.,. NlcMMl•n 8oth Nominated Santa Ana Girl Also Killed By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ... .,. .. , Pl1llt - Paul Kanani Broad, the only chlld or Costa Mesa policeman Roscoe Broad, and his girlfriend were killed in Huntington Beach early today when his s mall foreign car crashed into the rear of a parked van. The crash occurred on a lonely stretch of Pacific Coast Highway one-half mile east of Warner Avenue along Bolsa Chica State Beach. Broad, 18. who laved al the family home. was pronounced dead al the scene. His passenger. Deborah Demont. 19, of 12982 Loretta Lane. Santa Ana. suc· cumbed from multiple injuries shortly after 6 a .m. at Hunt· lngt.on lntt?rcom m unity Hospital. ""o.ll't "'"" ~ KILLED IN ACCIDENT Paul Broad, 18 I Accmed killer Chari. o.m1a Beu went oe trlal todQ la the aame courtroom wMn • jW')' re- commend-1 la1J elW ..--.. tbe death penaltf for t\e Halloween nteht 11.,.m, ol haaor student Stephen ")llb" FlnkJea of Fountain Valley. m1DSoft WU ""Jtdle\doul" and tbat ber father. publiaber Ran· ~ Jleanl. would wri&.e ll o(( Ma ta deduction. 11Mn the defense played the third tape recordioc made by M1a Heant and her kJdnapen - a lencthy diatribe by DeFreeze accu1in1 Hearst of givine "crumbs to t.be people," oullin· inl the Hearst Corp. assets and demaodin1 another $4 million in free food.. 'Cuckoo's Nest' Tops Oscar List Tbe victims bad to be exlricat· ed from tbe mancled wrec:ka1e of lbelr amall sedan which burled the van lt a~k 50 feel onto the beacb, l.nJurlna It.a twooccupant.s. Raymond W. Miller. 26, or Anaheim, and Diana Callac, 20, of 6462 Longford Circle, Hunt· inelon Beach, were asleep in the van and sustained only minor in· Juries, police said. Mesa Council ToPorukr Downlown I Bun, 22, like bl.a brotllsr. Hush Daniel Bean, 24, faces the death penalty for his alle1ed role ln the killing of Flnlclea, 19, on Oct. 31, 1974. The Orange County Superior Court jury in the elder Bean's trial voted for the death penally tut Friday after dellberaUne for more than four days. Judge William Murray will sentence him March4. Lawyers began ariuinc pre- trial motions today while plans were made for the start ol Jwy selection possibly later today or Wednesday. The defendant wu arrested with his brother In Santa Ana 24 hours after Finklea, a 1tned stu· dent and the captain or tbe Oran1e Coast Colle1e wnstlina team, was shot to duth while he worked as a clerk in an all niaht Fountain Valley market. It wos successfully alleged In the elder Bean'a trial that F\nklea was shot In the mouth u he confronted the two brolbera at the counter. It wes testified that Flnklea wu ahot five more Umea as ho ran to the rear or the store. Police found him lying face down in a pool or blood. Miu Hearst bad only one line on tbe tape -an lndicaUon she wustJU alive: ••Today ls the 19th and yesterday the Shah of Iran bad two people executed at dawn." Tbe defendant sat ln the wit· neu etand with her eyes downcut u tbe tape& made dur· ln~er capUvily were played, al h she looked a little con· cerne as Cinque spoke. She awal&owed and wiped her nose with a handkerchief at times. Her father and mother. sitting near the defense attorneys, lllt.ened Impassively. After the tape was finlsbed. Balley asked Miu Hearst whether ahe wu familiar with all the Hearal boldlnga. "No. 1 mean, I knew some thinp, but not all,"abuald. She aald &be didn't Uun.k the family could meet t.be additional $4 mlWon demand but had no. doubt her parenll would try to eetherout. (8" PA TTY, Pase AZ> -------------* * * Tiie. ...,., ..,..,.. •• YOUR VIEW ON PATIY HEARST OUIL T: I INftll Patty Hearst. •• O Wiii be found QUflty of robbtfy cf'leroes qalnst her Q Wlll be found lnnoc.nt n H~ Jury or oU.r ODMft\.ICITY: I ttHlll llafty Htent. .• Q Went Wiiiingiy wtttl Mr SL.A uptors o went unwlltlngty but ... bralnweshtd O Went agaln1t her wm Md wn Opt against her will INTEREST: ......... "9ttfMeentcate ••• 0 Closely, react most stories .-.t It Q PnttycloMly Q StldDm ONot•t•ll COVERAO~: ttNllll .. ,...._,, O ts overplaylno the HNrst CeM O Is cowrlno It •b!M ri9ht O Is underplaylno u. story AUit to the addreu beloW cw drop by any of the Diiiy Piiot offices 11"9d on Page 2. AttAtc.h llllft'f comn.nts on tht Pltty·HMrat use If wish. UterO.lfyltf ... 8h , .. C. .. Mfta, CA ftm .,, ......... ........ Of199 ... ) ······························~····'································ , LOS ANGELES CAP> -"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest." the sa&a of one man's fight against the system in an insane asylum, scored top honors m the 48th Academy A ward nomina· tiona today. The United Artists film drew nine nominations, including those for best picture. Jack Nicholson as best actor. Louise Ftetcher as best actress, Brad Dourif for supporting actor and Milos Forman for best director "Barry Lyndon" placed second ~ith seven nominations Traet Rezone and '"0.g Day Afternoon" was lhir4 with six. 'J'M..three films were nominat· ed ear best picture. along with "Jaws" and "Nashville." In the best actor category, Nicholson faces competition from Walt,r Matthau in "The Sunshine J oys ;" Al Pacioo, "Dog Day Afternoon;" Max· imiUa n Schell, "The Man in the Glass Booth," and James Whit· more. ··Give 'Em Hell. Harry!" Miss F1etcber's opponents as best actress are Isabelle Ad.Jani , <SH OSCARS, Pa1eA2l They were treated and re· leased at Pacifica Hospital following the collision first re· ported al 12 : 15 a .m .• by a motorist who called from a nearby telephooe. Investigators today said they are probing the cause or the tragic crash Involving Broad's compact car and the van, which they say was legally parked at the roadside. Police Lt. Gary Davis, night shift watch commander. aaid the Broad auto was traveling at an estimated SO lo 55 miles per hour when it crashed Into the van. Huntlngton Beach Fire Depart· menl paramedics administered aid al the scene as firemen worked to extricate the young couple, but their efforts were futile. Leaders Preparing Referendum Plans The double tragedy shattered the dose-knit family of Coeta Mesa Police OHicer Roscoe Broad and stunned the police de· partment he has served slnce 1961. Police Chier Roger E. Neth was aasigned to notify the Broads or the death or their only child. an Eagle Scout and 1975 graduate of Mater Del lllgh School. By ALAN DIRKJN Ot_hl..,,. ...... Leaders of the College Park JTOUP n1htin1 the rezone of one lot to commercial use prepared atrategy today for a citywide re- ferendum on Lbe l11ue ln Costa Meaa. Russell Miilar, c:~hairman of the group made up of 88 resl<Mnll \n the tract adjacent lo Harbor Boulevard. aald • drive would be launched to 1et the iuue on the June primary ballot if the city rouncll approves tbe second re· acilnt of the reaone ton11ht. Approval oftbe second reading is expected since the proposal - lo rezone a lot at '464 Princeton Drive to allow Nabers Cadillac lo use 1t as an automobile display SI'OCK PRICES DROP AGAIN NEW YORK CUPl) -Investor concern over the economy and the Uurd largest bank ranure in U.S. bi.story drove prices lower in fairly active trading today on the New York Stock E.ubaQge. Tl\e Dow Jones lndustria 1 averaae, which dropped 8.42 point. Friday, lost 7.79 more to 950 .. S1. Oecllnea outdistanced ad- vances about 4 to 3. (Tables, All.) PriCel 1'ilN ln bHTJ trad.lq CIQ the American Stoclt Bxcbanee. area -was approved 3·2 at the first reading. A .zone chani• becomes law 30 days after approval of the second reading. Thia timetable will be uptel if the homeowners aroup goes ahead with its attempt lo get. 10 percent of the city's 28,630 re· /SeeAt:ZONE, PageA2) / OUlcer Broad, n icknamed llock., for hla days as an All· Conference Hawaii League pro· fesalonal football player u a 175-pound tackle in 1947, Ut.erally (See 2 KILLED. Page A2) 1Jiae%cused 'Dltclalng' Holiday Truants Costly for Schools· BJ mt.ARY KAYE °' .............. .... Tboulanda of dollan in state money will be forfeited by the Newport·Mesa Unified School District due to unexcused student absel\Ces last Friday, according to attendance reports from dis· trlct schools. An overall district abffntee figure la not yet available for Fri- day. However, figures from the five blah schools 1bow that between S4 and so percent <:A the student.a failed to abcnr UP on iboeecampuaa. Scattered uporta from ~lemeotary achoola l.odlcaled fl'W'tf 1todeats 1tQed aw11 from lowerlev91 schools Friday. Teacher absences were about 30 percent higher than usual, ac· cording to Deputy District Superintendent Norman Loat.s. Usually about 85 teachers are absent on Bridays but there were 123 absent teachers last Friday, Loatsaaid. Apparently, many or the absences resulted from the fact tbat the prev,ous Thursday and followln1 Monday were both school holidays. Some atudenta appanmtly look a five-day vacation. said Loats. However. auendance officials added that attendance bu bMla (Sa MONEY, PapAJ) A resolution authorizing con· demnation or property in thC" downtown redevclopMent area I!! one of the Items on the agenda for · tonight's meeting or the Costa, Mesa City Council. 1 The condemnation would be for tone parcel In the area north or Llons Park. City offic1als said 1t.. is required for expansion of the present library building. City plans call for a fire station and a community center to be built on the block and for the library to be expanded. The city already owns the Boys I Club building on the block, which eventually will be turned into a so-called "super block" with the closing or Center Street to mer&!:! the street with Lions Park. Aaslstant City Manager Bill Dunn confirmed that the action would be the first condemnation move in the redevelopment area. Public Services Director Jim Eldridge will inform the counr 1l tonight that the owner o r thl" parcel has rc1ected an offer of $165.000 for the property. The c o unC'JI mcd i n it h scheduled to bc~ln at 6.:10 p.m. Shooting in LA I.OS ANGELES <UPI> -A junior high student shot and in· JUred his 19-year-old brothc:r four times, then ran out or lhf• room and shot and killed llimsctr. Coast Weacher Sunny with varinhlC' hlgh.<1 clouds Wcdnc:Mtuy. Highs In lh<' 80s at th<.- beach e s and s l i1thllv warmer inland areas. Low:. lonigblm the 40!!. INSIDE TODAY Parml4' fancfful ~· Ilona about lhe '1bird& and Ille bee•" a" ~avVig lhe Wile lricU out in lt /1 field iu to wlu!rt balnts rtaU11 do come f rom. Su Page A 7. Index •• ., '"I •• •• M ' .., .. ' All AM •• ,.. ' I .i\2 DAILY PILOT c TY!!d!y F'ebtu11ty 11 1m Red, White, Blue Members or Junior Girl Scout Troop 1415 of Costa Mesa work on bicentennial project the d~coratmg or fire hydrants along Harbor Boulevard with patriotic colors Painte~s Monday included Donna Niles lkneehng 1 and 1st~d1~~ from _left) Ingrid C1elrng, Bng1tte Ohhg and Ten \\right. Girls also plan to decorate fireplugs on Newport Boulevard in downtown area College District's Boundaries Aired A pubhc hearing 14111 be con ducted in Costa Mesa Wednesday evening to consider new trustee ar~as for the Coast Community Colleae District. which operate~ Orang£' Coast and Golden West <·olleges The realignment is reqwred a!> :1 result or the annexal.Jon by the tltstnct of oal>out 60 percent of the 1ernt.ory u( Lhe Garden Grove l 'n1fif'd School District 'fhe hearme bt'fore the Orange <·ounty Committee oo School Dis· Incl Organization is scheduled for 7 30 11 m in the collegl' dis· lnct board room at 1370 Adams Av~ The <·hun~l· will affect all five <'urr£'nt lro~tcc areas in the col· lt•Jle d1:stnct MONEY .•. lo1Aer than u~ual l;.atcl> because or lh(' nu For euch 5tudenl absent "'tthout un <'xcust>, the distnct lt>st $7 97 In !>late money District official!\ ~aid they could not yet <'Omputl.' thl' district loss Ix-cause lanul f1~ure:; are not compiled 'l>t'CI() 1n~ which Jb~ences wert> •''<cused .ind what"h Wl'renot If JJ ~·rct•nt of the d1stnct '!! :1 ifil 'tuch•n1' IAt'fl' absent Fri 1l,1y "'1thou1 .in (''CUSl'. 1t would re11ull 1n a lu'x of uhout$65,700 1'1.iurt'" f1 orn the five h1~h :-<'boot:. 1ncludl' the follow1n~ . ah~ence ftgun•i. 50 pcrt't'nt 111 lxlth Coi.tu Mt•11a nnd Mt"Nally l'onti11uati11n . •10 pcr<'l'nt ut l\c"'port llurbor. 37 11('rt·N1t :it <'1•rn11.1 111'1 M ur .1n1t 34 fll'rl'cnt 11t r.'>IJOl'l.J lln l'J11n1l l'r1d ,1yi.. ubt-t•nl'l'' .II I h 1· h 1.: h "hu111, r .111i'.•' hd'41·1·11 t•a.:ht p1•1 n :nl .ind :!:I P\'r •' 111 ,11·roi rlin1t tu !l<'hool flnn I llJ,11' OAANGE COAST "-,..-t" ("••t I 41t. I 1.-.f -~ """ " ,, • • ._ ~ .. • t t .,,, '' t"lolt ~I t. t•• • • I iii'•~ l -'\ "'"~ •I 11n Executive Vice Chancellor Correllan J Thompson said to- day that the college district will propose that all five trustee ureas be realigned on a popula 11on basis He recalled t hat present trustee areas have not been changed since 1947 when they were set up according to elemen tary school district boundaries Presently. the Ocean View and Seal Beach school dtStrict.s are m trustee a rea one : the Westminster district in trustee area two. the Huntington Beach City and Fountain Valley district in trustee area three, the former Costa Mesa district in trustee 11rea four. anct the old Newport Oeach district in trustee areu r1"e Thompson s aid th1!> ha.'! de "eloped into unequal rcpresenta lion on a population baSL'J over the years Thompson said that, Wlth the annexation or part or the Garden Grove School District , the col· leRe district will embrace a population of 500,000 and the pro posal 1s to set up five trustee areas roughly representing population$ of I 00,000 each. J\not.her issue which the county t·omm11tee IA 111 consider Wednes- rlay evening will be tht' transfer 11( territory around Talbert Av<'nue and Sprmgdalt' Street Crom thf' llunt1ngton Reach City 01i.tr1 ct to the Ocean Vlc•w 1.-;lt>mentnry District. This w11l In· 'olve about 100 student!! and 1:1 h<'inR re('ommended for rea!>ons of trllff1c saCcty, i.1•houl o((it-1111:1 ~a1rl China Str~~lr llONC KO~C ll 'l'l l Thi· l'hl nue \ommunl'il prart ) newllp•pt•r Pt'Ofllf''s Daily sn1d today that leaders und<'r attack in Chlnu '11 current r<>lit1cnl strug gle were trying to Introduce fo\hru&h<'hrv typ(' "aoula'h rommun1c.m .. Hinshaw's Sentence Delayed Convicted Con1reuman An· drew Hinshaw's aentendng wu delay~ for ont week today when the New1>9rt Beach R~bUcan's lawyer explained that he has not had 1utllcient time to prepare bi• motion for a new trial. Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert P. K.nedand set Feb. 24 as the date he will Jen· teoce Hinahaw lo what could be one to 1' years in at.ate pri.son on the bribery convict.Jon tr be de· rues attorney Manhall Morgan's motion. Morgan explained in court to- day that h~ has been datracted lrom preparation o{ hia motion by the serious illness of Ilia 13· year-old son who recently un· derwent an operation for re- moval or a tumor that proved to be benign. ~1organ said be has been further handicapped by the re- cent appointment to the Superior Court bench of South Laguna at· tomey Robert Green who worked with him on the Hinshaw trial. Hmsbaw, Sl. was round guilty of charges that he accepted stereo equipment u bribes from the Tandy Corporation while be worked as Orange County's as· sessor prior to his election in l972. He was foand gullty of a secood bribery count stemmin1 from aJ. le~ations that he accepted cam-· paign contribution• from a Tan· dy executive. Probation Officer R . J . Hamilton baa suggested a prison term for Hinshaw since, he states, the congressman does not be.lieve that he committed any cnme. Jury Picking Under Way For V allerga Jury selection began today in the Kem County Superior Court trial of former Oran1e Couilty assessor Jack Valleraa. Offieiels at the Bekenfteld courthouse which was seleded as the site of VaUerca·s conspiracy lrlal when be successfully demanded a cha.nae of \'enue from Oran,e County County said Judee P.R. Borton was assigned to the cue this morning. Orange County Deputy District Attorney William Evaa is prosecuting conspiracy eta.1es <;ontained In a erand jury indictment. Vallerga, SC, ii being defended by Santa Ana attaney John Cahill. Ford to Air CIAPlam WASHJNGTON (AP> President Ford wUl unveil his plan to reort{anlse s upervision of the In · telliRence agencies at a televised news conference late this afternoon, press secretary Ron Nessen an- nounced. The plan la for a streamlined Intelligence community that will put CIA Director George Bush In position to control all 1py a1encles. Admlnlstra· t1onotricial55ay flespeaks at :,pm Thf' officials say Bush v.111 Ix-chairman of a small inter -agency panel which will rive him the powt'r lo control the budgets or other spy agencies. 1uch u those within the Defense Depart· ment and the National Security A1ency. TONIORf COSTA M~ACITYCOUNCIL -Rt'1uJar meeun1. City Hall. 6;30 p.IQ. . "THE NATIONAL HEALTH" -South Coaat Repertory Theater, throu1b Feb. 21. 8 p.m "BEHIND THE HEADLINES" -Dr cues T. Brown le~lurer. OCC 1''orum. 7;30p.m . WEDNESDAY, FEB. 11 0CC LECTURES -"ln~me Tax Preparation," RJchard A. Brown Jr. lecturer, FiM Arts Blq. U9, T:30p.m . "Fa_,bionAc· cuaoriea Workshop," Barbara Ueuwen, lecturer, Estancia Jfigh School Room 32.S, 7 p.m. BASKETBALL -Cerritos College at OCC. 7:30 p.m. Costa Mesa High at Magnolia, 7 p.m . Estancia at Corona del Mar, 7 p .m~ We stern at Newport Harbor, 7 p.m . OCC DRAMA -''Incident at ·Vichy," by Arthur Miller, Drama i.ab Theater, Feb. 18-21, a p.m. Free. F,....P_,,e.41 PATI'Y ••• She aald that while she wu lo the cloaet t.hlnkln1. "I mostly t.bouehl I'd be killed." The defendant said her captors dt.cusaed the freeing of two SL.A members charced with slaying Oakland School SUpertnleodent Marcus Foster and said. "One or their main goat. was to let ever· ybody out of the prisons." "Waa revolution frequently dlacuued?" defe111e attorney F. Lee Balley aaked. "Ob, yea. Tbey talked about it all the time. "They aaid the SLA wu run by -they bad a court ol the people and a war council. I think the war council waa the court of the peo- ple and two repreeenlatlves of each came to1ether and that's bow they decided Oil the kidnap. ing." Miu Hearst was led through a detailed recounting ol her weeks In the cloeet of a suburban home by Baily, who first put her on the stand Friday lo tell the jury about her violent abduction. She testlrted that in the first tape recordina sbe made after her kldnaping, she referred to an Oakland house which the SLA told her had been swanned over by FBI •sent.a. Her captors aald if she'd been there ahe'd h&\'e been killed. "They said J'd be killed because they'd never sur· render." ,.,.... P.,,e.4J 2 KILLED ..