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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-11-05 - Orange Coast Pilot.. - Anthony to Join .. .. Six Weeks Early FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 5, 1976 VOL. H, NO. JID, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAOH Tlaeg're Cool . Travis, 4, and Wendy Finnern, 7, team up to douse their playmate, Cisco Rios, 6, with garden hose. The Costa Mesa youngsters resorted to this method of keeping cool as Santa Ana condition drove temperatures above 90 degrees Thursday throughout Southern California. Weatherman is predicting more of the same for the weekend. Anthony to Orange County Supervisor· elect Philip Anthony was ap. . pointed by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Thursday to flJl former supervisor Robert Battin'• unex· plredtenn. Anthony's appointment means he'll sit OD tbe Board of _SUperY11on about 1lx week• before 1UI newly •on term beclm iDlDUfl'1. , Bettin 's First DWtriet H.t wu vacated last Auaust wheo the former 1upervt.oi wa lelltenced foUowtna bis convtetlon ol uaina county paid empJoJw in a~' poUUcal campaian. Both Ant.baby and b1s 1enera1 . Twin Rai • --.oca~e, · Huntington Cops Seek Ex-mate . ' Huntington Beach PQlice ca~ tared five suspected dful dealers and confiscated nearly a bat( .. million dollars worth ol narcoti By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tM 01lly Pl• SIMI A Huntington Beach woman and her new husband were shot to death ln their ups tairs bedroom Thursday night and her ex·husband is being sought in the slaying. Police identified the suspect as William Gene Campbell. 40, an ex-convict who they described as armed and extremely dangerous. Investigators identified the victims as Mrs. Be verly Campbell Howell, ~. and Verne Howell, 42, who lived at 17847 Beard Lane, Huntington Beach. Both died or multiple gunshot wounds fired from i .38 caliber revolver. Homicide detective Jack " Welsh said Howell was shot in the back. Mrs. Howell was shot in the bead and arm. Huntington Beach detectives said s uspect Campbell is believed to be driving a 19619 Pon· tiac GTO, dark brown, with license plate 562 EQP. He is on· parole Crom a five-year to life sentence for armed robbery and is also wanted on a warrant charging hlm with burglary. Howell was a pipefitter, ap- parently currently unemployed, and Mrs. Howell worked at Don Jose's, a Huntington Beach Mex· lean restaurant, l>etect.ive Welsh said. Patrolman Steve Dutton was dispatched to the two-story Mex;. ican adobe·slyle structure neat Talbert Avenue and Newlancl Street in central HuntingtoD Beach after a 10: 14 p.m . telephone call to police. "Someone just ahot mJ mot.her ••• I " a hysterical Yoanl woman screamed into the re. caver. Tbe dllpatcher noted down at thlt moment that a car's squeU. lllf tires could be beard in the background and officers believe it was Campbell eac.aplng. WANTED IN Sl.AYINGS WllUam Oen~C.mpbel' Detective Welsh said Camobe.11 was recently .fired from his job with El l>oft Liquors, which has two outlets, one at 8462 In· dlanapolis A v.enue 11-rar tb,e-.. restaurant where Mrs. Howell was employed. Campbell was recently dis· charged· followi'ng a door-pry burglary of the Indianapolis Avenue liquor store ariC:l Delee~ Uve Welsh revealed today a war· rant had been i59ued tor bis Jr· rest in connection with that break·in. Detectives assiened to the case said today they have bo .idea where Campbell might attempt to go into hiding, knowing be would be tale prjOie sus~jll the double rnunfeT. •'That fs what we're ?line to run down''now," said ,pel~ve Wela~. ' ~ He ud Detective Phil Nolen were expected to Question Diane Schroeder, 23, reportedly Mn. Howell's dau1hter by her first huabadd. • ; Pol\ce clamped a ti&bt patrol ~o6thetesfdenceorbo0ili\s. Detectlvea today wer& beila· Sc!hl'Oedff an(S her fiance aJ>c)Ul nlng what appea.rtd'to be a·com· a: 15 a.m. tddar~ when (ears' arose pllcated task of uhravellDI tbe 'th~\ their lilies mtiht be in tan1led marital relatiOlll and d..,i;,r. aimmeriitl edloUona that aP,,· pet.ecUve Welda said be was parently eitplodecl In a bloodbath. =~ -attwmp~J' to-.tooOct Police said ctampbell and hla ~W1tor i',._eftlte,J"' :~::r~~~r::·:::.:~ ~! ~.:~'81!':r=tt= ~~Tr1.trrt~.~~~!D .. ~=~·~•rm~ ~rY ... ~~ He wu apparenUy em)loyed •The ptUrder 11\aapect,..nrv .. there u a'plpefltter for the J'luoc ~ \j,ale 00. a nve-~lil• Corpotat1on. -..tttllfare h1a ~ iA· Still anOUJer ex.tn.bmd who Taltll .... laid. a11o warjca for Fl~ ~on trobftally, cletectivtl beatn· =::::, ~~g= tod., to CC:: uree2 KILL..,, Paae AZ> ronn btm • 11 termer de'• murder.tlollceuid. ·;~~ '*-m'-&.. Deled[ve Weith said tt w• not' tllJE!Q~Mff8 Jinmedtatelr determlned when . Mn. Jlowel and Campbell met, ·.·~~ ... ~Q .ft.!_ married and separated, lellding ,,,.,. 19j ~, !UfB to eont==~~vtna the !G~1.1:s: lt•lF (NJU _ A ~e.t ban had • few1>eef1, ~ motMr ~e1';! bat not too "NC!•nd)-.'' Pellte ~. -foar ~ Sam lhfbefr, aid ftdllday • in1eparaLecasesThursday. ' The baul included 2.5 pounds ~in purchased behind a coff shop at ~e city's f'\ve· Po' ~pping Center and~ pound south AD)erican, cocaine seiz ,. .in a Tustin.raid. ~ Narcotics Detective Sgt. C~ Vidano said it was pure cobij ci~•ce the two major <lrul dt rest ,ues occurre'd ,t the samt; time, about1p.m. ~y. .~ ~o resist~ was ~ter"" in either drug arrestsituatlon. ; • The heroin haul, whic:h iq~ vestisators aay; involved ~ previous purch~ses from t~ same suspects, all analyzed a~ confa.rmed as Mexican beroiot )l'U seized at Main Street ~ Bea~b Boul~vard. "The stre4tt value or wbat ~ sotd=:;~~bd~ about. ~,ooo, ·: s~~~ Vl~~cts in that caseweretde Ufieit u JO. Dell liOUand, 35, Boyer Ave. Santa Ana. ~lam "Willle" Ralph l fe3°i'' n:,t7,o0222S.'Main&t.,S tea • 1 . !Jo and was arrested on a p . vioualy·lasued warrant carry SS0,000 bail, wblle Jefferson w held if) llff_, C)~,poo ~all. Both I charged Wtitl.aaJea of heroin. .. . '8eeRUOUl••ace&i> Weather Clear through Saturday, but with coollnl along the cout. Hilb near 80 on the coast, lo.wa to about 65. INSIDf': TeDA Y · Then'• more to cbain than , jtut lltlffl4' on tM?n. Todal/'• ~ 'Wtthnder view• thfa houuhold eflJect .as.art.and ~. CoamuDicaUou SupHvbor =:!~E~tbe of ia&lbt wllan eontaeted lbeltly ~ .todat • j .. tbl .. dtft~ ' al'!: mgtb~ ~.J: • , I .: .:. ..... . • '. ' 1. ' ===· :::: ~~TIMI ~"" •:<::..,'"""'!" ~ Anon s-peea~ • :1:1::..':=' =. tlWf == -At.ii =~; A~ .. CAa&oN CAN -PollH U=dbcl oM• .,.. ••> W..t 11f1PD Wal Ufie ~cif.& .. tbe4111! ...... ~ ~: ='="" AU•1 • fire ttia" tUled & 5'·J~d fl , ..., Mme ---~ At TllNMn Canoe wtma• la '-_., ;::a""..-1'ta brie ._ ,.._ c:'~1•n.= ="'"-BUB• ....... PronoaneeiiM': ~tM"""4.anet =. ... ·:.:.. ~ ...... I acl at thelffff.•arl~,l'rldQ. ~ ,. ) 1 • Al DAILY PILOT S Fr iday November 5 1978 ··;.carter Hftd Enough Margin of Victory lncolJSequential '·' ,. By WALTER •.llEA&S ,.,.~ ... c.r....-.. WASHINGTON -ltoo)yt#es a word to -describe Jimmy s;arter 's m andate for the pre- ~ldency : ( NEWSAN.4.l.YSIS) agenda for change, it will be as president, testing his strength In office, and the margin that put him there will be of little conse· quence. Enough. He Is the president-elect; he will be the president; and if margin of victory is much noted now, U 'will not be long remern· bered. • When he swears the ~th of of. "ce J an. 20, not many people will ri?m ember -or care -how many votes put him there .. Wh e n h e aoes t o the Democratic Congress wi th his Carter's gQals will be gained o• lost, hia presidency will succeed or fail, oo the basLs of T(bat ha~ pens ln tbe tuture, nqt because of his narrow m argin over Pres1·. dent Ford. "Although I would have ~re· !erred a unanimoavoteoo~· Godly Vietory? Thief Finds Jail at Church GRANADA lllLL.5 (AP) -A knife-wielding would-be bandit has learned the biblical lesson "Thou Shall Not Steal" the hard way after a Catholic priest wrestled him into submission at a church. Father Peter O'Sullivan, 66:yeaJ'·old parish priest at St.' John the Baptist LaSalle Church, told police he was awakened at the church Thur~day by a man holding a knife to his throat and demanding money. . · Father O'Sullivan said be J(ave the man $47 from his pocket, but the robber ordered him to open the rec· tory safe. The priest did, and handed over another $647. Police said Father O'Sullivan caught the 20-year· old assailant off ~uard, juJllped him and wrestled him until police arTived. .. . ~ "We're r eally proud of Father O'Sullivan," a police spokesman said. "He really showed some spunk. He's great." day, I think that the inapdat.ewas broad·ba.sed and certainly ade- quate," Carter sal~ Thursday nJght. I Carter won with 'J!l'T eteetoral votes, %7 more than the mlnlmu.m needed to win. He· gained 51 per· cent of the popular vote, to Ford's 48 percent. HJ.1 electoral college count was • the lowea~, of any wiMer in 60 yean. even though the electoral college bas enlarged in that time. But three of the last five presi· dents won with less than ball the powJar vote, and Gerald Ford came to the White House with no votesataJI. Harry S Truman was elected in 1948 with 49.6 percent or the popular vote and 303 electoral 'fOt.K. John P. KelbMttY"~ Jn 1960 with 49.7 percent and »J WAGE.PRICE CONTROL UNLtKEL Y: HEL.LEA-A4 RACE WON, CARTER'S RELAXED-A4 electoral votes. Ricbard M. Ni,,¥· on was elected in IM with 43.4 percent and 301 eledoral votes .. Their reputations and tbelr roles in history, good and ill, are based on what they did in the White House, not on the size of the margins that put them there. Landslides can be us'eful. Lyn· · iJOa B: Johnson pushed bis Great Society social programs to enact· ment after trouncing Ba rry Goldwater In 196-4. He did it as a "Democratic pre- lident with a heavily Democratic Congress, but two years later, Republicans m a de a con· gresslonal comeback. And wi thin rour years , with the war in Viet- nam escalating, Johnson was in political trouble so deep that he • ' 'Fill 'er Up' quit the campaign for renomina· lion. It was during the term he won by minority vole that Ni xon opened U.S. contract with China and went to Peking himself. He didn't last the term he won by ' Americans Flock landslide in 1972, r esigning 'T' G 1. p rat.her than race likely impeach· ..f. 0 aso lfle umps mentover Watergate. WASHlNGTON CAP ) - ,t>espite continuing warnings or dwindling e nergy resources, American motorists are setting records in using gasoline. Tb" F ederal Highway Ad · ministration s aid Thursday that the gasoline consumption rate this year will be great.er than any lahiatory. The aiency estimated lbat motor fuel consumption would total 118.8 billion gallons this year, including 115 billion for highway travel. It said the nation would use 4.4 billion gallons more motor fuel this year than in 1973. when tbe previous record was set. As pleas for conse.rvatlon go unheeded. the agency said, the increased usage apparently com· ·es not only from more blgbway · driving but also hlgber speeds. Although it did not t ake a national average, the Highway Administration said highway speeds are increasing baaed on a sampling of states. Gasoline consumption is in· creasing at a rate or 5.7 perdent. comparable to what It wu before lhe Arab oil embargo ol 1973 and more than twice the 2.S percent tncreue recorded in 1975. The 1overn~nt hoped to keep an· nual c umptlon inrreases to less tha 3 to 4 percent. Current agency projed!ons are based on state reports ol motor fuel cOMumption and oo cu?Tent trends, motor fuel producUon fi1ures and other factors. Suppo rting its claim that highway speeds are on the rise, the agency aaid, for example, the average apeed of free.nowing traffic measured on hJghways with a SS mile per hour speed limit in Texas was ~-4 miles per hour for the quarter that ended June 30; CaUfornla, an averaege of 54.8 miles per hour; Maryland, 54,5 per miles per hour; Indiana, DAILY PILOT =:T:..~~=.·r.::.:::=~= c .... 1 .....,.,.,....,.~. "-',....,.,_ .... Ptilt6'1\IW'd Mof'ld•y tf'W'~ ,, ... ., fOI ~t• ""'""°' H•-.... 1\, _._-ft"-· ,.tA V•lt•Y lt-t"•• S....•••O: V•tl.,Y •fWI 1..-e.•""°"l'IC..\I ,. .... ....,..., .... t10ft ti ..... l"""'49 lMW'rd.fY' .9f'lid ~T\. n.. =.~~.::'.'t.~~~JlO ...... ~. . _ .. _ ...... , .... ,..,~~·"""' , .. ,.cw... Yke-. ... ftl•N-tll~ .,_ .. 1(- (<l<t<W '-··· • ....,i... ~ ......... ... .,..,... .. .._ ~ ..... " ,. ........ ~·"'la! ... \ Offlcn C..l•AoleM "°:"l:!!:i~'"' l._ .. '"~ .... .. ... , """''"""" .... ft llllJhcft-.. nl a.41<1t"-<~V•t .. y l l!llH·•""t"-at-Oi.e.J'- Tetepflo11e f7U )MMnt CIHelfle4 AdYertltlng Ma-tl71 --C''Yallo-OllQ . _..,~ ,.,_...,.°'~~ 56.8 m lles pe r hour ; and Virginia. 51.4 miles per hour. The top figure was reported by Connecticut -60.8 miles per hour -or five-tenths of a mile per hour faster than the 1973 na· tional average. California will burn more gasoline, U.4 billion gallons, than any other state in 1976, the FHW A es ti m ate d • but s ever a 1 other Western states will have larger percentage increases. For example, Alaska is expect. ed to bum 9.6 percent more fuel for highway use in 1976 than in 1975 ; Colorado, 8.9 percent more ; a nd Idaho, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, and Wyoming all will use 8 percent or more fuel for highway purposes. The increase in gasoline and other fuels for highway uses will offset a small decline in fuel uses for nonbigbway uses such as agriculture, construction, avia· lion, and marine. The highwa y agency said the nonbighway total would be slightly below the 3.6 billion gallons used in 1975. 11 Studenu Face Ouater OXNARD (AP) -Eleven stU· dents al Oxnard High Sc:hool have been recommended for ex· pulsion as a result ol v1olence at the campus last month, and five of them have r equested open hearings, school officials said. The expulsions were recom· rnended by high school principal Harold Smith arter violence broke out at the school on Oct. 14 and 15, resulting ln llijurtes to seven students. . Sclwols Plan Second Look LOS ANGELES {AP) -The Los Angeles City Unified School Dis trict bas orde r e d r e· examination or its academic pro- gr~ms. wUh sp~cial emphasis ori jun1br and senior high school stu· dents' class requirements and performance. The Board oC Education was expected to put up $1Z7,000 today to fuhd a task force for the major part of the work. Board member Howard Miller proposed several weeks ago that basic malhemattcs, science, social s tudies and Englis h courses cut from the required curriculum three years ago be reinstated. F,....PageAI HEROIN ... Police said the heroin was packaged in plastic sandwich baggaies. A separate three-month in· ve s tigaUon led to the simUltanews arrest of three men at a motel on First Street in Tustin, where officers allegedly purcbaaed $50,000 worth or co- caine. The pound or stimulant drug from the South American coca plant was seized after alleged negotiaUons with su.apects Donald Anthony Urban, 28, Leo Godinez Medina, 28, both of Tustin. and J erry Bob Beasley, 28, of Silverado Canyon.. JnveaUaator1 booked the trio into Orange County Jail iD lieu of $10,000 bail each, on cbargea of sale of dangerous drugs. f',....pClflf! AJ ANTHONY. • • the appointment the ni&ht follow· int his election triumph and 'Ibunday beean f Wnc the P'-pers needed to cleai the way tor bis of- ficlall)t taklng th,s sut Nov. 16. In Battin 's absence, the board bas operated with tour members . There have been a seriea of tie v<Ms that are experted ~ be broken when Anthony becomes a 1upervlaor. Bou Expell Two \ a.Her'Bllrl! Caltfornla •s Assembly speaker. Leo McCarthy (0. San Franclsco) says that Pres ident-elect Jimmy Carter hurt himat!f la the 1t.te by not allowing Oalif or- nians to run his cal'!)pa\«n here. MOSCOW (AP) -Tass report· ed T1tu~a¥ that two women, one froP' .the United Slates and tHe other from the Netherlands, haTe beltd expelled from theSo~­ iet Union for alleted cWTency •lolaU0Sl1 and for lJ.Dporting "at •1lclerou a a'ntl•Sovi et literature." The two Mre iden· t1t1ed as (tranalltetatton from R-'•>: Cath.rtnt Vollera1 "29, fl San Francisco, and Jurren- dJna Bteidveld, 21, of Apel· doo1t1 Targets tor the Na1'9 An employe of Northrop inspects a Cbukar II . target aircraft prior to delivery to the Navy. The Newbury Park company has been a w a rde d a contract for the hig h· performance. remotely controlled target used in a ntiaircraft training of missile and ground gunnery crews. Judge Orders Move· SlwDrive-Rin ~io p apist Of Chowchilla Trial Strikes Again MA D E RA ( A p ) -T h e sealed unUI trials a.re COJDpleted Chowchilla mass kidnaping trial 80 prospective ju.rors •Woo't be today was order ed moved out or prejudiced. Madera County. • The prosecution opposed both Superior Court J udge J ack L. motions, arguing that the defend· Hammer berg also granted de· dants c~ get a fair trial here and fense motions lo keep the grand t~ public should know what jury transcript sealed at least transpired' in· the case rather until a trial jury is sequestered. than 'felaying' on rumor and in- Both rulings had been expect-nuendo. ed, and Hammcrberg said he The defendants -Frederick granted the ve nue change to ~· Woods, 24, or Woodside; avoid any possibility that the James Schoenfeld, 24, and his case might be prejudiced and brother Richard. 23, both of overturned by appeal. Atherton -have pleaded inno- The county where the trial will cent to 27 counts of kidnaping and be held will not be known until 18 of robbery involving personal Hammerberg consults with the items taken from lhe victims. administrative Office of Courts The victims were abducted in San Francisco. from their bus while on their way Hammerberg said that office home from summer school. They will provide a list of counties that were driven around in two vans can hold the trial, and he will tor several hours, then were select one of those. locked in a moviac van buried at Hammerf>erg Ciled his rulings a rock quarry near Livermore with the Mader a County Clerk almost 100 miles northwest of this morning but there was no here. formal court hearing and the de· fendants were not present. Hamme rberg had to r ead stac ks o f news p a per an d magazine articles and radio scripts before deciding whether to order the trial moved to a county more metropolitan than this rural area. Dllr.iog a hearing last month, he viewed more than three hours or television film and videotape, all devoted to the bizarre case in which 26 school children and their bus driver were abducted ·July 15 .. Attorneys for three young San Francisco Peninsula men ac- cused or the· k idnapings argued that a ch an ge of venue is necessary because everyone in this lightly populated Central CaUfornia county became emo· tionally involved. The defense argued at another hearing that the transcript of grand i'ury proceedings that led to ind ctments should remain Outlwuse, Anyone? FORT MORGAN, Colo. (AP) -Anybody missing a while, two-seater out.house s hould call the Fort Morgan Police Depart- ment. It has three of them. A fourth, brightly paint· ed in bicentennial red, ·white and blue, was claimed on Thursday by Glen Mart(n of rur al Morgan Ccunty. Officers said all four out· houses were placed on Ma in Street during the Halloween weekend. So far, Martin is the only owner to show up. SARATOGA (/\P) -Police said today that a young man they're calling th~ "photo shop rapist" struck again Thursday night, assaulting a clerk in a local women's clothing store. The assailant is believed responsible ror at least five at- . tacks tt'le past month, and three of his vJctlms were employes of drive·ln photo staJ}ds, according to Santa Cll\ra Sheriff's Lt. Frank Gonthier. Most of the women were forced to accompany the man to motels where they were assaulted, he said. The latest attack occurred at a store In the Plaza deJ Robles Shopping Center, police said. After surveying the premises, the young man. pulled a small pistol and forced his victim to the rear of the store. Similar attacks have occurred in San Jose, Milpitas and Los Altos, the police said. F,....PageAI 2 KILLED ... nin1 their investigation at the sc~ne early today said it is un- dera,tood Campbell was arrested just recently in Westminster, where he report~dly lived. Missile Launched VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE {'A P) -An airborne launch crew s uccessrully fired a Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile down the Pacific Missile Range today, the Air Force said. It was launched by a crew from the 91st Strategic Mis· sile Wing stationed at Minot AFB in North Dakota. It's What's Out Back That Counts! Our store is like an iceberg! No -we're not chilly to deal with -it's that you only see one ter.th of our store from the 'fron!. People visiting us for the first time are flabbergasted when the spacious interior unfolds before them. The huge showroom has thousands of samples. (Customers tell us we have the largest selection they have seen.) Our warehouse contains an inventory of infinite variety. Hundreds of remnants inhabit a 25x50 remnant room. Add offices. a spacious drapery room, plenty of p~rking, pleasant people, and YOl;J'll have the "Big Picture" of our success ful operation! DEN';s . :iiiSiiilitiiiJ;:·custom draperie~ /inof eUm • °Wood noor LIC. t '°· 2J04n 1663 'lAC£NTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CAllF. 926'27 • PHONE 646-4838 -6.46·'2355 DAIL Y~ILOT A:J ~ (:ounty E1nployDlent at · 2-year · ·High Employment In Orange County reached a record in October as the unemployment rate plu.nied to a two-year low, the state Employment Development Department (EDD) reported to- day. Pacini the county's recovery from the employment doldrums ot two years ago was a record 616,900 jobholders. A1 the employment rolls swelled. the county's employ- ment rate dropped to 6.1 percent. according to the monthly labor report. A month earlier, Orange Cou.D- t y's unemployment rate stood at 6.S percenL And in October, 19TS, 1t was 7.7 percent as 59,300 coun· tians were out of work. La5l month, accordJng to lhe agency, the number of un- employed workers was 49, 100. TM report showed the cre•~t gains in employment last mouth came in government JOC>S, refleclina the fall r eturn to school. "Public.payrolls expanded by S,700 Uobs) between September and October as schools and col· leges increased staffing for lhe fan term," the report said. Construdion employment gained 2,500 jobs durtn1t the roOblh as lhe v aJue of residential and industrial bwlding permits issued eountywide continued to. run along al twice 1975's clip. The report showed that lbe 1m· proving e mployment scene throughout the state bas already produced a reduction in benefits uneuiployed persons can expect totcceive. As a res ult of decUnlog un- employment, stale jobless pay beneliU were reduced from their extended 65-week maximum to 52weeks. ·Unemployed persons receivlpJ the extended payments will be eUglble to receive them through the &Sth week. ~Two Die in Long ch Crash Social Workers Paper Work Load Assailed By K ATHY CLANCY Of the O•llY PltotStltff Orange County social workers orten spend as much time filling out state and federal statistical reports as they do providing welfare services, county s upervisors learned Thursday. Robert G. Love. interim direc· tor of the Social Services depart- ment, criticized what he said was a state and fedearl govemment "foucu!' on process as opposed to results." Dunng a day-long budget re- view session which was to re- sume again toduy. Love com- plained that welfare regulations change almost daily. lie said since June alone the department Fountain May Fall To Houses The Lake Forest fountain, once a s himmering spray of water along the San Diego Freeway. may become a victim of progress at the hands of a bulldozer operator The fountain has been shut off smce the so-called energy crisis two years ago and in the wake of $3.000-a-month operating costs And Or:'lnJtC County planmng commissionC'rs this week ap- proved plans lhat call ror build· mg homl':-. wh<.•rt> the dr) fountain now stand!> If COUnly SU perv1sors arr1 rm the comm1ss1on·s Judgment. th1· fountain appt.>ar~ doom<.'<I bas received 8S new directives. ln addition, Love and his chief deputy Richard Ruiz, warned that there is a 14.9 percent e.rror rate on payments in the aid to families with dependent children program. They placed the blame on the constanlly·shifting regulations, high staff turnover of about 32 percent since May and difficulty in determining eligibility. Ruiz told the board that unless the error rate is reduced to a level found acceptable by the state, about five percent, tne county could lose some s tate aid in that program. Supervisors are taking a de- tailed look into about 25 percent of the county departments this fall, under a new review system suggested by Board Chairman Ralph Diedrich. Jn addition to the Social Services Department, this year's review will include the Health Agency, Probation Department, Menta l H ealth Department, Public Administrator-Gu<trelian, Veterans Service Offic:e. Senior Citizens Office and Consumer Af· fairs Office. During Thursday's opening session, Love noted that while most welfare programs are paid for by the state and federal gov· ernments, the county's share is significant. The county will pay Sl8.5 million this year for the Medi-Cal program. he said . Thal translates into 25 cents per $100 or assessed valuation on the pro- perty tax rate But. Love continu ed. supervisors and homeowners have little to say about who is ehl'(ible for Medi-Cal aid and how much payments s hould be. ........._ Al'Wi ... lo RESCUERS PULL IN A SMALL PLANE WHICH CRASHED OFF LONG BEACH, KILLING TWO Two Others, Occupants of Thia Aircraft, Walked Ashore Uninjured After Accklent 'Own Time' Work Noted Hinshaw Testifies tUJ Def e~e Opem Case By TOM BARLEY Of the O•lly l'llolSIOll Congressman Andrew Hinshaw told an Orange County Superior Court jury Thursday that he clearly recalled seeing assessor's office employes at a number of campaign locations while he was running for Congress in 1972. . ~ut the former county assessor wisted shortly after taking. U\e stand as the first witness in his defense that he was always as- sured by the employes that they were working for him on their own time. And he assured the jury that former assessor's aide George Uplon was absolutely accur14te when he testified that Hinshaw warned him that employes who worked on the campaign would !have to do so on their own ti me. The witness testified that Up- l"n was not quite as accurate in test imony indicating that Hinshaw ordered Upton to draw up a list of assessor's employes and th~n indicated with check marks which of them were to be assigned to the campaign. He testified that Upton himself drew up that list without being asked to do so and left il on H.inshaw's desk. Hinshaw agreed that as- sessor 's auw Kenneth McLeod's name was on the list. But he challenged Upton's statement that McLeod's name was ' checked off and he was ordered to work on the campaign despite his objections to the as- signment. The witness was reminded that McLeod had so testified in the prosecutiqn phase of the ttjal. "Then Kenneth McLeod is mis- taken." Hinshaw said. Hinshaw, wnoseemed more re· taxed on the witness stand thar. in .tn earlier bribery trial whJch ~nded with his conviction. will resume testimony after the lhree-da~ weekend break or- der e d by Judge Frank Domenichini. 2 Escape ··Mid-air Collision LONG BEACH CAP) 1-A mid- air colli$lon between two smaU airplanes that a witness said "sounded like dynamite going off'' kiJled two people but left two others•unharmed. The two planes, both sinale- engine Cessnas, collided al 6 : JS p.m. Thursday about 2,000 feet over the Pacific Ocean near Cbe Long Beach Naval Base. One plane fell lo the ~round, losing a wing and hitting two parked cars near the Naval Base. Both men aboard. J . Donald Wilkerson, 42, of SeaJ Beach and Edward Shaw, 39, ot Lakewood, were killed. Each was a Ucensed pilot and it was not known who was al the cbn- trols. • Wilkerson , 42, of 4596 Birchwood.St .• is survived by hiS • widow Joanne. His occupation was listed as a pilot. ) The pilot of the other plane, DaJe Ratta, 39, or Montclair and his passenger, Dave Leighty, 29, also of Montclair, walked away unhurt. Raus, flying under visual flight rules, decided to land on the beach but then set the plane down just offshore in order to avoid anyone who might have been walking on the beach. The craft tipped over on its back ~t he and Leighty waded ashore J?-0· hurt. He told firemen be never saw the other Cessna and did not know how the collision occurred. o\ spokesman for the Federal a.viation Administration said tile 'fiAA had no idea wbat ca.used l)le :rash. ClwrchSex Retrial Set (iul Kris K1<>ter. a member of the Saddleback Area Coordmat ing Counril n.·v1ew board, said inost Lake Forest residents had lonR aRo ii1,·en up any hope that tlit' fountJin would remain and !\lay 111 oµerat1on. The propo~<'d tract, planned by WJrrn111gllm Oevl'lopmenl Inc . t•alb f111 but lclini: 119 homes 011 31 .H:rl':. 11orth of the freeway near R1dgt' Ruull: On Vt' and Rockricld Bou It'\ .. rd Boy Facing 9-year Custody in Death Trousers Rifled A soft-footed intrude r who e¥1 · tered th(' horn e or via the unlocked door took S285 in cash from the pants pocket of a slcepin~ Dt1na Point resident. Orange c01mly sheriff's officers i,a1d the theft was reported by Byron M W&yne. 54. of 34161 La Serena Drive He I.old officers his cash wa11 laKen while he was aslee11 In his bedroom The Newport Bea c h Republican faces charges ot grand theft. conspiracy, em· bezzlement and violation of state codes governing the conduct of p1,1blic officials. It is alleged that Hinshaw, 51, utilized county manpower and materials unlawfully in 1972 while serving as Orange County assessor and successfully seek- ing election to Congress. JERUSALEM <AP> -The J erusalem district court has or- dered a retrial for a woman jailed for having sexual intercourse in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. Louisa Margaridi, a36-year-old Brazilian living in the occupied West Bank or the Jordan River. claimed in her appeal that she was attacked while walking through the church last month and was being raped by a Jorda- nian when a monk found them. Part of th<.• de\'t•lopmcnt 140Uld • oH•r th1• fou ntain and six acres surroundtnJ! 1t that had served as :in t>ntram·t• and ..,ymbol for the Lakl Forl:''>l Community. Thi.' plans call for maintaining :iboul s1 '< .il'r{'c; near the freeway <ts an open "P<lCt' and park arf'a, <1long with l,1ndscaptnr.t and walls to reduC'I' frecw a 11 noise The fountarn had been the topic nf \'anous proposals the pa~t three ye..r-.. when its bwldcr frrst wantl•d to tear 1t down. At on<' poin t . count y supervisors approved plane; for multiple -fa mily dwellings on part of the land in exchange for a promise thl' developer would deed the fountain and park to the r ounly. But those pluns were never com pl l'ted. MIAMI CAP) -Second-degree murder charges agamst a 12- year.old boy accus<.>d of slaying a young playmate were dropped toda> by a prosecutor who said the youth wai. "not rompetent to understand the adult system.· Asst. State Attorney Ed O'Don- nell said Wallace Mosley would be held m Dade County s Youth llall until he is 21 year!> olo Mosley had been charged as. an adult in the July 31 stabbing de- ath of 9-year-old Greg Billiter. "In the o p inion of the psychiatrists, Wallace Mosley was not competent to understand the adult system ." O'Donnell told Circuit Jud~c Natalie Baskin "It's my understanding that -he'll admit guilt at the youth center." O'Donnell said after the hearing. "The murdf'r indict Weekend Cooloff In Offing Sunday . For relief from the heat of San- ta Ana winds. sit a spell in the shade and read these stones in Sunday's Daily Pilot DEAR VOTER-What is left when you read between the lines of a mass mailing in a political C'ampaign? Not much. judging from the "'anatomy of a smear" prepared by Editor Thomas Keevil for the Op-EdU page. SPRINKLE RS OFFT-Fifty percent of home water is used for ouUlde greenery, and about half of that is wastt'd, golng down the sidewalk and storm drain. Staff Writer Steve Mitchell reports the lates t predictions from the Metropolitan Water Di'itrict and recommendations for conserving the wet stuff as Its c~l goet; _higher ( NDA Y'S BEST) SPECIAL HOUSE-What looks like a typical El Toro residence 1s actually the headquarters for In· dividualized Task Oriented Pro- gram UTOP> for people of all ages with learning disabilities. Staff Writer Laurie Kasper takes you inside for an interview with the founder, Sister PauJa Jane Tupa. TEST PILOTS -They spend more Ume on the ground now preparing ror a test, and they 're better educated than those daredevils of 20 or 30 years ago. But they still are a spedal breed with s uper skills and luck, as an Associated Press feature shows ment has been withdrawn by the state.'' It was not immediately clear on what bas1~ Mosley would be held, but O"Donnell i.aid the youth was not mentally compe· tent to oe released. Mos ley has been undergoing psychiatric evaluation since his a rrest hours after the. death. PoUce quoted th4! youth as saying he killed Greg oecause or a name that the boy called him. A grand Jury indicted Mosley as an adult after O'Donnell pre- sented the case to the panel. The indictment brought protests from around the country because of his age. Niguel Man Indicted in Child's Death Laguna Niguel electrician Daniel Gonules Guzman was in- dicted Thursday by the Orange County Grand Jury on invcJlun~ tary manslaughter charges stemming from the death or his neighbor 's 18-monlh -old daughter. Guzman. 32, of 29821 Paseo de Ocaso. will be arraigned Tues- day before Superior Couf\. Judge James H. Walsworth. He is free on his promise to appear. Grand jurors returned 1.he in- dictment after hearinl( testimony that Guiman rigged a 125-volt line In his front yard which caused the death Aug. 15 of Kelly Michelle McMullen, 29089 Paseo de Ocaso. Sheriff's officers who booked Guzman on murder charges said he told them that the power line was Intended to keep dogs and cats otf his nower garden and he bad no Idea that t.be child might stray onto bis front yard. The indictment led prosecutors to abandon South Orange County Mun1cipa1' Court action aJ(ainst Guzman Hinshaw has been sentenced to one to 14 years in state prison on the bribery conviction lie is free on appeal Artifacts Dalt Plan? An arcbeologicat dig on pro- perty overlooking Newport Bay has uncovered Indian shells, but it is uncertain 1f the ftnd will af. feet the Irvine Company's planned development of the area. A field crew from the Archeolog1cal Research Institute has spent the past two w~ks sur- veying the "Newport North" pro· perty off Jamboree Road bet ween the Newporter Inn and the Park Newpol"J. Apartments. The institute will determine ir there is anythinR or archeological. significance as part of a ptelfmlnary Environ· mental Impact R eport CEIR). The Irvine Company owns the land and rlans a residential de· velopmen of about 400 homes on the 8S·acre site. The company hopes to begin construction in April, 1978, with a completion date o! mid-1980, according to sfX>kesman Jerry ColUns. A major find couJd cause a change in the planned develop- ment. "We don't go looking for gold and we haven't found an7 poU," said archeologist Bob Drolet. "but every bit is very impor- tant." The crew fouhd a number of shells in the tlve boles they dug on the property. "ln that respect1 we've found a lot of gooa material,'' Drolet said. The·actual results of the field study won't be known until at least. J a nuary, according to Newport Beach Community Development. official Bill Foley. Foley aald the researcbeN will spend the next two months prrforming lab tests and analy1- inl field data. • Dell,,.... .... ,...., ARCHEOLOGICAL SIT£ OVERLOOKS NEWPORT HARBOR • T•rry Schuster, Bob Dlolet., For .. round,..Conduct Deg } I 44 DAILY PILOT Friday. November 5, 1978 '·. I Just • Korean Gifts Eyed Waldie, McFall Subjects of Probe wlCh Tom ~phine ~~ TAX TWISTERS: When voters • In the city of Huntington Beach , 1 went to the polls Tuesday, they passed a proposition that puts new c lamps o n increasing municipal taxes or fees. This one ~going to be interesting tow atch. What happened in Huntington was that a group called Citizens Against New Taxes, also known as CANT, got a city charter amendmentplacedontheballot. Known as ProposiUonM, it sug- gested that before the municipal government could adopt any new taxes or higher fees levied again.st the populace, it would require six yes votes from the seven-member City Council. THIS CONCEPT DISTURBED 'the Shakers-and-Movers at Hunt- ington Beach City Hall. They countered with another possible charter amendment, known as Proposition N. This one said five of seven council members could adopt new fees or taxes. Sowhalhappened? Well, wh en the votes were . talJied up yonder. both proposi- tions passed by hefty margins. The proposition that requires ,...six council votes for new taxes ; was adopted 42,381 yes to only f• 13,739 nays . The proposition call- ing for fi ve council votes also ( passed36,32llol7,732. f Faced with this, Huntington I Beach City Attorney Don Bonfa ruled that the measure getting the most votes shall prevail. That , wasthesix-vote rulesponsoredby I CANT Obviously, when it came to ap- peaJing to the current tem~r of l \ the taxpayers. CANT certafoJy could. TIMING FOR ADOPTION of l the tax-clamp couldn't have been more exquisite for the advocates. , Just before...-alection day, ever- ' ybody got their property tax bills. f Now clearly, the soaring, ugly figures that pop out from your tax .-bill cannot all be blamed on city hal l. The bill includes plenty for chool districts, county govern- ent, special taxing districts and into the night. fiut when they got to the voting • th. Huntington Beach tax- ayers had a convenient dog to ck. And they kicked il. So what does all th.is mean? • Well. for exam pie. let's say a pro- s al comes before the Hunt- gton Beach City Council to in- fease parking meter charges. at would be a new levy. To pass, the n!'w charge would have Lo get six council votes. Thus any l" o Nos from the council kills ll F\1rther thus. 1t means from now on , any two m<•mbers of the hunt1ngton Beach eouncil can get logcther and kill :>ny scheme to raiM· taxes, licenses or other fees charged the public VOl MIGll1 SUSPECT tl\is mean1o Huntington Beach is now gomg lo bl gvvernl'<I by minority ~voteoflht• council On lht· other hand, pondering ~thl land'lltcle p:i,~age of Hunt ngton'-; Propo-;1tion M. maybe ht> two vote Muncil minority eprM1mts lht• m ajorily of the a'<pavers if. Anywuy. sinC'e passage, I've ~talk1·tl to ,1 1111 m h<.•r of Huntington :Ht•Jch rwo1-1l1• "ho i.lfC abs-Olul<ely !datt·cl 11\ <'r th1:, turnmtaxation _. lh1\\ lluntington Beach city ~O\ ernml·nt "ti! op!'ratc or fail 'J-0 op<'r.itc undPr this system. ,-emarns to he seen ': Meanwhile, y<11• fan bet every ~ity l(overnm<'nt Crom Seal Reach :JO San Clemente will be watching ~'With enormous interest. I After a II, they m lght be next. - WASHING TON CAP) -Rep. JobnJ. McFall, the third ranking Democrat in the House, says be did nothing w~ne in accepting $3,000 from Korean businessman Tongsun Park, the reported target or a Juslice Department investigation or alleged South Korean influence purchasing. It bas also been reported that South Korea's ambassador to the United States in 1973 gave $2 ,000 to form e r California congressman Jerome R . Waldie , a Democr-a t, who denied ' that the dona- t i 0 D MUAU. purchased any influence. THE WASHINGTON STAR quoted a former South Korean Embassy official here wbo said be saw the former ambassador, Dong Jo Kim, "stuffing hundred dollar bills" into "about two dozen plain white envelopes" and then rush off "to deliver them to the U.S. Capitol." ... AB for McFall, be denied he had been bribed. But he told the Washington Post that when he accepted the donation from Tongsun Park, in October 1974, he thought it was illegal to take money from a foreign national. Consequently, McFall said, he deposited the money in bis office. account, which he thought was permissible. HE SAID THE money was in $100 bills in an envelope that was delivered by a man who worked for Park. A law making it illegal for con- gressional candidates to accept campaign contributions from foreien nationals did not lake ef. feet unW Jan. I, 197S. Con11'esslonal office accounts are not considered official gov-· emment accounta and can con- tain money from any source, a : deputy House clerk told the Washington Post. "I SUPPOSE l'M one of the CO«lgl'essmen bein1 looted at, but I don't have any problems as far as legality, explaining where the money went," McFall said. "But it will all come out and I'll t>e one of thole inoocenUy involved.•• McFall said in an interview with The Associated Preas and ~'•Fat WithFunth BISMARCK, N .D .. (AP) -While many states and cities worry where their. next dollar's coming from, North Dakota baa a sur- plus the tax com mis8ioner says "isn't just a cushion -it's a mountain of plllowa." The coffers are bulging fn t.his almost entirely rural stale primarily because of booming prices for farm goods, which in turn have sent income and sales tax revenues soar· ing. State Budget Analyst Dale Mou~ estimates that by Jan. 1 the general fund will have a surplus ol $176 million ten from a two- year budget of $442 million. $2 Million Ransom Boys Scion's Life MUENSTER, West Gerh)any (AP) -A kidnaped West German supermarket heir and Olympic horseman Hendrik Snoek has been freed for a $2 million ransom, police said. ' ' Snoek, 27, was the second scion of a West German supettmarket fortune to have been kidnaped during the last month. Wolf Gutberlel, 32, kidnaped Oct. 8, was held for ,.-----------... seven days b e fore b e ing ( J ransomed for $800,000. Police JN SHORT q~ckly a rres ted three of the four k.idnapers. -_ As in the Gutberlet kidnaping, police hushed up Snoelc's abduc- tion until he was released. Police added that they wer e investigat- ing lo determine whether there was a link between Snoelc's ab- duction and ao anonymo'us kid- napmg threat directed against tus sister . Marion , another West German equestrian star, two years ago. Sale Cro•d•fl Told BEIRUT (AP} -An American diplomat crossed Beirut's dangerous front line today for the first time since U.S. Ambassador Francis E. Meloy was slain here last June. George Lane, the U.S. Em- bassy's charged 'affaires, moved without incident from Moslem- held territory to the Christian sector for a stay or several days and a round of contacts with Christian leaders. The front is still the scene of frequent sniping and occasional outbreaks of shelling. ~Fr .. !ka CAPE TOWN <AP) Margaret Fuller, a 64-year-old woman who fell overboard while on a cruise, s urvived for two hours in the open ocean by float- ing on her back a nd occasionally swimming, the captain of the liner Windsor Castle reports. Mrs. Fullec was reported in satisfactory condition today after being pulled from the chilly South Atlantic about 250 miles off the coast or Antona. Capt. Patrick St. Quentin Beadon said she fell from the rolling deck or the Windsor Castle about 8:15 a .m . Monday. Her husband noticed she was missing, and the ship turned back about an hour after she went overboard. Deadlock Bold• GENEVA, Switzerland (AP)- Black and white leaders failed again to break a deadlock over a target date for black rule in Rhodesia. "Round 15 is begin- ning" In a s parring match between the two sides, black na- tionalist Robert Mugabe said as he left today's fruitless talks. Rhodesiaq Prime Minister Ian Smith has insisted on a lwQ\.Year timetable ror transition to ma- jority rule in the overwhelmingly black African nation. Four black nationalist delegations are de- manding a one-year transition. White Prime Minister Ian Smith said he would seek talks with "moderate, reasonable" blacks inside Rhodesia if the Geneva negotiations break down. . Mid U.S. Hit by Freeze Chill Spreads Sout"' Eaat to Georgia Teaprrafurn Hl•ll Uw ~~-&S l;t n " ,. 11 . , S4 t.O ,, ., ,, . , c\ 0 l1 ,., ,. 0 ,. 0 " 01 •ft Jt 0 " &• l!I .. ,, 10 lJ ~ ,. " 4\ I\ n I) "' ~· lO ., H MllOIS St P'•ul olO 23 s l u Nl'/W OPl••ns 6' '1 ,. ~ No•Yori.. 5• " •O u 07 Olll•~ Cllv S7 P !!l,.o~~~~~~~~-Oman. ~ ~ o., n.t Otl_, ............ MMdtyor.,oav n you °" "°' ""'• l"lll' _, 11y ~ )0 "m r¥t bltf!'ft 1 ll M 111<1 y<)Ut COllY IOIN t'9 ,,..l._,fG PtlM~lflOS •t '1 PHO ~04>IK 11 41 P!llt .. 11)111• st '3 ~-" .. Pl1111Nrtlt 0 1• '°'1•&nd.o... u ., S..utdly .,.., S11~ey ti ~ dO tlOI 114NI a111fl t1 JI .__ l'O•" coor ll'f' e 1111 '-" 5eu•""111e u so "''°'• 10 •"' ·~ \'Oyf _.., ... w"' St Ull•• ie n __..., S.11 Ulk• C1ty M H Stft l'f•JICttU> ,. $1 s.tttte st 0 TlwrNt •S \I w.-111t191.., n ., l 1.S. s .... 111ar11 "' l\IQll -"""' 'ntt"' "'"'"'"" •.._r Ml\tourt .... 0111ra1 •.to nett~ win ,., •• , 010." t•"' . ··~ >O CaHfernla S.-.t• An• w•..01 -wlllcll Ila~ ~ t•"'Pt••h"H Into Ille'°' 111 -" -Sllould ·-Soullle"' C.lllOf' • nl•IW ltot under tlle coll•• .ti IMtt lllrOUQl'I .... WMktnf. Ille N•l-1 Wt_.llerktvt"~\.s . 8111. If ll's '"" consoletlo11. lorK"'ttn s.ty 11 won'l be Qufle<ISllot H Ttwn~•y's recorf " •I 11\e ~ ""9tlts Civic C.nter Tll•I ...., two ~ •bove Ille pre•lous 1119" tor e l'tt• •.Mtl11MA•. MOI"' Ille 11 .. 1 •bit more betr•ble H1 ,,,. 14'<11. of llumldlly •• ltw 5-nlt Al\t wlnft W<hd I~ dl mO<>*H OUI Of Ille ••• Of! TllurJ<Uy, Ill• ltvll'l<dlty r~fromonly •11e•ctnl to••-of .. "' "'"' of •!MM ., .. ' prt<llct.d ~ --~A"Ofle\IOdlY,-11\t ,...rcury cllmlllnt novt ts In ti. s.n 0tr•lurttwf1rtlllnuson '••nendo, 1en G•llrltt •nd S•n E•rt• MO<nlnt rudl"'I• ... ,.. l'I ll\t lltt"t•dlnovtlley\ 10s 4t<ron fl'IU(I\ 01 111~ Mlnts\IPCll &utllCOf'llfl'l\llllllK. lll0\1111,<Mlu· Y•lltr. ()fllo VfllfY •nd t Hltrll Pt<t • 1111 of ,..llef. 11\t wul~ PllllM. w lo, wtlll l\IQlls v•ryl119 ~ n SI miler teMotr lhlrH w•n rt· #!flt. c:orwct ts I•• soutl\ H Ot11_ 1 _.. tll•n too.000 per14111s wwe ••· "'11..,,.1 ... o Tt""9H.. ' OK1tld 10 flee lo Ille llff<IMll ~to- TeMOerllurn In Ille'""'-,..,~, O.yto ... 11.1r••Pll•lrom1"'11ttl. flWt.d 111 1 ftw cemmu11111es In 1ow•, °'"" rtQlons. mu 11t1rne. -••· Mt\\OUrl trlf Nell••sk•. •ncl rt<o•o pKltld lo renoeo from lilt u_. 90s ft '-_,. Ml IOr Ille dale will\ rud• ~ tlev111on, lo Ille mlcMO\ In •nos of ... , Sofl,..ilttd. Mo . Ml<l 10•1 ·-•to<illltfllttOIOM. hntttvlu, Ark Mountain,..,.,,., •llOvld hl-.Jr.ml ,, .... llO l~m ... ••hl••• ,,,..,,., Into ,.,, Ill ,.,. .... 10 MIO·IOS • ..0-..111, .,_ t•flttll Oull "•'" •no 0..WQi• nlQMUtO<lnCI •O • 119!0f'td•- l ••ly mor111110 ltMU<ltll>U r~ lrom 1' •t f I Tnm lo•• et \~ l"OfltlCl.Mo ,anCIW_l.,t()O I-• ~\lloWHldU'll•""llfCI 11\wt\lt"i .,..., Of Ille G<•tl l •k*• r~ -tr • ..,t M•l ... 1•\ _,,, U"Ctlle<I hw <"Y"ll"S<Nl"of l•llt Ml(l'll..., rcoottol weother in· /ormotton wm t>. /~ °" ~BatodaJI) the Modesto Bee in California that he used tbe '3,000 mainly to pay for newsletters., offlce aup- plles and expeoau. TONGSVN PAU LI a rice trader and businessman wbo ls reported to have giveo cub and expensive sifts to a number of members of Congress. A lavish party.giver, he made frequent appearances oo the capital IOClal ace.ne, but bu been out of the country in recent weeks. McFall&ald be once was cuest ol honor at a party given by Park. Waldie aaid be toot lbe $2,000. from former Am.,_.Mlor Kim foe Waldie'• unauceeal\al lt73 race for 1o•emor ol callfomla. But he denied tbat the am· buaador "ever asked me for anythini." WALDIE ALSO ac.lmowledled that Kim eave fifll to hi.a famlly and helped secure the release from a South Korean prison ol an Army comtituent faciq a death sentence for murder. The former congressman said he attended a number of social affairs at the South Korean Em· busy and invited the Klms to bis home for dinner. He said Kim's wife gave his wife a Korean gown UiSeptember 1972. WALDIE SA.ID IDS friendship · with Kim developed after be "sought the ambassador's in- tervention on behalf of a constJ. tuent.•• and Army sergeant. Bard Ti•es 01'er1' Mrs. Martha Moff of Alliance, Ohio, collects the Rolls Royce she woo in a contest sponsored by Johnny Walker Black Label Scotch. Her husband is totally disabled, so she may dedde to take the alternate $40.000 cash prize offered in· stead. Carter: At Ease at Last By JULES LOH MSKl•tM l"f-~ PLAINS, Ga. -1bere he was, the next president of the United States. But there were none of the trappings. No trump et flourishes, no dazzling chan- deliers, no flags, no seal or office, no honor guards. Yet, standing there before that weather-worn old depot in this little Southern town at h.is first post-election news conference, telecast across the land to coun- trymen still wondering much about the person they had chosen as their 39th chief executive, Jimmy Carter looked and talked more like a president than ever before. HE WAS FORTHCOMING in bi.a answers. He was gracious to his defeated opponent. He flas.bed spontaneity. He showed boldness, dignity, humor. Maybe it was the emancipating effect of victory. Certainly the man answering questions Thurs- day was not the intense can- didate whose steely mien many thought, betrayed an inordinate bung er for the job. The Jimmy Carter outside the depot was serenely confident. The president-elect doing the job. He seemed in control of himself, in control or the situation. . THE HARD EOOES or the campaigner were smooth, fuzzy edges sharpened. He even m!lnaged to back off adroitly from one of the stands he stumbled into in the heat of elec- tioneering, the business about "keeping U.S . bands off Yugoslavia. Somehow, he rounded his posi· tlon off into acceptable perspec- tives without seeming, in that old Mn~1 ~~~ haunting phrase. to have nip. flopped. Those who knew him best said his wit was always there, just wait. So, asked how he could unify the nation after losing practical· ly all the Western half, Jimmy Carter smiled. Not a push-button s mile. And asked, hadn't he won Hawaii, the Western-m06tof all? HIS QUESTIONERS sat on Colding chairs borrowed from an undertaker. And his vice pre- sident-elect and both their wives and some of their children sat ort to one side in the railroad yard gravel on two dilapidated pews -a sort or. well, peanut gallery. He spoke of taxes and of foreign affairs and of his notion _ or what a mandate meant and he spoke with unaccustomed authority and s ureness. He was at ease. ~PB~!A~l5 informative ... entertaining ... useful ... and only in your Saturday DAILY PILOT HELPFUL TIPS and timely news for outdoor and indoor gardeners, plus yard and home maintenance information. ACTION PHOTOS and exclusive stories of Friday night's high school and college football games. COMPLETE WEEKEND STOCK TABLES for full New York Stock Exchange and American Stock Exchange lis ts ... week's highs, lows, close and volume. GET ACQUAINTED with area churches and their activities in the Saturday church pages . SHOP THOSE GREAT BARGAINS in the famous Daily Pilot Dime-A-Line classified ads. No merchandise priced over $25. DON'T MISS THESE SATURDAY SPECIALS AND MORE IN YOUR DAILY PILOT 642-4321 'ADierica's Victory' Lear Hails F amil LOS ANGELES (l\P) - Televlaion viewers should expect no immediate changes in early- eventnc prosrama u a result or a federal court decision against the • networka' .. family hour"vtewing policy. Hour Decision CALIFORNIA Friday. November 5. 