• worshipped bis aon. The patrolman honored in 1968 as Cost.a Mesa Policeman ol the Year was featured in a beaming . father-son portrait on Page 1 of the Daily Pilot In 1972 when bis boy achieved Eagle Scout rank. Yowi1 Broad ai.o held the Ad AIU.re Del award for service to hls r ell1lous faith, earned in ad- dition to bi.I Eacle Scout honors. The youth had joined the City ol Costa Mesa Traffic Engineer- ing Department staff as an intern just a month ago and exc.!lled in science studies as a Mater De1 High School 1ludent. Funeral services for Mr. Broad, a native oC Honolulu as is his father, were pending today al Bell Broedway Mortuary in Costa Mesa. Bandit Wounded KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia <UPI> -A force of 100 policemen shot and captured Malaysia's mott wanted bandit, Bot.ale Chin early Tuesday In a three-hdur eunbattle lbat left. lwo other lugtUva dead. Banker Foils Robber NEW YORK (AP> A man who threatened to blow up a bank Oftl('e and later told polJct' he J&Ol lht' Idea from a televltilon show was apprehended today after a cool bank officer preued a 1Uen1 alarm button and delayed t\lm W\Ul police arrived. The m•n. wearing o fake mustache end carl")'lng a packa1eo. enter~ l.be First National City Bank oence D('Xl door to Rockefeller Center and diaeonally across Flt\h Avenue from St. Patrick's Cathedral and demanded $86,000, police said. "l have a bomb and I want money," police quoted him as tellinl the bank's branch manaierln a note. "ll will lake me a while to g~l t.hat together,·· she was quoted a:. replying. "WUI you wait?" Police aaid the manager, who wu not identified, then signaled a 1ileol alarm which brought baH a dozen police cruisers to the bank at 51st Strttt. tying up traffic and drawing hundreds of onlookers. The man's back was turned as the first four uniformed officers entered the bank. Police signaled to the manager to move away from the man. "Let me check on the money.'' she aaid~ picking up a telephone and dialing an extension to an empty desh desk nearby. "Oh, I have lo get that." sbc said, quickly getting up from her desk and moving away. The four police officers then grabbed the would-be robber. Police officers said the man lat~r told them he had bttn influenced by a television' show about a bank robbery, butdld not identify the show. They al5o satd he had read mumerous new11 stories about a bank robbery last year but dld not specify which one. The bank was evacuated and Emergency Service police tossed a rue over the package on the floor until the bomb section arrived. Bomb detectives examined the package, which they later said contained only cardboard. The man, wearing checkered pants, a brown raincoat and h11t , had his phony mustache torn off when police seized him. F,....P~AJ OSCARS •.. "The Story of Adele H .;" Ann· Margret, "Tommy;" Glenda Jackson, "Hedda," and Carol Kane. "Hester Street." George Burns. whom most critics considered Matthau's co· star in "The Sunshine Do ys, .. wu nominated in the supporting actor category. Besides Dourif. he faces Burgess Meredith of "The Day or the Locust;" Chns Saradon. "Dog Day Afternoon," and Jack Warden, "Shampoo." The supporting actress rac£' features two from ''Nashville.'' Ronee Blakley and comedienne Lily Tomlin . Also nominated: Lee Grant, ''Shampoo;" Sylvia Miles. "Farewell, My Lovely " and Brenda Vaccaro, "Once is Not Enough.·· Academy voters will now view the nominated films and make their final choices, which will be announced to a tele\•lsion au· dlence on Monday, March 29 1n ceremonies al the Lo6 Angeles Music Center . Although nominated for best picture, "Jaws" was given only fou r nominations and none for direction. The director nommet>l'I a r£' Federi co Fellint , "Amarcord". St;anlcy Kubrick. · Barry Lyndon". Sidney Lumc·r "Oo~ Day Aft ernoon" . Hott.:•11 Altman. ''Na,h vallr · nncl F'orm:in fnr "C11C'koo'i. Nl'\I · The i.ell'rt ions brought few su1 prises but. one oddity -Jumt.•s Wh itmore In "Give 'Em Hell, Harry '" llh1torl ans could not re· membt>r a no mmati1m for so meon(' In a one 11\'lor casl tl't "f I I ~, ... .,...,._. " ,._ • ..,. tr.,_,., I \.• Ill ltliit •9'" \ ""'" .. ,, • I"""''° ......... '""'"' ...... -~ ...... . -.. •' ''' ••1·r-• ,.,. • ., """' """' • • A•~ ..... I• It f' 1•"'9n.,,.... , • '•• t •• .,,,., • r•..,.. " •• • • t y .• c"' • • • .. , • Hopeful Urges Communication .. Robf'rt N WH!d . , , • • ,f • J,IC ~ R Cur Irv \ • • .. t ""'1 -.• .. ....... • ...,,. • ·•·•v- l hom ,1\ A Mu,.phirlf' M.n .. t "'9 l lf ... ChMll"S H Loo~ Richard p Nall ... , ' ''~"'•0 ,.., __ ., CoJU Mna Offlo ue vrt .. ,, I•,~,,..... ""'-'#'IQ ACM•lf\t r 0 .... 1.0 .,.,,,., Offl(f'S ,~ ... ,. ... ~ ... ··~,..._.,...,,,...... ._...,_. ,..,, f'\•A " r I'-•""~·~'"' .._,.~••t• • 111• ..... I <itW • •' . ,,~ ... ...-....... TfltphO,,. 171•1 '41-4311 Cli1SS1flecl Advtrt1Jlnq M2 5671 (~•' .,. I ,.,, , • ._Qlil' I •• ,. ,~..,. t ~ ...,,, ..., r•~· ,,.,. .... '"'"•' '!"I''""''"'' pt1•llff ' flf'J•• ,,,,,.. •• h •••• "' ....... .. t•~-.d"' I • • '""•wt ,..,. a+ J"' m h•• et ,..,., ..,,... -.. ,.. .... ·-fof'I••• ... c:••J ... f(,. •• """''• CA .• '"". '*"""' .• , ·~ t'if I ........ \l ' ....... ...... ,., ..... w 2'"" ..... '"'" ""'"' .... dP"'""""' ..... \.'t1 ... ,..,,,.. f d1tor ~ \ ot I' T l1eri· ore Ii rnn rladatu 1·111n9 /or thrtt stats on th,. <'oata Mua Clt!J Council This stnrv 1.~ nbout onr nf them Th(' t lrctwn "'Morch 2 Costa Mesa City Council can· d1dale Mary T . Smallwood wants to Improve com municallon between residents and their elected representallves. She said that the cdtnmunlly has become fragmented Into areas and thi~ tendency should be corrected and that s tep5 5houki be rnken to encourage c1t1zen involvement in communi· ty affairs. She said that a communit y center. presenll.) plat.ned by the city. could be used foe town hall meetings to improve com mun1catJon. She also said more use &hould he m<.Hi(' or Cllllenc; wh() havl' volunteered to serve on civic committees. Mn. Smallwood, who is v ice chairman or the Housi ng and Community Development CommittH, said the city has not taken advantage of the other 87 applkanta who could not be appoln~ to the ll·member committee. ''I'm also concerned about an attitude of hostility that seems to be growin1: between homeowners and the business community." She said. "We need to get better communication between these two groups. We need an honest at· mosphere and a willingness to listen to other points of vtew. If Costa Mesa is goln1 to be a better place to live, il'a 101.nctobe bdW for business u well." M~. Smallwood. O. ll mamed T with four adult children. She has lived in Coate MeJa for 14 years and resides at 1981 Komat Drive. S he ia tbe Costa Mesa representative to the Oran1e County Hou1tn1 Author\ly ad· visory com mltt•e, ii a member ol the cbambtr of commerce, has served on commltteesolUM Mesa Verde Homeowners AsaodaUon; and hu worked for the Cinderella Guild, Children• Hospital of Orange County, the Cancer Socie- ty and victims of multiple acleroeis. Mrs. Smallwood noted that the city already wa11 becoming In· volved with social services and aald theae effort.a should be coo· Unued. She aald there were 14,000 sen!« ciUseM in the city and aunestect that tome could be uaed in Ju.enlt• dlvenicn pro- grams She spoke in fa \or of .J f'ity-subs1dizcd day eare cenlc'r, saying privatl' c·c•ntcr!> were not practical She cxpre!lsed "mixed emo tlons'' about the proposal ror a newsletter, questioning how It would originate. She said plan· nlng commission appointments should be open lo all segments of the community and said areas o( authority between the com - mission amd the council should be redefined because at present some Issues were being dealt with twice. • She said that stronger enfon:e- ment of codes was called for m the wests1de and said "we need a good plan for the pbaseout of spot wning" m the area. She added that tratnc was the number one problem downtown. MesaFomm. Annowreed A forum for Costa ~kn c11r Council candidates w1l be prt~ented ThurSday l'Vl'nlnll by the N\'wport Harbor·Cost:a Ml.!!'1& Soard of Re ltors The l7 C'11nd1dates vyina for three S('ats at :1taake in tht.• Mart'h 2 t>lectlon l'•Ch will be !liven hve minute1 to speak. Luter there wUI be a question and anawe.i se~111on The forum. co-sponsored by tht• L~·agut> ot Women \'oters, will bciltt at 7:30 pm . In the bourd auditorium al 401 N . Newport Blvd ,.,..... l",..e A I REZONE ••• J J:&Sll•red voters to sign a pctttton r('qucstrng a referendum on the ll>!>Ue. "We feel 1t 's the democratic method to go the referendum route," Millar said. "But IC we fail to get the signatures of 10 perct>nl of the \'Oters on the pell tlon we may take legal action." The legal action would be to ask the Orange County Superior Court to block the wne change . The possibility of a referendum 1s the latest step In a long battle aJ!ainst the zone change waged by residents of College Park. They have complamed that ttw zone change w o uld be com - mercial Intrusion of a reaidentlal neighborhood, wo uld constitute s pot zoning. would i;et a prece dent for future commercial use:. an College Park, and would lower pro~rty values. The argument put forward ror the zone change has been that It "ould constitute sound planning because the lot is adjacent to II arbor Roulevard :ind next to the auto dealership. City ClHk Eileen Phinney pointl'<i out that if 1.0 percent of - the voters signed the petition the issue would not automatically go to a referendum. The council would have the rl~ht to re <'Ons1dcr Its previous action In addition, the council i.oon ~111 have a different makcu!J because three of the five seats are at stake in the March 2 elec- tion, and two or the incumbents ure not seeking re-electJon. E'roaa Page A J PROBE ••• d1('ate~ Mr. Nelson wa~ shaking but there was no report of vomit· mg Officials at OCMC did not db cover Mr. Nelson's skull fractur£' until Jan. 26. At fi rst, docton. thought he wa!! s uffering de hrium tremens and did not find the fracture until he failed to respond to treatment, hospital or ficials said . Mrs. Nelson did not locate her husband until Jan. 27 artcr re pealed calls lo the jail und OCMC, ~he s aid. Hospital oHicials s aid they <•rred in not contacting the fami· ly, while Griffeth said shcnrf's offi cials tried to call Mrs. Nelson Jan. 25 but were unsuccessful. 'HEALTH CARE' USI'ED TODAY A 11pec1al 20·paj:(C review of health fadl1ll es and 11crvlces uva1lable to Orange Coast resl drnt'I I' mt"lude<I In today's Dnlly 1'11111 'I h11> 'P1•1 ia I !>1•<'l 111n <·ontaani. informal inn nn an•a hospilal!1. :.pcctull1~d care and medical <•ducutlon 11lon11 with 11lorlc11 and p1cture11 on :;upportlng medlcnl lndustnti111nd ll!'rvice:i. Look for "Ornn1ote County llculth Cure" in today's On1ly Piiot Dell?"'* SUit .... SEEKS COUNCIL SEAT Cendldate Sm•ltwood 7 Orange·~t EDITION ; Today's Clo lag I N.Y. Stoeks VOL 69, NO. "8, 3 SECTIONS,~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1976 H ' TEN CENTS ··State Begins Probe of OC Jail Deat By KATHY CLANCY CM .... llyPI ...... The California Attorney General's office hu berun an in· qulry Into tbe death of a Wntmlnater m•n wbo may have suffered fatal bead irUuries while .auvtna a weekend Jall term. . Capt. Robert GrUfd.b of the Orange County Sheriff's office said be turned bis report on the death of Don Nel1e1n. 39, ovv to an attorney general 'a in· vesti1ator on Friday. Nebon died Feb. 2 'at Oranie County Medical Center· after ly· lni in a coma there for a weet fofiowlng 1ur1ery for a skull fracture. liflte Serio, senior invest!i"at« for tbe attorney 1eneral in Orance County, aakl tbe inquiry ii "very limited at tbis point." It wu ordered by Deputy Attorney and candidate lo last aprln1's General Dan Kremer ol lbe Su Ocean View School District Die10 office, he said. trualff elections, was aervtoa the Kremer could not be reached fir1t weekend of five on a for comment today bat, an at. · dnaken drivlna coovtctioo. tomey for Mr. Nelson'• widow. Griffeth 1ald today the Bonnie, said la.al weeti: be would aberiff'a investlgaUon revealed ask both the auorney aeeeral and Mr. Nelson fint became ll1 dur· District Attorney Cecil Hieb to iq hmcb in jaU on Jan. 25. Ke invaUgat.. laid be auffered "a a.eUure ol one Mr. Nellon, a bartender at the type or another and fell and tul Marlin Inn in Hwi~ Beach b1a head oo tbe concrete." Gri.tfetb aald Mr. Nellon was examJned by a ACilt.ered nurae OD duty, then 1eemecl to be fine &Del wu returned to bll cell. Ke 1\lffered aootber aeisure about 4:1.S p.m. in the cell and wu a&aln taken to the medical otnee, then wu tranaported to OCMC about 8: 1S p.m., Griffeth eontlnued. He explained be does not yet know what caused the seilures or 1r Mr. Nelson was tOMc1ous when he fell each time. ! He said Jail officials did try l~ help Mr. Nelson and pro~bly did, the beat tber could for him. ~· Mrs. Nelson's attorney has claimed jail officials did little to aid Mr. Nelson, who report~ was vomiting and quite m • throughout lbe day Swiday. • Griffeth said bis report in·j <See PaOBE, Pqe A%) SLA 'Fu1ious' With Money--Pattyl Blue is BopP!f Sla}'ton Gordon. 16. Newport Beach, frohcs with her dog. "Blue," a four·year-· old English sheep dog who obviously is overjoyed al being out in the fresh air and sunshine. Blue got a combination romp and obedience lesson Monday at Mariners Park in Newport Beach. Slayton explained that, although Blue may seem a bij old for obedience training. he is a new me mber of her family and needed a refresher course. School Absentees Costly ~oliday Ditchers Plague Newpon-Mesa By HILARl' KAVE 01-.o.11,,...__ Thousanrts of dollars m state money "111 be forft'tled by the Newport· Mesa U nlfied School D11trkt due to unocW1ed student absence!! tut Friday, accordlnir to attendance rt'ports from db· tnct schools An overall district ablt'ntee figure ts not )'el available for 1-'rl· da)'. However, n11url'S from the hve high schools s how lhal between 34 and SO l>('rcent of the studentA fa1ll'd to ehow up on those campusel' Ornnge Coast Sunny with variable highs cloud!! Wednel!day. Hlghs in the 60s at the beaches and sli&btly warmer Inland areas. Lows t.onigbt 1n the 40s . INSIDE TODA V Partnt1• fonci/vl apbD. tior&I obovt ''" •·t11rdl CMd tJw btt• · · art leavmo Ow llttle ~ out 1n left fwld °' to wlwre bobfn reoll11 do come from ~~ PQJJe A 7 l•tl•x .. •• All .. ... .u ., .. a+s All .,. .. M Sea ttered reports rrom elementary schools indicated fewer students stayed away from lower level schools f'riday. Teacher absences were about JO percent higher than ll.1ual, ac· cording to Deputy District Superintendent Norman Loats. Usually about 85 teachers are abffnt on Bridays but there were 123 absent teachers last Friday, Loataaald. Apparently . many of the abeencH resulted frorn the ract that the previous Thunday and following Monday were both school holidays. Some students apparenUy took a five-day vacation, said Loats. However. attendance officials added that attendance has been lower than usual lately because of the nu. For each student absent wtthout an excuse, the district la1t S'T.97 in atat.e money. District officials aald they could not yet compute the district Ion because final flaures are not compiled 11pccl()'lng whlch absences were excused and which were not. <See MON EV, Pa1e A2> 'Cuckoo's Nest' Tops Oscar List LOS ANGELES CAP) -"One Tiew OveT tt)e Cuckoo's Nesl," the saga of one man's fl1bt a1alnst the •JStem ID an tnaane uylum. scored top booon in the 48th Academy Award nomina· Uonstoday. Tbe UnJt.ed Artiat.s fllm drew nine nominations, Including thon for best picture, Jack Nlehobon u bell actoc'. Loui~ fietcber u best act.resa, Brad Oow1f for supporting actor and Milos Forman for best dlrertor. "Barry Lyndon" placed serond with seven nominations and "Dog Day Afternoon" WU third with sl.x . The three rums were nomlnat· td for best picture, alon& with "Jan" and "NubYille." In the best actor category • Nlcbol1on facea competition from Walter Matthau in "Tbe Sunshine Boys ;" Al Pacino, ··noa Day Afternoon ;" Max· lmillan Schell, "The Man ill the Gius Booth," and James Whit· more, "Give 'Em Hell, Harry!" Mias Fletcher'ti opponents u best actress are Isabelle Adjani, ·'The Story of Adele K.;" Ann· Margret, "Tommy;" Glenda Jackson. "Hedda," and Carol Kane, "Hester Street." George Burns, wbom most critics c0t\51dered Matthau's co- star in "The Sunshine Boys.'' wu nominated in the support.Ina actor category. Bes\des Dourlf • be races Burgos Meredith of "The Day of the Locust;" Chris Sa.radon "Doi Day Allernoon," and Jack Warden. "SbampoO," The 1uppottin1 act""8 nee features two from "Nulnille." Rooee Blakley aad comedieDDe <SeeOSCAU, Pac.eA1) $2Million Called 'Crumbs' SAN FRANCISCO <UPI> - Patricia Hearst testified today that her kidnapers were funous because her Calher put up "only $2 million.. ror a free food giveaway and told her '"he was JUSt playing with my life." The pale. gaunt newspaper heiress resumed her day.by-day description or hfe as a captive or the Symbionese Liberatton Army for the jury of seven women and five men at her bank robbery trial. "They got really mad because my father gave only S2 million," she aaid. "They said it was total· I)' wrong and he was just playlng with my lire. lt didn't matter to him what happened to me." She said SLA chieftain Dcnald "Cinque" DeFreeze aaid the $2 NEIOHBOA-9ATI'Y 'NICEST I EVER MET'. A5 milllon was "ridlculoua" and that her father, publisher Ran· dolph Hearst, would write it orr as a tax deduction. o.11, .... ..,._ KILLED IN ACCIDENT Paul Bro•d, 18 2 Teen-agers Die in HB Then the derense played the A l C h third tape recording made by u 0 ras Miss Hearst and her kidnapers - a lengthy diatribe by DeFreeze accusing Hearst of giving "crumbs to the people," ouUin· ing the Hearst Corp. assets and demanding another $4 million in frttfood. ~Miss Hearst bad only one line on the tape -an indication she was still alive: "Today ls the 19th and yesterday the Shah or Iran had two people executed at dawn." The defendant sat in the wit· neu stR"rrt! w ilh h er eyes downcast as the tapes made dur· ing her captivity were played, although she looked a little con· cerned as Cinque spoke. She swallowed and wiped her nose with a handkerchief at times. Her father and mother, silting near the defense attorneys, listened impassively. Afler the tape was finished, Bailey asked Miu Hearst whether she was familiar with all the Hearst holdings. "No. I mean, 1 knew some thinp, but not all," she said. She said she didn't t.hlnk the (See PATTY, Pa1eA%) By ARTHUR R. VINSEL • Ol .. O.lly ...... _ Paul Kananl Broad, the only child of Costa Mesa policeman Roscoe Broad, and his girlfriend were killed In Huntington Beach early today when his small foreign car crashed into the rear or a parked van. The crash oc:curred on a lonely stretch of Pacific Coast Highway one-half mile east of Warner Avenue along Bolsa Chica State Beach. Broad, 18, who lived al the family home, was pronounced dead at the scene. His pusenger, Deborah Demont, 19, or 12982 Loretta Lane, Santa Ana, suc- cumbed from multiple injuries shortly arter 6 a.m. at Hunt· ington Intercom m unity Hospital. The victims had to be extricftoo. ed from the mangled wreckage of their small sedan which hurled the van It 1truck SO feet onto the beach, injuring Its two occupants. Raymond W . Miiier, 26, or . Anaheim, and Diana CaJlac. 