1976 DAILY PILOT A"' Farr Wins Appeal, May Not Be Jailed LOS ANGELES (AP) story publlshed during -William Farr, lhe re-the trial. Farr, then a re- porter who has refused porter Cor the Los lor five years to reveal a Aoeeles Herald Ex· secret news source, says he ia encouraged by the amlner, wrote or an aJ. le1td Manion family plot to kill Hollywood celebrities. lateat appeals court ac· ~~:.in bis contempt 'GWI'W' Televisio,., U.S. District Court Judge War- ren J. Ferguson ruled Thursday that the major TV networks violated consUlutional rights of free speech in adopting the policy last year. ·Propane Gas Eased "I'm optimistic that l probably won't have to Show• 'Crude' go back to jail," said .. DH Farr. "And that's thit "'~---0 first time 1 ·ve been op-r Umistic since this case LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actress Olivia De began .. Ravilland is furious with what television Intends to Fercuson dld not, however, abolish .. family hour" program- ming, which was designed to calm public protC$t by keeping sex and violence from earlv· j!Vening television likely to be wakhed by children. HE MERELY SAID NBC, CBS and ABC couldn 't delegate authority for setting the policy to the National Association of Broadcasters {NAB). The decision was haifed. a vic- tory for free speech by the three entertainment guilds, two pro- duction companies and nine situation-comedy makers that had filed a lawsuit in October 1975. "Americans everywhere won a victory today," said producer Norman Lear, crealor of "AU in the Family" and other hit com- edy series. CBS and ABC said they would appeal Ferguson's decision. NBC and the NAB said they would re- view the decision before com- menting. CBS, WHICH led the fight for the industry's adoption of the policy, said. "In the meantime: and until further notice, CBS will voluntarily continue to adhere to the family viewing concept." The NAB adopted the policy in September 1975 after network or- ficials held a closed meeting with Federal Communications Com- mission Chairman Richard E. Wiley. The networks and 462 television stations now subscribe to the policy. WON VICTORY Norm•nle• In Ferguson's 223-page opi· nion, the judge also held that the FCC violated the First 'Amend· ment ''by issuing threats of gov· ernment action" through Wiley "should the industry not adopt the family viewing policy or the equivalent. .. " He said "censorship by government or 'Drivately created review boards cannot be tolerated." FERGUSON RULED that the NAB and networks were liable for any damages that Lear's pro- duction company suffered from the policy. No date has been scheduled to consider damages and a contention by the unions that the "family hour" policy violated federal antitrust laws. The policy says entertainment p rograms ••inappropirate for viewing by a general family au- dience" shouldn't be aired at niiht during· the first hour of network programming or in the preceding hour. The policy .does Hospital Profit Eyed HE MADE RULE Judge Ferguson not specify what constitutes inap- propriate programming. Ferguson, in criticizing the networks for t>enamg to wnat ne called FCC threats, said it was their right and duty to make in· dependent decisions. "Instead of doing so, they took the easy road and capitulated to FCC pre- ssure," he said. ROBERT ALDRICH, presi· dent of the Directors Guild, which was a plaintiff in the case, said his guild would ask for Wiley's r esignation from the FCC. Wiley repeated in Washington, O.C., what he had testified in court -that he never pressured the networks to adopt "family viewing." Arthur R. Taylor, former head of CBS, said in a phone interview from New York that he still believed in the concept and thought the decision will be over- turned on appeal. SACRAMENTO (AP)-A state survey findS that publicly owned hospitals lose money and private h ospitals make small profits in California. You are the one! . It also shows that the average hospital pa- tient spends 7.4 days and $1,107. but it costs hos pitals $1.231 in expenses, including pharmacy, X-ray and laboratory costs. You are No. 1! Get your S14 00 on free girts from Huntington Center JC Penney NEWPORT tJ CENTER. FASHION ISLAND STOIE OM&. Y HEW GARDEN SHOP HOURS! Sat. 8:30 to 6 p.m. -Sm. I 0 to 5 p.m •. SCHEFRERA ACTINOPHYUA NOW 999 • Grow in full sun along the coast or partial sun. • Can be adapted to indoors • 1 O inch tub. • SA VE S6o.oo· · do witb the lilm she calla the greatest motion pie· In Harbor THE CALIFORNIA tu.re ever made ln America -"Gone With the 2nd District Court of Ap-Wind." The movie ls scheduled for airin1 by NBC. LOS ANGELES CAP) peals ruled Thursday com)?lete with commercial lnterruptions. -The first bulk ship-that the Charles Manson For this mm to be shown in sucb a crude man- ment of highly volatile Ii· trial judge who convict· ner in this Bicentennial year is, l think most in· quefied propane gas ed Farr of contempt sensitive and very foolish," (LPG> has been brought must dismiss the finding said the actress who won an into Los Angeles Harbor or else "show cause" in Academy Award nomination for under strict security court why he should not her performance as Melanie in safeguards. be ordered lo do so. the 1939 epic. T h e S 6 O • f o o t De p u t y c 0 u n t y Miss De Havilland said she Femwood, a Norwegian Counsel William Stewart turned down flat a request from tanker bound from said his of-NBC to introduce the lilm on its Skikda, Algeria, brought 'r i c e • telecast. The movie will be its 6,720,000 gallons of li· represent· shown in two parts, Sunday and quid propane into the i n g Monday nights. In addition to ~ harbor at 10 p.m. Thurs-Superior the commercials, Miss De DEMAVILLAND day. The propane was c 0 u r t HaviUand objected to NBC's splitting the movie at a chilled to min us 47 J u d "g e point later than the intermission called rot when it degrees and kept under c h a r 1 es was shown In theaters. pressure. Older, will ------------------- THE GAS WAS being not volun- d el iv ere d to the tarily dis· Petrolane storage facill-uu m i s s the ty in San Pedro. case. He said he would "LPG is hazardous. we present legal arguments certainly recognize that at a Nov. 23 hearing urg- ract. But we know to the ing that Farr's convic- best of our ability that Uon be allowed to stand. we've taken all the safe· The ne wsman faces quards necessary to han· the ~~sibility of a five- dle this cargo " said day Jail term and $500 G 1 en n Jayne ~, Los fine if Older prevail~. Angeles Fire Depart· F~r: served 46 days m ment battalion chief. jall m 1973 before he was BARBOR PILOTS r eleased pending ap- guided the Fernwood to peals. . its berth at a time when Older, w~o presided at no other large ships were the 1971 trial or Manson under way, and harbor and three WOn\en patrol boats allowed no followers, ha~ .vowed to small craft to move in keep Farr ln Jail until he the vicinity of the tanker. reveaJed tne source or a UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, IRYINE RETURNING THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11th Cecil LyUe, pianist .. Fmi lap ti Odler llckes" Winner ot a grant to research and pertorm piano music of Afro-American composers. utttlzfng musical styles native to black music, including a collection of Rags by Scott Jophn UCI CONCERT HALL-8:00 P.M. $3.00 general. $2.00 students. $1 50 UCI Students. Tickets available now 1n the. ASUCI Box Office (714) 833-9378. Gateway Commons, Monday-Friday between 9 a.m. and 4 p .m. and 1 hr. before perlormance. Unreserved sealing. For further Information ~•II Committee for Arts at 714-833-6378. · SAVE s20. ONE DAY ONLY. SAT., NOV. 6 I 0 A.M. • 5 P.M. ONLY • LARGETHIOW AWAYIAG • IHSTAMT IUG ADJUSTMENT LOW PILI TO DEIP SHAG. • CONVllTS EASILY FOil CUAHIHG AnACHMEMTS Tools -7 Pc. SJ<J95 IMOD. I 017) IM. •24• Tools -4 Pc. SCJ9S IMM. IOJll 19f)'lf" SCISSORS SHARPENED REGUlAR SCISSOR'S •••• 6 '/¢ All Work Done While Y~u Shop Ground to a perfect uniform edge by experts with the finest commercial equipment available. Bring in all your scissors. Your neighbor's tool All work done while you shop. IM STORE DEMONSTRA TIOH SATURDAY, HOY. 6, 10 a.a .. s p.tn. GE TOAST-R-OVEN™ " deluxe GRAPE IVY The Hoover Dial-A-M atic with TOAST·R·OVEW' toaster Model T93B ~' 6 inch size pot . R41CJ. 5.99 NOW 399 • Good _house plant for medium light. • Luxurious foliage that can be trained on a trellis or allowed to hang. HARE'S FOOT FERN (Po'.ypodium) NOW 2"9 • Mounted on a 6''><8" board so It can hapg against a wall or Post. • Excellent'Plant fOr the patio or can be adapted Indoors. Reg. 6.99 *Quantities limited on ad merchan ise Power Drive s149 95. (Mod. U6007) USlYOUR •• , .. ,Al ... .: ...... . CUllt CHD &...·-··-·I _ ... __..., !-: Nrw~1rt .C . t: (\:ntcr • .,. ---~ . ;; llloOel Ta/JI 2HOC • Automatic M'I for baldftg rolls, biscuits. pota1oet1 Cllsetoltt. Saws energy. • &rolls hamburom. rteal(.11ot "*• clllcken, Hlfood. • Auto1111tlc 4 $llct toasttr toasts Miii SIOH It once, alllrtl otl when tout la rtad'f. • • Automatic Top Brown feature IOI melUflO. Ctlsplng Of toasting just tht 1oPI Of foods,. $4695 LIST -S57" HARBOR VIEW CENTER . 1614 MacArthur Boulevard Newport Beach 644-8570 • Automatic 2 allce toaster, pop-open door. • Energy saving oven for potatoes, biscuits, etc. • Top Brown setting for open sandwiches, snacks s341s us:r -$40" • .:16 ... D 1\ILY PILOT EDI ~'ORIAL P GE • p . , ·Votes bi .Si)Qt ligltt : >- An ~lected oCClcial who accepts a gift valued at more than $200 can't, by law, vote on an issue involv- ing the ~ivcr for six months. Th:.it scctwn 01 conflict-of.interest regulations ap· droved by Culiforn1u 's voters two year s ago makes J;COS('. UnfcH'lunut~l.Y. campaign contributions, no mat- ter how large, ~rcn 'l considered gifts. Cunscqu e ntly, un office holder may vote on an is-. speclific ad\.ice as\'> what.will be acceptlbte. ~ep.ts rnust1M.given subStantlal trainingtn writing w1£h pro· per construction, s pelling and punctuation, and in the analys is of literatw·e. Ocficicncy in Englis h can be a serious handicap to stude nts atlcmP,ting colleg~-level work. The trend tn de-emphasize the subject in high sc.hools h as con- tinued long enough. The university's plan to use its admission require~ ments le ver t o upgrade high school English programs SUl' involving tht' ca1npaign donor's interest the s ame d<1y ttw donation is rt•cl'ivcd. is timely and well advised. -- In the cusc of ne wly elected Orange County· Su1wrvisor Philip Anthony, his $200,000 campaign wa s, to a I urge degree, financed by the same d evelop- mL·nt, union •rnd lobbyist interests ttyit have heavy st,1kl•s m county decisions. fn Anthony's ruse, he'll soon be in the position to dist ttt~·brcaking votes on land use issues that have t>ec·n IJdor c the Board of Supervisors ror rnonths. The b:-ucs invoh·e the fin uncial interests or those who J>0urcd thousands of dollars into Anthony's cam- ~i(!n. " E' l'r) on e will be watching how he votes when "s as kl•d lo cast the critical h e-breaker. Academic Action The d et'l1m• of acad emic achie vement at the stcon<lur:i-:-.chool lt•vl'I sccrns to generate much talk but very little action. Now lbc University of California has decided to ahi vc a direct approach to one part of the activate u <lircc t approach to one part of the prob- lem the one thut now makes it necessary for up to legc tune to learning to ha ndle the English language. The uni versity will tighten its admission r equfre- rdcn~ fOJ· English....w.ith.spccia.Lemph~ w:titing. No longer w ill high school journalism, s peech or ctf arna classes be acceptable s ubs titutes for tradi- tional classrs in F,n~lish. i\ncl hig h :-.chool principals h ave been given Van ishing Delica cy One of the tastier denizens of local coastal waters. the abalone, h as been doing a disap~aring act in re· cent. y ear s-as abalone fanciers may have s urmised frorn prices ranging up t o a startling 512 a pound. See m s too many seafood gourmets dis covered the s low -growing. succulent charm encased in that at· tractive s he ll. The s tate Department or Fish and Game has set out to rescue the abalone by proposing a five-year ban on its r e m oval from the area extending from Palos Verde Point to Dana Point A ban on commer cial t ake of abalon e already has been imposed by tt~e st ate, but the fish a nd gamers want to extend the ban to sports fishermen who like to dive for the rare mollus . • They argue that-t. r e's plenty of ~balone left in more northern waters nd the local survivors need lime to r estore ijleir pop ation. . Sport s divers coo end th'e goal can be ac- complis hed by slmpJY'sh rtening the present 10-inonth season on a ba lo~. tho more pessimistic say it neve r will be possible ti> r e ote the enormous abalone population oflwoorthre e~ades ago:-. - There '11 be no decis n until after a final Dec. 10 h earing, but whichev way it goes, tHe outlook is poor for local abalone f s .. · \I f..A I th r~om"My, q ' ~~· fol lowihg me. hotl:'e." Lawsuit Epidenric Delllahd s Treatment Dear G~o1ny Gus Red Tape v~ Justice JJo vou M11nl't1n11:.s get the idea thJl wt• ;1n• ;d 1 ~u1 nl;! each other ~d~·;1lh " And, c111w1>1nm1t<mlly, :Ji<l1 n1• thl' ('tillntrv down the dPCll 11 '/ 't•opl•· who ltkl' -.1t·W~ ::-Ul' pen· i'il' who like bui ldings. People ~o llkl· ;111)s ~\f <' pl'opll· Wf1o will nol , .. lh1•111 h1• H 0\ Id l' cl. C!w H•r:. °'U(.' dO<'t ors Lall' I>. lhl'\' l'Vl'll ~4!vc twcn ~u · I O.J.: I ht• O(' c -.i s 1 u n ,1 I law vl'r R t· m111 ~dt•rm1·11 -..u1· lif1· t"n<1nts and lal•· llnants ..,u1• lhl goo'c that lmtl lht•ir p.1rtll'Ular i.:oldcn ~i: J\1hl 1<• trll• n·•l l .1w,1·r.., htig:.ite in 11 ... 11;11111• of l.u-i.:1· und Un· 1UJ!1 'tul d.l',,,., Thl·r1· '"almost rw rn11rn1•nt wh1•n lhom •• md-. of In· di ans, or ol h1•r ugg r1 t•Vt•d • Hi-..st•s. .trt' not 1 n the court'>, If, u.i lh wHh n ut their ewa I{ owll•<ll(.A! • ~111 " l11nl{ ,1g(1 .a C0t4°\ \f::t1 ;, ... lt.-cl tu llt·rtdt• ¥ .. l'{t·l~t·r r1•derat 11!'1 ... 1111 , ar1• u 11<'onst1luti onal b<'<'.1u"" a' · lnw-<'ost hoo1>1ng" th 1 ' l' \ t· I u 1! 1 w h 1 I \4 s ., n d lh't·r1 111 •· 'l••l.111 tlw l'I\ ii R1~hls \Cl nl UHi .ind 1!168 • TUIS hlt'!l•ll.l.,lll''> I' bt•cc1mtnjl 1!p111t•rn11· !11 l h t· rc~lf'r.11 l1•g,1! ... yi-11 Ill. th" 1· ,,,.)11,i.I wtnl uf) 77 .-•rr1 •11I fr11r11 11110 111 l9f.O ll 16111111•11 .m .11lcl111onal IOG pt>r('t•nl uy 1•1;;; Th•• nurnb<'r 11( ft'Cler.11 .1p1u·ll,1ti• < .1 c ' .1lm1r ln1>l<'f1 1n tht• past tl1•1 .uh• 'tlw .1ppell.tl1• C'flllrt 1 n1' r ... 1,111.il~ .1rl' rdu~ 1 rig I 11 h1 ,1r '··r :ii t1rgurrwn1' and .11"1• 111111'1! ~11111111;.inh "" ca'<'', rdu,1nJ: 1 • dt'l1~1 r w.nllrn c1p1 nl<>ns CHAR LES McCABE The U.S . Supreme Court de· cides a host of mighty important cases by NOT decidil'lg them. In the recent Fre.sno Bee First Amcndtn-.$nt case, the large is- sues r~ained unresolved jµst bee aus~ Che higb court refused to hear them. Tin:RE can be no doubt lhal lbls inc:r~ase in lawyering is parUy due to the fact that the poor have le-arned that justice also exists for them, and that there are l;Jwyers who are will· ing lo plead the case or the poor for h tUe or no recompense. or for federal monie ... supplilod for such purposes. But the swollen legal system is wbal it 1s largely betausc so manv matters arc left to the court:,. and their officers that arc )lQl prbperly court matters at all. Wh<tt(Uly need$ a l;,iwyer to work out a rbula.ne r e al estate deal, or -a i.i rnple divorce, or an uncontest- ed will case? There are m alters of fact and not of law th at could and should bt' removed fr om th~ court 11ystem. A staunch advO<'ale of th1~ particular reform is Robert Jl Bork, the U.S Solt t'1tor · c;enl·ral. Bork estimates that the fC'der al d1str1ct courts could cul :x>.000 <'USt's a year from their a~enda by transferring to special administrativl' bodies disputes tn\'Olv1ng Snc1al S<'curity cl rums. t•nnrunmt'nlal pohry, consumer product safoty. rood stamps and pn:soner grievances ffiS :Freed a . 'Hit Man' 1 never would have thought you could elect a ~oobernatorial candidate in a presidential election. W ASHIN<lTON -Jin alleged ( ] "hit man" for the underworld was set free a year ago, we have -J ACK ANDERSO~ just learned, because the In-.. 11 • A.~. Oloom1 Gu• commeM~ ~rt ••l>m1111d b'f roOorJ •nd oo nol n•ce••,nly reflocl IM view\ ot tfl• n•w''''''. Send 'your ,.,.. peeve loGtooJ'l"G" .. ~114 "''?'· ternal Revenue Service held back vital information that could whic~ have n_ow been cl't.ang~. ha.ve led to a murder conviction. reqwred Fa vis to get pnor ap· A key witness brought the in-prov al Ctom IRS head<.i,uarters JJl formation to ltt""e' fnS, which Washington. . I s pent three "This would not oql y help ffie courts, but help the litigants as well," said Bork recently. "After all, a federal judge is no better qualified than some other ' µuthQrity t.o decide wbe~her some fe.Uotthas a paiahn Wt .back and 1s e11thled to his cl\im." -months pro- cessing it. By the lime all the red tape bad been cleared a, way, th• trial w ... • over. The wi\· TODAY we are approaching unlversal legal representation. This is likely lo have the same consequences, good and bad, as universal cduc5tion. There has arisen the id~a that lawyerS"and courts can seftle nearly ALL dis- putes. This is nonserv;ical aDd, in the ex act Sense, ill egat. · ness never made il to Shal<esp~ijr,e. in tHenry VI, would have had u~ 'kill all the l;iwyers. ·• There is 1J1Uch to be s.uid (or the Bard's view. Most lawyers. to lhls d ay ,Jur prefer t6 litigalc thari to accommodate". One of the s:roat advances of I he I aw has. been.. in the ad-, minislratio'o ·of the collective t>ru:gaining sysfem in. this coun~ tr)lt. lncreasi1'gly , arbitrator Ii are found to be more effective than courts in settling dispu~s.· especially id soctf factual mat- lers as w'ttges a nd hours. Arbitrators are increasingly be- ing used to settle bitter marriage disputes into uncontested ap· plicalions for divorce. There is more justice1' it seems' clear. in accommodation than in fighting in courts. T~e spor1~r we"ltqow it · lbe better off wt.-wittb!. court. W h e n we told tbe.prosec:utor the details of what had happened, he called · tbe I RS • ~b ungJers" and "bumbler.a.•• · . THE BJZ~RRE tale began in July, 1973, in~ Fort Lauderdalel F1a .• nigt"lt clwb. Ase rock bana· drowned out the gunshots. li' Cleveland man wu lured t~a pay phone aud murdered gangland-style. Two years htkrr, New York City police, acting on a tip, ar- rested Salvatore J\ipulone. He was returned to F1orida an~ charged with the murder. • Meanwhile, an IR$ int.elligeDce. agent named StevCJt Fa~ was. contacted by h reliable ihfor· mant. The informant dlsclosed· • lbat Ripulone had confided dur· ing a private conversation that he had committed the pay phone murder. • Favis U.:omedia"tely tried lo turn this important information over to tbe F ort Lauder.dale authoritie~ Bill IRS regulations,• FAVIS WAITED thq!e month.S before UJe approval was finally granted. But it was loo late. Ripulone bad been acqiitted, and. he cannol be retried. Phil\p Shailer, who p~ec~e case, told us U\e Uts witneU .couJcS have led to a conviction. 1 We have now retra~ed the bureaucra(ic run-arouhd that Favis encountered. He requested permission in an Aug. 12, 1975, memo to arrange for hls infor. mant's testimony to be heard at the murder trial. Three weeks later, the request rece,ved tbe1 routine· approval ot Favis' superior5 in Flonda". The request arrived al the na· tional office in Was!.5·n on on Sept. 2. No act.fop was l ntil Sept. 22, Then a me · o ap· prov1J wa& drafted. AltsQugh the memo C()ntained only ttiree short parairJlphs,. it lQOk another nine ,days tdgetij. typed. Then, with the outcome of a "murder trial ~hangiag in the balance, the ihree ~agraphs were retyped tWice over"the next two days. TWO WEEKS after thft final typltig, the request wasaJ>proved by a patiopal tJranch chief. It was now-October 16. Two fnore I.Rs of.fiet.~s aJso •approved the memo. '.l'he'n a11otber IRS man sugg-ted..Jhal the memo be re- wordtd again. It was redrafted. The branch chief gave hls second approval on November 6. The other three IRS officials were alao.salisfied with it. The memo j;)ien was handed up to Lestet" Steln, a special assistant to the chief counsel, for a final clearance. By the time it reached Stein's desk, the memo already had been retyped live times. Yet in- credibly, Stelo disapproved the language, suggested·furtber re- vialon and seot the memo back to the betlnhing of th,e line. Then it bad (o be reapproved all over again. • Stein eventually gave his ble586 ing to the much-typed memo, anti it was forwarded triumphanUy to the Florida field offices on· Nov. 2L But unfortunately, Ripulono had been acquitted on Oct.17. ALTHOUGH it's rar too late to matter, here's the statement that Favis' informant would have re- peated on the witness stand. He told . the IRS. according to ln1 telllgence doc uments, that Ripulone was "a hit man for th~ organization. He's a sick man. "He was always trying to im· pr'6s me by relating to me the details of murd.ers be had com• mitted. He seemed to thrive Oil giving me all the details." The informant repeated th~ boasts he had heard rronif Ripulone, including an accountt about how he had robbed an, elderly couple in Florida. "When: they wouldn't t.eU him where they" kept their money," related the~ informant, "he held their bandsc to a hot &love ... Footnote: Internal Revenu~ Commissioner Donald Alexander has now revised his own earlier orders and has authorized IRS! agents to contact local police~ hereafter with this kind ot in· formation. I New Priorities Contribute tii Demise of Family ~ ' ~ An 1nt1.•rl•1>lu1 i;: lhtn.X occurs in tbc M<1ry Tyler Moore episode dunn~ whl<'h Ted. the anchor roan, and hi s wife. Geoq~ette. lhe angel puss, have their baby. Angel Puss ~oc!> into labor whlle they're ha' ing ct1nner at Mary's. There's no time to get her to the t¥lspital so she has the kid in Mary's bedroom alter which the doctor .ind ambulance arrive so that mother and <'hild may be shipped to the hospital Why? 1'herc's no medteal re- a6on lhal 99 out of 100 babies ha ve l o o c born in a h os pital Given the free and easy way that dru gs. anes thetics and over - pow e r c d equipment is USl.'d tn lhe maternity wards, the most that's ac- complished by huvlng a baby in tbe hospital is to increase t.l'I~ risk of subJlmlnal, hard·to·d•tfft brain damage • .But there are e<!onomic: rcason~t .. havlng nothlnc to do wUb me &ab)''s welf:lre, ror maklna tt practltal· lJ lm])Oss1ble lo ha~e a kid at bom~. Besides_ pro\'idm• ClJltonitn • • IMt medical industry, laavlJIC • bf lD a ~ital undencoret ' ·'·\Tt the idea that the supremely im· portant unit in our society isn 'l the faD).ily but the big institution. The big institution makes sure that mother. father' and child are kept apart and r~gulated in ac· cordance with the institution's needs. With the current slack in the baby business. some hospitals with a dearth cf maternity customers are offer- ing service specials, permitting members of Ufe ramily to reunite for longtt periods of time than had heretofore been allowed in a hospital. FROM BIRTH onward, the family is reduced. i«nored, minimized and damaged. Law, public. policy, the health in· surance giants combine to see that an American child's first days of life are spent in an im- personal environment among strangers. Our heirlooms, if we have any, don't include the beds we were born in, which are all identical white bospltalJobblea. ~t. kJddo, comes the day. care ~ter because granny has been carted off to a senior eitlMn'• center. The day.care ~ter II tar lrom home, thus dllprl..,_f the chlld ol any sense ot plate, and feellnta of stability and coaUnuity. Early disorient•· tJoe ad dcpersonalizaUon is UtMfUl preparation for buaing ~o tebool. Wberr or not thl;a pro- VO N HOFFMAN the serv\ces famiUes once'did. [ ) vented professions to' perform That's what happened to the lhree·generatlon family. Its members were detached, one cedure aids learning or prom\)tes tnterracial respect and amity, it should manufacture a person without any loy.alty, tta<liUon. or sense of community, a humanoid who ought. to malle an Ideal , employe. · · T!Je marvelous thiQg is that tP.e values and lraditiorus oC Ca..lnllY Ufe are still so strong that there ! aren 't nearly as many humanoids as one would ~uspect. We've been wounded by the pro- cess which has tumed the homes of America Into orphan asylums an<J. parents into domestic bureaucrats. Many of us go abOut paying money-to }ack~ shrlntts and evangelist lherap1sts so that we may "gel ba~k in touch" with our misnted s~lv~s. But th~ are also many millions who still have a strong center ttn<l.whq refuse, t.o the irritat1~tt of their employers, overtime so tb'lY f•n go home to their families. WHAT GETS priority in our society? The use oC human be· lngs to m organizallonu needs,' l.e. mandatory ~~tlfh€, or (am Illes? In a niutibn 'Ways we've elected to go the overtime route and to build yet more larg• oraanli4Uons staffed wtth more .• • •ii tg(~~ .. from the otber, and handed over lo specialists . We're mor~ aware ot th1s in re· gard to older people th.an we are with the young. lrf'stead of having a system or family allowances we've chosen to build "housing for the elderly" and equitl it with pbysiotberapist~. social workers. r~reation directors, nutrition· advi!ers, gerontologists and thanatologists. The same set-up is rapidly be· lng created for our children. Day-care centers are obvious, but. stop and think about s chool breaktast and lunch programs. . . Wicks y 1f K/ulntttlr mMt tel him I'm tumtlng 1ow,,;. ~· The decision was made not to use pubUc money and resources to help families continue to perform these functions but to tum two- thirds of the feeding of millions of children over to l?rofessibnals. mediocre quality. That's th best. It is far, far cheaper to have some sort of dlre<'l family grant-~ f11A program to build a mother ln·law apartment in the rear lb~ to pour It away for housing to the elderly. The family is th cheapest and the besl ad~ minlstralive unit, so let's kee Georgette's kid oul of the day care center. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT BY ANY standard of judgment the paid help does a poorer job at a higher cost.~eredo you want your cblld lo t and how? On lines. superv1 ed by civil atten- dants amid the noise and slops of the institutional setting or at home? Which will il be when you're 1in trouble? A friend or a relative, or those expensive stand-ins , the marringe counselor and the duly licensed, Hol>;•rt \ Wred. l'11bfuh1., boob psychotherapist? Thuma~ li<•••t•1/ ~.d1tor IJortxirn II rr1b1d1 Carter wlll find out that there Is l':ditonal f'ogt' t:ct1tor no way an HEW can be re· org anized to do the job Thr f-d11orial 1ia..ic orthc Daily • h Pilot Ht·k ~ to 1oform anrl "responsively•, to use t e vogue t.hmulofo rc•flrlrrs by prl"srnting word. At. this point ln Amertcnn on thl11pn1ott'1livers<' romllU'ntary civilization, we neltl)erknow llow on 1.ol1ic;s of 1ntrrr!)l by syndlcat• 1.0 train Jl&id personnel to ~CO umnlsti; t\nd Cllr\~tS, by pert'~ \hes8M!SOf'l4 of services J1Mvidln11 • forum for readers' nor bow to administer them vtew1' nnd by prc11entlng this through large institutions. The nc'r'Sflllflt'r'b opi nion~ and Ideas mixed partnership of govern-()fl <'Urrcnl \oples. The editottaJ men\. and pri v at.ie•seotor en.. opinion• of lh~ Dally Pilot np..,_.r tcrprbe works no better H only tn ttw rdftorl:.il c:oturnn _tf ... lop nr thr p11(l'. OPiftaoM ex11 shown by th recurrent bO!lpllal p1 e1>.~ed IJy uw columnists and and nursing hP.m~ sc:andals . rnrtoonl~I~ 11nd lt'tl1'r 'r'ntr"' a("C Wherexf'r govenirnent h~ con-lht•1r o'r'n and no \•utlorM"rnt•nl 0( tr1cted out to bave any or these lhelr \It'~" b. the Ou\ly PiloC nrv1cH pctfo'rme<t th~ most t11111ld bC! 11\ttrtc>d we've,ollco ls an abeenceofoul· Friday, Nov. 5, 1976 .r~ 91.ov•ble tb~rt.,••4-.-~-....--.-.·~~--...,,_,. f rlc1 • November 5. 1~76 CoPYfUGHt 1178 •EXPERT SERVICE ANO ADVICE ........ . BY QUALIFIED PROFESSIONAL SALESCLERKS DAIL V PILOT A •YOU SAVE MONEY .... THE FIRST PRICE MARKED •AMPLE FREE PARKING ON THE MERCHANDISE INDICATES THE PR ICE AD·JACENT TO ALL STORES •9000PAINT AND DECORATING ITEMS •EVERYTHING ALWAYS SOLD WITH AN UNCONDITIONAL MONEY BACK GUARANTEE FOR COMPARABLE QUALITY •... •THE SECOND PRICE IS YOUR COST •OUR LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICE •YOU SAVE THE DIFFERENCE!!! ON EVERY ITEM ... EVERY DAVI INTERIOR LATEX FLAT WALL PAINT TREMENDOUS SAYINGS DRIES QUICKLY TO A DURABLE FLAT FINISH •GOOD QUALITY •BRUSH OR ROLL •EASY TO CLEAN·UP WITH SOAP& WATER • 1-HOUR DRYING •WASHABLE I ~ COINUILE-···· -· :3es OUR · LOW PRICE GAL. 1 LB. PKG. STEEL WOOL c PR!:!,f!!!~!D ·~~~PER OUR 7 MSTYl.IS --1•s 52s -.-oos IEAIJTY ... PRICE TO ANY ROOM TO c ..... SOL. AOU SEE OUR COMPLETE WALLCDYERINS DEPT. lltE WEST'S LARGEST WALLCOVERING DEPARTMENT. CHOOSE FRO,_. HUNDREDS OF PATTERNS OF IN·STOCK VINYLS, FLOCKS, WEAVES• PRE-PASTED PAPERS ... OR ORDER FROM HUNDREDS OF Sl-ECIAL ORDER OICORATOR PATTERNS. POLYFOAM PADS HUNDREDS OF USES! e t 11~4 a72 IN. COMP. RETAIL 3.71 ~~l~E 199 EA. e 4 x 24 JI JSIN. COMP. RETAIL 5.89 .?:t1~E 219 1 EA, •2. 24 • 72 '"' COMP. RETAIL 5.119 ~~~E 299 EA. e 4 II( 24 x ?2 IN. COMP. RETAIL 10.9!> ~.~e 599 EA, l!J lit_ \:-111· ~~ .,~ __ .., _. . . . •1x72•84 IN. e7 IC 12 11 12 IN. COMP, RETAIL SOVA RES 81 9.95 ROUNDS OUR 695 COMP. RETAIL 39c PRICE EA. ~~l~E 25~A. e SHREDOED 5 L8. BAO 199 COMP. RETAIL 2.SS ' OUR PRICE EA. •SERVING THE PUBLIC SINCE 1939 A ·HUGE VARIETY OF.PAINT STANDARD BRANDS PAINT CO. CARRIES THE WEST'S ·LARGEST SELECTION OF PAINT & PAINT ACCESSORIES ...... IN HUNDREDS OF POPULAR COLORS ...... FOR HUNDREDS OF USES ...... ALL AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES! •INTERIORS •EXTERIORS •FLAT •SEMl·GLOSS •HIGH- GLOSS •OIL BASE •PLASTICS •RESINS •VARNISHES •STAINS •SEALERS •THINNERS •UNDERCOATS •PRIMERS •CLEANERS ~TERIOR LATEX SEMI-GLOSS ENAMEL· COIPUAIU ::ess 98 OUR PRICE GAL •USE FOR WALLS & WQ90WORK •AN EXCELLENT PAINT AT A I I LOW PRICE •bURABLE ""' I • SOFT GLOW FINISH ..... ---··• ~~· "~,./ • SCRUBBABLE . WHITE, OFF.WHITE & COLORS ALSO AVAILABLE IN QUARTS CABl1NET HARDWARE ·~~~~~L;~~~~N OF SMAlt. CHROME KNOBI LARGE CHROME KNOBI CHROME PULL •No. P111·26 •No. P1 13-2e •No. P115-26•4 IN. COMP. RETAICM(. COMP. RETAICN{ COMP. RETAll,;JM( OUR PRICE 19c EA. OUR PRICE 29c EA. OUR PRICE~9t EA. MOSAIC CERAMIC JILE ·~·~ CIMl•E •GLAZED PATTERN llflllll 100 •RANDOM LIGHT & rtllCl DARK TONE COLORS •1II 1 IN. TILES •STANDARD SIZE SHEETSOUR (APPROX. 12 II 12 IN I •MOUNTED ON GAUZE PRICE ------- PLUS 55 GLAZED PATTERNS I ~~:~.~~~·~~HESIV& OUR PRICE 69c TO 1. 75 EA. OUR PRICE 5 .69 OAL. COMP. RETAIL T.00-TO·J:.iO. COMP. R£TAIL.~ EXTERIOR-IN ERIOR ONE COAT HOUSE PAINT STUCCO-MASONRY & WOOD LATEX PAINT COllPARAIU RETAIL 1195 PRICE OUR, PRICE •UIElHAOUGHOUTTHE HOUSE •IMAATCO..OAS & PATTEANS OUR PRICE 98 GAL. • 'OAM B.ACK!D•LONO W!AAINO 1°"" CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE TIP TOE®Hl-LOW CARPETING . . 9 9 •lWO TONED COLORS •USE THROUGHOUT THE HOUSE •LONG WEARING •12 FT. WIDTHS •JUTE BACKED so. Vb. 100% NYLON ·1 PILE SPECIAL ORDER OPEN 7 DAYS & 5 NIGHTS · MONDAY THAU FRIDAY. I A.M. TO 9 P.M.-SATURDAYS, i A.M. TO 6:30 !J.M •• SUNDAYS, g A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. Sa~~AQ coA-.m .. v ,Qf9.!'9• 1 BLK. SO. OF WAANEA •OELHll 1 81.K. EAST 0~ BAOOKHURST (BETWEEN TAFT & l<ATELLA) TELEPHONE 17141 546-41117 TIL"PH<>Hl 1114" \U-1507 Tll.EPHOHE 17141 •-23111 la .Habra CORNEA WHITTIER 8i IOAHO 2 BlKS. E. OF llEACH HACllNOA TeUPHONt 12131 tit llOI A B DAIL y PILOT Friday. November S, 1976 nm F .um v cmcus· By BU Keane New Film: ~Real Story' Accused Drops Motion MME (AP>-"l'm not trying lo con· vert anyone," says Franco Zeffirelli or his latest and certainly most con- troversial work, a television epic on the lite of Christ portrayed as "Jewish from head to toe." With an ecumenlcal cut and ChrisUan and Jewish religious advisers, Zefrirelli and his crew have spent $12 million in what is billed as an attempt to strip away the legend and separate the man Jesus from the myth. "I'M OFFERI NG WHAT we think is the real story,:• said the Italian director, who ~not to international Came with his •·Taming of the Shrew" and "Romeo and Juliet." Entitled "The Llfe of J esus," Zef- firelli's epic will be televised next year in the United States (NBC). Britain and Italy as s tarters, serialized in six episodes concluding on Easter Sunday. Zeffirelli hopes his epic breaks new ground in portraials or Christ as seen in the more than a dozen films made on his life ranging from ''King of Kings" to ••Jesus Christ Superstar." THE NEW VERSION, for instance. pictures the Virgin Mary, played by Olivia Hussey, s uffering labor pains. It also shows a graphic, bloody crucifixion scene. · ''The crucifixion was a shattering, gruesome act. offensive lo human me. And we have pictured it so,•' the director said. MOVIE'S 'CHRIST' Llttle-known Powell UPI,,-. ciples and in other supporting roles. They include Lord Laurence Olivier as Nicodemus, Rod Steiger as Pontius Pilate, Anne Bancroft as Ma ry Magdalene. Peter Ustinov as Herod the Great. BUT FOR CHRlST, Zeffirelli cast a r e· latively unknown British actor, Robert Powell. who jumped from the rock musical ''Tommy" and "Mahler " to the • Zefftrel1i empb..U. lb.at bll ._,lon Ls an atte)Jlpt to weave an hhtorlc;al taJ)estry, not simply a Chrlt.ttan legend, and therefore depicts Chril1 as Jewish. sonfelhing obviously known but not always stressed. Christianity was invented Jong oft.er his death," the director said. "Christ w as born and died an ~.x J ew.'' sald producer Vincenzo Llbella, who produced another religious · epic for TV on the Llfe of Moses. ZEPFISELLl'S QIRIST is pictured as a victim of the Jewish establishment because be threatened the status quo, altboqb actually put to death by the Romans. ZefflrelU said t he two rabbis who served as advbers had no complaints with the version, although some Roman Cat.holies have objected to the scene of Mary iD labor. Zeffll'elli is a Roman· Catholic. The man who played Christ. 31-year· old Powell, s aid he hopes they were suc· cessful in touching on areas ignored ia previous versions. SAUNAS (AP) -Ina Garcia has withdrawn a motion for a change of venue to avoid delayint her retrial on charges of killing a man 111he claimed helped rape her. The hearing scheduled on the motion in Mon-· terey County Superior Court lasted five minutes Thursday. The second trial is schedulf,11 to start bere Dec.6. ANNE KIRK, one or two public d efenders "You know what grandma always tcry11 'A handling the case, said wGshed pot M¥S bola.'" seeking to get the trial -------------------moved elsewhere would have delayed the pro- ceedings. Mrs. Garcia, free on $5,000 bail, was convict- ed in October 1974 of THI: second-degree murder • t bri "CHRIST DID N<rr go up elegantly and spent 15 months in rLUMllMG IUS ftg onto the cross. He wenfup in pain. I hope prison before an appeals .~:~~~c;. your Credit Card we got this across." co\lf't o verturne d her m.. _.. The TV viewer will rind the version as conviction. ·--· for $14 in gifts Stf'ric:e 111 YOU< At--C..U spectacular as the film company hopes it ''WE ARE going to M1ss10N v•!JO That'ulght, register In is innovative. make an attempt at get· "9nc."""°c.p1.i...,., cf, ......,.n with a u ..-er C r ·~ 0...-. J...,., ......... f\wr1• ~· -,.,_, For the temple o J erusalem, or in· ting a fair jury here," 495-040 I arge, B of A. Penneys stance, the company spent some $600,000 said David Tucker, the cosrAMESA orWard'aCtedlt Oard alone to convert an anqient fortress in other defense attorney. m6 N9WPOll B••d. and receive To tell his story. Zeffirelli cast some or the world's leading film stars as dis-role. Monastir, Tunisia. "She can't be a def en-642· 1753 Huntington Center's .~:a!:::l:ClllC.J.:Jir.11~•:)..."i.~.J~~~·~~ / dant the rest of her life. KITCHEN & IATH Nu~4:e~u1 l She wants to go back to REMODELIHCi membef'ahtp which entitles $49,100 a Year BrOwn's Pay Ranks896th SACRAMENTO CAP> -Gov. Edmund Brown J r.'s $49,100 annual salary ranks only 896th on the state payroll that is topped by a health science pro- fessor's $94,000 pay. The figures appeared in a California Taxpayers Association review of top state salaries. CAL-TAX REPORTED UNIVERSITY of California officials confirmed that ·a health science professor was listed at $9<1,000 for 1975·76, but would not relerise the professor 's name or school. Under an arrangement at UC medical school s, some teachers who were hig h-paid doctors in private practice keep offices at UC hospitals and keep a portion of the money from the patients they tr .!al. A total of 288 UC health science pro- fessors, 565 state judges, 41 college or university administrators and one state commission direc- tor earned more than the governor, the as- sociation said S t ate $upreme Court Chief Justice Donald Wright is the highest paid state public orhcial at S66.869 a year. an 8 5 percent or SS.260 increase over last year. JUDIC I AL sa lari es have WRIGHT chm bed dramatically because they have been tied tn the cost of living index, but a bill signed by Gov. Brown this year will clamp a one·year freeze on Judge~. pay and impose future limitations on raises. 4 Hontes to Open To Benefit PT A Four Newport Beach homes will be opened to the publil' :"ov. 12 for the third annual home lour of the Corona dcl Mar High School PTA. The cost is $5. and proceeds will go to scholarships and to support of the Spinnaker, the Baccalaureate tc:i und grad night TO BE VIEWED ARE m~ Link Mathewson family home on Harbor Isle, a home in Big Canyon owned by J oan Neville. Mr. :ind Mrs. Lee Sammis' home on Linda Isle, and the Shnrecliffs home of : Mn. Edgar B. Witmer, which overlooks the beach at Little Corona. The walls of the Mathewson home are lined with fabric ci nd the beams are from an old bridge in Wisconsin. Rugs in the master bedroom and entry : hall were designed for the family and loomed in Hong Kong. Neville has modeled her home after the Coun· try European style. It includes architectural features such as anUquc armoire doors and a French marble mantle. Furnishings are English and French anUques. ANTIQUES FROM THE 18th and 19th cen· · turies are a part of the Sammis home, as a re a col· lection or sailor!! wool pictures. The folk art form was created by English sailors, using old sail can· vas and yarn. • • Tickets are available at the homes the day or the event or m ay be obtained by caUing Phyllis Baker al640--0790. 'Hillbilly Preside nt' Defended NASHVILLE, T enn. <AP> -Fried chicken every S unda y a nd "Green Acres" on all- n i g ht t e I ~ vision ? Nashville the nation's capital? ll 's a ll suggest- ed in a n ew country music song, "Hillbilly in the While House." "That's what we need in the White house -a hillbilly," s aid J e re Raymond, the m an who recorded the new coun-try song. "A regular guy. who works." THE SONG was writ· ten last spring before Jimmy Carter of Plains, Ga., became the front· runn e r for t h e Democratic nomination. . There's nothing in the song directly suggesting Carter. "Al aba rna Gov. Wallace was still in the race then and I think Sen. J ackson of Washfogton was the front-runner," said Raymond, 34, who wrote the song along with· Alan Ray. OTHE R PROMISES With a billbllly president, according to the song, in- clude citizens band radios in pickup trucks, country music for disc jockeys to play and 2> cent beer. Country m usic singer Dolly Parton would be sent to Spain as an am· hassador and former partne r P orte r Wag- go ne r would go lo Portugal. And ''freaks" would be made to cut their hair. SOME STATI ONS have refused to play the son g, cl al ming it is political. "Butt hey play "r ecord<> supporting rape, alcohol, a dultery and even murde r." Raymond said. ''The closest thing to that ln my song is beer for a qu art e r . This w o uldn 't o ff e nd anyone.'' RAYMOND· WHO'S never recorded a hit, believes Carter sup- porters will like the re· cord and not resent the word ''hill billy." "He (Carter ) projects a country image," Raymond said. "He's not exactly the executive type. Besides, a hillbilly is a f a r me r from Mlchigan." • HOUSE PL.A..,S 24" BOX TREES 15 GAL. TREES & SHRUBS 5 GAL. TREES & SHRUBS WHOLESALE BOOK PRICES S.D. Wholesale Grawers 11622 WARNER AVE. FOUNTAIN VALLEY PHONE 546·3429 DAILY 9 AM·S PM S1L----· at "os:n;ta livinganormallife." FRffESTIMATIS you tot14 1n freeglfts. f UJW ll 1 '.I:' &t Mrs. Garcia was a.. o ... °'..,..,... Llmltad to first 15,000 An award-winning television movie dealing with charged in the 'March ANA~~~~M~:~:flC£ to register. Get mental bealth.''The""'"agileMlnd,"willbeshown at 1974 fatal s hooting of "•-""E•t •• •·u.. yourathentell r £ Miguel Jiminez, whom 772·3470 .,.,~ a friend. Beach 7:30 p.m . Wednesday at South Coast Community she accused of helping =--------' Blvd. & Edinger H06pital auditorium, 31872 Coast Highway, South Louis Castillo rape ber. at San Diego Fwy:. Laeuna.Admissionisfree. ______________________________________ _ The film is narrated 1-----------1 by Joanne Woodward. Its s creening com- memorates the first an· nlversary of the hospital's mental health unit. After t he movie, John Burnham, m edical director. and Charles Head, mental health pro- gram coordinator, will lead a discussion. You are the one! You ore No. 1! Get your S14 00 in free gifts from Huntington C.enter .. ART LEAGUES ART SHOW · NOV. "th Thru 7th. South Coast ?f aza 10 Fairway Ho~s for Immediate occupancy at Ironwood. f! • Ironwood Country Club has only JO of the prestigious Falnt'OIJ Homes left to sell. Splendid views; quality construction; at prices we can never hope to dup/icotC' Here Is your chance to enjoy this entire desert. season in Palm Desert.'s most attractive location. Ironwood Country Club is situated on on eleuoted plateau in o coue formed by the Santa Roso mountain range. ResidenL' enjoy a uorlety of spectacular ulE?t.IJ$ and a sense of openness that surpasses anything to be experienced down on the desert fla ts. Our new building program. tvhich includes a second lB·hofe go lf course and a $10 million new community of homes, is now underway. We are also expanding the facillUes of the Ironwood Tennis Club. Ironwoods most luxurious offering of 2 and 3 bedroom Fairway view liomes. From $88.500 to $106.500. Driue South on Portola Al)('nue In Palm Desert., just post tlie Living Desert Reserve. Telephone (714) 3460551 or write: 73.590 Do/ea Lane>, Palm Desert. Ca. 92260. Attention: Mr. A Po/mer. COUNTRY CLUB HOMES IN PALM DESERT Potm Sprtnos---~ Palm Desert '-----111 ~outh 2 mil""' on Po1tol1 In P.>lm Oesrrt. I ~~-----· ' . ' " . .. . . • . ' ' . * • .. > LM.BOfld Clea:Dliness, Godliness What's needed around here on theater marquees is a lllUe imagination. Why not show "Earthquake" and ''The Poseidon Ad· venture" and bill lhe double feature as "Rock and Roll"? Or show "Car Wash" along with "Jesus Christ, Superstar" and bill the pro· gram as "Cleanliness Next to Godliness"? ·That's all I qrn think of right now. Any others? All know that history records it was once a crime ror a medical student to dissect human cadavers. A client asks why. That fierce pro· hibition d ated all the way back to the Middle Ages when the c urious cutters discover ed that man did not lack a rib as everyone had been led t.o believe by the biblical story of the crea- tion of Eve. QUERIES FROM CUENTS Q. "I know the world's longest gorge is the 217-mile stretch of Gr and Canyon down the Colorado River in Arizona. But where is the world's deepest gorge?" M,000 State Votes Big 'Victory' Bash For Libertariam By &OBERT BAKKER Ol llM Dall., l'l ... tuft Members of the Libertarian Party held a victory celebration In Los Angeles following Tuesday's election. Libertarians received S,345 votes in Orange County and a total of 54,000 throughout California. At most , they expected to receive only lh million to a million votes nationwide. Yet David Be r gla nd , a Huntington Beach residenl who ran as the party 's vice presidential candidate, said the Libertarians had reasons to celebrilte. In a post-election summing up, he sai d that the Libertarians made great s trides in the campaign lo gain national recognition . • Oedgllng Libertarians bope to take the place of the Republicans ln the 1980 presidential elec:llon. "This election went a long way ln developing the Libertarian Party as a viable vehicle for the future. "We've made the public aware of the existence of the party and that it offers the only alternative for people dissatisfied with the traditional two parties," he said. "We've rung the chimes a tinkle. Do I regard the vote results as a setback? Good lord, no." Bergland was the runnin& mate of presidential candidate Roger MacBride of Vlrginla, an author, farmer and e<>-creator or "The Little House on the Prairie" television series. .. REASON TO CELEBRATE Oevld Berglend DAIL V PILOT A9 Scout Fete . 1~7 Sigrwps Sought · · Ora"nge County Boy Scouts interested ln attend· ing the um NaUonlll Scout Jamboree sbould pick up applications now, according to Jim Decker, Orange County Council'• actlviUes chairman •• The 1977 jamboree will l4ko place Aug. 1·10 at Moraine State Park in Pennsylvania. The Orange County Council plans to t ake 180 scouts and 20 scout leaders on a tour to the jam· boreebeginnlngJuly2S, lm. The trip, whlch will cost $7M, wlll include stops in New York City, Wasblntton, D.C. and Get-, tys~urg. To attend, a boy must be at least 12 years old 3nd a First Class scout by April 1, 1977, and cannot have.reached his 18th birthday by Sept. 1, 1977. He must have earned awards in blk.ing, camping, first aid and cooking. Applications can be picked up at the La Palma Street Service Center in Fullerton and lhe Bear Street Center in Santa Ana. A. Hell's Canyon, Snake River, Idaho, at 7,900 feet deep. A. "How Jong has it been since a Russian husband or wife could get a divorce simply by maHing a postcar d an- •'We appeared on ballots in 32 'States and we think that we definitely are the party of the future. We look forward to fielding a full slate of candidates in all states in 1978," he said. The two men ran on a platform calling for s trict respect for individual righ t s, a non-interventionist fore ign policy and a free-world economy. Among other things, they called fo r repealing all victimless crime l aws and ending government prying into citizens' private affairs. nouncing that intention to the partner ?'' A. Just 59 years. After. that, the divorce laws over there started to tighten up. Q. "If I spend 10 hours on the road driving at the 55 m.p.h. speed limit, bow far would I travel with my eyes closed because of blinking?" A. Figure about44 miles. One out or five women stJU unmarried at the age of 24 never get married. PLAT FORM SOLES Those shoes with· Che ridged platform soles m ay look dandy, but they put an un- natural strain on ankle , legs and hips. Or so say the medicos. Contention is girls who wear same long enough may wind up strolling in a slightly awkward manner, stiffly, as though they'd learned first how to walk on frozen cat- tle crossings. New Guinea tribesmen for years believed the world to be no more than five generations old. That's because they had no written his- tories. All stories of bygone times were word- of·mouth. As the elders died and memories faded, the five.generation timespan notion re- mained constant. Next time you walk past a glassed-in monkey at a zoo. please note the glass isn't there to protect you. but rather the monkey from whatever germs you happen to be cart- ing about with you. · Wou l d you say a w oman who tapemeasurcs 37 ·25-35 has the ideal figure? Harold Minsky, the burlesque expert, thought so. At IC?as t, those were h is preferred measurements for the young, ladies he de- corated to go on stage. Addreu mail to L.. flt. Boyd, P.O. Bo:c 1560, Costa Meta 92626 Deatlu Elsewhere FRANKURT, West Germany (AP) -Dean Dixon, 61. a black American who left the United States 27 years aao and established his reputation as a sym- phony conductor abroad, died Tbursday a t a hospital in Zug, Switurland, • the Hesse Stale Radio reported. and the 28th chief of the Clan MacLeod , d ied Thursday, her grandson reported . ETLAN. Va. (AP) - lames E. Gorcloa, 85. the nation's first draftee of World War I. died in a Veterans Administration hospital, according to re· lalives. The par ty appeare d. o n Tuesday's California ballot as independents. Bergland decl ared that the Bergland, who ~ an attorney with a practice in Newport N••• trat1qortatlon f For a..ilied Ad ACilON Call A Deit, Pht AM!Mr '42·5'71 Get your s 14.00 In tree gifts from Huntington Center Retired Officers Start Chapters Four new local chapters of the Retired Officers As· sociation have been started in Orange County. The new chapters have become possible because or the large number or military retirees living in Orange County, according to Tom E. Brown, president or the Orange County Chapter Pair Join Resource District Agricultural engineer John W. Brown and citrus grower Jean P . La Couaguc both have been elected lo four-year terms as directors of the Orange County Resource Conservation Dis trict. In final vote tallies re· ported We dn esday. Brown collected 69,222 voles. La Couague 47,183 and businessman A. John Terrell of Newport Beach 32,roJ . Orange County electioo officials said the vote wa~ lo elect two or five direc- tors on the district's gov- erning board. The district deals with resource and open i:;pace land conser vation. It was created sever a l years ago by combining lhc f o rm er San Juan Capistrano and North Orange County Soil Conservation Districts, county offi cials said. PITY: PA.TE VANISHES TOULOUSE, France (AP) -More than 2,000 cans or pate de fole gras and 250 pounds of un· canned pate, valued at $26.000, wer e stolen from a ractory near Toulouse. ortheROA. The new chapters in: elude the Golden West Chapter, which covers Huntington Beach and vicinity and the South Coast Chapter, covering San Juan Capistrano, Sa n C le m e nte and Laguna. T he North Orange County Chapter serves An ah eim, Fulle rton, Brea, Buena Park and Placentia, while the Los Alamitos Chapter covers Los Al amit os , Seal Beach and Cypress. The Orange County Chapter will continue lo serve the entire coun- ty. Retirees m ay belong to it, to their local chapter, or lo both . For more information, contact Col. Donald E. Bailey. 538-6509. Flu Clinic 'Hours Set The American Red Cross West County Ser vice .Ce nter i s s ponsoring Swine Flu Clinics on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. un· W further notice. · Inoculations will be available to the general public 18 years and over, including senior citizens, at no charge. Call 898-3!>47 for an ap- pointment. The service center is located ay 7571 Westm inster Ave., Westminster. Take your pick of tire packages. They're all wrapped op at great prices. Your choice packages. ft Polyester cord Steel belted radial r '.2 ~trong. ·mooth riding, Golden Falcon polyester cord tires. 2 precision iwhecl balancc.- 2 brand new tire valves 4 Golden Falcon steel belted rad ial whitewall tires. 4 precision wheel bal ances. 4 brand new tire valves 4 tires expertly mount ed 2 tires ex pert ly mounted any siLe listed Plus expert fron t end alignment. any siL.e listed A78·13 E78·14 F78·14 G78 -14 G78·15 H78-15 ER78·14 FR78·14 GR78·15 HR78·15 GR78·14 2 FOR 4FOR 1.75 to S2.87 F.C.T. per me dependmg on tire size and weight. Whitewall' add SJ per tire $55 S2.1 l to SJ.47 F.E.T. per tire depending on ti re si.i:e and weight. $199 , Brake Overhaul ln~tall new brake lini ngs on whee l bearings: in\pcct master all ..t wheel : rebui ld wheel wheel cylinder: adju~t brakes cylinders on all 4 wheels: turn all 4 whecb: inspect all sea ls~ and true brake drum s: bleed, inspect all brake $48 95 n~~h and refill hydraulic sy~tcin hoses. Road test. Wit h new brake nu1d: clean, Disc brakes extra. • inspect and repack outer front Most America n Car~ Lube, .Oil and Oil Filter Car lubrication. oil cha nge and new oil fi lter. Mos t $7 using up to 5 quarts premium oil American Ca rs. The Broadway's Holiday Sale Orange Mall Phone 998-9490 TIR E AND SERVICE CENTERS Open 8 A.M. lo 8 P.M. l\londay through Friday 8 A.M. lo 6 P.M. Saturilay; Noon to S P.M. Sunday Newport Beach Huntington Beach Phone644·12l2 . Phone892·3331 Laguna Hills Phone 586-7630 ABERD EEN, Scoc.land <AP> -Dame F1era MuLeod, 98, or MacLeod, the only woman amo n g Scotland's S2 clan chiefs LAS VEG.\$ -""-"'•" li<eMI'> --------------------'---------------------------------------IS\"""""'• 1t•c:iudo O<t-rU 11.\H oe .. Al(ElllSOOM·MARVEV ---------• -G.tr•tll, 1t, •lld Sfoerry Lor.,,.. 11. belllflf Ll)Ollf>.t lleecll l .UTl«IHGUOM IVMltt.41. HOWi Corona del Mor 673-9450 Costa Mesa 646-2421't llLI. HOADW 4T MOITUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 McCOIMICI( MOHUAlllS Laguna Beach 494-941 5 l~una Hills 788-0933 San Juan Qipistrano 495-1776 ,ACIAC view MINOllAI. rAU Cemetery MortuatY Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport. Callfom1a 644-2700 P'HK FAMILY C:Ot.0"1AI. ~Mil.Al. HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 SMITHS' MOITUAIY 627 Main SI. Huntington Beach 536·15539 SMJTM TVnftll UMI OUR WHTCUFI CHAI"& Mortuary • • 1548·4888 427 E. 17th SI., Coste Mosa (lAIUC·GVYONMOltEL-°""Ght Gordo'I •l , -J••m•,.. Mati., 74, °"'"OC C.1>t\lr-1kacll EASTHAM D'AM8RO~I -Jenwps e-.... H. """ Elllel LOU•W, n. beth 111-oor• ee..:11. Deal h .Not Ires IOSWOltTH FRANCES M. BOSWORTH of N~wOOf"t ftt!•<l't, Catlfor"••• HSWd AWO N,,.,....O~r 4, t•1•. Su...i""d by ""' 111111><111d Arc111.,; d•UQl>lt•. CMolY'!I Mlcltel\011 OI R•dOftdO S.t<oll; Motllwr """· O A Rand•ll of Coloredo IY04"''· Frenll. A. Randall of O>*•: \I•'"'•''· Emme LteMlcdlofWI~. Eva Mlly Hugll•11 ol Colmt. Me<<I• Bt~bvrq of Wl\C .• Rull\ e. A.l""-11 of ColMedo. Allee I. l"'9fft of S... Ptd•o, Hiide P•tto11 of Color_., S..vk~ Tu-•Y. No.,...,11*, •,M J·oo PM, Pacllle 111 ... c ... .,., '"'"" ..... "'· Pe<ill< \/low ,,,,.morlal P•rl, '"'-1 Buch, C•. Pacific 11,~,. Mo'111*'y di recto~ ICltELLE WILLIAM H l(RELl..E Of ~ &-acl\. C:.lllo,..,la, IM\\e(I eway NoY. ...,tao, l. lt7• Svrvl ... d 0.. Ill• ..,.,,. Janie•. de .. qhter\, Jo1<t lAwis Of Tu\IM -Glor•• Sllward Of Nt_,r1 e.ac11. '°"· Wllllall'I M f(,Nll~of YOtb<I Linde; .. v1n qrandcl\llllrt11 .. 011 Ros.-ry I 00 PM Frldey, "•clflc View Olae>@I. Ntw-t hacl> l'Ullfral MA\\ !>alurday , 00 PM, Our L•dY ~ Ol An~h C...IMllC Cllurcll llllermem, Pe<lllc vi. .. Mtmor1•1 P•rk. Ne-1 -"· You are the one! You ore No. 11 Get your S 14 00 In free91ns from Huntington Center Pre-Holiday- Upholstery SOFAS & CHAIRS Featuring such well-known Imes as •Woodmark Chair (large selection) • Sherrill Upholstery • Stanton-Cooper • Marge Car•on •Henredon • Heritage • and many others Fine Furniture and Interior Design TOIUllANC• LAGUNA •IACN •SWPOllT ••&CH •M4• HAWTHORN• •LYD. M• ""™ COUT HWY. na? naTCUPP Dll. 371·'271 .-. .. 11t Ma4lOIO ALL REDUCED DURING THIS SPECIAL SALE 2 WEEKS ONLY ALL STORES OPEN FROM MON.-SAT. 8AM·5:30PM. ' t' I l AJO 01\ILY PILOT Fr1doy, November 5. 197e Stay Quiet Rape Advice Irks Women ST CLAIR SHORE.5, Mich. (AP) -Feminjsls here have denounced a mm being shown by local police that tells women not to scream or struggle if attacked by a rapist. The film, entitled "How to Say No to a Rapist a nd Survive," was purchased two months ago for S750 by police in this Detroit suburb for use in the department's crime-prevention program. IT SHOWS A TALK GIVEN last year to a group or New York college students by author Frederic Stor aska. 34, who believes women stand a better chance of escaping death and serious injury if they submit to r apists "We hate this film." said Doris Little, a representative for the . .Macomb County chapter of the Nati.onal Organization for Women. "We believe rapists love it." 0 In his film ed talk, Storaska says be committed rumself to com batting sexual assault nine years ago while a college student in North Caronna after wit- nessing an atte mpted gang rape of a teen-age girl. "llE'S A PROFITEER AND a showman," said Marilyn O'Rourko-Athena, who heads NOW's rape task force. "He doesn't have a degr ee and he bas never done any scientific studies on rape.'' Feminists also object to Storaska's tone during his lecture, claiming it is often nip and jol.ihg as he tells women to fe ign cooperation with the rapist and hope for an opportunity toflct:. ''An yone who follows Storaska's advise ... will get raped." Ms. Little said. "Immediate resistance is the key to avoiding rape, unJess the attacker has a lethal weapon." CITY OFFICIALS INSIST. HOWEV!R, that Lhe film is u:.erul and !iay they will continue to show it to interested grouf)l> "Who the he ll 's an expert"" said city ma nager Donald Harm "They Cthc fominists) simply have no case. Thcy'r<: playing the ~ame game as always looking ror publicity ... Harm said the film was shown to 40 female city C'mployes before 1t was purchased and that all thought 1t was beneficial. Laguna School's Pla~ Approved Working draw1n~s for a continuation s chool build· ing in the-Laguna Beach Uniried School District "ere appro\'cd hy the board of education this week. Construction of the 5150.000 project is scheduled to begin next January. with completion due by Sep· tembcr TllE 2,000-squan• fool bwldrng will ha\'C thrct• classroom-; and an of. f1ce. Built or wood frame and stucco, 1t will lnok 11ke a sk 1 lodi!<.' It will bt• built on tht• Laguna Bl•ac h llti?"h School &?round-;, on th(• cdgt• of th•' athletic field , behind t h (• has C'ba ll diamond Two thirds of the ... tructu n: \\ 111 l)(' huilt out on a -;lilt fra m1.· on•r a ..,lope' i\ 12-FOOT drck Wlll rl\ er h a n ~ •• 2 0 r n 0 l c.b"np The school wiU have forced-a ir heating but w ill not b e ai r · conditioned. Th t> pl a n s . b y a r r hitects William Rl urock and Partners or Newport Beach. are to he submitted to the state next we<'k for appro\·al. CONTI NUAT I ON school enrolls about 40 high sc hool students a yea r who h ave dis · c1pline or othl•r personal problems. Such students arc now ta ught in a dis· tnct-owned building on St. Ann's Drh·e . The buildin g , h owever , ---------doesn 't ro mply with "" ""'"'""""' WIH n ... ,,, .. I rn m i ~ r a ti o n a n d ~ a t u r a I i z a ti 0-n S c r ,. i c c H e a d Leonard F. Chapman .Jr. says he will sub- mit his rcsiginalion. to Jimm y Carter. Resign a ti o ns a r e standard procedure in exe c utiv e changeovers. stale earthquake stan- dards CP Unit Installs Officers The United Cerebral Palsy As sociation of Orange County has in· stalled officers al its an- nual awards dinner in Newport Bea~b . Elected president or the board of directors was Ray McNeil or Brea. Al Blair. South Laguna, will act as first vice pte· sidenl and Les Gray or Santa Ana Is second vice presideht. Secretary is Jack How!lie of Downey and Don Ayres of Hunt- ington Beach i s treasurer. Members of the board are J ohn Boling, Laguna Niguel : Don Huber . Fullerton. and Don Nickerson of Huntington Beach. The center serves more than 100 cerebral palsied children and a dults from O r ange County on a daily basis. Kinda Kind Robber Can't Take It SAN MATEO (AP) -A sympathetic rob· ber is on the loose in this San Francisco sub- urb, police say. The masked r obber was lurking in"some bushes waiting for a victim. When a 24-year· old woman e merged from A nea rby restaurant, he jumped out. pulled a gun and demanded mont'y. According to police. the woman handed over her purse, but told the r()bh(>r . h(' only had S1 25 and hod a child at homt' to lllUpport. The bandit. without even operung the purse. handed It back and Mid · "I've got kids too." QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandi 11·5 "I'm off for lunch. If 1 run tnlo anything 'trendy,' I'll pick 1t up for you." Senior Health Fair Due in LB A health fair for senior citizens will be held from 10:30 a .m . to 4:00 p.m. Sunday at the Laguna Beach Festival of Arts grounds, 650 Laguna Canyon Road. Free medical tests will be given by more than 30 volunteer physicians and nurses and technicians trom South Coast Community and Saddleback Com· munity Hospitals. THE EXAMINATIONS WILL Include eye, hearing, bronchial, heart, blood pressure And blood screening tests AddJtionally, health information and liler alure will be available from more than 40 booths on the grounds . The purpose of the health fair is lo alert senior citizens to physical ailments which may have been overlooked. s aid S1 Slaven, president or the Laguna Beach Council on Aging. Free transportation will be provided by the city of Laguna Be ach. Senior citizens may call 497-2442 for trans portation information. Got two turtle doves to sell by Christmas? Move the1n under our tree. On e a c h T hurs da y from N o ve mb e r 11th throu g h Decembe r 16th, the Daily Pilot will publis h s pecial pages to make it easier for you to convert your sale able items to Christmas cash. Buy a box under our tree & selJ your t oys, s ports equipme nt, luggage, a ppliances, furniture, antiques, handmade & unique gifts and no matter what your business -we have a box for you! Putting a box under our tree is e as)i and Inexpensive. 'Rates are $4.00 for the smaller box to $22.50 for the largest box. BIG, BIG SAVINGS if you run more than one time. For more infor mation and to place your ad just call 642-5678 and a sk fo r you r C hristmas Ad-Viser for more information. Your credit is good with us. we·u bill you or you can charge your ad to your M ast e r C harge o r BankAme rlcard. DAILY PILOT . .· . .,. 642-5678 • -<P I Hope Pinned on Casinos l Atlantic City Gambob Over Gambling ATLANTIC CITY. N.J. (AP)- Th i s fading r esort city, permitted by state \'Olers lo slake its future on casino gambl· ing, is celebrating as if il had already hit the jackpot. But odd.smaker Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder rates the chances or rinan- clal success as "no cinch." On T ue s day. ·New Jersey voters approved a constitutional amendment making Atlantic Ci- ty, h om e of th e famou s Boar dw a lk and the Miss America Pageant. the nation's only area outside Nevada to al- low casino gaming. SNYDER SOUNDED ONE or several notes of caution as city residents gave a chorus or hur· rahs. He predicted that gambling would s pread as other areas try to cash in, too -and warned that running a gambling house is no sure thing. Meanwhile, New Jersey Gov Brendan Byrne said he considers careful supervision of gambling more important than setting it up quickly. Promoters said it would be at least a year before gambl· mg starts. And a prominent banker warned or a wave of speculation on property. Caution was hardly the general mood, however . as hotels threw parties here and bars served free drinks. "I FORESEE ATLANTIC City on ce agai n becoming the greatest seashore resort in the world," said Mayor Joseph Lazstow. "We're going to rebuild this town,•' vowed John Ricb1 presi- dent or a bricklayers union, many or wbose members havo. been unemployed. "The skyline wtll change dramatically," pred ict e d lawyer-banker J ame.c; Cooper. Jim m y "The Greek," in· terviewed in New York. saw it dilferently. ••NOW THAT THE ROLLING stone has been let go," Snyder said. "I'm just wondering how many other st ates are going to pick it up. "Pandor a's door i s open ... What's going to stop the places up in the Catskills (a ,re - sort area just north or New York City) from doing it~" Atlantic City hop es t o capitalize on the gambling market among tens of millions or people who live on the East Coast and a re unwilling to go to Nevada. ATLANTIC CITY DOES offer some advantages, Snyder said, such as ''the commuruty and the population ... the transient trade." Unlike Las Vegas pro- moters. he said, operators here won't have to spend money lur· ing people lo an area out of th~r way. But he polnted lo New Y<>Tk Cl ly.1,00 mUes north ot here, as an area or pol~ntlol competition. On the day lhe amendment wall ap- proved here, voters in New York approved a more limited measure allowing reUgiows and philanthropic groups to raise money with so-culled "Las Vegas nights." "Everybody nnd his brother is going to be runn;ng a Las Yegu night," Snyder pndicte d "Tliey're going lo have lo open schools for gambling." And be added, "Who are they going to get to run it?" ONE FlllM PROMINENT in the campaign to approve casino gamblin&: here is Resorts Jn ternational. a Norlh Miami, Fla., company that owns a gambling casino in The Bahamas. Snyder said he resp ects the outfit because "they know something about it." But he asked, ''How thin will they be spr ead? ... How many executiyes are you going to have? "The chances of it being a sue cessrul venture -you can't real• ly make odds on it." Meanwhile, Resorts lnterna tjonal announced that It would go ahead with plans to renovate the 1,000-room Chalfonte-Haddon HaJl Hotel on the Boardwalk, and to build a $50·million, 1,000-room motel near the equally famous Steel Pier. JCPenney .. . Presents FREE FLORAL ARRANGING* SATURDAY, NOV. 6th,.1 pm-5pm *Dried flowets purchased in our store. Bring your favorite container or purchase one at the store. JAMt.5 .ANDERS. t Ir ·cl 0Ps111ner 'or Nature. Horvc51. w1tl cJcmcnc,lrole th< ort ol or1onc;1nrJ nnwrolly prt 't rvcd f lowt:·r-. from 1 pri r(; 5 prn on Sotw ck:y Nov 6rl 1 rP• P nOlt1rOlly pre' r rved Coliforn10 flowers. 1 < trnn their color 01d nottm: l1•·1rnly for rvcr Broul1f y ~tr·y I r)t)n1 tr .•11.r hflm1 w11l1<1norror1qr. 1111 1 f rd rt·ll' ffo~·1t·r. tho' ' ' ,ti. le:)~ g 1{1•,• AJCPenney EXCLUSIVE SAVE 20o/o ON ALL NATURES HARVEST DRIED FLOWERS Through Sunday, Nov. 7, 1976 JC Penney NEWPORT BEACH STORE ONLY• FASHION ISLAND • A • \ ' .. l P\JBLIC N011CE I NOl'a lWW1Tl .. O I t OS TM c:-.ty IMl\Altloft Do•~ flf . o.-. C:.....y, C.tllon ... wlll ...c.1 ... SMIM blft \Miit Tund•v, Ho-tt..,,,, lrl 11·00· ....... , ~ llt , •• "'"'" .. lfl9 l)t\tfkh' A-IN \tr•tlVt efllte\ by lllt O•tt e110 ltme ...... ~ ... Mtt forth, •t """<" llmt ....... Wiii M 9V011cly OO<tned -U • ..,.._ M the o lllce of the Olll•l<t• • .... 1111• Aw-. F-lelft Yall<ty. c..lllontle, tor tt>e 1ollowl1t9' IOl.101 ltAUl.INO tOIOISTllO SE WA GE 51..VOOEI &HC11"tCATION NO. S.011 ... """' "' Wbfllllled ....... '°""' SUOPlled bi tM 01\lflCh t11 ecc...-.a_ willlell-vl\IOflJOflMWMClfke!IOM. PUBUC NOTICE •ICTITIOVS ... SINUS HA .... STATblllNT Tl\I> lol'-l"G -""' I\ OOlllQ bu>I flt" .. $Al.YIN CONST. CO., :n44 ND. IO ._.._ Co\ta Me\•, CA thi. Wllli•m T S.lv111. M OeNle f'I •. (MOf\e del Mar. (A. tt•?S Th!\ bu""9H I\ COll~ted bv ... lft ....... , Wllll..,.T,S.IVlft ll\1' •l•l•m•nl w•\ hl.0 wjtll lhe Co\Mtv C•~'' ol Of•tllt c--, on°' -17, ltl ... ,..,nz flllbltshed Ot-Cocist.C>elly Piiot. Mowmt>er S. If, It. U. 1tl6 aStJ.16 PUBLIC NOTICE $c1Klllcellons. bid t>la11a. 4'l'd fwr\'*'" llntorfl\Mloft MeV .,. Ollt•IMd <ot n. _,......._,~,le ......... 9'a·2Alt 0t i---.. -IC_T_l_Tl_O_U_S_l_U_S_IN_l_S_S __ S62'10.. NAMI STATl!MUIT J, w .. .,..(! ~•1Wtfer The 1o11ow1119 pe"ons ••• dolno Ml· S.C:,...larvotthe&o.rds ,.n .. , Of Direct°" lHIE 11oose OP TERRY, Soy\h Pllllll~ Or-COHI C)elly PllGll1 CN\I Plata, T.IJ3 8rls1ol. ~ .. Ml .... tlov. s, ""' CA. m~ _________ ...;.•;.;S..;,.l· .. 1' Ata11 Jay 1te11dter, tkll S-• lllllftCI• SI •• FOllflt•ll'I Valley. CA. 9210I Bonnie RH M ... di .... 114l11 S..ta --,5:-:u"",."'i'""l"""io"'i.,..,.,co'"'O""lr.frorli.-fit.,.,.,•,,__...;· 11e11..a. s1 .. Foun1 a111 v a ttey. CA. tt10a STAT•Ofl CALI flOR .. IA flOR .. :~~IMS\ Is conducted by an I~ PUBUC NOTICE l'MI! COU .. TY Ofl ORANOC BoMle R. tteNli.. .... A ... lllt 11>1\ \laloment ... , flleo Will• Ille ttOTIC• Ofl MIARINO Ofl ~y(tt1',.ef0r~Counlyon<>c;. nTITIOM f>OR flROM T• Ofl WIU. lobe< 29, m.._ AND "°" Ltrntr•s TtrSTAMIN-TA"Y AND fllOR AUTMDRllATIOH -.~1 --,.. ,.._ l"U71l l'D ADMI NISTllR UNDI • THI! .....,.., ~ "'41"98 ....,.n ,_11., Piiot INDtr,.•NDllNT ADMINISTRATION ,_-_____ ,_. 1_1_• 1_'·_1_6·_"_7_6 __ -_1+_76 OP trSTAT•S ACT IPROMT& CIOOe "1&TMIQI PUBLIC NOTICE ast•t• of CLARKE A. SMITH, 1-----------0.C..Md. NOTICE IS HEREllV GIVEN ti..t AHNIE T. SMITH has tiled._,..,. e "'1tl0ft tor Probote ol Wiii -tor Is-~ .. utte<s T••l• ...... terv to Ille ~tlloolw elOd for e11111etlt•llon 10 eel· rn1n111 ... Ille !Estate.....,., the'"°"""' tleftt .. dnlltllstreUOf\ Of IEilehrl NI ,,,,_._ Code Stl et MQI re ... _ 10 Whkl\ Is m.tde for l\lrllwr IMlf'lk ulers. .,,. ttwlt tl\e Ume end place ot -1"9 IN~ IMI•-HI tor Now-n. ""·el 10:00 e .m ., In the c-1,_,, ol ()epertmeftl No. J ol Hid CCM'I, et 100 Clvl< C...ler Drive West. In the Ot't Of s.tll• Alie. ~lllornl•. 0.1.0 No,..mw 3. "" Wll.UAM •. StJOltN OM.lttty Cieri( 'AMCS M. DODDS .0.l'IOAL AND HAMMtrRTOft A.....,.rs .. uw .., .............. , ........ 122 s.teAAe,CA"7H Tel: C1MI s-."1 AftwMrs..,.: ""'lllletler • PllbllNd Ore1199 Cont Dally Pilot. Nov. s. 6. If, 1976 •S6~T• PUBLIC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUS a USINIU NAM•STATIMINT n.. to110...i119 .,., sons •re cloll\9 bull· flHus: THIRTIETH S TAE ET A•04tTECTS. atS 30tl\ St., N-1 .. «II. CA. 91W Jotw\ C. Loomis. ,,,, Nwkfa St., 0.le Mes.t. CA. 91611 Jtmes c. WlfM>l'I. IG4S Ga•lot•. U-lk«h. CA. 916S1 This business Is conOY<ted b"( • ...,..,.1 e>ertner~lp. JollnC.t.oomls This stat•-"' wes llltd ...Ctll Ille °""'4'f Clerk ot Orllf\99 County on Ot· tDcer lt. 1976. PICTITIOUS IV SINUS NAMtrSTATtrMtrHT The touowl 119 Pff"M>nS we doing 111.nJ.. ntUM: $TUFF'N l.UV. tltS Tustlft Aw., Mtwport e .. ch, CA. '1660 M•rl• Alln Vl1'150n, ntS Tust111 Aw ..... wport S.e<h, CA. tt..O Wllll-O.rald Vlnw11. nt5n..lh1 Aw .. New-18eech, CA. t?6'0 · nh t>u\ln•u"' 'Ofldll<led t>y general _.,,.,.1110. Thi\ stalemenl was flied with the CoUlltv Cterll ot Donoe COUlll"( on Oc;. IGOe< 2' • .., .. ...,.. 1'111>11\lled Or•n99 Cont 0.lly Piiot Nowmt>tr s. n, It, 16. 1'7• •S1'·'6 PUBLIC NOTICE ,. ~caine Try Off Judge Cites 'Ci~' Attitude BOSTON CAP) -A Massachusetts judge who said he wanted lo sniff cocaine before deciding a case involving the drug has dropped his plans because the proposal "bas t.aken on the dimensions of a circus act." Judge Elwood McKenney is! sued a statement Thursday 1n Roxbury District Court saying, "I feel that it will be impossible for the result to be meaningful, and I am, therefore, canceling the experiment." BE ADDED IDS decision m the cocaine possession cruse against Richard Miller would be handed down in the near future. McKenney said last week he would not rule on the case until he had tried the drug. Lawyers the charges shou.ld be dismi3aed on the grounds cocatne is a "harmless, nonaddictive recreational drug.·· JAMES LAWSON, ·a lawyer representing M Iller, arranged !or Richard Resnick, assoclato . proreasor pf New York> )fedical College and a director of the · school's Division of Drui Abuse, Research and TreatQleot, to perform tbe experimenl McKenn,iy bad been expected ·to go to New York to take the drug. A spokesman for McKenney said District. Court Chief JusUce Samuel Zoll supported the de- cision made by McKenney. Zoll had expressed concern about the .. impact on the entire district court system" of the proposed Media Access Upheld DAI~., ~LOT A I I Pastor Wins State Wttery • LOS ANGELES (AP) FromAPDllpatchn -A federal a ppeals 1twaa adHamcometnaerortbc Rev.S1ln1ter court has upheld the Powler the 68·year-old putor ot Saints Pentecost.a right of the media to Qlurch1in Baltimore. p-eater access to state Last August he· dreamed he bouabt a jalls and prisons than newspaper from ••4 mysterious man I didn't even tbatguntedthep1,1blic. recocnbe" who gave him a free Maryland·lottcry The ruling by a three-ticket. member U.S. 9th Circuit Mr. Fowler told the man he didn't ask for the Court of Appeals panel ticket, but the man replied: "lt's there. Take it." afftrms a 1975 declsiQD Mr. Fowler had his dream analyaed, and was by a federal Judge In San tad to buy a lottery Ucket. He ·won $171,llOO Y,i' Fr'allcltco Involving the Maryland'll 1776 bonuslotteey. i·· Alameda Cowity prison '* . at Seta Rita. The case Omar S•arlf, home ln datro for the fint time in involved investigation of 12 years says President Anwar Sadat "made me jail conditions by a t ' promise to come home when we television ataUo.n after a met last year tn Was~n al a suicide. While House reception.' The actor accompanied a · for the defendant argued that. experiment. UNTIL THE ruling by bevy or French models for a "'-~ the late Judge Oliver charity fashion show arranged -----------------------------" Carter. j ail officials only by President Sadat's wife \ Peanutiest Pusher Peter Panton, a lg.:year-old Brown University sophomore, bet on the wrong ma.n to win Tuesday's presidential election. So he spent 28 minutes--on hts hands and knees blowing a peanut along the sidewalk that surrounds the Wriston Quadrangle on Brown's Providence, R.1. campus. Bankrupt Innkeeper's Mansion Sale Likely SAN DIEGO (AP) -The huge house built for Earl Gagosian before his Royal Inns filed for bankruptcy last year is being sold for "a little less" t han the $2 million he asked. The buyer apparently will be Richard Burns, majority stockholder N~guel Directors PlanMeet~g The Laguna Niguel Homeowners . and Community Association board or. directors will meet at 7:30 p.m. Mon- day at the Moulton Niguel Water Dis· trict headquarters, 27500 La Pai Road, Laguna Niguel. The directors will hear a report on co~munity parks by Dennis Devine, chairman or the parks and recreation committee, and consider new associa· t1on bylaws. The meeting is open to all Laguna Niguel residents. Laguna Flu Shots Set Flu s hots for ,the gencr~l public. the elderly ond c,hronical· ly ill will be giwen from 1 p. rn.. to 4 p.m. each Mond ay in November at the Laguna Beach Free Clinic, 4600cean Ave. Swine vaccine only will be given the general public. Both· swine and Victoria vaccine wUl be given senior ciUzens and persons with special health pro- blems. Dates or the inoculations' are ·Nov. 8, 15, 22, and 29. Tbe shots ate free. and chief executive officer or the R. L. Burns Corp. of San Bernardino. IN ANNOUNCING PLANS to move the gas . oil and coal exploration firm to San Diego ·s 'Fifth Avenue Financial Center next M"arch, Burns disclosed also his home·purchase plan. Escrow bas been opened. . The 17-room La J olla mansion is the biggest in San Diego. But Gagosian, who said he built the place in l972 at a cpst exceeding $2 million, first asked $2.9 million for it. AFTER MONTHS OF rumors that kings and movie stars were interest- ed, he sold it to a government infor- mant u sin g ·a non-negotiable certificate of deposit with a face value of $1.75 million as coltateral foe a $1.5-million loan. Charles Leggett gave $700,000 ot that to Gagoslan in July 1973 as a down ptlyment', bul the rest was never paid. Leggett pleaded no contest last week to grand jury charges or using the false certiflcate of deposit as security. A charge of theft, brought by Gagosian for the rest or his money I was dismissed. THE HOUSF. COVER'S 14,000 square feet an~ ha~ a pool, tennis courts and a caretaker's apartment. ln the fiscal year ended July 31, the Bums company reported net earnings of $8 million or $1.19 per sbar~ on re- venues or $27 million, up from $6.7 million the year before on sales of $13.6 million.Burns.fix.ed its esse~bt $100 million. Gagosian bas ronned a new com· pany to operate three Royal Inns which be owns at South Bend, Ind., Omaha, Neb., ancl, El Paso, Tex. The firm which the ooe-tlme Utab carpenter founded in the 19608 hu been undergoing re0ig4nJ1ation. Saturday in Lagana permitted reporters to ,Uta.an. He said President Ford take tours or the facility introduced Sadat to him at a that were open to the state dinner. public. Sharif's rilm, "Doctor Alameda County of· s1tu•~ .Zhivago," originally banned ~ ficials claimed that re-·avoid offending Russia. was showing in Cairo . porters had no more . • right or access than the To WlUard Slappey, a Fayetteville, N.C., 1eneral public. veterinarian, Jim my caner ls jusl another cousin. · "l .flnow he's smart," said Slappey, born and BUT THE appelJate ·raised in Carter's home town of Plains, Ga. "But I court, in a decision by .just never realized there'd be a 'president from Judge Harry Pree~. Plains .•. When be started the campaign, I didn't said, "The access needs ·think he bad a chance.'' · of the news media and · "I've got two other ( J. the public differ. Media ·couslns who are just as PEOPLE access, on reasonable .smart as be is," he said, ; notice. may be desirable !referring to Don Carter, a ...,_ ---------' in th e wak e of a Lexington , Ky ., newsworthy event, while ·newspaper editor, and Hugh Carter, a Georgia stale the interest of the public . senator from Plains. in observing jail cocdi.-* lions may be satisfied by Dolly Parton, named top female vocal.isl by the form a 1 , s c b ed u led ·Country Music Association for the second straight tours." year this year, has a severe • The access decision -throat condition and has been had some restrictions, .forbidden to sing for the rest of 1 bow ever. the year, her record company ·says . JUDGE Pregerson · Miss Parton, 30, canceled an said jail officials could ~eoocert appearances unW next limit media access when year, RCA r ecords said. The j a i 1 s e c u r i l y i s company said her physician re· threat ened, and could commended that she cancel her make reasonable time. appearances and advised her to p 1 ace and m a n n er talk only when necessary for the PARTON restrictiops. next two weeks. tn a concurring opi-A spokesman for her booking agency, Top Dill· nion, Judge Shirley ing,said sbewillmissabout2Sconcerts .• Hufstedler aaid, ••as the • eyes and ears or the James Keogh resigned as director or the U.S. public. newsmen are en-Information Agency, effective Nov. 30, agency tiUed to see and to hear :~ sources r eported. everything within the in· : ' Keogh, 60, was named to sti.tution about whic.h the ~n ;:-~ bead the USIA, which publicizes general public ls entiUed ' U.S. government policy abroad, to be informed." · in December 1972. He served as Ex-cops Siw Over Charges VISALIA (AP) -Two former P o rterville policemen have filed a lawsuit accusing ex-city manager Edward J . Valliere of damaging their reputations with al· legations that they were ~exually Involved wilh two 17-year-old girls. The action tiled by Larry R . Dean and Russell L . Vossier in TUiare County Superlor Court contends Valliere knew the charges of sex- ual involvement and pro- viding the girls" alcohol and marijuana were false. The suit contends that Valliere, who resigned last month, made hl.s ac- c us a tl on to former Pollce Chief John Sta.rt and later to the state at· wmey general's oflice. Dean and Vossler each seek $2 million in general damages plus $1 million in punitive damages. Students Fill Rx Firm Posts Vla Lido Drug in Newport Beach is among pharmacies throo1bout California and Hawaii employing student in· terns from the Universi- ty of the Pacific School of Pharmacy. . Kathi Ikeda, who is workin1 full·Ume at Via 1Jdo, ta one of 63 students spendln1 the aemesta-in. practical a~pllcaUon of elusroom leamlnf. • chief s peechwriter and re· searcher for atcltard M. Nlxoa'.$ 1968 election campaign and held the same position on Nixon's White House staff the next year. He is a former executive editor uoo" of Time magazine . .Between bis government positions; Keogh published a book. "Nixon and the Press," critical of news coverage or Nixon. * Democratic Sen. Vance Hartke, defeated in his bid to become Indiana'&firstfour-term senator, dis- covered that someone bad broken into bis leased station wagon and stolen his luggage, clothing and a s pare tire. • The car, packed in In· dianapolis fo~ the family's re- turn to Washington, D.C., was parked In a near-downtown apartment lot. "The only clothlog my girls have is what's on their backs:' Hartke said. • HA•TKE Karen Anne Qalnlua'1 mother, who pleaded with the coul'U to ''1>ull the plug" on her comatose daughter's respirator so sb~ could die with dignity, bas been. inducted into an organizatio1:1: that gives psychological counseling to people dying ol cancer. After months or ligation that drew world atlention, the New Jersey Supre~e Court in March gave Jmla and Joseph Qainlaa ~) the right to remove a respirator: Mnou•HLAlf from thetr 22.year -old daughter. She has been gl ven no chance or regaining conscious· ness, but bas survived. , Her mother earned a certificate as a member or the newly established Riverside <N.J.) Hospice Volunteer Corps, which includes doctors, nurses., psychologists, soclal workers, clergy andpeoplelitt Mrs. Quinlan with useful personal experience. • DorMby Flslter, 44, the world's longest aurvlv; ini heart transplant patient, was described as .. 'Cine" after a week of rouUne tests at Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa. Dr. Chrlltlaaa Bamard and his heart team : performed a transplant operation on her more than seven years ago, OD April 17, 19619. . * . The JusUce Department decided not to appeal a federal court'• dismissal or an Indictment against Mqer Laaaky, alleged financial -· wiaard of th• underworld. Lansky, aging and Ill. had been indicted in La Yeps ln 1972 on chatlfs of conspiring to conceal about $36 million in caaino earnings from the Flam· lngoHoteJ. U.S. District Court Judge .SO,er D. l"oley dismissed the ln· dictment S ept. 30, sayln1 14nJky's health appeared to be ~enlna. LAMMC.Y The museum hu been at the coutal site since llrlt. '!'be IW'O-. perty wu the 1lrt ot lbt Jfow.,-d G. Heisler. Artists anlt trteads raised funds to build t.blrpreeeat * • tributon. . The way appe&l'I clear.cl for Dr. Pautet~ "Tbe ori•m•l objedlfts lo ~· European Common Market commilstoner: gallery. • · · • • Lat~r CUnd drives paid olf lbe m~'• mortga1e.. Mn. Lewi.a F. Moo.Hon and the late Mn. James IrviJlc wer-o lttae ecn-· ma.intaln a perma.oent art ial aftaln, to be declared tbe next president: '1allery and eolleetlon, to ad· 1 lrlsh Republic by acclamation. . : vuc• knowledae Md~ ln HW•rr. 5', wu nQmlnated bJ lbe Flanna Fail: ut. and to create a &Jllri1 of party to aucceed Prealdent Cearbllall O'Dalal&b.: cooperatlon and fellowsblp, wt-c>reatcnedlutmonl!I. . · · : betwea painter and pubUc re.. ;J.'be rulln1 J'l.ne Gael and Laboe' parties decided: m&.l.D today,•• Tom E.Dma..n, ndt to nominate candidates to oepose Hillery in a ; mUMWD dlredor, aald. ' .aatioG~ elecUoo that would have beep held Nov. u,· Al 2 OAIL y PILOT Friday November 5 1976 Heller: 'Active' Carter Won't Use Controls By JOHN CUNNIFF Al" •~'l"•n A...if\I The maJor difference between the Ford and Carter adm.lnislra· ttons will be the difference between a passive and an active president, said Walter Heller, the economist. legal s anctions but Instead n sense of responsibility from big, business and big labor." Carter's wage-price program will be voluntary. he said. lng to a variety or programs but that no fin"l cho1ce has been made. "I find that Carter understands you cannot get down below S per· cent unemploy ment with fiscal and monetary measures without getting into inflation," said Heller. "He knows you have to go the last mile with s tructural measures.'' "Out or that activity we can look tor both a bolder attack on the jobless problem and a more broad-gauge, broacl-s pcctrum anti-inflationar y program, said Heller , one of the DemocraUc party's most influential advisers. "I've dlscussed this with Mon· dale and with Carter and I see re· al respect for the working or the market system. But where it doesn't work and where antitrust cannot h andle the problem, there will be guidelines,'' Heller said. ti ELLER SAID, "It is very im.' portant thut he understands that," and "very important that the country knows Carter doesn't Cit the big spending image." He realizes, said Heller. "you can't. just open the spigots." HELLER SAID THAT despite a more active role, Carter's r espect for an understanding or the market m echanism makes it highly unlikely that wage-price controls will be imposed, as busi· nessmen and others have feared. BECAUSE or his close associa· tion with Carter and vice pre- s ident-elect Walter Mondale as an adviser, and because he served as chief economic adviser in the most recent Democratic' administrations. Heller was asked his opinions on changes to be expected. On the issue of jobs, which ap- peared to play a large role 111 Carter's victory. Heller said he found the president-elect listen· Carter, he said, will not "try to flood the economy with fiscal and monetary stimulus," but instead will seek to focus his efforts on the specific em ployment pro- blems, on the "structure" of un· employment. "There's been a lot of misun· derstanding on that issue," said Heller, adding: "He doeso'l want Gremlin Dips Cost 8% as Sales Stall The thrust of Carter's effort therefore, be said, would be t o ha ve government provide ·•meaningfu l incentives lo private business lo give jobs and training to the hard-core un· employed." CARTER, HE SAID, will also seek deregulation of industry in cases where it l eads to "price propping" and the stifling of competition. DETROIT (AP) -In a move to bolster lagging sales, American Motor s has cut the slicker price of its 1977 Gremlin by $253, or 8 per- cent, making it the lowest-priced domestic car for the new model year. AMC President William Luneburg announced Thursday the sub· The president-elect, he said, is also sympathetic to the concept of government acquiring buffer stocks of commodities that could be released in order to control speculali ve demand that leads to higher prices for basic goods. compact will carry a base price of $2,995. He added the reduction takes affect immediately for cars in dealer stock a nd for orders placed beginning today. the new model year several 'weeks ago, and undercuts the price for a comparable 1976· model, which sold for $.1,082. The sticker is the manufac· lurer's suggested r etail price and does not include options or taxes. A company spokesman s aid the prices of options, which often add 20 percent to the cost of a car, have not been changed. Similar stocks have been main· tained before but solely for na· tional defense purposes. Tt_ie idea THE NEW PRICE compares with the $3,248 set at the start of Conference Set Workshop Slated A youth career conrerence sponsored by the Orange al'ld-San Bernardino county chapters of the Busi ness and Professional Women's Clubs will be held Saturday at Orange Coast College. The new Gremlin sticker un- dercuts General Motor's lowest-. priced car, the two-seater Chevette Scooter, by just $4, and the Chevy Vega by $364. Ford's lowest-priced car, tbe Pinto Pony, starts at $3,099. A workshop addressing busi· ness problems will be hosted by Saddleback Associates from 9 a.m. · 4 p. m. Saturday at the Sad· dleback Inn, Santa Ana. Registration fee, which in· eludes luncheon, is $75. Office Opens · You are the one! ODA, International, a consulting fi rm head· quartered at Palo Alto, has established an office at 18872" MacA r thur You are No. 1! Blvd .• ~ . General manager of the Irvine operation is Ray Burch. He will con· cenlrate on providing or· ganization assessment, development, and plan· ning. Get your S14 00 1n tree g1tts lrom Huntington Center Call 642-5678. Put a few words to work for ou. ,ffie,ieJ( cfX>/,J n o 11une al Ji(d~ I 1111 1/i ·111•11 \11ht·1s Co1illl11t is well klwwn fur q110/11i 11111/ 1·\ 11 //1•111r 111 oftl'T tll(·Sllk s~n·1u. a \ o1l11" ( ·11./1/101· co Sir llr• "'""'and )'OJI gt•/ tlr1 /,, '' .'In· ,\'alicrs CoJ1/lar tt1<lay. Nabers Cadillac 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-9100 Send one card for each tag + one spare. We return permanently sealed attractive tag & strap, meeting airline 1.0 . requirements. Prevent loss & theft! For a personalized tag enclose wallpaper, fabric or "Day Glo'' paper & we will back & trim your tags. Or try 'two cards back to back. $2ea. or 3/$5 4/5 tags $1 .60 ea. 6/9 tags $1 .50 ea. 10 or more $1 .40 ea. S<1les Tax included No Card? Or Aw your 0'11111, Of send vour n&l'l'll', e<ll!rl'\\ •"d D"<>M n11m11tr W6'1l rM~t -'""' per tfQ, ADO: 2S .. <II. ENDCHECKORMONEYORDERT PILOT PRINTING P. 0 . Box 1560 Costa Mesa, Catltornla 92626 Got a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, getting the answers and action you need to solve inequities in government and busi· ness. Mail your questions to Pat Dunn At Your Service. Orange Coast Daily Pilot , P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Include your telephone number. The column appears daily ercept Satu!days. Flute's Fairest of~ All DEA R PAT: Several years ago I attended the Renaissance Pleasure F aire in Agoura. I purchased a beautiful cer amic fl ute that was fun to play and had excellent lone. Last year the flute was broken and I was unable to attend the fair this year. Where can I write to arrange for the purchase of another flute exactly like the one I originally purchased? P.J., San Clemente Your problem took a string of phone calls to solve, but here's your contact: Ms. Judith Drury, Box B, Novato, CA 94947. Ms. Drury is in charge of craftsmen for the Renaissance Pleasure Faire. Your flute craftsman lives In Sweden, but he re· turns each year for the fair, apd arrangements can be made ror another purchase through Ms. Drury. Carter, Co111111luee l!nknotmt DEAR PAT : I'd be interested to icnow when, if ever. your column was contacted about President· elect Jimmy Carler. I'm a faithful reader and I don't recall uny inquiries about this previously un· known man who is to become the President of the United States. L.C., Newport Beach Thf' only Inquiry or comment addressed to the A. VS column tbls year about President-elect Jimmy Carter was published ln the Feb. 26, 1976 column. It asked, "Where can I volunteer to be a worker for Jimmy Carter In the California primary election?" At the time of research \n early February, Orange County Democratic Party sources could not provide the answer. A VS did provide the information, however, bot only after contacting the Democratic Party of Callrornla ln Los Angeles. Checking back In the A YS logbook, it was noted that Sen. Ted Ken· nedy's and Ronald Reagan's addresses were no pro· blem at all to obtain. They were published following a reader'a inqulry on De~, 19'75. ~e There's a 1t'IU • • • DEAR PAT : Where can I write to request a copy of the "Living Will ?" I have decided that sho<ild I become terminally ill, I do not wish to be kept alive by expensive medical equipment. . H.L .• Costa Mesa Contad The Eulhanula EducaUonal F\and, ZSO W. S7tb St., New York, NY lotlt. In addition to avokllnl the continuance or lJfe by extraordinary medical measures when there Is no hope of re· covery, the Living Wlll also proteas doctors and nurses from possible legal action in terminal Ulness cues after the use of llfe·malntalnlng medical equipment is discontinued. TO% A111~ndnt4>1tt Drlat1f'd · DEAR PAT: We filed an amendment lo our 1973 federal Income Taxes in June 1975, claiming a "car· ryback or unused 1974 foreign tax credit." The amendment, fil ed by our accountants, asked for a $710 refund on our twces for that year. Last April, after no word from the Int~maJ Revenue Service, we resubmitted a copy o( our original claim. We are still waiting. ' . · V.L.,"Fountaln V3lley Thi• column contacttd Rep. Charles A. Vanllt CD-Ohio), cbalnna11 ot the Hoase &ibcommlttee on OvenlJbtoftbe IR~ wboforwantedyoar complaJnt to tbe lllS. OfRcla.11 ot Ute fll8'11 Fresno Sen1ce Cmltr aothort1ed the rdund, lacludJn~ Interest dCae J'GG tor the tlme tb at )'OOt ~rand wu delayed. Dae to lbe laws of conndendaUty, the IRS woald not dls· don lite reason ror Udadtlay. • or using such stocks to control prices results from a staff study of ~e 1974 commodities price ex· plos1on that, saad Heller. indic-a.t· ed 40 percent or the spiral could have been averted. · SPEAKING AGAIN of Carter's fee ling s on w age-price restraints , Heller commented: "He wants to retain and un· chain the Council of Wage-Price Stability to focus ju;it on the con· centrated industries and r eally ·big business und big labor and get them to s it down together.'• He said Carter has expressed himself very specifically on this approach. The president-elect, he said , wants large units ''we think of an as noncompetitive" to report major wage.price de· cisions in advance to the council. BELLER .SAID HE thinks a ( NEWSANALYSI ) good objective analysis then can be made, and that when it Is de· termlned that increases are un· justified, ''the President will use jawboning." Heller said Carter belleves presidential leadership might work where other methods have failed. An example or this, he said, would be· in convincing labor that ''it Is Just as well off with s percent wage increases and 2.S percent inflation as it. would be with 8 percent In· creases and S.5 percent infla· Uon." A prerequisite of s uc h leadership, he said. is responsi· ble fiscal and monetary policy. "While Carter is an act..ivist. he'll Chrysler Safety Car have a well modulated nscal and mon etary program,•• aald Heller. "HE REALLY understands that no longer can you handle in· nation by the demand side only, but that you have to mo~ to sup- ply,'· he observed. Concluding, h e commented that one tblng you can expect. "and everyone who worked ~llh him agrees,'• is that merit will be a very major conslderaUon in ap- pointments. "It wlU be an adminlstraUon or merit and competence. of really cracldng good appointments." Would be serve again? Said Heller, who was chalrman of tho Council of Economic Advisers unde r both K ennedy and J ohnson : "I've done my stint in Washington." A,WI,.,.._ The new Chrysler research sa!ety vehicle. unveiled in London r ecently, is based on the Coventry-designed Chrysler Alpine. The company believes it is a major step in the design of future cars. Gene Cafiero, left , Chrysler president, attended the un· veiling. NEW YORK iAP1 Cron Co -TM followlng 11>1 Cutlr Fed h • sele<•~ N&t Danly M lonal Seturlto"' oai. Oqn Oealen "1>n ii o•tr o.1a 100 :~.~~~'ea, 1~~~\. gm,i~ rial 'toos. OeKlb Ag A!L Ind 7.. 7~ Otlhl 0 11 AFA PrS •V. S'l<i OeLu• C AIO Inc 714 I Ott Ctl\T AVM Cp 'IQ 114 Del 1111er AdOIVI W •v. 1 ~-f El MY Ros ,,. 7~ 01.tm Cry Albffl' 5\0 •VJ Ol•n Cru Allco '"' 8''-8\o Oo<uttl Allerg Ph '''" 2S Ooller G Allfn Bae 7 1..., Oort~ G ~ f~ i~ ··~ ~~~nog Am Furn 1 2\• 0uflrort Atn Grffl ,,,.. •'\ Ebtrl11 In A Micro 11'\ ,.., Econ L.ab Am Talev II"> 1o•r, EIPH El Am Weld IO''o II V. 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FrtM 7.71 I 0 Mtq In e U •«I $..a $ t )II 10 a WIK IM ) ~ s:" 1 --·--== .. Friday's Afternoon Pricea NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS~ ' ' Ohio OU Discovered BJUDGEPORT, Conn. (AP) -The Soutfaem Connecticut Gas Company bu UQQW\Ced it bu found oU and gas dfl'P081tain lta Oblodrilllnc area. 1'be company's drllliq subskllary, ~ ProducUoa lnc., said Thurs· d., it did not k:now bow rtuaeb 1aa or oU would be produced fJ'CllD the well. The company'• ftnt Ni In tbe same tract in soul~ Oblo found oil. ~ third well ls n0w btinl drilled and more are planned, the company Aid. 1 - Frldey. November 5, 1976 s DAI L y Pll.OT A I :J 1978 Ta~ Lam Changes Enter Winner's Circle By SYLVIA PORTEil (IA#"' 0 Scrlfl) Winne r• of more than $1,000 i n horse race s, sweepstakea, lolleries ond the Uke now may find that 20 per- ~nt or their winnings wl.11 be wltbheld and turned ovec directly to the IRS. This will be &llllilar to the w-s. e mployers withhold in· eome tax from s alaries, except tha( the amount withheld from gambling winnings wUl be a fiat~ pettent rate. Here are the win nings from whicb the 1976 Tax Money's Worth Reform Act requires 20 percent '\\ilbhold.i.ng by the payor starling J an. 3.1977: -More than $1,000 rc<:cived from a wager in a sweepstakes, wagering pool or lottery (except state lot- !A!rles}. This includes all pari-mutuel betting pools, lnclud~ tng on· and off.tra~k racing pools, similar types of bet~ pools. -More than $5,000 from state-conducted lotteries. This doesn't apply to st ate-conducted swee~takes and wagering pools. These are subject to withholding on winnings or more than $1,000. -MORE THAN $1,0GO RECEIVED from any other wagering transaction if the odds are at least 300 to 1 or higher. Winnings from biogo, keno and slot machines are ez •. empt from the withholding. The iloiount su.hJect to withholding is based on the net proceeds less the cost of the ticket, taking into account all tickets for identical wagers. For instance, if a person places one $100 bet and two $50 bets on a single horse to win a single racetrack event, the track is supposed to tot81 the winnings from all three tickets and subtract the cost of the three tickeb to see whether winnings top the $1,000 subjec:t to withholding by the trade. WHEN A WINNER IS SUBJEcr TO withholding. th~ payor will require him to furnish a statement -under penalties or perjury -giving his name, address, taxpayer identilicaUoo number and similar data tor anyone eoUUed to share in the winnings. Those who participate in wagers should retain their las· Ing tickets or other evidence of losing wagers, for gamblli:lg losses D)ay completely offset winnings for the year. Winners of one or more wagers subject to the 20 percent withholding will already have paid the tax. To offset it, they must list the total losing wagers as an itemized deduction on Uteir t ax returns and claim tbe 20 percent gamblin8 withholding as a credit against tax tor the year. IN ANOTHER AREA. PROFESSIONALS or business people attending professional or business·related conveD· tions will be subject to new deduction llmlts on attending foreign conventions after Dec. 31, 1976. Firsl, the new law allows certain specified deductions ror attending no more than two foreign conventions during a taxable year. For instance, deductible transportation ex· penses cannot exceed coach or economy air fare; deducti· ble subsistence expenses cannot exceed the perdiem al- lowance ror U.S. government employes at the convention site, etc. Second, deductions are barred from attendance at more thlln two allowable foreign conventions. "Foreign" means a convention, seminar or similar meeting held outside the United States, its possessions and the Pacific Tl'UBt Ter. ritories. TIURD. THOSE WHO TAKE such deductions must at· tacb a kind of "report card" to their tax returns so the IRS can check compliance with Ute requirements. This will con· sist or a signed statement that lista the total days or the trip, hours spent at scheduled business activities each day, pro. gram or scheduled business activities, etc. Recession Fades Bank Recovery Noted by FDIC WASHINGTON CAP) -The chairman or the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC} says he thinks the nation's banks are overcoming the problems they bad in lhe re-cession of 1974-5. Robert E. Barnett gave that assessment at the same time he reported that the number of banks on the FDIC's list of t.rou bled banks bas increased. THE RATE OF INCREASE IS declining, be said, pre- saging a return to health as the economy improves. Barnett said the number or banks curtently on the list of institutions with a relatively high proportion or shaky loani is now 379, compared with 349 at the beginning of the year'. The figure contrasted to the 183 banks. considered problem& at the end of 1974. The increase included a jump in the number of bi.g banks Crom two at the beginning or the year to eight now• with one of those eight considered to be in serious difficulty. TIIE BIG·BANK CATEGORY INCLUDES the 88 in the nation with deposits of $1 billion or more. In all, the FDIC keeps an ere on 14,700 banks whose deposits are insured by the federa agency. That number amounts to 98 percent of all banks in the nation. 1 · Barnett. in keeping with traditional practice, did no4 name any or lhe banks on the current watch list. • He described the increase this year a11 DOt too bad. "J1a{ delighted Lhat•s all it's gone up," he said. HE EXPLAINED THAT THE MOST recent lnerease it mlJd compared with the increase last year and tndJcutoa that the b(lnking system may be shaking off the problems tt oncountered during the recent recession. . "That's cobaisteht with what should be happening "he said. The normal lag in the jump in problem banks eoitow· ing a recession is ll to 18 months, he said. And since t he most recent recession was deeper thaa JnOlt, Jt makes sen se lhat the tag should be a UtUe longer be said. ' HE SAID PROSPECl'S ABE EXCELLENT for th~ eight biggest banks for avoiding either failure or some sort ot feceivershtp by the FDIC. He said the number of big banks curreqtJy on Ute list ls less worrisome than the smaller baJ,lks, because it takes longer to assess tho condlUon of the biggest banks aod Ulut they can be placed on the list several months a.Iler they havt already passed their crlsls. Rockwell Gets Contract An $8.1 rnhUon letter contract t4 product ~ •Yltttn• for the U.S. Nny Trident 111bl'Qarine'1 onbom:d naviptor hu bc1qa awarded to Rocneµ lnternatlooal.'a mariae systems dJvialon, Anaheim. by the Na\tal S. SY1te.lll1 COmmand and the Stratepc ~J1lem1 ProJec!t ot· nee, The 11reement tndades the delivery or spa.re pal'tf, le>.lbUct IUJ)pott an4 reUabWt,y and evaluation testm1 t.