20, of 6462 Loneford Circle, Hunl· <See% IULLED, Pa1eAZ) * . * •~~~--------~------...... The ..... ,. .. , .,.., .... YOUR VIEW ON PATTY HEARST GUILT: I tltlnll Patty H•rst. •• O Wiii be found guilty of robOery c~rges against her (l Wiii be found IMOC.eflt n Hung lury or other O>MPLICITY: I tM'* Patty HMm .•• o went Wiiiingiy with her SL.A uptors Q Wtnt unwllllngly but was bf'alnwashed O Went against her will and was kept .igalnst her will INTEREST: I follew tM Pltty "•m c.M ••• O Clotely, re.cs most stories •bOut It Q Pretty Closely Q S.ldom Q Not at alJ a>VERAOE: I t"l1tll .._, ........_., O Is owrplaylng the Heam caw O Is covering It about rfght O Is undtrplayll\9 the story M4111 to the address below or drop by any of the Dally Piiot Offices llsted on Page 2. Attach any comments on the Patty ·HNrst case If WiSh. E•WDtlty~la.t lioa. 15'0 C.tll Mesa, CA '16U ............. .....,.., (ff.,.. ... , •....••..••.....•......•..••........••..••....•••..••••• , ••.....•.•• Newport Hit Twice OnSigm By JOANNE REYNOWS oe-.0.11,,. .. ..,... Signs -the lick of them, or the presence of too man)' -have become minor issues in Corona del Mar and Spyglass Jilli. Last week. city crews removed 57 signs Installed only last fall along Ocean Boulevard as part of lhe city's ne w street sweeping program. The signs announced parlung restrictions along the ocean-view street on two days during mornlng hours so that street sweepers could get into the curb line. Residents complained that the slans apolled the view and the city council ordered them removed. Meanwhile. residents or Spyelass Hill an preparing to post a half-dozen signs, wilh the council'• bleulnt. that read "We Love our CbUdren -Drive Slowly." In a Jetter to City Councilman John Store. Ronald Robison, president of the Spyglass Hall Homeowners Association, said the signs "are needed as a' positive deterrent to speedln~ vehicles. • . "As you know, we hav~ numerous children residing within our development, and have no immediate park facilities, which increases the pedestrian activity along our streets,'' the letter explained. Spyglass r esidents asked the city traffic committee for permission to post the signs which were given to them last year by lhe Lusk Company, developer of Spyglass. The committee turned down the request saying the signs were ineffective and damaging to the environment. · But homeowners decided to post the signs anyway to ~ce what would happen. Not tong after they went up, homeowners were or· dered to take them down or city crews would remove them. When they look them down they were told they would have to gel city couTicil approval before the signs could bo legally posted, they were told. At their Feb. 9 meetin". councilmen gave the poi1Ung of the signs their unanimous approval. The signs aru scheduled to go up thls week. The removal or thu 11licns on Ocean Boutevprd did not receive• the unanimous 11upport of councilmen. Lucille Kuehn 1rnld 11hc Mt ltie- piecemeal dlsmunthni; or thl' street swecpln" prof(ram waJ\ o poor tdeo. but llhc wu11 ovcrrull'd based on a staff re port from th'" city Department of Gcner1.tl. Servlce11 which said the strcc~ could be removed from the: special street sweeping. program. The staff memo from Wad& (Sff SIG NS, Paie .U> STOCK PRICES DROP AGAJN NEW YORK <UPI> -Investor concern over the economy and the thlrd largesl bank failure in. U.S. history drove prices lower 1n' fairly active trading today on the' New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jon~ industrial average, which dropped 8.42 points Friday, lost 7.79 more lo 950.S7. Declines outdistanced •d· vancea about 4 lo 3. (Tables, All.) Pricet rose In heavy trlldJnr on tbe American Stock Exchanae. I Al DAILY PILOT N 2nd Bean Brother On Trial By TOM BARI.EV CM ... o .. u,~ .. ~ Accused killer Charles Otnnus ~~n w4!nt on triul Wd•Y ln the same courtroom wh~ro a jury re- .-ommended bl.a elder brother tit~l the death pennlt y for t h ... Halloween niRht &laying ot honor sludent Steph~n .. M lke" Flnkltrn of Fountain Vullcy Bean. 22. llke his brother, Ii ugh DanJel Bun. 24. far-ea the death penalty for his alleged role 1.11 the k1lllng of flnkle:i, 19. M Oct 31. 1974 The Orange County Su_penor COdrt jury in the elder Bean's trial voted for the death penalty last Friday arter dellberall.lll for more than four da)s Judjle W11l1am Murray will sentenc~ him Manh4 Lawyers begJn argwng pre· trial motions toddy ~htle plans were made for l he 1tart of jury c;election possibly later today or Wednesd<1y. The defendant was arrested "''th tus brothe r in Santa Ana 2<i hours after Finklea, a gifted stu deot and the capt:un or the Ora.nge Coast ColleRe wrei.thng team . was shot to death whde he worked as a clerk m an all night l''ountau1 Valley market It was succ·essfully allt?Red 111 the elder Rt' an ·s trial that Finklea was bhot in the mouth as he confronted th(' t\l.o brothers at the counter It wa~ te~llf1eJ that Fmklcd was shot five more llmf.'S as he ran tAl the rear or tht" stAlre. Police found him lying face down 1n u pool or blood Motions belll& a rau('<i toda} rn duded 3 motion for supprei.s1nn of evidence and a motion for dis· mLSsal of the c harges E',.._POfl#Al MONEY ... IC 33 perct!nt o r the distnct 's 24.761 students were absent Fri day without an excuse. it would result lo a loss or about iGS,700. Figures from tbc five high :-:chools Include the followmg absence figures SO vercent at both Costa Mesa and McNally ~ontinua\lon , 40 percent at :-.lewport Harbor. 37 percent at <'oron;i del Mar and 34 ~rcent at f:11taoc10 On typkal Fridays. absences .1 t the high schools noae between t1~ht pe rcent nnd 2.'5 per roftt. arrordlnJ: to school prln c lpals l ,.,....r~''' PROBE ... d1cates Mr Nelson wa'I sh:Uong hut th('re "as no rt'port of \Omit IOlt Offir1als at OC'MC dad not dis rover Mr Nt•lsnn 's skull fracture until Jan. 26 At ri nst. doctors thought he was sufferina d e· hrium tremcns and did not find the fracture until he tailed to respond to treatml•nt. hospital of· facials said. Mr!I Ncl~on did not locate her husband until J nn 27 ofter r~ pealed rnll~ to the J&il and OCMC. <1hc sau1 lto'lp1t a I elf fl<' 1.d~ bald tht'Y ..r1NI in nOl l'ont,1rltnj.! lh~ fam1 h . ~hllc <;rirreth 11aid shrnrr " ••fflc1als tri,•cl tn rtill Mrr; NE-Ison .I ,in 25 hut "<•r,• u 04'Ul'l'l'''rul Cli~r Plu~es SEOl'l •. South Korl'n IAr> Ont' ml•mhcr nf n Kort'Dn tum 1ralnlng tn r hmb Mt t:vert'sl n1·lll year w :.~ killed In an .1valunrhc nnd twn other1 11rc: ml~slnit. the Korean Alplnl'lts l.ea,,:u«-nnnounr<'d today. Oi.ANOI COAST I N ""•""Of' (O••f (1•1 1 r11otff WI 1' ..... '" , .. t f,,, .. ,. 0 • ""' •\ r f • \ I\ .. I ...-.0 "'t O .. ' ... ' •\t , .... ,.~,"' ''"' ,_ t ......... t ~ J • • ~t • Nf\f+\P1•8 ..,..,.,..,_., f'Vf•~ t •wM• t., l•••• ,_.,,,. N•••"'' ..... ~ t•~ ""'-'~ H••'" t • ._, '•·~ .,, •t I ,, \•114 r+4 f 't••·· •• ,.... • -·~· ... " .. "'""'~ f ........ tit'• ··~·~ •"•' 'r ... tt ,.,., ~ .. 1.-1&..o _.. \~ ,..(\ .... i I••' f"tf' t"H'llll .... ~ ~ •t I"' """''' .... ,,,..,,, t -· ""'"''--' ••• ,. ......... Rol:M'r1 N W~'O I '•• .-I •M fv \1¥ ,.noma\ A Muf'1)fllne .... .._. ... ,.,.,,,,. CMrl~ H ~°°' FUch.1rd P. NAii ,., ., • ..,., ~""V·~ l '""'' hl•l)floM (7U) .... ,~, o.aislfltd AdYtrtl1I~ MM471 (,..,, ....... ~·~-.,, f~i' "'"'•""'~ ,.,,,.,.. .... l'tOJ l'WI•\ \f<"f I '""'•',_.,. ""1t ... i41 ,,..u., ....... ,.". •1"10 ,_.,, • ._ ,,. ... n of'HVC•d ... ,~ ..... U •C ••I ......... ,,. •••• .... ..,.._ ~9'f'".tf Cle\ "O't••• e•tll .e4 ~·,a *WU , (..-"'9P-:f'lt• \ii_. I"'~ Of c.,..-.,.. U 11 ~ ..... , .. ~l "4..lt..........,.,,ftlt1IH..,.....,.,...,. '31t,_ ... , Tftlr tor Du ~inc .year -old Anna Moller weeps as she "atches her father's coffin carried from a c hurch m Bristol. Conn .. while State Trooper Warren Seeley places a comforting h a nd on her shoulder. Trooper Carl Moller was killed when he stopped to a id a motorist and was struck by a truck. F ,...r.,,eA J 2 KILLED ... mgton Beach. were asleep m the ,.an and sustained only mmor 1n· Junes. police sa1d. They wert' treated and re leased at Pacifica Hospital following the colhston first re· ported at 12:1S a .m .. bv a motoris t who called from a nearby telephone lnvesligalor& today said they are probin~ the cause of the tragic cra$h mvolvtng Broad's compact car and the van, which they say was legally parked al the roadside Police L t. Gary Davis, m~ht shift watrh commander. aald thc Rroad auto was traveling at an C'~hmalecl 50 to 55 miles per hour ~ ht'n 1t crasht'd into the van. JlunUngton Boch Ft.re Depart ment paramed ics administered :1111 ;11 the srene a-1 firemen "'ork('d to extricate the young 1·ouplt'. hut their effo~ were f uttle The double tragedy shattered tl1r dose·kn1t famal} of Costa Mt.>SJ Pol1 re O!f1rt>r Roscoe Broad and stunnl•d the police de partment h<.' has ser\'ed since 1961 Police Chief Rof'er f. Neth ~es assigned to notify the Rroad!I or the doth or thE'tr only <'hild, an Eai!le Scout and 1975 graduate of ~later Del High School. Officer Rroad. nicknamed Rock for his days aa an All· Conferenet' Hawaii League pro· fesslonal football player H a 17S-pound tac-kle In 1947, llterully worshipped hi5 son The patrol man honored in lOOR as Cost1t ~h-i.u Poli<'eman of the Year was feal1tr<'d 1n a bcamin11 father-son portr.11t un Pa1te I or the Dally Piiot in 1!172 whl•n his lwn :ichlt'\ ed ~a.:lt1 Scout rank Younit Broad :alao held lhe /\d \ltart-D~1 awnrd for service to his rrU1t1ous fa11h, t'nmed in .id d1Uon to his F:J1ilt' Scout honors. Tht" )OUth had joined Ult' City or Costa Meu Trafn<' EnglnHr• rng Ocpnr1ment st arr 11~ ftn int.-m Jusl 11 month ~go t1nl'f txcellt>d In :iidl'nre stu<fil"< ll'\ a M:il(•r Oct I lhth School st ull1·nt Fun<.'ral servlct>a tor Mr Hro111I, 11 nat1\'(' n( llonol11lu ll" '" h18 f:tth(•r. "NI' pPnil111~ lo<lav ;it llell Hro111lw.1 ~ Mort1111ry 1n l'OSl<• M r11a M •!i" ll1•mon1 ":t'I I .1k111 to \\'1n l111{h•r Fa mil~ \t11rt11ury in ~untJ Ana. ~ ht•rl• arr >tt11t4'mt•nts we-re "ch1-.l111N1 to tw ma<11• by her fem1ly l:itcr TOurist Attraction Huiidreds Flock to Patty's TrUU SAN FRA NCISCO <UPI) - The triat of Patricta BHl'll wu • loU.rilt attraction tor aocne ot the bund.redl walUna in liDe ~ day for aoau ln the court where the new1paper belresa to&d aaain ot be.I" Ille undttll'OW'ld with the Symblooae Lit>. ration Army. Flrat 1n line w11 a JOUD1 man who declined to 1tve b1a name and wbo said he had been plan· nJn1 to com e to the trial for some ume. "But 1 just erocrastlnated:' hf' said. "Then l decid«l I .-ould come Loday. ll Juat happened lhlt hoded wllh lh1I ct..y." He aa:f be sot In llne about 8 JO p.m. Mooday and apent the 111&ht waiUn1 outalde the Federal Bualdl.q. Bolt llardl and t"'O frtendi. were next ln line. Tbey hi.d C'Om<' to C&lllornla from Ori.roll, they aatd, "toaee the West." Mooday nl&hl, they Jail lbclr College District's Boundaries Aired A public bearlnr will be con· ducted m Costa Mesa Wednesday evenine to consider new trustee areu tor tbe Coast Community Colle&• Dlalrict. wb.icb operates Oran1e Co11t. and Golden Weat colleges. The reall1nment la required aa a result of the annexation by the dutrict or about 60 pereent of the territory ot the Garden Grove Unified School District. The burln1 before the Oranae County Com mlttee on School Dis· trict OrganlzaUon is scheduled for 7:30 p.m . In the college dl3· trict board room at 1310 Adams A\'e The change will affect all fi ve current trustee areas 111 the col- lege district . Executive Vlce Chancellor Correll an J . Thompson sald lo· day that the college district will propose that all five tru1ttt areas be realigned on a popuJa· uon baals. H e recalled that present truatee areas have not been changed since 1947 when they were set up accordlng tAl elemen· tary school district boundaries. Presently, the Ocean View and SeaJ Beach school districts att in· trustee a rea one : t he Westminster district in trustee a rea two, the Huntln(lton Beach City arfd Fountain VaJJey district in trustee area three. the former Costa Mesa district ln trustee area lour. and the old Newport Beacb district In trWltee area five . ThomPton Hid uu. hal de· \'eloped into unequal re~ uon on a populatloo hula over .• the yean . Tbomplbn Hid lba&. .W. UM annexaUon of part ~ t.be Gardm Grove School District. the col· Jeee district will embrace a population of S00.000 and the pro- Dana's CofC Seeks Coast Panel Demise Blaming the California Coastal Commission for "ir reparable dama1e to the economy of the Califo rnia coast," tbe Dana Point Chamber or Commerce bu called for the end ot the com· mlaalon. The chamber also came out 11tronaly agaln1t the proposed coastal plan that Is now awalllng ;1 c t l o n b y I e g I a l a t o r 1 I n Sacramento . Mi ke Saettele. chamber pre11l· d("nl. uld today copies or the re· ic.olut1on enacted by the cham· ber's Board of Directors have bttn 1ent to all elected otnclala representlna South Oran1e Cowl· I\' nnd to Governor Brown and to county supervisors. Su llele u ld the resolution was prompted by the com· m1sslon'1 on1otn1 acUvltlH Hlm-e Its creation In 1972, when ('1tllfornla voten paued Propoal· lion 20. Suttele nld the tOUnly hu no long-ran1e pl1n1 or lntenUons for the south county ar e a , p:utlally becau111e of lntf'rference hy th<' coa11tal commiuion. Jn thf' resolution, chamber tiirf'Ctt>rs charl(e thot the coa11tal r om m l1111to n "Is n ot de mn('ratlcally elected and wieldJI a rbitr ary powt>r without the f(Ulc1ance or standard! other lhan the member's own and ahinina t:istn.·· poaal ls to set up five trwsttt areas roughly representing population.a ot 100.000 each. Another 111ue whJcb the county commltt.H will consider Wednes· day evmin1 will be the transfer of ter titory a ro und Talbert Avenue and Springdale Street from the Huntington Beach City District to the Ocean View Elementary District. This will m volve about 100 students and is beinl recom mended foe reasons of traffic aa!ety. school ofllelals said. F,...P.,,eAJ SIGNS ••. Beyeler. acting director or general aervlcee, pointed out that the atreet could be awept as It had been ln the past on Monday mornlnpfrom 6 a.m. to7 a.m. A memo not included In information 1lven to councilmen wu froro Bill Darnell, city traffic enctneer. ln it, Darnell said he felt the exclualon or Ocean Boulevard from the . special sweeping procram was neither economical nor efficient . He pointed out that the pro1ram u.eed In the paat. which wlll be reilutated on Ocean. did not solve the summer litter problem because the swttpeni could not set lnto the curb where litter la dropped, becauao or pa rked can. Darnell uld be could remove seven of the 57 1lina that were put up on both 1ldee ol lhe street. but be noted lbat apactni of the sips la bued on m unicipal court requi~meata. Tile police d epartment la anot.Mr c lly aaency that backed tM posted DO·parktn1 plan. CapL Donald Oyaa• of the Police tra!flc divlaion explained that abandoned can could be spotted much taster. He also noted that tilter enforcement. technically a poltcr job, is very d lrtlcull unless an officer sees r.omeone actually dropping litter "It's far cheaper to go around and sweep up af\erwards. It's not cost effective to enforce litter laws when we can sweep it up," he said. Jewish Talk Scheduled The Newport Harbor chaptrr of lladasu h will meet n~xt Mnn day at 11 e .m . al the Versaillc~ Club House to hear a talk by newspaper publisher llcrb n rtn on the J ewish contrlbuttons to the American Revolution. An earlier story In the Dally Pilot Incorrectly ILILed the dutc of the meeting. 'HE.4.LTH CARE' USTED TODA.Y A tpeclel 20·page revtew o r health tactlltlea and tervleea available to Oranie Cout rettl· dents ii included In today's Dally Pilot. Thia 1pecl:il 11ectlon c·onluin11 Information on urea ho."lpltnls. llP<'Ciallzed care Lind m~·dlcul education alonit with stories and pictures on 11upportlnn ml'<fir:il lndustnes and s('rviccic Look for "Oranf(t' County Health Care" In loduy's Onlly Pilot •tar at a :imall restaurul'll n1•ar t.he Ft"dt'ral BuJldin& and rame d-Own to &ee the tnaJ. "It "as one or the thlnas we wont~ to do," Rardi uid. "The ract that she ts going to bt· on tho watotu 11tllnd h11d nothing to do with it. We would have com_, anvway." . Mary Domlto aod a friend from Moraga were next In lane at>ttlna to the Ycderol OwldtnK about J0·30p.m . Monday. All slx or ~e youne peoplt· "t the head of the Une were un· dumayed by the weather. "Maybe there was a little ma.st a little drln le, but It wa.s nothing." one said. Guards said it w as by fttr the lar1est crowd to turn out for the trial since it began Jan. 26. lt obviously would have bttn larrer except that others turned away when they arri\•ed and ~aw the SIU O( the line waitLOg for about 100 seats available to the pubLic. * * * #',....P~AJ PATIY ••. family could meet the adrlltlon•il S4 million demand but bud no doubt her parents would try to get her out. She said that while she was m the closet thinking, "I mostly thought I'd be killed." The derendant said her c1aptors discussed the freeing or two SLA members charged with slaying Oakland School Superintendent Marcus Foster a nd said, "One of their main goals was to let ever· ybody out or the prisons.·· "Was revolution frequently discussed?" defense attorney F. Lee BaJley asked. ··o h. yes. They t alked about il all the lime. "They said the SLA was run by -they had a court of the people and a war council. I think the war council was the court of the peo· pie and two represent.allves or each came together and that's how they decided on the kidnap· lng." Miss Hearst was led through u detailed recountina or her weeks in the closet or a suburban home by Ba lly, who first put her on the stand Friday to tell the jury about . her violent abduction. She testified that In the first tape tte;ording she made alter her kldnaping, sbe referred to an Oakland house which the SLA told bar bad been swarmed over by FBI a1ents. Her captors said tr she'd been there she'd have been killed. "They said I 'd be killed because they 'd never sur· render." f'romr~A I OSCARS .