&b. The letter eclllrad '1so lnehtdas additional monitor •rstema ror retronf,on Poeeldoa dua flMt Ball.l.IUc llbaUe (18M) au~marlnea • , •• . ' ' I· '• .. ... 1 • "' ·' I • '· ,,, ,,, r · • • I .... AJ 4 DAIL v PILOT .. · Receued Tl.uue Holder a.oo TluueHolder 4.00 StandlnJI ~Dish 2.60 Wall 5oaP Dlah 1.70 Tooth BnWa and Tumbler Holder 1.70 Friday. November 5, 1976 4x8SHEET %" SOUDCORE PLYWOOD 790 3x3x7FT. CEDAR FENCE POSTS 50! 6Fi. REDWOOD GRAPESTAKES 20! TRANSLUCENT VINYL WINDOW SHADES Cut to size free to36"w1de ·oot ... . . ~ . ~PEACOCK . SHORTY'S ONCE-ONLY OVERSTOCK AND Remember when you bad to thro" a garage sale to get dd of a lot oi thlnsr-you had no room for? It kllled you to Hll lt so cheap. rS~bt? That'• wb_.. we ~· So don't mind our m.lsty eyes. march right ln and acne. Nobodr felt aony for rou when you had to gi•• away that great mooH head for Sl.00. w.11 Nil more Clearcmcff en'" flod . 8tuH thats oyerstocked. but you won't f.lnd thiJ stuff at the" pric••· ao don't meH around. come in early. · ACADEMY TUB ENCLOSURES # l60T Tempered GlaHTub Enclosure _, o~o 0 2545 L-------4 #200TBetter 3265 Tempered GlaH Tub Enclsure .... #300TBe.t Tempered GlaH Tub Enclosure 3465 Either Swan Dealgn or Plain .•.•.. '#.OOTGold 3465 Tempered GlaH Tub Enclosure •.. WISPERCOOL GALVAN12ED TURBINE VENT 1900 REDWOOD CHAISE L0UNGE 13~ ~ 6FT.x15 FT. BAMBOO FENCE 32: 6 FT. x 15 FT. REED FENCE 7~ PLANT PRIDE PLANT PRODUCTS TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE CHEINCO PLANT WATERING BOTTLE sot 10 LBS • CHARCOAL · SPRAYPAINT r G.E.LAMP SOCKET DIMMER BRIQUETS Lots of Colors . 40~AM ' 9'xl2' DROP CLOTH 9k 10'x25' HEAVY DUTY PLASTJCT~ 175 COOL CUSHION SEATS Choice of Styles DASHBOARD THERMOMETER S0!1so Antique Sil•er Finish Garment Hook 1.as AahT~ 2.70 Single Switch Plate ... Double Switch Plate 1~• Combination Switch Plate 1.as 18"' Towel Bar 4.00 ~aces ingSocket ·10.t • 't' . 23ii.~REEN ~ .. SION . .CORD · :s·oi • 8 Fl'. TWO TUBE FLUORESCENT FIXTURE 9~- ALL DECORATIVE CEILING LAMPS ~OFF REDWOOD TABLE SETS 8 Ft.'Wlth 2 Bench••· •••••• I 9 00 '8'' With 2 Benches, . 2900 Square or Rouod ..••••••• , REDWOOD CHAIR 90t KELLEY GARDEN WHEEL BARROW 900 DICHONDRA SEED 1!0 DEFEC'rIVE . LAWNMOWERS AND TILLERS YouFlx 'em STAINED GLASS PANELS •• 1 2'x'' 9Qt 2'x6' 135 GRANDOR FfbAF F OR TILE SureSUck or Plain m· 15! BIGELOW CARPET .. .9 CLEANER KIT 2so DOUBLE- FACE TAPE 30!u JADE HARDBOARD PANELING %"x4'x8' FlntQuaUty 3so GAS LOG SETS All Discontinued Models, Complete 9~ TEMCO FREESTANDING FIREPLACES Small 7500 Large 10000 COOKN' CROCKPOT 7so Rubbermaid SHELF LINER SOUDCOLdk # 1603. # 1613 60'Roll PATTERNS # 1606. # 1616 95c Roll 24" Towel Bar 4AO Towel Ring 2.60 90~ BIFOLD DOOR SETS 24" 1 s.00 30" 20.00 36" 25.00 CORNING WARE SET 00 1 Qt.Sau~ 1 ~ Qt. Saucepan. 5 Extra 2-1 ~ Qt. Pana with Conn. SET WHILE STOCK LASTS Ad Good 'Tll Nov. 10 No RAINCHECKS REORDERS - 1 •· \ I ~-~ Future First Lady Rosalynn Carter thinks square dancing in White House would be fun. BEA ANDERSON, Editor F"day. November 5. 1976 AP Wlre ..... lO 81 The big day for class pictures has arrived, and Chris Harkins at first seems a little nervous but with the help of Erline Gam he is ready to 'look at the birdie.' _J .•. ' . ' . 'Plains Lady' Blossoms . .. .. . ~.- By VICTORIA GRAHAM As• .. l•1t•Pret1Wrilw She came a long way from Plains, Ga. But Rosalynn Carter 's farm wife toughness and her Sunday school spirit inake her a First Lady who could never just sit in the White House RO$e Garden. "I see things all the time that I've got to do something about," says the 49·year-old woman who campaigned 19 months on her own to put her husband in the White House. "There's no end to the things I can do. You can do anything," says Mrs. Carter who used lo weigh peanut trucks and keep the books for the family business. She calls herseU "a simple person" whose favorite cam- paign sign was ''Plain people like the lady from Plains." Like the Baptist Sunday school teacher she is, she ca.lied the campaign a crusade, sounding the theme that "Jimmy ' Carter cares about people'' and that her family knows the meaning of hard work. Now, Rosalynn Carter has the chance to prove it. As First Lady, she says, she will try lo coordinate and im· prove ser vices to the elderly, the mentally ill and the ~larded. She especially is interested in Getting fifth graders like Adam Kempler to smile is fairly simple, says Erline Garn. The younger ones are more difficult. seeing more community mental health centers, like the ones Carter established when he was governor of Georgia. VOLUNTEER In Georgia she visited most public and private mental health facilities and worked as a hospital volunteer. She served on the Governor's Commission to Improve Services for Mentally and Emotionally Handkapped Georgians in 1971 and was honorary mental health chairperson in 1973. From 1974 to the present. she has been a voling delegate from the Georgia Association for Men· tal Health to the national Mental Health Association annual meet· ing and a member of its board of directors. Mrs. Carter doesn't have a grand plan for social services yet, but notes that programs and ser vices are fragmented and wantl\ a national commission to inventory what is available to the elderly and the mentally ill. ·• As First Lady she would have no legal authority to do anything on her own, but other First Ladies -Lady Bird Johnson and Eleanor Roosevelt, to name two -have been able lo effectively push special projects in the past. During the ca mpaign, Mrs. Carter steadfastly refused to dis· cuss any difference or (>pinion with her husband, saying: "This isn't the time to disagree." She added: "But after he's elected, if there's something we disagree on, and if I think it's im- portant and I can't change his mind, then I will speak out." She and her husband are partners, 11be says, and she has sat in on most strategy and policy segsiorui. CLARITY "I've always argued with Jim- my," she says. "I don't just ac- cept. A lot of times J do it so I will understand what he's talklnc about. If he has an idea and it's not clear to me, maybe it won't be clear to other people." As an example of their joint de· cislon-making, she cites Carter's personal opposmon to abortion but rejection or a constitutional amendment against it. Mrs. Carter supports the pro· posed Equal Rights Amendment' to the U .S . Constitution. She opposes the use of mari- juana but believes possession of sma.11 amounts of the drug should be decriminalized. Mrs. Carter was born in Plains, attended Plains High School and Georgia Southwestern College, a Lwo-, year school. Her father died when she was 13, and her mother worked as a dressmaker to support,the Cami· ly. Rosalynn pitched in, sewl~ and working in a beauty parlc:>!'. CIDLDHOOD FRIENDS . She and Carter grew. UP together, and he says in bis autobiography that after tHei'r first date he told bis mot.her: "Sbt\'S the &irl I w antto marry." While Carter was away on sub marine duty. Rosalynn man~e< the family. When he returned it Plains, she wor~ed in the ramll) business. When he decided to rur for governor, sbe campaigned with him. · They have four children: Jack, 29, a lawyer; Ghlp, 26, who worked in thtt family business; Jeff, 24, a city planning sludertt. andAmy,8. · In her While House role, Mrs. Carter will be no straniei! lo large-scale, formal entertaining. During their first year in 'the Georgia governor's maruiion,,the Carters entertained 750 diftnet" guests every w.eek for ereht. weeks. ' Althoueh Mrs. Carter has said, "We're not people who like to .party," she thinks a little sq~are dancing would be nice. "We always used to bilve square dancea al the govert¥>r's manston.'1 llbe says. "And I tllnk it wOU)d be fun to hafe one at the White House." ' .. . Stud·ents Sa.y 'Cheese' By DENNIS McLELLAN , Otl~•D•llyPllOISt..ttf The College Park Elementary School first grade class bad marched in an orderly fashion to the audUorium, where they now waited patiently in line. Some com bed their hair with their fingers and straightened their collars. Others stared in wide-eyed wonderment al the strange· looking equipment on the &tage. It's school picture day. .. . And. for the next rour hours, students will be parnding through the auditorium to flash their best -and sometimes toothless - smiles into the camera lens. "OK, send one in," said head photographer Erline Garn, se;it- ed on a stool in front of the camera, operated by assistant Nancy Hoyt. Mrs. Garn reached Into a box of black combs and combecl the boy's hair out of his eyes, which shyly focused on the noor. SMILES PROMeTED . "Keep that chin up," said.Mrs. Garn. ''That's great. • "Say peacl\es," she cooed. "Say puppies." "Puppies," the boy whispered, finally smiling a big, toothless grin. . 'The strobe n ashed and hb eyes grew wide from the surprisingly bright light. He hurried off the stage. "Each age has a personality,'' expl.ed Mra. Garn, during a brealC. "ti.ese (the first lf&deQ > are so innocent. That's wf\y they'resocule." · She lau1bed. 1'They stay that way untn about fourth grade. Then .f>.e1 begin to get sopbiaUcated." · The two photo1rapbers, dec:ke:d out in rfd blaaera, are one ot 16' crews c:u1renlly plyin1 the . Orance, Blverside aqd.a portion of. Loi Aq1etes counties for the Fullerton.baaed Blalack Sohool PtetUl'el. • Qecauaelhe.,oritluetllOftal (it lleekl oil in the s prio1 and sum· mer>, rnost of the tt~ l..,en and dslatanla are women, who pretu bevinf a 1art·t1meJob. avsYaSMON .. ln th. I all · •e ~ • full net.'' 11ld IC nag am. -'Wbell. ··u makes It interesting. You the children go back to school, we don 'l become bored. ": J goback. We're extremely bl.lay." "Now today," she said, above -Both Mrs. Garn and Mrs. Hoyt, the blare of the school orchestra Corona del Mar residents, got into that had begun rehearsin, 11\· the photography business after another part of the auditomnn, their children had grownup. "we're being serenaded." "I always had been interested in it," said Mrs. Garn, who start-UNUSUALSVBJECl'S ed nearly five years ago. "But I . Sometimes the schools will ~tf~ .. _ d di • them to photograph class pe(.e •• was r aising chllu.aen an ·c1n l Stich subjects al do•s, snakes. have the time to do it." • "I enjoy working with children, mice and roosters have appeared especially the little ones," noted before their lens. Mrs. Hout. "They're just so jnno· "There are a lot ortun thlnga on cenl." · · lhJs Job, .. said Mrs. Garn. "Just The crews deal with the entire the other day Nancy got shot witn spectrum of ages and correspond· 3 water pistol. Ing smiles , rrom "gaps to nice "To stay In this job you hlvt ~ teeth to braces." stay calm and have a eood le!IO> What's the most difficult aee to of humor. It can getft'antlc." •• - shoot ? Altboulhshehaa~cuatom~ "There's no question about it," iiule bird (''Watch the bi~-., said Mrs. Garn, laughini "jun-that she sometimes uses on ~ lor high. They're extremdy sell-schoolers, she seldom brinp~ conscious and unsure of outrortbeolderchllcb:en. •!•. The k ids of ~oday are .. -.,.(r themselves and it all shows up ()() sophisticated, she said, that it i.u. the camera. vr:; "lnhlghschoollheybegin toget spires more wisecracks Ulfll' a little equilibrium back." cooperation. •• NOCO,\XING , SOMETinNG NEW The older teenage girls s~ She said tlae young ones onen' need to be coaxed into sn\llbW. are afraid of the lfghts. "It's new however. "In high school the~ to them, somethingthey'venevef" want to be gorgeous.1bey'll give done before."· youtheirbeltsmlle." In the preschool age. she said, Jn traveling the school dte1ll.t ''Webayupa,wfullotoftears. Mrs. Garn has noticed th.c ~ ''But on the. whole, the cblldre actaool 1tudenta are dreastta1 really love to b1Ye~ pictures mucb better than they . ero taken. Tbeyuyl 'It pictureday' severaljearugo. • • and'tbericture Id iabere'." "Ne•~e and cleanll'*9 ;Is She• on•of th moet lmpor· ln." she reported, "It start.el pt. tat qua e' for •'school pbotd' 'Uni better about three yean -.O irapher to ha'velrappon with and now it'• just like a futiion t.he atldenta .. and you aSmplJ 1_., '' mustlaechUdrea.·~ Aa~Mtond gradeenteredb One of Ute reasons she enJoys a~um, Mrs. G11m and M5'1· .the Job, she said, lsbecauae ••~h · HQrt'hfttbacktowcll'lt. . dQ la cti«eteat: There always are , .... ~t.'• s.d, · • 1Ul \be pleture oew workln• ea'lironmelD _. l~'eoiD•o9boneJ,llDileJ1&1t- problem1todealwitb. ·""""'· ~'rl"a bft... • : \ '~ , __ _ 8% (Ann .Landers ~ • • ~ DEAR ANN LANDERS: God .bless you fo r your reply to lhe ,roung man who was despondent •e er his homosexuality. I :.pent 14 ~Yfars of my life Cl'm 30 now) try. home and heard so much about the sinfulness of bomosexualit,y that I stopped going lo church. Fortunately. I met a kind and understanding clergyman who spent m any hours helping me see that God loves all bis ~hildreo - gay, straight, whatever. found the C'Our age to tell my parents . They accepted 1t beautifully I don 't recommend lo aJI gays that lhey tell their parents, but l .do urge them to go directly to God, as l did. I have never fell so rulfilled and C'Onlented. Life is beautiful. -YO'U R FRIEND wo man who dieted for her husband's sake, went into therapy after regaining her weight the second time. ditched Mr. Turn· OH a nd lost her SS pounds ug1:1i n. 1n mylifo. This time it's for ME. I have accepted rull responsibility for my ratnus. No one put.a food into my mol.llb. And no excuse is good enough to be tot. It's not only unaUractivc but a health hazard. DEAR THI NNER: Beauttfut! Wbat an uppc-r rorthose laUJesout thtore who need emoCJonaJ •up· port. Lel me know wbeD you blL :.ize8. Uig to accept my homosexuality I was the :.on ~a small-town busi· nessman and scared lo death to admit to myself or anyone else iJtatlwasgay. Finally l met a Ulan I wanted to :Stttlc down with. Although we hid our relationship from all but a &{nail circle of friends:· we had a '\to'Onderful h fc and Were very hap- 'J>ytogether. When he left me I felt as if my whole world had fallen apart. I was brought up in a Christian Since alt else failed, I)ook his advice and gave God a chance. Ann, il was the best decision I ever made. I prayed, "Lord, I cim gay apd I dOP 't think. I can chanre. Please lake control of my life. Thr will be done." Soon after r pr ayed I felt serene and at peace. A m onth later I met another man with whom I plan to spend lhe rest of my llte. I also DEAR FR IEND: Thank you for alaartnc yogr experience. And DOW 1 word Co all who read the Bl· ble faithfully: Please don't &ell me to look up Genesis 19, Romans. ~hapter 1, Leviticus 18:22 or 1 Cortnthlans6:9-10,ete. Help la where you rind it. DEAR ANN LANDERS: This letter is for ''Skinny Winner," the I'm a 16-year-old girl who weighs about 30 pounds more than she should. I recenUy decided 1 am NOT going to be fat the rest of my life. 1 can and will get myself down to a slze 8 dress and slay there. So far I've Jost 10 pounds. Doth my lather and boyfriend are anti· fat. Daddy fo ught the weight bat- tle last year and lost 50 pounds. A few years ago I dieted and los t 30 pounds but I gained it back because I bad done it for the men U sten, men with fat wives or girlfriends, mothers with fat daugMers. Get off their backs. Leave them alone. I know from experience if you layotfthcy'lldo something aboul it eventually. Let it be for t hemselves. not for you. It's the Oflly way they will. keep the welght off forever. -. T HINNER NOW TUAN A. MONTH AGO Don't flunk your chemis try test. Love is more than one set of glands calling tu another. If you have trouble m aking a distinction yo u need Ann's book.kt, "Love or Sex and How to Tell tlle Dir· ferencc." Send a long, self. addressed, stamped envelope with your request and !iO cents in coln to Ann Lnndcrs, P.O. Box 1400, Elgin, Ill. 60120. ., TIRED of . UPHOLSTERY FAILURE? Cooking Up New Image c:::E.~~.. ~~j:~~c ... -;;;;;;======;;;;;p::==i • NO DRUGS • NO EXERCIS Injured Jewelry. tow cost. high resu11s By MARCIA FOlcSBERG OllM0.11,l'ilolSWI News reporter Trilia Toyot.a has a degree in home economics and she's proud ofiL fl' tnake ends meet during inflation, how to deal with the housing situation and how to clothe the The KNBC anchorperson for Saturday's 5:30 and 11 p.m. newscasts told Orange District members of California Home Economics Association that her· valuable, well-rounded back· ground h el ps "more than anything" in her work. family." · Speaking on Effective Use or Public Relations for the Home Econ omist. M s. Toyota described ways for CHEA to get news stories and press con- ferences covered by the elec- tronic media. since "people don't know what it means." . The concept can be elevated by using the media to express how the field has expanded to include lhe art a nd science or relating families to progress in today's culture. "The consu mer movement bas done more to change peoples' lives In the past few years than anything else," s he theorized. When covering issues like the Fine Jewelry ht>aled uy Of money back gent I e j cw\' I er., We're cit.•p•r. •••ler tharl Jewelry apprais als Uy "--Ii• pr~ or fros"" gradual~ scmolo~1sl -._.,. people, ond we feel C u s l o m d c s 1 g n c d _,.. effectln. Tiiis Is tM jewelry. ....... welfht IMS '"'9"9lft Five M Gems 41e1mt4 °" "'• Todey Show. 270 E. 17th St. c .... MM• Hfllll .....,._.. ,, I 64S·l909 DAILY f'I LOT CHRl!:-.1:\1,\S TH l':E £VERYTlfUllSDAY <..1.i.~~ifil-0 Section SUM WAY 646· 7933 645-2051 NOOR tltl ,.._, dq 642 Ctt1t..,. St. Coste Mes.,,i621 In fact, the Channel 4 news director "told m e I was hired because of my home cc degree," she explained. "You may think you have a· good idea, but you might run into ·a brick wall." Ofte n times ass ignment editors' knowledge of the field is limited -it ceases after cooking and sewing, sbe said. milk boycott, beer prices or home i.-------------------- mortgages, she had to •·rush oul Newscaster Tritia Toyota finds home ec degree an ass~t. A 1969 graduate or Oregon State Univer sity, she added journalism classes lo her course of study since "I was looking ahead toward television. "I wanted to do something like food demonst rations on educa- tional stations." During a broadcast economic seri es, s he utilized what she learned in her m ajor and "tried to explain to people what 's going on in the world,'' s he said. · GRAIN INCIDENT "For example, the public is in- terested in how the Russian grain deal affects their lives, how to "But never take no for an_ answer. Call and call again. Write letters. If you want a story on the air, be loud, outspoken, ag. gressive, pus hy, or whatever it takes." She told t he group that "while, male management decides what is to be covered . "They are probably graduated from school in the '50s. '40s and even '30s when home ec was basically a science or the home. IMAGE OUTDATED She believes that the image of home ec is "shoddy, outd:.ited" and find an expert to talk to." BlJTCllER Instead of interviewing a butcher in n cold storage locker. she prefers "a mini-expert in the home ec field who will function as a liaison to help people cope more cffecti vely today." Ms. Toyota outlined ways for the organization to get its point across: -Expe riment with public service television prog rams. -Try smaller. independent stations. -Make tho story as visual as possible. -llold news conferences in the morning. -Utilize the wire services Moods Dom_inate Logic fo.r Cancer SA T U RDAY. NOVEMBER& to error. Know il and ask questions. Look Out Westminister Mall Look Out South Coast Plaza Huntington Center Customers know what 11 s like lo be No t Just bnng your credit card to Huntinglon Center and register tor new NUMBER ONE CLUB charter membersh10 and receive S 14 00 FREE GIFT OFFER L1m11ed to• lirsl 15 000 to register Pt ease hurry! Beach Blvd & Edinger at the an Diego Fwy. 00 •OU ~NOW YOU~ O•l\MO•m!. VAl!)f n(CVNll v INCAf .,o;. o• w .. .. ,,,.,..,. tM1 wt\llt14 •n•.u, ,,,f'.:9 At'lrn'•1""J •I' tr.f'.:•'"''"•t •,,A, l !M ti,,,,.. Oh'>fl l')f th,. 1e~l'V I\ All 1mrwtrt1tr1• o.vt ••''''" "' tr·h·tt'WVA rn rl·•ll ''·1 '>' '''"1""''" ,,., J•Uf1ni.J ln-J Offl>t\ .. l'H r.~ i' 1~t•r••l1 -, +t D'''""' ~ .,, 1 '•I )•u• Al lfl! • ,t hAll It'll' v11,, .. l)f l 'l •"80u~ttt '~flf 41\ ,, 11 .. , ,,, '"" fllP. lf'Ui nr , .. ~ "°"' 1!' ,. ,., t'hfl-" '"" 11•¥tf"l'V l1w damiii09 Of 10 \l~t1fv lh• 1d(lnt1fv ~~of c..,,,.,,,,. f >rt nl lt'h• ()ft\ f' 1" th~ "" .. 01 ol io.,, .-dtr PROFESSIONAL JEWELERS INC. '"" Jl'hll..l WS -t.(MOLOf l~f • -OCStC.f"il!C.RS 714/963 5625 20!107 Rrookhurst Su~et, Suite 201 Hun11119to11 Beach, CA 92646 By SYDNEY OMA RR ARIES (Mar ch 21- Aprtl 19): Full moon position and aspects in- dicate money arrange-emotional involvements men t s a r f e c ting are featured. Moods tend partners bi p, taxes, to dominate logic as Cull leases. Open dial\lgue m o o n s t r e s s e s with one who means friends hip, fantasies, spreading the message complains, sings blues. will dominate. One who· SAGITTARIUS (Nov. Jnspired you in past 22-Dec. 21): What had l: o u J d rn a k e rea p. ~.o an "open secret" ic; ---------·--------------------- pearan~. • not likely to be "quiet" LOSEWEIGHT AND LIVE LONGER 9'9 n wolh ll!t\ o1th.VJ1111 lonf l.olel' lei.; tl1l.'1f!S-IO:.( P%'1CI' ·l1.111!'h ltlo·~ 111\•Qlrny uQIY t •tt'>' !iu!Qt\ ~ h dllft1tlltc Ill Y"'Jf lfllflOl1 No poH l.1bltt Of ~~ APOuclNt 1~111$04dd~l'(t 10 Ille pUOllc IS Slr00199". motf flOWtll\ll 01 "10I t efletlrit tf\an I~~ "•" lt~le o1Clt11n SWfl ~ ~"IOPl"1' VC-.1 HI ~~luln food Mid trlT~ la! tM I l•1j1n~ UO tl't!Q< on<tf,1'1 Of t1ltd W"'ClM Uti rl\I N ,,.,,,.., l.11 .slCJ l1v .... lil'lf•)f'f °' ~ .. II ~ .... Ill> MWJM vl)U w.1111 1111 l~t SWU -l A.otlo• "'Q l'l.111 Ui II ro .I\ '°" ll<l "'I "'"'•V t>w.11-No ,. "'lllWIS ~,. ~ THRIFT Y. ,1 " ~'~ •• , much to you. aspirations, a need to be. TAURUS <April 20-appreeiated, wanted, May 20): Aim for securi-loved. ty. Let othe rs do the· LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): spec_ulating -, consult Emphasis on building, family. beautify sur-organization, accep- roundings, entertain at tance of c h a lle nge, home. Fulfillment In-responsibility. Ability to dicated as one at top lead. inspire, expfess makes roorofor you. s urges t o fore front. GEMINI (May 21-Jt.me Some may accuse you of 20): Area that bad been "preaching."· They're hidden , obscured, envious. peopled wit~ your fe~s. VIRGO (Aug. 22·Scpt. d o ub.t s will r ec~1ve 22): Lunar aspects in- bcneht or greater l1~ht, dicale communications, wisdom. You come out of advertis ing, publishing, doldrums. You're hap- l:JBRA ($~pt~ 23-~t. any longer. 22): Check tendency to CAPRICORN <Dec. vacillate -decide direc· 22-J an. 19): Affairs of Uon a nd go! Full moon heart domina te. Love pbsition accents pay-nature is e mphasized. ments, .receipts. un-AQUARI US (J an . ders'tanding reached 20·F eb. 18): You get pro· With partner or mate. verbial "break." One Money is very much in· who pulls strings wants volved. to m ake room for you at SCORPIO (Oct. 23-more elevated position. Nov. 21): Jlighlight n ex-Be receptive, diplomatic ibility, humor, ability to and don't sell )"ourself perceive potential. Ac· short. cept social invitation. PISCES (Feb. 19· Break loose from cmo-March 20): Travel pro- tional grip or one who . gnosticalions arc subject p1er c·ANCER (June 21- July 22>: Romantic. Workshop Handy ~ SALE! SALi! SALE! SALE! SALE! ~ WORKSHOP: Steve . how t o fix small ap- Long, maintenance han· plian ces, outlets and dyman, will demonstrate faucets: how to buy new appliances, and how to shop for secondhand ones. · GRAND OPENING 110 McFadden Place Newport Beach, Calif. Open 10-8 7 days Ph. 675-3080 Saturday, Nov. 6 ~ s ta.ff or.~d :=::::;::~ His presentation will ..------------------------------ w ~ ~ et Cje ~ !i Womens ~ Haberdoshery ·~ "' INVENTORY CLEARANCE To Makt Room for Ntw Fal IMrthondise 30% OFF • DRESSES • SKIRTS • PANTS • aOUSES •JUHSI 4" >· f;i i ~ ~ -'FERllW <XllllTYMD ~ 16«> f. C.oost Hwy. Corona cW Mar• MMW. ~ SAUJ SAUi SAUi SAUf SAi.ii fl be at noon Thursda:,:. --------------------Nov. 11, in the math/s· °""' ( .... tlo) •••• '.. SR-t 7 (ht., (pt~) .••••• , .S7·$10 lec.~(ttrflitll)., •••• t8-$t0 • ..., (pWil), •••••• s' , • ., 4 'OUllCI ~ T~ •• , S20 & oo tolhop Dc1li. ••••• ~o a "" ("""· 4•-·••• •1& & up ~tirflt .•••••• i 1ta up a.:lt. .......... ••••••••·. ••••• •••••• •• • ••• 1 14 a up .,.. 1 ...... Sitt ... ,. M., • ..r....,, lftileMf • ~~ cience building, room 125, Golden West College. Sponsoring the session will bo Lhe Women 's Center on campus. DELTA GAMMA: The UC Irvine chapter will present a fashion show and luncheon at noon Saturday, Nov. 13, in the Balboa Bay Club. Proceeds will support the Blind Chll dren's Center, Los Angeles. Tickets~ at $10, may be reserved by calllng Mat· ty Yardley at 675-4481. I hlorl< '""'" 1•( \..., Dlr<1n I rvy "" M••< ll11llu1 Ohlf '"'"'"" • ,, .. ,,.Wll Catllcart • SOUTH AFRICA a w en 's group on W esday, Davis said • .,. wi,..._ he 1 s ··seriously con· Neieest Nation si ering" running for M l t Ar . , . g ernor in 1978. ap oc a es raca s newest nation , Transkei, set up by while·ruled Sout h Africa uter Teld as a product of apartheid. The nation's 3.3 SAN LUIS OBISPO do without official recognition by majo an earthquake near two powers. nuclear power plants -------------------+-here could cause a dis· Mluod•l• Corp., Irvine, hu announced the rouowing personnel changes: -Lo• Hrlbu, former national accounts manager for the firm's Reality <TM> systems. has been named vice president ot marketing Roa Murny, former national sale11 manager ror direct sales, has been named vice president or saJ~ Don Pagan, former vice president or special system. has been appointed to a new post as vice president, service. -Norman D. Heller , a former consultant for the Los Angeles area electronic industry, has been named director of systems development. -Ronald R. Nlckbarg, former director ot operations, has been named vice president or opera· , tions. • Howard A. Siegel, Newport Beach, has been elect.ed president of State Mutual Savings and Loan Association, Newport Beach. Seigel joined the association as executive vice president and managing officer in 1975. He will con tiuµe as executive vice president and chief operat· i.rf'f office of Far West Financial. * 8 . J . Lavins has been named president of J ensen Marine, Costa Mesa. He is former vice pre· sident and general manager of the sports products division of the Shakespeare Company and has more than 25 years of manufacturing ar.d engineering ex· perience. I aster that could almost • N N Pl I wipeouttbepopulation of Michael K. Williams, sw;i Ju~ Capistrano. h~s ew ant / the nearby town of Avila beeu promoted to loan officer in Union Bank s • / Beach. That possibility ,.Orange County re~ional office. He is a former 1 was raised Thursday in member of the bank s real estate loan department. H . D I testimony be fore the • t t E R Tbe C. E. Miller Corp., Irvine, has announced e arIDgs u e !:de Co~=~~~ati~~oc;,c~~ sthtafe ,'~.!lowing realignm~nt of its management-level mission. -Wllllam C. Biggs, former vice president of By THOMAS D. ELIAS Fa&e Alarwe contract administration, to vice president. market-. Public hearings have begun on th . first nuclear ing. power pl ant proposed in California s.· ce the defeat LOS ANGELES CAP) -Wllllam G. Cooke, former vice president or or the Nuclear Safeguards Initiative ast June. And -A s m a 11 package engineering, to vice president or contract develop· it's already clear that the planned fjlcilily will have touched off a flurry of ac· ment. a tougher time gettin.g st.ale a~pr '_al than the three tivity at Los Angele.s In· -Micheal D. Smllh, former vice president of atomic plants operating in Cal1fo 1a. terna tional Airport when sales, to vice president of project administration Even though the initiative, hich appeared on it was believed it might -Jack E. Curtis, formerly with Standard Oil the ballot as Proposition 15, los Ya 2· l margin, the contain a bomb, but of· Company or California, to director or engineering. package of nucle~r sai:ety ills it s purred the ficials said later it was a • Legislature to pass 1s having· impact. false alarm. Jan Zachariasse, Laguna Beach, has been Th e package al the d l c th I 1 FOR THOSE NEW LAW -BEING applied for United Airlines baggage name sa es manager o e Marr olt Hole , h r. t t' e fore· tat off'c'als to ask Newport Beach. lleJ'oined the hotel's starr in 1975 as t e 1rs 1me -ar s e 1 1 te r minal had only a questions they have neyer before been concerned cassette recorder and convention sales manager. over. I women's cosmetics in· * Among the issues1the state Energy Commission side, officials said Thurs-Denn ls M a c Donell h.as been appointed has said it must t esolve about the Sundesert day, but it appeared manager of the Lido Village office of City National I I t · ed b th S D'eno G· s and Bank. He has been with the bank for three years. nuc ear p an Pr:"'PoS Y e a n 1 ,.. a from one angle to look El · c th most recently in the loan department al the Beverly eclric o. art? ese : -How s afe is the re· like a ha nd grenade. Hills headquarters. r SOU'\"HERN <.:AUFORNIA actor the fi rm plans to Secret Lobby use in the generating sta· lion. pla nned for a desert • William A. Wells, Lake Forest, has been pro- moted to vice president for international sales at Business System s Technology, Inc. He is former na· tional sales manager for the company. \."'OCUS area near Blythe? Could SDG&E use ~ome other form of ~encration? -How much waler will the plant use and would that hurt farmers in the area who may depend on the same water for irrigation? -What impact will the sever al hundred miles of trans mission lines needed have on the relatively pristine desert areas they'll pass through? -OF ALL TllESE QUESTlONS, only the ft.st has been a traditional concern of the Nuclear Regulatory Com m1ss1on, tht> federal agency which formerly had virtually all authority in the Cield . Other California ulll.alles are looking closely at the handlin g of the SUndesert case. for 1t will be the precedent guiding the handlmg of s1m1lar proposals in the future. So Concerned is the Pacific Gas & Electnc Co . whose atomic rac1!Jly at D1ablo Canyon on the coast near San Luis Obispo has been beset with one pro- blem after another .. that 1t has become a formal participant 1n the San Diego utility's case. even though it will get no p<>wer from Sundesert for Northern California customers "TRIS COULD AFFECT MANY of our future nperat1ons." PG&E attorney Dan Lubbock told an Energy Commission committee. PG&E will tslsv be looking at the Sunde.sert out· come as a barometer of the commission's general attitude toward nuclear power. The comm1ss1on voted 3·1, with Chairman Richard Maullin aMtaining, to oppose Proposi- uoo 15 last s pring. But since then. Gov Brown has appointed one ot the com missioners. R1rhard Tuttle. a superior court judge and replaced him with the more ronserv a lion-minded Gene Varanini MAuLuN With Co mmissioner Ronald l>oc'tor already a known skeptic on atomic power and Maullin's poslUon still unccrtwn. no one can ac· c11ralely predict whether lhe Sundesert plan or any other atomi~ proposal wilJ be approved. ADDEO TO TIUS IS UNCERTAINTY over lhe impact of the apparently ch11ng1ng attitude of local governments In the area. Both the city of Calexico and Imperial County had not llclively oppoi1ed the plant, but both recently asked to become particl· pants in the case bec11use they felt their interests might be threatened. The Cirst phase of the Sundesert heanngs will continue olmosl untll the end of the year, with numerous sessions In San Diego and Blythe. There will be no decision unUI sometime in 1977 from the Energy Commission, and even if it approves. that would bo only the first of many permits the plant will need. Sales To Assist University Band Members of the Univenity High School m arching band and Its support group 'the Band-Aides' are adl .. lng Christmas 1reenery decou Uons and community coupon books as part or their annual fl.IDd ·rals:lng project.' will be delivered Just before Christm u . LOS ANGELES CAP) -Sen. Alan Cranston CD-Calif.> c l a ims a secret lobby wants to st.op the flow of informa- tion from the govern- ment to the people and "short circuit the Bill of Rights." He made the claim in a speech pre pared for Sigma Delta Chi. a na· tional society of pro· ressional journalists S•at1 Req~••ed WASHINGTON (AP) -The Uni ver sity of California asked the U.S. Supre me Court Thurs· d ay to delay. pending ap· peal, a state Supreme Court decision that ruled UC's mi n ority ad · missions programs UD· constitutional In requesting the stay, U.C. attorneys ctrgued the state court's oecis1on might result in "virtual· ly all-white enteri ng cl a ssei." 1n the un- iversity's graduate and professional schools. E.qJO E•der•ed LOS ANGELES CAP) -The Los Angeles Coun- ty Board of Supervisors has endorsed EX{>O '81 , lbe world's fair proposed for the Ontario Motor Speedway five years from now but has firmly ruled out any financial support ror the project. The endorsement re· i1olution was m ade Thursday by Kenneth Hahn. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Th e b oa r d o f supervisors has agreed to pay a subsidy lo the Southern Califo rnia Rapid Transit District, assuring that bus Cares will remain nt their cur· rent rate. The two bodies re- ached the compromise ThursdaS' for the $4.5 mlllioo subsidy lor the current fiscal year. 6 Attain Top List * Robert W. Nye, Laguna Niguel, has been named assistant vice president at Bank of Newport. He Is former assistant vice president. • Michael Weisberg has been named gener al manager of Bullock's South Coast Plaza store in Costa Mesa: He joined the organization in 1973 as department manager and has worked as a buyer for the past two years. He replaced Gloria Johnson, former manager of the store. Ms . Johnson will manage a new Bullock's at Scottsdale, Ariz * The following personnel ehtlnges have beeh an· nounced at Dlceon Electronics, Irvine: -J erry Robinson, former Western regional sales manager . to national sales manager. -Lonnie Gaskins, director of m arketing and advanced technology, will concentrate on new pro· duct development. market research and enhance· ment. • Jack ff. Baldwin, Laguna Niguel, has joined Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc .. Newport Beach. as an account executive • LeRoy H . BreUln, Corona del Mar , has been named president and chief executive officer for Newmau Propertiei., Long Beach·based shopping center developer. Former executive vice president of the com· pany, Brettin will be responsible for the operation or the company 's development of neighborhood, community and regional centers. Before JOtning Newman 14 years ago, he managed a chain of men's stores. Richard N. Newbre, Newport Beach, has been promoted lo vice pre.sident. development, for the company. In his previous assignment, he was responsible for neighborhood and community center development, which he will continue to direct in addition to new duties. * Dr. Daniel G. Aldrich Jr., chancellor at UC Irvine, has been appointed to the editorial advisory board of The ExecuUve, a new Orange County busi· ness publication. Editorial director of the magazine is Nick 8 . Wllllams, Laguna Beach, former edJtor of the Los Angeles Times. .. Lee A. Lasher, Huntington Beach, has been elected vice president of education for the Orange County chapter of the National Association or Ac · count1nts. He is director or administration for Arthur Andersen & Company, Sant.a Ana. Richard W. Adamson, Corona del Mar. has been named vice president of membership for the group. He is busi- ness manager for CBS Publications or Newport Beach. • ~rge F . Balch, Costa Mesa. has been promot· ed to c hief financial officer of Ernest W. Hahn,1nc., shopping cente r developer and conU'actor. f'ormer vice president and controller. he is a membel' of the board of d irectors. .. Carl Barnes, Corona del Mar, has joined Estey· Hoover, NewPorl Beach. as an account executive He is former product sales manager for Kil Manufacturing .. Earl Vannoy, Huntington Beach, hns retired Six Orooge Coast stu-from Laura Scudder·~ snack food division alter 30 dents at. Cal Poly San years or service with the company. Luis Obispo were named He joined the company in 1947 as a relief drt ver to the dean's llst for the I and. during the next U years, rose through various summer quarter . • sal~ pos itions to become general sales manager in Tbestudent.s are: 1958. Band m embers and supporters are going from door l o door in t rvtne .. and are also sell- ing the Items at com· I. inunlt.y sbopplng cen- .. ters. Proceeds will go B•nd members are also selling $1.50 coupon books valued at $30. 'the coupons are good at. com- munity stores .• Stanford K. E111lman 1n 1960 he became the N()rlhern California of Cor o n a d cl Mar. aeneral manager and a year lat.er w.a11 n1tned vice Charles M. Coricb of president. He moved back to Southern Callfomla to Costa Mesa, Zane C. , handle marketing In 1971 a11d became vice pr eal· t towards payint for the BAND "EM BERS re- l new band unllorms. cently wore their new WI· lforms and dlaplayed f C111118TRIAS English thelr new bflJDef when 1 holly a n d over1reen. the)' pl1ced nrat ln ~ ; wre1t.h.t, klta. 1arlands dlvt&ioo 1t. th• Oct.. 16 t -and apraya ue ~1ng T uslln Till r Da:r aold unUl Nov. 4. '"'6y parade. < .. Johmon of D•na Polnt, dent of sales in 1975. Jeltrey S. Dyer tnd Jon C . Olsen . b o th or Newport Buch. and Kristy Logan of P'oon· lain Valloy. • J . I . MOier, Newport Beach, bu been •PPoinl· ed au\stant controller tor Ule aec.tatz'7 Hc¥1 at Orange County Airport. Sbe ls the former h4?ao bookkec1>er at the Balboa Ba.J Club. Friday. November 5 1978 DAILY PILOT ·~ All Wl,.jlMte PENN STATE CHEERLEADER IS 'PASSED' OVERHEAD Mrs. Dave Joyner, Earlier Victim of Foot~all Seaaon Hoople Coeds Would Waive This Forward Pass CHAMPAIGN, Ill. <AP J -A University of Illinois sorority pres1· dent wants lo outlaw passing at cam· pus football games. Carol McHugh isn't talking about the passing be ing done by the quarterbacl<s on the gridiron. She wants to stop burly frat men from picking up coeds and passing them over thei r h eads arou nd the grandstand. P EOPLE-PASSING AT football games has reached a dangerous level this season because coeds are being passed io races Crom the bottom to tht;_ Violence Rating Urged for TV As Parent Aide SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The television industry should rate pro· grams according to the degree of viole nce so parents could c urb violence viewing by children, a lead· ing physician c:_ontends. ''In no other way can parents be warned that a vfolent program is go- ing to be telecast." Dr. Thomas Elmendorf told the Nati onal Homicide Symposium presented by the California District Attorneys As· socation. • "I WOULD LlKE TO see these violence ratings made public on a dai· ly basis, program by program, so that parents can turn off these violent pro· grams, so that parents can help their children grow up without the insidiuos threat of acquiring violent behavior by default.'' Elmendorf said. The past president of the California Medical Association said studies have consistently s hown that televised violence has the effect or increasing the aggressive behavior of children. "NETWORK EXECUTIVES and producers say that violence is what keeps the ratings high. that the ad· vertisers demand it, and that the viewers want it,•• Elmendorf added. "The time has come to put a stop to senseless violence on TV. "AS AN EMERGENCY room physician J have seen my share or what violence can do lo a person. IC the actual. physical results of most violent acts were shown on television. few people would have the stomach to watch. "It produces blood and biological gore. as well as lost daddies. crying children, attend family hfe and im· mense suffering. Real-life violence is not entertaining. It is sickening." Sehooling Helps top rows, Miss M cllugh, president of Delta Zeta Sorority, said. Susan Dempscy,-a trim, 115· pounder. s ays she was passed and that "it was frightenin~. l 'd look down and see a bunch of hands r eady to gub me and bounce me up tn the next row." MISS McHUG H SAID her houi.e supports requests mailed to all fraternities and sororities on the cam- pus by Richard Tamburo, assistant director or the aUtletic association. that people-passing be stopped. ''We want it stopped before so· meone r eally gets hurt." said Tam- buro. Miss McHugh. a senior from Mun- delein. said people-passing is sort of traditional at Illinois football games. but "it now is getting out or hand because of the r aces." SHE THINKS F RATERNITIES have scouts al the games. picking out logical coeds for a passing race. ··They can either be girts who don't c;., weigh much or heavier ones-as long as lhe wei~ht factor is about the same." said Miss Mcllugh "The race starts when a group of· rellows sitting behind a coed suddenly picks her up and begins bouncing her like n sack of potatoes -over their heads to the next row. And up she goes. maybe 75 rows," said Miss McHugh. "Someone could get hqrl, either the one being bounced by fall - ing on the concr ete or falling on someone else "mERE ARE NO volW1teers for this. They are picked at random. As many as 20 are being passed a game.·· Miss Dempsey, a s~nior from Lake Forest. said. "All of a sudden J was picked up and passed about 75 rows. It was frightening ... I wasn't in a race al the lime. It took about 10 minutes to be passed to the top because there w~s a pause midway up. But I'll bet 10 races they can pass a person up in fin· minutes." W aterbed Gear Stolen in Viejo Watcrbed shce~ and wall hangings valued by the victims at 5706. 73 ha vc he en taken from a Mission Vit>jo store by intruders who may have had a key to tho premises. Orange County sheriff's of· ricers said the theft wu s reported , by owner John Neil Wilson of: Creative Watcrbeds. 28570 • Marguerite Parkway He was . away from the store at the ti ml.'. . Dirty Job Pays Welt By JOYCE L. KENNEDY Dear Joyce: My daughter 8ays shr wonts tc become.an.auto mechanic. l/ 1 can't talk her otd o/ it, what's her best bet for trafoino? -S.A.F ., Sacramento. Calir WhlJe the work 's dirty an<l may sub ject her to carbon monoxide poison· ing, inf'ectton from cuts and burns. and straioit fr9m lifting heavy parts, the p ay can be attr acti ve and mobility's J>Oasible because jobs ore dlaperaed throughout the country. Auto repair is a large occupation 735,000 -with nearly 25,000 job open· lngs expected each year THAT LAST FIGURE could go higher , If new.car prices ceoUnue to accelerate. Moreover, there could be increased opportunities for opening Independent repair shops should the trend toward gas s tation..'J lhat lack re· palr t•clUUe.s prove a lasting Cine. Although roost mechanics learn on the job (starting as helpers. rubrics· Uon Hrvicers, car washers, and so. f orlh), Lo b ecom e ·\he k lnd ol me.thank customen swear by rather than at, •dvJse yow-daughter to at· ~d a 1ood vocational school, which could be a mUJ[Uy trainint proaram -or secure 1 formal &j)prentice.'Jhip. SOME BJGH SCHOO~ communl· ty colleces a.nd private trade schools (Career Corner} . miss so much under the hood thht vocational educnUon gets a black di.' when students drop out In droves. Or quit the occupalion u few months afttr graduation. Make sure thnt the ifl- slruetor'& a pro. that the school usf s late·model equipment and pructicc cars, and that new technology Cel~ tronlc ignitions and catalytic con· verters. for Instance) is par1 of lftc curriculum To locate all types or auto mechanJc training programs. check with yoOr slate board of education. or write ~<> the Automotive Service Industry· /If(>· sociation. 230 N Mirhigan Avq . ChiCllgO, lll 60601 : EVEN I F YOUR OAUGHTEtt graduates Crom one of the many oul· standing auto mecha.nJcs prograrn11. such as the one at Oklahomo St.lUc Tech ln Okmulgee, Okla .. she'll ne~ several years' expcrien<'c before be· tngvlewed as fully qualified. READER SERVlCE. For free li:J. formation on NlASE certification (a brochure and 30·pagc test bulleUn). send your po11tc1ttd req~est to Joyce Laln Kennedy al this newspaper Mk fOT "Auto Mechanic MASE." / , . , I l'J 4 DAILY PILOT Friday. Novem~r §. 1976 . .Togetherness Pays !·For ·Unbeaten FV .. By ED BURGART OtlJM D•ll' ftlleUu" Bruce Pickford knew he had a good thing goln'g two years ago when all the seniors on the cur· rent, undefeated Fountain Valley High varsity football team were playing on a sophomore squad that was 8-1. "We kept them on the I sophomore t eam tbal year specifically to win a cham· pionsbip," says Pickford, head football coach of a 7·0 team that is ranked No. 1 in the CIF 4·A poll. "But they worked with the varsity as sophomores. So, these kids really have had three years of varsity coaching. That kind of (>rogram may be too intense for some sophomores." But those sophomores were something special-a group whose players have known one another for a long time and one that Pickford says 1s easy to coach. "'They're so far above the others l 've coached," says Pickford, in his 11th year at Fountain Valley. "Ttiey're easier ro coach and they're just plain smarter. Out of our 20 seniors, 15 are 3.0 plus students and several 7 are straight A students." But their intelligence is only one reason why the Barons are favorites to win the CIF 4·A title. BRUCE PICKFORD The Top Baron •·Many of these kids went to the same elementary schools and the team morale, spirit and together· ness are much better than other teams I've had," says Pickford. "The seniors have an outstand· ing squad attitude. As skilled as we are, it would be quite easy to Aft..-. JEFF DANKWORTH LEADS UCLA SATURDAY. Brown Leads Bruins Ducks Invade Colueum LOS ASG F:J.ES -Theotis "Big Fool" Bro~n. UCLA's re· cord !-it!tt1ng running back, will l<'ad th<' und<>fcated Rrwns into action Saturday afternoon when the Oregon Ducks invade the Los Angeles Coliseum for a 1 30 p.m. Pac1fic·8 conference game. The Bruins, ll<'d with USC for first place 1n the Pac·8 with a 4.0 • rttord. wall t'nt('r the ~ame with a 12·~ame uncl('f Pat('(f c;tnn~ Th<' last time l 'Cl,i\ l()!>t was on Nov l'mbt•r t , 1975 Sinct• that t1rn1· th1· OrutnS h;n e (•om pil('(J a rt'<'O rd Of 11 0· 1. mclud 1 ng .1 rc·rord of 7 O J this Sl'rlSOn Right halfback Thcolis Drown Readers' Hot Corner Mr. Wh1ll'' I am a red blooded parent of two Costa Mesa High School slu· dents and my blood is boiling over your column in the sport pages of the Daily Pilot -writ· ten in the guise of news. Who are you to demoralize kids, step on their hopes, citizen their failures and generally try l o ruin their spirit? is one reason the Bruins are UD· defeated after eight games. The sophomore set a school record by rushing for 220 yards against Washington last Saturday in UCLA 's 30 ·21 win over Washington. its first in Seattle since 1958. Brown carried the ball JS times wh.ile breaking Kermit Johnson's record o( 183 yards, set agalnst Arizona in 1972. He also r an for touchdowns of 29. 15 and 51 yards the last makine him the first Bruin back to ever crack the 200 yard barrier. His three rushing TD's tied a school record held by 20other Bruins. UCLA will host the Ducks com· ing off a fine effort against a good Washington team. The Huskies had averaged 146 yards per game against the rus h and 3.1 yards per play before the Bruins bit Seattle. UCLA rushed for 451 yards. averaging 5.9 for their 77 <'arries. The Bruins finished with 520 yards against a team that had been allowing just277per game. Meanwhile, the Bruins held the third best rushing team in the league to 111 yards on the ground, 36 in the second half. Washington gained just_109 yards in the second half as t1CLA out· scored the Huskies 16-8 lo win, 30·21. set into a sltuatlon with petty JealOU)ies. "But the only thing these tlds are concerned with is winning. They don't care who scores, as lone u we cet into the end ione." And bis current varsity players have been winning for quite awhile. The seniors played on '1·2 and 8·1 freshmen and aopbomore teams and were q_uite aucceaaful'.in Junior All· American football. Greg Geise, who coached the Warbawks junior All-American team in Fountain Valley four years ago, recalls some current Barons stars. "Gary Coleman was a quarterback for me.. but l never 'thought he would be as good as he is. He has probably improved more than any kid slncetheeighth grade. Gary was always smart, but the big improvement is that be learned how to throw. "It's really a shame he got hurt. I think he would have been All-CIF." Coleman damaged cartilage in his knee in Fountain Valley's fourth game and is out for the year. Others who played for Geise that year were Jefr Mason and Brad Wood. currenUy the start· ing cornerback and reserve fullback. A year later, Wood, Don Bohay, Larry Budgen, and four present sophomores-Russ Heidesch, Pete Chinnici, Kevin Romine and Tim Henigman- played for Geise. •'We h ad s uper strong fullbacks and Wood impressed me more than any kid," says Geise. "He has what it takes to be a great football player- stamina, toughness and desire." Bohay, a startin' defensive end now, may have had the most interesting background. "He only weighed 107 pounds then and I've never bad a kid more dedicated than he was," says Geise, who ia now a coac:h for the Southern California Rhinos. "He now weighs 175 pounds and it came through working with the weights." Bohay was an offensive guard and nose guard under Geise. Another junior All-American coach, Dick Reid, also tutored some Barons standouts like cor· nerback Ron Padilla and split end Stan Shibata. Reid coached the Bobcats- another Fountain Valley-based squad-and recalls that Padilla suffered a separated,shou}der. Padilla was a quarterback- cornerback while Shibata was a fullback-linebacker. "All were ouutanding and it was easy to see they were going to be outstanding ballplayers, says the 48-year-old Reid. So, it's easy to see that success didn't come overnight for Pickford's Barons. "The nice thing is that we have had no sudden transfers or move ins," says PickfoTd. "This particular team hag been a good team all along. They're super ·kids." And it's this group or super kids that figures to keep Fountain . Valley's good thing going - perhaps all the waytotheCIF4·A' finals. Seattle Tabs Royals' Jones NEW YORK (AP) -The Seal· tie Marl ners opened the American League baseball ex· pansion draft today by selecting Ruppert Jones, an outfielder from the Kansas City Royals' or· ganiiation, as the No. 1 pkk. Jones played in 28 games for the American League West Division champions and batted .216. The 21-year·old left.handed hitter spent most of the 1976 season at Omaha of the American Association. Seattle's next choice was in· fielde r Bill Stein from the Chicago White Sox. Stein batted .268 with four homers and 36 rbi in 117 games with the White Sox. He was the first recognizable name selected by either team in the draft. Toronto followed by selecting rl1ht·handed pitcher Jatnes Clancy, a 20·year-old out of the Texas Rancers' organization, then Seattle went for Boston pitcher Dick Pole, wbo was 6-5 with a 4.31 e .r.a. for the Red Sox in 31 games in 1976. STANFORD'S JAMES LOFTON FACES use. Breather for Bell White Gets Chance To Test Stanford · STANFORD CAP) -Southern California's fourth-ranked Tro- jans will give Ricky Bell some breathing time Saturday, letting Stanford chase fr eshman tailback Charles White instead. "At least if we catch White, we ~hould have a better chance or bringing him down," Stan/or~ coach Jack Christiansen said about the Trojans' one-two tailback punch. "Bell is at )east 20 pounds heavier than White," Chris· tiansen said. ''He'U break any arm tackles, and if you're not careful, he'll break your arm as well." Bell, the senior AH-American. is college root ball's leading rusher despite missing part or the last two games with minor in· juries. He has gained 1,154 yards on 207 carries. White has filled in with 493 yards on 70 carries, an average of seven yards per try. game lo rank No. 2 nationally, lo such receivers as Tony Hill, Bill Kellar and Vince Mulroy. is what makes the Cardinals a constant threat to score. But Stanford's standard game plan, working re· cently, requires some rushing success to keep the defenses honest. '"We just can't get into a posi· lion where we hive to throw on every down,:· said Christiansen. adding that he hopes Southern Cal can be forced lo throw. Southern Cal's linemen, both on offense and defense, "are so big that if they don't beat you early. later they might just wear you down," said Christiansen. Last year in Los Angeles, that didn"t happen. Stanford's de· fense played its best game of the season; with end Duncan McColl making 18 tackles and dropping Bell five times behind the line of scrimmage, in a 13·10 Cards vie· tory, $350,000 Ra~e Top GoH :~ourney Canceled LAS VEGAS -A fixtW'e on tht Profeulonal Golfers AssodaUor tour for the past 19 years wa! sacked Thursday when omclah of the Del E. Webb Corp. an nounced cancelatlon of tht $UO OOOSahara Invitational. Edward M. Ni,ro, vice presi· dent and general mana1er of tht Hotel Saharl here, cited risin@ cosu, a decline in the national promotion benefit from the event and scheduling problems as re- asons for the cancellation. r-....-•reeza TOKYO -Roscoe Tanner anc Ken Rosewall scored quarter. final victories today in th• $100,000 Japan Opeo oC the Asian Pacific teqnls circuit. The top.seeded Tanner over whelmed Jurgen Fassbender 6·3 6-2, in less than 30 minutes. The second-seeded 42·year-olc Rosewall downed John Whitl inger6·1, 7·6. . Jn the other quarter-fina' matches, tbird·seeded Did SWckton whipped Dick Crealy, 6·2, 4·6, 6·2 and Corradc Barazzutti, fourth-seeded, de· feated Brian Falrlie,6-1,6-4. Colt110r• Tri._p .. COLOGNE, West Germany - Top-seeded Jimmy Connor over· came stubborn Colin Dibley in the decisive third set Thursday night to reach the QIJarler·fmals of the $50,000 Cologne Grand Prix tennis tournament. Connors, 24, came under tremendous pressure from Dibley's bullet-like service. which is rated the world's ardest, aod needed all his aried shots to pull ahead for the ·5, 4·6, 6-4 victory. RIO E JANEIRO -Soccer star Pe announced Thursday he would t renew his playing contract wl \th~ New York Cos- mos of the No~ American Soc- cer League. '\ Pele told a ne~s conference that, Instead, be woQM accept an offer by coach Oswaldo'Brandao to become assistant coacll-.~n Oc· Lober, 1977, or the Brazilian"1a· tional team that will compete )n._ the World Cup. Pele bas one year Jert on his playlnc cotllract with the C()smoe, the N ASL said. Prep• la Tro111Jle DETROIT -Detroit schools wilJ soon eliminate all high school sports programs because voters defeated p. five-mill school tax request Tuesday.'- Unorficial final returns showed 183,992 votes for the millage hike and 185,923 voles against It. School officials said the pro· posal would have brought in about $37 million. "We'll play White along with Bell early in the game so Ricky won't become too exhausted," said coach John Robinson, whose Trojans have won six straight games since an opening loss to Missouri and share the Pacific-8 Conference lead, at 4·0, with third-ranked UCLA. Stanford is 3·1 In the Pac.s, los· ing 38·20 to UCLA last month after leading the Bruins 20-10 at the end or three periods. A crowd of more4Ran 70,000 is expected Saturday for the Cards' final 1976 home game. Top Horses Ready "Stanford is capable of scoring 35 points on us," said Robinson, even though the USC defense has allowed only 33 since the 46-25 loss to Missouri. The passing of Guy Benjamin, averaging 21 completions per GoH Results LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (API -1'1"1 roun11 l<O•H Tllursday In .... UOO.OOONttlon•I Tum 0011 c111mo1on,111p on lh• oer i. >lt-12 P•lrn 111<1 Milqnoll& cours. Al W•il 0'~""Y Worl(t M<Gff-Mllltr lltACkburn.l(retierl Mam•· Iver'°" Cte~ll•w·PHrce Rudolefl.O Sfkn Pontr-ten<ffr 8rewer-Nl<11011 Petrner•L. TllOltl0\01\ tffO·Moran Terry·T-pe . M<NICkle·Ptrk~ 8, !imllh·8 WyM Snff<l.we .. kool Jel\llln\·W•I••' ICnoll·L•e a ... w..J.nu.ry 0.Hlll·M.Hlll 8Hl"d·l!l<llett1er9"r 111..-<tl·Olll Cooe-ScllfM JM<Ul-M<Cotd ColbHMtelr..n <Anloe-MtOlnnh 0. ~le·lt. Mt\Hflffll' Bllml·P•I• Oooermann• Tlrnbroo' )O.JO-ta 31 )1-(tl J).JI l>4 ,M1-+t 31 ll-o.t Jll:l ... 4 lH?-45 31 3'-45 lH1-•S l?·U-4\ l4·l1-(JS JI 3'-•\ 11·34-U J).J1-!)5 llJ~ ll 33'46 u-~ Jl·U--.. ,,~ ,,,~ JJ~ 3.tl7- J07- 3734- 37 )1-)\.JI- ARCADIA (AP> -TbeCbarUe Whittingham·traine4 eJilJ'y of King Pellinore and Riot in Paris drew top weights and middle.of· the-track starting positions Thursday for Saturday's The Champions $350,000 Invitational Handicap at Santa Anita. KinK Pellinore drew starting position No. 6 and two slots over in No. 8 will be Riot in Paris. The formeT will carry top weight of 126 pounds including veteran rider B.U Shoemaker. The latter has 125 pounds including Laffll Pincay Jr. In this race which offers nearly a quarter of a million dollars to the winner, 10 horses are to start including Bert Fir estone's Honest Pleasure, the 3-year·old who bas won four major $100,000 races this year. Craig Perret flew West from New York with Honest Pleasure and will ride as part or 121 pounds. The next highest·weighled en· trant ls L'Heureux, who'll tote 118 with Don Pierce doing the rid- ing out of position No. 5. At least three top horses whlch were invited, Bold Forbes. Forego and Royal Derby 11, passed up The Ctampions, despite first prize Jllbney or $240,000 and second money of s:;o 000. Forego is injured. Other entries and their weights: Father Hogan, 113; Ap· passionato, 114; George Navonod, 114; Norcliffe, 116 ; Life's Hope, 112, and Festive Mood, 113. You slam, you slander, and rub noses in your muddy past dis- putes -or which local readers could care less a~ut. If you want to editorialize .....: get on that page! You write behind the pulpit of our local paper bearing our school's name and. then try to destroy its fine name. You are not a credit to our school, and you do it, and my youngsters, a great iltjustice ln Reggie .Jackson Outllbes Bis Needs . your writings. . It is my oplnlon, rou are a poot' 1 journalist feeding, and resterl.Og ; on the past -wtUlout a healthy • posiUve attitude. '.lbls ls BAD : NEWS for any newapaper. JANET M. PEUCROWSKI Costa Mesa ' CARLSBAD, Callf. CAP> - ~per slugger Reggie Jackson says he doesn't know what team he'll sign with, but hopes ll will be ht• last contract. Then, maybe 'he'll buy his own baseball team. .. I haven't talked money wt.th anybody," the Baltimore out· fielder said shortly after beJnc the first player selected in Thursday's fir•t-ever re-entry draft of free agents. Jackson, 30, wouldn't say if the reports ho wants $3 million ror a five.year contract are true. He said money is only one of several conaideraUons. At e:ample. Jaclclon said be buys g me tickets for needy and Mndic pped children, then eata· Ice cret' m With them aft• hi.I games and tries to theer their livea. Tbat akea hlm happy. So d~ playinl foe a team Wbere tie'• needed. So doa doing well In &uslnesa ventures. "It's 'tbla ts what makes Reg· g:ie happy.' If lt psycboloc1cally. makes me feel better. rm some to hit home runs," be said. · Flanked by a financial adviser and a lawyer, Jaclalon said he'll narro• the 12 teama wblcb draft· ed hlm down to lour or five. · He mJght even get t.ocether with CharUe Finley and go back to the Oakland A '1 lf lt made blm happy, or he might Just end up ~inf that team, lf lt made b.lm happy, Jackson uJd. Jack.son aaJd bis once filp re- mark about buytnc the A '1 bad a bull ln fact. Ha aiuc-4 at hiJ attorney anct· ( his bualnesa manager and aaid, "Yes, they are tblnklng tt miCbt be nice to have a c~b-Utlll own a piece of a tennis t am." The reference w to shares in the Phoenlx Racquets. Consideran,ns wi also include staying close t the maJor' tel~vislon markets -New York and Los AQgelea. appearance Thursday was a Rancho La Colla, the resort of San Dleso wheH he's tapin1 a TV Mrlet in which h hosts sreats fl"om tbe aports world. • Philadelphia's Julius Erving (Or. J.) grabs a rebound in front of Jamaal Wilkes. Philadelphia toppled Golden State 101·96 ln NBA action Thursday in Oakland. • Thund<'rbird. A nl'W kind 1>f rhumkr. / . I. completelJ new Thundertilrd at ~~~,~~~i~ !!~!~~~~rpowNfrontdi~ the '77 Thunderbird still has the special luxury hraktcs, 'Power :.tl'cring, automatic transmission, fea1ures and appointments that make Thunder· 102 cu ic·inch V-8. full wheel covers. AM bird fomous. Even with optional vinyl roof, radio, lectric clock ;ind stccl·belted radials at b odyside moldings, whitewall tires and m ore, mi c..·. ra charge. Now more than ever it's rnuch less than you'd expect. And if you T!;lindcrbird luxury is within reach. I ~otol. lmeriea's best selling compact ~car, now with sportier handling. . California has a new Pinto for 1977. With a fresh new look front and rear. And spirited new performance to match. A .,pccral California pnckage adds front :m1hih:er hnr for spo rt ier handling, steel· belted radials, rear windmv defroster and deluxe wheel covers as standard equipment \\'uh a long list uf options for you 10 scat and Sports Rnllyc Package for the hcst handling Pinto ever. This new Pinto ha~ sr iric you can fn·I. It comes from a :.-.trong :rnJ pmvcn 2. 3 lite r 4-cylinder engine a nJ responsive f,1 u r·lln·thc-floor mn n ua 1 tran-.miss1on (au111matic is optional). For morl' spirit, chonsc an or1Hmal 2.8 liter v-6 with autv· mane tramm1~~1011 r\nd the '77 Pinto brings cnioy: ;:ill glass re:u d1..X.1r, flip up remov· ahlc opt.'n air r0l1f. 4·way manual llnvcr':. )">u built·in dur.1hility with the electro-dip prime coating o n the entire unit·boJy construction . Ford klclrs off a 1reat new seuon with a 1reat new pme. ' FORD'S ftlST &TBI &AD. • t\ hiNball J:::tmc dw whule family will cnJ,)Y .. tun for kid~. challt•nt.:ing for adults. • Authentic football ~tratcgy. with runs, passes, punt<., field goals, fumhlcs, time outs and safeties. • No1hing to break., nothing to wear out, and no . clcctr1city. It's portable. too. You c11n pl:iy 11 on the beach. • • ~tore football fun than heavily advertised J.?ame<. n>"t1 ng $10 to $15. and it's yours tor just $1 l\1 ~)) _/) •'· / I , • Great C hristmas gift idea. Stop into your Ford Dealers today nnd get yourself some ftiotball fun with Ford's Firs't and Ten Game. ,. OnlJ $100 ... a SU5 value o.J"".) Friday. November 5. 1976 DAILY PILOT "8S . ,,,,_. '-···-,~ l - Ford .lranada . The best selllnc car In Callfornli. The 1977 Ford Granada, at your Ford Dealer, luoks like cars costinJ:? many times more. yet it's ./ designed to be functional and practical. Nll wonder it's California's favorite car. Now refined for 1977 with improvements like standard steel-belted radial tires. And it's one of the few U.S. cars to offer 4-whecl disc brakes (optional). Look into an elegant interior with room for five adults, and a vacation-size trunk that holds eight assorted pieces of luggage. Look into the Ford Granada. America's success car, now in a ~rilliant 1977 editipn. LTI1 L:ind.m 4-Door Pillared H:irdtop The full-sip ear that staJ&d lull-size. POIDLTD. This year. some car makers are making their full-size cars shorter and narrower. Ford believes chat people who want a full-size car should have that choice. So the '77 Ford LTD hasn't been reduced by a single inch! Ford LTD has n longer wheelbase than the d own-sized Olds 98, Buick Electra, and Chevrolet Caprice and Impala (which have shrunk to the length of the mid-size Chevelle). And LTD still gives you its traditio nally smooth, quiet ride, interior spaciousness, deep-well trunk. and 3~ ton towing capacity (with optional Trailer Towing Package). See the new Ford LTD at your Ford Dealer. A new car: LTD II. Quiet like an LTD . With a trim new price. For a 6-passenger car that's trimmer in size and price than LTD. look at Ford's LID II. It combines I..TD's high level of workmanship with a unique sporty spirit all its own. And LTD II, like Ford LTD, comes with V-8. auto· matic transmission, power steering, power front disc brakes. steel-belted radials, DuraSpark Ignition system, and more ... standard. At your Ford Dealer now. Test-clrln one of Ford's better Ideal for '77 ... and eompar& We're confident that when you measure Ford's better ideas for 1977 against the best that competition offers. you'll put Ford out front for value. And there's no betrer yardstick for comparison than to see tho· cars and take a revealing test drive. Come in today. '· I .ft DAIL V PILOT Friday. November 5. 1978 Edison Bids to· Dethrone FV Tonight Orange County's top prep foot· lnatalled as 11-point favorites to bllll attraction of the ye~r-make the Huotloiton Beach· Fountain Valley and Edison-based Chargers of Edison coach headlines tonight's agenda as the' Bill Workman thetr eighth VIC· twocolUdeatAnaheimSladiutn. Um.· • Kickoff;s at 8 and a crowd in Edison, however, bas eitjoyed excess of 15,000 is expected for ,·lJle role of underdog before ln thl.s the Sunset. League duel whicn serie& and has u~nded Fountain wilt go a long way in determ1ning Valley, sparked t>y keen defense the circuit crown. and .a finely tuned offensive Fountain Valley 'i11 the No. 1 thrust. · rated team in lhe CIF 4-A with a Edison leads the series with 7-0 record and has demolished five wins, a loss and a Ue . everything in it.s way bel)ind an • rtie Chargers are unranked In effort which has shown no boles. the CIF and hold the No. 8 spot in The Barona of Fountain Valley · Orange Col.Ul\Y, thanks to non- coach Bruce Pickford have been league los~es to Weat Torrance Key Loop Tilt . ' I •. .. ) -/ > r- E x plosive Mesa Battles El Toro Having accomplished the ma- jor goal of the Cirst winning foot· ball season in the school's 17· year history, the Costa Mesa High Mustangs bid to keep an even more important objective within r each when they clash with the El Toro Chargers tonight. Kickoff for the South Coast League football contest is 8 at Orange Coast College. The Mustangs, 5·1·1 overall and 4·1 in league, are embroiled in a three-way tie for first place with Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar. By winning their final two games, the Mustangs would reguar-anteed networsethan a tte for the circuit crown-and that's a position no Costa Mesa team has been in. And Tom French's Mustangs are nine·point choices to tum back an El Toro team that is 3.4, but losers or four straight. Costa Mesa's offensive ex- plosiveness figures to be too much for the junior -laden Chargers, who a re 1·4inleague. Quarterback Dave Mollica and .running backs Dan Duddridge and Dave Brennen give the Mesans one or the league's best backfields. , Molli ca, a s print-out quarterback who was an AJl - Century League linebacker a year ago, has completed 52 of 97 J>asses for 601 yards while run· rung for 267 yards on 83 carries. Duddridge has picked up 455 yards on 114 attempts while Brennen, primarily a blocker , has rushed tor 266 yards on 68 carries. . But they may have a hard time penetrating an El Toro defensive line that held San Clemente to three first downs rushing. The Chargers ar e only allowing 10.4 points per game, and only one team (Corona del Mar) has s cored more th a n two touchdowns. Offensively. the Chargers have s putter ed in their last four games, averaging 3.6 points per outing. But t ailback Hector Avella has enjoyed some bright moments, rushing for 254 yards on 57 carries. Costa Mesa's small de.rense- the biggest starter fs 19l·pound Steve Perei-has been of the bend-not·break variety. It has been at its best the last three weeks. giving up 7.3 points per game. Ofl•nH LE Miiler LT Murolly LG Te\Cll C Finch Re; Kno• RT Pelfcllow\kl RE Fraiotf 06 Molllca R1I OudMldqe RB Br...,,..n FL Snow Olfenw SE OonohOO RT La1t9lo1S RG Gerar<)o c McFadden LG PIN!\ LT Menthorn. TE Jacobo oe S.ntak FB Falrbroltwr TB4...,lla FL 0.arl" Oeftn .. IU 161 Cathcart HO 1'11) Puu 111 us Little 160 tis Amburg<'y t13 t8S Mltlt< lllO 115 Brantley 111'1 1114Frarler in 1ss Tereols 165 IH Snow 160 1.0 Aven 110 140 L.aJeunes.e Et Tero LIM~ 0.1 ..... 160 JllOMcF-n t8S !IS Lonqlo·~ HO !IS Hontllorn '"° 180 HOh t80 tllO Davl!IOn IH t&S Ole~ 160 us Falrb<OtMr 18S !SS R. Cnarht~ IU '"° OonoP\00 HS 160 J'Cobo us ''° B. O.arles LE LT NG RG RE LB LB CB HB H9 s LE LT NG RT RE LB LB CB CB SS l"S Vikes, Lions Clash Westminster Big Favorite The Vikings of Huntington Beach's Marina High, seeking their first victory in 14 starts agains t the Westminster Lions, invade Westmins ter tonight at 8 in Sunset League football. The Lions are favored lo keep their unbeaten string against Marina intact, thanks to the 1·2 punch of Doug Boswell and Mater Dei High transfer Tim Wigmore. Boswell. a 6·0, 180-pound senior. has averaged 5.2 yards per carry. usua ll y punishing the enemy's interior . He's also a threat as n r ec-eiver and hu scored six touchdowns. Wif more, a two-wa.Y standout. can bum the defense passing or runnin1. gh•ing the Lions an out· :HVC in Action MONROVIA -Huntington 'Valley Christian High of Newport Beach will be trying to secure outrljht second place in the Ac ademy League·~ final stand· lngs for 8-man football tonight. The Conquerors. 3-1 in league =pla y. battle Arcadia's =Maranatha High at Monrovia .:High in an 8 o'clock struggle. side threat to pressure Marina's line. Coach Mike Henigan's Vikings have come on hard times regard· ing an offensive punch in league play, picking up one touchdown against Huntington Beach in gaining their only victory. When things are going right for the Vikes it's Mike Fuentes and his running abiJity that carries the ground game. Quarterback Ron ValJercamp could be a big factor if he can get his option game going around the ends. Vallercamp has com- pleted 33 of 75 passes for 399 yard.sand a touchdown. He's rushed tor 145 yarda in 71 carries and three touchdowns. A big plus for Marina tonight would be lhe return of Shaun MehaCfey in the line, although it wasn't known until tonight whether Mehaffey could return alter a liver ailment. ~rln•St•nlft9~ Oft•n~• OllltftH SE P<Mkl,,Ql>orne !10 I~ Potl!l"9110<n1 LE LT Clle"1 ns )?\ C""rry l.T LG Tuck•r IU 1'S LOY• NG c Pot•tllOllO<ll• llO l6S ICMwltt RT ltG How•rd HS 1111 ,...,,,.,r RE RT Gr•.,. 10() 110 /\n~r,an LO TE ICl190r~ '"° llS Or•n<Jon LB 09 V•flert •mp 18\ 110 0-0n••\Ofl CB R8 F..,.le\ IM) 1'} HAnYftV CB RB Sc>rlno•r ISO 170 TrtlO SS FL NOl\otl 11\ lllO Torrt' FS WATCH EXCITING •••• andSantaAna's Mater'Del. lloebacker . Bill Grlli a t Both tea,ms Mppear to be at noae,uard. and ends Musso and their peak, allho~h t.he BaJ"OIU Don Bobay, that bas allowed were bwt earlier with tbe lou of HV•D opponents only thr~ quarterback Gary Coleman, who touchdowns. And Steve Steinke la nGt expected to play qaln this bu kicked rield goals of 52, 47, 46, year due to.an a.nk.Je lnJury. 218 and twice from 23 yarda. Still, the Barons have a No one has held Fountain formidable crew. Thoro's Valley to less than 21 points and tailback Willie Gittens running the Barons have been tough behind the blocks or fullback a.:a1nst the run or pass. Mike MuS&o. There are receivers The Chargers have a threut in Ken Margerum, Bo Boxold and both utesorlea with quarterback Tim Holmes and a capable Steve Jlakbshani the key with his quarterback in DoqTbompson. ao-He's completed 74 or 133 There's a defense, led bf Box· , 1wes ~r 1,043 yards and eight old and Rieb Stanto ~· toucbdo~s. Mis targets: Mike • I \ l\t M'7 Ton·ight· Malals\ J eff Smlth uc1 Scott She.raro. Jlm Judd is the power in the runniof aasne w.lth Sl<l)'arda on 115 carrtei and eiabt touehdowns a.s opPoMd to GIUena' s'8t.~ of 1591 yard$ on gr carriea and 11 TDs. The trencb.a, however. ts where thia oo~ wW probably be won. If Edison upsets •"'<>untaiD Valley the answers may be in the conrrontaUons between Edison's Randy Schwart&, Randy Holla· day, Mike Wllberby 3nd friends agalnst FV's Stanton, Tim Bienek, .Mike Seymour and lhelr teammates alona the lines. Fountala Valley Off~me TE-Bo 8<>l(old RT-Mlke Seymour RG-Rlch Stanton C -Tim Bienek LG-BlllGtlh: LT-Frank Christy SE-Ken Marierum .QB-Doug Thomption TB-Willie Gittens FB-Mike Musso FL-Tim Holmt.l:s Fou11taba Valley Defen81l! 170 207 1~ 215 205 210 170 160 lOO 205 19S Sea {(.ings Tab"f!ed To Bi>unce Diab·los The Corona del Mar Hig~a Kings, stung by Laguna Bea,ch for their first loss in South Coal.st League footba 11 action, arb\ favored by 7 'h points lo bounce back tonight when they collide with the puzzling Mission Viejo Diablos. DE-Mike Musso 01'-Tom Stallings NG-BillGrilz OT-Frank Ctttlst)' DE-Don Bohay LB-Bo BoxoJ"'d~­ LB-Rich Stanton CB-J eff Mason CB-Ron Padilla S -Rob Weaver S -Tim Holmes Edison Oflensc TE-Scott Sherard RT-Randy Holladay RG-Randy Schwartz C -Bob Wilson LG-Mike Witherby LT-Eric Huth S~-Jeff Smith QB-Steve Rakhshani FB-Larry Simpson TB-Jim Judd FL-Mike Mala is 205 195 205 210 175 20S 185 170 155 165 19S 190 230 170 205 180 218 175 175 185 201 170 SPORTS Newport, HB Clash The Huntington Beach High Oilers will be seeking their first 1976 varsity football victory and the Newport Harbor Sailors will be bidding for their initial Sunset League triumph when the two teams collide at 8 tonight at Newport Harbor High. Both teams are 0-3 in circuit action and Bill Piuica's Sailors, who have encountered a grueling schedule, are u~point choices to even their season record at 4·4. The Sailors are accorded the · edge beeause they have been dominant on defense at times while showing spa rks of of- fensive capabilities. With the exception of a 6-3 loss to Huntington Beach's Marina, the Dave Van Hoorebeke· coached Oilers have been out· scored 149·26. And the Oilers of· fense will be matched against a defense that has shut out two opponents. Newport's defense has been more vulnerable in U1e l ast three games, mainly because the Sailors played Fountain ValJey, Edison and Westminster-the league's three bestteams. . At the same time, the Sailors offense hasn't been able to erupt, although it scored 14 against Edison and 10 against Fountain Valley. With the re.turn of Craig Lyons at quarterback, the Sailors could show more firepower. Lyons, who injured his ribs against Fountain Valley two weeks ago, has completed 41 or 90 passes for 460 yards. His replacement last week, Greg Paquin, has connect· ed on 16 of 38 for 193 yards. Led by 200·pound tackle Bill Murphy, the Oilers defense hasn't been thrashed by anyone except.for Fountain Valley. N•Wl'Ofl HarlMr Ll- 011..... 0.l•nH TE Vom Slff9 17S 1'° Blltttl RT 91onlon '40 210 Meverson .RG Frost 210 no Fro•I C Prlteman 100 I'll) H~nk~ LG 4•MY 180 111() B•rkor LT Scnmidl t8s tllO ~l•nce10111 <,E IHllO 160 l'IO Bul••a OB lyon\ u~ 110 srn1111 RB Ward 110 160 t(awamura IU\ Ro tSS 150 Brown FL Tll&~rd 115 110 W•rO Huftllft9'0t1 8Hcll LIMUl>t 011 ... u O.ltt1tt Re RT LT LE LB LB LB CB CB s s SE Sampen H\ 175 McCoy LE RT Lonv 110 20t Murplly LT RO 8•bln5kl t'IO 16S Nl~colcl\ N G C l.Un<lqul\I l'IO 200 Cohn RT LG t>er-•n• J7S lllO 1. • .utey RE LT COiin '00 l'IO Rolh LB TE U\lev 180 l1S Poter son LB 08 0 '41e•!klndro 18S l8S 0 '41•U4ndro CB FQ "-ler-son 175 17S Hjelslrom CB TB Gurman 110 165 Ru\-.tl SS WR Gl•M 110 135 ArAlln F<. Kickoff is 8 al Mission Viejo High. Dick Morris· Sea Kings, featur- ing a defense that has held oppo· nents to 5.0 points per outing, are 4·1 in circuit action and in a three·way tie for the league lead. Meanwhile, ,John Murio's Diablos, expected to fare well in pre-seal:lon polls, are 1·6 over· all and 1·4 in the South Coast Lea~ue. Crippling injuries and an inconsistent offense have plagued Mission Viejo. And it's because of that in· consistency that Corona del Mar is expected to win tonight. The Sea Kings have not allowed more than nine points in any outing and have shown more offensive explosiveness in recent games. First-year player Mike Spraitz has finally become accustomed to Corona del Mar's power of· fense, and the shifty tailback has rushed for 486 yards on U6 car· ries. Fullback Brad Stassel has gained another 198 in addition to opening huge holes for Spraitz. And if the trend continues, Mis· sion Viejo's stingy defense will probably be attacked for 10-12 points. The Diablos ha~e given up no more than 17 points and no lesir than 12 while holding foes to an average of 14.0 points per out· ing. But the Diablos offense has not been as consistent, averaging 4.0 points in Mission Viejo's l ast three games. J,n ract. Murio is talking about mO\ring tailback Scott Spear to qu*erback if the Diablos can't r es<ll)ve s u ch problems a s fumb~s-Mission Viejo fumbled eight ~·m es last week. Spear would dd a running dimension to an o ense that has primarily featured • '1t drop· back passing game. '\ The Diabld~ · most consistent offen sive pl~yer h as been tailba c k ·ful back Mitch Cheselka, who ha rushed for 358 yards on 84 ca ies. He was moved to tailback ast week and will start at that pos · n tonight. Mlnioft Vltlo Ofl.,.s• SE RI\ T Bdk~f G MtOo,,•ld C Grover c; Henrv T Ntl'°n 0.1• 110 ltS ();•n '15 ?IS Calcl.,ron llS 190 Mummert US 100 H•lson Edison Defense DE-SColt Hayward DT-Don Weisman NG-Mike Witherby OT-Ray Sheeks DE-Kevin Randol LB-Randy Schwartz LB-Brian Gloshen CB-Jeff Smith CB-Rey Cano S -J eff Hyder S -Brian Desrosiers 201 190 180 180 170 170 170 175 170 170 175 UCI, Br11ins Duel Tonight UC Irvine's water polo tearn faces a busy schedule this weekend. m~.eting three oppo· nents in three days. · TE CiAll~ OB S_,.,v TB CM"lko FB P•rker SB Jo"u loO 110 Broo""'n 200 •80 Ol.trn1Ukl 170 175 H•ll•r 160 ''° U jalt ttS IU Reed L • Coach Ed Newla nd's An · ~= \ teaters. 11·3 h ost UCLA lo· s \night (7:30) at Newport Harbor s )\ligh. Saturday UCI visits Pep· ~dihe for a noon encounter and Sul\d-t)' Newland's crew takes on Arizoh4a at 10 s.m . at~ewport. . 1$0 1110 Br•wlt!y •SS ISO Bowtr CMon• clel M.or 1.IMU!>S Olftnse 0.1..,•• SE HUOh•• 145 17S Harrl•r RT JOl>Ont>fl\ 710 t&~ O'Rour~ .. RG MudOr 1llO !IS Rall c Q\OIQQI• 18' !IS C•rO•tucro LG Lavlon I 10 t!IOMudor ~ T Go•99e1 20S llS Sl••sel TE Hollnqa 180 1as G.trratl OB Merry 1 SO 135 9otclleller FB StaS\el 1qs llO Merry TB Sc>ra111 170 t40 Broe-man FL F'rffmo1> 160 160 C.tltlson OE OT NG OT OE LB LB CB CB Rov s The AM~aters have split a pair of games w~h UCLA, losing at Newport. 11-f\, and winning at UCLA, 12·11. ~l.,.h~lJQ.l met Pepperdine and At'r'Zona"tW season. Laguna Faces Stiff Test The Lagun a Beac h High Artists try to write another chapter to a storybook football season tonight when they meet the vastly-improved Dana Hills High Dolphins in a key South Coast League football game at San Clemente High. Kickoff is at 8 a nd Dennis Haryung's high.flying Artists are favored by five points to improve their season record to 7 · l . Not s ince 1968 has a Lagunjl Beach t eam fared as well as the present one and if the Artists win their final two league games, they will be assured of at least a tie for the circuit crown. Dana Hills, following an 0·4 start. is 2·5 and has the kind of offense that could give Laguna Beach's rugged defense a major challenge. Thus far opponents have averaged 5.0 points per game against the Artists. But Laguna will be facing the pass ing com bination of quarterback Steve Crapo and re· ceiver Steve Telaneus, and they are capable or providing Dana Hills what it needs to record an upset-the big play. Crapo, a nifty runner and ef. fective passer, has run for 134 yards and p assed for 529, while Telaneus has caught 29 pas~es Top Runners Vie at:MV , It will be some of the best from the CI F 3·A against some top CIF 4-A schools in the Mission Viejo c r oss country invitational Saturday morning at UC Irvine. To be run over a flat two-mile course with the finish on the UC Irvine track. the invitational starts at 9 with the first varsity race and concludes at noon with the girls race. The day's feature race is the first varsity competition that features Marina and Edison, two Huntington Beach schools ranked in the CI F 4-A top ten, and Mission Viejo and University of Irvine, rated third and sixth in the CIF 3-A poll. Also entered are Corona del Mar, Westminster, Foothill of Santa Ana, Artesia, and Gahr. Area varsity teams competing in other races are Huntington· Beach , Newpor~ Harbor a nd Laguna Beach. In the girls division, Mission Viejo freshman Tami Darr will shoot for the girls national prep record of 10:51. for 540 yards. But Laguna Beach's touted secondary. led by Rich Nunis and Dave Strombotne. has picked off 10 passes while holding oppo- nents to a 27.4 percent comple· tion rate. Until last week's 17-0 win over Mission Viejo, Dana Hills' de· fense had surrendered 21.8 points per outing. But with the de· fense's sudden improvement and Laguna Beach's failure to generate more than ll.5 points per outing, the Dolphins could re· gister the upset. Offensively. the Artists are led by running back Craig French. Ofltn>t 0.ltltH Se Nunis 110 llS He11d•r\on oe LT W•ltt 16S '1()9 Steveni OT LG Pikl! us tss McCu•touoh NG c Sl••t"S 10'I '30 0.-Baun OT AG Ponte !BS 168 W••lgaard OE RT GrHnOuQh 215 t8SCiompf LB TE 4nde•!IOn 115 I~ Miller tB QOGomPl t~S 1 SO BrothPr1on CB f.B Mlllor 100 I~ MIU\tr (0 TB Froncn 16~ IH Slrombolne 5 l'L Won tlS 110 Nun1s ~ Din•Nlll~ LintUO\ OfltnH 0.l•nH TE M<GfOQor 180 tto Mt G••aor oe T Hal" 'OJ 110 H~nOrl(~•Oll OT G Bernk• 11S l'IO B•ller\by NG c Wlnno~oll PS 110 CM~ll Of G Ballertl>Y 100 tt..O TP\ornton oe T Jtn\en 7'5 llS B•lhke LB SEStronq HS 160 Elllow LO OBC••Po 170 t~~Volmerd•llQ CB RB Ol•en IJS '16S T"IM~U\ en RB Hor91n tlS 170 Cr•Po fS FL r.,1all<!US 16S !IS O'N@•ll S"t ORANGE COAST COLLEGE FOOTBALL THIS SATURDAY NIGHT -NOV. 6th IALUMNI MIGHTJ occ vs; CERRITOS at Lelard S~ °"The OCC Campus G ... Time 7:30 P .M. TICDT PllCll: ADULTS SI .SO CHILD ... Sl.00 STUDIMTS $1.00 IOXOIACE OP94SAT 6:30 ,.M. FREl PARKING GOOD PRICES GREAT FOOTBALL MANUFACT~RED HOUSING & RECREATION "EHICLE SHOW The BlggMt Show of lta Kind: eo Mobile •nd Modular Homes ~I ' I 1,400 RecrHtlon Vehlcles 200 aCCHaory exhibits DODGER STADIUM · Adults $2.50 Juniors 6 -18 $1.50 Children under 6 free NOV.6-14 SATURDAY ANO SUNDAY 10 A.M. to I P.~. • WUKDAYS NOON TO 9 P.M. DISCOUNT TICKETS AVAILABLE AT ALPHA B!TA MARKETS AND THRIFTY DRUG STORES . \ ' ' • . . . Wo1nen's Sports Results Cl IH.S Tlr'HNIS VAIUITY S.ftCl•-ftlt (1•1'>110 Uftl.,.nlly ""'"' F•ll.,.-•., IUl oel 0•111\trom .. o cl(' Linde • q Otl Hu<l\On 0 o. (,aM"I IU I w0n l l 6 I. 6 I. R•o 1UI 1<»1 • •, -•~•.o •. Otwtlt• 11ucllmooat Gordon CUI IOU to M .. l\U l.uM I 0 IO\I lo G !>!><•· Cttlk•M l 4, IO\I to 8r•v Urlb! 3 •. Adrl<H-OOrlll\ Ill I IO" ) •. I 6. ) 0 K•mln\~6\ Yo•ll1no IU I 10\1 l •. )$, I&. LI•-l IOI ( IZ\.'i I O..,.t HlllA ~ln9ln Ftld•r 101 O•I Wtll-6·1, d•t M,.rn•"Cf'tl • 1, def O'Sutlhntn #) t Gova CD• wo" & 1. l'>\l ) •, W\)f\ fl 1. Gou1t\ (0> won• 4, 11 • 1 OoutMe\ LlfTtC>ft q 1 t II f Dt <Jl'f Sr•'Hth M .. n""' 7 \, IO\t Ill """'"°" .Co· ltr ) 0 IO\I M H1nwoo,x1 fhorntt>n l • M (()t•111'lftlJ Ward C(J 1 li.~1 1 h b 1 1 ~ Jfllonk1r. Aldt•m fltn CCJ ' wonf) c Io l1hl \, M 1UiOnV1•lo , •• ,.,, .. (HU Ht\• VARSITY s .... ,1 .. , Ne..tl CC> fl"' J">"nY>n 6 1 !>"""'ti I C••u''"' b o Rc..•o.-" 1c1 ,,_ '" • l. e.o. 01 Mioul IC. wOn~ 1 6 I hnt •6 O.uott\ O•Jnn O a. C lo t to ~·mo~ Gr4hilm 1 6 tlrt Ao'n eo.,..n fl 1 •0,1 to (,.1-ri-..cnt-l't w'"'"" 't otri .c:n,1 •>1 .1tntn.11 cc t wOf\ • •. 11 t • -.. w..,n •4 LuntfPl111 ..,-""'""'; t~ w>n c J lft\t nrH\nnnnnnt'l,,,\n t>, J ~ E't.tn<l• IU 111, (0 TV.tin S1;\qlt\ M•Y"r\ f E ) «1,.f l • lll'UJllr #i I tt •t Ml0t}n1f'"I 6 l d t't Mtwamoto 4 o. 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(\ J Doublf\ ~ 1tMn H tm111 in 'Vii I• th M ir•' P v 2 ~ IO'.f ,.., Jl)n"\-.lol'I G 1, "'' .t H G->mu l•' Ml IO·I 16 to Junq H,.nn1nqer fM • lo\t '" A """ M ... ,.,, 1).6. lo~t IO (,'\f('f•)n 0.-l"f' ) t, ~nn.t M l Mr• (M) 1°'1 0 •. t tt Ml)r ,.,\ H•v•t• tM> to·n to J,ud•ni-·Ktrr U 10'\t fo Be.t\lfloy Mlllfllr J •; a.atM. .. WHfloml fM ) '°'' l 6 ) "' Jofttfri~· Monlon IMI a•I C.runay S<llMfttl>-1, -~ l>Y lnrf•11. M•urer-Teylor IMI W()f\•~2. won bf torfo1t. Coro.,.dtlMol• (1'">1 Cl' •l EIToro S1nqltl ~ti,,, C £' h>~I to K otl•r o.4, duf Root• 4 11\\f If') f n,.,1 0 b, Ov•ll· ft 1 l~I 1 Iii, 0 b, 0 b Cr.;lt-r tl I IU'\t 1 6, I 6 06 Double\ M,., 1rtt1t"'' Lo~ ,.,, •r> ro'' , , B \t11w1n 0 ,.,, ""'" n 4 In I I t Pl'lrh r11ltt Krf'lt r ~;., IO\I 10 ,....H 91• 'SctM•rflQ • 1 C.•trh , Cunlf'Y (l;. J~· 1 O ~. ) f), wq ii ") l:'r ~ 11.m U•'·•.,.•c.•rr tEllo\10 o o 6 U ~ JUNfOll YARSl'l'Y univer111y 0 1111,,1 S•n Clemente S•n•lt\ Po't t~I d,.. Ori wn f..1 ft.A, A• 'fWSA ''° C).-f But'ton~ l V~''" SI Wt"~ I\ tt•. lt»I 11.., H.trpter I~) won 1 'f I .1 l-6,wono·l. • Oou~t., .; L,.w•""·l lvlOf (\I '""' '" 0.-ity .~'""'hflttf'.r W d .... c;.-.. ..,.. 'uH'°"" .... l ellPt Lf""'l" ICl'VQP\ ~I. C.• f"I F~tn•nd-· t,.1 wo" • l "J • I "'°''"'°" Ro,••mu 1.-.1 to\I •I won , 1 6 ) O•MHlll•l•'\I IUIU~Ul\OllH<" $1n•lt\ A J1~~'° Cl .. I tt,.t M t ll"'<1'W'W'V ,., • et-t f\-, 'e I 4. '"'' ti> \1.1r.,_ ,,,_""'' • • Al"d'#·ll tl WOfil ~ t 64 'O't 7• W. 1nir r ft_ lr)\I '\ 1 l .. I)~ 00'..lbl•\ flfl ;.,.,., W 1-,n l •lrf AN°tl'lruw, F-Ot'r'll "'~ 'J I } 0"' t •-'"' ttw-• .. tt1-r .. t ,,,.. \ '""' tl'l1 w• ,._...,,. 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A4 Otw•\IO., ··~c ... ,,,,' ., .... ,,, I\ -'•'1·11.-bw ~ n t I a Yi • ""' 11 1' I\ I\ J.. t ~'I va•\lf'I' Nftt1111Dl rt tt ,,-,,.,, "1•• ' f .,,.., 1\ '' 1\ " • tn v11t1 •• ,..,.,., ,._, ,,. , , • 1 1\ 'J w.-.• 1,..,.." t ' >-i ttJr • t1f'-t ,. I\\. o ~ " I ·~ ft•f y,..,,., fl,. 1' tl 1\, L ••nr 41 ,,.., ''' t ~ 1 I\, t ' •1~•"4' f\~A· " tr•t 0 • ' U '\ t ' \\ I M'''•01t V 1•1't -Nit (n\t• Mii\, t rt1. IH \,.I\ Clf'l'1"liftf'\ff" Of'lf Uf\lv•f ~··~ I t1. 1\ 1 C"'Oll" ""' MAr dtl (I r.,.o II o. 1\. JUN IOR VAll\ITY Nowporl 11•• llOf O~I (flo'°" 1f '· IH . Ftn V&ll"V ,, .. , M.1rl"I\ H •. 1' ll tlut1I. 6u cn a<>t W••lmon.tvr IS S, IU ~1 Jo~"l!M c1•f MAI•• °"' IS 10. ,, 11 Tu•llnO•I E\l•nrl• H 10. o I~ I\ 4 l.•IWNI Burl\ dt, """" H1!1\I) '· 4\ 1 • (Ot1.a ~Joli 11.-f M:•,•otM Vtfiir) 1S·13., 'S·l1 unl'Ht"'" d•f Stft Cl•manV> 1\ II, : H6. , CorOM ~I Mu dol El To<'> I~. 'I\ .. ' f'lt:l.DHOCIC[Y ~W.ll 141 ttl l:HI ~ owe sconnca. O•v•d 1, c;_,_ "''""· ·. .. DAILY PILOT If 7 Edison Outruns FV; Scrambles Title Vista The Edison Hig h Chargers of Huntington Beach. r anked No. 10 1n the ClF 4·A cross coun· !WI 10·:10, ~ Oerc11 (Ml 10 JI.' f n. dicotl IMI 10 ~.I V••v•• IWI IO ,. • A-.wn (Ml 10 .0, •.Htrzot (W) 10.)1, 10 Slly (WI 10 U . flllMiM CJtl llU WUIMIM• 1 try poll edged No. 5 ranked f'ountain Valley, 27·28, in Sunset Leagu..e action T hursday after- noon at Bartlett Park in HWltington Beach. JUNIOR VAllSITY 1.•~UM .. OCll 1111 I,.) CclM 1 "'41rple tll tO S4 2 All<lft CU "oo· l AlddlC.k ILi 11 10, 4. P.ool•Ovocn ILi II It ~ Ml .. ttr CCI It 11 o Po-II ICI 11 11 I WylTlln (\.) 11 3), 8 l'utltr ((I II ,.; •• Honl~y ICI U ·OC.; 10. Wlllt•klr ILi 12 I• C11t1MeH110 (~1 Unlwnlly t 8t•Ottl tWI II OI t J-(WI ll•ltJ > o.1rvmo11 IWI H JO; I 6'e0ttl CWI 11.)l t. Corl IMI II a 1 • lt.m-..y (WI '' S1; 7. llur1 lMI n ·OS • C:ltt<Y IMI 11·>6:' Villtle (Ml 11 ll, 10. Ullll.,t (Ml II U. '1ft V•llt' CUI IOI lfl-1 Oerk l'I U 11, 1 Allen 11'1 ,U 11 ;, ICltt~ntr lt!I ,, H. •. "''"llelmtr (,, U,36; S. Curry Ill 11 43, l Knoa tl!I 11 ••:I, llowt" 11'1 17 "·I Brewsltr IF I 17 )S; t. Acll•r lf'I II:~; 10. Cow•n (l'I ll.St. PllU HMAN l.119~ lee< h (21) 1211 CdM And in other action, Marina of Huntington Beach d ef eat ed host Westminster , 24·31. M arina and Fountain Valley are tied for the Sun set lead with 3·1 marks, and·Edison, Hun· tlngton Beach and Westminst er are t ied for I. <Hlv•n tUI 10·1/; 2 Spt~Ul' ICI 10 21. 3. Knipp CCI 10:16; 4. 11- IUI 10:37 S. Pet•non ICI 10 Jl• '· ,,..~IOrt IUI 10.3'. I, Sll•n9 CCI10 ": •. c;. ....... ICI 10·0; • l omlln (Cl 10 "; 10. AOOrlQ..er ICI 10 47, 0.NHllll (Ml IUI Mlol..,Vltfo 1. tuel Quist, Snrlver (Ml 11 04 3 O'Mllltv !Ml 11 0), • Mee-101 II °'· ). G<l•h (Ml II: 11 •• Lutfano 101 I' II, 1 Ptlt (01 II 19. a ltUO· 9ln IOI II U , '·Aplin 101 II ll; IQ. John.on I 0 I II :i. Hwtl. 1 .. c111111 IJll N._rt I. SC.oil CCI 11 ·OO· 2. C•UOfllln ICI 1 I.Oii; ), MCMICllHI II. I II: 10; ., Corey Ill II J4; S. P•9•M (I.I II 31; t.. WICkl (Cl II 0 , 7, Sll•W II.I 11;41( a Tl\ur"""r (Cl 11 · ll; 9, Pel-Y II.I 12.04: 10. T.vlor (Cl 17' 14 Hunt. IU<h 00111•1 N._t • third with 2·2 records. 1 WOOdlo< .. (HI 11 49. J CM.., IHI ,, o.·) Wttoe IHI n " •. HlrilM• .. lNI 11 19· S B"rO !HI 11 19 l Fry IHI 17 JS, I McR1~ IHI 11 41 a lY· OIV IHI 1)•20; •. Sllvtr$1•1n(HI I• 17; 10 Whitt IHI 14•)1. 1 Gibe•-IHI " 10; ,, O.t1•els IHI 17 t 'I l. Fr•n~lln (Nl 11.l'I 4. I.eek•• CNI 12 •l S Allen INl 11 )I •. Hallo<ll IHI U 10; 1 Htr'l-1 llil 11 11. I. Rlidd lf11 IJ Jt, '· Atv•r•I (Hl u·u , 10 Hlr•ll•r• INl 13·,. "C..I• Mele IJ41 IUI Uftl"""' .,.., ...... ~< .. •••••.aM 0.1ty Pilot PllOto b~ Pttrl<k O'Oo4ntll UNIVERSITY'S KIRK SAMPSON (29) REACTS TO BLOCK A PASS. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Football Standings ANC.il.U~(EAOUE W I. Pff P• <;1 Pdul 4 0 107 ?S Pou\ l( 1 I 77 l1 .... , .. ,.. 7 I 10 3S 8•\hOD Amdl I 1 11 7l Mdtf•r 0 11o1 t 3 )~ 60 !>I AnlllOOf 0 ) 1 '" Thund1y's ~core t;t P•ul l' M4t"'r 0~1 6 Tont9ftt \ c;,.mf' 8 t\'U> Am .tt •I 'it A ntf"I nv '•turo .. 1 'G.ime- '11" I...., St-rv1lt "' Wt"\tmln\ler l'R E[WAY l.IOAGUE W LT PF PA A"-'l\t•rn S I 0 I~/ Sii T ro1 4 1 0 17? )I ~••nna 3 1 0 IOI 16 S.-.. f H1lh 1 J 0 11 79 ~"· 1 3 0 Sii 100 U.-11 1 3 I Sl 116 w1>11ern 1 3 1 .. as S..e<>.o Parle I 4 0 n 101 Th11nd11't ~<or• Andi.. om 11 l o-II Q T0"19~t'l G•mH M-IM)1'Qll4 V\ ~u11ny H1tts •t Buena P•rlc !)..1..,1nnl' "~ T ro v \t ,.. ult,., t°'l S.aturd41y'\ C•me 01.;t l'\4 Par le, •l Wf'"tltt '1 Uni Outlasts Mesans ForB-5 Polo Victory Three goals on quick oasses i n the fourth period and the Universi·. Ly High Trojans of I rvine defeated visiting Costa Mesa, 8·5. to take the l ead in the South Coast League water p olo race Thursday afternoon. In other league action, host Cor ona del Mar swept by Laguna Beach, 12·5, to boost its record lo 4·1 and tie with Costa Mesa for second place in the standings. The 5-0 Trojans, ranked No. 4 in the Cl F poll, had defeated Costa Mesa, 11·1, earlier in the season at the Stanford slartet's on major fouJ ejections. M eanwhil e , Jerr Scolman scored 11 goals to l ead M 1ssion Viejo past visiting Dana H ills, 23·6, and hos t San' Cl emente defe a~d El Toro, 11·8. Trailing 8·7 with three minutes t o play, San Clemente's Don H iJI scored to tie it all up, and the Tritons came lo life, scoring three quick goals in the l ast two minutes. V.lltSITY Sute 111 Ou•rltn C.O.ta AA-.•• 7 I 1 o ) Un1w"11y l 3 0 l • Scorinq CM-Whll"'ore ) 01~". Dolan Uni Bal><\ l II <l"'·''°"" 7, P C.•mo~ll > M6d~~,, 8r•1..1n JUNIOll YAR SflY c ... :aM.-.1 7 l > • ~ l.M!Vt"f\ll; J 7 1 ... Scort"") CM. RGQPr' 6. WA\,.f•t d. CR\"'•"° l Un• t<1\P'l1t\ftt 1 Moon J, loM.CJ:r(. G. HOAIO. W1IM1n rllDSH•SOPH Seer• llJ Ou.art•" Cml•MI>•• 2 1 1 0 ~ Unl.,.r .. ly 1 J 1 I I> S<orlnq: CM-Balon 3, Pior11. Whitmore. Unl-llot1YI( 4, AO.., Wooll•tt. VARSITY Sure b1 Ou.,.,.,. L.Q""8llHCll I I 3 0 S c.oron.<1t1,,..r 2 4 1 • 11 Scorlnca: Lii-Morion 7, Llnt.t•tlrr, B•l#l•wlcll. 7. CdM-Wrlghl 4. Hoo s. Semon~l. Sllv•. JUNIOll VA A St TY Sore llf Quarler1 And in n o n -leagu e play, Huntington Beach's E dison lost to h os t Esperanza of Placentia, 11-7. , l.<191'11t Bue ii 3 7 1 t • Corona~tf~u 2 I I • 8 ACAOl'MV LEAGUE W L PF Amt>.Jna{jf)f (f'H"•"-""' ' O 185 H1Jl'\I \,'.1ll••v (..hr1 1 I 61 ~ti"r'httt\t 1 I 10'f PA I nvitational, but didn't ~! find it quite as easy this •a tlme. Randy Roberts led the Edison scoring with four goals, two of them in the final period. Scorlnq· L6-0 1.lnltl•lll" 3. K•uq oer. Chrn tensen '1. Stott, 8 r•\h1N CoM-6trc•w 7, Cllomeay, T"'"'" tlr }. rROSH·SOPH k•,..llyQurl•n ~·d (.111.... 1) J 6 .... ,.,~, ''l"" 0 , 11 :~~ M esa's Mark Whi t· m ore fired in a penalty s ho t and John Olsen scored on an extra-man U1911n• lka<h 1 J 7 ) 17 TO"•Qf\t \O•mt'I. H,.,.,, lQ• at MltJ .. (itu•~ ts• M•ran•trw "' Hunh nqton V•l•ty e,r,,, t1 .• n •t Monrovi• Hu~h (U CHlllSTIAN 1.[AOUE W LT PF l'A l •ber1y CMI~···" s 0 0 ,... H A~r•CM1 Chrl\holln 4 I 0 U t 50 V<1?r va1 •f '"'· o ' 1 74 ns ~IVJ'16aot"t 0 4 I 4'I 161 Ton1,M't Gl l'ft• y,,.,~ \f•l••Y (f\r · \lt ln VS C.lv¥y 0..1pt1\t •t r,,.,..,,," p,,._ t ll S•tu,d.iy•, O•m• ""''"" ,,. •" ,,,,, I•-" v~ Lt~rl._, (.,_r..t• _,"•I Q,O .. \I ·l·W S-~001 (t pm ), situation to tie up the match at five in the third quarter. University, whic h went to a man -to-man defense for the match, abandon ed the tactic and returned t.o its stuffing defense. Univer sity Jost two YAllllTY S<ort ltJ GHrttn Edi'°" 1 0 J >-7 E_r..,UI t 1 S )-11 EdiM>n KOri119: Guln•n. 5-tft. 0. Pickford, Rooerfs 4, JUNIDlt VAltSITY -lc.wolty~ EdlMft 2 3 2 , ..... E-U1'UI ' 1 I ~ £01'°" Ktnr19; C. PIC-IMd 1, lte<J. die-2, Cr•wlord 1. l.•urstn 7, HedOtl. rllOSH·SOPH SCH••YO...rl• ... o o o o~ I 2 I 1-S Coron1oelt.Mr 1 t , t 4 Scor lnq: I. 6-L•dtrrn•n & Tr~•soll, Wllllto<ll. S CdM-IHrlow, Nttnr, Piper 2. 8•1drldge 2 . VAIUITY Score •r Qu41rten Et 'l'oro 1 • 1 O ~ Sin Cl•-ntl' 1 7 J ~ 11 Scoring ET-Wll1on ~. Alck•l>aU9h. S<lllldel 2. SC ~Kelln ), G<00\7,H1111 1.lntl>•ck Dor .. JUNIOll VARSI TY S.... Clemente wo" lly lorlelt rllOSH·SOPH Sco•• llY Qu•rt•N El Toro O 1 O I 7 ~ .. , .. ,,...nl• 7l,7 t Sc.O'lnQ ET-Awe"amo. Rlr~ SC -cooic. 0.Ds 2, W•f>l'I 2. G<•ll 1, SwordsIDen Roll, 34-6 SL Paul, Slices M~naTCIUJ Apart G1bb'5 W11fi1tms ~ .. VAllSITY S<O<• .. , OuarltN O.neH1ll< 1 1 0 1 4 M1<<oon v .. 10 • 1 $ 1 1l Scorln9· OH -BP<rm•n. Mllo\<11 l. McCarlnev. O<>lan•Y 1. MV-£by •. !>colman II, IUy, V. v .. u llo 7, OU101, WOOCX. Ptte~o") JUNIOll VAai lTY Scort IJY Q,...rtero By ROGER CARLSON Ol lfteD•llY Pilot Sl•ll S t . Paul High's S w o r dsmen put eve r y thing t ogether Thur~d::iy night as they punished the M at('r Dei High M onarchs ot Santa Ana, 34·1i , in Angelus L€'aguc football before 6.500 al Sant:> Ana l\owl. II was an impressive ri1splay by the Santa Fe 'i pring s-ha se d Swords m <.'n of coach M::injon Ancich as the w1nn<.'rs blended a w icked pa.;c;ing attack w1lh a ball control of- (<.' n ~H', r e cov e red fumbl es. inter cepted pai:.ses and bloc ked a punt in stifling MD. It wa s th e 10th s traight yea r the M onarchs h ave come up without a vktory against St. Paul and it was the worst beating from a St. Paul team in the 18-year history o f the series, which St. Paul n o w leads, with 10 wins, 6 losses and 2 ties. If the M o n archs of coach Wayne Cochron had a shot at St . P aul at all, the chances were erased quickly by two penalties early in the game. St. Paul b ad SCOT'ed, but MD quarterba ck M ark Drazba struck with a 51-yard pass to Steve B eeuws aert lo gel the M onarc hs to the St. Paul30. St. Paul wrapped it up with two m ore TDs in the lour th period on a blocked punt and fumble r ec overy. M oments later Drazba went to the air agam, but GAMI. STAT•:.~~~~. MD his 14-yard str ik e to Flr\tdownsru\l\<n11 a Beeuwsaert for an ap-=:;!:::~:=~~',f.0., ~ parent touchdown was To4 .. tttr\td_,., 11 t d b Cl. pp' g Y•rOStu\111"9 180 nega e Y a I m vard~wn•nca 11& penalty and the threat varct\lo\I u eventually fiuled with :!:~::~~~~:~ 1 ~·s another p enalty and v ... c11.o..n•111eo • 1o.110 finally a missed field Fuml>ln tum1>•f'•0<1 1.0 ' • \9 1)1 ,, 16' >II• Ht 4 2 Score"' Ou.orten goal. St PAUi 7 ll 0 U-)4 . The M onarchs put SIX M•t•rOt• ftUSHINOo o • o-o points on the boards in st P~w• the third period when 1cb v9 Drazba went to the air =!~'" ~ ;: with Beeuwsaerl in a c-en 10 " nice effort. Reeuwsaert ~.::! ~ ~ caught the TD pass from C...-rrero 1 o five yards out and for the '0181' ~~u :! game be caught seven or omo. 12 11 Drazba's bullet s for 117 =•" ~ ~ yards. MCGow•n 1 u But by then it was too ;:~~~•m : ~ late. Tot•I• n s• yt 0 0 n 0 0 0 11 •• s 6 • 0 0 0 ,, .. .., 1.l 39 O• •0 so 00 3.6 10 0.4 10 140 2.0 00 I.• Already St. Paul's Tim 's~~:~~ Cowan had completed ,. ,, "'' " "''·· O..noHlll< 0 0 O O • O Minion Vie Jo • s 1 ) 11 MV .Corino· Barn< •. Jack\Otl, Sltver 7, Hall, lee 3. Brown. ,ROSH·SOPH Score lly Qu•r I••• O<tn• Hill\ Z 0 I 1 \ Miulon Vo•fo 1 J J I 8 Scortnca· OH -WOO<J• l>• .. •G•• 1 11 .. m•n MY-Eby l , Oerr. xolm•n l,H~r. Chaffey Tops Gauchos, 15-11 ALTA LO MA-Phil :M orr eal e scored six goals for Saddleba('k College but it wasn't enough as t he Gauchos l ost t o h ost Chaffey , 15-11, in Mission Con· feren ce w ater polo ac· lion Thursd ay afternoon. Despite a defensive breakdown which enabled Chaffey t o score 11 goals in the second and third p eriods, Sad· dleback goalie Koko Koorajian came up with lO sav es. six of seven passes for ~ ..... ,,. &1 o' 0• 1M0 .11s Secldto1>ac1t 3 1 1 4." ~· .000 OWIHey 0 S 6 4 0 122 yards and 3 40·yard lotels ' 7 0 121 ,Ill Saddltbat lt scorlno · Dunll"O. TD to Mike Gallego. *""'O.' Frermn,MOrrHlt6,k11c11,Murul\y, Cowan also had a one· _o.._•_r_M __ 1_• __ • __ • __ 1_n __ "'-"_09_"'_0_r•_· ________ _ yard TD run and 1Uck Ambrosi bad scored the first of hi s two touchdowns to alve St. Paul a 20-0 l ead . DON AUGOOD Edi son 's C h a rlie Christensen and 1'~oun· lain VaUey's Hnan Ap· pell and · J ohn Spreitzer set the pace for the first mile before Christensen broke Joose to win in 10.47. A slrong f inish by Edison's Jon Goldstein, w ho overtook ,Spreitwr to place third, proved to be the difference. M eanwhile, H unt· ington Beach coasted past h os t Newpo rt .Harbor, 15·45. And in South Coast League meets, Costa Mesa, ranked No. 1 in3-A <.'ompetition breezed past No. S ranked University of Irvine, 19-43. E l sewhere, No. 3 r ank.l·d Missio n Viejo swept by vbiting Dana 11.Jlls, 17-40, and El Toro defeated hos l San Clemente 24-34. Jn other action, visit· ing L aguna Beach fell before Corona del Mar, ~- VAllSl'l'Y "11" V•ll•f IHI 1111 &d!Mft 1 Crvo\lon"'n t EI tO •I ' Aoot'll (Fl ti 01, l Gold .. oln (El II°"·. Sl>r•lt1tr (Fl ll:ll; 5 llu111., IFI 11•16;6 l.A"-4EI n ?•:I '!ilobom ((I ti )'1 8 T"lr~•~ IF I 11 ><. • Smoot (FI II 0 , 10. llr<1n1~ IEI II ri. Hunl. llucll I Ill IOI Nowpor1 I 111•1 Hurtll. Ouli, C••••no, c-.u fol'rl OU 11 O?• \ 01l'«.1ullfl"\ Hi\ 11 °'" • S"O• I \H I 11 10 I 0.-,.11 (NI 11 U; I S""°'"' INI 11 l<. 9 Gr~y IN I II 3). 10 1.0w•nte INI 11:36 Cotto Mnt tltl IOI Unlvt~•IY 1 Younq (Cl• lJ. 1 C.I~\\ IUl••:JA• l Tllomown ICI •·o • Ge•"~"" (Cl • 0 , ~ Overnoll (Cl• •6, 6 Kolar ICI • .,,. , Sh•C~tllorO CCI 1n 01, 8 Lono IUI O·Ol, t ~lle1d ICI 10 10. 10 I.JI· ''"""" IU I 10 JO o .... Hiii• 1401 1111 MIUhMI Vleio I M Mortn (Ml 10 O•; 1 Hoel Waller11ou1~ , L•Bonle IM t 10 10· • Meuwtin (01 10 13, ), Ancltr-on IMI (0 11; • M.111 1'Mll!I CM> 10 11; I H•rrl• IOI 10 H ; I II V•WIU<'l COi 10 lO;t 8••n\ley CMI 10 30, 10 Jel ,., ..... 10110 0 [I Tore 120 (J41 S•" Cle,,..nle I C.1lro tEl lOll 1 Sc""'•dtlEl 10 16, J ll•O<I'" ISi 10 1'. • Lrw s 1'>1 10 l7 I F<><J•rlv 1.-.1 10 11 • Fu1<ll IEI 10 •7 1 V•nW•o IEJ 10 ~ I nynn IC I II 00 t Conone CSI 11 01, 10 P,,mtw•lon IEI 11 ·0I L.ttun• llH<ll IHI (ISi CAIM I fll~l (h••·tt 1lnd SlrAng~ f() 10 Oii J Jone\ tel 10 10, • Hun"'~"' CCI 10 10, S. On (Cl 10 11. ~ °""'11•\\ (Cl 10 17 1 °"""''"-\ II.I II ?• 8 JOftl\ (LI 10 1•. t Snyder Ill 10 H. 10 Osw•ld ILi 10 ll. Mlrt~ UO csn WtllmlMlff 1 Cline (WI 10:11; 2. Pltll (Ml 10 21: 3. O.llup (Ml 10:18: •.Bucker Pro Scores N11io"11 •u-.1b•ll A\\0Cl.ll•"" Clev11•nd9• Mllwaui..• 118 Allant• t1 Cl"r•qo 81 Pllll•~lohl• 101 C.old•n 51•1•96 N•tl..,1t HO<kty AUO<.tlltOft Ro•tnn 1 Chocaqo s 0-lroll l Pllol•~l"'1•a 7 MaNIW l:UI 1211 weu""'"'" I McCrory IWI ti 01 1 "'"'" IWI II ot. 3 Ea\lev IMI 11 n. 4. 1.0, .. tMI 11.11; s. McF•rll" (WI II "· •• G<ltrln (WI 11·11· 1 w .. r~ (Ml II ll. a l.el>OvicklOI 11·n . '· Oberl tWI" l9, IQ. Cern1ky (WI II ... Fl". V•ll•Y 1111 Ull EdllCWI 1 Ouaov IF I 17 07; 1 Conroy tFI 17 n · 3. Htrn•r><lfl tFI nu • GtlO•" IEI 17 11. ~. Tiit-ii tl'I 17 >a· & lllc111rd• (Fl 17 le, 1 """" IE I 12 •9· 8. HUISt !El It S.. ' Rorm1n IEI lJ:OJ; 10. Woo<I IE.I tJ 111 Et Toro llSI ISOI So" Clomtnlt I (.har>gald IEI lt'H 1 0•,,Nnto IEI ll'.76;) Hmo IEI 11 •'I.• Ju<k (El 1t·)•; s W•l-s IEI 12 n · •. (.on .. , IEI n:.o; 1. Bonteld ISi n·«; I. Sltnley IE I 11 SS; 'I. Tomp~IRS IEI 17:57; 10. lltewer (Sl ll. U. SOPHDMOlll! HY..,. auch 1111 lttl N•WllOrl l 8ord1 (HI 11: II 1 Fry IHI U 1'; l 6~oc;i•n (NI 17'1'; •. Alv•.-.1 IHI n »; S. Wllll-rtll IHI 11·.0; I>. t<.>r ro\dh (H) 11:0 ; 1. McK1bl>ln INI 11 « 8 Florn tNI ll 01 ' 0 B""' (HI ll.OS: 10. Ktncnel IN I •• OJ. • EIToro IUl IHI S•" C1t-ni. 1 ~ncn I ISi II OS.' H•l)Cl•ll\ (El 11 08 3 Aeddlnqlon 151 II 10' 4. K4rM<,., ISi II 11. S F11rr ISi II 19. ~ Po<>•l\arnrner IE I ti )I 1 R1l•v (~I 11 lS I Frey ISi 11·.o. 9. lnt;11t CEI 11 41; 10 JOMIOll ISi 11·0•. C:O.LI Meu tUI UOI U~1ve"llY t rvine ~I ftOft-<O"'•''•""t '· OverhoH IC I 10 II; 7 llttvner IUI 10 11 3 L...,.a tel 10 ll; • llovd IUI IO·:i.; S V1tna1>t1t ICI 10 43 I>. Ou•IO Ill 10·•1; 1 Humpl\rpy, (Cl IO·S.. a. Flander1 IUI 11 07,' Bland 1<111 I?, 10 Cruml~y IUI 11 11> L.oqun• llH<ft Ull Ull CdM 1 llol•y •M Lor~n !Cl 10 S1 ) Hool CCI 11 11, • Phollop\ II.I I I •'I S Par "'" 1\.1 11 • S8 6. CarMrt ll 1 1 I ~·. 7. ""''"u""' t c1 n o.. • H~n< 11 11 1 17 OI· 9 Yill!Alrl<t (C) 17 4/' 10 Oolm l l. I 12 SO o .... Hill• Ill) Ill) MinlonY1tlo I t1•l~I O'\bornf" Mt Afet· tM• 11 o .. J 11e1mu (01 11'13, 4 Kt•"l•n tMI II o . 5 l.arwooa 10111 \)•!..•II\ lMI 11 S4: I Brown IOI 11 01 8 WO\lmor~ldnd IOI 17 1~: ~ Car1er 1011130,10 Wal~rr lMI ll S8 I KOi•• ICI " 00 z SutlO<' tUI "0!>;3 Miiier (UI l!