•. Llly Tomlin . Also nominated · Lee Grant, "Sh ampoo:" Sylvia Miles. "Farewell, My Lovely,'' and Brenda Vacraro, "Once ls Not Enough." Academy voters wlll now view the nominated films and make their final choices, which will be announced to a television au· dlence on Monday, March 29. in ceremonies at the Los Angeles Music Center. · Although nominated for beat plrturt-... .Jaws" was ~r\'en only fou r nominations and none tor direction. The director nominees are F ede ri co Fcll1n1 , "Amarcord". Stanley Kubrick. "Barry Lyndon". Sidney Lu met. "Dog Duy Afternoon" , Robert Altman . "Nuhv11lc ." and Forman for "Cuckoo's Ne5t ." The nomlnoted songs: "How Lucky Can You Get" from "Fun· ny I,.ady"; "I'm F.a1'y" lrnm "Nashville '': "Now That We're Jn Lo ve" from "Whiff~": "Richard'• Window" from ''The Other Slde or the Mountain," end "Theme from Mahogany." For ht•~t l'l('fl•1•nplay 11dapt:J lion· Stanley Kuhn<'k. "Rurrv Lyndon ·· .. lohn ll u~l on und Glarlya 11 111. "The Mun Whn Would He• Klnit": Lawrc·rw1• llnu1'1.'n nnd Oo (;oltlmun. "(1n1· Mt•W Over tht• Cu1·k110'!< Nt>l\l'' Ruucro Mact'or• und Oino Risi "Scent o r e Woman". Nell Simon, "The Sunshtnt• llov~ Pellet Gun Warning Issued A l"ewport Beach man, whose clog was slain hut week with a ~llet from an air gun, warned parents today th11t tht-Jtuns are more danirerous than they may bclie\'f' "The l{uns are a real hatard and parents should think twke before buying them for their <.'h1ldren," ~Hlid Arthur Powers or 2338 Po rt Lerwick Place In If arbor View Homes. Powers' year -old lrl!!h setter • Kelly. was !!hot •nd kill~ la.st Wednesday as s he romped ln a vacant CJeld near lbe famUy home. Kelly, who ba d eotten out o( her own backyard, manqed to crAwl to • nel«hbor'a yard after the shootln". The pellet had lodctd In her lun1 and caused death sevcraJ houra lat.er. ~owen · sald. Powers said he wants pareni. and c hildren to realhe Ulat the (\Ins, which s hoot pelJets using rompresslon, can easily kill. "It'• bad enough that my doc was killed. She was loved by t.be • 'Whole famUy, tnchJdb:a& 1n7 two IOOS.•• ''But children allo play in the fttJds and lbey could be kllltd, too," he added. Accord.ln1 to Ne•wrt Beach Pollet Detective Tom Stewart, who wu called In on lhe case. youn11ten often use air guns to shoot birds and duck.a in the lleld.t . 11te guns are Htll.Y obtainable ~ "•tJY 5 end 10 •tore.'' but are Wea&! for persona UDdet' 16 ~ old. Stew an san. · &..art, a JunnUeomeer. wu calJM lo becauae autborlties believe a young p~rson is responsible tor the ahootlng. Stewart says he plans to compare the l)('llet. removed from the dog wllh guns owned by people In the neighborhood. Both Stewart nnd Irvine Ranch Oeputles, who patrol t he un developed land. say that 8uch shootings a~ not common, even though huntln£ wild fowl Is com- monplace. Stewart said It appean the dog wn intentionally shot nt, aJlboath he does not know 11 lbo person. knew the danger of t.be ~llets. Ford to Ai~ CIA Plam W AStUNOTON <AP> Pre 1dent Ford will unveil has plan to reoqtanhe )UpHv1slo n of the In· telhacnce 1111encles at a televl.sed new1 confe~nee hill' this arteornoon, PrHa t1<'cn•tary Ron N~ul'n an. nounced The pluu l:i for a :slreamhnod lntelll1ence community that will put ('IA Director Georiie Buah 111 position to control all !<J>Y ag~nclf's, Admlnlstrn· tionortaclal1 uy. llcapealtf <.d Sp.m . The orrtdals uy Buah will be chairman of a s mall lnter-a1ency panel which will give him the po~r to control the bud, e ta ol otbe_r s py agencies, s uch .. thoto ~1thln the Defense ~part· ment and the National ~urity Ageney. • Hinshaw ~ Sentencing Delayed ~ Convicted Congressman An· drew Hlnshaw's sentencing was delayed for one week today when the Newport Beach Republlcan'a lawyer explaln ed that he has nol had sufficient time to prepare bia motion tor a ne w tria l. Oranae County Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kne-eland ael Feb. 24 as the date he wlll 1en- tence Hinshaw to what could be one lo 14 years In st.ate prison oo the bnbery conviction II he de- nies attorney Marshall Mor11n's motion. Morgan explained In court lo· day that he has been distracted from preparation of his motion by the serious tllneas or hi.a 13• year-old aon who recently un- derwent an operation for t e· moval of a tumor that proved lo be benign. Morga n said he hu been further handicapped by the re· cent appointment to the Superior : Court bench of South Laguna at· t.orney Robert Green who worked with him on the, Hinshaw trial. HJnshaw, ~3. was found guilty of charges that be accepted stereo equipment u bribes from the Tandy CorporaUon while be worked u Orange County's U• sessor prior t o !ala electlon in 1972. He was found &ullly ol a second bribery count stemmin1 from al· legations that he ae<:epted cam· paJgn contributions from a Tan- dy e.xecutJve. Probation Ortlcer R. J . Hamill.on has augaest.ed a prtaon term for H in s haw since, h e :-.tales, the congressman does not bdieve that he committ~ any t:nme. Jury Picking Under Way For .Vallerga .Jury selection began today In the Kf'rn County Superior Court tnal of former On.ini{c County as1>e11sor Ju ck Vallorga. 0 Hi('ials at the Bakersfield ''ourthouse whlrh was 11elect1'<1 .1i. lht' s1tt' of Valleraa'i. rnn.,pir::arv lrlal when h<' "UCCt:ll!lfully demanded e change or vt·nuc from Orange County County hilld JudRc P.R. Borton ~as a151 aned to I he caae thl1 morning. Orangt Cnunty Deputy 01.alrict Attnrncy WlllJam Evans Is pr08erutlna con1Jplracy char1ea c'ontalncd In a {rand Jury indictment. V11llcru. M, 18 belna dtfended by Santa Ana ot.tom cy John Cahill. P:vons predlrtr d bf'foro he lcfl fnr Bnker11flc•ld M1mdoy that thP tnal of lhl' formt>r 11~11CA11or would toke ut l1•1111l throe woek11 thr length of o t1 Htl In Vf'nturo ('uunty laiot Aujlu'll lhal l1•d 111 Valleri::1':; c·onvl<'laon on mult1ph' 1 nm11111 l l•hurfi(Ni Vallcr.:a wa~ r1nf'd St.000. rt>moved from county om cc nnd ordered to Sj>r Vt! u 8C).day Jail term after that conviction. The flno and Jail ttrm have been Mayed pen Ing a nillna on hla appeal. · At issue ln the nakB"Sfteld trio I 1s the aJlegallon that Va1Jer1a was one of a number of employe~ In tht' aueeaor's otnce who ~rmltted county manpower. materials ond lime to be ust'd during former county uaea1or Andrew fllnshow's successful bid for Congress. Hln~h :.w will ht! tried on ldentiral conspiracy c har11es March l In Orange (;ounty Superior Court. The· congrtuman "111 be 11enttnccd Feb. 24 by Jud'e Robert P. Knteltnd on b1a reQent bribery convkUoo. > l --.... .._..._ . -· ' . ----------• • T uesday's Clo1iq P r ices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ._ ____ --' ' I N DAJL Y Pt LOT c1 f f 2 Camera Firtns Shooting it Out By MILTON MOSKOWITZ This l!i the y(•ar th11l Eastm1tn Koda k wlll ftnally :1hool 1t out with Poluoid It's o showdown thut hi.tis lonJi: bt'l'O in thr mi.Jung. Kod ak 11nd Poliaroid url' lhe dominant comp1m it•:1 In lht mulU million doll or pholoiitrnphl<· bu1'ineiis. llowcH~r. up tt) now they have avoided a fo~>e to fare confrontation. POLAllOID HAS CARV•:o Ol!T ITS o-.n nk hc In lh~ markeot with Instant C'ttnWrn:! Kodak not only tolt•rutrd that d~velopment bul 11150 helped rolarold by llUJ)ply1nl( tl Wlll\ neaalivc film Kodak workl·d un the a1>sumptloo thut anything good for photn~rophy wai. good for Kodak. This peoctful coexbtcnct-I!> ahout lo t-nd Polaroid. a~ oC Jan 1. began i.uvply tni: all 1lll own him n .. edt.. 1l no longer buys anything from Kodak And Kodak ts gettlnc ready to introduce an imitunl camera or its own to compete agasn!l.l.. the extens ive l'olar1ud Kodak has not dls· ~ Une. ~ <'IOSed when at will bnnt '\r ~ out ita new camera but • everyont' 1n the photo- graphic industry s eems to expect It to arrive this s pring Money Tree No details are available yet on the features of the camera or how il will be priced. IF POLAROID lS NER VOUS, rr·s not showin~ it. It atumbled a bit "'·hen It introduced its SX·70 :.elf·dcvt•loptng camera ln 1972 but lt hns just come through the second year in a row in which it sold more than five million camr ras. on~ million of them SX·70s. It now has three diffe1 ent versions oC the SX·70 ~-and next month. headlnic Kodak off ul thl! pass. It will trot out a fourth version. the Pronto. The Pronto. like tbe other SX·70s, wtll al!>O de\'clop col· or pictures automatically before your t'yes without }our having lo do anything It will \I e1gli 16 ounc<>s and carry <• suggested retail pnt'e of $66. which means that d1scounten. will probably be hu\\ king 1t for S50 P RONTO, \'O WlLL. OTI-:. IS being ,hipped into stores immediately pnor to U1e rumored introdut'llon of the Kodak instant camera . Kodak and Polaroid are a study in contra!\ls. Kodak is by far the bigger company, oul.l.ellmg Polaroid by 6-to-1 and outurning It by 10-t<i l. Kodak has 200.000employes. Polaroid has 13,000. l<odak is known as a conservative. do-1t by-the· numbers company. a place where everyone 1s well groom<.'d and where it's not uncommon for sons and daughters tu follow their parents a" employes. POLAROID TAKES MUCH O•' ITS spirit from tbe rest· less energy of its founder. Dr. Edwm Land, \I ho s llll head-. the company. who slUI serves as 11s chief sc1cnll!>l and who still owns JS perC'ent ot all the s to<:k. lnte rvlewed last year by l'"orhf's maga1in l'. Dr. t.anrl W8.I asked whether Jt wasn 't trur that he h~Hl "rrca tt'<f Q whole industry based on impataenc<' "Jh' rc11lll•d · "Look, if the picture you gel 1n!>tantly 1!\ us bt>autiful u-; the picture you gel by wa1lin~ seven d11}s. then 1l 1l> ab:.olull! madness to soy that there 1s virtue m wa1tin~ ... ll 's a virtue that Kodak as g1v1ni: up th1~ yt'ur. t1>0 . . UCB Bra1zcli Due To Open in NB The United California Bank will have a new sinizlc-story and mezzanine branch with drive· up fact Ii ties <il2750 Pacific Coast Highway in the Mariners Male at Newport Beach by late summer. The buildinc. lo be located on a 18,900·squarc foot s ite with 4,468 square feet of bank floor space, will cost $235,000, said St an Brockhoff. vice prcsident-izeneral manager or construction for lht> branch's g1mcral contractor , Don Koll Company, Inc .• a lso oC Newport tieach. The architect is Wilson V. Woodman and Assoclatrs or Newport Beach. The land!\C'8JX' architect is f1mtnd~1· Landscape of Costa Mei>a and thr interiors arc by Lall J ackson and Associates of Santa Monlcu. Due to late t ransmission today's listing w lll not a~ar In the Dally Pilot. l"• '. ... 10 .. )0 l .. II .. l•u Up I/fl Up "' Ur' "'' l/11 '"' \Ip VP VO VP VO Vp VO Vp Vo Vp VP Oft °'' ()II ()If 1)1• ~ "' "" l .. "" ,, ()ff »• r>f• .. ,_,., OH .. ,,., .. ,,,. ) ' (/H ''" ,,., "• rr• I ~ 11• 11' ,, ' ,,, 110 Hf, " I ,,, 114 "1 II 1 111 11 t ,, t I) 11\ 11 I 17 I n o ,., l H "J 10 I 10, . ' •• 4 , • 1 -I II , ) 11 11 •• . ' • . ' •u . , /\'~ 1'ork IS Mod Ardrr ""''' YorlO. ~ ,°'!; ....... s~.. • .. ·~ + • " . .. . 41•... • • • 1 • ,, v. " ' I\~ • •• 17 • 111• I' ' n . " . . . . f''rw l 'orh Sal_.• l'olNMP Oy Uf'I AN•'"'' t t11t •... .,, "' ... , 1/411 I• •fJ Montn•oo v ..... , 4ff)tl r..w''''*'''"''Jn ,,.,, I tn11 •• 1 .. 1'1\ lo d •I• tt/4 to O•I• Mar~f Trrttd ~if¥•"' ti'\ {)il:111r. .. Uni ""MliMI Tot Al AMI.II MAOKIT A,,...,.,_,._, "'"' ,,,., \Jfl't!~ .. tl'fll9'd fQ••• l"1•11m1n••f '°""'' 1 HtlNO ,_, ...... , •\I "" ,,, tV')" ) r' l)l ,,... ,,,., . ... - All DAILY PILOT 1 -t1 ,If r .. ·~ ";"• -f .. . I i. '!U!!d!y. F!bru!ry 17 I 1'79 • ' New flavor discovery for 9 mg. tar MERIT achieves taste of Cigarettes having 60% more tar. Now there's a way to cut tar without the usual loss in taste. That's the report from Philip Morris on a new taste discovery called 'Enriched Flavor'. A way to packflavor-extraflat1or- into tobacco without the usual corresponding increase in tar. The kind of fl avor that o utdates conventional low tar brands. The cigarette with 'Enriched Flavor' is remarkable new MERIT If you smoke-whether it's a low tar brand with a taste you . can't quite get used to, or a full-flavor smoke you enjoy but with a tar level you'd like to drop-you'll be interested. Smoke"Cracked": Key Ingredients Isolated After a twelve-year research effort, a team of scientists at our Richmond Research Center succeeded in isolating the "key" flav o r ingredients of tobacco as they exist in cigarette smoke. By adding only those ingredients \vhich arc of extreme high quality as ·flavor producers yet low tar producers as well. \ve're now able to pack incredible flavor into a cigarette without the usual corresponding increase in t!r. 'Enrich ed Flavor'. It's extra flavor. Natural flavor. Fl avor that can't burn out, can't drop out. can't do anything but come through. We packed 'Enriched Flavor' into the tobacco used to make MERIT. And began an extensive 0 ftmp ...... 1-. U'76 \ I I I series of taste tests. The results were startling. Uste-Testr.d By People Like You 9 mg. tar MERIT was taste-tested against five current leading low tar cigarette brands ranging from 11 mg. to 15 mg. tar. Tho usands of filter smokers were involved, smokers like yourself, all tested at home~ The results were conclusive: Even if the cigarette tested had 603 more tar, a significant majority of all smokers tested reported new 'Enriched Flavor' MERIT delivered more taste. Repeat: delivered more taste. MERIT and MERIT MENTHOL In similar tests against 11 mg. to 15 mg. menthol brands, 9 mg. tar MERIT MENTHOL pcrf ormed strongly too, delivering as much-or more-taste than the higher tar brands tested. You've been smoking "low tar. good taste" claims long enough. Now you've got the Cigarette. MERIT. Incredible smoking pleasure at only 9 mg. tar. From Philip Morris. •Amnk •n In"''"" tlf Consumer OplnK>n. \tudy •v••l•hl< fru on r<q11<\I Pl\lhp Moma Inc, RicllfTIOftd. llA 2J261. 9 mg '. 'tar:· 0.7 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC Method. Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. '£·· ~ n .· 1 • ·.1 ,. -. .. I r, . ' . . ... ;J .. £.r· / . J February 17, 1976 Orange County Health Care A review of health facilities and services available to Orange Coast residents and a guide to supporting medical industries and services. - . -... ,,,,,. • I ' I ~ - 2 DAILY PILOT Febnwy 17, t876 ~~ Care Section PILOT-ADVERTISER Febtuary 18. 1976 UCI Wins One_ By DOUG PIUTZSCRE OtlllolMNy--- Years of battling for the purchase o r Orange County Medical Center have won UC Irvine's California College of Medicine the right to more years of fighting to make the former county · hospital a better facility for patient care. No major changes in the sprawl- ing hospital in the City ot Orance are anticipated durinc the flrst year of university ownership, ac- cording to UCI medical school Dean Stanley van den Noort. But three or four years and about $13 million down the road, Or. \'an den Noort envisions a more efficient. higher quality operation at the facility purchased from Orange County for $5.5 million for eqwpment and supplies plu.s a still unresolved $2.5 million for the land. • 1n OCMC Purchase • 1n Future lhe emercency room. which Dr. van den Noort described as "smull, inefficiently orgunii ed and pcrhapcs mls locatcd. ·' Nuclear m ed icine and X·ra)' facilities need to be btought closer together and closer to "here pa- tients are, he added. "Another area is the ob:.tctrics service, !ihlch Is gro:.sl)' ovcr- cro.wded and lacks adequate rc- sourcea needed lo provide the best standard of obstetric and tynttolocical care," be said . Another problem, is a numb<>r or fi\•e-bed rooms, which he describcd as "deperaonalhlng" to the pa- tients and lnelricieot lo operate. Eventually they are to be reduced to two or three-bed rooms. To as great an extent as po'i.ible, he suld, patient care will be con- fined to the main ~pital building and removet'I from the numl·rous outbulldtn.S. Even further down the road, in the yur 2025. Dr. van den Noort said, "I believe there will be a need for a hospital at that location, rather larger and more modern than the present facibty with space for faculty and research raciliUes." Few Immediate change• are ptanned for UC lrvlne takeover of Orenge County Medtcal Center In Orange On the Irvine campus, "ork 1s expected to begin in April on a new medical science building. The SJS million, 107,000 square foot facility will provid e classroom and lab space for students. The terms of the agreement un- der whlch the university purchased the Medical Center from Orange County dictate little change. Rather, the terms require the un- iversity to hire any of the hospital staff seeking to ,;tay at the hospital and the fad Illy 's scope or services will remain the same . The purchase also inch.1des the Santa Ana Community Clmic. The university has operated the medical services al the county hospital under an affiliation agree· ment with rounty government since 1968. Many of the technical and other actlvilies o f the hospital-purchasing. payroll and the like-have been handled by the county under the affihatfon agree- ment. The <'hanee or ownership means the university must take ovc.-r these functions and more than n doz.en task forces have been formed to handle the transition in the year following the university takeover July 1. Munwhlle, the med1ral scbool New Health Agency To Have Teeth to It By WILLIAM SOIREIBER Of ... O.lly'""4- Wlthin the next rew months, a new fcdeully-mudated aaency wlll take sole control of Orange County health planning artd health grnnt re· \'lew. The U.S. Department ol Health, Education and Welfare will select a county Health Systems Agency OlSA > under terms of' P\.lbUc Law 93-641 after applications for the de- .sl~natlon are 1tudled and critiqued by 11tatc omctal1. Tht new law replacoo a measure ro1cted In the late ll80l lhat created a ayatem of health faclUty revirN board• around the country with somewt.at llmlt ed enforcement authority. The •xl1Un1 eounty Com· prehemlve Health P\mninC CowacU wu created under the old law and ls one of two applicant.a foe the de· •ll"alJoa .. tb• count~"• HSA. The 5 ppUout la Oran&• Couatr ment. • has been chosen to be nn agency arta In ltselt -llSA 13. Until tho new law was enacted, health plannlna agencies on the local level were Umlted in lhelr control over the health Industry. Thdr ruling• on Individual health facility project• were important l.1Ul not critical to the IUC<."ess or failure ot new faclllllc8. The llSA law puts more teeth in ht11lth plannlna. The designated HSA will have major "r~vlew and comment" authority over health aranl appUutlon.t by private and public ageoclta. Throuah It• mandatory ht'Slth pla.ruU01 proarama, the JLCiA will be better equipped to solve persla~nt problem• 1uch 11 hctpltal "ovcrbed· cllnC" and the bllb <'Mt of health care. n. HSA wlll alao have • workin1 • bodcet about three Umes that of the pre~nt t'ouncll. will allempt to get slate rinancln& for reno\'ation of the Medical Center; changes that ultimately will reduce the capacity of the hospital from its present 515 beds to 466. The reductions, Dr. van den Noort said, are neeessary because the arrangement ol buildings on the Medical Center grounds ls inef- ficient and in some cases detrimen- tal to patient care. The $13 million, ir the school can get it. ls earmarked almost totally for the improvement of patient services .. Some of the runds may be used for educational facilities, Dr. van den Noort said, but none will be used for research-related ex· penses. One area destined for change is Additionally. the campus is one of three vying ror a new vett-rinary medicine school to be cstabhsh<>d by the Universit y or Cali fornia ID Southern California. UCI. UC Riverside and UC Sap Diego have been com(>t'ting for the new facility and word on which site has been selected is expected at any lime, according to a uni versity spokesman. Lookinc Into the future of the campus eod of the merl1cal school, Dr. van den Noort said. "I believe that by 2025 there will be a hospital next to the medical school al the campus. It will be a large hospital and will represent a major and re- alonal resource for patient care " Lut year, state budget makers shot down UCI's immediate plans for an on-campus hospitnl County Dental Society Helps School Districts In rc.