·ot; 4 Fe"" Ill 11 10. S lAltunt"e ICI 11 7'; t. .tin Or ... \ (UI II ~ 1 C8rllOll (Cl II •I • T•ytor (Ul " S8 ' Humplvey (II 11 01 10 ~DO\\ IU I 11 U 0.M Hiii\ (•I IUI MhslO"IV•t i. I tin 101 II 1), 2 Robln\Otl IM1 II l1 l Vtrl (Ml 11°0 ; 4. Compar..., 10) II U ) Perry (Ml 11 ot; I>. Goal• lte"81k IMI 17 10; , Mcl••n (Ml 17 9' I Z<><W IMI 11 11, t Kelly (Ml 11 41, 10 H•v• IMI 17 n. rtft. V•llty Ull IUI l!dlllOft I eop_,. IFI 11 •1; 1 Son-\ 161 17 II, ), McGlvern !Fl 1Z S~; • Tornulc I El I) 00: S Oullo9<1 IE I 1l Oii, •· llernord IE I ll' •t. 1 Pric• IFI I) 1a· I V••v•• (El u n '· :;:·I~·~. (FI n ... 10. Froudlflbe•Q I Mlrt"e USI IHI Wulml"'ltr 1 C..l>•llos IWI II 73: 7. Munqer CWI II·,.; 3 '1'11ompM1n IWI U·Ol, •. B•O.Oley lWI 12:11; S. Zlolllor'tQ lMI n ·u· '· O.venoort IMI n · 1s; 1. Wll· , ... IMl 12. I'; a. Corr (Ml 12 lO .• Bao (Ml 11:21: 10. Lawrence (WI u .21. OlllLS CllOU COUNTllY Ll•wn. llHO -n lly lorft41. COllt Meu IHI (U I Uftl"9rsll'( 1 l'l~r ICMI n 01;2. 01-r (UI n ca· J Rom•"" IC> n ::io· •. 0.ll•Qhor CCI 11 o · ) Purctll (Cl 17 )3 ~. £1tonberg IUI ll 04 I. T•lreult ICI I) 116 I Humollro.-IC! IJ 10 e HOll•Uoy ICI 13 I•, 10 SC.llult1 IUl ll 70 El To""-" bY lor1tll Oa ... Hiiis-ft bY lorfllt '7G-JAWA MOPEDS ·Aulomalic - WHILE TMEY LA.ST ,-· AT ~~~~!?r Apprx. 112< M1. ' Coast Moto Cycle C°"""'i) 2334 Newport Blvd .(' M. OAll.Y ... CL0\111 SUN., MOM. 714-645-1001 1 5'' NEW SNOW FALLS IN ROCKIES BUY NOW! K2 HORIZON Dwrable 9le11wrapptd canstntctlOft. Gr.at few st..+ift<J to "'"'-di .. • tltlw~ White wltfl ........ ,. .. $13500 . Mwlrw Ml/US Sttp-lft blndl"9' co111pereble to nwny •90• + bl"dln9•. PACKAGI PllCl '7000 $13995 ROSSIGNOL PllPOIMll GI••• 1a11dwlch c-"-"°" •lttl tti. rec• c;···" ..... 111atod dw-'c-. '15500 Safet11e• 4 44S 11111411199 8 • u "The Beffer arga1n . my ro ... all old friends OW the .. .,....Ye "S".I s.1-··· -·· ~ .. ,.........,.,°"" ' I I . ' • I ' • p; ' ,. CHINOOK $6S9S For solect the best choice In Chinooks, from the large inventory at Marquis Motors. Come ln ~ill.l.~~~.~111.':i ... ,todbyl . .. . .. -·· 15 ,000 first prize winners That's It exactly. &ch of the first 115,000 customera to bring a credit card •nd reg~., for Huntington Otnter'a l'l8W e~tfng NUMBER ONE C1.U B reoe1Yet st4.00 In freeglfta. Now durtng 10th Annlverawy 5'1• at Beach Blvd. & Edinger. \, and B~wllng aequaintonces. I'm .back In Orange County and anxious ·to let you fcnow that I'm at Dunton Ford at 2240 S. Main, Santa Ana as Sales Manager and would lllce to have you call or stop by. Titanic You. 546-7070 ( • . ' PAacAO~ PR .. CI $1 5 9' S • I ..,.It 111 Mottnen Mii• ... C-st Mwy. (Ne.,..,,,..., LAOUNA HtLll -LONG llACH MOJN,.111. 1M1 SAT. IM, IUN. 12·1 .. .... ----··· ....... __ ........... ----------................ -.-··------· .... -... .... . •; ..... - 88 DAIL V PILOT Ffldav Novembor S 1976 W111ds Buffet Ho hies Strong wind11 off the Wai.lei.lei coast playt•d havoc with the first four pre-championship races of the Hobie-16 world c hampionship Wcdnes- c!ay. BOATING There wen~ numerou:> championship races on capsizings in the third Saturday. and Courth r aces and one Monday and Tuesday drowrung was a vertcd by were de\ oted to qualify. the quick and heroic ac-ing races for those who tion of a Newport &:ach h<1d not previous l y team. earned a booth on the The near tragedy OC· 96-boat r oste r . There curred whe n a n un were 32 qualtfiers. in- named Austra h an team c I u din g D e ~D ee flippe d in 25 -30-knot ueauchamp, you st of winds and high seas and the Newport each By ALMONl.Ot¥•e1'·. • .. , °"' OllMi:,.ltY~ ... S.;fi-'. Top dinghy sailors from lt\•West Co¥l Wlll ~o head·to·head at Newport Ru;Yach\ Club$-.tllr· day and SUnday m the annual est Coast l>i~ lnterclub Team Racing Cham sbip tor tbe Jean Schenck Trophy. Salling will be y two-mari teams in the Lehman-12 dinghy, popular in lnterclub rac- ing circles for more than25years. In addition to the host Newport Harbor Yacht Club, clubs committed to send strong teams art! the defending Balboa Yacht Club, Lido Isle Yacht Club, St. Francis Yacht Club of San Francisco, San Diego Yacht Club, Mission Bay Yacht Club of San Diego, Alamitos Bay Yacht Club, Long Beach Yacht Club. NHYC is providing 32 boats for the regatta which will involve a total of 64 people. Each yacht club will fie ld a team of four boats. THE BALBOA YAClff Club has won the covet· ed trophy for the past three years in a row and the team will again be skippered by Dave Ullman. NHYC's team will be skippered by Henry Sprague, LBYC will have Henry Schorie_ld as skip- per, ABYC will be skippered by Ken We1ss, MBYC the crewman became en· Beauchamp fa mily in t angled m the s hrouds lhe competition, and her T -----an Captures and trapeze wire of the uncle Jam Beauc hamp, .L.AJJ.IJ.il.1.- boal. oldest member or the family competing. Other c NEWPORT s kipper members o f th e Bo art Ra e up Jim Black a nd his crew Beauchamp family pre-g C Russ Eddington, who viously qualified are Bob h f th h t wer e sailing nearby and Dick, both top-flight Lumaran, skippered by Bill Ro rs~ e os leaped from their own ~aalors in the class. Voyagers Yacht Club, was the overall series winner boat and r escued the Top five leade rs in the od(etrhethHeu":>~~f~~~~~~ ~~neJi~~Pya~~~~~=te3l~~~ crewman who was p r e-c h ampio n s hip trapped underwater. races: 1, Dean Froome-systeTmhe. seven race series concluded last week and Black's own boat sailed Jerry Driscoll, Hawaii, VY C away .end all four had to 1.2; 2, Rick Naish-Jess final standings were just r eleased by · . be rescued by chase Faulkne r, Hawaii, 2·3; 3, Running concurrently with th~ Bogart Series was a series for Midget Ocean Hacmg Fleet yac~ts boats. Jerry King-P at Love, for the Homer LaughJm perpetualtrophy. The series will b•ye the f..-nelShlpe ~i\ilor Earl Elms, LIYC's team wiJl be~·lppered by t'red Miller. Skippe~s rer the St. i'YC anct Sao Die•o teams were not naMed. The tdltm racing wiU be based on one yacht club aeainSl' enother with four-boats on each time. re· suWniil'l a totalof33raees. •. IN OTHER LOCAL S"1LING competition, Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club is sponsoring a Laser Class invitational regatta Saturday and Sunday. In bit boat aclion, ~Angeles Yachl Club will hold the spotlight with the Saturday noon start of the biennial 1,032-mile Mazatlan race with a roster of 39 of the top ocean-r acing yachts on the West Coast. The n eet has been divided into four classes with. Jim Kilroy's 79-foot.ketch Kialoa being the to_p en- try in Class A. Class B is headed by ~alin Burnham's Ericson-46 Invader, San Diego Yacht Club; top boat ln Class C is Concubine, Richard Daniels, Huntington Harbour YC. and at the top of Class Dis Ghost II, John Reynolds, NHYC. Southern Calirornia Yachting Association calendar: • IW--'•klbN BAHIA CORINTHIAN YACHT CLU8-Ut"r lnv1lal....,.I S.l11ro.y SUll- CUy NEWPORT HARBOR YACHT CLUB-Jun SU>•ntk Memorial R•9at1a IUl>man· ltl S.turoav Sunoay L°'"-ie.~ .. Mll LOS ANGELES YACHT CLUB StM1 Of~ A~lo to 11111 .... 11~ r.c•. ""°"~J;f~(OBEACH YACHT CLUB Fall~r1UNO 1 Sun.Uy Saftta MOi>lu k y ASSOCIATION OF SANTA "IONICA BAY YACHT CLUBS- Ola'"P.°"""P R•Q•ll• (PH RF I S.lll'Oay sunon MALIBU YACHT CLUB Ftll~fl""HO l S•turd•• Sunoty l(I NG HARBOR YAC>if CLUB Re-City HO-P0'1 R•9•ll• all Cl&\\.t'\ Sunctav s..-OI ... MISSION BAY YACHT CLUll 5'11oe lnv1ldllonol, SaturO..y Sunday. You are the one! You are No. 1! Dressed • Ready lo Cook Pheasant pac ific morinE • SCHAnR • H•R•IH • .oMSTAM • HtQO,.CO rloolno C>C> 0 suppl~ WehaYenowexpanded our senicn cwtd facilities to include a M line of Marine Suppffes • SAFETY E9UIPMENT • HEMRI LLOYD-foul Weather Clothincj • LIFELINES-Made up •SWAGING • RIGGING REPLACEMENT The firs t two races of Newport Beach. 1-5; 4, WJ·nner was Aloha II, skippered by Glenn Reed, the pre-ch ampion ship Br ay a n d J oyre, SouthShoreYachtClub. were s ailed in 18·20 knot Australia. l · 7; 5. J err Fin•• '"•no•nci•. eoci~rt $e••·, 1 Lu"'-" 1n 1 T1q,,r u11v. Roo o-acon. Get yours 14 00 winds which increased to Canepa, Santa Cruz-VYC 3 ""o•w•.JerrwMnn190,., .. ,, CHYC • 8<•1>0111 Boooarrwn,vvc.~. • Cl II llYC in tree g1hs 2!\-30 in l he f 1 n al l WO R i c h a r d L 0 u re k • Tr•1.nC:.~~rn;~9< \!~11nlln ~•IM """"a II 7 s"'" ~ V•~ 0-.n Ou8o...-from Hunt1ng1on Center ELWELL FARMS S:inta.An:i 547-1193 Costa Mi?sa 642-4311 2430 W. Coost Hwy;-N~wporl Beach (7141631-2161 races. ....~N~'e~w~po~r:t~B~e~a:c~h~.~2~-8~·~~~":"c~J:i'.:8·~~~M:a~oci~1•~M~··~·:H~·~··~··'.::i~"~·~~·~c~·_··~n-~P-"1_•_0o_d_~_d_"_0 _~_1-=====================-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--=~:::::.&...i::::.::_~~~~~~~~~~~ Skippers wtio survived p, .. ,,,., HHvr 'r . .,1n11u•.n K"""'"""' s~vc the h e:ivy goi n g establish ed spccdi, or over 20 knots in the speedy cats. EVERY S KIPPER sailed twice, rotatin~ boats on a round-robin basis. • Pre-ch amp ions h i(l races continued Thur~ d ay and today. Tht• top 48 will be chosen for the Sunny '\,tturrJiJ'I L1qnr w~<it to .. "llff•w~"''"~ fl!linrt O<i"'r tl'le O<f'.Jf"I H1"1h\ f-r11j1''f ,n h+•lh RO\ (O .. ,t fl'm~r,ltUtft\ tii rMH~· •JP It) .. I') 1n1,1no tfl'mo,.,. 1t1Jr"' '"Q""" hlql'tf't' W•t(l'r t.-mC)l>r ''U"'' no't11nt'J *'r •t>ou• bl l'RIOAY Yrondtow 1 no"' O I !to~Ond"·gn I! -Hom . : SATUllOol'I' f:1tt.lft)# 1 v,.m '. Ftr~t n 11:Jft . ~ •m 'I S,,.t'Q"<J '""' 10 .. (t; y ,.,n()h,q" , '' n rn ,, ~UNOAY i 1M.llO• 't '" t f F1r-\t"•'lft "'••ti ',it Cjilo.f-')f\Ol"h• "I" •1 n t S.0-nnd ho'Jft • \) 0 l I 4)11n• ,. tt '' • rn '\ • • " '' Ntool'tt f> .. 1 Lt"" \"h) 01 . '"'- "I live in fc:-~cfuJ_£UCE4~w~m© but bought my new car in ~oow~ from JOHNSON 6 SON" low Price ond being treated ht~e n member of !he Johnson Family. was worth gorng our of my way for lho1 s why I recommend you Llrive 10 Johnson & Son Their Golden Touch service 1s ihe ONLY way 10 buy Give 'em o try. They mche you feel real 1mporronr. And to me. that is 1mporronr Bill Skiles San Juan Capistrano ORl\N<JE COUNT~ S OLDEST LINC<X.N MEflCUflY OlALfRSttll' ~ YlARS () rR1£N1X.Y fAMll.Y SERvCP I .1-b.. Mi11 •+u e •• 1 1 ~-+.m31e+n ---- ohnson &son , r.;>t. HARBOR BLVD L.OS TA ME'SA !>40· ~630 SKI &Tann111 '"\_~''" \ ,/11 ~ . I • , I r1i1mn11 SKI PACKAGE 1976-1 977 CARRERA Reg. $115.00 NEVADA G.T. $59.95 POLES $6.95 PACKAGE SALE PRICE Reg. $181.90 s1 399s SKI PACKAGE 1976· 1977 CLASSIQU~ Reg. $135.00 SOLOMON 444 $65.95 Reg. WILSON JACK KRAMER ••.. 131.50 DUNLOP max ply ......... 134.00 SPALDING WORLD OPEN ... 135 00 YAMAHA GLASS .......... 144 95 DAVIS CLASSIC I or II. ..... ;48.95 SALE s239s s239s '2295 s291s s319s ThHe prlCM. good with purchase of Strings Only WINTER TENNIS CLOTHING NOWIN STOCK New warm up & Fall Fashions NEW ARRIVAL 1976-77 SKI FASHIONS POLES $6.95 By: AMBA, SERAC, EDELWEISS Reg. $207 .90 INNSBRUCK. SKYR PACKAGE S 16995 Super selection of colors and styles SALE PRICE " SPORTS IV UI t 1 .. ,DOR ltO. . -,,_ ""c:.-~ Fa.IDTOll .01 S. IUCUO ,_ ....... .,_ .. l'f0.7112 SKIING TENNIS ~ic• & Rentals MEWPOR »a3 NIWPOtlf M.VD. rr_,.-...... "-C"T-1 TUSTll 131-20M 10ff •vt .. M.VD • .... .__.,....,,_ ••s- Reveals DAILY PILOT FRAM. ., "5 n fllTll . '•oi.c1You•l'>9'.,.' 229 , ...... ~ lho °" • ..,. .•.. & .,.ptorir T~ I 1,_. L~J.\. 541·5111 PlllCD .... 1'' ELECTRONIC 111111011 !:;,:o:: <;:1~~·~~d..,,eft lo ••t:t'c><• Ne Mor.,'"''"'' lw~ Up' ~~'''~••• f+l"n1t19 °"''' 1hef,,1u,~tfdRong1 Of,,.,. f~q.,. MIC. USJ 5'.ff j 34 99 .l C/l(Cl/f~ Sl'(QMltJYI AUTO ·PARTS SAYE 30%-50% ., u.•cmas unP11C1 ·~·.a;'ll COIDITIOlll C,+-..•tN•whoury r,, •\tbb.r Y'•ood, V•rrllft!t#\er P O\I & f·t:•'S au ''o'"'' &l•o • • ., (O\f lo App, 116. 2.M ~ SPilY _-_ WHIOSNlllD Dl.f<EI De-ft('"''',. \et~\ Meftt ''•Ov'ftiti, fhowt rt019'\ locti.,~ Ono1, Wot~\ /t.l')O 8.tl('W IJU . 99c SPRAY @h-iv """°" SEAlEI ~•'JJ'" •• ..,.w., IQr 110'\\ fie· 1t1c:ol (OfW\it(tllnl'\\ lonq lott·"'O~'otM'-<11\ '"'l"9"* ''~'' .. 0' 't''•"" W.a~Pt~. '•"0'1'"9 • HIAVYDUn COOUJIC SfSIOI c-., CLQIEI ,. ""' ~ltvr•dWtf cleaner ,._y_ coo1.nvs,"- 'o••Af'tllfo•1 OlnolvM f vtt, koe &(#-. Sole for A ""'Inv"' .. .... l.7t )49 Wlllsmlt WAS• SOl.YDn AllS-0.,t f1f,.,t~., O•uor1'fl<if~. 1"9' ANUood SplO\h "'~ Vov• WJ"ct..,.•kf Ci-And l•oq~t llltJ'ClilCJfll A#OSillfl 59c ~ a.. SJAHM RN "''• o.. .. ~ 51.,,. .. ,,. AllGotol- A"<I0.•"1 f<>g .... ""'-·u-t..,....1• .. ..,; , .. ~ .. ~-99c .... . ' .. ,, • ~ , ., EEKENDER Entertainment ~ I Friday, November 5. 1976 DAILY PILOT CJ ·, 1~-------~ l ~ ,1 Ir i• l · I Polish To Play Tonighl I . · One of Europe•s leading or· chestras wiJl perform in Santa Ana tonight, sponsored by the pr~ni::e County Philharmonic ~ICt\' The Polish National Radio Symphony Orchestra will open the society ·s second series of five oncerts at 8· 30 o'clock tonight in he Santa An a High Sc hool udjtorium. 520 W. Walnut, San- a Ana. It will be conducted by Bohdan odiczko and will feature Plotor aleczny. piano solist. The progtam will include lborada del Gr acioso from Ravel's "Miroirs:" Concerto No. 1n C Min or for Piano and r c h es tr a. Opus 18, b y RachmaninoH. Two of Poland's most popular composers will be onored ;ifter intermission with th e pl ayi n g o r Wilo ld Lutoslawski 's Concerto for rt'hestra and Wojeiech Kilar's "Krcsany" The orchc!!tr a, which was or· anized in 1934 by the Polish con· '<luctor Gru~orz Fitelberg, is on 'an eight-week touroC Canada and the United States. , Pianist Paleczny won the 1968 gold medal at the lntemational ·Music Com petition In Muni ch and he won the grand prix' al the International Fcsllval of Young Soloists in 1972. • Tic kets, at $6-7 and $3 for stu· dents, are avail able at Immel· ta's Ticket Agency and al the ~ociety's orrtce at 201 W. Coest !Hwy., Newport Beach. I . ·Long Beach Faculty Plans Fall Dance · Professional choreographers and dancers -all members of the Cal Stlale Lona Beach dance faculty -will present a ran dance concert Thursday through Nov.14. The concert series will orrer works encompassing modern, ballet, jau and lap idioms. The performances wUl lake place al 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 12·13; 2:30 p.m. Nov. 13·14 and 7:30 p .m. Nov. 14 ln the Studio Theatre on campus. The concert will OJH!n with "Encounters," a ·"J)re·daaslc suite danced by students and choreograph ed by Gloria Newman.' A former member of the Bella Lewitzky Dance Com· pany, Rebecca Bobele will dance in a premier piece which she also choreographed. The concert is being directed by Pat Finot with Craig Kupka, musical 4U'eclor. Tickets, rang. Ing from $2·3.50 on different 1 performances, are a vailable at the CSULB Fine Arts ticket of· fice. • • ....... . ~- A .. :· ... It ..... · ... . : • Chairs Seen as Pieces Becorrw Scnlpture in OCC Exhibit .· There's more to a chair than just sitting. That's the opinion of Van Romans, Ora nge Coast College Art Gallery director and instructor of in- terior design. Van Romans has organized an ex· hi bit of more than 20 chairs entitled .. Thonet a nd Thereafter" which opens Monday at the OCC Art Gallery and continues through Nov. 24. "Thonet was the designer of the bentwood rocker." said Romans. "Not Mr. Bentwood." Thonet m ade his chair in 1860 dur· ing a period when homes were filled with very ornate chairs with lots of surface treatment -roccoco or baroque. "Thonet was the first person who broke down the functionalism or the chair. He eliminated everything but the necessary qualities." Romans said the exhibit is the first of its kind in Orange County. Fifteen artists are represented in the show. many of them from the celebrated German design house. Bas Haus. The s how contains chairs from 1860·1974. They are made from all kinds or wood, plastic, chrome, tub· ing and cane. "The chairs become pieces of sculpture r a ther than the usual func- tion of chairs which is to be sat in," Romans said. Pictured above is a bentwood love seat designed by Thonet. Above left; a 1936 s croll chair made by Alvar Aa1to. It is laminated plywood. Left, a red and purple molded plastic chair designed by D. T. Chadwick in 1972. The chairs have been sent here from as far away as New York City. Among the s howrooms which are lendin g th e pi e ce s are Palmer /Gar land, Knoll Interna- tional, Group Artec and Herman Miller. The preview will toke place at 7:30 p.m. Monday a nd is open to the public. Gallery hours are from 10 a.m . to 3 p.m . Monday through Fri- day and from 7 to 9 p.m . Monday and Tuesday. , . .. , . .... .·. .. - .. ; .. .• . _ .... SCR Comedy Serves Up Fa~y Life{· By JACKI E RYMAN Of l ... Dally Pl1"'1 5Uff South Coast Repertory is cook· ing up an Italian comedy - literaUy. "During lb& first act an entire spaghetti sauce is prepared, real food fs cooked," explained Martin Benson, who i•directlng the Costa Mesa professional theater's production ot ''Satur· day, Sund •y, Monday," by Eduardo de Filippo, author of the screenplay for "Marriaee, Italian Style." "I never dreamed that so much went into creatini a 1papetU sauce," Be:sr>° said. • "She (the mother) has to cut this, chop that, brown this, pour it on top of that. We're doing it all, 110 it'll be an olfactory ex- perience. "IN THE SECOND adi, we. serve the spaghelli. They (the ac- tors) just eat constanUy. The odor of cooking should perrneate the audience. J ust sitting here at rehearsals, I get ravenous.'' Benson described the play as "a comedy of family We. It's re- ally a wonderful, warm and tender play and very different from the style of plays we do. We've never done ap Italian com· edy.'' He said the bluest problem the play poses. bealdu coordlnatinc the coold.nc with the I action, ts mastering the Italian accents. "We're trying to get the fl avor without going into the cllcbe ldialect," Benson saJd. .. THE RHYTHM (of the language) is really essential to it. Everybody's out there doing everything they can (to develop the sound) and sometimes it sounds llke Chinese or I.Jthua-nlan or Serbo-Croatian ... South Coast Repertory will use a complete raked (sloped) stage for the first time, Benson said. .. It's an old 'theatrical techni- que and we're using it here for the first time on the whole . m,e," .be said, adding, "It was too steep as or yesterday.. ao we've reduced it." About the play itself, be noted, "Il 's a tbree·ring circus kind ol play, but finally and,above all a pl~ about relation.ships." Featured in the 17-member cast wlll be Hal Landon Jr., Barbara ·Van Jlolt, Ann Sienna. Ron Bouseom, William Brad)', Art KouatUt and Lee Sballat. "Saturday, Sunday. Monday'' will run Saturday through Dec. 18 at SCR, 182'7 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. CurtJin Umes are 8 p.m. Tuesdays t~h Sundays, wttb s p.m. maUnees cm SUndays. A.dmi11lon la $4.SO to $6.S> and re- senaUon1 are available by call· lnc $46-1363. .; f' • .. 7hat's real spaghetti sauce,' says Hal Landotl Jr., whetl 'Mama' Barbara Van Holt presents him with a teste In 'Saturday, Sunday, Monday mo $' a e • · .. . • · • -(;2 DAIL V f'ILO T Fnday Nov~mber 5 1976 • :.i Phil Dike ·::::Slwws Work ·WATERCOLOR PAINTINGS -By Phil Dike, of ~ern California scenes, Saturday through 1so\I. 28 at Challis Go.lleries, 1390 s. Coast 11 ehway. Laguna Beac6. ll a.m. to S p.m I Wed- • esdays-Sundays. Free. ''CllAIR DESIGN -A show of 20 original chairs 1 from the past 60 years, plus film on making of a r Chart.es Eames chair. Monday through Nov. 20 in , .the ~range Coast College Art Gallery, 2701 , f~rv1ew Road, Costa Mesa. 10 a.m . tO' 3 p.m. J:,~~kdays and 7 to 9 p.m. Mondays and iMesdays.Free. · 'W01lLD OF FRANKIJN AND JEFFERSON' - ·..Artifacts from 1706to1826, Tuesday th.rough J an. .22 in lhe Ahmanson Gallery, Los Angeles County M~eum of Art, 5905 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles. · 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays-Fridays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. Free. 'PALLADIUM PROCESS PRINTS -Photo- graphy by Peter Mauss, Thursday through Dec. ~ at.the Susan Spinlus Gallery, 3336 Via Lido ~ewport Beach. Reception 7 lo 9 p.m. Thursday'. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m . Tuesdays-Saturdays. Free. ·Galleries/ Exhibits PAINTING AND GRAPIDCS Torana Art Leagl,le Open Juried Exhibit, Sunday through Dec: 12 al Mills House, 12732 Main St. <Euclid Park). Garden Grove.1\eception 2 to 5 p.m. Sun- day. Hours: noon to 4 p.m. Thursdays-Mondays. Free. ART SHOW AND SALE -Costa Mesa Art League will be showing work today through Sun- day al South Coast Plaza. GERMAN EXPRESSIONISM -Eighty works by Marc, Nolde, Barlach, Kandinsky and Koloscha and those artisLs who inspired the German Exprcss1orusls will be exhibited al Lang Art Gallery. Scripps College, Tuesday through Dec 17. Gallery how-s: 1·5 p.m. daily: 7-10 p.m. Wednesday. PRINT SA LE -Rolen Gall eries Bowers Museum, 2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. will have a Roten Galleries print cxtub1l and ~ale from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m . Nov. 20. CALIFORNIA PRINT COMPETITION -Forty. two juried prints and drawings of the California Print and Drawing Compclit1on. sponsored by Chapman Coll ege. arc on exhibit al the college's Guf!genhei m Gall cry through Nov. 19. Hours· 1 5p.m Mond:iylhrough F'ridJy RF:Cf:NT WORKS -Stefan l\.r1kl, Newport &>ach jl'wt•llcr and ~1rt1st, wtll show recent abstracts and olh<'r works al (.;aJcnc Santora. 207 N . Broadway, Santa Ana. PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW -Works by faculty and students from the Newport School of Photo· graph~'. Wednesdny through NO\' 30 al the J\I Belson Gallery, 3720 Cnmpus Orl\l', Newport Bearil 2 to 10 p m Tucsda~s F'rida~s ALI~ M f.DI \ COM Pf.TfTJO:\' -Sponsored bv C'osta Mes:i J\rt L<'a.i:rtJl'. on dis play during ~m ember at <:tend al<' Ft-<.kral ~a\ tnl(S & Loan. 500 Newport t'enlN l>nn'. ;\c"o' port HedCh. Free '\i,\'tlOl'\AL WATERCOLOR SHOW • )1 onda' throui?h ~ll\ 29 at the 1.aguna Reach Mu~eum of Art. :l07 Cltrf l>rt\'C, Laguna Uc.ich . i 1 ·30 a.m. to ~:tinly those who happen to discqver it can enjoy its • spec1altY shopping villages. •dockside restaurants. •deluxe motel. •complete boating -.-... services. •green recreation areas. Follow San Diego Freeway (5) to P;icific Coas t Highway (1). ony day of the week; turn toward 'the sea and you'll rediscover this nautical cove. Then koep It a ,secret •• ~ (if you canl) ' HAUNT THE HARBOR '1 Fltf04 Y, OCT. Zt • 3:30.6 P."'- PVMPKJM CAAYIMG COMTIST I -Nft1' SHOW r~~--__. f I San Francisco Opera UCI Prof Debuts His Work The work of a UC Irvine professor cMbuts on tho ttage of the San Franclaco Opera House Saturday night. "Angle of Repose." a new American opera • commissioned by the San Francisco Opera Company in com - memoration o, the twin bicentennials of the Unit· I ed States and San Fran· • cisco, has a libretto writ- AMERICANS ALL -World War I posters will be on exhibit at the Poster Gallery in La~una Beach in honor of Veterans Day. This work by Howard Chandler Christy an elderly 20th century illustrator, pro: claims the American heritage of all t he country's foreign born. Exhibit continues through November. 4 :30 p.m. Wednesdays-Mondays. Admission by donation. WATERCOLORS -And ink-and-wash paint· ings, by Didi Moore, now through Nov. 12 at the UC Irvine Student Health Center. 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays, at Verano Way and Circle View Drive. Free. MASTER CRAFTSMEN -Unusual, collectible blown and leaded glass by four master craftsmen: John Leighton, Paul Brown, M. Rhys Williams and John Conard Lewis at Designs Recycled Gallery. 619 N. Harbor Blvd., Fullerton through December. STONE SCULPTURES -Norman Hines, assis· tanl professor of art at Pomona College in Clare- mont, exhibits work al Huntington Beach .7 Library, 711 1 Tai bert Ave .. Huntington Beach. OIL_ AND ACR VLIC -Newport Bcacfl arch1le<'ll a~tist Edward Giddings shows his work al Dc~1gn Plaza, 260 Newport Center Drive, Suite 300, Newport &>ach. Hours: noon to 8 p.m. Wednesday and noon to1 p.m . Thursday-Sunday. Through November. Music Center Opera Association preHnt1 the 1 Olh Annlverury Seaaon of the NewYorkC~ orE~ JULIUS RUOEL, Oht ctor La Belle H6tlme ( Ollenl>lc~/ En&h•hl Fii 11/19 (E) ·Sun 12/5 (M) Thurs 12/9 (E) Madema Butterfly (P11<con1 lltal11n) Sat 11 /20 !El • Sun 12112 (M) H.M.S. Pinafore 1C.1l1>t1I & Sullovan, £nCh•hl Sun 11/21 (M) • Sal 12/1 1 (M) Turandot• 1Puc .. n1 ll•h~nl Wed 11 124 (E) · Sat 11127 (M) ·Sat 12/4 (E) I "fl •' wr 11" th 111/ie Ne». York City 01,N, wJs Der Ftlegende Hollander Nov. 17-0ec. 12 "' iW•cner/Germ•n) my 'desPrt island' Fri 11126 (El • Sun 11 /28 (M) cnmp,inv and .• 11/rr 1tr. Sun 1215 (E) nmlh ~ea•on 111 Lu~ .I I tn t I Algoletto ,.nr.e e~ " w•n <", see 1Veidot11~111n1 rnr<>J cn tn rrv1•e thJI Sal l l/27(E)·Fri t2/12(E) • ; n1c n T hr>rt' 1~ 'om•~tnin,:: about NYCO, a Die Fledermiu1 · en~e o/ ,.. l"m I p. s1t~uu/Ena1,.n1 • • • d (CI " en • Sun 11 /28 (E) • Fri 12/3 (E) danRPr almost, that one J'"h lrom no olh·•r ma1or La Travlata C'PCf41 romro.Jfl/." IV~rdo/ll•han) Stephanie Von Buchau, Tuos 11 /30 (E) • SAN FRANCISCO Fri 12/10 (E) MAGAZINE It B1rbiore di SIVlglla Oo~ning Niit~I-c~ouln111u111nl Wed 11 17 g PM Wed 12/ 1 (E) ·Sat 12/4 (M) SpPcial Gata Benefit Tuos 1217 (t) PtrfNm.lnre Carmen "A Ball 11 Prince Orlolsl(y'a" 1n1 •1 11.nchl u. stuun ano olftPrs) Thurs 12/2'(E) • La Boheme Sat I 2111 (E) 1P·1c<on1 '"" ·•1 The Makropoulos Affair Thurs 11 18 (E) • ll•o~f< ~ E "C'""' Sun 11 21 (E) Wed 1218 (E) ten by Oakley Hall, a 1 UCI Engllsh teacher for nine years • Hall's libretto. ll0ut1 look out Westminster Mall! Look out South Coast Plaza! Huntington Center customers are at the toP or the prize customer list. The first 15.000 to register dunng Huntington Center , 10th Anniversary Sale receive $14.00 In free gifts. Tell a friend. Beach Bllld. & Edinger at the San Otego Fwy. Op•~• 6 C11111ubJect 10 c1M1nv•_·_1on_M_;C;.;.O_A_P•...;.od.:.:.•.:_r1...;."'-" ----1 TICKETS NOW! Mualc C.nter; •II ~utual AgMcle5; Pac1l10 Sl•reo. &37 So. Holl; W1lloch1 ~:·: ,~;~~~:u:J:e;';;;~ 11}~1~~~:• "''' not ... •••flanged or rtlunded.) Tocl<tl ,.,..,..._ .. ,. 8•11 11 Prine• Orlol1llf1"1 \30 00 20 00. 12 00. g 00. S OCl All Ol~er ptrlOfmanCtl S 15 00, 12.50, 1 ( , 'o 01> ; ~o ~ oo f\ IL '"{ I NII I\ Ewn. •I I pm, Mate. et 2 pm. o•copl •• ,., B•ll • "" • •• "'" II Ptlnco Orloloy'a at 9 pm, v PAV I LION '°' Cr•dll Card Phone Rt1t,...llon1 Call (a13) 912•7111, 10 oN-1 pita CMon.-s.1.) Anlerlcan E•Plott/Mnstor ClllrOll/Dt"'Amll(lord All llCCI ..... n .. , .... ,, "'°f••""""'" ·~· "4~ ~ .............. .. ..... " .. """"" 1 _..,. ........... M\'_..,.,.._......, Complete COY81819 ot county tov•rnm•nt and courta. !very d•y lnth• DAILY PILOT r •' publlabed by Shawnee Prest, is based on the Pullt1er Prize-winning nove I by Wall ace Stegner. The opera was con- ceived by San Francisco impresario Kurt Adler as bolh an American and California project. He spent three years gather- ing writers, mus icians and performers who w ere either native Californians or had strong California ties. Hall is a native of San Diego and has been dlre~tor of tho UCI gr~u ate program Sn creative wrltlng. ~e author, Wallace Steiner directs the ere alive writ· ing program al Stanford Univers ity and com- poser Andrew lmbric is a musi<' professor at UC .Berkeley. Tbe opera is directed by Gerald Freedman, conducted by John Maucerj and stars Nan- cy Shade , William Lewis, Dale Duesing, Susanne Marsee, Wayne Turnage and Chester Ludgin. Hilt. who dlvldes his time between residences • hl Balboa and Squaw Valley, is the authorof13 novels. They include "The Downhill Racers," ''Warlock ." "Report from Beau Harbor" and ''The Ade lit a ... Uc was awarded a UC R ege nt s Fac ulty Fellowship to work on a dramaUc adaptation of Henry James' "The Portrait or a Lady" and received his MA degree from the University of Iowa. The K ru!(crrand Colleclkln is more th:m just heau11ru1 JC"elry. t 1 also h:ippcns h> be the world's best way to lt"n 1!nld. Thal's hcct1u5C the Kru!?crrand Is the only c1lln min1ed that cuntain~ exn.:tly one troy ounce ur pure j!\lld-rwl a fradi11n11t amount. I L~ gold content. th~n:forc. is 11C\'Cr on dl.luhr. s,1 even when It swnds 11lunc.1hc Krugerrand isdcsirnhle. But when 5et in fashiunablc.14K gold Widcbiand frnm.:s. lt's practically irres1\1ihtc. S1op i!' .. )I.In uml sec our cnurc gilt collection. RARE COIN GALLERIES 91 ToW'ft & Ccwt1 t OrCMCJI (7141 llS.tZ4& C._.L Y F"LOT (;,# More to Dining Than Just Eating I f. 1~ MAXWELL' PLUM arncr lA'Hoy, the Elton John of lhc r e:,laur:rnt \\Orld. :-a\'> "The l'C:-.lauran t I!'> .I fol'lrl C>f entCI'· l ainrn<;nl .. NEW YORK (AP) T o Warner Lt.•Ro>. a restaurant Is not JUSl a place lo l'Ul It ·~ u grand production on the glittery scale of CN.'11 ll. De Mille. "l view u restaurant as a form of cntt!rtainmcnt It's a spcrta r te." sttys Le Hoy. the 4l·)'l.'<.tr old pudgy rreator of Maxwell!> Plum and T;ivcrn-on·lhl.' Green "I try to create ;i total environ ment. I think J'm Sl•ttm~ up at· muspherc for people to com municatc with each <1lhcr und nature places wtwn· people can indulge their sem.u.i.1 fc('I · ings." Indulge indec.•d. AT MAXWt;LL's, diners m the back r oom sit beneath a brilltant ly colored Tiffany glass cc1hn[!. illuminated by more th;in 1,200 60-watt bulbs. In the cafe section, an ornately des tll(ned copper reil mg casts reddish hues on the sur- round inf: Jnl1q ue wood paneling. .. Old World " lanterns. :-some with tht' r .rna•ll Tiffany shade, dan~lc from the copper casing Near !ht• br;i::.:-.r atlt.'CI bar, an army of Jrt nouveau statuettes abound Thl•n "s an endll•Ss array or st .. uned Jnd p1UAlC.'d glass. an· t1qul' mirrors a9d pic·ture!.> MJxwcll's 1s c1ther u rornp through a c·ounty sqwrc's mans l· or a mad tumbh.• through tht.' Alic e· in Wonde rlund looking glass It dl•pen1b on your l<tsks Tavern on·the Green 1s a ~1ant b1rth<l ay (';.1ke, just waiting for patrons to sa1nple lhl' frosting. ~rt pusll'I colors l'll\'Cr lhl· walb of tht· T :n crn's 111uin dining room. thl• Crystal Room A col· ll'Cl1 on or Sl ,500 ilaccarat ch an· delien. hang from tht.' ornate. 1cmg-hkc rl'1hng. On one side or the Cry!.l...tl Room is a ru .... tir Y.OUd ·p...tnl'led area. complete with bubbled m irror~ and two lil.:s1ted "h1tc s lats "I CREATE m y fai ntasy world," confessed Lt!Roy. 'Aftu ull I grey. up in fantasy." \\ arner ts the son or HollywC>Od movie mogul Mervyn Le Roy and got his penchant for spectacle at an early age. Little by litllc. LcRoy·s artistic drives led hint to sculpture and ('l'afls. lie s aid ht· wanted lo create wilh ha~ hands. Hu wanted tu build. This was about 12 years ago, a time when Ne w York had a de· .11'lhofs1dewolk cafes. "NEW YORK has the grcalc:>l street life in the world." s aid LeRoy. "So I decided to bwld a !>ldewalk cafc ." The birth of Max well 's Plum He says he never really expect· ed the East Side hangout to be quite as s uccessful as 1t is. The inlt'rior nssels of the rc•!>taurant are more than Sl.5 rrulliqn. Year I> bus mess ts more 'han $4 mtlhon. The sinsll' bu:.mess at Max "t:ll 's bar the see. be !>C{:n and ~cl picked up ~ct•nt• •~ only 5 percent of lht· t'nllrc bu~1ncs!>. sa~ s l.c Ru~ . ·H's not a flt'sh mark,•t,'' he says "It's a nice pluc<' to hu\c p eopl e ga t her and enjoy themselves. ··1·ve had offers to redo Max "ell's in ever ) part of tht.> world. but I've always S<1id 'No.· b<>cause you c:in 't redo :.. work of urt." Will Le Ro) s midas toul'h work forthenewTave rn"! He hope:. so The restaurant in Central Park near 65th Stt:eet on the West Side opened in typ1c;il LeRo) st)Jc. A qw et nine-course dinner for a sinall group or 500. Each course was introduct.•d hy a stroU_int( band. womco m i:old IHml' ~4f;C1ts and Jugglers tr) 1ni: tu bJl~ as m anv us four :wocudo:s or t~rec melons And during all th(' h90plu. L<>Ro) h lmi.clf pranc1..'<l ~nequy about 1n rh1nestonl' rimmed glas~cs und gold St.'Quint'<i ~ult. somewhat resembling a heavy. Sl'l Elton John PRIC'ES. uhoul the same ~ at Maxwcll 's, rungt> from S2.50 fbr u chicken sandwich to $16.50 f9f •• lar1o1e lobst er . But the IQwer· priced ite1ru; urc not sell\f\11· LeRoy said. Diner s arc not eul· ing the hambur gers, omeleltCJ;. cr epes and s andwil'hes •. And LeRoy h as yt•t to sell a p1zia'. · But hl' ins ii.ts on keeping ihc lower-priced ill' ms on the menu. .. This 1~ a people's park." LeRoy s:ud. ·'I 'vc even put a blcy· clerack outside " Don Ellis Band at Hungry Joe's Times/Places TOSIGIIT, NO\' EMBER 5 'TH E KING ANO I' Musical. Long Beach Civic Lighl Opcr:.i ;.1l Jordan Theater, Long Bcarh. Ticki:ts at agcnl'il'S or (213) 432-7926. 'SOUTH PACIFIC' 8:30 o'clock tonight and -suturday, Fullerton Civic Light Opera at Plum· mrr Audito rium, Chapman and Lemon streets, Fullt.:rton $3 50 S5.50 adults. S2.50·S4 .50 students 12·22, S2·S3 <'hi ldrcn 879-1732 afternoons, or Lilwrl), Mutual and Wallichs agencies. ·GUYS A~O OOU.4'. -Musical, 8 o'clock tonight, S:aturc1a) and l\ov 10-13 at UC Irvine \'11la~c· Thl·atPr ~I 50 .adult:., S2 s tudents. 8.13 6617 DOS E LLIS And his big hand. 9·30 to 2 a .m . tomghl and Saturday at Hungry Jne's Jan Club, 1506 Pac 1f1c Coast llighway, Huntington Beach. ~plus one drank mm1mum 'SllF. STOOPS TO CONQUER. -Comedy, 8:30 o'clock tonight, Saturday and Nov. 11·13, and 5.30 p.m Nov. 14 at Golden West College Tht•at er, 15i 44 Golden West St.. Huntington Be:.irh S:t J?t'nt'ral. S2 students and senio r <'tliz<•ns Tit•kc>ts at bookstor e or door . DA:\CI-: CONCERT Matti Lascoc Da nce Theuter Company. 8.:IO o'clock tonight, Saturday urn! Nov 12 l:'l and 19 20 at 218 W. 4th St., Santa An.1 ~2 so l!l'nl•r;1I, S2 s tudents and senior l'll IZl'llS. 5 12 l:!l)f>{) • Say Heflo To Marcial T~ 'f ORANGE COUNTY'S rlMESl MEXICAN FOOD =--• .•••• , •••• N .., ,.,.~, 'Q A'"""~"' & ~lllex1c in ff ''''' 1 .. t 1 .. t t•,.m I''\• ~.J, &. Sun I 0 .... lUHCHlOH •~, Sl'tCIAl $1 .65 I COM,UTf OIHHHS FROM S2. I 0 to Sl .CO D 170 NfW'OU l lVO., C.M.•'4S-JS20 D \.I , Sun l A~ 10 12 M1<1nigm ~elestial Lounge PRESENTS The KING of ROCK 'N' ROLL TOPPER TROOPER ... NOVEMBER 1 thru 7 ·rREC T-Shirt~ for LJdics "FREE TOPPER records for Everybody D NCI CONTE<;T <'V<'ry FridJy ... PRIZES (Ladies Only) CET DOWN and BOOCIE to the DYNOMITE SOUNDS of UTILE RICHARD, CHUCK BERRY, J(RRY LLE LEWIS, and MOREi TOPPER PLAYS 'EM Alli!/ Lar gC'st dJncc floor in Wcsr LA PMlfln I tote! (fnrmf'rly 1hr Amtrlr.m~ Ho•~I) ti161 (.rnltnd• Avenue I.it pvlvl'\J.i Lul"e1 City b4Q-li76 'NORMAN, IS TllAT vou?· Comedy, s·:io <>'l'lol'k tonight through Nov. 22, Tuesdays. Saturday~. <1 t Laguna Moulton Playhouse. f,()6 Laguna Canyon R<lacl. Lagunci Beach. 494·074:J afler 1 p.m . 'PLAY WITH A TIGER' By Doris Lessing. 8 o'clock tonight and Saturday in UC Irvine Lillie Theuter, Room 161 or Humanities II a ll . 75 cents. 'MAJOR BAR,8ARA. Shaw comedy. 8 o'clock tonight and~turday and 5 p m . Sunday m Santa Ana Collci?e's Phllhp1; llall. 17th at Bristol Street , Santa Ana S2 J!.l'nt.•ral. SI students and senior citizens. 835·5971 ·OEDIPl"S TllE KISG' Drama, 8 o'clock tonight. Satur<h•) and Km· 11 13 m Fullerton College Camp11s Thcat\'.'r. :121 E Chapman Ave . Fullerton S2 50 a<lulL .... SI 50 studenb. 871 8101 weekda}S PffiLHARMONI(.' <'ONC F:RT -The Polish Na· tional Radio Symphony Orc-hci.tra will open the Orange County Philharmonic Society's -;econd series at 8:30 o'clock tonight 1n the Santa Ana High School Audilonum. 520 W Wilnut. Sanla Ana. tickets. at sr. 7 and S3 ror students, a re :t\'a1luble at 201 W <.:oast llwv , Newport Beach. ALL-WOMAN PLAY OCC Drama Club pre· !'(•nt s Arthur Kop1t '-, nn1·-art com e d y ·c h:m1bcr Music" at k o'c:lock and Saturday in I.he OCC Or;irna Lab Thl·:Jll'r Admission. Sl. LUNCHEON AMO DINNER DAILY RlCKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE 'It> • ISOO A0A"'4S lol Horborl COST A MESA .t.110. 111 Gor1H11 Gro•t! • 12201 IROOl<HURST ~C0-1 9l7 S40·192l IAI Cllopmo111 6)8-7020 Now appearing: TRIGGER Monda., Nlthl roo1b1H 810 Sc'"" Hot Dogs tod e- ~. 11 (•,.]If •f'Ah tlf11 1 bf''""'tf"~"V1 (.>\I t I.Ito I\ I 1• I "I '),(,,I\ 17141 .... Q .'!t1"JO • at 2 p.m . Sunday. Admission, $2. ~EW CONTI NUING IN LOS ANGF.LES - ·· 1-:quus," through Saturday at lhc Huntington Hartford Theat er : "A Ma tter of Gravit~, .. throu~h Dec. 4 at the Ahman son Theater; "Vanities." through Dec. 19 at the Mark Taper F11rum : "A Chorus Linc ," indefinite run al the Shubert Theater. SATURDAY,NOVEMBER6 DANCE CONCERT f'h·e by Two Dance Com pany, 8 p.m . Saturday in Chapman College Memorial 1\ud1torium. 333 N. Glassell St.. Or ange. S2 general. Sl s tude nts a nd senior citizens. ·aNDER WHO?' Parody pr esented by Mis· sion Viejo Cha pter of Sweet Adelines. 6 and 8:30 p m. Saturday in Charger Hall, El Toro High School. 25255 Toledo Way, El Toro. 586·8753. 'SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY' -Comedy, Saturday through Dec 18 at South Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. 8 p m . Tuesdays-Su ndays, 3 p.m . Sundays. S4 .50·$6.50. 646· l363 after l p.O'l. daily. SLACK SABBATH -Rock concert at the Long Beach J\rl'na. 8 p.m. Saturday. $4.50·$6.50. at agcnl'ies. GREEK FESTIVAL 10 a .m . to 11 p.m . Satur· day, noon to 11 pm. Sunday at Scottish Rite Memorial Center , San Diego, with food and folk dancing. $1. p.m. Saturday. noon lo 6 p.m. Sunday, with about 60 dealers, at the Cosmic Age Lodge, 17171 S. Harbor Blvd .. Anaheim. FOLK MUSIC -Mis poche, singer s and mu!iiJ cians. will present inlcrnat1onal and l:sraell music at 8 p.m at Te mple 1lelh Shalom, 13031'. Tustin Ave .. Santa Ana. Ge ner al admi~sion, S4~ students and seniors, S3. and patrons. $15. SUNDAY,NO\'EMBER7 HYPNOTIST R ETURNS J ack King, master hypnotist. performs at 5 and 7 p.m. at the Park Newport Spa, San J oaquin I hits and Jamboree Roads. Newport Beach. Admb sion. Sl.- 'BLUEGRASS R EVIVAL' Mike Auldridge. Wild Hickory Nuts. Canyon Gras~ and other s. 10 a.m . Sunday a t Lion Countr)" Safari. 8800 Moulton Parkway, Laguna ll11ls. $4.95 adults . 52.95 children. includes tour of preserve . IUSTORICAL TOURS Of lleritage Hous e, to be held from 2 to 4 p m !'very Sunday beginnin& l'\ov. 7 at Cal Slate Fullerton . 870-3250. 'UND E R MILKWOOD' Play by Dylan , Thomas. 8 p.m . Sunday in UC Irvine Village , Theater. Free MONDAY,NOVEMBER 8 RHYTHM MACHINF. The Orungc County Rhythm Machine and Wind Ensemble will NOW Take A Dining Trip On A Traill ~ A TRULY SENSATIONAL SHOW!!! Formerly With THE PLATTERS ENTERTAINMENT AND DANCING Tuesday 1hru Saturday 9:00 P.M.-2:00 A.M. OUTRIGGER ROOM KONA LANES 2699 Harbor Coito Mtsa 5'5-1112 '.._ .... -..\ For a unique dining adventure, come a boar~ the gbmour train. Lunch . dinner and Sunday brunch. Savory en trees include · Roast Prime Rib of Beef, Rad of Lamb 8c Chesapeake Bay Scallops. Grand • Central Station Lounge with Chowder Bar and Dining Can located in South U>ast Plaza in <Asta Mesa. (711) ~0-8822 Come relive the pastO.· Inquire aboih: ouy specially-selected -~~wine of the month .~·- ~\l'O" lkaclt .,\\orriott's :· . : J • o4 . . . · ... .. . '1 .-.. ~ :: ,. / ... . . · ·:. \. _______ _ Remember tJtosc great Than~v.ing Din· ners you rnjoycd so much? The Newport Beach Marriott in- vi tes you lo have an old fashioned Thank!.giving Turkey Dinner with us, and all the I rim· minp.s. You·11 be carv· ing your own turkey and the leftove~ belong to you. Pleasa call for infom1atio11 & reservation Phone 640-4000 Pa~ ifi~ Ballroon · 900 NEWPORT CENTER DR •• NEWPORT CENTER r C4 DAILY PILOT Fr •dc1y. November 5 1976 Jagger Plans Live DisC By U SA ROBINSON While the_ usual groupies attempt to track him down, Mick Jagger s~retly visits a New York recording studio nightly to listen to the live Rolling Stones· concert tapes from 1975 and 1976 tours. With Jagger is Ron Wood (who also accom- panied Mick to the Ali-N"orton fight), while Stor:u~s guitarist Keith Richard lbtens to has copies of the tapes in London. That Ali -Norton fight had more than a handful of rock s tars in attendance. In addition to Jagger and Woody, s potted were Peter Frampton (who has been jokingly referred to as the "new Roger Dallrey" ~cause of ail the film offers he's received), Steven Tyler (who met J agger at the Malibu beach house of Ron Wood manager Bob Ellis and has tried to get in touch with_ his "idol" in New York ), Bobby Womack (a musical pal of Woody's): John Phillips (who has been Mick's almost constant companion in New York) and Elliot Murphy (if you consider hi m a rock star). \\'.HILE OFFICIAL.sources won't make any• promises, expect that Live Stones LP sometime around February. It will definitely be released on Atla,ntic Records. even though the Stones have been talking to other companies about a new, long-term contract. (CBS and MCA have been the two mentioned most often. but it is known that Jagger feels particularly c-0mfortable with Atlantic.) Since Jagger will be busy for the next three months in New York getting that live LP t<;>gether, he's looking for a more permanent re- sidence: those hotel suites get expensive IVY HOUSE RESTAURANT 384 FOREST AVE. LAGUNA BEACH (In The Lu.-.YatdJ Ample Free Parking 494-9491 752-8558 04irporter GJnn l!HE.\KF\ST I l \('II l>I\ \1-;H ( O('KT \II. I> \,\('f'\(; As ror all those rumored Jagger movie plans -he'll be with us as a rock and roll star for awhile. 1.n addition to his current concentration on the live album, he's still talking of another concert tour here this coming summer. I *** GEORGE HARRISON, who says he's been "spending far too much time in lawyers' offices and not enough time in recording studios." is be- ing sued for $10 million by A&M Records for "not turning in his a lbum on time." (Since when was that ever a factor in this bll.Siness?) George's album, recorded in London this summer (and delayed ~ause of his bout with hepatitis), is practically finished, but was technically to have been turned in by July 26. As A&M is basically attempting to relrieve $1 million in advances, as well as revise George·~ entire contract. it is likely that the former Beatie will re·sign with another company. (Warners is the rumored-lucky label.) Incidentally, Harrison no longer has a beard, has gained a bit of weight since his illness and now wears one gold earring in each ear. The new album promises a bit mor e rock 'n' roll and not quite so much philosophizing. *** . THIN LIZZY'S Scott Gorham s aid, "ldidn't lake our last album so much, but I couldn't believe how it took off in the States. The new one is much better." Thin Lizzy returns here in about a month to make up all those dates they canceled when they we nt in a London hospital with hepatitis. *** TOM VERLAINE told me he'll begin record· ing Television's debut LP in one week with engineer Any J ohns. Tom's hoping to finish it within three to four weeks. and have the album in the stores around December. ••• . In the works: a promotional film clip with Robert P lant to coincide with the release of the movie "The Song Remains the Same" for American TV ... Jn Chicago 30 Lynyrd Skynyrd fans were shocked to discover that inside their copies of "One More From the Road" was "Liberace's Greatest Hits" <honest) ... Leo Sayer's next, "Endless l-1 ight." was produced by Richard Perry . Jb, cosroN DESICNED "' srOCK coesr CHECKS Call 714 548-2888 (C•lltot} Arl '"' FKEE Su.Jilt Kit l'FRSONAL SI KVI< f l'RO~IPT 1111.1\'I RI•\ CAL-GRAPHICS PRESS 1«1~ ~IONRO\'IA A \'I 1'1 WPOK1 Ill .K ii I IOS HSI lc1tell1 IYf. 1n1l11!!m I 1141 U9·lff4 Call 642-5678. Put a few words to work lor ou. SUNDOWNER SPECIAL l Dally SpeclCllh S..ed 4 to 6 P.M. • Moft •• fri. ~ hlclttct. SCMllll or ScMd. v....-... Potaton w lie• Catch of the Day IMGfood it.-1 SJ.75 ,.,.._ 1t11t 1..-i111 c.t> S4.15 1"1111 -• edcltloMI ........ •arled delly TIMES, PLACES ... <From Pa1e C3) perform at Ubngry J oe's Jan Club, 1506 Pacific Coast Hwy.. Huntington Beach. Admission. $1.50. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER t . 'SLAUGHTERUOUSE'-Captioned rilm tor the dear. 4 p.m. Tuesday ln Golden West College Forum 2, 15744 Golden West St., Huntlngton Beach. Free. •POLYNESIA• -Travel film, 7 ~30 p.m . Tuesday in Santa Ana College PhilliJl.5 Hall, 17th at Bristol I Street, Sant~ Ana. Free. 1 ONE·ACT OPERA -"Bastien and Bastienne " a comic one-act opera by Mozart, will be prese~t­ ed at noon in the Fine Arts Hall 119, Orange Coast College by the Whittier College Chamber Opera Ensemble. Ad mission free. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10 NEW PRODUCTS EXPO -Consumer items, 11 a.m. to 11 p .m . Wednesday thr~ough Nov. 13, 11 -a:m. to 9 p.m . Nov. 15 at the Los Angeles Conven- tion Center. (213) 659-5355. THURSDAY, NOVEMBERU LOS ANGELES BALLET -At lhe Huntington .. ; H_artford Theater in Hollywood, Nov. 11·21. ., i:1ckets at Mutual, Liberty and Wallichs agen-..,. c1es. Strum Along AFRO-AM ERIC AN COMPOSmONS-By Scott Joplin and others, played by pianist Cecil Lytle, 8 p.01. Thursday at UC Irvine Concert Hall. $3 general, $2 stude nts. Gu itarisl/songwriter Floyd Dakil is a m usician ~vho in~oi~·es his audicncC' to s in.I! along. llc 1s appcanng al the new Registry Hotel in Irvine a!1d P<'fforrns two shows, at 10 p.m. and rn1dmgnt. Monuay thr ough Saturda~·. · Colllecly, Music Maan Str eet, a s1x- mC'mber musit grnup, will begin a thn•e-wcek Pn g a1ument in the R egis tr y's Grand Portage Saloon, Mon- day. Main Street combines a fast.paced comed y act with a so phis ticated range of musical talent. Their repetoire runs the gamut fr9m contem· ...................•....... . . i SdtaStln~imt ~ • ~PV-'ttOJ$1 ~s • . . . . . . . . •••..•.....•..•..••........ porary to s uch classic so und s as Louie Armstrong a nd Bob Crosby and the Bobcats. In addition, the group f eatures a special NosJ.al4ic '50's r outine dunn ~which the au- dience may request their favorite '50's tune, often turning the evening into a nightclub version of "Stump the Band." MAYNARD FERGUSON-And his orchestra, 8 p.m. Thursday at Cook Auditorium, 811 W. Lin· coin, Anaheim. 172-5280. ··am A Y, NOVEMBER 1% 'SONGBAG• -Coffeehouse entertainment, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 12, Golden West College Community Center, 15744 Golde~ West St., Huntington Beach. $1. ONE-ACT PLAYS -"You Know I Can 't 'Hear You When the Water's Running," 8 p.m. Nov.12, 13, 19 and 20 and 6 p.m. Nov. 14, Tustin Theater Guild at Knights of ~ythias Hall, on El Camino Real near Main Street, Tustin. 838-1971, 557·6860 ext. 260, or 558-3852. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13 FILM WATCH -"Boseman and Lena," a film by South African director Rose Devenish, will be shown at 8 p.m . in the Forum, Orange Coast College. Admission, $2.50. BEETHOVEN CONCERT -"Eroica" will be performed by the Long Beach Symphony at Long Beach City College. · OCC SINGERS -Chorale and Chamber Singers concert at 8 p.m . in the OCC Auditorium. Tickets $2 and $1 for s tudents. Two guest soloists. CANADIAN BALLET -The Royal Winnipeg Ballet performs at 8 p:m . in Plummer Auditorium, 321 E. Chapman Ave., Fullerton. Tickets are $3.50 a nd $2 for students and senior citizens. 'Hotel J'RESE\TS Ol'TSTA\Dl\G OJ\f \(; & E\TF.RTAl\)1E:'\T .. * MEDITERRANEAN ROOM 111 W . Pali.ado-Old City Pfmo-491-1211 =======================================-! f or 1 • c k e I 1 n Io r '''a I 1 on DANCE CONCERT -~thryn Posin Dance Company performs at UCLA's Royce Hall on Nov. 13 and OCC Auditorium on Nov. 20. Tickets $3 for pres ale and $4 at door. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14 R E~ITAL -Eva Krutein will g ive a harp1schord. clavicord and piano recital at 3 p.m. at University Methodist Church, Culver and University Drives, Irvine. Free admission. FOH F:XQl'ISITE (TJSI~E-Sf':Hvrcr: l>l:'\:'\~:H St:H\'ED F'ROl\l !> J>l\t I.I \<'If FHm1 11 ;30 AM CHA'.\1PAG\E St;~DA Y BRU~CH FRO)J Ill A.\J · 3 PM • Captain.!.s-f altle C<>Uee Shop ~ER\'!:\'(; 21 UOL'RS DANCING & ENTf:RT AJNMENT HIGHTL Y IN THE lOUNGE 18700 MacARTHUR-NEWPORT ro,,osrn THl At•..otTl 833-2770 Take off for a fun evening at The Registry! Great evenings take off 1n The Grand Portage Restaurant and Saloon. Stan with a superb dinner featuring table·s1de gourmet cookery. Stay for dancing and switched-on entertainment. Come for dinner. Or the dancing. Try our 24 hour Gazebo, too, Now that's a happy landing I Floy~J~.~~J! THE REGISTRY HOTEL ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT 18800 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine Phone 152'8777 OllW...O en4 Ol)t<tlecl ~ HOtpltetltV MllM(lt1Nnt ~. o.Jt-. T1"9t ) Op(·n i Oa.1 s lltL!ht'.;! (,Ultitll' '\,111\v ~lo·x1r.111 .. ·noel~ ~~-T Mon.-Thur 11 ·30 a.m. to 10 pm Fri. & Sat 11:30 a .m. lo 11 p.m. Sunday 4 p.m..to I 0 p.m. IN THE LOUNGE DON ALVARO (jJGUITAA CCX::KT AILS 9093 E ADAMS. HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911 Orange County's First All-Comedy Nightclub NOW OPEN Top Comedy Entertainment Nightly Starting at 9:00 p.m. Cocktails an~ ~~>$1 Specialty Nitetime Menu Served until 1:00 a.m. OPEN FOR LUNCH featuring gigantic sandwfches and salad bar HAPPY BOUR 4 :00 to 7:00 P.M. Gencroa1 Orinb 1111d Free Hora d'~Vff:I THE IAFF STOP 2122 S.E. Bristol (at Birch) Newport Beach-714/751-7867 • I .y • ' •' .. " 8 rr•<,(•1 vot•O•''> coll \7 '4) 492-9950 140 AVE. PICO SAN CLEMENTE DINING, DANCING AND ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY IN THE ROUND r; '· 1, ~ { t-' ~ J Guest Boat Slips ( l For Reservations l 640-5123 ~ A/ : .. u.:: ... 103 N. BAYSIDE DR., NEWPORT BEACH<~ ........ c::..~ ~olden ~~:;;~ ~--~/ ;l;;;, agon . ·--'~ GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES Specializing In Chinese A Lo Corte Dishes LUNCH•OINNER DAILY Food to Take Out 11 :30 A.M. to 10 P.~ JOU Hertler lfyC, COSTA MIS.A 642-7 I 62 • 646-'9 I I JACKIE NIGRO and Plain Truth For Dancing and Entertainment It's All Happening Nightly at The Lldv Lvunae 19/Y~ 1107 JAM90REE ROAD, NEWPORT BEACH '714) 844-1700 Gourmet Japanese Cuisine South Coast VIiiage •crou trom South Co1tl PlaLa 3800 S. Plaza Dr. 1t\IUH,,M.lt Horil<a'lva Santa Ana (714) 557 2531 In Little Tokyo n••r 1ht Mut le Cet1ter 111 S. San Pedro Los Angeles (213)6809355 Real Cantonese Food eat htrt or take home STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st Pl., Newport Beach ORlole l-9560 ... _ •• Mldoli4fht Daily-WMlitflCh ""'" 1:00 IJll. o•u n n.oiu .. HA.11oe Alt• (Two or more persons) Chicken Chow Mein, sweet and sour porlt, eu • foo youna, fried ri ce, fortune and almond cooldes TWO LOCATIONS 1411 I. t.,.... St. S-.AM l1NU.6 . l j . yr ' " 11 I ' l ! I l I ·1 , ! CLM.-J/ B~ A E3tG ~~R If OWt.Y t: COllt.D Gel A eR~I<. .. FUNKY WIHKERBEAN OUR Sfi\RS t.J11J.;.-( 0€ (f\l At,..IGNMBtJ"(," l,.F\URA. by Joe Marthen 1{)t7,4Y MY H~ Al7V'l~D Me fo ~ELJ.-V AtJD MHl£$S4' 1AK'tt AVllAtJfAGE" Off~€ 0~1..V>ION~ Cf A 6'()()fl fRtSJC'. by Tom Batiuk THE VIRTUE OF VERA VALIANT , DOOLEY'S WORLD IF HEIFETZ COULD l-IEAR ™AT, Hl'D 8llST OUT IN TEARS ! DR. SMOCK COACH, <,WR lEAM 5£Efto6 W£lL Ot-1 IT 5 CJ.i¥.i ID ~E~ COMPLE1El4 Dt~E.ltTED SEASO~ ! 