-cent years the Orange County Dental Sociel y has directed one or its major efforts in health care towar·d local school children. ., With the help of school dislricls and the1r school nurses, the dental society has established a dental con sultant for each district in the county. A volunlc>Pr memb<>r ot the 1oeleoty provides preventive dental care in hla a11i1ned district. Children'• Dental Health Wet'k, held each year, is another Hpect demonstralina the 10Clety'1 work in this area. Tho Women's Auxiliary of the IOCltl)' also helps the school pro- aram with a speakers panel avaJla ble to the school•. 1J a •r.•ller la needed for any achoo , phone 833·979!)1 I 11 I " • I It l•1t11ll formation 1y11tem 1( you ha v1• ;iny questions about dentistry. dr ntal disease or dent a I rnre and prt'\'l'n lion phone 835·2221 /\. complNt• li)lt lna of the t apes ovrulubh.' 1s in the Yellow Pages . A 24-hour cmerg1•n1·y <'.II e num l>C'r. 542· 7505, ror IK'Clllk ~It hout -. ref(ular dentist or ~ hn ran not IO<'ate their own dentist in time of emt'raency. A P1tlent Relation!< Committee which will render 1mpurt1al Ju<ti.:c· mcnl on complaints from J>at1cnts about the care provided by a member of the denlal S-Oelety. The Orange County Penlul Society 1A a communltyorlented profe!\)1101rnl health care organiz.,tiOll Jt1> jlo11l1i •rt to promote the conUnulnR eduC'a· lion of Its membcr1', coordln<1tc '1 • .._.r»ut lliHQlqmcJI .-.cl Insurance -- '"'4tt •• _ .. ~tffi.A.'• ,, U1 'ilchb~ bf''Wbf~~lude a numbtr oi counties. Oranao County One or th• H.otcll'• m1Jor achlevemeteJl.la .....i•1earw ... tornplefitN 0£ ._ c_,.flefienat11 mat6 plan of health cart f'1r U\t county The 850·member dental •oc:ltty ai.o offent such other l'ef'Ykles Hf.' ., -Participation ln lbe Tel·Mtd in· I M•.1,;a""' yv,l.\ih °''l '11>(~1'1 ~d IC '' ~~·t• ,ti..• p.,.,llt ,-Out <lent 111 hcll1lh. ---- -PILOT·AOVERTISEA Fetwu.y 11. 1t7t Mrs. Auth Tinsman It helped by Mrs. Juli• Mathenv, hHd of the volunteers who try to m•ke patient'• visit to the renal dlalytlt unit •t South Co••t Community Hoapltal more plHHnt. F!bN!ry 17, 1976 DAIL V PILOT 3 Dialysis Treatment 'Made Easier' Here Al South Coast Community Hospital the renal dialysis center is more than a room full or machines lo purify the blood because the kidneys have failed. Behind the silent pumping machines there is a highly trained staff of specialist.a. a medical direc· tor renowned in the field of nephrology, and auxiliary members who help make the patient's stay a comfortable one. Stanley Rosen. M.D . is the chief of renal medicine and an assistant professor of mediclne al UC, Irvine. lie has written. or co·wrilten 61 medical publications and be has a background in various medical fi elds that stretches back to his native Leeds, England Home dialysis units are available al South Coast for some paHents who have sufficient family support lo use them. But for those who must come to the hospital as much as three Hmes a week every effort is made to ease the burden. Patients who work can visit the dialysis center in the evening. Volunteers will handle errands for patients who must spend three or four hours on the machine Dialytl5 treatment, which can run $30,000 a year and is classified as a catastrophic illness, is also covered by the Medicare program al South Coast. Open Heart Surgery Done At 9 Hospitals Nine or Orange County's 38 hospitals perform open heart !>Ur· gery. according to s tatistics pro· v1ded by the county Health Planning Council The hospitals with open henrt capability include· -Canyon General Hospital in Santa Ana Canyon -St. Jude llosp1tal in FUiierton -Anaheim Me morial Hospital -Good Samaritan Hospital -Palm Harbor Hospital -Orange County Medical Center -Santa Ana· Tustin Community Hospital -St. Joseph and Children's Hospital or Orange County -Hoag Memorial Hospital 38 OC Hospitals Average 56% Occupancy There are 38 general hospitals in Orange County , of which nine are non-profit and 29 are proprietary County hospitals. their total number of beds and average occupancy rates include. -Anaheim General, 99 beds, 56 percent occupancy Anaheim Memorial, 240 beds. 52 percent occupancy Beach Community, 58 beds. 65 percent occupancy Brea Com munity, 114 beds. 54 percent occupancy Canyon General, 165 beds, no a\'ailable occupancy figures Chapman General. 99 beds. 67 percent occupancy Costa Mesa Memorial, 19 beds. 64 percent occupancy Esperanza lnlercommunity. 106 beds. uncertain or cupancy figures Fountain Valley Community, 214 beds, 76 percent oc· t•upancy (based on former 113 bed capacity ) f'ullerton Community, 56 beds, 45 percent occupanc} Garden Park General, 97 beds. 60 percent occupaAcy Good Samaritan, 255 beds, 38 percent occupancy Hoag Mc:-morial -Presbyterian, 376 beds, 68 perce nt O<'cupa ncy Huntlntcton ln~crcommunlty, 141 beds. 49 percent oc t•11pancy La H1bra Community, 201 beds. 75 percent occupancy La Palma lnterrommunlty, 136 beds. 62 percent oc c11pnncy Lincoln Community, 67 beds. 36 percent occupancy Lo!l Al• mltotGi'n.-ral, 151beds,67 percent occupancy Martin Luthtr Gtnrral, 138 beds, 61 percent <><' rupnncy Mt-r<')' G~n«>ral, 114 bed!\, 67 percent occupancy -Ml slon Community, 212 beds. 79 percent occupancy Orange County Medical Center, 371 beds. 68 percl'nt ocrupancy Padfka, 109 beds. 78 percent O<'cupancy Palm Harbor Gnt"ral. 176 h<'ds. 65 percent O<'cupancy Platf'ntl1 Unda Community, 114 beds, 51 J~rccnt or· cupancy Rlnrvlew, 93 ~s. 5.1 J><'rCl'nt occupanry Saddleba<'k Community, 100 l>eds , 48 r erC'ent oc· cupanc-y " ik.. l••P•·Mlll Chtldftn'1 Hospital of Orange Count)'. llf l b!dMet IMtt-~ o<!t.1'ty 1 \' -111t . ,f,f.f,. ''-~Wet, ft ht-rr""'' ""•·-......... -San Clem ente General, 116 beds, SO percent occupancy -Santa Ana-Tustin Community, 164 beds, 65 percent oc- cupancy -South Coast Community, 125 beds, 74 percent oc· cupancy -Stanton Community, 132 beds. 38 percent occupancy -Tustln Community, 203 beds, 67 percent occupancy West Anaheim Community, 145 beds. 68 percent oc· cupancy -Westminster Community, 126 beds. 63 percent oe· cupancy OC Hospital Rates Highest ORANGE COUNTY HEALTH CARE If you Jl(o lo the hospital In Orange County, be prepared to pay the one of the highest dally rates anywhere in the United States. As of last year. the average dally hospital charge ror a patient in the county was close to $190. That com· pares to a nationwide average figure of $119 and a stale average of $162. Health statistics show that Oi:ange County hospitals have the hlghesl aver•ie revenue and expense ngures per patient day of lhe 25 lariest counties in the United States In 1974. a bue year for staU.Ucal reckoning used by the county Health Plannin& Council. a total of $156.S million was spent on health services, tupphes, construction, doctor care, dentists. nursing home care and other related activltl~. Thal total outlay In Ole health In · duatry 1Ver.a1•~.Ul.• foe $tTf lftan1 wom.an and cbUd ,11, .tbt (''"'"VI' OrangeCoHt DAILY PILOT Febru.,y 17, 1978 Robert N. Weed f'T .. 1-1 eM P_..._ George A. Letd•I .......... , .. ,_,._ GUIDE TO ADVERTISERS ADVIRTlllR PAOI t 11 If IO .. •• " • u .. .. I II .. "' • " " II , ' \I IS .. " II It • • ' • J .J 4 DM.Y PILOT f!!!r-x 17, 1111 Med1C81C .. s.ctlon PILOT-ADVERTISER Februery ti, 1971 Volunteers Bring Care Phone Tel-Med for Information Would you like information oo healt.b care without having to visit a doctor or dentist 'a otftce and without revealing yoW' name? ln Au1ust, 1973, the Orange County Medical Association established a system to do just that. Memben calJ It Tel-Med. You can leam medical lnformation on more than lS> topics by dialing 835-2221. This year Tel- Med has switcb~d to a 24-bour phone 1ystem. The most requested topics, ac- cording to Dr. Charles Plow, OCMA President, are marijuana, gonor- rhea, vaginitls , LSD, and vase<:- lomy. All or the Information is recorded on separate tapes. An individual merely dials the number, 835-2221. and an operator will put on tbe pro- per tape. No names are given and there arc no personal discussions. Dr. Plows said Tel·Mtd received more than 227 ,610 calls during its first 30 months or operation, When the tapes were only available nine hours each day, rive days a week. During that time the OCMA spent more than $46,000 on Tel-Med, en· tirely from association dues. Under the new 24-hour system Dr. spealting to more people ln one day than 10 people UD lo a Wttk. 'Re OCKA operates Tel-Med with the belp of the Ora.nee County Dental Society. Telephone taq>e topics cover aeneral health, denta l care and personal aalety. Some of the available subjects in· elude: poisons In the home. unwant· ed pregnancy, cancer, how lo cut medical costs, strokes, nu. acne, dandruff . ulcers, and constipation. Some new tapes died include: dluinesa, old age ft'eckles, thermal bums, emotional upset, cboleaterol, v.•arts, herpes simplex, earacbe ln children, mumps, and measles. Callen may request a complete list ol tape topics which will be mailed to the caller's address. All messages have been carefully screened by panels ol medical ex- perts and all are physician ap- proved, Dr. Plows explains. To Homes The Vlsitln1 Nurse Association (VNA), a nonprofit volWltary or- ganization, bas served Orange Coun· ty residents since 1947. VNA can provide care at hornt.' by professional nurses, certified home health aides, and physical, occupa- tional and speech therapists It does not provide around·the<lo,·k home nursing. Special ·help is offered in :six dis· ti net areas: -Professional nursing from a re- gistered nurse who can gi\'e injec· lions, change dressings and assist with rehabilitation, among other nur!>lng skills. Nutritional guidance prov ided by the VNA staff with the help or your doctor In planning special diets. -Physical therapy in )our home .. -Occupational therapy to hl'lp adapt acttvlties to daily li\'ing after an Injury or Illness. -Speech therapy. -Ho me health aide-. a s taff member assigned to help w1lh daily routines such 35 shopping. meal pre· paratlon ond light housekeeping. Plows expects Tel-Med to receive lS,000 to 20,000 calls per month. Tel· Med ls now capable of playing 10 tapes at one lime, providing a capacity for up to 1,:500 different three to rive minute messages uch day. He compares It to one person Smile! You're Healtfty. VNA headquarters are located in Tustin and the phone number is 979 7212. Car e can be provided only with the approval of lhe individual's physician. VNA is licensed by the Home Health Agency ana ac- Cl'pts Medicare . Dr. Mlch••I Acord, a graduate of UC lrvlne·C•llfornla CoHege of Medicine, ex•mlnH Jimmy Orcutt, the ion of • UCI student during the unlveratty'1 annual well-baby cllnlc. COSTA MESA ColJege Phcrmacy 546-3289 LAGUttA HILLS MOULTON PHARMACY Openin«J July 1976 •PRESCRIPTIONS •SICKROOM RENTALS •INCONTINENT SUPPLIES •OSTOMY SUPPLIES •JOIST STOCKINGS •CAMP SUPPORTS •llEAST PROTHESIS •ALL PREPAID RX PROGRAMS HONORED KARL SIHR PHMM D. 440 llAll Da. AT HADOI Acroee From FlllNtew Holp. COSTA..,._~ GARY A. DlfYM. PHARM. D. MOULTON PHAaMACY UHltte._,.__,, 1 )'.Ml"K. of El Toro.Of .. U6GMA tllU. CAUP. FINALLY Something NEW AND EXCITING IN NURSES UNIFORMS By APPLE BUTTER Designed by Nurses For Nurses ALSO A COMPLETE LINE OF LAB ANO TECHNICIAN COATS WORK-DUDS 1618 E. EDINGER 9111 11 -· Ptl.OT·AOVERTISER F!bru!fy 11, 11'76 Costa Mesa Memorial Busy Place More th an 21.000 patients have been admitted to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital slnce the 99·bed facility opened in 1968. The emergency room has treated more than 52,000 emergency cases during the same time period and now operates with an emergency physician constantly on duty. The hospital. located at 301 Vic· toria St .. features a surgical suJle, an intens1\'C care unit. a cardiac care unit, r adiology department. laboratory. a nd inhalation a nd physical therapy departments. 'fhe nuclear medicine area also ofrers cobalt therapy and a radio isotope unit tor comple te brain and liver scans Ho s pital Administrator Tom Richards says Costa Mesa Memorial also plact-s a strong emphasis on its function as a vital part cl the com· munity The hos pital sponsors frff im· munization programs, public in· formation program s, and has performed free lung function tt-sts Cor IO<'al residents. Students from Orange Coas t and Golden West communUy collcge!I, as well as local high schools, also use the hospital (or vocational training Out-Patient Unit Success The Out Patient Surgery Center complt'tt's 1ts fi rs t year of operntlon this month in Huntington Beach. Seve ral hundred out pat ient :rnr t lc al p r ocedures have been performC'd. The Surgery Center (unctions onl)• on an outpatie nt basis. All patients are admitted the day of their surgery and are usually dis· charged about three to four hour<> later Th1rt) fl\ e to forty percent of all surger)' presently being perfo rmed ln ho'>p1tals can now be perfo rml'd on an outpatl('nl basis. The fc:ei; l'harged the patient and his m11urancc company are 3~50'; less t h an those charged hy n hospita l, n iipoltesman for the centf'r aaid. The patients are &reeled by the nursing staff In tht reception area and the ume Slaff take care or the patient throughout bia at.ay. Some or the common procedures pc-rfnrmt-d at the center include : -Plastic Surttry: race lilts, n<>Re contourtn1. breast enlargements and rt>ductlona -C ynecoloakal Sur-.ery: D&C. tubnl lil•llon• (Band-aid Optratlon> and pregnancy termlnaUon. In addition to the above pro ~urea. there are also urolol(lcal, orthopedic, ophthalmic, dental, H \o\'f'll {J'} If PnPral surclcal procedures performed on • reaular bul.a. The l:tC'1llty was created for thr purpose of reducln1 mf'dlcal costs For Information about the renter call 842 1t26 ( CONSL'MEN ) ADVOCATES '" '"• i•t11\l~lml· -....... --. . .. . .... - Tom Richerds Febru.y t7. t976 DAii,, Y PtLOT $ Fairview State Hospital Wins U.S. Accreditation Fainiew State Hospital in Costa Mesa bas once again won national accreditation for its health care ser vices. Fairview ls the COWttry's lareest facility Cor the dev~lopment.ally dls· abled to win its two-year accredita· lion from the Joint Commission on Accreditation or Hospitals. According lo state health manaae· ment officials pnly abwt ao percent or similar facllitles ln the nation earn such honors . Fairview provides for the care, treatment and training for 1.700 de· \•elopmentally d isabled clients from Orange, San Diego, imperial and Los AD1elea counties. It is afltllated with the California College or Mecllclne at UC Irvine. The committee wbJch inspected Fairview's racllltlea, staff and method• praised the hospital for "strength in the areas of effective administration practices, assur•nce cl the rights of residents and their families, community integr ation. stafC training aod consultation, and behavior managem ent." Orange County Medical A1aocialion AN OPEN LEmR TO ORANGE COUNTY RESIDENTS WHAT IS THE MEDICAL ASSOCIATION? Membership in the Oran,e County Medical AssoclaUon Is open to all qualified M. 0 . '• practlclnc In the county. who must meet certain proteu ional and ethical standards. These pbyalclllftl an aeneral practitioners and 1peclaUsls. Through the cuunly society. they are afnllated with lhe Calllomla and American Medical Associations. We would like to state that this b your county medical society because our members are your doctors. Our purpose 11 to &WOmOte, throu1h teamwork or our Individual members. the health and welfare of our community. · To carry out these purposes and to coordln11tc our community actlvllles ln lhe public 1nterc1l, our society ha.s an orrlce In Orange. We t'xlcnd • sincere Invitation to you to cull on us at any Ume. A.1 lnd.lvldual doetors, and as the Oranae County Medical AuociaUon, we rec0&0lze our public responslb1hlies to assure our ~munity of the utmost In health prespn•ation. Some of these vital public service functions are: COttl!!MTJ COO~~JK>tt We offer eUective liaison with organized &roups interested In caocer. tuberculosi,, heart ~ase. mental h<'alth. cnppled children and any other area in which our medlC'al knowledge and ser vice can be of auistance f'tffSICJ.Ut•USATl~ We pro\•1de lh~ stimulus and means for sclenllfic cou"es and seminars to take place in Orange County so that our doctors \\ 111 have available to them the latest medical knowlcdu. NOftC110M A6AIMST quAC&MT: We inve.stleate and take appropriate act ion to protect the public against un~crupulou'I and ul\Klentinc persO<L~ who anempt to practice medicine. It Isn't necessary that everyone know lhe many chapters and Stttloos ot lhe Code ol Mechcal Ethics to decide whethtf' a partlcuar doctor has been unethical Our committee will assist you -aner all. the ethics or medicine were wntten and are enforced to protttt th~ Interest of the public ltlY1IW Of! COMPlA~ Three committees. Pubhc Service. Medical Advi.son •. and Medical EthlC's. work tngl'thcr to review all C'Ornploints made to the Association regarding doctors' medical trntment, fees or prorcss1onnl conduct In order to maintain and pre<1PrvP a hlch standard of medical care 1n the community. ~~ Of Sia~ Our doctor• donate their time and services to county hospitals. to high school~ u team .Ylicans. to the liei'privlleaed, to Immunization programs 1uch a11 the poUo and rubella drives, as physician lldvi.son to the many ~alth aaendea neechn1 medical assistance, to Medical Explorers Posts, and many many more too numerous to list. MIO~~ ~ NIAL~ We cooperate with the county health department In the problem" or 1111nitatlon nnd preventvemclnehl'Oliih work of 1uch committees •• the Infection Control Committee, the Polson Control Wormatlon Committee, the Perinatal Death1 Committee and many other•. 'W'Ot •n AUllUAIT1 Our wives prcSVlde or1anl&ed activity to wlat the medical 1oclety In phUant.hroplc and educational wort IGCh aa llHlth C&retta Day. ~ We bave pr4!f)&red • llbnry of over UO lal>4'd mdHfel about your health. You can listen to these messaaca 0¥• ,our teh~phone In the privacy ()( your own home. Tb.la HrVire la free or cbarae. Tel·Med la a collection of tape-~ded hH llh mMs.tC• which have bffn carefully aeleded to: ~Ip you remain healthy; help you reco1nlte utl1 ~ ot Ulnesa ; bdp you a4JU8t to a Mriou. lllu11. T1'4IM lapet are I to 5 mlnut• lonc and have bffn writ~n In a atrall't torwarcl. HSY to~ way. EvtrY tape hu been caAhalb scrMned by a parMtl of physicians lo Insure lta accwaey. Tb111ervlc• ll aval.la~e M boun •day, seven daya a wtek. Sim~ call as.mi. Brochurea a,.. available on ,.....-. l!!rfs' ~M~ tr you are new ln the community°" do not have a reaular Ph>·slclan. call the Oran11c County a soc atlun. 532-6$11, al'd usl~tancC' ln securlnl a doctor wlll be 11ven W\ahlnl you C'OOtlnucd &ood t.e.lth, Chari~ 'W P1ow11, M D President Utv.<.. w. {?~Wd, ~·ll 36o SOUTH FLOWER BTR&ET • QAANQE, gA.&.lfO~A 92868 (~EA CODE 7MJ • A3W6).1, • I ' •. ! -~~'"' .... ~~~~~ .... ------------------..... ~ 'I ' f [)M. V PILOT Febtuary 17, 1976 Medical Cat• Secuon lrvlne Ptlarmaceutical Company Perfecting Soft Lens Cleaner One of the country's major pharmaceutical firms bas established a plant in Irvine for the production of a cleaning nwd for the Soflens Contact Lens. Allergan Pharmaceuticals ex· A dip In the ~om.,.ny'1 special aolutlon wlll clean the protein .. depoalt• from the Soften• Contact Lena, according to Allergan Pharmaceutical•. peels its Irvine branch to help mttt a national d emand for a new pro- duct, Soflens Enzymatic Contact Lens Cleaner, promoted by the com· pany as the best method for extend· ing the life of the Soflens Contact Lens made by Bausch &-Lomb. The new cleaner bas been on sale In the U.S. since November and has been ma rketed abroad since the spr· ing of 1974. It removes protein materia l which may become de· posited on the lense from eye secrc· tions. The output of the Irvine facility, combined with another plant near Montreal, should enable the com· pany to meet the projected demand in the U S. as well as in foreien markets. Glenn Ocla.ssen, sort lens production manager for Allergan, expects the manufacturing volume to quadruple when the Irvine branch reaches full production. Researchers at AUergan say that with once·a -week use of their new cleaner, So fl ens Contact Lens wearers will regain visual acuity and the inherent comfort of the lens which may have been lost through the build up or protein deposits. (1 .u :K ANDERSON) REVEALS in the DAILY PILOT PILOT·AOVEAT'5ER Febr\lary 18, 1976 Expansion The Word At Facility . Expansion bas been the most popular word expressed in the halls of Westminster Community Hospital the past two years. In recent months the growing fa cahty has added a large and attrac· tive lobby, expanded the pharmacy, built a new meditation chapel and opened a new gift shop. A valuable new piece of equip· menl. a gamma camera. was also purcha11ed for the hospital's nuclear medicme department. The gamma camera utilizes radioactive isotopes to isolate and diagnose brain, lung, hver and vital organ dis('a!>cs The hospital has now expanded to rover a noor capacity of 135,000 feet serving 182 patient beds During the expansion a new administrator. Richard LeGrand, al~o was ap. pointed A new, two-story medical office complex will soon be finished next to the hospital as another phase in ex· pandcd medical services. Westminster is owned by American Medlcorp, Inc., a na· tionwidc owner·m anager of acute care general hospitals, including the neighboring Huntington Intercom· munity Hospital. Westminster Community Hospital Multi-Million Dollar Expansion Program Completed A dramatic architectural achievement llnklng old and new facilltles Into a 135,000 square foot hospital with the most sophisticated diagnostic and treatment facllltles available in Orange County. "Providing high quality hHlth care alnce 1958" Westminster Community Hospital 200 Hospital Clrcle Westmlnater, Callfornla 92683 7141893-4541 • • • I - -- A comfortable relklentiat Mt· ting la th• primary go., of the newly returbl•hed Newport VIII• West realdentf•I cere fac:lllty In Newport Be•ch. Newport's Villa West Intimate Smaller. more lntimau surround· Ines are emphasized at the newly o~ned Newport VUla West residen· tial care facility In Newport Beach. "Newport VUla Weal ii 1pedfica1· ly desi1ned for tbOM who don't need nursln1 care, but wbo wish the aecurity of available servtces," ex· plains Lillian Hoover, administrator ol the Villa. The fa c Ill t y. located al 393 Hospital Road, offers daily maid service, selected menus offered three times dally in a family setting with waitress service, daily transportation for medical visits. shopping and entertainment, and a full time social director who ar- ranges a<'t Iv ill es both within the center and for outside events . The 170-capaclty complex features double accommodations, singl<' rooms and suites There is a b<.'auty ulon nnd barber shop. Service to Public Raleigh Hiiis Alm Continuing service to the publi<' 15 the plt'd1e of Ralcllh Hills Hospital for 1976. The hospital, located at 1501 E 15th St., Newport Bear h u a multidisclphnary facUity devoted exclu11vt'ly to the treatment and rf' habllltatlon of tbOH atructed with lhE' dlsN111(' of alcoholism. Accordln1 to L.O. Copelllnd, hospital administrator, "Wt bchev(' that akohollsm Is an UJness and that tht' alcoholic is addicted." Hl' explamt'd that the hospltal"s program Is basf'd on countercond1 Uoning to dnelop "an Involuntary avt'rsion to th<' smell, taste and t>f ff'<'t of alcohol .. The hosp1t:1l ls staff~ by o team of phy11k1ans and rcg1stt>red nurst'S, headed by Or Robert E Schm1t1, of Newport Beach. In additlOl'I, count1cllng Is pro,·ldt'd by formt'r R alelgh H11ls patients, re covrrt'd alroholH'S fammar with 1h1• 'F'R~~~·i ir~~J~~~W~~~ffh 't~ Medical Cate Seci1on Febfuwy 17 1976 DAILY PtLOT' 7 Lawton School Emphasizes Appearan~e, Experience The emphasis 1s on appearanct'. composure and real expenen<'C at the Lawton School for Medical and Dental Assistants In Santa Ana. ··Jn school we start the student out 'in v. hate' with no Jewelry, gum chewing, slopp y dress or soiled shoes." says Lawton d1rcctor War· ren Henningsgard. ··ey this method when they are re· ady to go on extemsrup they look, act, feel and know lhe part they are to serve once on the job. They don't need any second thoughts on ho\\ they should d ress. how their hair should be fixed. or how their finger nails should be polished. All they have lo do is concentrate on the new job and how to please their patients and employer." The Lawton program includes a toor-week "externsrup" in a doctor's offire at the end oC the school train· lng. Lawton Is located at 623 W. 17th St., Santa Ana. OCDS ORANGE COUNTY DENT AL SOCIETY HAPPINESS IS A HEALTHY MOUTH 1975 RIC.I< RCINERT PROC>ulflON.S ' ORANGE COUNTY DENT AL SOCIETY AN ASSOCIATION OF DOCTORS OF DENTISTRY ORGANIZED TO PROMOTE ETHICAL PRACTICE AND TO MAINTAIN THE HIGHEST S TANDARD OF ,DENTISTRY LOCAL AFFILIATE ~MERICAN DENT AL ASSOCIATION In cue of emerooncy °' for referral anlatance call the number below to Obtain the 68f'Vlces of an °'•nge County Oen1111 Society ,.,..mt>er (542-75051 24-HOUR SERVICE 295 S FLOWER -ORANGE VISIT OUR MUSEUM OF DENTISTRY Antwer Your Ouesllons Aboul Oent1my: TBAi41D TAPE UllARY C7141 ll5·2221 24 Mura 7 days I Week Phone I uk fOf lh• dewed PfOQ<am u haled 301 Why Flolt Your helh 302 Eff.ctlve Tooth Brushing 303 O.ntal PlaQue. the C..us. of Tooth Oecav and Gum OlllHH 304 ~11 for Oen111 Heelth 305 Malocclualon (Crooked Teeth) 308 Whal About W1tdom Teeth? 307 Seven Warning Slonlls of Gum oiaease 308 One M1u1ng Tooch Leads lo Another 310 How lmp0rtant Are Baby Tfflh? 311 The Truth Aboul T001hache• 312 Abeeued Teeth Can 8e Saved 313 What You Don't Know lf.bo\JI OenturO'IJ Can Hurt Yout 314 We Know Whal Causes Bad Breath Do Yoo? 315 Are Dental X·Rays Really Necessary? - ' • DAILY PILOT PILOl-AQVUmH.R febru411Y 11. 1'171 Paramedical Arts, Science ''MY HUSBAND TREATS ME Provides Maximum Training LIKE A GIRLFRIEND NOW." -"I'd bffn trying for 7 yHrs to get back , Tbe American College or ParamedicaJ Arts and Sciences, UIOO N. Broadway, Santa Ana. trains men and women to become operating room tecbnlcians, respiratory therapy technicians, ward clerks, emergency room technicians and nursing asslstants. Maximum training in minimum time is the educationaJ philosophy of the school, according to William J. Anthony, President of the College. Studfltts may be dropouts from college, other schools or jobs. There is, however, an admission screening test for motivation, intelligence, math skills and occupational pre· ferences. Clinical aspects or the training are conducted in various Orange County hospitals under the eye of college faculty or hospital personnel. Pacifica Accepts Payment Plans Pacifica Hos pital at 18792 Delaware Street, Huntington Beach Is an acute care faclUty serving resl· dents of HW>lincton Beach and Seal Beach. Ms. Doris Confer, hospital ad· mlnlstrator, aaid Pacifica accepts all medical payment plans. The IOO·bed facility employs 300 people. One aspect of the colleee program involves extensive research into the job market and a filtering process wbicb guides students lnto careers where jobs are actually available. Use Aspirin For Arthritis You can reduce your aspirin co:.ts, says the Arthritis Foundation. Many products advertised as giv· ing "lon1·lasting relief" from arthritis pain are composed cbleny of a~irln, glamorized by fancy names and packaging and bearing high prices. Aspirin is very effective at special physician-prescribed dosage levels for arthritis, but plain inexpensive aspirin ia just as good as any "glorified" aspirin. Aspirin is still the preferred drug for treating rheumatoid arthritis because it controls Inflammation and pain. But there Is a s~cial way to lake aspirin for thls disease, which is dif. ferent from the way to take it for a headache or cold. Find out the dlr· ference by readln1 "The Truth About Aspirin for Arthritis." The pamphlet is available free Crom the Orange County Branch or the Arthritis Foundation, 900 North Broadway. Santa Ana 92101. HEADACHE AND PAIN CONTROL CENTER Dr. Warren J . Famalaro Chiropractor Specializing In Neuro-Musculo-Skeletal pain syndromes. Palmer Graduette Methods Member ACA, I CA, CCA, aces National Board of Diplomats Process: Medlcare-ln surance~Workmen 's Compensation Week-end Health Care -On Call 2.C Hours Speeches/tatkspn Chiropractic, health, whiplash Complete physlcatf neurologlc, orthopedic, and rad ologlc exam. EL TORO PROFESSIONAL BLDG. 23381 El Toro Ad.• Ste. 107 EL· TORO 12930 (EJ TOf'O I Mulrtanda) 837~8610 2AHoura down to my normal 1/ze ..• flnally I came Into the Cllnlc and lost 20 pounds." -Toni C. (patient) • FREE CONSULTATION {+) ' WflQHT AfOUCTIOH MEDICAL CLINICS, INC. • INDIVIDUALIZED PROGRAMS • NO EXERCISING • OPTIONAL FOOD PROGRAM • DOCTOR OWNED • DOCTOR OPERATED • CALL A CLINIC TODAY ~ The Only Thing You Have To Cbse Is ... Weight. Orange /Tustin I 026 E. Chapman 997-7880 Huntington Beach /Fountain V •ey 17612 Beach Blvd. 847-1235 ------ WE IGHT REDUCTION MEDICAL CLINICS LAWTON SCHOOL training that sets a standard of excellence for dental & medical assistants Become a Medical or Dental A$S11tont m 4 01 7 months Medical AHt. $985.00 TUITION "Off. Mgmt. 750.00 o,nt•t ....... 750.00 NIW CLAIHI tTA"TINQ MONTHLY. P'UCl.MINT AHtBTANCe. MIDICAL Al· 8t8TtNQ '"OGRAM A''"0VID IV NM/Al.MA ACCltlOfT90 M!MHJll HATTI. UOQ GAAHTI ACClf'Tm. PAYMENT PLANS AVAILABLE Doctors You cen depend on the mtdlcel assistant Who Is , LAWTON TRAINED Ask the physldtn who has on. I Quallfled and dedlc.ted Qt'ad\lltH 1v1ll1b't for Internship and/orplecement. ~~ ----- 141-44t1 623 W. 17th St. Santa Ana Medteal C11e Section Februaty 17, 1976 DAILY PILOT • A dean environment produces 1 clean product for the people at L & N Uniform Supply. LIN Uniform Firm Leads Clean Life The employers at L & N Uniform in Santa Ana live a clean life every day on the 1ob. Since the doors were opened in 1960, L & N bas sought to provide the market with new dimensions In cleanliness with its ultra-r lean reoter. In ti&hlly root rolled conditions L & N proceases raps, booU, coveralls, smocks and frocks for use in med!cine, research and industry. The company's sensitive cleaning area Ls totally encloeed. Processing areas are maintained under positive alr pressure, controlled by alr condi· tioning to within one degree Fahrenheit and within two percent relative humidity, r elative pressure, air change rate and dust control filtration The firm , which cleans polyester fiber garments to standards set through microscopic examination. provides uniforms to space-age com· puter and component firms as well as those Ul\'Olved in all forms of medical researrh. L & N's farility at 1602 E . Edinger Ave . Santa Ana, 1.s open for visits on request from 6.30 a.m. to 3 p.m . dally Beverly Manor Aids Addicts Beverly Manor Hospital, 401 S. TU5tln Ave .. Oranae, specializes in a variety of proarams dlrttted at re· babllltation or akohollcs and drug users The hospital rerenlly celebrated Its rtrth anniverury Mtltlng a series of seminars on drul' and alrohol re habU1tat1on and opening its doors for public tours During Janu1ry several guest apeakers lerturcd on various aspects o( rchab11lt1t1on at the facility Some of the speakers lncludt>d J ohn Bf'duc-, PhO , department of M>C1oloitY, Ca I St ate •ullcrton; Dun en n Thom 011. adm1n1strator. employee assistance program, Northrop Corp : and Bob Scott. ad· mlnistrnhl r or Bt>verly Manor an Orange The ho'lpltal ha, treatt'd more than 4,000 alcohollca in it.a five years of prlvatc rare. Child Guidance Center · Now Has Two Facilities The North Orange County Child Guidance Center, conceived in late 1966, now 'has two faciliUes -in f'ullerton and Buena Park. With the original backing or com· munity leaders, the League or Women Voters, and t.be Children's League of Fullerton, the Center was incorporated as a oon·profil, com· munity sponsored organization. The Center's broad objectives are lo improve lhe mental health ol lbe community by means or educa· tional, training and research pro· gums. Specifically, Che Center ls devoted lo treating children with e.mot.iooal, behavioral. educational or neuroloeical difficulties. Because of the complex interac- tion between home.life and child, it is also orten necessary to provide ewdance to family members. Two cbaracterisllcs ol t.be Center are especially significant: -All services are provided on the buis of a family's ability to pay. -The Cent.er also stresses short· term treatment. . --... -. --" .. ""' ' - ... - Je DAILY Pit.OT Medical School Grows Stanley van den Noort, dean of the UC lrvlne College of Medicine v1ewa model of new medical 1el•ncH complex to be located ad .. Jac.nt to preH nt medical Khoo! campu1 at UCI. Project coating $10 mllllon get1 underway thl1 ipf'lng. PILOT-ADVERTISER FebNwy ,8, 1978 Huntington Hospital Paramedic Facility HuntinetoQ Jntercommunily Hospital in Huntineton Beach operates as the base facility ror West Orange County paramedic units. During 1975 the hospital handled more than 41 ,000 paramedic emergency calls which helps the medical starr better understand the needs or the community, according to hospital administrator Dick Grundy. Five fire department paramedic units use Huntington lntercommuni· ty as a base station, though all emergency cases are not transport- ed there. While the paramedic function ls one of its most pubUciied services, Hunllneton lnlercommunlty ts a 141-bed acute care eeneral hospital with several interesting features in- cludlnc: -A children's mental health unit which specializes in the short·term treatment or emotionally troubled younc people. - A nuclear medicine depart- ment. -Respiratory therapy. -Physical therapy. Grundy also says the hospital plans lo spend $200,000 this year ror the purchase or such equipment u : ICU /CCU monitoring devices, blood gas analyzers , flouroscopy machines and oth~r medical tools. The hospital, owned by American Medlcorp, Inc.. employs 275 starr members with 100 active status physicians and another 150 physi- cians with courtesy privileges. Patient Days In Hospital Average Six The Orange County Health Plannln1 Council's base year figures show that the length ol stay ln county hospitals was the same in 1974 as five years earlier. The complete 197• statistics show that the avera1e number or days spent by a patient in the bolpllal was six. It was six days back ln 1970, followed by 5.3 days in 1971, 5.7 days in 1972 and 5.8 days ln 1973. Jn 1974, the wesl county coastal areas or the county showed the shortest length or stay with an averaeeor5.3days. The lon1e1t average lenet.h or stay -6.6 days -was reported in the Newport Beach-Costa Mesa-Irvine area . The health council notes the average length or stay for the entire slate ls 6.7 days and the figure for the nation is about 7 .3days. HUNTINGTON INTERCOMMUNITY HOSPITAL is ... THE PARAMEDIC BASE STATION FOR WEST ORANGE COUNTY A COMPREHENSIVE ACUTE CARE GENERAL HOSPITAL OFFERING COMPLETE SURGICAL AND TREATMENT FACILITIES INCLUDING: • 24-hour emergency department • active cardio-pulmonary rehabilitation center •major cardiac catherterization laboratory • modern obstetrics and pediatrics units • fully-equipped physical and res piratory therapy departments • progressive Children's Mental Health Unit An Am eri c an M ed 1corp Hospital Huntington lntercommunlty Hospital• 17772 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach, CA 92647 • 714/842-1473 Young medlc•I .-.tanta UM the tool• o( their 1oon-to-be tr8de •t the 8rymen School1. Bryman Schools Certified The Bryman ~bools. the largeal network of paramedical trainin& schools in the nation, were created to meet an ur1ent health care need by lrainini office asalstanls for the medical and dental professions. The comprehensive curriculum wu developed by Esther Bryman, a pracUcin& physician's assistant. Before developing her coursework she spent years acquiring the lrain· in& to become a registered nurse. Her first school was establlshed in 1962 ln Los Angeles. National Systems. Inc., current owner of the Bryman curriculum. now operates 15 schools in seven states. Clasarooms are equipped with up· to·date medical and dental equip· ment -everythlng from the dentist's chair and the doctor's examination table to EKG. X·ray. and physiotherapy equipment. Students lean to operate a complex array of tecbnoloaical tools and to practice procedures they will perform in their work. Jn addition to the technical, dental and medical equipment. the schools are furnished wltb the latest office machines and business equipment for lea min& management skills. Three courses are offered by the Bryman Schools: a mediul assls· tant program; office management; and dental assistant, which com· bines front offlte work with ~ck of· fice work. All Dryman students mu.st al.so un- dergo an Intensive extcmshlp in a doctor or dentist's oHice for a minimum of 160 houn before they are certified for araduatlon. Obstetric Care Surplus In County There arc n total of 460 hospital beds in 23 Oranac County hospitals offerln& obstetric care. The county Health Pl•""1ni coun· ell hu noted that the average oc· cupancy of s uch beds is only 44 per· cent compared to a generally· accepted standard of 75 percent. Projected lo 1981, It ls estimated that 12-4 of the county's obstetric care beds wlll be "surplus." Febfuwy 11, 1976 DAILY PILOT J J Mesa's College Pharmacy Expands List of Services When College Pharmacy. 