00 CXX.l HAVE A~ COMMENT? WELL , IN A CA5£ LIKE Tt-115 , 'TMERE'5 l?EALl<,> ONL<,> OJE PlACE 10 W lHE BLAME f TANK McNAMARA f~~,>~RV~ ft41'T i~ CfW/P Ml~T <l\~T!Rt ~ A 1> ~Mu.IOU 6Llt\RANTE6 • NANCY DO YOU -REALLY MEA N THAT? WE AIM TO PLEASE . . I I by Jeff Miller & Bill Hinds by Emie Bushmiller GORDO MOON MULLINS TODAY'S CIDSllDID PVIZLI PEANUTS by Chartes M. Schult • O,t._>,.,1:,.., ~ " 9 CH1(f" Y,()(0,1'! lt1l1Ym•I l4 L,llc1t'rt t1ea I S OulCtl k><•l}ll't ,,..~ 4 1 HOrllO"' ll 5Ull001t bums <1 3 J,ufQl'~ ~.,fTimf'r'I <14 • ·Piotr nl H~m,.1 rt ,., Sflger r,.,, / mt·J11•''" •• r \<.f" 1r ,,,., 16 N Ame1" in • 1ce1Jac .. lrl01i11'1 4 g H Cl,.\ 2 17 C 1v 1n Iowa ... ntds 1 H 51udf"nt ~) FrOITI 0'11' 19 End1ng ... !t'I end to the c1tc or con~ OUler 20 Pa1ticip1les 5 4 Goll COVISC 22 Ru111 tHlure crossovtts !°15 • lac lo 23 R01T11n dale By !tie I act 2• Small store •1'•11 25 Dead drunk 56 Stun 28 •••·•·• dtSHH lsla,,ds 5 7 Roma~ gocl J 2 Grows 58 Secured weary with rOI)~ 33 Ar1tsrs 59 Jeer me<1•um 60 Swiss c1ly 34 To a 61 Outer t11T111s and lt-r · •· 36 Paeked11p 8 Connec1ove 37 Pet 9 Hockey 39 Wasp or goatoe s leat· hornet 10 Bulbous co ···· looass. plants Haopened I I Ending with ,2 ....•• cake ltd or 99" •J Keep undef 12 81ra s contro4 mus•cal call 4 5 Paont 13 Pos1ess1ve 46 Snead and word Spade 2 t Summef dr111k1 c 7 FeivOI 22 Beam'td 48 Ice cream constderabte degree OOWN 24 Parts ot l99s unit 35 "Too bnd1'" 36 P1ok1tno solutton 37 Basketbctll le.im 38 Pensioned Abbr 39 Begins a voyage 40 HIS regard J Peal of 25 ln1t1ftte 49 .... about: thunder ?6 Ceramist Chang!! 2 Kind ol bean 'l7 Harangue direction Ju SA 28 follows 50 Turn 4 Pre0tdall'ts lnf!lfmar 5 t Not new 5 . ,. .. down 29 In flames 52 Se11oots ol W11hdr11w 30 Umbtltcus seals 6 Catt1ar11c 3 1 r0tmat 54 Montreal drug a1t11e hockey 1st· 7 The birds 33 Snooped tnl0<mal c j j 1 . JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS MISS PEACH l(fU. 'f feNHL f~A\'&L. AGENl't ~ ~ A~, ~~1·~· ..-....-------......, NOW THE SEA50N 15 OVEI<! AND WINTER 15 CO.V.ING ... I !-!ATE TO LEAVE AN OLD FR1END OUT IN T!-!E COLD ... -........ - ~ ,/,£." ~_::..:'-_=TJ • ,,. ,..,,.,_.,/,-.,,.,,,~~ .. ...__ ______ _.. ~· .... _,::: -:. ... • -~,N .. O",> I HATE TO eREAK UP TMIS I MOtJ6HT GM\E ..• M I'VE GOT TO GO 'l'OO HERE! HOMC,WHY OOH'T I JUST nL ORNE CALI. A CA& AAO 'l'OO &O'tS YOO &ACK! CAA GO ON Pl.AYIHG! by Herold Le Doux by T °"' I. Ryan ~ y by Mell 'f'(,tlfl . c:>o YOU WAN1' TD WAL.I' ""'OMf Pllff'f'.,L,A'ff O~ l 'ONOMY? Friday. November S 1976 DAILY PILOT f:5 • X by Lee and Sprin9er • by Georqe Lemont by Gus Arriola "'I've never really liked Tosca but I can only stand seeina my new mink cape hanaina in the closet for j usl so long." ••• 1t u .- '11 " ltl 11 J "'• i '1• '~ t1U I I 11, , . \ ... l" ( 11 ',, \ !1 • ' I •• , ""•l •. , .. f .h : ,, u; II\ '11., •1 •U) . ~· •(• f '"' I I• Ill "' n• ''.) t ,. t•)t•t· . . ,. i ' .. ~ i . I ~I i fj l t 1 ; I I • I -- .. ,..., . £'8 DAILY PILOT Fnday November 5. 1976 BASS Louis Lebherz TENOR Alvin Brightbill A ·n THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY MANN'S ':ALICE IN WONDERWll" IXI 11••0 \U \UM J•t'4JS.,_.,. SO. COAST PLAZA (U1' llltU JUI l,1iitl 1•11111 "FLESH GORDON" I 0 U.Tl\UM I~\ U..a:H MANN'S "MAD DOG MORGAM .. SO. COAST PLAZA 1 00-1 ... n su"""" ,.. .. ,,_, .. ,. '"" Miii ASSAULT OM PRECINCT I l J~:.~~\\" CG) I IS SAT/SUM. J:tS.HM:H r •111•1•' MANN'S "MARATHON MAN" so. COAST PLAZA WC D4f\ J·l•t;O Ill \u flott SAT [$UM .. ,..~,. .. , .... 10 1m •·••·'°"" M TINEES DAILY AT CINEMALANO MANN'S LEE MARVIM-ROGElt MOORE CIN£MALANO "SHOUT tU4 \I 1it.11u ; :;~·,..:, AT THE DEVIL .. MANN'S CIN[MAl ANO ltl I 11 MJfUf "'"' .. U) 'lt' MANN'S CINEMAlANO 1tlt '• "''"' ., . .,, .. UI IHI llll•.Ultll "MARATHON MAN" ......... kl. U f/lUM I J•J•W-11-lt:H "MARA THON MAN" , .... _ lATllUM I t•J IS.S~NS.10-N "Splendiferously Funny." 11lt'• a ball of a brawl." J i ~', ,, (R) PLUS .. THE PRISONER OF SECOND AVENUE" JACK LEMMON edwards BRISTOL CINEMA BRISTOL AT MACARTHUR 540-7444 "THE FRONT" IPG) BANANAS lPG) "14 MATTER OF TIME0 lPG) "GUAT SCOUT I C4THOUSI THUl.SD4Y" .. HORMAH IS THAT YOU?" lrGJ "HAHT a W.41.Ta GO TO HEW TOU" ltteil_ - "LET'S TALK ABOUT MEN" "BRIEF VACATION" "MIDWAY" "GltlA T SCOUT & CA THOUSI THURSDAY- Y" "TlACICDOWH'' "SH'WITHASMfLl"IRI "MURDERIYDEATH" "ILACICllRD" INJ "SHOOT" "SOLDIER llUE" CRI "MARATHON MAN" "FROM NOON TIL THREE" FROM Fash ion Island Newport Beach . Soloists Appear With OCC SingerS Two guest soloists Wlll appear with the Orange coast College Chorale and Chamber Singers when the college's music department presents its fall concert Nov. 13 in the OCCAuditorium. They are tenor Ah \n Brightbill and ba::.s Low:. Lebherz. Brightbill has been a soloist with lhl· Roger Wagner Chora.l e, the Portland Opera, lhl' Western Opera Theater or San Francl8co and the Carmel Bach F<'!.llval. , Lt•bher z "as recently featured 1n the San L>1cgo Oper a product10n of "Othello " lie ah.o hai. performed with tht· Euterpre Opera or Los Angeles The m njor work to be performed 1s Benjamin Bntlen 's "Cantata Mjs- ericordium." The work was writte n in 1963 for the CC'ntennia l celebra- tion or ijte Red Cross. ''The work is unique Kenton Repeat,s Clinic THE GREATEST AFRICAN ADVENTURE EVER FILMED! Jazz great Stan Kenton has been given the go-· ahead by the Coast Com- munity College Dist.net Board of Trustees to con- duct h.is third annual jazz clmic at Orange Coast College next s ummer. The clinic is tentative- ly set for Aug. 14-19. "Kenton's clinic this past summer drew a larger crowd than the summer before and we expect it to continue to grow in the future," Dr. Norman E. Wa t son, Coast District chan· cellor, said. Last s ummer nearly 300 junior high, high school, college a nd adult musicians took part in lhe six-day workshop. You are No. 1 on our 10th Huntington Center celebrates its 10th Anniversary with our exclusive new NUMBER ONE CLUB charter membership ofter. First 15.000 to register receive st 4 00 1n tree gilts. all tor a 13c postage stamp. Bring your valid crecht card. Beach Blvd & Edinger at the San 01990 Fwy. STIMULATES young "!inds. Samuel z Moll Presencs LEE MARVIN ANO ROGER MOORE ™SllOIJT AT THE DEVIL Ai50Sl~1111Q BARBARA PARKINS · IAN HOLM · RENE KOLLDEHOFF A MICHAH KLINGER PRODUCTION ·A PETER HUN! FILM · An AMF RICAN INTERNATIONAL P1ctwe MuuC~nlConiMltaBv MAURICE JARA( •St1ernc>1~1 Rv STANLEY PAICl ·ALASTAIR REID .i•l<l WILBUR SMITH Bast0001ne0001. SllOUl Al THE 0€Vll ov WILBUR SMllH • P•Mut!'OUv MICHAH Kl INCEA • 0•11"C1ec8v PETER HUNT ,-.. ,. .... '·•· ................ • IPG ) ,._,,'""~s""so• ·~~ l ***L********************* • X·RATED ADULT MOVIES • THE WORLD'S FAVORITE BED-TIME STORY IS Fl NALLY A BED· TIME STORY ... AN X·RATED M,USICAL COMEDY STAtlllNG PLAYBOY'S COVER GIRL -KRISTINE DEBELL WlTH LARRY GUMAN •ALLAN NOVAK • TERRY HALL SPECIAL GUEST APPEARANCE I Y FLESH GORDON DIRECTOA OF PHOTOGRAPHY JOSEPH BARDO ASSOCIATE PRODUCER JASON WILLIAMS LYRICS AND MUSIC BY BUCKY SEARLES ARlllANGED AND CONDUCTED BY JACK STURN a PETER MATZ PlllOOUCl!D IY WILLIAM OSCO • DIRECT!D BY BUD TOWNSEND it-HOW IH COSTA MESA ,. ,. BEL-CONGO MOTEL : WILL RING DOWN ON DEEP THROAT IFIMAL WHKl -fMDS THURSDAY. NOV. 11 ftlS!rCAT, 11'-4111 109 f •• ,....,.,,_ 0,...01ily 12"-... ,,.,,_, ... because it IS scored for the solo string q uurtt.'t, string orchestra. p11.1no and per c ussion," said Richard Raub. director or the occ group Foll owing •O· termission. the 90-voicl' chorale will perform sel ec t ed woTks by Bair s t ow, Verdi. Schuma nn. Brahms, Haydn and Warlock. Tickets, which will be availuble at the door or may be reserved by call· ang the college. are $2 and $1 for students . I.A MIRADA 4 • LAKEWOOD CENTER 4 : WAI.•·•• IA•OAI• l'lllCI II M _, -UTUllOA• 11•-.... ...,., 11 ae .... tu•A' 6 lt0\IOU1 11.Jt •• l#lt U e.ttNt ....... , ... .... 2400 t• •····· ....... , ... "4·2400 \1•1•tO ......... -. "4·2400 '-·~ ,,c ......... 531·9~80 WMI °'~" 11ua runv&lt IAMll101 PlUI UWf TO WITCll MOUll'TAIN101 "l ltOt M_, CW MAn" AUAUll OH 'llCINCT 131'1 'lUI CA'°"l111 "Wllfll n All HOA141" WOOOSTOCK111 PlUI GIMM( SHUTll 111 -· MOOlll e lll MAIYIN SHOUT AT TMI DIVIL ll'OI •lUI SMALL TOWN IN nus ,.., • ._ttn&ll ll- WOOOSTOCK 111 •lUI Gl~I SHUTl1it1 '" .. ' tll(t........, 531-9510 STAY HUNGIY 111 'lUI _________ TUCK DOWN111 . .... .. , .......... 531·9580 ..... •••eOA I \ WO Oiw."' Swep MM1 S.t & Sun -t -'° t pm OllANG( 0.M·ln I & i t.1 • '"" _. ........... , , ... hoN•ft ••• ._. ..... , .... """' h"'M Funl Pr r ...... .... u 821 A010 1•• .Et .. .,....., .. t1 .. u.11t•h 1 N2 2'81 ,.,. ft ... ,. I .. Mtf"' ••• ,..., lltof 171 1162 I tUl•ht ""''"•" 527 2213 ,.,. ......... , ··-•21 ·8831 .............. --W -1131 tllJU IUHI I .(Al WASH ll'OI 2°UMIL Y 'LOT 1•01 ).fllltll & lltl llAN (POI l'll~U AOIOHI I .-Sll WITH A SMIU 111 1.-GUUS WHAT wt llAINlO-ltl 3 . .COVllGlll MOOlLS 111 --' • llUNT MOVll CW1 2 • TAXI DalYH tel J ..... Ill I net MANi.t 'WNlll " au llG•Nr- WOOOSTOCK111 •1u1 GIMMl SHILTll111 1000 MOOll t lU MAIYIN SHOUT AT TIU DIVILr>01 PIUI SMALL TOWh IN TtXAS tl'OI 1111 1110011 e IAlU 11111>1 STAY HUNGIY 111 "UI TUCK DOWN 111 1111 UIOOU e Ull Y 11110$ STAY HUNGIY 111 •1u1 TUCK DOWN 111 W•ll DllNIY lllM IUllYAll "' llMll 101 PIUS ll<A'f TO WITCH MOUNTAIN 101 •• llOI lflOtll or MAii" ASSAULT OH ,.lCINCT U 111 PlUS SWITCH ILlDI SISTllS 111 WA41 OltflCT lllM lllllYAll llMll101 PIUS UCAP1 TO WITCll MOUNTMll 101 STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR Friday November 5, 1976 DAILY PILOT C7 Briefs in the Arts How to Book on Profit A one-day seminar on Collecting Old Book.s for Pleas ure and Profit will take place Saturday from 9:30 a .m. to 4:30 p.m. at UC Irvine. J ohn K. McLauj!hlin, collector and anti·• quarian book store owner, invites students to br· • ing their books to share. The class will survey the history and production and value of books with emphasis on fine press books, illustrated books 8ild first editions and manuscripts. The UCI Ex- tens ion class will take place in Room 108, Physical Sciences building on campus. fee is $20 and students may pay at the door. 1 Onth~Road Snoopy , th e i n - 1 ~ependent b eagle, , eaves home with hls ' e~thcrcd secretary ti'Wood s tock jn 'P'!·s n oop y, Corne 1 ;'lioroe" at 8 o'clock • ~~-;,ight on Channe l ~o. ., ~!Filmex . . . ~ontest fWidens •,., •• ; ~: Super-8mrn fil ms will : ~be admitted to the 1977 • ~los Angeles lnterna- : •fional Film Exposition ' :~r the firsltimc. ~· Entries will be accept- ·~d in docume ntary, i~ r a m a t i c • c o m e d y , ,.nimated and ex - ;»crimcntal categories. 'films may be 18 or 24 • ames per second; en- ; ies with sound on film ~' ust be mag striped and ave s tandard 18-fram , und advance. Radio Dra•fl6 Original radio dramas will be aired on KPFK at 2 p.m . Monday, Wednesday and Fridays and 10 p.m. Wednesday throughout Nov- ember. The works ranging from classical lo con· temporary. range from a 1784 William Blake manuscript ("An Island in the Moon") lo Sam Eisenstein's "Among School Children," "The .Wall" and "Turns." Leet.ur e S.-ries "Come Show Me the Way," a series or 12 lec- tures on the way people view their lives in rela· lion to themselves aod each other, will be pre- s ented ·for the first time at the Westwood Playhouse through Nov. 19. All lectures are from 10:30 a.m . to 12:30 p.m. in the Westwood- Contempo Center in Westwood Village. Among the speakers are Chuck Ashman, Nov. 9; and Rad Bradbury, Nov. 23. Art Guild S~ries The Orange Coast College and Art Guild pre· sents a film series and speakers on from noon to 1 p.m. Tuesdays in the Fine Arts Hall, Room 116 on the Costa Mesa campus. Two films in the sur· realistic fantasy genre, "M. C. Escher" and "Jesse Allen" will be shown Tuesday. Scheduled speakers are Melinda Wortz, curator of the UC Irvine Art Gallery, Nov. 16; Florence Ker- rechuk, representative of the Art Center College of Design, and Kevin Boyle, artist, NC?v. 30. A no,ther 'C:t1rano' .• Films should be sub- :Jillttcd before J ao. l . An "alternative theater production" of . "Cyrano de Bergerac:" will be presented Wed· l!il§ffil!il§l§[!jl§[§J!jl§l§l!][9l§l§l§[§l§l§[§[§[§[ij[§[§l§l§ [§l§l§l§l§(§l§[!il§[!j l§l§l§[!j[!:il§ (;! THE MOST IMPORTANT FILM i EVENT OF THE YEAR! m ~, ' ----..... A fascinating human study of an / _ ~ ~ articulate and amusing woman ... " who proselr.ti1es /or bisexuality like , ' \I .·..... a housewife pushing Pampers. · .. ~ · • · ;.;..J J 1 Sweet and gentle ... an absorbing -: work with insight and humor. A frlm bv.JfAN-FRANCOI'-; OAVY BlTION Starring CLAUDINE BECCAR.1£ X A&~utl lll\ "v o,cuNutH u1w1LttllAO'lltnt o G1 G1 G1 G1 G1 G1 ~ i GI G1 G1 G1 G1 G1 G1 G1 G1 G1 NOW SHOWING AT SPECIALLY SELECTED THEATRES! m CINEMA WEST wn h •l .. Hlt.' (',~OlHWlH WUTMIH ClHTU IU·44'1 TOGETHER WITH G1 . '°E"tftla'tlur~ ~. \X:was never·~ this.I [ij§§©©l§©l§§©l§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§§©©©l!i©l!l!§l!i[ij[ij(!j[§(§[§(!j!§C£il!iffi nesday through Nov. l.l at the Orange Coast College Student Center. Mime and puppetry begins at 7:30 p.m. and the performance at, 8 p.m. Admission is free. Director William Purkiss s a ys it ls "alternative theater" because it is being performed without stage, scenery or costumes. Freedo• Fu .. Three films will be presented on Fridays at 8 p .m . sponsored by the Cal State F\lllerton Facul· ty Forum, a group of students and faculty with the purpose of improving relations between the U.S .• socialist and developlnJ nations. "A Luta Continua." a film on the national liberation movement in Mozambique, will be shown tonight in Room 110. Humanities Building on campus. Others are "Freedom Railway," which depicts the construction of the Tanzania railroad. Nov. 12, and the California Homemakers Association .will present three union films on Nov. 19. Violinist Returns Violinist Nathan Milstein, who has not ap- peared in Los Angeles in nearly a decade, will perform with Zubin Mehta and the Los Angeles Philharmonic at 8:30 p.m. Nov. 11·12 and 2:30 p.m. Nov. 14. He will play the Brahms Concerto. Other works to be performed are Mozart's ''Sym- phony No. 40 in G minor," and Penderecki 's "De Natura Sonoris." Wonaanspaee Speaker Linda Levi, Los Angeles artist and co· founder of the Womanspace Gallery, will show slides and discuss her work in drawing, painting and sculpture. The program is sponsored by t}\e Art Gang, the Cal State Long Beach Art Depart· ment studl?nl association. Admissionisfree. Messiah A udltlons The Orange County Choral Conductor's Guild will hold auditions for soloists for its an- nual Christmas performance of "The Messiah" from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Sunday at Garden Grove Community Chur ch, Chapman and Lewis streets. Prospective soloists should be prepared for all the solos for their voice range. Walt Disney$@ aml'i TECHNICOLOR® rr..,, tt.t s1orr "1 fUIA SAL rtN • ••""°"'bf IU(tu VIS!~ o .. 1rill<ltloot to, Inc. ~W•lt P4ocj ''~Inc. Qt11i..i.<t;o.'.lllU•o 'l11WAAl!l.(OllDoP<ttWllllU:06116 PLUS "ESCAPE TO WITCH MOUNTAIN" ~---~~~--~~~~ .... ~~ NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN i: • POKES "1Jn .a~&tliflfXif '""H"-shirtS everywhere • FOR THOSE OF YOU WHO NEVER KNEW. AND FORTHOSE OFYOU WHO HAVEN'T M-FORGOlTEM. ~ PRESENTED IN 4 TRACK STEREO SOUND AT NEWPORT Where ltAll Began. 51.,,ing Joan Baez· Joe Cocker Counhy Joe & The Fish Cros~ Stills & Nash Ario Guthrie· Richie Havens Jimi Hendrix· Santana John Sebastian· Sha·Na-Na Sly & The Family Stone Ten Years After· The Who IRl.-.!!.~!~'.!~.~-1 ......... """8PAM" -.us• The best place to buy CLIFWllJll. 6-11-llE PLUS or sen along the Oronge Coost is the Doly ,.. · Call 642-5171. Put a few word• to work for you. "SOLDIER BLUE" • . r • Q DAILY PILOT Friday. November 5. 1976 , TV DAILY LOG 'Horn' Fun at Holiday After sitting through such lat· ter-day Nell Simon plays of lesser renown as ''The Pnsoner oC Second A venue," '"The Good Doctor" and "The Sunshine Boys," it's sort of a nostalgic treat to get back to the basics of "Come Blow Your Horn," the ont that started it all. fuMY·bone in the right place at the right time. ble. l.lkewlse Virginia Forman, who plays the art-htypical Jewish mother, though not quite as stri- dent as might be expected. FRIDAY •Y•NINQ e:oo a e CJ) (}GI Cf1J CD at lltwa a u oo <~ oo m .... 9 Sbrlrt• (I) '-tr ryi. -~· CD hrtridte f M ily G>MMl-12 QtlStN Trft m Eltdric c-,."' Qj) OillMl m Utt1t 1atu1s -6:30-• Dill•" Cuesb include em, IUntlow, Lady fllsll, Dd Cl11k, Silly Ktlletman and SU11 KJnn. {)) AMy Gnttrta (II ...,., Grilflll Show 1DF..ityAttalf Im Fritlla tf Mu 7:00 ua o ro m•ws U l.ilrs av. (])My Tlltet Sons ' a C..C.tratioa Giil.Mi.Ky G> Tiit f1I fl)Gtblatr Clt A1M1J Grifflth fl) Tiit MK•ill ltlUtl aepott m Drautk Stria el Tiit M4a1111 ,...., -7:30-D Witd~ g llwtiftc ltr Dolllrs CA) Tiie Odd c.u,i. • Clll Cl~ Cf) IWlywood Sllara (I) Tiit ....,.ts Cl Tiit -'-•r's W-1141 • Tiit lfMy lh11Ch (J1'J CV Watt"' Music Shclw fD licMdt'41 ~ Mlp1's Htr0ts fD Ql11Mf ZI Toiript OJ) Im• tlM ._ m '1aJll ""• 8 :00 U cm CD (}) .m!'!!ilS-,, c.. "-(90) Sii009¥. 1111 Hide· pendent buale Peanut, and hll feathered secretary, Woodstotk, leave home for a fop to SnoooY's former owner. a httle gut who lrns far away D lW Cl) oJ m Sanford and Son "The Wuwuna T def" A pair ol con men tal~ the Sanlords rnlo a shady promo11on scheme that rs desrgned lo rncrease salts-and put !hem in !he pooihouse, as well. u Mowit: (<;) (2111) "Tiie bftllN (hor) '63-Vincent Prrce. (J) Movie: (C) (211r) "Qhl1et" (com) ·~9-Sindra Dee. a <a (()) QfJ o-, & Marie ClleSls art Roy Rocm and Dale £ms. RICll l•ltte and Ctort11 Enael. Cl IMie: (CJ (2~) ...... .., All SUSHS" (dra) '66-Paul Scolreld, Robfrt Shaw, b• Welles. m J ...... W1lh r, P'urt . * lailey & JIU Ca,_ Try To •n' The lallt! .... u...-. .....,., ..._ a ... : © (11w) .,._. m A l:n" {•u) '69-Glun ro•d. Carolyft Jonn . ................. m oa.-.. _....~ ,,..,_ -1:30-• 0 (J)t!I DOllce_. .. .. "Clla's Problem" Cllitt Ulvites '"51ifttrrud. lGa. lor a quiet .. 111111 ill his Hit aowtment. but tht ewt· "'Ill trtds trllh • quJlrtl to11owt111 allnosl C011hnU011S lllltrrvpllOllS from td alld p~ u Ifs from tllt llOSp 01 where Liu IS a nllfSf. -~ m -·sMc.SW, m .. .,...,.... m c...,w.r.._a.. 9:00 G all lt1 lf• Ill 1111 WIM frle1 DrOUllll •I lftdianhud RrYtr · llot~le<d fr.t1111unr 1to11tllu IOf "'' lr1tnd, Anrel whose willdtall rdts llOlll rt.ti UUlt Jlt. rn IK1 part ol • LU 1~ pl.tn an111tt4 by I~ mob •llo 110W ••ftl Allrtl o.t of tilt y 50 lhty Un tollt<I 8 A W.W "'*""'"' • '1tKffTMMf "' IAOHAlll toolfll" • (lfl • ) 01! AI C frl4ar llettt: Cl (l•r) "llPl•art 111 ..._ ~ (d1a) '16-0tbotah ~'" lynnt Moody. Cllrd Coftnon. r1onnuala flauaan, Trna lODISf , Robert Reed, Della Rttn, lana Wood fwo roomnutes' uuhon dnwc across the COV11lry terns Into a ~kine mptr11"e wttu tllty 111 imHled on tme c11M1es and Wft· fenced to the "°'""' ol a .,.mlfNe l womtn's P"'°" far111 ••t~ no W1y to l notily pattnts or friends. -• Miiiie & S,.U Widl . * Otte ,.,......, .lld .... ,n..~ Merv Grifftl S._ lllt VlrsWN $elllltli lleCtw IJ,S.'t""'" .....,.,.."'-" -9:30- (ll) CJ) Cl) CIS rtWt, ... : CM> ""'7 "._... S.'" (com) Woody Allin. Orane kutllfl, Roberts. Jerry lacy, S.san • Woody Allm's opr~riovs abotrt • ,_ sd1noot who the Sflflt tf Humphrey -tflt lldits. )llNt,tlle~ ,.,... . 10IOO IY COP llO OTMOI Cl )(ll •. Ser,ke 1*" J.c• Ovfly-(pnt an), I~ "-.Ptt· ""''"' l*'tMn .. Ille ~-ii ltl#ltd with ill *' tflolt lo JU&h • rinc.~IM~ l'o sritf ... Miit of • plaJ by Dlltfr, -lO:lt-. ._ .... 11c0o 1~- (1)) "" ...... Style lt ) "' ,...,. """'' -~ .... • ...,. .,..,,..,11 .. t * ftf Lomtl ' CIMsttr C.'1 filld His °"'" CD MllJ H...-.. lbly Hlrt111111 • T• If tlle Iii.Int tm(f)S...,llltSbrs fill) filll Qmic: '1.-iR l.oft" -11:30- D (ll') CI> Cl) CIS u le lltvit: ~ "The Most Ctvciil G1me," with V1ltnt Harper Jnd Robtrt Culp. a «ii <D «t m *" c... (t) ... : ........ S4ldl f ... (dra) '38-Hu11ph11y Boort. PrlSCllla laM, WIY'lt Morris, lt11p Hetbeft 8 (Qt Cl)) ID S.U.T . ....... ~Tiie 711 a. 12:00 ..... "'9dll a lln le: CC> "Wht's II•• ~l\tOml '65-Peter SeUers, Peter O'Toole, Romy Schllfider, Ca· puClfte, Paull PrentrU, Woody Allen, Ursula Andress. • ,,. feotNI "'1Ucl ID CiMIU 34 -12:30- • U.llipt Slltw: "Tiit c.mcls, .. .. ,.yqa, .. "T1tt lnia Tlllt "°"""' Die" D ,.,._ lllut11 a» .._.: "J1le V'..._ Iha" (dra) '6S-Gle11n ford. Barbara Sta11wyck, CdWlnl G. Rollillson, Oiaae foster, Brian Ktitlt. e llewll: "1slMI ill tilts..· (dra) '57-James Muon. Joan fontarne, Hany Belalonte. ~ Moen DIM F...W HiPQpts 1:00 8 8 CD C!.1 Mid1i1•t s,.ciel mlllt ma..• 2 :00 - 111 ... : ct) •f1tfy 0-•: Dol'I I.Ml lelliM T•" (mys) 7 1-Peter Lawford, Harry Mor11n, [,,Ci. Marshall, Stephanie Powers. G OwMefu tue llniu: "Alf· Mla,""fle9•flltlsf" -2:30- CD AMicM st.: "f1iOC lw f,.... -. ... "J1le flnt r .... <Ill CI> n. Lit• si- -3: 45- U Mlrie: "A Stelee life" (dra) • 46-Betfe Davis. Glenn ford, SATURDAY MORNING 7:00 Ill Ste,s '9 luntill& a ID (I) Ctil m WMllJ llfood. ,.ct11 (t) ....... •(Qt CJ)) r .. & Jerry/ ~·si-lllm'itilll ., .. & tilt ls.wn • '*' r ... e S.Y.tySNw l!DYep llf Healtt -7:30-•Mt• T,.._ D U W O.PIM,....., (IJ c..n.. LllMlc ..... ,......si-' ·~""" l1l> Cl) ... llff• ..... ....., 8:00 9 (IlJ CJ) Sylwttltr & T.ety -~ (IJ ,...,./alp c.rw. •< (1))8 ~ ........... •Meirie;"DIMA ~~" (dn) 'S4-Michy Rooney, Drannt t osttt. M<Htlly. .......... IJt)Metf f.,. es.-Stf..e -1:30- 111 ITTJ ro ru 14ics llllltlflhH· ,...,...., •F*llfl*r ~(lltl [jJ) t lretlt s.,.,. D ...,..: ~~et 1t1t Cnt S.-" (llW) '~1-Ptltr f111C.h, John • ei''*· A11111o11, o~· 9 :00 • ft (1) ff• • lllcOlilf • f1itllft " 111.M ( t ) llmt: "l ltc•IHlsters" (com) 'U -Tht £as1 Sldt l\rd~ .... ..., ..... fD 0.C. U,.. A Cllt6le (I) .,....,. -9:30- • CJ1) (]) (l) TanH: ltr4 tf Ille ,...... D @(J)9G llt1111ttr S.• .lllt ..... ..... .., ....... , ..... (co111) '49-fred MacMurray. ,,..lllHll 0'14111. N1tal1t Wood. ID Ill* a:> •lllfiMs let's Gt" (adv) '61-Tom Tryon. .,.., ID Ill Dia 10:00 • (ilJ Cll Sltlamlt* .... 8 @ Cl) (fl D uM tf tllt t..t ...... .,,.,. .... Dllf' {d11) '60-Raymoftd Butt, Joan 8t111ett. ~J (I)) QI Wah lintr "" a.it lift ~ of thrrd IOIOd pllJ from Late Bue11a Vista. Fla. a iw r-..sa.. . .....,,..., ......... -tO:Je- • 0 CJ) Gt l ie I•••, Uttlt .. Cl) .................. , ·~-l.Mtel & ... ,,. ...... ,c...... :=: .... 11100 I ID> CJ) (I) ... c.u'l.. (I) (J!j 114• ,, .. • <•Cl)) 8 ICM ,...._. ::r.. llolldop WI. flori4e Gltol1. _: ... .:= .... -11;10-• mi Cl) CJ) a. a.. ••<1>• ... .u. ..... ....... ,.., While it may not go down in Broadway annals as Simon's best work, "Come Blow Your Horn" remains quite su~or to his more recent efforts, even given its debts to the Rock Hudson-Doris Day school of com· edy that flourished in the late Fif· ties and early Sixties. The writ· ing is crisp, the gags unforced and the characters credible. It's always a fun show, and it remains so at the Intimate Din· ner Theater o( the Holiday Inn in Costa Mesa, where "Come Blow Your Horn" is enjoying a two· month engagement. Andy Gwyn's production clicks along at a comfortable pace with a well-balanced cast hilling Lhe Al Diun is well cast as the 33· year-old superstud frustrated over his lack of progress with the Nice Girl who's carefully baiting her trap. His breezy moments of the first and second act are ef- fortlessly handled, though the depth required in Act Thre~ pre· sents more of a challeng;e. As his younger , shelter ed brother, Peter Johnson exhibits a s harp sense of timing, particularly in the second act while attempting to get his mother out of the apartment and, later, whlle nervously entertjl.in- ing the sexpot from upstairs. Johnson keeps his character more Richie Cunningham than Woody Allen. thereby maintain- ing his believability. The show's best character role is that of the Cather 1lnd Tony Oliver plays it to the hilt. His .Jewish accent is laid on a bit thick, but bis timing is impecca- Phyllis Fisher gives a splendid account of herself as Connie, the girl who brings the playboy down to earth. And Becca De Vore, playing the biggest stereotype of the show -the vacuous, blonde would-be starlet -turns in a marvelous performance simply by the way she breathes the word "oh." The set al the Holiday IM is superior to the two past produc- t ions. but director Gwyn stumbles slightly in bis treat- ment or the script -to update or not to update. A reference to "The Untouchables" becomes "Police Women," but the name or the late Chaing Kai-shek re- mains in the dialogue. "Come Blow Your Horn'' is as rooted in the early Sixties as, say, "You Can't Take It With You" is in the Thirties. As a Stevie's Album a Wonder . By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of Ille Do11tly Pllo4 S~ll The Jong wait for Stevie Won· der's "Songs In The Key Of Life," has been well worth it. The often delayed project (due last Spring) finall y arrived a few weeks back a nd immediately en· tered Billboard's Top 100 as the nations #1 album -a feat duplicated only by Elton John. It is a rare, well-deserved honor that firml y entrenches Wonder as America's most in· fluential and important pop artist. And "Songs" will no doubt dominate this year 's Grammy Awards; probably at the expense or Boz Scaggs' excellent "Silk Degrees." ijut no matter, ''Songs·• is a monumental work that warrants such acclaim. The double-album package-which includes a 7, inch (33 r.p.m .) bonus record and 22·page booklet -contains 21 songs clocking more than 100 minutes of richly varied and compelling music. ALL BUT three or the songs are Wonder solo compositions and he handles all lead vocals in addition to arranging and pro· ducing "Songs" in technically ·~._.,, .. ,_ a>Olil Ea COOBUilll -r F~~!'"' '(~~LAV -........ .......... . ...... .. I 'UUtl It WllU .. lW 1 J ... 6 1\ 91 · ... I " . " ..... IS."~ -~-: l"SIUtll I l I l ' '••Ill flawless fashion. Although "songs " features cameo appearances by jazz notables George Benson and Herbie Hancock and various back up personnel, the focus never shifts from Wonder's driving keyboard work and silky smooth vocal presentations. His unerring grasp of musical styles meshes beautirully as he blends elements of soul, gospel, rock, funk and jazz into a form uniquely his own. SIDE ONE opens with "Love's In Need Of Love Today," a romantic plea Cor harmony which can be gotten by simply mailing in for yours right away. This song is a gentle tone setter that shows Wonder's amazing flalr for m elodic and rhythmic clarity. "Have a Talk With God" follows in a funky gospel vein that surpasses the efforts of Billy Preston-the last successful gospel-rock proponent. ''Village Ghetto Land''isr '\eon Wonder's most int riguing pieces; a stark look at inner-~y life set to an incongruous c certo·like background. His casu , almost detached, vocal invites the listener into the ghetto where Wonder offers images of broken glass, poverty and starvation that forces families to eat dog food to survive. The classical backdrop r esults in an ironic. con- , t r a st b e tween wealth and despair. These opening tracks reveal parts of the stunning versatility of Wonder's lyrical stance. He is part t eacher, r oma nti c, philosopher and social oommen· tator. But even in his bleakest visions, Wonder's music and delivery seems to offer future salvation. WWLE h is songs may seem simplistic in print, they are always direct and conveyed with a child·like innocence that transcends any weaknesses. The only real criticism I have is that Wonder sometimes stretches his musical points (through repeal choruses) a bit too far . "Songs in lhe Key of Life" is a masterpiece th at will stand alone, at least until Wonder goes back into the studio for another laboroflove. Don'twait! (~I ALEXf:r THE GYPSY 2 "'WOODSTOCK" la ~ ~IWllT LOYI"' ' ........ Ate THI llAM" llJ J>on•t tfi.ve up the ship! "Llal'T"' it ln classified • 8'Jp to abore reaulltl ...,.. ' JACK GENEVIEVE LEMMON BUJOLO ~\~~ !Q (PO;~ 11 ..... ~ rht' only 111nd 01 love t>t>lwt'<'ro a me111111<1 a woman ll!ill t> ~/11/ fOrb•CICIM. #YOU'RE GOING TO HAYI A GOOD TIME AT THIS ON1r• (Q) -tlOHA BAAAtn. MC·fV WIPDAYI 1:00.-110-1o:n IA TUflOA Y..uMOAYI I: ll-J:Ol-5:00.7.00 l:I0-10:40 Intermission Tom Titus period piece, which it as Cast becoming, it succ~" well. In any event, its treatment at the Holiday Inn makes for an enjoya- ble evening. Performances con· tinue Fridays •and Saturdays al 8 :30, preceded by u 7 o'clock bul· fet dinner, thrQugh Nov. 20 ut 3131 Bristol Street ot the Sun Dieio Freeway in Costa Mesa. Phone 557.3000 for reservations. ·There's a sexual revolution going on ... and all the leaders are In my family~ IN ,OUll•lftAClt SlllllO Al IC-WherellAI ...... ·-· Joan Baei ·Joe Coc:kcor Ccuntry Joe G The nM1 O~ StlllsG Nash Ano Guthi'le · Rlc:flle ~ns Jlmi Hendrix ·Santana 1 Jonn Sebastian· Sha·Na·Na Sly li The family StOn<' Ten Years Alter • 'fhe Who P\.119 "GIMME SHELTER' Tttl ROl.UNO STONll ltA•tl '-"f .. frt()Y, 11 AT .. ViflPOollT "lllllONOM_ ... lNEM•" E E~ AFRICAN ADVENTURE ' EVER FILMED .LL!~ ROGER PAAHVIN ,.. MOORE Pl.US JACK LEMMON "PRISONER OF 2nd AVENUE" wards BRI TOl CINEMA M IUOl • f MAC•.,,.. .... , ... Ph1'i Til'( & L1ccn~ s1999 sgg g Plu~ Tax & License s1599 Pu' T.ix.& License Plus Tax & License s1399 '69 VW CAMPER Loaded with campN CQu1pmcnt (ZXX883) $199 down S92 70 ~r mo for 36 mos l)pferrl'd payment price $35J6 :>O APR 18. 1 s~c. on appro\/Cd credit. '69 FORD.TORINO GT 'l dr hdtp. VS. auto .. PWf'. sir. (ZWA656) s 199 On_ S38 94 ppr mo Jor 36 months. deterred payment price $1600 84. APR 18 1!:i0o on approved credit. •73 FORD MAVERICK 2 dr. s199 ON. V 8 f,lcl air pwr ~tr. radio. heater (660HX8) $199 dn S6q 66 prr month for 36 months deferred paymeot pt1ce $2706 76. APR 18 15°'o on approved crl'Cl•I '72 CHEV. VEGA f ctr;i o;h.-irp Tr11nsportat1on special $199 down. SJI ?6 por mo lor 36 mos. Deferred payment price Sl324 J6 APR 18 IS"o on app1oved credit '74 VW BEETLE s199 ON. Radio & Mater. Xlnt. cond. {728KKG). $199 On .. $84 75 per mo for 36 mos. Deferred payment price $3225 00 APR 17 .9~1. on approved credit. '72 VW SUPER BEETLE s199 DN. 4 spd radio healer. very clean. (t81MXBI S199 down $54 30 per mo IOI' 36 mos Deferred payment pr1ce $2153 80 APR 1815°.-.on approved credit '71 TORINO WAGON s199 DN. Auto . f11ct air. pwr. str .. xlnt. cond. (202CPT). S199 On .. S38 94 'per mo. f<>< 36 months, del8f'red payment price 51600 84, APR 18.15"4 on approved credit. '72 FORD PINTOR I A s199 DH. 2 dr. 4 sod . custom pai/t. R&H. (6i6FB0) $199 dn .. S65 82 per month lor 36 months. deferred payment oriceS2~68.52.APR 18. 15%onal)provedcred1t. WITH EVERY NEW 1976 .PINTO- OR MAVERICK SOLD FROM NOY. 4th THR~.,~ MON., NOV I 8th, WE WILL GIVE THIS I.• QUALITY 1912 MODEL l REPLICA TRANSISTOR RADIO I •• FREE • . WE STILL .HAVE .. OVER ,80 NEW, MONEY SAVING COMPACTS - , THAT MUST BE CLEARED . NOW. EVERY CAR DIS· COUNTED TO ABSOLUTE ROCK BOTTOM THE 77's ARE ROLLING! VIRTUALLY EVERY MODEL NOW IN STOCK. SEE & DRIVE THEM TODAY. LEASING? . SEE THE 1977 THUNDERBIRD! NOW PRICEO SUBSTANTIALLY BELOW 1976 MODELS ORDER YOU.R 1977 CAR OR TRUCK TOD~ Y FOR'- EARLIEST DELIVERY • ... ) WE · LEASE ALL' POPULAR MAKE VEHICLES. GRANADA '\;Pr . auto .. fact. atr, pwr str &brakes. low miles. (579NXM) s4499 Plus Tax & License '74 MUSTANG II 2+2 Auto . fact air, pwr str . custom trim, R&H. (182KEG) $3199 Plus Tax & License '75 FORD '73 FORD GALAXIE 500 4 Dr . AM·FM stereo auto. a11. pwr sir & brakes. vinyl root. R&H. $2199 (792JEOI Plus Tax & License '73 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME CPE V·S. auto trans .. factory air. pwr steer . vinyl roof (448HBD) $3199 Plus Tax & license '73 DODGE . ' '73 CHEVROLET 1,·, TON PICKUP V·S. auto. trans. power steering. radio. heater. (996N) s3499Plus Tax & License '74 VOLVO 145 WAGON' Auto , fact a11. radio. fuel in1eot . luggage rack. (79'2.JEO) S 4499 Plus Tax l L1cen~• '74 FORD T ·BIRD HOUSECAR VAN E-200 V·8, auto .. air. full pwr .. landau Auto .. fact. air. pwr. str. & brakes V·8, auto. trans .. power steering. rAd•o. heater. 1031135) top. cruise cont .. leather. (752MPN) butane stove. Ice box. 28.460 mlles s7299 s4999 (444HNS) Plus Tax & License Plus Tax & License s3999 Plus Tax & License '73 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN V·8. auto trans air cond .. pwr steering, root rack. (7JOJZBI 53699 Plus Tax & License '74 MUSTANG '74 FORD GHIA El11' Auto . fact a11. vinyl V-8. auto a1~pwr str & brakes. vinyl rf . extra sharo1 (0002LFJ) rf .. AMf'M stereo (992KZJ) $2599 Plus Tax & License s3999 Plus Tax & License ~ ~ ____ .. ,.,..... _ _. __ ,,, __ ..... -= .... 1 ••• •·. • • C5¥. U&.f Otrf MOUH .. r ......... ·--·--w ......... "-•• ._ ... ,,.. H41flet a'..n ......... , .......... .,.... .. ,.._.... 'A&UOWT 0,. .. J &f,I_ .. , ,_. COUGAR Hardtop. factory air. pow. 6teer1ng. like new inside & out. $ 1799 (ZZC568) J Plus Tax & Llcens '71 FORD TORINO Station Wagon. Auto fact. air. pwr. str. (202COT) • $1199Pfus Tax & License '74 PONTIAC ' GRAND PRIX J V·8. auto .. air. pwr. str .. disc bks .. pwr. wind .. seats. landau top. s4599 su~rf,.; (920MTO) Plus Tax & Llcen '74 COUGAR XR7 V·8. auto .. air p. str & p d••c brks .. p. winds . R&H. wsw flnt glass whl co11ers. landau 100 s4399 (735LFSI • Plus Tax & License l D2 DAIL 'Y PILOT Friday, November 5. 197!1 PlJBUC NOTICE 0•01NANca .... 1.... EXC&PTING u •• ,..,r ___ --.rsoftMCltyC.....cllwllnQtl>r 1 09101NANCa OP THE CITY 11.,..1yt119-11wffyotll1 .. -"°'tyll,.. --ll>tttlleM-. NQL OP TllE CITY 0, O»TA otV1Cl0tl•SlrHI. PASSEOANOAOOPTEOll'll,uloa1 SA, CllL .. 'O•NIA, CMA .. OING HCTIO" L ,.,,,u..,, to .... -.iNovember. "'•· atONINOOPAP091TtOHOFLOT v l\lons ol Setl•Pn U ·1t 01 Ille C>omlnlcJ 1111<111 PAl•VIEW .... Ms, PROM Ml to Mul>ltl.,..1 Co~ oi th• City .. c.o.i. MeyototllleCllyolCOSt•~ MQ. -· 01\trlCt ~p A-4 or,,. Ol't of llTTES1 .. lHE CITY COUNCIL 0' THE CITY ~·· Meu I\ ... , • ..., •mtncle<l b'I""' Ellff<IP. Pnlniwy Of COSlll MESA OOES HEREBY ilddollon thereto o t l"e MG •rH C•tvCterl<alt ... ClfyofCMlol,,._sa OilOAINASFOLLOWS: CIH<"l»d ln*ltonlh~rool ST4TEOFC4LIFORNIA I '· MC'TION t . All 111•1 partlon al I~ SECTION> Tll1sOrdl,..nteslWolll11'e COUNl'l'OFORANGE I SS followh>Q ~\Crlbed re.I pl"Ol)O!r1y 1\ •ttKtand!Mlnfulllwc•tlllrty (JOlclloy1 CITYOFCOSTAMES4 I ~ oiaced •nd ln<luded 1n the MG 1rom•nd•l1.,.1t1ous.w.-onorta. I, EILEE"' P PHll•mev. Otvci.<"\ ':mne,towll· lMU P<r•loon of fll1ffft IUI clrlSI....,. -.. ~lf•t•O Clerk of tho Clly (.ol.wlcll Theee$tetly 2.cl.OOfH t ol l..ol 15ol 1he tw\~Qe thereof. '11•11 lle.....,.lllled oft11e O tyolColl•Wsa.Mrtc>ycer11fy l'alrvlew Farms, per map 1-...i ,.. once on the Oraft!le C.O.Ut O.lly Pilot,• 1'1111 ttw •"°""and foreoolnv OrdlAMK• ,c.1WffCI II\ 8ooll a. Page 71, Mis· newsiwoer of 9-•1Clrtul•lloft,pr1nt. No.1~wu lnlroducedandCorolld@re<I cfll-ou• Maps, recore11 of Or-Id and l)Ubll\Md In the City of C..ta -'1"" by M<tlon al a regular ,.....uno Cpunty.C.lllo<Jll•. ~·· 1-tn.r wtl" t"9 names ot tlllf ofMldO tyCountllMldontl'le41"ct•Yol ·~ I . __ ,. ~ , : PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUCNOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE I' // ltG(HO ~ ----·-· -.. =--_,'"' -· .... _.._ ............... ·---...--""· -J ::...·~..:..·::: ·. ·~~. I=- .......... --~ ....... , . -·····--· ......... --:!' :: .. -r:-.. "::_ ....... __ ..,. •• 't • . . ........ . . _, ........ -··-··---... "-'-........ ~.,_.. 1 ...... --...... ~ OltOlliANCI .. 0 .1-'"" ''""'""'"" "' !l•k•r Sir ... , w.fl\ ,,... OltOINANCI! 01' Tlfl ClfY ""''""''Y C>Ml~"'J~l•M ot 1"8 H\l llno NCIL OF 'tME ClfY 01' COST& 01 \•1d lot 10 Bin« I\. ·-~ •lotlQ SA, C4LIFOllNIA, CMMtOlNG .. ,d '•nlotl1,.. "0•11• ... , •• CW' -I ZONING 01' LOU ONI, fWO. 1fW 00 •••I '"""'" oMafle! ""'" U ld NI , AMO TIN, ILOCIC I ; llND ._.,, 1,, .. norlh 00 ·~· 40'" •~I )18 JO ft Otll AliD TWO I LOCll C. Off 1,..1, l,..nu ""''" )6• '1' ,. .. -•1 '1 t• it•Y T•ACT ... OM "'· llt AliO .... , .... I>(. ,,.r .. 11•1 wl tll ~d ,.,,. TOll•CP-IUCI' IHl ..... nortlt ... ,.-o. 'we\l IOS 'Wlt-.1. HI CITY COUNCIL 0 1' ntl! CITY ""1><•P"•••i.t wn11 w 1•u.111ne- COST4 ME$A OOES HEREBY 00 ... 40'' oot "'00 '"'· t'>enu OAI"' 4<; FOLLOWS ,,.,., .. , wltlt W•d l•M•rll,.. '°"'"Ill!' ac:TION I. All that l'Oftl<WI ol IN W Ot ' H \I Ill 0 fffl lo Ille lnler-· lowl119 at<erlbed rt•I pr-rty '' non ot • t-11111 '' c-•fll•I< wll>t pieced •f>d 11>(1-'" w. Ill -\Outll•rly .. 00 •••I -•Y.•M i:;:~o:;;._, o• Loi\ 1 -10 ;:!'~~ 11~0": =,~·~:.:'st!.~'~ -8. and l ot I. &IOC• C. of lllf C.l1fornl• r~or<fod ...... ,,,_IS. lf11 ry lrect. &ltd lllOW oort"'"" of In Bonlt ... , • P•Qoo H4, of Olilcl•I 1411'1no AV.""11 ..,d Bur s.r.i, .ti Ate.Or"' of 0re"94' '°"""'" •• <ou-n tlle Clhol Coil• M~~Qurlt\ltl IJI el IMvl~ 11 r 111<1111• of 6110!) ,._,, • • Sl•I• •• CallfOf'lll• ... "-' redlM to ~"' IMe,,.CllOft bo•~ _,. .. -· r•t•f'Cl9d In ao.11 •• P90t •• °' 10 IS' U' w.tt. '""II<• .. \I.fly 11t"6 1_, lie<-•'" tN Olt•ool le• I •I 0"0 ,.111 con< •nl r • r Ctulll' lb!<ordtr of LM .... !ft t Ur "• h • v I n O f r a Cl I u \ o I ftly, C.•llrotnta, ancrl"" ts 6U.OO l•tt t"rouoh • cent••I 8t191tOI It 11' 19'': \Mii<• wut"W,.. or· east• n leet to 111e •H t '""'°' ii. IMld t<>nv•v•d lo G<ro•oe Oeniel l..oYottl -""'• by O••O r~COtdld No ........ r •. "\l. '" So<>• 2~ Pell" •n. ot Of. tu: tat Q~rord\ qt Or Ano• County. llllfnc• •lonq 'IAld .. ,, line ~ •'°"9 Iller .. ,. lint of ••Ill Loh I •nd 10. 81otk 8 •nd II• \oulll<trlv oro10~9•t1on \GUiii 00 ... .,.. _,, 7'7 11lttl10 .... POINT 0P8EOINNING. EXCEPTING lh•t DOr11°"tncluded W!INn llal<er Stre.i H conwl'9d lo"" County of Or•llt»e by deed retorded J""9 J. l'MJ In 8oOll 110. P•oe 11•. Of. fltl•I Record• ol 0••1199 Cou11ty SECTIOli J. 411 lllat p0rtlon of tlllf fOl-11\Q dncrl-, .. , P<OOl'"Y '• ,..,et>y l>IKtd end lnctueled In ""' R•· CP 1one.1owll· Tl'IO\e oorllOM of Loi. 1, '·•.and 10, BIOCll e, ..... Loi• I •nd J. 81oclo c. Df lflt ..... ry Tr.cf, •ftd lhoM partlot>t Of ....,,.,,no llvtr•u• •11d !Har St,_., •II Wlll'lln lN Clly Of Coste Mow, GcNnlY of Or•t>QI!, S••lt Of C.thlorn••. •• •flown Olt • INIP •ecortlf>d In Boo~ •. l'tQt &. ot Mtw:ellM.ou\ R•cord• In the 0111~• ot '"" County Rerorder of LO' l«>Qf'i., C.11nfy. C•llfor nla. dncr ''"" H .. ...~ .... ,.,_ ........ .,.. •• ....,...._ "'-•U ...... . ...... ._ ..... -..... .. --............ _ .. .... . =:ia.:-.. .... PUBLIC NOTICE CffT <1" COST" a.it.SA, CMXCllHA "'--0(..,.,-c,., OISTRIC~ MAP lallow.: S.OIM lng 11 llHI lnler,rcllon of 1"8 cenlet11ne al 8•1<•r Slreet Wtlll llllf 'IOUIMrly pro1ono11t1on ot 11\t ~•" llrllt of said Lot 10, e 100 8 thence etor1<1 w ld centerline nortn ee s•· Ot'" _,, 7'1100 IH I to I"• TRUE POINT OF BEOINNINO: lllont~ o..,•lltl w•lh w lct .est 11,.. north 00 ••' llY' Hit J!l.lllf .. t: '"*"'° nort" :it• >1' Jl"Wttl n .1• IHI; theno oer•ll•I wftll M•d cenltrlllllf north 89• S9' O'I" WHI IOS.311 lee\; !Nlft<t ~r~lltl With Hld-1 llN nor1"00" ... fO"usl ltt.OOIHI. ~ -•lltl wit" Wld centerltne '°"'" •• W Ot" e•\I Ul,O fffl to llllf lfllHW<· """of • curve INll h <one...,,)( willt •nd •oulll<trly Mo.00 feet musurtd r~dl•llY from 111•1 O•t•ln curve dtKrlbe<I ln • dteel to the Sl•t~ of Calllornl• record<td Novembef IS, lf11. In !looit '911, P•oe S54. ot Olflcl.t RKorcts of Ore~ CWnty, • coune 131 ••Ila vino• ,_.,,of •IT 00 teot, • r•dl•I to \OICI lnl*r\tc llon bl'"'' M>Utll 20" IS' SJ'".,.,,, lhenc• we.t~rty u 41 lf'fl •lonq saJd concentric cur.,..,..vl"ll • rotc!Ou• ol 1>81 00 leet lltrouQll /1 <""1•1111 I ... -. ......, lCGlNO ., , ..... .. r-::.;! ~=:...,.~ ;;J:: •.. .. .:: ....... ._. ........ ---.. ...._._. -----...... . -.....,_....,. __ , PVBUC N011CE PUBIJC NOTICF; PUBUC NOTICE Al ·-. --....... ., -"'--- , ' .J,', __ ....-...... ,, r: ., .. I L[G(IC) ·--...... ~·-· ..... u ..... ...._ ~-......... . ....... ~ ............ , ...... ....-............. ~ ....., ._ ............. ...... . ... , ... ._ ··-· •• •• CITY CIF COST A 111:~, CALlF"ClllMt\ fll.-C(-IW'NT _.,.-oloi'loil0'11Mi1°--..-J _ .. IG/2 ......~ PVBUC NoTICE / CITY CIF COSTA 1111($A, CAllCllMA ... ...._Ol....,'<'<T CJSTRICTING MAP . .. -· ... --~· ... ,_,_.. .... ...,..,__, ..... :::;-._.:-=r .. ,;:,-:~ •• :...._. •• :;,.::::;,.:.:":: ·-· ..... ~ ... ---.. ~ -.. l:::::!:~~========i:::::i!:J::1""'=:~--::;::--:::..'~·~ ..... ::.---l ':·J..J.:' .... _____ .. _"_~-----"'-''"-1.;:;:::;;:..::.;.:;:..;;;;;;;......,. __ ,.... ...... ~ .... ;.;.;:;:;;;;;;"o;:;;·::;;:......,......,. __ __.~/~ _,.of OS' 14' OI" to''"' SO<ltllf~ COIWW dttscrl-'" ''"' Cl...t from,... ~•CTtQf4 •• Tiiis Ordlnanco SNll t•rml11us ot tltet certain course Statt of C.111°"'1•. recor-Nwy 20. ~ tife<t and be In tun for~ 11\lr1't dHGrlt.d In IM Clefld lo ,,.. St•• OI tt76, In a-llUJ. P"91 15~. Olll<tet 1301 dtv• trom and •ll•r Ii• p,ns. .;t. C.llfornle. •!!Corded May ti, "'" In lloecorels ol Or•1>99 Co111•fY as "toUl"'1" M>d e>rlor to Iha .. plrellon of 1111-0oolt 111$3, Pa99 ,,., Ollk lal "9Corcb 18' cw•• west, 74.« ft!el"'; lflenct WUTlt CISl dayt trom Ille PUlaQe tt>er..,.. of Or•nvt County, e\ "M>ulfl ... W W ' 3:)• t•' H'" M\I. 101 11 IM\; I'*~ \flall Ii. 11111141111td Ot>CO 111 11'* Orenga .. ~I 1U 27 fffl"; thence U11tlf111f119 south 1'' 32' U" eatt, lllM IHI; Co.tst D•lly Piiot, e nows~r Of ftOrtll~terly •long said '"'-Nrtll M' I/lone. soutlt 1"' u · SI" eau. '"·'""' C)tntr&I clrculallon, ••lnted anCI 1" $t" west, ,II M IHI lo a llolM lft to t"9 H $1•rl' lint ot ,,.. wnterly C>Ul>ll\lleel In ,,.. City of °"ta MHa, Parttl 2 ol t,.. de.ci to tM sc .. ol 110,00 lett of i.alCI Lof 10; llleftct •'°"t t•tMr .. ,., !tit Mmn of "'-mem- C.lllornl•. rt<Melecl M•• IO. t'7&, In said llnt IOUtll oo• n· 14" ""°'' .,,., ,_, tiors o1 ti. City Councll votlnt tor ...ci BoOll 1170, Pege Ul1, Offlcl•I A.c:tr'CIS lo N ICI centerline of aa-er Slrtot; ~"''tho same. ol ()r4W191 Co;inly, laid ... Int lltlno .... tflltft<• tlOf\9 UICI unter11 ... SOUlh .... PASSl!D ANO AOOP'TEO tllls ISi "°''ll-sterl¥ termlnul o' a fine W 09'' HSI H 41 , .. , lo Ille TRUE day of No~Mr. lt16. OH<rl-H ""°'111 64' WW'...,., lllOINTO, 8EGllOWCG. DOMINIC J . RACITI 119$ IHI"; tflen<• wu111 u•,.. '1'' EXC£PTINOtllalDOr1 .... lnchdtel ~YOfolt ... (Jly ..,."-41,06 fMI to a curve 111.M Is c.,.. wllllln 8••er SlrHI es c"""•'t'fd lO tllf ofCotltNwH centric with •nel dlsl•nt so.rthtMttr'ty, County ot Ora"ve by deed recordtel ATTln: IS.00 feet mhsurtd redlllly trom ll\lt J->. 1'41, In 8001' I 10. Peoe 119, Of. EH"4' P. i't11n111y cer1eln tur.,. detcrllltd Inc....,,. IS) of fl<l•I Records of s.tld Ora"9• Qlunty. CllY Cltrk of 1"9 w141 dffCI H 11n1no • radllt\ Of US.00 SSCTIO" J. Pur\u•nt to 1"9 pro-O f'tot Gofta Mesa f"I; , ... ,.<e tovthwulerly •'-said Vision• Of se<tfon 1).1t oi Ill• Munl<IP414 ST4TE OF CALI PO•Nl4 l con<eMrlc curve cono.,.~-· Codi of Ille Cit• of Colle Mew, 0411rltl COUNTYOI' OllANOI! I SS ly "•~lno • redlu\ ol .oo f .. t. Nwp E·), ot the CllY Ill C~I• ""'" ,, CITY OF COSTA Ml!SA I ,_,... •n ~I· ol 07' • • ... ewe 11ereby•-nC14'ClbYl ... eddlllofttn.reto '· 61Ll6N P. PHINNIJ'I', Ott~ distant• of tf.U IHI: I e toUt?t C) of tht ._,·CP•"" R• CP •ru•de\Crlllt<I -u~lflclo Clerti of Ille (Jly """""' II ' 04" west, 116 1• tut to Ill• lns.tll-ltndJMreof. of ''"' City of Co•la Mua. "''•"" """"wnlflrlY termlnu\ ol INl Cll<1.tn ttr1ily tMI ,.,. ~ ..,. lorego.119 .. Ordl-• No. 7~ _, lnll'OdUCec18ftel conslcNr'eel Mellon by Mellon el a ,.. 9111., "'"u"' of iald City eounc11 llelCI on the 1111 Gay of ~enftler, 1'76, and lhe<qfler PH\e<I •nd •ctnc>leel " • Wholt olt a re9utw -•11119 of wlel Oty Council N ICI on ,... 111 city ftl Hw- ~ •.. , .. by the lollow1"9 rdl , .. , vote: AYll1: Cotltl<ll Mem!N": 91eclll, H•mmett, HerltoQ. Smallwooci. "°"FMl-NOl!S· C-11 M9mti.rt: ...... ABSENT: Covncll Mem~t ._ IN WITNISS WHEllEOF. I ..... Mr.,,..to wt my lwlnCI tnd ~-Ille Se .. Of tt.. City of Cella MeM lNt tl'ld Gay of Nowmbef. lt7 6. lSEALI flL.fH I'. PHINNEY c11,C••rktl>d•• om cl00ef1t Ol ll't City ~Mii ol lfw City ol c.t If #tit tt ,..,bll~-Orenqe Coot Dally PllOt, "'°" s. 1'76 ·~'· CJT"'r Off CO~f4 lollD&.. ~ l.IHICI -w _,_ ---.:-.---;;r----:::+-~~-~""=-~~ ... -=-~~-f~~~'-"-....... _....;.,..,,. ___ ~---"'~~--1 .. ....-.. .,,.,.. ~ ..... _.--.,,1 -.. ~ /8 I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Ul'O NOTICE OF SALE Na )JJ·l.0~ OM1 N·Ot•<t h tM:r,.by Q•"t·n 1fl..lt thil' un dt '''l'll'lt.od ¥tlft M • lO ' m Of'\ CM l&lft t'J.'" ot No"'"'.,.._,.. ,,.,, .tt 1201 Dow ~,,,.,., In 0\f (llV of M~w00f1 8fo4'Ch (t'IUl'tV nf O'tlMIJ'A' Stdftl' of (dl1lor~• PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS llUSINESS NAME STATEME .. T T"" loilow1n9 1><1rwn• "" dojr>q bu\I• n,...\d\ CE NlUllY 11 CROCKER REAL ESTATE, b'' W"I l•tn 511«1, (01ld ......... C.A ~IUI C.fO( iil.t"f" R~ .. 1 f*tli,)1t' '"(. A C•l1h...,n1,• tnruor )f1ott •11 ~\I 1"1"' St""'' (.o l•M•·• (A•IU/ Th•\ th.tl1•11P\ 1\ cunouu~o o-r d: <or~ potaloun C'r«k•' R,. .. , E\t.tt ... (nc. Al\1M Not 1n, 0 \1•4• Ph O•·tU Th · 1,1tt,.m1·nc ....,d. t•lt'd wit" tfH" ""11.tt PoUOht •uct1on to th~ h1~t "'d •--------------C:>"''~'" <. tfh o• CJr•nov (ountvonOtt 11. IQ)t> "'" 1.,.. CASH lhe IOllow1no dt"<n""" '"""''"°""' f)(~l'tV' t•7~ Par\U.<t<: • ? PUBLIC NOTIO : OtW '1<-ro•I No 7P4111Sll108Q11 .. ol-------·------Liron'~ fn•vn•l"'a~bclMr>e<tcod.•I NOllCElOCllEOITOllS Fi01" Pi.;t;t1\~('I Or lr'IQl9' Coa\t Ottlly P11ot, °' 1, 1~. 17, 1• •no Nll' ~. 1••b !JlhJ ll••Ch l\oule•~•o. We"'"""''"' SUP ERIORCOUllTOFTHE C1111 ST&Tf;OFC,,,llFORNIAl'Oll Wt ro\!'rw~ lh~ "<ltll lo bid°" 1n• OM THE COUN~~:.~:1~RANGE P.rtV C:..nnnlMOf"t~ l'.\!,ll• OI HllOI\ C ROMSlAO PUBLIC NOTICE IVtflPffon<t'l(OfDOrd\'Qf\ ~,. .... , .. tJ 11\\0<JlhWll~· Rodd NO rt Cr I~ HC: RF nv (,1vn1 10 '"" l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS N .. ME ST,,,TEMENT ArH"'QIOl'\H••QhlS lH W!O()~ f"·d1t")t\ (11 lt\t>t ,•r>t:J\I• n41,.mOdt"C'"''-~-'"t P\.tbll\h""d OronQ" Co•~• D••'v Pi Jot ttwl •II O*'"Of'I' hdv1nQ < 1 ""'"' ..-,.wt<tl T.,.. IOllOW'•t1f1 V"',. •Of\ t do1nq bu'' "",,.,., Nov S. 191b t~ \d•d '1¥',.~"t 6'r re-quH·-d fo • •(" .010 1., ttv>m with trw-""""'" 1n, vGvt:.N',. ,,, C,PARI ING'' <fERLC N G --------------fl'llfli ofhC" ot tn.r tf• '" ot Ch.-V•Vt" • n nE\1(',N<, f-01 R,.t1t\1 [ p!1tn.,U. '-'t PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS llUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Th"' fot1ooN1no per~on~ ar~ dVtr.o bu11 h'o\\1l\ ll'I VAqtl\N VIL~A CE. ~H Old N•WPOrt 81¥11 • Newoort 6Mtn (II •11161 Ct1M'll'\ Th-i'•1Jf11trP ';rr"'" ~ Jr , •70 Vh' L•Uo Nu,d, Nt>W00f'1 'Jf<a,h, CA ~/Oh) f',,;1ri~Yit A ~•1fVM\. Aj'O \h l I '""' Nc)rfJ f'it•wOO,.l R'"-lCh CA 01MJ Tn1-. bu· 1ntt ' i\ (Onovtt,.d by a '> ntr11t "'''""' ,.,10 Grn1 ""A S,..rvOt'\ Tt'\1\ -.1 ""'"Pnt WI\\ 111,..0 '-"""' IPY r""-'f\ty Cf,.rli; "' Or Jnqt" Coul'lfY Ot"I Oc l?Dl'f~ 1~1() F•~ Pul>f,\l'f•'1 Or.1nq-(04_.r ()Jitv P1fol No!>• ~ •:. ••• ,~ ···~ htlf'of.J <ovt' ,,, tn h' nl ttu-m ..,.11n uv f'W(~\W''I.., ~ t1•r IO 0 '1• •11'\-~'t\l'lf"# l di,,,"' t>ll , .... Sf#-' I( ANO M._R\10'4 AHO'"'' t I'll l ,..,, • 'f r C0~.00 (.\lvt) ~y11f• )1) r1, •t11 "·' C.11torn14' ~l 101 wh•' h 1\ ,,... P•l't,, "'' blJ)i"""''' Ot lt\f" yn1"Wlr .,,, IQn1 Q ,,, "'' O'MI h:f\ pttrt,.1n1nq to'"' o\l.Jh C>' '"''" OI rt'1(-nt ..,.,,,,,,, tl)u' 1110""'' ~101•• vw ftr\t t1utM1rat1onot '"'' not1u· 0&1•0 0t IOl)N 17 IV1& RO'illBFllA Nl'oT Jl'>Nr'i ,Jn•JLLOIO Sll"N" l)r CALIFORNIA Pll~A(lf NA MAIN nfFl(l r:ittofUtO,\Olt""V. It fll tnf' ~f'WJv•· n ·~"''J 1JM pQJ•nl STECK ANO MARSTON Anol"f'tf\ "' L.aw l'>4 E Color.Mo 81•<1 , S"'t~Ul Pn.t<lofta, CA t1101 Ttl U!lt "'·'•1' Att0f'M¥\ f•r E ceuator\ S,U1tf' Ir) t'O\I .. Mt ~ C& •1'i16 "ttP.,f"fl M ' ,,,. •• '"""'"9· 11\)t H,.,,,, l n 11 ·'''' (A 'lll\'411 th, tJJ\•n.t-< •l'hlut111' t>v ,,.. 1n .fiYl004JI \f•lli•l'\M ••r• • ..,f.nQ fn ... -.111tt·m' nt w;t\ fd"'d w1tP\ 1hJ.i Coot\' f (1""' 11. of Or fhlQt• Ct.lunt y on o.,, t lq, .. ,. FMaU J"luh•ll\h"'O Or 11'\Qf• co.i~I o .. 11v PtllJl 0. I n n ••~4 Nuv \ 17 t•I• 440\ lb Pl'BUC' 'N.OTICE -" Sf AT E-.1" N T-0-F--A·8--A-N_O_O_N_M_E_N_T_ OF USE OF FICTITIOUS9USl~ESSNAME lh,. fOh0#1n<) 0-''\0n "'·'\ dbolftUonol'ld '""°" .... of,,...,,,, I· •·w·. tu1~· ""''' t\&l'T'W" MARO:,IE S MANNFl)UIN 2/Wl! r<iort>•"\ Ad L "q""~ N1que-1 (1t1i1 91611 Pvt>'''"""" ()rlHH)"' Co 1\t n.-,nv Pt•ot ---------------l0rt t\ 1 .19Jn<1NnY, '''!. u.u.Jn .. ''"' W"u•n 711S7 Calle Ml Cid M 1<-'ion V•"I > (l'tld rro• ou• ,..,.., w~\(Ot'HJU(tc.-dt>vt"tntn dlv11Ju•t P UBLIC !'/OTICE S·lOOO NOTICE TO cqEQITOltS NO.ll· .. 10 SUl'ElllOll COtJlltTOl'TNE STATE QI" CALll"ORNIA FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE I,, '"'" Mtttft"r Of "'" E\f ,,, ot PARTICIA CREESE. AICI\ PATRICIA 14 CREESE /4KA PATRICIA ANN CREESE. O.o~wo Not•(f' '' nt-reby Qtv•n to crf'ld1fl'\f"' f\tv11·w1 <l•I'"" •OAtn\l Uw w.cl lJH• ""'"' lo "'"' \tttd ,,.._,.,, tn tPoMt olf.c .. t)f tn.a cWiin: ot tn. '9fM,.._lt•d <00'1 t'r •n D"~"Wnt trv-m to'"• under\tqnt!d At tM Ollt<e fll MICHAEi. 0 MCEVOY MURCHISON.\ ("UMMING. ""~""'' t\t LAW, MO WthhH'f' PIA<e •n ,,,.. (it\' M l&\ AnQ'"'"'' ,,, LO\ AnQ'"'"' '°""''" #f\1(h '"""' """ •• I\ '"'" 01'9(,. Qf b\/"'I IW''' t:tf tn• un~' \1qn"d 1n ~H mAtl•h tii"'rtA1nu·Ha In ,,.,,J t\tlfl" \U'l"I rl1•om· w•t" ff\.-,,..v 1try ve>uth"'t \ rN\t ,,., '•IN1 nr Of't\,.nff"O ,, •t'O'"'"' i1d wl!ni" fOU' monft'" MH r .,,. llr" O..A>I '-Hrf)O "' "' 'Wjll• -u.,f,ttl")c • "'~ l')Of f M 111'>"1'1 I' A 1"' ""'~I''' , .,, ''°'• w•'"" 'W A""'•• 0 MUllC:HISON 'CUMMING AUOf'"'tYI ~\.,.aw ..OW1t,1t1.-• Pl.c• L..,A,...I•• c;a t001~ Ml(MAELO M<EYOY '•' • P UBLIC NOTICF. l'ICTlf IOUS 8USIN ES\ NAME. STATEMENT l'Y' tot10..,,nq Pt'\On'\ tl't du•nQ t>u'I "IO\' A,, w[NTIJC"V l'RIEO CH•(IC("4 O~ U.CUNA BC 4 (H 61'1 "'"''"Ct-< I "410"...,·"°'· L~Qun.-Rt.:Acn Uhll'nt•• •hSI (t)ll·"~ H• ·~~ ,,,. ' ( tt,,~irtt.A '""00' tl•'>n ·~ ....... ,,1, (>fW .., ..... 18 C.0-('lnadJ"IM.." (_..l1tn,n,,,Q,,,~ th•\ OV\tNIU I\ <O"du 1r1I C>v \ t..\it • CJfj••1•0" Coll n .. -..1t1ebt)lt ltV ( A H·ltflbflM ~'"' , .. , .,,., rau• w~'"" l hl\ tlf"m"'nt W.4\ t1I~ Wt1"i fl°M CJ>unt,.. C,,.,., nl ()r d"'Jl9' County°" Oo 8. 19'• ,.,.,., PvP<ill· "'d o, '"() .. '"A\1 Oll••v P1l1>t 0c I I>. 11 /'I omd ,_.OV \ )?1h t)}) It PL'BLIC NOTICE WPElllOll COUllTOFTHE ST ATE OF CAl.IFORNIA FOR THE COUNTY OF ORANGE 1000•1< C.ntor Ort•t, WMI UM• •n-1, Ca1uortu•'1101 Pl,,,I NT IFF Afl'>NI CE JOV T n., \11\I•'"'"' • ., t 11 • w rn C/)u"tvCh·•• ,,,0, •nqr(1J1Jf'IV WILLAROM llEl\l ttrOtAvtfllUolf'Ol("•St•'' Stf> Vfl l.o•A•••IO\ C,.,_., I 71J >ti• •) 1) ,,... LINOl.E ( ,on<ISTANf OROUNOLEY or~1 NOANT FRAtHC. JAMES ROilf IH"> r I R\T oor SECONO (J()f lHll(U (10r FOURTH OOE rt~TH DOI 'il1o!H OOt SEVENTH L•Olo •110t1<.!i IM l'IOf F&f~I J>\Jf"ll1 "\..,, ().-,,,, ... ( t I f 0,1 'f (11! 11 N >v \ t: Pl l, I 1 \ ~UMMOHS Cl\t Num.,.r llllS• NOT•Ct:. 1 Yov "•ve been 1..0 Tht • .u '' cotMt may Helde 1qa1nu YOY W'llhou1 Pl BU{' :'\OTICE vovr bf•f\q hc'•rd uni•" yo111 '"100nd wttti.i" >O d41y, At'G "'' 1nto,m.1Hon laitlow AVl'I() Uo.O••\ldocltmM>d"<lo El f':ICllTIOU~ 9U\tHf~'J. tr1~.at 0>11tae ff(id.r tof\tr• Ud \1n H&Mf ~T AfEMENT •~+•ftC.tA .t rN'il"IO'\ QIH" lJd r•\00~ T¥ I ~O-W ""'l D' 11 , 1 r 1 t l =~~!I' )0 01.tt L*.t I• lftfottTV(fOn ,..., .. Pt.1n• ,~,, >r'4"'1'1"' Co•'' o.