440 Fair Drive. Costa Mesa. opened its doors 12 years ago it was primarily a pre· scription specialty store. Now its expanded list of services includes such specialties as: ~onv alescent and sick room ren· tab. -Authorized dealer for Everest and Jennings wheelchairs, Lumex convalescent aids, and is active in consultation for post surgical pa· Uents recovering at home. -The primary supplier of oslomy equipment. and a consultant and fit. ter for colostomy, Ueostomy and urostomy patients. -Fittings for surgical st.ockings and garments, and breast pres· thesis. College Pharmacy, owned' and operated by Gary Dreyfus and Karl Spinner, wlll soon open a branch, Moulton Pharmacy, in the Rossmoor Leisure World complex in Laguna Hills. REACHING OUT INTO THE HEART OF 1ltE c:oMMUNITY WITH SPECIAL SERVICES TO MEET THE NEEDS Of EVERYONE • RESOCIALIZATION PROGRAMS •MENTAL HEALTH UNIT Free Classes and activities for patients Also free consultation Interview for those recovering from such immobolizi ng seeking help problems as strokes. heart and diabetis • MEALS ON WHEELS Hot meals delivered to homes of shut-ins • PUBLIC FORUMS "'Free programs with panels of specialists on health • PRENATAL a.ASSES Free to expectant mothers and fathers • ALCOHOLIC CARE UNIT Free films and helpful information to groups and individuals • GERIATRIC OPTHOl.MOLAGY Free glaucoma screening clinic for senior citizens • SPECIAL SERVICES • YOU ARE NOT Al.ONE Dally phone calls to keep in touch with Auxiliary assistance for numerous patients' elderly live-alones needs • EMERGENCY -HELIPORT 24 h•r senlc• SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL Accredited -Co.......,.lty~WMd 31872 Coast Highway -South Laguna, California - • PILOT·AOVERTISER Febt'UllY 18.. 1976 J% ~LY PILOT Chiropracty Considered 'A Science' Fet>Nsy 17, 1171 Remove HGir With Radio Waves The r e w a s • -t ime whe n a ch1ropraclic doctor was considered useful for fllon~ "bad backs" and not much more. , But times have changed and the art of cblro practy is now coosidered more of a science, according lo Dr. Warren J . Famalaro. a chiropractic physician in El Toro. "A chiropractor is now considered a well-trained physician with in ex- cess of six years of advanced educa· lion," he explains "And he is fully licensed as a physicillll of the natural healing arts." Dr. Famalaro stresses lbal much can be done wilb the use of manual manipulatory adjustinc ol the spine, physiotherapy. diet-therapy, and specific exercises. -He says chiropractic is still ex- c e 11 en t therapy for common maladies suc h as pain syndromes, headaches. bad backs and injuries to the spinal column, but il ii used more and more as a preventive measure. More people are aware of the vitality they feel when the spinal column is functioning to allow the nerve system lo do its job, be 1ays. Ladies. you can junk that r ai:or and toss out those sticky hair remov· ing creams and keep your legs s mooth forever . according lo the re- searchers for the Depilalron Cen- ters. They have devrloped a new. pain· less alternative to electrolysis fo r the permanent removal of unwanted hair. The method was perfected by ~gineers al Optron, a ruvision or Universal Technology, the same company that makes electro-optical devices used ror lrackin& missiles. In simple terms. the process Is performed with the l.l.'te or a pnir of electronic tweezers which grasp the hair, then e mit harmless rudio Ire· quency energy to coagulate the papilla. The result ii no further hair growth In the follicle. The process was tested for two years in Japan and, was successful· ly introduc,d to Scandanavia a .,year according lo Depilat.ron spokesmen. Reportedly, more than 300,00C treatments have been administered by trarned personnel with customer satisfaction running more than 99 percent, according lo Depilatron. Dr. Famalaro received bis own lralnln& at the Palmer College of Chiropractic Arts in Davenport, Iowa, with additional training al Logan College and the Uruvenily of Iowa. A pair of electrtc tw• ,_,. cen ellmlnate the nffd for razor tMde• and dclly hair removing cream•, according to th• Deplatron Center9. There Is n Depllatron Cf'ntcr at 23521 Paseo de Volcncla in Lagunc. Hills, another at 919 E. Uncoln Ave. in Anaheim, and a third will open in March at 14120 Beach Blvd. in Westminster. THE GIFT OF LIFE .. OSTA MESA MEMORIAL HOSPITA 301 Vic:tor11 Street • Costa Meu. Clfifonli• 92127 • Telephont64~·2734 Emerttncv Department Open 24 Hours Emergency flttysician Ott Duty Day ..t Nilht , ...... f • I "* -.... l •• I J.. Cllllf " Stiff Jean Jensen, R.N., Nuni"I Dinctar Accrediwd by The Joint Commission on Accrtcltauon of Hos:pitJh ----Orange County's Oldest ------. Parm111eclical School C'AREER TRAINING for MEN and WOMEN of all AGES! .., ......... , . au uMew,_ I g ... ............. ~ WCI ..... hhlato.-, ...... 635-3450 • Acoded Member. Noliord Auocoion of T •ode & T .twWD Sc:hooll • Ni ~ imt~uloOll undw rhP F.rl.wdly IM.Jod S.udtom Loe:.! f>i.oqom. Notoonal O.ect ~~ loor r.,,,,.:yn bic fd.colianal Oppm.,.ty v<YI Proqom Colle?- W°'• Study P1oq1om, Supplemenro4 Ed..cor.onol ~ G-Proqom. ~([TA • Appowd for v.._DM • f'lcx: ........ AuiVCJrlCt for GocMJt.i Cl N) .,,.0 COii SOUTHERN CALIFORtlA COLLEGE .. MEDICAL AND DENTAL CAREERS 17171..•• tt r•lt~~tJH4 - PILOT·ADVERTISER Februwy II , 1171 Finances Plaguing Industry The health' care field in Orange County. as well as the rest of the na- tion, will be forced to make "radical, fundamental cban1es" in the race of financial problems now plaguing the industry, says Robert Keller, ad- ministrator of Santa Ana's 215-bed Mercy General Hospital. ·"The new syste m must focus on in- Modic.IC.,. Stcilon FebrU!!Y t7, 1976 DAil.! PILOT JI Staff Aids Community Education Stalt members al Fountain Valley Community Hospital consider com· munity edU('alion one ol their prime objectives , accordinc to the hospital's direct or of education, Mary Jo Miller, R.N. One pro1ram planneH for the future is a public forum on the dangers of over·the-rounter drugs, u explalned by Lou Moskowitz, the hospital's chief pharmacist. "There are many useful over-the· counter drugs, such as aspirin, slm· ple cough syrups and some n~ ~prays," he says. "However, these dnJp abould be treated with the same caution as prescription drugs. "One Important precaution is lo see a physician if the over·tbe- ~ter drugs provide no relief from the ailment. The symptoms may be warning signs of a more serious con· diUoo." Moekowilz also warns that talcing two or more drugs al the same Ume can be dan1erous. The chemicals ln different types of drugs are often ln· compatible causing an interactlon which can be harmful. He cited the example of a person takln1 a prescription drug coumadlae (a blood thinner for phlebitis) and also using aspirin. · Coumadine and aspirin interact in such a way that lbe effect of lbe roumadlne 19-speeded up and the blood becomes too thin. The patient could conceivably bleed lo death, ac- cordin& to Moskowitz. The pharmacist plans a series of seminars for the staff at Fountain Valley Community Hospital as well as a similar panel discussion for the public. d ividual needs, r etaining a ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~­ personalised nature and it must also emphulze preventative medicine - workina toward the maintenance of good health rather than toward the treatment of illness," explains Keller. Keller contends increasing technology and spiraling costs are the basis of many of the problems ln the health care field. "The expenses of maintaining an up-to-date health lnstllution are reflected ln the 12. l percent bike ln average cost per patient over the past eltbt ye an.'• be adds. • 'Sucb re- latively new procedt1tt1 as fetal heart monitorin1. open heart sur- gery and kidney dialysis each represent lbouaaDdl ol dollars ln equipment and tralned .,ersoonel." Ketter notea lbat ao to ?S-perc:ent of a hospital's expenses are earmarked for penonnel, compared to 2S per· cent in other industries. "We can do everythin1 possible to slow down costs, but the only action lbal would have a definitive impact would be to compromise quality health care," says Keller. "The eau_ge or quality health care is lire and death, not dollars and cents." 8HealthClubs Serve Area Holiday Spa Health Clubl serve men and women at etcht locations in Oraqe and Loa Anceles counties. 1be Oran1e County apu are located in Colla Mesa, West.minster, Hunt· lniton Beach, Oran1e and Anaheim. <>n. of the Spa's rules la to "r• member that lbe club ls intended to be a 1anctuary -a place to escape trom the humdrum ooblde world - a friendly oula dedicated to 1ood health. Trained atan members belp Spa patront tttabU.h tbetr own physical fOndiUonlnc procrama and wellbt control and nutritlonal plant. The 1pa1 feature bot bat.hi ultra vk>let aunlamp rooms. heated indoor awtmmLnc poola, Twtiab and ~k lteam room, redwood uunaa,a cold dlp pool or shower .. and a variety ol rym equlpm~nt. lloUday Spa Hu1th Clubl are al· Tillat~ with the Health and Tennla Corporation of America. and mem· hen may alto uae laclUUes ol other apaa Ln the nation which are atrlliat· ed with the Unlvciraal Gym Aasocla· Uon. The t'haln '1 headquarters are ~~~ ~n the W~tcr spa at - IT'S (And you'll love it) Newport V UJo West will soon .... b e home for 170 ambulutory - or non-ambulatory residents. Lucky folks! Because Newport Villa West Is truly one of the fl nest rcsldenUal faclltUcs In Southern Callfomta. Just comp le tc ly re d eco- rated. Newport VllJa W~t offers a new concept ln luxury llvtng tn one of the aouthcoast•s fabled areaR, Newport Beach. Sunny roomR. cor- ridors and paUos gtvc each reHident plenty of expoRure to the bcuuty of the outdoot& Twenty-four hour l'upcrvlslon IH by a staff of cxpcrtR whose only con- cern 111 to cat.er lo the nccdR of cuch Individual. Amon.c the Mc rvl~·cR offered ore: sdccUvc me nu with '· wa.ltccsM.s to serve you. daily lrons- portaUon to doctors wad .,;hopping, therapy r oom, dally maid service, recrca tJon wid game rooms, beauty and barber sulo n, arts and crofts and a full-Umc social director for Inside and outside acUvltlcA. The f acilJty ts on one floor fo r cosy mobtUty and lsjustacr088 the street from Hoag llos plta.I for emergency and out-paUcnt care. We tnvll.c your Inquiry regarding the excellent. fnclllUcs available at Newport Villa West. We think you1l ~"It's home-" . .. W1d you'll love td For lnfonnaUon rcgardJ.ng Newport Vllln WcRt or our other five 1ocol fudllllc.-, contuct: Lillian J loo\"cr nl (714) 631..s656. VIUAWEST R esl den tJal Care 393 I fospltul Road. Newport Beach. Cullfomla 92663 Arco fo.cllllk" o~ncll wld operulcd hy Amcncan..CQJ Mc&llcuJ Ser\llcC<;, lfll'. ~-...,c .. _ ... l\irk \111 ... r1or(°nn,nlno«nt llo1•1lltul C 71•11~-lt·UO· ~l'.•1•"1 Vtllu lk...,lcn011Jt un C7141M:!·~•I l'atil U.lut un~llkll<''ntl.:ni. r('7l4)1~-"4C ... him~~ l'ulrn "1Hl11l("I Hn111&..""1ut ll• ... 1'4t.111(7141:1:t7·WHI 1'aa ...... 1(i•>l<k11 lllll (",.n,uJt:"4~t1l llo'<pU11I (71411.'!\l.' :.><t~i J 4 DAILY PILOT College Celebrates Birthday The Southern California College of Medical and Dental Careers, 1717 S Brookhurst St.. Anahe im, is celebrating its loth birthday this year . making It the oldes t paramedical college in Orange County. It began with only two career training programs -medical and dental assistants -but now includes five programs , having added medical off ice management , emergency medical lechnolo&y and dental technology. Classes last from four lo seven months and are offered mornings, afternoons and evenings. The col· lege has been approved by the state department Of education and is BC· credited bj the N allonal Association of Trade and Technical Schools and the American Medical Association. A high school diploma is the only re· quirement for enrollment. Fllma Theater Dence Televlalon In the FebfuetY 17, 197& Medical Care Section PILOT ·ADVERTISER February '8, HHS ltuct.nt• at Southern Caltfornla CoHeoe of lledlcal end Dentel Career• work with modern equip· ment In their claa .... E!!!!!<i0 AND MEDICAL CENTER • DEOICATED TO SERVING THE PEOPLE • 24 HOUR EMHGfHCY CAH WITH PHYSICIAN A YAU.AILI •COMPUTE OUT PATIEHT AND IN PATlfHT SHVICES •PHARMACY OPEN FOR YOUR CONVIHIEHCI •AU. PRIVATE ROOMS FOR MEDICAL AND SURGICAL •PRIMARY NURSING CARE IY UCEHSEO STAFF 441 LAKEVIEW AVENUE o ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA 112807 u (714) 191-4400 . ·~I• CEHTO'" COMNmt HOSf'fTAL --~~~--·------~~--~~~-~~~--~~~_ .... __ 11 ~._....:--.,..xw:i~IUll .. lllllCiililiiaizili:i~ma~niiiiWiim. .............. ~ l l r-p ~-IL~O_l_A_O_V_E_R_l_IS_E_R __ F_ebr __ u_ary.._1_e.~1_9_76 ______________________ ~,,__ ____ M_ed __ ~ __ l_C_ar<_e_S_ed __ •_on __________ ~F~ebr=..;U:::..!IY17,1976 DAILY P1LOT JS Obstetrics Specialty at Mission Community Care for newboms can develop swiftly into hre and death situations, but thanks to a specially-trained stafC and modern equipment, the scales {'3n be lipped in favor or the infants in M 1ssion Community Jlosp1tal 's obstetrics center. About ha tr or the babies born in the South Oranee County area are de· Livered al the 212-bed community hospital in M issioo Viejo, according to obstetrics head nurse Marion Don, R.N A percentage of tht:se bctbies Chiropractor Emphasizing Nutrition Dr Gary L Couture is a li censed Chiropractor work ing al 2043 Wrstchrr Drive. Newport Beach He deals extensively w1lh nutri· t10n. food supplements. and correc· tive spinal ca re for sli pped vertebrae and sllppeod discs result· ing In pinched nerves or a matrunc· t1on of the nervous system. His work emphasi~cs reflex and muscle testing to Indicate the nuln· tional and digullve functions or the body. He also tests reflexes lo In· die ate a pinC'hcd nerve or a malfunc- tion or a spedrlc spinal area. Dr. Couture accepts all types or in· surance in the health care field must overcome such obstacles as prematurity jaundice. inf actions and resp iratory d istress syndrome (commonly known as hyallne mem· brane disease>. "Today. doctors are learning that very serious problems in aewbom in· rants can be treated successfully," says the director or pediatrics. "Ten years ago, for instance, the majority ol babies suffering from respiratory distress syndrome died. Now, an in· creasingly large number are being saved." Or. Gery aC'eouture A FVll 'f ACCREDITED HOSPIT Al 8PECIAUZING IN TH! DIAGNOSIS & TREATMENT OF PSYCHIATRIC OISOAD!RS, nl'U ... ALCOHOLISM, BARBllURATE ADDICTION & NEURO- LOGICAL OISOROEAS. INPATIENT ANO OUTPATIENT SCRVIC! AVAILABLE PSYCHOLOGY-SOCIAL WORK ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY GROUP THERAPY-MARITAL COUNSELIN(J OPEN STAFF ••• STAFF PSYCHIATRISTS AVAILABlE I 11•-••e-uo2 1 11•·•31-11n 1 3391 S D!l OBISPO • DANA POINT 12129 (I MIL.a~ IOUTH 0' f:.AG~ IUCH) Mission's nev. born nursery is equippeod with up.to-date medical in· 1trumenlation. including isolettes, respirators and fetal monitoring equipment. The obstetrics nursing staff also attends classes, lectures a nd seminars to kt;ep abreast of the latest techniques and proc:edurH . All Mission obstetrics nurses have been specially trained in neo· natalogy -the ore of newborn in· fants. Life support services, includln& X· ray, laboratory and pulmonary are available 24 hours a day to handle any e mergency ln the newborn nursery. In addition lo its care, Mission of· fers a wide range or other b.igh quali - ty services including: a 27-bed pediatrics unit with special intensive care sections ; separate units for teena1ers; a parents' waiting room which can be converted lo sleeping quarters for parents who want to stay near a critically i1J child. Capistrano by Sea Gives Help for Many Problems Capistrano By The Sea Hospital is an 82-bed acute treatment center for all ty pes or nervous, mental, alcoholic a nd drug abuse problems. The hospital is located at 33915 Del Obispo St., Dana Point, on 10 acres or landscaped, residential style crounda on a hill overlooking the Dana Point harbor. It offers total senrices for both In· patient and outpatient treatment which includes individual and group psychothe rapy. chemotherapy <treatment with mediC'ataonsl. oc· cupallonal and activities therapy, electroencephalography, laboratory and diagnostic X ray services Treatment of the patient is based on the team approal'h involving the attending physician. nursing, psycholo&ical i.ocull work a nd ac· liv1ties sen1ces Capistrano By The Sea llospltal Is acC'redlted by the Joint Commission on Accreditation or Hospitals and maintains an active membership in several hospital asSdelalions. It is approved for the care of Medicare and Medi-Cal patients and is a con· tracting hospital with Blue Cross or Southern Califorma Payment~ are also accepted through a variety or Insurance plans The hospital feulurcs u staff of 40 e mployees on tht> avcru&e and prar· tires under an open medical stare pohry. I PACIFICA HOSPITAL I HUNTINGTON BEACH • Lieenled 10< 109 beds • PK•hca Hoso1111 has comole1e lac11t11es to ewe tor the Crthcally ill 0< intured • TheM include three surgical uneta. • LabO<atory •Radiology • Physical Therapy • C.rd10-pulmon1ry Oepanmentt • The lour bed Intensive ewe un11 and two ~ catd11c unit are comoletety 9QU1pped with monllonng system. Pt~ 1n oxygen 1nd auction eQu•omenl lo aid lh9 physlcl1n 1nd nur11no staff en providing lileaavtno orocedure1 117'2 OIUWAH ST .. HUHTIMGTON HACH 1714t 142-0611 Febf 17 1971 Medical C.,e Section PtLOT·AOVERTtSER Fet>ruar; 18. 1976 DEPILATRON Jlbly WE, TltllJ PMW'S, ltblr ...., lir ......_ ,,_ -• IJ 1 r~ ,..... way lo,....,... --.._ -,,.., ol "°'6 DOOy ". ~ !tie OV'll.ATAON --O • --_ ..... ettect_ -....~ -.... ---_,.,.,,, ..... ~~--...... -._., _...., _, .... ..-d IO...__ ......... - .,~_..,~ ............... --___ ,,,DOOy __ u- - -QllCllly -~ M ._..., "-*'-' _..,. ______ Al_ .. ~ _,_ -_...,. OI WTd•on In i.ct. ,,... "°QA tie.,.,....,• :a: d....._ after tr..._"' "MJ PJ.tAJ..LY ENOOR~ ~0...M O ~•4-eo.d ol Oent'9to1o9y DEPILA TRON PROFESSIONAL CENTERS AMAHllM ..... ~ ...--.c.t. _., ..... WISTMtMSTa .. ,,._ ... ..... " °""""""- COUTURE CHIROPRACTIC OFFICES ----FREE LECTURE PROGRAM,---- As one of Southern California's leading authorities on natural health care. Or. Gary Couture is often called upon to lecture for civic groups and club meetings. Ask them about this free service for your organizations. Alao vou are Invited to attend and participate in free instruction and Individual demonstration of muscle and reflex testtng for d1gest1ve, nutritional. vit amin def1c1enc1es. hypoglycemia and diet. Every Thursday at 7:30 PM at the Couture Chiropractic offices *3 Wtstd ff Drfw.-Sultt 107. tMwport leach. Teltphone ~S-5300 Corner 11th ~.Jtvloe near eoco·s Community Resources List For Reader's Convenience AATitlllTU JIOUNDATIOfll S41·S591 -900 Nortll llr-S• .. r. S...u ~ .4'1DfOl.OGV Cf>ITl:ll OF NEWPOllT IEAOt 64S·>OOl -l07 """"'"'"' AV< ~n8c>dl IUHO, SUVJCES FOil S4l·lJ,. -20U N B«,.Jwa~. S.nu An.a lltAJUl. IJtttTn!T£ 121 ·.SOOO -S 21 N. Dale, Mabean> CAUFOIU'-1.4 H\llUES' AS$00ATI()H ..... US l 327 2021 E. 4tll St • $.ont~ Allot CAHCU SOO£TY IJl--OSIO -11}$6 foutth St, TltSIWI OtlU> CUOANCI! QJNIC 646-71)) -171£.11111. Costa Wt>a a.II • Us.4J57 -21 10 E. ht St . Ste 104. WUMI fl. MOIXN.4 aJHIC Ot·2721 -4'1 S l'"""St .~ D'ILEJ'SY SOCl£TY S41·S621 -21J0..4 Nottll M.oUt SI !Mt.aAN FAMILYIEAVICE AS90CIATIOH Ol'~COUNTV 1)1.7)17 -401 w. fowtll, T\utill 111~15 -lll W. A-•· Fvlklton f'OOMDA TION FOa IU.DKA1. <:All S41-6lll -)()() s. Flont, 0r._ RD Q JIOC OI' O&A."fGL COllNTV. INC. 956-1900 -S00.4 N. AAollnm, AAIMI• # Fll£ Hl.LN1JNIC OI' 11!1.r·UN!.. lHC. Sl6-ll» -lU l'VIJI St~ Httlllifllt"" llodl MU tt Al*>OA110N S47·>001 -104) One ~l<r DI Wftt, s..u Alla 10t1N n.4CY QJNtC {?U) 741-50 1 -106 W. MA.,... LA. an.at c-•IJ O....oeJtrat""' HocwM '4J.227 S -ll 4 £. 19111 St .. C'GIU Nie FIAlltt-............ ...,.. .. '"' 0.f/1111>4 Oldd-..... Theil ..... Ii 870.9')) -I02 E. O\ip11YJ1, I ulMoton UlTRA MODERN REDUCING TECHNIQUES * '"'"'' "'11'•..i.c "" 181tr-«lt• * Stltclt11tM c11trefttf .. ..-t ... lf•nt * P11u1H 1lectrlct1 "Y1trt-lhm111· -IMMI * 1Mtt1lllQI 1t1U.1 ... "..-cl1I .... ,. * s .. u lac"t -M•s • lltOH+UI .. .,.,,,..,trllllilC ttt•••ttl • IN llMll ll'-Hll(I • S.,• CeMihH ... * ,., ... ,.,,.,, ... ,,...,... * In t llM h ..... 11 flfl'I• LA(;l!HA 1£AOf ftU CUJ<IC. tNC. 494-07•1 461) ().'UJI A•tftW, 546 lf IS l.lc»tu llD<J> l.AHCUAQ! Df'VfLOPM~ C1'1'1ff"ll 11• JSIU H I S Loa~. AMlwc•m MARC1t Of' DIMES 979 1270 1 lOl S M>1n, S.nt> AN Ml l'\fAL Ill' Al nt & 'lft..'<TAL HYCIENE Set , .... ) MEHTAL ltfTAltDAT10'1: ltrpoA>I Cntttl "' 0UftJ< '"""'Y De .... OllrMftl•ll• 0.wbl<J 618-l>IS: lltW1' u\'ru,Oun~r UJ l>OJ•I Onn1• CYun1y Anod111on fOI lhtorckd (1VWrm 541-l~H NIH 111' Ol<•lnwl, S..nu An• NATION .U. ~ORIASIS FOlJNOA TION b7S IOU P 0 lo• Sl42 r•rton 92US 1'F~1'0aT LANCUACF & SttfCH C'f""l'l It MS :lll!l IR I' I wlle1tut1 A•c UJ 1191 c.,.1~ Mt ... QltAM;t COt'NTY Hl!ALTH ot'.PAltTMPIT '1• JI JI S• S N It""' PltOVI~ SP£EOI ANO HEARJNG 6)9-49911 4io S ....,., Ou nce llFO CROSS ASSOCl.4T10N 0 S Sltl -60 I N Gol<kft C'1" k 0. S....t1A1U afHAIJUTATIO'< ll'llnrvn Of OllANC£ COONTY Hltni aaoor t...Vm 0n"r Ll!NG ASSOCl.4 TION OP OtuNGI! C'Ol'NTY llHU7 -1111 N. •oo<1w1r ·s. ........ l ""ITFD Cf IU'U.41. P ALS'Y AS$00.4 TlON S46·Sll>U ->020 W H.lfYlrd $1 S.11u """ VISI TINC NlllSU MSOCIATlON 9 79 U 1 l 17911 O SA,y '11k Bl•d ll'llftC LUXURIOUS 'SPAS • l•t1 •uttf I••• ,..h• * lltl ... ,,., .,.., •11u1e '"h • IK' llt M 111•1 * .. ...., f1oau• ~· rtt• • (Ktl,,IU U•ll INlblltl rtt• • • 11111 t1tl1t H•IH •11tl.1 * tu11• ulf fl•et•· • '''"'• 111• ....,.,. * l1t11• .... ,, ..... ,, .. ., .. ""' * rn1m1tt11 •!Jlt '"' *1•1& • Al JfltctH lto ti. HOURS: W11k•a1111 l.M. tt 10 P.M. · Satiir•a~s t l .M. t1 I r.M. • SJ1•a1s I l .M. te 3 P.M. 6 CONVENIEN1 LOCATIONS 1. OIANGI ............................... 714 639-2441 6221. Kett ll• (h tween Tvuin ond Olou ell) 2. COSTA MHA ........................... 714 S4t·3361 2* Mwkr 11•4. (Hor bot Shoppi"Q c .. nte•l 1. ANAMllM .............................. 71 4 126.0311 511 S. lt•dt llw4. (Corner Beoch & Orange Ave)' 4. WISTMtltSTll ......................... 714 lt4-l ll7 6757 ....... , .......... (We1lf'lliMl•r Shopping Ce"ter} S. MU•Tl ... TOtl llACM ................... 714142·1451 11515 Mel" StrHt (f 1v• 'o•nh Shopp1t19 Cent~•) 6. LON• llACM ............................ 2U 426·1174 4101 Atl .. tlc a ... (Corner of Co,.on) HuMt.-.wf.effllie.._ .crou .._ ~t;.,. . .. .. . . . . ........ -. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . ... ......... . " ..... PILOT-ADVERTISER FebN!ry 11, 1971 Spinal lniuries Treated About IOO Californians become \'tctims or spinal cord injury each year. The cost or medical care, custodial care and living expellSH can reach up to a halt million dollars for the victim. Ca s a Colina Hospital for Rehabilitative Medicine in Pomona is attempting to red uce the cost of comprehensive rchabiUtatlon for the spimil cord injured, as well as those "1th other disabilities. According to hospital figures, the cost of rehabilitation in top ootch spinal cord Injury centers is $20,000 per injury, for a stay from 106 to 128 dayi. in the center Cuslod1al care for a quadrapleglc <paralyzed In both arms and legs) can cost $6,000 a ~car At Casa Cohna, the hospital's tn· tensive, comprehensive spinal cord injury program modifies the cost through faster rehabilltallon. The total cost is ot\en reduced far below the s t andard $20,000 and custodial care Is often reduced to as Utlle as S2.500. Medleal Cw• Section DNL y PLOT I 1 • Cua Colina also concentrates on reduclna the &oa1 or employment in- come by p,rovldlng vocational counsellna. job trainlna and job placement, thereby increasing the total lifetime uvinp to f70,000 or more. Casa Colina HoapUal trlea to rehabllltate parapleglc1 In • fast, thorough method to aave ex- penae1 for the patlenL SAt>t>le13ACl{ COMMUNl'CY hospt'CAL 2'4~1 \'IA £~RAW. l.AC;uNA hills CALIFORNIA 9;:6q lH-'Jl·OOO INPATIENT SERVICES: • U..ffour Emergency • Medical-Surgical • Coronary •Intensive • Pulmonary • Rehabilitation •EKG OUTPA TllHT SERVICES: •Home Core MEDICAL CENTER: •Child Guidance • Retdillitatlon • Pultnonary •X-ray • l.Gborvtory • Arthritis Centff • Paclftder Center • Phoemocy • LtorNng Oi1obllitie1 •Vision Development • fom61y /Mor~ 'Coun1~ng Non..probt communitv hospital accredited by Th..t Joint Commission on A_ccredltatlon of Hospitals • American College of Paramedical Arts and Sciences TRAIN FOR A MEANINGFUL CAREER THAT MAY OFFER PRESTIGE, SECURITY AND EXCELLENT EARNINGS. AMERICAN COLLEGE OF PARAMEDICAL ARTS AND SCIENCES OFFERS TRAINING IN THESE POSITIONS. e OPERATING ROOM TECHNICIAN •RESPIRATORY THERAPY TECHNICIAN -WA RD CLERK •NURSING ASSISTANT •EMER GENCY MEDICAL TECHNICIAN An Eltgibl• ln\11lu1ton Under The F•dtnllv ln,ured Student Loan Progr•m ACCREDITED MEMBER STUDENT LOANS AVAILABLE APPROVED ran.VETERANS TRAINING GRADUATE PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE '-1!(} ~1~ •• I --' 1 • .l.~-1 -~ ...... '· --r "'--\ AMERICAN COLLEGE of Paramedical Arts and Sciences. For furlher informll1on wrttt or call Director of Admlulon1 1600 North Broadway IU'7~"'""11\of')i~,.' J 8 DAILY PILOT Fet>ruwy 17, 1976 FOunt:a1n vaLLPH communrt:.H ' HOSPl"CaL and Medical Building Euclid at Warner Avenues Fountain Valley (714) 979-1211 Medial Cw• SeetlOll PILOT-ADVERTISER February 18, 1976 One of the county's newest hospitals Is Canyon Generel, • $12 mllllon complex In Anaheim Canyon General Hospital One of County's Newest One or the newer ho!>p1tali. in Orange Count) 1s the 242 bed Canyon General llosp1tal on a lO·acre site next to the Santa Ana River and the Riverside Freeway in Anaheim The eight-story, $12 million com plex has 182,000 square reel. A three noor medical-dental building hal> opened next door. Canyon General Is physician owned and managed by American Medical International. John F McC'ally 1s the administrator and Ronald Rodman, M D . 1s the chief or staff Among the modem health care equipment Installed in the facility 1s kno11>n as C llAMPS IC11nyo n llosp1t a l Automut cd Medical Processing Sys tem I CHAMPS makes available new systems and information which 1s not usually found in a hospital set- ting. The computer I~ used by medical. nursing and financial starr members. Anothe r Canyon feature allows supplies and materials lo be Im· mediately available and delivered to the point of use. There Is also a 24· hour supply or Items used ror patient care in the nurse server In each room, freeing the nurse for closer patient supervision. J-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-J~~lhe $1 .8 million c~puter center ;::::....~========~-==================:=;- It's rPIO'lllng ... it's neod(ld for thM 1ntorvlew 11 makos you "loosor" for R tough day ... It's also 1 klller! Alcoholism and other drug problems arc olt<"n lethal E11<>n wh<"n th<" body conlinues 10 exist. tho 1nd1111dunl 1s dc'llroycd So is the ft1m1/y II the d1sPa11i-ol alcoholism or olhor drug de· Pf'ndency is a piohlem loolt to Beverly Milnor Hos p1tal for help Beverly M11nor Hospital spec111h1e11 in 1hc 11eot ment and reh;ib1l11a11otl ol the df'v11stal1nq problrm ol alcohol and other d rug abuse. (714) 633-9582 Beverly Manor Hospital A call could 9111!' you bAck the rrsl ot your Ille Blue Crot1 conlrec llno ho1pl11t / Certlhed lor Medicare . . tor the treatment ol atcoho/1sm OUT-PATIENT SURGERY CENTER This spec11hzed cere un11 hes been developed to meet the community needs ror 1 short stay surg1c11 1nd med1calld1agnos11c l1c1Hty S.sed completely on 1n out p111ent fe><mat (petients ere discharged the sarre dly the surgery is performed) with hours Monday through Frld1y lrom 7:00 em 10 5 00 pm, the Surgery Cente<'s go11 11 to provide ufe. eff1c1en1 patient c1re at e cost -40 percent less then thel cherged in conven11on11 hOSP•lals ... Uftt ...... ,... ... _ ... ........... .......... ,._ ... &,... ..... ....... ,..,,..,. / ._ ...... _ • ._rl .... .,.. ..... Dlap .... c w..-ti·•• arc-IN.. y_._, OpLM *•h!t ~ .......... bcw.ef1-ef't•tl .......... ......... ..eye ..... .. ~ ... ,,....,... ~tllcSwpry C_. dlmfl•/r•-•el a..c"-frectwe1 ....,.._.,_ ... rtfttnla m~ leac• tnllnrd T...,.OM: 714 142-1 426 lllltitlt"' a.x•. C.Wftmb lt . ,. ·--~ fln.OT·AOVeAT'5ER F 11, 117'9 ~nt of MeRtal Health Regional M~nu.1 Hcatt.b Services 2215 N. Broadway #3. Sant.I Ant Information -834-4722 Afft.liited Community ~d Centers LA~UN A IUCll. SAN CLEMENTE. SAN JUA."i CAPIS11lANO. MISSION VIEJO COST A ME.SA, NfWPOttT 8£Actt. COil ONA DEL MAit. IALIOA So"lh CO\l"IY ll~n;al Mental HcalO\ Strv~ .....•.......... 497-1781 670Sout.b Coul ll1Jh~Y. l.4Una Bt.ach 926.Sl toll rr~ 979-0381 1441 $uptrl0f Boutevard, SUltc P, Nc11.por1 Bc4dl 92626 6-42·9240 S;Jdclkbuli. Comnt\IDllY Mtnl.t lkallh Ot"IC ...•...........• Ul-9860 27802 Pmr1~ R~•I Sut~l, Mmion Viejo 92675 ll!cr.iptu11 flc•1dcmwl Cm1tr. C:irflclJ Cvm•l~t Hu~ru .. 1 .....• 896-762S 77111 wrhcld Avtnuc, llu"ll"'ton Bc-.1c.ll 92647 u,un.1 kKh frff Clink .•.........•....•....•...•.. .546-371.S 460 ~c:;&n A•tnuc, Ujl.UDoa Dudl 92651 494-0761 Sin Clcmtnlc Community Mental HU11h 01111c (~Lenin~ un) .••. , , llll·94SO I02 Avcnid.i deb uircU~. Rm. 209, S;Jn Ocrocnlc 92677 Youth Problem Ctn1cr •...•••.....•. , . • •.• , ..•.... 6--$2-0032 I 32 l: .. bl 18th Strccl, Colli Mcu 9J627 Cluld Guldanct C'rntcr of Ormn,c Coonry 171 C:.1~118th S11cc1, C"o..ta Mesa 92627 ................. 646·7133 160 AY•·n..W (.";ab11llu, Sln ('lcm<ntc 92677 ........... , • "91·9868 FOL'STAJN VALLEY, llUNTINCTON BEACH, Sl:AL BEAOI, Wl:.STMINSnR. MIDWAY C11Y tforlh CltJ\I RtJJon.J t.kni.I l killth Service\ . 1196· 7566 141110 beach lldult:v.ml, \\utm1m1c1 9:?6b3 Nm lh C"u.1ll l>Jo11 Abu~ StrvK"tS . • • • . . . • , ••••••••••• 11'16-761 I 170H Ncv. tanJ, llun11n~1on llei•h 9264 7 Nunh c .. u1 Kt~l\Jn.tl 0..) l 1c.11nen1 StPI•<'• . . . ' . . • • • . . . 896-764 I 14)10 8c.1•h l!uuln~rJ, \\c,1m1n\tt1 92683 fh,r 11-.·u1,. Hn .. i.1111 .. 1 (.,nru C....1hdJ """'•" "''"' llv,111•1 • , , , l>'J6-762S 7'111 (,Jtl1dJ hc111,.· llunllllj:l"n u. .. ,11 9!t.·H • 'l11• 11 l<l\~r l1r.•ur llt•f11( 1< 11111.hcn·, RC'\iJCnll•I> ..•...•...••.• tl'J7 3321 ~~ ! ) 1t .. 1 .. 1J \11J11..1\ l 11) 92655 ' ( l11l.1 (.111J.11,,; ((Oh I ol o. .. n,e Cuun1y fl\~' llo1I.., l\hllll(, llUllllll; !t•ll lk~•h 9:,,~7 1717 S lfr."•l.huhl I .. unt.1111 \ .Hq 9:1011 ~ .. l ll ALI/I 0 ~I I(\ 1<.I !\ 11'12 8344 . 96HS50 /\.Ju1111hll•l•"n ..•.....••••..• , . . . ll}-l~722 <1111.11"11, ~1" " . . . . . . . . . . . . , .. , .. , . , 1i 34-62H8 11111• \hu...-.... l\I<(\ \Jllllllhll•lh •I , • • • , , , •••• , lj)4..(,14) \hd1 .,1.,,,, \l.tmhn,,n,~ l l•'•lmcnl Pr .. p.1111 A•ln11nhl1Jt1,•n .•. ., . 1134-614) \1 .. 11,d,I• nr \l•inh·nJ11,c l1c.a111ic:nt -\\,.1lmt-L1'1 l111;lr & i..11,,l,..n . . . .. . . . . . ...... ' ...... I> 'J \S20 I 1•1 c <1111,,1 \h 1h ,.1 .. ,,, ''""'~"J"" Trl'.ttment (.enter .••...•... II \4 ~04 I lh·-. 11.h .onJ I >.olu.1111 11 . , . • , . . • ••.•• , •. , , •.••• , IU4·)717 ~:I~ "••r lh IC11•.11h<J), l\.1nl• """ 917lt6 i\f, h1•l,.111V1•i." . ~39·7 1 111 111'14 2 11"1 I 1111 \11" I, \.11111 t\llJ 9i7ttl . m ffilSSIOO commun1rv HOSPITAL OUR MISSION IS YOU A 212-bed general acute care hospital. o lfering a lull r ange of medical services. including a 24·hour expertly-sta ffed Emergency Room. an Intensive Care Unit eQu1pped with the latest 1nstrumentat1on. a 27-bed Pediatrics Unit. and a modern Obstetrics Center. 11, 1978 DAILY PILOT J• • Mercy Gener•l Hoepltal • 215 -bcd modern hcaltli i11sti1utiu11 • 24-hour, fully -staffed Emergency Room, equipped ro handle all rrauma cases. including industrial accidents • Complete Radiologic ;lnd Clinical Labor:uories • Cardiopulmonary and Physical Therapy facilit ic s • Superbly-equipped Surgery, Intensive and Cardiac Care Units • • • • • 2701 South Bristol Street Santa 1\n~ (7 14) 979 -3500 SPINA L CORO • VOCATl~AL INJURY DEVELO ENT CHRONIC LOW • AUDIOLOGY ANO BACK PAIN SPEECH MAIWilMENT • DISABLED DRIVER STROKE TRAINING GENERAL • AEGIONAL CfNltR FOR AEHABILIT ATION THE DEV DtSABlED PRESCHOOL FOR HANDICAPPED CHILDREN /' ., , .. .. -DAILY PllOT Teachers Started Blue Cross· A group or Texas teachers dedded ln 1929 they would like to pay a small fee each semester tor guaranteed medical service at the Baylor University hospital. Their proposal provided 21 days of care each year to any sick or injured teacher. The Blue Cross plan was started. Today, there are 1• separate Blue Cross agencies in the US., Including Blue Cross or Southern California, and combined they cover more than 82 million people. There are also Blue Cross plans in Puerto Rjco, Jamruca and four In Canada, serv· ing another five m lllion clients. Blue Cross plans pay for the actual care each hospitalized member needs -no maximum 1s set. Benefits cover short term, non- critical slays and longer." more serious hospitalization. The two millionth member was enrolled in Blue Cro55 of Southern California in 1975. The same year , 2.S million claims were processed with payments to subscribers amounting to about $3S4 million. Blue Cross or Southern California Is also lestinc some experimental procrams this year, such as a pilot project for the rehabilitation or alcoholics and a partial psycruatric hoepitalization program. The organization's main omce is located a t •777 Sunset Blvd., Los Anceles, with a branch office In San· ta Ana. Institutions Replaced by Home Care Medical care at home Is helping to keep many elderly persons out of nursing homes. The trend to a less expensive and more dignified alternalive for chronically ill senior persons Is erowlng across the naUon. Many or these. when Ill. don't v. ant or even need instllullonal core. There are an estimated 2 I malhon Americans over the age or 65 and the rlgure will go up 25 ~rC'ent by 1990 The home t'ore programs for the elderly sick we're plonerred hy hMplhals. Tht>y RO by surh n11mrs M - gf'riatrir outreurh, Mmmunity c·ar<'. acriatrtr doy <'Dre They all aim to makr It po~!uhle for th<' rltlt'rly to llvt Al homtt with dignity, to oo trc11t t'd at home. to keep al hny th.- hurturhc a"'t loneliness of ln'llltu tlonol rare AmuaJng obeervatlon1 of life alont the°'.,." COht, ,.._ .. M '¥•1tttM .... , '"the DAILY PILOT F«>nwy t7, 1171 Medical C11e Section Pn.OT·ADVERTISER f"""'-'Y 18, 1m Dyslexia Affects Many Children By .JAMES J . OOVL£ SANTA BARBARA, Calif. <UPI) -At least 10 percent, possibly more, children In elementary schools sul· !er from dyslexia -a perceptual disorder wtUch blocks their ability to read, spell, or write legibly. It could turn them into delinquents later on. Ret'ent federal studies indicate a deep sociological problem results from dyslexia v.·ith as many as 80 percent or more or the prison popuJa. lion in the United States affected by it. Dyslexia, which may be inherited, scrambles symbols -letters and numbers -in the brain and also can cause a similar effect in hearing. A dyslexic child may see the word "dog'' as ''God,'' may confuse con- cepts such as "noor" for "ceiling" and ''hostile" for "hospitable." A "b" changes into a "d0 ' or a number series such as ··t-2·3" may come out "2·1-3 ... Experts say that many dyslexic children are or superior intelligence but often are lumped with retarded children or others with multiple learning disabilities because the dis- order is not widely understood and there are no programs available THE within the public edutation system. Spokesmen at a recent conference o( the nationa l Orton society here noted that studies have proved the race and frustration that results from continued academic failure is expressed ln delinquent and anti· social behavior. Beth Slingerlaod of Seattle, a teacher and national consultant on dyslexia, told the Orton society meeting lhal dyslexJc children are "perreclly normal, intelligent children whh no brain damage and no primary emotional problems." MEDICAL TEAM: JOIN IT! The Bryman Schools con train you to become on Important part of the medical team and it only tokes 12 to 26 weeks. You can be on your way to a new career -one that's in demand and respected. e MEDICAL ASSISTING e DENTAL ASSISTING e MEDICAL OFFICE MANAGEMENT Send the coupon below fo r your FREE BOOKLET, "Leaming To Work In A Docto(s World" or call The Bryman School. FINANCING AVAILABLE PLAC EMENT ASSISTANCE THE'BRYMAN SCHOOL~ 1120 NORTH BROOKHURST STREET ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA 92801 (71 4) 778-6500 r------------------------, I Please mall me my free c opy of 1 1 "lea rning to Work In o Doctor's World " 1 I NAME AGE PHONE I : ADDRE SS : I CITY STATE ZIP I L CS>1974 The Bryman Schools. Inc. J ------------------------ - . 19