-..1v S'1 ·~ 0-1 I\ 11 14 Al"(f ti10.., ~ 14 'I) l/1~10 1< "' (nPt·~ !'[ I 10 IH[ orFfNOllNI l\e>VCI (AL''0"~'" , •I Hr,. h H .. , 1 ""'t)l.11ntn ..... t,,,.1•nt11tf1nv1hf•~I••"''" t dll\ 1• S•• ft\ W•"'"''"" • r ( • '4 l 1 ,.,.-.,..,, Y(t'' (~,., fuotN>h1 ) --------------1 ~11.," t' M '' 11 ., 1• ,1 ••yi·'•'••J l1 H °'"""""'' ntn0f"'"'''f'11hl~l~lt ...,...,,, ,~nt , An, , " 'toumu't w1tf11n l0d1'V\ ,.,,,.,th""""' Pl'Rl.IC" ~OTl<'F: , ... , 'lu ''t''' 1 , 'J 1, • 11, 10 10 rnt•n\ 1. ,,.tw1•1t ''f'l vnu. l•I~ w1th thl\ --------------1 U..1ini;•I '""'1, wr1th n ~lh ft(11no 1n r~\QOfK4" tn tr'"' 1Y '" 1,,.,.., tnr.,,,,,,,11t1111 11t., Ju'\l•Cfl CoUf t you \IAf[MENT OF ¥fllMOIUWAL ~llOM l'&llTNEllSHll'Oll UNIHCOR•OllA TE 0 ASSOCIATION Ol'FIUTIHG\INOEll l'ICf1 f 10VS aUSIHEH NAME f-wt '"1 .,~ "') r'"°, " "'"'' wt~ff"'"""" tf \ 1' '' 1 t O~Mf.tt °"'"' """ •' ""bit' t1°"'1 fl'\tP I tr'.., .... ,... rV ,..,,, • ,,,..w,., ..... """' , .. , "" ..... , "·rt-1 :.r"""4 t"• t f t I 1-f OW' ,,.,,. ",,._."' f'lf I Arll tr P't "''lll, lM 1>111)1>11' !\ )f'\'\ ~ fll•f'4'1f\ l;tt•f I lf9lf, ... C •~ 'Ot°"•49}tl\ ff\• I 1 flOV\ f:Mltil'W""\ n.,.... ~ •'" ,...,". t,,, W\• IM'ff"lr, '°\ .• _.. ... t 1"""1 ft!'\ "*""""'~' 1~ t.,\ tffit lholt (tun~., nl <>-•~ ~u-'I "fi't1'W+ 11tM A(ft1'ff \Of,,,_. ,-....,Y>"I W'lth0,4•1"i•) f, ,,, .. c, M•'~"'*"'" .. S"1t·• :101ffln ~lf~'Vtl't ,,,,.,,. t'i,,;ft,.4 (.tl1,fH'ht .. 011\ ''"' U"•M•"t "' Wlf"IJ'fO•#I I\ w4tnot1t O'•l\J41·'" to """,.,,,,.....,.,,/)'\tr. ,~,-".""""'~'""'••r tJ'Wtfh/J,..,.,,,,.., wA\ .. tw''"'", ,., '"'"' Wl\t ;rH ,,.. """' ti-f 1~\ r,,l·lf "'flll'•tif'H) A P'\t t p..ri.""'f'U""" '''Mvr I\ ltn" M Pih-'•' r.trot•\im ..,.l')C'f~t\ f"( Jta"' Ct M 1(ft-.tH\\ ,..., .. ..._ Pul)l,.,,..tt Ot•~'l" C.,..<1 O.•l'f Pl•o< °'' n '4 • ..., Ne• s n "'• ... ,~ PUBLIC NOTICE f~, '•' ~ 'V.1 I .-:1 ,,m .... mi1 .. 1(111 Wllf\f"I fl"HHfl\wflh Mpt;A(J J· , ,,.. ("' •'"J '"" ••r" "" t1rnl J)lf"dif"IQ to~ .,n rn,,• •v 1 , • .1 ',.., • h' .~' ,,, f1 111 ·~· ""''"•' '"'"'""''.._.to tnf" ftl!t\141 , .,,.,,,,.,,,, ""' lht'l ,., d .... ~ ollrt"'' ,,,,. t '"''~ < '>• t Du, t ,• ' , Pl'DLIC' ;-..;oTICE CP 100 \Vl'flllOR COURT 01' THE \TATE 01' CALI ,OllNIA l'()A 11<1' COUNTY 01' OllANGE No A 1'1•\ NOllCE 01' Hl! .. lllNG 01' PETITION '011 PflOaATE 01' WILL It.NO COOICIL ANO fOR LETTEll'i fE S TAMtNTAAY ANO AUTNOlll tATIOH TO AOMINISTEll UNOECll THf 1 .. 0f PfNOENT AO MJNl\T II & TIOH OF ES TA TES•CT ''""''" r. • '"". •1 1nv11u1 n ""''• writ"' '""\l')n(t y""" Ot' I t•j'l #· I~ 1•11t,.t•t1 Ul•\f' .1r10l•C•l•0t1ot ,,,. o• 11fll1fl '"'' "'' u'1 '""" #>n1f'f A -"1'l•t• it • ,1t1110\I yr.11 f,.,. ttv-,. .. ltf'f dto' ""t0oV>; ,,.. ,,.. t \mrt.t1n1 wh1tn toirn ,,. '' "'t-" '"' t"-w-"t o f W•\O' \ IA".lnQ ,I ""'°' t•W ()1 t\I 1'4,.t IV IV GI'""' I rl1tl rtr Q\lf'o\t111a 1n tn,., omo1,.1nt r II 'yOV ,., ,~ to >~d 1M ..ivlte OI "" •UorMY lft thh m.ttter, you ~ttt $!) .... Pf"'"""' •o '~·· your wnlltn ""-Pettit, if <11'Y. m•v IH fHf'dMtun• 0111,.d ""<I l't '\J/t\\ WILLIAM E ~1 J014N (.h•rk 1\EAl.1 kv ~-it 10, 1.-A,.drnuna OtpvlV E t1'• nl ttf.>W.\UO C Jh\AMON'e 0--t,..l' .., • ,,.._W'f),rf f'\mf>I ttn1 .. lnrh'°""' ('n"\ N!)f l I\ ••£"'1rr\V r,IV£.N lflt•• "~'""'' llH1f'U1tl '"'''"'~' ('0\\ ,.,,.\, '""'Q•t;h,.., rRU4'T (fl"A f:O""t>t1'~n"''" d''""n""' '"' .. """'' ,..,. .. ., ", • If ,,.,r" • t>t-'•' ,, fry trf'J·'' lf.1f,.n1tAnt ,.nout•r ltte•UOW\ ,,..,_. °'M)AJ'• .,. "' I ,, 1, , .,, ''""-... , I"'' Oh,, Al"""' m.~~.rulln,. '"' luQt'\ ''""'"'n.p t•\ T•·• '""""'' ''t t o," p_.,.1 t ,,.,.., tn41 •""1 ""V'"' A w"tt•n Ol••d1nq ltk"lod \•1IN'\t'il 0 1 of\ '·• tl'HT\ ,. ,I ,, """'fl> t ,,,. l"Q A" .-.n\w_.r' ftl\tt,ur<tr ,.I(. "'-'''bf'> ~ th• 1"'1"114'"""'"' 1't1mln1 ,,,., . ....,.. ~"'"•lo''" ,.,~u•,,.d t>v ttwt Ctltfntn1A Ot EtMI .. , &t\ ,,.,t,rfHfl '" ~''"' ., qu1,. .. M '"Uf' v,,ur O•l~l,,t\tOINHS•M M~ 'ft>r torff\o, P''f' ''''"' ... nd '"'"'' mtntbftU'""*"'""coortw1tnoro0t<tH ttv\ t•~ Af\d o• .,.. ,,, f\f'<itr•no t~ '"'"" •f'Wl fl"f'!\ 1tM ptoot th~l • toPY •Mr.ct f'\A~ Of'""'"' ,,,, Nn..;M•nttr' ?1 1cu4 At w~\ Y"r...-.n e>n *"'" plAlntlff'\ atiortWty --------------1 to oo 1 "'" "' t~· cnu, '',,°"' 01 Dt•tMrt "net l'f"l l'llt( h pl,,inllft not reprflscntN:t by \U,l.ttlO'\ cou•T OP T"ME f'lt'WlM Nl'I l ,,, 'l.tH1 ('"urt ·'' 1cr' Ovh A,, Atft)f,..,.V Thfl time wnttn 3,umtnOn~ STATf'. 011 (AL.I l'OllHIA FOil c_,.ntrr Orl\lf" We\t '" tJ\ie tllV ot S.1nt.\ ., rjfllprnrd '"'f'Vfld on" ""''V m,y Yfry THI COUNTY Of'OltAHOE l\n, C~•·•~•n•, ttoollf'nd•nQon 1n• n1•t~nt1 QI YrYlft'. F<Jr NOT"ICI Oii' :.·.:~=~H ll'E"TITtON O-.tfodNii"rmt)-r 1 14PA •'•MT'IOI~ VtCCP•ll 101nro~•1\ ~ OICll ECTIHO CONVE:YANCE OF WILLll\ME StJO>t... SPIUGUE,Mll.LIGAN ltlAL l'ltOl'l ltT Y SOLD OH r.nu•llV(I••"' &tESWICI( CONTltACT THROUGH ESCROW .HME Wilhelm Att-yutuw AOltEIMINT lXECUTEO tT ollCINOlLtANOERSOH l11W CoV<1SI, DECIOINT lll1tHwillaro•dw1v Svllt41n In I"" AU\l•r nl !II• E, •••• f)I .JOHN S...UAn• CAt74'1 \.>• llt"'•'dlno. CA •1401 5 BROOKS Oot<••••d 1114HM-1111 Att-V\ It• l'lalnttlh N0TIC( I' wEqEBV GIVEN IMI • All°"""'., ~Ullonor Pl/l'I"'""~ 0<~"'1" Co~'' Oalty Ptlol, """"1'(1 ol .... P>ollhon Of'"" FIRST A.otolMd Ot •t>Q• (~<I o. .. 1v Piiot Otl .,, 11 l••M•iO•. s. 1q'6 .... TIONl\I. 8Al>ll( OF ORANGE Nov 4 S It "'~ 4SO I~ COUNTV. •• •,.tu1or ol ,,... IMll ol JOH .. S 8ROOICS, d•<U•.0, IOt "" P UBLIC NOTICE P UBUC NOTICE Ofd!'r 10 <Of"l>l•1• a <ertaln (Oll1•~1 ---=....,,.,=--------------------------1« "''"of <Mlaln teal t!\131• ""lf'f"'<I HOTICI TOCREOITORS • S•lo.4• Into bv IM cletedt"1 In Ill< ...... ,,.,,.. •nd SUl'l!ltlOlt COURT Ol'T'4E HOTIC[ TO CllEOITOllS ROBERT A DERRICIC """MARV e STATE 01' CAl.lf'ORHlll FOR No.A·tllO OERRICIC. llu•Dond anti wll• a\ lolnl THI! COUNTV OF ORANGE SUl'ElllOll tOVATO"lHE lf•Mnl>. "''" ~ ""'d 81 ,..,. Qlur1room No. A·-STATI! OF CAl.lf'OllNIA FOlll ol 0et>&r1M•nl No. 3 of llw! ~tee>< Ettllt o l OLIVE PIERSON Tl41COUNTYOl'OllANOE C0\1'1OI1114 S141t of C3Hfe><n4~ In •ftd 8ECICLEY JOHNSON 4~11 OLIVE B In lhP Meller ol lht E\IAI" nl lor 11w (<Nnly ol Oun~. 100 CIVIC JOtl .. SON Ott ... SOCI PHii.i.iP GUY CREESE,••• C•ftl•r Ori .. We ~I. 5•,,I• /4n•. NOTICE IS HERE8V ()IVEN lo llw PHILl.IP G CllEESE, '"' PHii.LiP Cl••IMnlA on""' 11 clay o1 "°""'"""°' """'I°" ot tr. abon M,,,.<I ~nl CAEESE Ot<U .. d ,., .... AM ...... •II~"°"' "•••no CIOllT!\ •0011 .. 1 No11u I\ ...... 11. 0"'"" lo Ul!dilt"'\ SAtd '""' oro~rty \U(t1Kt to llV t~ \aid d«.0-nl •r• r,.q~rfld ttt f11t Mv1nq (lalm\ '"~•ln\t th* ~d dP<e "'°1•110n •NI 'IOvOt\I 10 be <_,..d 1' l""m will\'"" nee""''' •OUC_.. 1n Ot•I IO Mt •••0 (IAlm\ In llw ofllce ot 11IU4tll'd•n ,,.. C•tv of Ort"'1t· ~l•ot l"f olfl<• a• Ille,. ... 01 •~«JO~..,, ""' <ltrk ol llw a!or••A•d court 0< 10 °''"""· St~•~ of C•fllorni.• 1'nd It~ lcllfO(OU!'1,or lop• .. •nl l,,.m, ... 11111 .. l>'•'l"fll l"'m 10 the un"'n•orw'1 al IM \1rttl AClllr•H ,, ,,., No•111 ... c•u•rvWf>IK .... •i,I0111tll'l.,.....i-Olfit• ol MICHAE L 0 McEVOV, S.Ct_.,flto,OU"'1",C•l1IQF'ftl•,w1111a •1 IM Olli<• of OURTON OAIJl.OIN, MllRCHl50N llHO CUMMINGS, Al '-'"'K•I01lon•slollo"'1· T"MOM~N "NC'L50H, ""°"""'' "' IOrt'WY• .. UIW • ..., Wllll11rt Pl«~.,,, Loi IJ Of Tract No ,.11, M"""""" '-""'• 7't• ~ Ptlnl•r A•• , WIWtt1.,, ..... C:llV ol 1.o• An99IH, In LO\""""~' on Mao rttortlM Book U4, P-• 30. 11 C.lilo<flll 9060?, whic h h 1119 plAtt ol Cbunly, Wlll<ll l•ll•r &Ill~••• theplec•of 9!>CI J2 ot Mltnlleneou• Mllp•, Rec"'"' t>usl""" of I"-~floet\ll)Yl.0 '" •11 INtl· Mlr•t\\ of lht uncjersl11Md In 611 l'NI· ol0.1W1QtCt111nly, C.lltornlt. ten P9T1Alnlnq Int"• .,,,.1. ol "''" oe ,..,., "rUlnl'IO lo ••Id •llllt Swell qtltr•n<t I\ hertby M.0. to !hit Cedlfll, wllllln lout monlh• •H" ""' CltlM\ wllll t~e ntc•"Uv•O<JC:Mn Pt1111on on 111• h•rtln lor further lltJI publlollo11011111, 1"1tl<t, m1;J1 bO II~ o• pr,. .. nltd •*fortMld ~rtl(ul•"· O.IHOUoe.r•. "" whllh lll\/r MO'llM •lltt ,,.,. ""' OATt!O• OcloMr,,, 1'7t. R JllC!(50N GAUlOIN Mlitt110f10llftl•noll<e, ,.,~T NATIOHAl.llANIC t!•t<u1oroll~Wlllof °""'d°'I 11, Ttn 01' OltANGE COVNTY, IM .OOw M-d d«•ctonf JOOS!< M ARNOlO E wec111or Of 11\eWlll IUltTOM, GAULDIN, Adml"l'lr•lot O' ti..~-· of JOHNS BROOKS TMCIMtofl,&Nll.SON w1111w cn "Morel l'rMl<llHI P. on.-. "...,.,.., .. , .... ~ltCNISON. CUMMINO Tl'\l'\IOtfl<M' 7aM$6. .. 11RiwA.,., A~•.fl yw '°ATIOAl.6 MAMMl•TON MlfnMr, C:..lff -I •Wlblllr-. f"i.te I Y IAAltY L. ALL.SN, A--~ T4tl ctlJI ..... , U.AJltti<tl,c;A. *11 lttr""'"-' 1 •tt-nl•ltrec•• """'°"'o M(h.., • l'INltllee ~ OMKt Oeltv fll1o1 fllill4w.ct °'-eo .. ,, o.nv l"llcl\. P\A>llUled Or•-Co•,1 o.n, Pllo(. ~ "· '°' °'"" ...... s, m• .,.,._,. Oct. u. tt. tt, eno """'" ma 44$-7' Ott.. u, tt, ,., -M•. i, "'• .,....,. 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ' Frco1y Novernoor 5 1976 OAIL.YPILOT D3 ._, htM• ,. fODO 1'W The Blapst Marbtp&ac• on tht Orlnae Coest ,.....,_, ._,., JDCIO-MM "'~" .. "'.,, ...... ~ . ,_.,.. --DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS .._..... "'°°'"' .... ...,.... _...., ..... ,_ --..... -.. l•"'"""" 'IO)O~ w.,.,,,._. -- You Con Sell It, Find It, ( ] One Coll Service Trade It With a Wont Ad 642•5678 Fast Credit Approval .__. . . -""! =::~"""'t100-' ---------1 HOt.ltH For S• HousesForS• ERRORS: Ad•ertisers G;;:.;,.:.t••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• shouid cMdt tt.eir ads I 002 GtMral I 002 dally and repori «· ··••·••··•·······•····· ...................... . '°" !~lately. The DAILY PILOT assumes llabHlty for the f irst in- cc>fTed lnseriion only. LIVEON THELAkE l.(lv~I> 2 S\Ot)'. 3 br. 2 Im CluMer home (no com mun wull). Lgc bonul'I F' ll -----------1 w1wct btir Totul securi Publisher's Notice: AJI n•al eslul~ ;uh 1"rt1~c\l 111 lh1s nl'w::.pa1wr b ~uh JN'l tu the I-~<tlt•ral 1··:.11r Jlou~rng Al'l ot l!J<>M 11,h1ch make~ 1l ille.:JI 111 ad\'t.·rt1se ''uny 1.1n• forencc. lim1tut1on. ur d1st·nm10Jl1on bJ"'J on race. ('Olor, relri:1011, >ot·~. or nuttonal orison, or JO intcnuon to makt' any such µrdt'rtmn·. llm1t,1· lion, or d1scnm1nallu11." This newspaper will nol knowrngly aCl'••1.1t JO) advt'rt1s1ni.: ror real l·SlJtL· which IS HI \ 1ul,c ' lion of Lhe J.1w. Hou~s for Sale ..•.....••••..•........ Geoneral 1002 .....•....•••.•...•.... ty, dubhousc fuc1hl1cs, r1~hmi:. No maintcn1mcc, le1i.ure living ul lls bebt. S-15-!J.l!H. &t '~ ~ rr.WV.~ -~ SURF'S UP Nt•w offering only a few l>loc ks lo Newport 's famous Wedi.:e. Cuslom- bUJll .i ~droom. 2 bath Contemporary. Nalurul "'ood-., gas kit chen. great patio. A mu::.t sec al SllS,000 CALL 640-9900 .f/w .lltal &lo/, .9~('~ Wahrfro11t Condo Terrific v11lw with 40· boat :illp. Quality u~1 grudlnte. 3 Bedrms, 2' 2 baths, dining rm, fplc . Offered lo the dill · cri mlnul Ing buyer for $140,000. t>44 7270 FAMILY ENTERTAINER This cha rmin g 3 bedroom, 2 bath home has a big screened fami· ly room with gas fell flreplac<' and 11 ·::. m l•l.I· lop shape. N<'W paint & 11 super con\'e111ent loca · lion adds up to an oul· standing value at $5!1,950 CALL~·2660 t;::SELECT I PROPERTIES HouHs ForS. HouutForS. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 G.-rol IOCfZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Count your blessLnas. but dun ·1 counl on lots or time to decide on this . 3 lx:autiful bdrms, 2 ha~. t•i<trui>. llu11y. $58,i'OO oo:J·5ti7l. ~- Walker c lee Ht1r:tl fstete HIWPORT HEIGHlS HSTtUY! ANXIOUS OWNER CUTS PRICE! Cwitom buJlt honw d1• lllgnl'd for t•nll'rt.unl!'I! and rum1ly run;:.! Massive lwJroomtl 1Jaeh with walk Ill ('IO~•·l11 1m1l pr1 vutt' bath. Ton~ 01 garage vark111i: l1('11rt 1)1 A TTEHTIOH ewport I lc1i:hl" on 0(H•I IHVISTORS med lot. $KS.500 Fu II 6 UNITS OCEAN price. C;.ill 64fi·7171 ir:~:~~ag~:::~: 1 ij·1uan1 arche<l courtyard & low -~ maintenance. Iii Rh in· NEWPORT HTS.' come w11l i;how rash now 3BR expanduble, 111 11 wllh minimum required super nhrhood w/hr<lw1I <.luwo pa) ment. Hurry fir~. H&O, w/w crl)1i-. for this unique find + Ext. new Spuni~h t (';\lJ.lll' many uther uweslment ~tucco. Ir~ trees & niceh Clpportunitws. Cull today lctscpd lot Lots of rm fur 9ti3·71181. xtrj H>h1c\e:. + dbl ga1. ( .. ,,, '11 q."'" 'I••) 11 " I.· S&!.000 lor r JSl Sale [ ~ m J, __ JA_c_6o_7~~6~~~LTY LOOKING .... ----------•I .. lor a home In Newpol l MESA VERDE 48R-fAMILY $84.500 lmmacul<1te :\lc::.a Venk 4 b1.·1Jroom doll h uUM'' lll'JUllfuJ l'ate!>•'ltcr Valley Realty ------ABANDONED B<•arh's t:ni.tbluff. llh: ASSUMABLE Canyon, Harbor ViL•W. Owner says sell now! Th.e Bluffs, Corona dl'I home. Slate t'nlry way PRICE C1gantic formal lh 111i.: YA LOAN Spacious c•ntry. 3 bedrm, Mar. H a Y c r c 1> t. k. h Turtlerock. Dov1·1· 2 bath. ~our met 1tc en, ""-r"~.·'> Wu h"VO lo\ ·'l v Excellent value (or this 4 formal dimni:. paneled ~ho"'m:;; & l't~nd~s lo ~h~ room -massi\'C wall of REDUCTION f1replJl'l'. Hui:e fJ1l11ly /\. sweeping view from roum. Spotle:.s l!ourmel this 1mmac. blfly de· k 1 L c h c n Sec I u de d l'tiratl?d & lndsl'pd 3 br. 2 master w1ni.: plus J ba. FH , atriumed morl' fam1lv ~11cd Turtlt'ro<:k home Woo<l bedroom:.. Ow11c1 decking, gas BBQ & lr:insferred 1\lu:.l ~1·c to more! ~5·9191 bedroom. 2 balh homt.' in l1\'1n~ rm with bri ck ~ U u n tin gl on Be a ch fireplace and near new you 111 ull lhc!.e art·~. Provides 01>portunity to eorlh lone carpets and much more ... pll'3ll1.: decor:ile, landscape. etc Name your terms. Only call for app'l. to your desires. Priced $65,000. C. F. Coleswortht aboul $4000 under AM s1m1lar properties. Bet· ORE REAL TORS 640-0oio 75:!-l 700 now! ~ belH'\'C.'. Hurry -call - Ler hurry lo see this al $55.!l:al. Please call for COME TRUE additional information 11nd appointment. IPYOU'Vf: ALWAYS W,\NTF.OTO I.IV!': ''' I )• '•' 1r -............... • NEED • • ~ CHRISTMAS • Ju!.l listed Just pro- fcss1onally landscaped and JU~l huge tree- ,.,haded backyard. H.oom (or une more un1l v.1th var1ancC' Enclosed i:aral'tes. Walk to ~hop· p111i.: and bus. Owner will t'JITY 211d 'Sti!J.~00 IAQuail ~ liilPlace Proper ti•• 752-1920 546-4141 ,., ·~ ... , COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. OHWATEA Wide Ope" View S ll9,500Fee 4BEDROOMS Comrnumty Tenn LS/ Pool - WATERFRONT HOMES REAL ESTATE 631-1400 l•OO OUAll SI NlWl'Otn alACM • ~ MONEY? : •t.H""'-.11numt tlu.-1,,,,,,. .... __ _ ••It,: o 1\ thu1iot HUii 1\''I • , ___________ _ EASTSIDE DUPLEX ~ rh•1u' A. lur tl U1c·rn •1110 fl ,.<tut luL" 1111111,., 'uu • .. t ·'" ,, .. , .UI .td U11'\ "" • .. uthld rtu f) tlh l11lnf .. .. 111111'1\l\:-Olllll' • "\ II I .1U 111 \ 11ut '. ·ornli1•'' • • • >w < lu' ttu.1~ I H ,. '' 111 411 t( •'l'i" .II l',t• h ., hut 'It\ • l11llH '•I\ 11th lhlU 111 t • .. 1••1h (.di l·I' ... ~ ,\ •I ~ ¥ • 1111 ' 1111 l 1111 tn ,1 \•l • • \I'• r 1-.1 1uu1 i w•11t 111.1 -41t 41 tu111 -tt ....................... l•SI CREOIToqS COUllTOFlHE 'LI FORNI A l'OR TYOF Oll•NGE ..... 5, E\l~te of H E!>TEll HARRV 8AAICER,.,l\O k ownd• CHESTC:R H 8AIU(EA. 0.<•-''•d NOTICE IS HE REBV GIVEN lo lhl' <rf'od1tor\ 01 lt'I,. <!lbo-w, ,,dtTU•d <.1K.f~ti1 tMt fll IM"on' ~~W1n9 c.1a1m\ ACMI•"'' It'!•• \l•d O,,.tfctent 1HP r~utrf'CI. f1h tty.rn with th~ n•(fl'\C.~'Y vo11C~'· in IN 01t1<,. of ,,,., ttt>rk nt Ou•~ .. rn ht "'1ft'tort nP"tno,.,.-..-nt l~m ~lhtrwt MO\\dtV ..,Ou< n.r~ lo lh" UndiAf,IQf"ll"'d \I ffh' law Olf1c•" n• Nt Wl•N TllC"ABIJllY & JOHNSTON IAll•n """ TMmt \ H Oownf•yt nJ W_.t.t v .. 11-nrn SU Ht Sun,. t JOO LO\ AnQl"lf'\ C.,litornt• ~n wl'\1C.,, " '""° Ol«' ot biAlf't\~ 01 tne unO.r\1qned in •II mat '~" Pt'fta1n1f'q to 1•\e "''*'*' ~ '"''d dtt cedf'nt "W1tnjn tour rnontn\ AftfH" Int: 11''' publlc•t ion of thl\ notitl'. oai.dO<tobtr •1. ••lb JOSEPHW DARK!:~ A<.tmin1\lrAilOr wtlh W ilt Ann~'""'"' tnfl' '"~l•t"O' f~ 1•bcH'" no1mf'rtdttf!,._," N f \111 1.IN , TACKA6UR'r & JOt4NSTON lh TIN1tnl\ H 0.. wne • 111 Wnl St•tnlh St., Suitt 1100 t..o• An9flt" C.tlll 900 II T•I 11131 Ut-7101 All«n•y•for Admlftl\lrotor CTA PUl>l•W>d Oranq~ Coe\I O••ly Pllol 0< I 1' 11 7q ano Nov S. 1•1• •)'l 76 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE OF SURPLUS PROPERTY NOTI CE I~ HEREBlf G•VEN 1'1at th• Ro11r<1 of Edut.\tton ot thr N"wOOr1· filv:i\A unul~tJ ~1 "oot Ot'\1.ict ot Ornnoe County. CAt1torn1A I' ftH ... rll\Q tnr wit ,..., 171 '"'""~~n T"" ~lno NO 11 Mt>~ri"ndf>~b(u; trt111t11tr 8•"\ to, t~ .-nu1o"'"u't wlll hi-'"' r111.v-of1 1n .,,,. oo,,.,. ot tn,. P;Jtr'°"'c1,,.,, 01r•tlor llJO Pt1t<ttntl" Str••I (O'\tA ~~. (3llfn'n'" VD 10 11> I'll) A. M ~"""" Hov 11 t•1• ,., """"" 0,,,. ,,_.,will bf 0Vt>f1c1y oo-r.fl'd ~ .. ~..,, •"""1 A0-001"'"""'"u to tn\O'"< t t"4!t •howft _..IOIC)mfl.f'lf m1'V tJo"' m4'(J~ b'f (4'1hftq ('1t\I•• T 1..~nq•n, PutthA\ln~ ~UOl'Nl\Or.•1 U&·J11>8 Bl«h for •.ch P•ect o• 11<1•~-"' tnv'1 be \1Jbm•l1"'1 en ..,•l•d """"100"• mat~~d "SURPLUS PROPER TV, 010 NO 1b TT." All 1AIM Ar~ fin3I Bidd•r~ •llOl.lld lt1· ""'<I I"" ~qulpmenl bfolorn blcldlnq rn. Ot\lrU t do.t: nof 9u.vM1"fH "°' vurrAnty 11ny lttt~ ~<>Al"\t ~tKt' Succt",tul b1dd1r• rl"h.1\l '"f'~ trw. P"nc>l'r1Y ,,, h•~ °"'" f'Wl)tf!n~• " .. ""'v"I mu\I l>P m-du" tlQ "'" nMmal .,.,,, ni-\\ 01'¥ ant1 l>t <Ot'l'\Ottt,.'1 w1t~n ~ ~ek nt ac<.-o'•nc• ot th• tt~d P"''"~"' mu\I bl' m•'1• •t Ut"' "V"<M't""l Ofl·<• b@tnrf' ""' f'flU'P. ,,..,.t t•nt»-f~Movtd trom the ~\ltl<• P•,.on~I cn~cl<• ,.,,. ~ •cttolecl C..lltorn4• Sl•I~ S.I .. IU pl 6 lfet<•n• ,.," bt coHecttd Aw••d wrn IM m<0<1" I" t~ ~ '" t•fHI• ol ll>e S<'-1 Dl\lt ltl, _.,.,, '"* hl~\I blclder Wiii lt(ti .. Of't r~e In,.,. •w•ttl of lhfo C>Jd. Tiit 119&td of Edvullon 1Mfr"9" m. rloM to ••letl ""' er •II btCla •rod to .... ,,,. ... , lrrequttrllY Of lnl6'm.olllV In '"" lllddlnq El'llOIOytt ol IM S<"°«ll 01.trki .,.. l"fllQ•bl• lo bid by Glre<llOI\ Of llW Boitrd of Eductl10ft. • Dtteo 0c1..-. ,. lt76 NEWPORT·MESA UN"IEO SCHOOi.. OISTllllCT of Or .... C-lv. Cetlfomla ~ot~Y HArv•y Fl~. P\lrCIWl""O Director, EASTSIDE COSTA MESA llOM~ Plus apartment SJ0,000. That's right S30.000! ~lust have all cash. Call 546-5880 •••HALF ACRE. 4 Br. 21: baths, ram rm, wet· bar. 2.700 square feel. Ucaut1ful t'nclosed $!rounds. $162.500 S.J .C. • BOMD REAL TY* 831·2212 or 831·9411 W/l.'l'CHr'OR THE 01\lLY PILCYf CHIU Sf MAS TR EE EVERVTHURSDAY General 1002 GeMral 1002 ················•······••··•······•······•••·• cae: BIDRGE ILllNS ca. OVER 50 YEAJl!S OF SERVIC£ LlMDA ISLE IAYRtOMT New Pier & Slip for Large Yacht Has Just Been Installed at This Lovel y Ba yfront Home! 5 Bedrooms. Family Room. Wet Bar. 3 Fireplaces. Terrace Deck with Firepit. $275,000 OPEH DAILY l ·S 210 VIA CORDOVA, LIDO ISLI Spacious split·levet contemporary 5 Bedrooms, entertainment lounge & wet bar. Separate guest qtrs. 3 Baths, patio with most unu~ual jacu7.7.i. Beautifully upgraded . $207 ,500. 111 DOVER DRIVE 631-1800 S©~~lA-L££~s · That Intriguing W orrl Gome willt a Cltuc:He -------141<•• ~, CIAT a. POUAH ------- 0 •totrono• ""•tS of tt.. '°"' KIO ..... ltd -.ft .... low ro ,_ lour ..,.p1e -dt I 12 I I I I~ I VORNEG I I DYHUC 1 1: \ 1· I I I' . I l ___ H_A_v_o_E....--41 L I lllo:e the 1phll end ,.,. 1 Ii I I j ntrne of thos. se-nior ci1lzet1s ... _ .. _ ----·----.. who for"*' their own Ir.cit ,.---------. team. TlitY•• "lied 1he -. I v E E s t R I ,, J ... ,-, -1 ..... , ........ , ... li .... 1..-t., ~= ~""' "':~ ~ ------------~'-...,No. J ""'"· r r r r r r r 1· I' r I I I I J I I I I I I I ,,._,,,, . Lovely double door entry leads to elegantly de· ~'tlratL'<I 4 bedrm, 2 balh home. Splendid pool pro· tt'cled from pryin~ ey'\s by luxuriant folial(e. Play house (or children. Everythin~ for enlcr- tamment and lu::.h II\ mg. II . Roberts Realty 11!41 ltacll 81Yd 11•.ilftCIOI BtaCh BY THE OC EAN Spect:icular HU• dt•$!. ocean v1cw & ma~n1fl· cent sun:.cts, tl11s 38!<. office & 4BA homl' W/ll sparkling pool at 4515 Or rington Avt•. in C.:am~·o Shores is h~h.'\l at qn>Y $198.500. ASAND&St: \ REALTY 675 8flll0 NEWPORT BEACt;t LUXURY Best buy in Haycrpi;t ! 2500 Sq. fl. uf pun• t:la8h' Four massive bl'<lroo'm~. with sl'rludrd ma:ilL•r E ts•d 0 1 X win!?. Sunny country as I e up e kitchen With all new Ull S75 000 pliances. includm.: b\11\t , • m microwave oven 2 /\ rare find on Costa Larf!e water h C'a Le-rs '.\tesa Street-call and + + + dccoralor's de· gel parl1cuh1rs! llitht. Don't miss all J.})1s lli for only $139,500 Cull ~i?rsil [~;;· ANYTIME ;·ai 1002 GMH'OI Ask About Our "Seller's Protection Plan" ASSUME $21 ,000 VA LOAN l te~ poof hontt, with low ..m.te1u•1ce yard, dttoched C)Cll"a«Je BUILDERS! O.tt 30,000 square foot cor ... r lot •oned aph.. Call Today OCEANVIEW SCHOOL DISTRICT 1002 $54,HO. 3 ledroom holM 0'1 lwge . lot. INcj yow llt.V. mid pen ft an ttte , sick! Freddy pohded, HW corpet llw.,.ttout. SIEK & flNlt JAMES MADISON 0 U 1 C 0 A 0 R l A H 0 I T A H A B t G T A C 0 J T l P P A C E P F E G I F R S .M J N H F E D A H I 0 R E W H l 0 A I M A D I S 0 L A T N E Y 0 ( L R B L E H V G E T S H 1 C A S T R R 0 T H A K E Y R 0 H I A S l C l N l E F M E R G S E l R E E T I I E D U E I R C H E B T 0 V N F H l U H P E 0 A L l H A D 0 l H C 0 Y 0 D 0 T P N C N E C ( H E Y 0 R E H A N N L 0 I T E S P H N l F l I L 1 H J E F f H T 0 G E T T R L E A T W L 0 G I N I A V G N H N S Y T H 8 A E J E F F E R S 0 N A G 0 N 0 0 T M R H T P Y L I L 0 P l R T M 0 M N l E N 0 E l 0 P A N R E l 0 D I C R nrt -: 1 worm below •PIMtr orwt , .Cll· wrd, up, dowft Ot dltQOOatly. Fond •ed\ end boll It In,~ Dolley Jefferson Constitution J Ghtnt Montpelier Fort McHenry ~ Napoleon New Orleans National Road \I V1rg1n il Tippecanoe The ftderalht TOllOJ"l'OW: Hod.gt Podge 11Jrt• ~1"'" 0r-c;o.,, o.i1, Pit(!!. scuM-&.ETS .,.,wft'I "'c1ost1flcotloft nso. ,.,.._"' 1t, ma ttn·r• L:..:.:.:..:.;.;.:..:=.:.::.::.:.::.:.:.:.:..::.:..::.:.;=:.:.:.::::=:.::.:::.~=:===================~- l ' ~~!~!!.~~.~ ........ j ~c:'!!~!.~~~~ ....... ~~:.~~.~~ ... .' .... ,~~~~.~.~~ ....... ~c:'!:~:.':'.~.~ ....... ,~c:4!:~:.~~.s:!:. .... : .• Hous .. flor 5* IHousff For S. • HcMn.H For SciW ' GaMf'.t I OOJ GeMrol I 002 GetMf'of I OOJ GnMrel I OOJ Gwnl I OOJ G...... I 002 '-..1 'D.f. DAIL V PILOT Friday November S. 1978 .... , '·····················1······················· ······················· ..................................................................... ._. ········~·············· ............................................. . ~~....,... t002Gewral • 1002 GaMral 1002 ~4'· ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.. Best Of Mission Vieio j·~: . . . " r~ ~' . HIWPORT HIYGHTS 'MIT POOL ., Un beautiful J bedroom cltalet mit 1 • ' gorgeous pool ln Newport Heights. ,.,. ·· Remodeled with new kitchen, baths, :~· · tile counter tops and mirrored closets . · All d er best quality, by old world ·; crafts men, at $110,000, ya sure! U~lf)UI: tif)Ml:S REAL TORS': 675·6000 ;'' 2443 East Coast Highway, Coro11a def Mar also 1n Mesa v .. rdr. at 546 · 5990 . ,. Gewraf I 002 GeMf"GI I 00 ~······················ ..•........•.......... ILUFFS DOLORES MOOR -view end unit. greatly upgraded. 3 Bdrms., 2ih baths, w e t bar, la rge wra p-around d ec k . Imm aculate! $152,000. Exclusive -by app't. only 673-4400 , ~u~ ---..... ~IUllAL~ · 2ou 1 ... n14e.N.1_ 646-4463 WANTS .• .,snlesper son. Please c·alJ or come by. HORSES? Room t o r oam your horses here, comrortnblc ram ily bom ~. only S4tl,tl50. Call for de-luil:s. Huntington leach SEABREEZE POOL + JACUZZI Prestigious Huntington Beach location. Spacious Ll.kc rtew 5 bdrm .• 21.i. bath home in choice a rea. Xlnt fl oor plan (Tht' Mad.rid) for large farruly. Upgraded car pet s & drap es. P ro ress. landscaping. Restful view of canyon & mts. Full size 3 car garage. Owner being transferred -realist 1cully priced at $125,000. P ossession c lose of escrow . Bluffs 603 Vista Bonita OPEM DAILY l..S P.M. S h arp 3 bdrm., 21.,<z bath condo: exceptionally attractive greenbelt. An x lnt value at $115,000 H°"" £uol.uoti~ -IC.J ebe.igoli~ • • CORONA DEL MAR· 675-3000 two·story condo w ith I huge ma~ter suite fi rst G....,.al I 002 G.....-ol I 002 nooc plus two twin·siz.e •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• bedrooms upstairs. Twin patios, separate laundry room, professionally up· graded thruoul. S63,9'.x>. CALL now 962·7788 ~ KE:Y R€AL TOR.SIC Close to Schools 5 Bedrooms Luxurious 4 BR~ home. Family rm. & formal dining. with view t oward Harbor I sland. Boat slip. $325,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bay\•u~· Dr•vr NB 67S·6161 DMsfon of H.-bor lny.stmeftt Co. NEWPORT, H ARBOR !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!1-I HIGH, UC I. E'r e cw a ys f',. near, yet out of beach ~~~!'! .......... !?.~~,~~~:! .......... !~~~ · GNerol t 00 G"9erol I 002 traffic. Shop at Wcstclrff. Easts1de Costa Mesa. $88,250. l'·or appl. cull .......•..•........... .....•.••.••..••.•..••. BEACH GIANT N C Cl b Cool ocean breezes bathe , r ountry U this fantastic 3 Br, 2 bath Pool home. Mc:.a Vl·rde :.plat ll'\ l'I ~1ant. Jlui.:e :1 Bech m, den, 2 bath. rorncr fol w /cus tom I' r 1 t' l' cl r l' tl tH' l' d t •) la11t•c t'oH•red pallo t- ~ 500 ('all for aool room for Ht V. Complrtc· . ~UPERB HOMES ly uri~radrd. Less than one rmle from the blue P Jcif11:. Priced under $75,000. Call ror appoint· ment. 842-25.35. . ~::::~~~ [ ij'lii 01·l'an \'icw, pr1valt• fleat•h right~. rnmb111l' 'w spac11111s ·I Bil :!BJ\ Ill ,prlnll' Cll \l a l'\'.I for l"ll'l'll'l'l family huirw. AH new apt:-. fir-. t·~tm drps, kit apµI s . Sl21i,f;OO .Sh t• w n l1) a v µ l. b ) .owner Open lloust' Sat & ~n I 5 IH<I 0558 VACANT $46.950. lteally to movl' rnto 3 "Eroom on largt• \:Orm·r ~ ol j'l.c" ly PJ ir11t•'1 irJ111I new c..irpels fur l<JWltli"O I'll.OT ll F: \1. F:ST \Tl-: .'>1110."~j S IDRMS I.ct\ t•I\ r.1 m hnmc• in btfl '' \ 1111· l ummunlt) Near !>-di•••"' & ucccss..ihh· tn trwys. ~lay IK' punh.1,c·d subJed tu C'(l,llnl! '"" in terei.~t:l luan 1.11, !ill. TWO ON A LOT Rr~ind nrw. one home has 3 h1h, 2 bas. the olh<'r hns '1 hds ! Rui It by om· of our bt•st It.Kai bldrs. Xlnt l':ASTSI DE location, Cood :.ct up for you & the Arandparents, or for rn- l'(lme properly. Our ex· dui.ive listing. 646-7711. ••• 4 HDROOM HOME UNDER $60,000 TMalrd in the Cameron 1-:. .. tall•.. ol fine home-;. <tourmet ki tc h en w1 formal dine. Crackl· lnj:! fire-place m~e yard and pJt10 Ju~t listed. He f!Nl to call for this um· que find! 963·6i6i • O·,I< t 11,.lfll,..,Nl(l' 400E.17". FOR All C.Mt!Blhw IESTIUY INIRVINE 3 nice bedrooms, cozy fireplace in family room, step.sa ving kitchen with pantry, even a dining room and carpeted lanai. Cus~m drapes. nice wall·tO·Wall carpeting. decorator wallpaper and no association dues. Located in one M lrv1ncs top locations and priced to sell at S68,000. Call now for appomlmel)l to Sl'l' and appreciate. 673-8550 !"Vi!f•J 'l 'I• f "VI I, ( [e:IU~H;I CHOICE TURTURO CK Plan 3. 4 bdrms , 21 ~ LIQUIDATION • PAIR OF 4-PLEXES together_ or separate. Each with (2) JBR + (2) 2BR units, Costa Mes'a. Can be sold separately. Both for only $259,000. FOURPLEX. all 2BR Anaheim, all one story. Only $95,000/lO':o down DUPLEX, Huntington Beach. R eally nice. $67,000/ 10<"/o down. Both arc 2BR. Big lot HOME & INCOME. 3BR and Duplex. (2) 2BR on a lot in good area of G~rden Grove. Only $89,000/ 15% down TWO UNITS g. GUEST QTRS.' ( 1) 3 & den, orily $59 ,000/ 15% down , Westminster . GOOD PROPERTIES BEIMG SOLD IEj:AUSE OF PARTNERSHIP PROBLEMS. BY OWNER /AGENT, 540-0555 bJths; l~e. ramify rm. G~Mrot 1002 GeMrat 1002 with ,gleaman~ hclwcl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• nrs.; formal dinmj! &i---------brkfst. rm. Charming atrium openini:? orr fam1 · MESA VERDE lyrm &kitrhcn Beautiful tri-levcl 4 OPEN SUH. I ·S bedroom home. Formal 19472 Sierra Chula d11uni;, large family I~ room with l ovely ... L[• };• 1 l ~;r::ala~~~a~r~:utfr~~~: . 1 _!!!!~ii~ landscaped. $86.900. • 675-5930. 640-6161 CALL NOW ... YOU'LL BE GLAD Wb~n you sec Lhts 01} m pk size back y<ti 4+ II!. ram. rm -frml. din ing-2 story-frpl. Spar new home nr. So. Ccia!'ol Pfau. Only $7~,900. l.:all 962·7751 INT'L R. E. NETWOHI\ ATTENTION LARGE FAMILIES; Enjoy lots of elbow room ln this large Monterey located in the prestigious ''The Ranch" in Irvine. 6 Bedrooms. oversi7.c<l lot, plus more. 3000 Sq. rt. One yr "BPP" wa rranty. $91,500. Call lo see. CALL NOW 752-7315 DONALD M. BIRD A ssocia tes Realtors G~ral 1002 IGeMral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ESLEY N ~YLOR CO. HEAL.TORS ~111ct.· HMS ILUFFS -GUIHlll T VIEW and walk to pool. Much desired plan on 3 levels. 2 L ge bdrms & paneled den with fireplace. Mirrored formal dining rm. Wet bar. air-cond. 2 pa tios. Decorator perfect. Lease $750 mo. 2 fl I San~ Hi•s Rood NEWPORT CENTBt, H.I . 644-49 I 0 I 002 G~nerol 1002 ·••··•······••·••···•·• .•.....•.•........•.•.. KIDS, Cats & Do9s Will luvc· this l:m:<-yurd 'l'lll'1r p!1rt·nts \\Ill Ion th\• 3 lJtlrm. honw 1n Co:.t.a ~I esa at 2001 ARNOLD OPEN SAT /SUN. I ·S FE,EL CRAMPED? '\nt in lhL' lo\ l°I>, l.1r,11c lam1ly home: :l huge W.rms. t family 1 m . I '• h.1. All nt'" C'~lrp. Unc ol ~;a st 51dt• ' hl'1'l .1 rt•..i-., !lUIL'l l'UI dl' Sd C oft ot ~rel Slrccl. OPEN DAILY I ·5 2311 FAJRHILL Pyramid Exchcmqors 833-1768 - JlTS~ LISTED PRICE SLASHED! 48EDROOMS PLUS POOL Private roadway leads lo trrple car garage. Secluded executive tile entry! Dining r ntertain- m l• n l. Epicur ea n k1tt·hen. Separate mom· Hl law quarters w/bath. !>o.inng :.la1rcase to IJcdrooru relr~lS. Lus h 1r11p1t·al ba c kyard " :.h101mcring :.ummcr fun pool. Skinny dippers delight! Owner buui;ht nrw Mu!>t sell. T ry $9,300 total down I S47-6010. ,.,,,,.,,.,')·ff~l&J~l ''°'f''· f• [ ~z.IU&IU1] ATTENTION VETS! 2 Master bedrooms, 1th baths, custom bar,Very upgraded Townhome located one mile to surf. Choice end unit. $SO,OOO. Here's your chance to own in Huntingtoa Beach wider the Vet Loan Program. CALL PHYLLIS SAL YElt 962-4454 Coah&W~RNlll .... IK. ,02' ............... ..... IOOJ GMet'lll 100% •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .~ •••• ~~*********** MANAGER WANTED ******************* For a well known, expanding r eal estate company. Opening a n ew office in Costa Mesa. Must have experience & integrity. Salary plus +. All applications confidential. Apply to Daily Pilot, Box 791-ClassHied Advertising. 330 W. Bay, Costa Mesa. 92626. . GeMrol I002GeMt'al 1002 ·········••············••••••••·•··•·····•···· SECLUDED MANSION 4 Large bedrms on wooded corner lot. Formal dining , s te p·down living rm, fplc in family room, s tep out the back slider into private yard with pool & jacuzzi. Priced to sell, owner mus t move east. NO MONEY DOWN Just clos ing cost moves you in . Veterans. here it is!! 3 Bedrms. 2 baths, great neighborhood, quick occupancy OK. Only $65,900. Hurry! POOL & JACUUI Show off your new home, .that's what you '11 want to do when you own this cus tomized 2 story pres tige ·home. 4 Bedrms. huge family rm, dblc door entry with BEACH OUPLEXES T"u bdrm. huu'l' & 2 bclrm ;1pl, 1111cr clh\. garage. N11·n patio: ~tt•ps lll ht•tlCh, ~I :10,1100 :1 Udrmi.,1 1111. house w1lh .1 sinJZk up\. "' rL•ar. Slc•p:; to bc11l'11. S!J7,f;IKJ exceptiona l decoration. HEW LISTING! I You'll love this one. N~wport Heiqhts OPEN SUN. I ·S ' 3 ~~sE~oMgi~fE~~ve. ~~~~r.!.~unun~~~e!1 Y (.'hurmm~ 2 bdrm. house ~:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ti73·3ti63 673·1i08ti Eves associated IJAOll:EAS-AEAL TORS J02S W lolboa • 11 JU l CORONA DEL MAR VlEW .\ brNrthtnking '!cw of the ,ral"lfic· .ocean .111d w,..ll>lhnc plus ouhlJnd 1nJ? quality 1n th11' beautiful t'ustom home. 5 tx-clroom1'. IJm1ly room. laq:c enough lur l11lli.J1 II table. formal d1ntnR llcam cd ccilrngs , planked Cludri. and wurm c·ountry dt•cnr Spt•t•ial f1·aturl's too numcroui-to plus guest quarters; frplc.; room for boat, camper or whatever. .Large 7511. lot. S89,500! OCE.ANFRQNT Sl0,000 l'ncc reduction! Deluxe dClplcx. 2 Large umts, 2 BR .• 2 baths ~ach. $179,900! MESA VERDE Grat·1ous 4 bdrm . 2 ba .. spotll'-;~ -h:c. lot de- tached gara~c. Sll0.000! COSTA MESA EASTSIDE J Units ·S89.500! 4 Units· $128,000 Balboa lay Prop. Rem tors * 675-7060 * Quickie Jumper! Glitter Magic! l ~lfltMll :Jr..1'; E. l',t II\\' . Cd 1\1 ~ mcnt1011. ~l!J!J,500. CJll 1---------•I Walker 8lee Real lstale Wont ads Ca II 642-567 :t.~F'aJ 1002G .... ,,al 1002 .;······················ .....•........•••••••.. '· .. •f• 11 ' ;JI , .. ;, , .. . :. ·. "'. "· macnab I Irvine realty fl HER HOMES FROM $74,500 TO Sl.200,000 ,RIME IHVISTMINT! Thi-. lnvPly duplex <h•fin1lely has GIH:AT p o t ential for WCt'kly re ntal during iwa~nn JUSl l lf.i hlocks from hooch -lots or cha rm & pnt·cd to sell al $130,000. Bob OWt'llS 6 t2·R23S. (Nt I) HOADMOOtl IUUTY - TURTUltOCK P I " n :i C a m p u s V i e w -3 be<lroorns. family room. formal dining, brirk fireplace, 2 baths, J{ourmct kitc hen & indoor/outdoor entertaininJ!. $89,900. Vee Stinson 642·8235. <N12) KUP COOL Great little 2 bedroom + den home shows like a model w/rich brown carpeting. Beautiful Ule jacuzzi in privare rear yard w/lattice patio. $74,500. Lynne Rothell 644·6200. (Nl3> 1.14 ACUS! Choice bui ldablc estate property -close to heaches, boating & shopping. $197,500. Elaine Svedeen 642·8235 (Nl4) IA YNONT LOT Finest location on Prom ontory Bay! Selle r has Coastal approval for doc k & slip. Drive by 624 Harbor Island Dr. -the only lot for sale -build your dream home. $189,5 00. Cathy Schwe ickert 642-8235. (N15) M2·1ZlS 901 Dover Drive 644·6200 "erbor View Canter .. 673-85SO • •LAKEl-'RONT with pnvate bench. 4HH. JIJA. $!15,(KlO W ' .. down OH COATS &WALLACE REAL ESTATE, INC. will lca~t· ~iOO per mo. -- nr1 r4 ''' 1 • 1 ~ '"''"'n flt,..,,-,• option. t~' d wh w · ------. . Try a U.11ly P1l•1I OWNR/AGT 540·0555 ~n .1 Pi?\ t~u To~t 111 Sell things Casl with Daily Classified Ad to buy, 11<.'ll a1 Y o assi ie s. Pilot Want Ads. or rent ,.nmrthmJ.!. GIMf'GI 1002 Gttterol 1002 ...................•.•...............•...••... file~~~.~~~ CROWN POINT. LAGUNA Prcsl1J,!1ous n e11-{hborhood location on ocean side of hwy. Just a block _ from Crescent Bay Beach. Extra large 3 bdrm., custom built home. Man y bui It-ins. 2 mst r . s uites, pool. All in mint cond. $179,000 A CO&.DWILL IAHICll CO. 644-1766 2151 SAN JOAQUIN HILLS RD. IN NEWPORT CENTER !:~~!'! .......... !~~~,~~::~!'! ........ ~.!~~~ Did you Imo~ Newport Beach bas: 2464 WATERFRONT HOMES 1776 WATERFRONT HOMES onthebay.channels,canal 1132 WATERFRONT HOMES withprivatedocks 688 Oceanfront Homes Batonlyl WATERFRONT HOMES'RealEstate 'lnereare only 4& actively listed for SJ le! l'f'!Cf\.1'1 ................ N~~·-'""ltlt"I~ ...... ~.\T' ~'' "1 H f\MfGl'l""""''••flft•• N~..,1~tt H_.IWW • (MH ,...... 0 .. tfj Of n• .. tftt'41 t"t_.,,,... •• , .. ,. ,,.~ '' M••t t ''' f't•)t Cl•• , .. ,. Hyouwlsh to buy ·sr ·renta WATERFRONT HOME call WATERFRONT !!PES~¥S . CB 631-1400 ~I I 2633 W. Coast Hwy. Nei..vport Beach POOL ESTATE $59,500 P rivate cul·dc·s:ie! Secluded tile entry to ex- puns1ve li\•ing room wilh Palos Verde s tone hearth ·a mas te r piece! Epicurean k 1trhcn h1~hli~htcd by formal dme' Hich wood panel ing :ind sparkling paint! S wl'cp 1n j! ma:.ler brdroom retreat• Child safr rear yard fenced for safely with sp.irkling summer fun pool! Seller anxious. Call for details! H-17 IAllO u·; ?• •11 ">I I '• -1 •" 3'12 Acs lock Bay Large ranch style home ovt•rlooking Upper Day und s urroundini:s. 4 )t('(lrms, dining rm. family k1tchrn. lgc den wit h wet b;,ar nnll dark room, tkaut1ful r1or1I Sl'l in ("<pansivc i;card1•11s ,\! t' n t l' r t a i n i n J.! t· e n tcr SLUest house S.'>50,000. PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 642-5200 S,AHISH VILLA 3 IEOROOM +pool Aenutlfut tiled C'ntry lo hu.:e l1v1ng 111om . Crarkl1ng r1rrplnc~. It o u r m e l k 1 l t' h l' n " brl'akfai.t area S~rve thru window lo pn' Jl c v11t10. Space for H.V. purklng. L-Ocatcd near schools nnd shopping. JlarJ(ain price at $54,900. Hurry I Call 963·6767. •"f'' JJl 9 • H \ ll'tl !OM "1'<(1 [~lftltl TUSTIN GREENS! 2 Br Condo. Squeaky Clean! Urcnl for Stnrter Home or lnvc!llmcnl. S43,950 t Century Financial Rltrs <THE llOM ESELLERS) 7~·~. Dlll Madigan ,_ SIZES 8-18 ~ 1lT~i,_ 1ff e.....-r-- PUll STRI NCS 'to nip the w11st of this sew qu1tk fumperl Whip it up 1n a d~y ot smooth flanntt or knit to te.m with tlass1c st11rt 1n stripes, prints. Printed Pattern 9192: M1ssef S11rs 8. 10. 12. 14, 16, 18. Size 12 lbu\t 341 1umper 2•,4 yds. 54". <h11t P~ yds 45w, Send SI .00 tor each oattern Add 35( for etch Nlltrn for f1r!1 ·CIBn 1lr111111. lnnrllinq Send to Munan Marlin Pallern Dept. 442 011ilyP1lol 232 We~t 18th SI .. New York. NY 10011. Prinl NAME, ADDRESS, ZIP, SIZE and STYL.E NUMBER Do you know how to 11t • pattel'!I free! Send 11tw for outt new ran.winter "•ttern C11Jlo1-c11-coupon inside fer fru patt1111 or your cllolct. s1n1 n, 11ew' Sew -1-Klllt loot S 1.25 lnstut Mo111Y Crttts S 1.00 tnstl•I h a•lon ltolt Sl.00 lnst11t . ~wl-. lotk '1 .00 Sldtl carlYI rill your tree with &parkllni crochet tri ms! Lal\ of Chmtmas glitter lor pe11nlu! Crochet lovely tree ornaments quickly. easily or p,old or silver yarn. P11lem il32: an2el, tree, ~tar. grad· u1ted balls, bell$. Dlrect1on~. $ t.00 for uch pattern. Add JS; uch p1ttem for flrsHlan 1lrm1ll and h1~dlin1-Send to: Allee Brooks Noodlecr•lt Dept. 105 Da•IV Pilot • BoK 163. Old Chelsel Sta, Now York, NY 1001 1. Prtnl Ni\me, Address, Z•P. Pat1e1n Numbor MORE than ever btlore1 200 designs plus 3 free prl11ttd In· 'ide NEW I 976 NEEOtECRArr CATALOG! Has everyth1n2. 75c. Crochet with S41uru $1.00 crochet 1 W1nlroll1 _$1.00 1Uf1Y fifty O•lllS .... --$ 1.00 Rl,,lt Crochet f 1.00 Sew + ltrtlt ltok _ 1.25 "ttdltpolnt IMll _fJ,00 Flowtr Crochet look ~ .. ·-1.00 Hairpin Crochet look _ 1.00 Instant Croclllt l ook \JlQ lnstJnt M"r1•• look I .00 Instant Monn look • • 1.00 Complete Cllt look '1 .00 Complete Alp.tnt l l4 $1.00 12 Prlrt Afl'm 112 50( ...It of 11 Qtllta II so, Moeu• 11111t •••k n soc tS Qllllb fer Today 13 _ 5011 ... It er 11Jltrr111111 _so, t l • ' .. ~~!~!.~~-~~ ....... !!~!!.~~~-~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~~~!.~~~.~~....... '"day.November 5 1976 ' DAILYPllOT DSC ~~~~ .......... !~.~~ ~~!~!:4~~: ....... !~.~~ ~.~~ ... !~.~~ ~!'!~.~~.!~.~~ !':~ ............ !~.~~ ~.~~ ..... !~~~ ~~!.~~.~~ ....... j~c:4!:::.~~~.~~ ........ ~::.~~.~~ .... ~ ... . SPANISH 0 1t'lwr Wr dt•n J1,b11. IW OWNtR. a Br P~ 811. Univ ParltTwnbse 3 br 2 H•wport leoc.h I 069 N.•pot1 haclt I 069 Son Cl~ l,07, TRI-LEVEL 1111 lrml yd lOl7 \l uJ)ll· r:•m r~ xlnt locu 'on -ba. din.rm , utr iu,;,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••-IEACH 1~-~IU !ZJJi5•nt!WJ h ry...(lean. Open I e. $ti9,000. By ownr IYOWMER ASSUMES40.000 O\wni:r,Shr l '•bJ CO\' ~~o~ n 1 2·~P t . ml ~. oficlo ~ ~ 2 Ur h~ll.SS2.~ W.1lk Ouuhh• cluc>r 1 ntn to 1·n·1I 11.i11u. Ill'\\ pu1nt L" •·1 ~.,, ...,., WHl...r:GLOVE • to "IUv1t•r ;i l\r ;it'h': ... n ~ y. -··"""· "'--• r--·-fl!; t L,( e CQO \U, Prll\lll ICX. Get l'lt·~Jlll r.11'1•11 II' In¥ ~.IA)O ~Q.)11~ Only nE4iU ~ur; Clean, and Y"'"' own l'-u i.I r d rHum \\1111 i:r.111.1 ct,1 'ha.AAl:!t//lY "" ii :.t nl•d y wrd. CtHr ,,, .. ,,,Jl< Hirr11.d l.11111111; Smnrt & Modern, 3 Br ~ land CaH us lo t.e\! lhl< BAYFRONT EXCLUSIVE Paer & patio v,·ry ctean lllMdu, mcim llu11t• U.t1 l0rl1111.1 $49,500. Townhumi: With Vl\'W uoWTH .. T'S !::u~yoll&e)~bhaellpoo&ls. ll'kll· slip. 4 BR., 4 ba. $275.000 ~mrtls~c.· ronldlllor.,c.·n ~111 ICJrllt•n \ "'" l..11 d10•11 Costa M•so l'rr m e ~· V. loc<lllOn " '"" ' par " .. at u II n ~\ .. HOME' around it . 3 Bdrmi. .. 21, ,. 1 1 0 s ,. r I ll''\J var I) 'oum \I, nh 3 llf)(l\l 2 buth, b111 lot SM 000 J\gt 963 6767 -SPACIOUS 2 bd h I b ... on l ' I • "' u t•a ".11101111 .... '"."'"''"'h ll urr.v 011 thi:. ~ne . · · · · Trilevel Execut1\'e home ba.~.500 rm. omc. nrgc ri~ -t!l8J005 I t d I ti N 0 R 1 N S puho W /fountains & "'Utdoor n"'r' d••n ~r11u111b \l.111111111·11t l'ILOT IU-.1\L. ESTAT E, Huntlttgton hcrch 1040 Ot'll e n prc.•i. g lOU:! ~ " ..... .... • m;L,lt•r .. ,1111· ''"'I l<\H'l'P ~10 05."1~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Goldcnwcst Park. TWO· 552·1000 R E A L T y room . $165.000 v A CANT "'"' .,,.,11, 111 "'i·und ,., "', :o; t o r y • 4 b c d r o om OPEN HOUSE -wtt·' '""m•· :.10.1100 • -MALIBU modl'l with THr ·.·. . . COZY brick frplc. tor snuggle time. FRl·SAT·SUH 1 ''' 111.111 ~o •w" l11Jt1 over :?ooo sq ft. Cent. 1;. EXCHANG! adds an inti m ute touch to this 3 bdrm ru\tl> S.l!IK 11111 l••I\' Jll BY OWNER -~ A/C&luxurythruout. VILLACE .. '.' Triidc your lnrome pro. home. $147.000 928Av..Sal•ador (',1.1,1 H•i3 i~J MESA VERDE -Call 842·9371 REALTORS perty equity for th~11 \'Oil Oecanvic.•w homu In ~"" ood t:l<"mc.•ntt1. the Newport 1 Jll)Jl \I, 1'001.. SW,000 Real Estate R lempocary w & ~la~!!, LIDO REALTY Bc ud1 or tomorrow W l I ' I r a (I e by~~ OWNER EDUC ED: ~ L-leach I 048 ocean view hom\• tn I l ..,....rms or 3 + d en un --·-uJ ood Come & St'l' l 1 :. un ''wn .. , i\"."111 .• •10 "'-SS or ·~"' • I· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Q et, w sy llluchlrd ll77 Via Lido, ..... 1. 673 7 ' • ~ '' "" que firc plac dream ,.._ "d " • 300 bt'llt'\'ablc \'{tluo:. Tb1• 5."1i 511111 k h c . . • TltEMENDOUS ...... nyon 3 o rms . & 2 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 111..e rww homt• Is rc-a<f~ VOTE FOR ME'· ·1Lc e n . n e w price. F .... ,.1lY HOME baths. Owner looking for Eastside Charmer .! llo-.h 0•>111 ~ ctc•n ,'(. 2 liJth~ 111.1!..1 I h" rt· 111011!1·h·ll h'"'"' .1 11r .. 1 "" 'uur h't lo 1·1" 1'111111 1-. ... l '<l rio• llll'JlHlll 111 \\ 1• .. ll'l1ff .. 1101111111:.: S69,9SO. HA TE TO PA.INT? ....;,, rwl'!I t11' Tht., vaC'ant \l,·,,1 \\•rck :1 hcdroom . L1m1t~ roum home with 111 q1l.H t• 1:. rcadv to mh\ 4' llltU n.:ht rlOW 1 \\1th" gr,•at rc.·l'reallonal IMl111 l.111:a1ed 111 a real 111111t• of H\I. ncri.h 1p 11ughh11rh11od .ii only ~,;'OJ' CJll ~16·2313 I • ~.:500 Turbell,RLTRS, ....,... i ncom e -pr o p ert y lo movt' 111lo. wi ne\\ l tan't bc:,bcut'"SSJ.950" r all842·88!1 Exquisite (am home. 4 a ny '¥hcr e ID Or anj?e LogunoHi~ 1052.Vwporthach 1069 crpci.&drp." Comc&:.c• J bedrm. X-clean an nice Br. 3 ba. Cam room. wood c 0 u n 1 y . :\f a r k c 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• at only Sl 1$,000 <SJ• <'Olldo \'illage. New Ille. O WNER AN X I 0 US : & g ! a s s., i. au n a. vaJue~$l2S,OOO 01eltO F'tw~, f.:I Camm• recently painted up Cl~e to sandy bcachcs.3 arc batect s p e r sonal UNIQUE turnoff lcn . foUow s11t11 stam i umt. Cull today-bdrms. fa ~1ly room home. Sl85,000. LIVE to top or hill I J\~t won 't lai.t ! C ollect -a.rc a , c h e f s dre a_m : .... ,u" Boy Tu :i <I~ ll!31>orl).1~.~ Hurn". 968.4456 kitchen. Garden paUo. -~.,...,-.,...._ ·--AT THE IE.ACH 4 8r hom e S\l.N~ping ------ SIGH UP HERE 21a car gur.ige. $67,500. --...,<WU:UMI=:-:: for 32,SOO Spacious 2 view of CK'n & Catalmu OCEAN VlfW , f:x<'lus ive M e r ed ith 962Tar_.~l'· RLTRS, call ~ Bdrm . 2 b11tb m obile from \Cr} rm Lg. "eJ WOOD&GLASS ~ 1020So.Coast Hwy494·8519 home. Prime \'leW loc:a· :>Ide terrace & ba<'k~d .:-.. .. " all wood. 3 6dr n· Gardl'ns Tri-leve l. -~---------1 Lion pool pol~nt1al T ern ~ " B<l l~o ny ovt•rlooks 2 lrviM I 044 Porarily 111 SISS.000 U> :!': h.1. fltm1ly room. c.ln SIOf'Y li\'ingroom. lsola t ••••••••••••••••••••••• (11> £:0 * 494-805 7 * ownr 491;.i;:.'7! or673.01t!O HARIOR VIEW IOI? rm. :i car garng1 ed master , S<>pr din rm RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN ..1 ~ ------------------- -CARMEL i;ood occ~in \•icw !\lu• HEALTH FORCES SALE· S52,7SO Marble. f1repl•11'e & mrr· 3 fir 2~i &. PoPUlar San · (11 ~~:o m 1 )lonarch Ba) Tl'rra<'c -I :J BR. 2 BA, l'Ol'lli•r lul '~l' lo <Al>Pn•c·. $149.500 ror . Privat ll ya rd Luis Rey. Many up -{g ' \~ ---~1-ngo br.3ba Sl-19.500 !'ran P ro f ci.:.1 0 11 .1lly ns:°"----- w1cov'd patio Quality & Rradl.'s. View Rolf course c,, ~· •.. ) ~·~ ·-0111). Open h~t· Sun : .a. hindsca1>Cd Atrium ..... WAMS POOL TIME! !'ride l>hows thruout. I & lake. sns.ooo. S.17·i~4 <..,:) • 1131~ alltipm 673-760 I ~ J<,,,.,., •·'lnt1l' Palms sur· ~rranty.9G8·4 tS6. or833·3215 c./ / EMERALD BAY Mission Viejo 1067 LlDOJSLE 3 Rfl. 2Ua 1,. 1020SoC011•1Hw~494·851 t·uurut ttu~ 1mnlarulate J ·---------•i E r ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ,.. l nu-.u.11 11m>i.>rlu111\ \ 1u .. wu 111,,, 1..irl!•' 111W11 ..,,, 1·1 1 3 11\•ll rnom :1 h.ll tr T11wnhu1110· "1( It huge• hcmu:. 1 00111, 1dt·..1I lt11 J Jl<IOl 1 at.lo·"' ,11 ll •I l11clc a w:1v <iourm..t I.rt• lll'n o\1•tl•1ok ho•;1u11rul 1111\,11\' p.11111 'l'hr-p1 11 hdrm & fa m il\' rm N \V Un iv k Peters REAL ESTAT E pallo. mo<krn kttchc.•n Santo Ana 108 hmnl'. with •' M;cl uded VictorianCharM Twnhm 3 Br 2h Ra, ••• J UST OFFERED. OPEN SUNDAY $139.5 00. fl y u wner •••••••••••••••••••••• \nthiiny IJ""' O nly Double door entry l<'ads Populnr C Plan . Xlnt loc. Charmin~ 20R + den Only lO''r down for thu, H73-«llS. Charm 2 OH. S30.900 si~i<rn to lovely large h vmg $98.500 . 547-7044 or HearC--.Jetion h om e w/Spl'l'l u<.'ulllr det:orak r Mlldrid 620! "8 C t 9 '~ "' room. Master bcdrm has 833-3215 ....... .,.. whalcw:.iter views. hrdwd 23422Ca mpestrc MAGNTFICENT 3 Br. IRO R , ostu J\ c~& S4 .90 ba y window s a n cl ----------1 S pectacular wood & n be ·1· h b.)•Trubu"'··o·•·Al1'"ra de"'"f'<' occun view, n<>w Own/:1g t S5G·1200' lll'l'l\ I 'I"'''" "' "' 1101111111<·111 111tt\ l•ti· "' ' ill kl'' .!· •. 1 .. Bclboo l~lond 1006 ·•········••·•·······•• ~ "Tl l lt \ I lun11 ~ \pl u \ t • r i! t I -.I J! l "\ I '\ u 11.J~ Bill ll,11 do".L\ ll1•;1ll1>1 ~ I J '.11 I. \ \ 1• Iii[) :.'111~1 Balboa Peninsula 1007 ······················• JI It :.! ' J I\ ,1 II ,. \\ 'I""''""' ,µ111 IC \ C'I \\ lrph r .• m rm. & dbl i,;.,1 '\1 ~1 CoJ"l l'lata ~; r-10 \).!t Sam Crane. r.1,, 1 n1or510 lltiOH '1-:w or-:1.ux ,., THI Pl.!';X ·1 Br :! B<.1. "" nr:. uml dl·· 1,1dll'd + 2·2 l\r . 2 Ra. in .1 prt ml• t' )I .irl.'a. St7•1.;uo Paul Allen Reatty SJJ-6030 'j l ''\ rl S \;!'I 1,IH<I I~ .wl'I ••Ir. • .. 1.i.11111 1---------- 1\ll : '•·1 11" •11" INVESTME ..... T I Ill( 'I t..1 . l 1, ll<HI f"'ll 'Ill\,\ Ito 11 l.!'•.1l~t SPECIAL!! \l.1r..,h.ill l!lt 1 11,,, lh(lll I .11111tv hnrno• 1n rc'fdt-n Corona del Mor I 022 11.11 "''"1 nn l:irgr 1111 :! ••••••••••••••••••••••• BB .. 'B\ ~t;l.OOO FEHOMINAL 3 BR+ NEAR PARK ..... '" ·' ·' d ,11 \ '" """ l•'I" 111 •• ~"· ' Joi l) "" p 111. .\" 1ll.t11 It 645-3474 a·1"~,-- I •n• ,. tu ... ,. .. 1, 11< .u '".. • EASTSIOE • " 1liltl:hll111 • •1o1t1' ,\ '11111 :!H \ pr1d1· 111 .. , ... 'I ,,., •t" ... 11>.1 '•"11\'t .. hlfl" m:·n~ \II;" l.111111\ I Ill hu1111 " 11•11 .\11111 111111 I ~I :.72 11011 l1ft111.1I •l1t1,1 1: 11 1111111 \I \t, ~ 11 11 1-· \ t.T\ U f'l l'I Ul1il' ltt.., '• lltl l \\ \\t .. •I j14 .I II I I'll lltJ.! " I ,1110 1 ' " 111 1•uA PRICED REDUCED ~)200 • l11rn• f.t 1 b t • 1•11o" II 1·111 111•1-• h 111 .. ·11.i.1.1 EASTSIOE Itri' 111 ·" I 11,., I\ 'I h1lrm Ji,.111 .. 1111 ·' 1.11 ~'-' lot H··• • 1111\ 11·cl1•1•nrat1·1I "" J(KI GIB WALkER REALTY 675-5200 ,\ ,11 II I !'11 111 11 h \11••,l d• I \l.11 111 0"111 :J I I 'ti• 1.. • 11 " ••• I I t lot .. It ' 11111 I 111 li:t• 11. t \ • 11••1 l.1o11 I'" 't, ., :111 I:! lft \.ii '""'' Termt.-T~ ... m5 111· 11,.,,,, "',11 , .. ,. , i. Dono Point 1026 DE"'I ... 1 .. _ 'th d l rs. am C<>r rngs, uge ... ~ "' • ... .,..,, 89 0 p:arl'nt's retreat. Lar~e ·"' 0< FIELD gkass ....,bome wu' . ome 0 lot. cul-de.sue. A, really Pa noramic \'lc w or l:OIT homt-. Spyf!la'{:. Hill by .....;. _ 1 pri\'ale rca r y ard forthe B khPAT I HOME s.!.:..au· ve&. n1q~•500c con· supurbvalue at$189,500 course&mounta ins o wn l'r . 832 li!/80 ,\-• ch ildre n . Downtown uc orn. 2 Br. den. 2 s .. ...,, on over " sq. BillThomp:.on Realt y ~0·1751 ~Real Estate Park Section on quie t Ba. upgrades. By owner. f t : w i l ~ shp i r 3 (I ••• LAftGF; f.'AMILV 495·1870 lree linedlane. Prit-e rc· 572.600. Ope n H s e . strurcnse ... an earl o HOME . ----· Cherry Lake Ana duccd toSil,500 Sat/Sun l·!!P!\I. 10 Mint Laguna Jleach MUST ·fcatunn!' r ed Uarcdona "ChJrro tl'r· Tustin & 23rd St. ,.I d rl\ SEE' ceda r . naturul beam~, , C<.'nlury 21 Surf ltt'alty ••a e. 5.,,,.55as big \'ll'w SOil neull} r a cc d ' 1 f ~ I o t . 1..ovely 3 1rn homt· w •:! S36·7:H2S36 1174 WAL.NUTSQUARE rue<.' S21>80oo i.pnnl.lc•rl>. wal>hl·r . f p lcl> O c\Or Jlhr 6. Ar·d c n -2 b a N r a r Marina lligh. Rltn BBQ Siil.roo. 968-5700 Owner Hurry!!! · clr~1·r . r dnj:l 1nl·ld \\aJlµapl'r &. mirron•d C0,.00 1'0 11mctospareonth1 ... ~••OVEHSIZEO l'l.J\' Sti4 .SOO K:l'i:-i!t23 Tu ..... tloor~ Sull· ).tril 1111,·r,, 2 Story. 2Ur, 2bu. lam excellent buy. Seller h as LOT appro>. l l.l)(IO sq ~at boat trh P.J1 kani: O" ncr rm Tile patio, air cond. two week d l.·adhn.. .a ft . clo:.e 10 ll.'nni:. courb, Nl':VEH I.I\ F:LJ I!\ mO\ 111i: north, want" endunit,corncrlol Prin· Bdrm .. 2 •: b :.i th 111 pool~ .. pa rk.· and "-.. ch r1w·c• s·ilt• •· .. 11 tor .. nnt ~ ·' v.:u Ca~ll llt: El Ill bci J 511, 1. ,5 -,~ •• ;1• '-u 0 ,.,, By Owu"'R capals only S53.500 Ph: Laguna Niguel. $66,000 $69 000 ... ""' na; ~160205 Uo.aSo.Co astllwy . l!Or~eoui. 2 ~l}. 1 Ur C: t "I\\' l lf ' llighly upgrad<-d 2 Bdrm --· ------LAGUNA Bl:;ACll UncJo Re~ &tate "" flnashl'ti honu:. 'm . :1 _t·n ur~ ~ <''ll i - Huntington Contmcnt~•I · SPANISH * 497•2457 * Rod Onley 494·8086 Ba, cu.st. l'PL' &. drJ"i. BEACH DELIGHT To wnho mc. e nd unit. SPLENDOR' -----------thruout. 111 r. bak on:v. Highly upgrd 'd b •ach frph:, no·wa x noors. Ai. • PRESTIGE Irvin<: Covl.'; mirror:.. Jle;.t. offer O\CI' home· with man" ~~Im sumable 7'., loan. As· 4 br Cornell In Co.,lleg!? ~curity, bc1.1u11ru1 !>andy S80.000. Prine onl y · (. . • J • sumc SIS.327. for Sf96. Park. Upgrad.ed. Famt· .A •ew~ , bea c h ; c h a rmin J,t 3 962-85~1 catu~c:-: askm~ S74 .500 a imo. fo\11 1 price S39.000 ly. formal dining. Bonus , v ..-~.._ bdrm . 3 ba .. ~pacious -~l:\.63l·3900or64h·1'11·t !*>3-873R art. 61?m Prine: rm.,r~~~·H REALTY NICE OCEAN Vll:;W & liv. rm .. d<'n. formal din. 3 Br 2 'n~: Cordova El DL1PLEX·Vl1 J Ur. 2011. •••••••••••••••••••••• lusinessPro,...+yl40 ........•••••...•..•.. ORANGE COUNTY 0 OFFICE ILDG. ONE YEAHOLD II'. :'\!'\:"<. T "o ye. RENT Gl'ARA:\TI-: 32.000 i.q ft P1 I Sl.705.000. s.!20.000 dq" F'ully a!>sumablc If" No rec~ l week e!>cto T.1ke pos1t1on of prei:. huycr 111 escrow. C1 l..il'I Don I .akc or D;i W1lh1Le ' leu~c. Cl.'d quack '• you can walk to town rm.: wmdow walls oix•n· Ju.lo. lXttpllon.il ''ew. 2Br. den. ••u ... Sl70.t"to. 551 2000 beach & high school fro m h h land rl t o lpl "'" • ~ I£ I (">Crow. WOODARID-~-.-E-T_"_'n_h_m_c. thhois subs,;tandtta_!_~ lindrm. ~~juJ~ P~l~1~. ~>'~t :i ~ll'. ~~·la~~~~ p.1 ' • c:. 6-t2·1121 day s.rn i:li8 t'\'c' QPluacai•~ HURRY ON me. ·iur w,,.,., oors ~ara>t<':-. S225.0UO Incl DY OWNl~H . N•''41'ol'I THIS ONE 3 nr 3"-011. AIC, 579.900. & other qualily reaturcs. land. /\ l•:t; 1-:,\ '\ llTS p:o\10 Cl'l'Sl <..:on<lo. 1 llll. Must Prap•rl:i•• . Sp11rklini.: pool &Jaruzzr. E\'~1Wk_nc1_s_·21_3_.i_~_J _26_'34_ Large corner lot. .. room llHEATllTAKI :\'(; c·ou:>t h!lmt' 3kR :m,\. l1·n locll riu11 i.. 'o :q.:t:-. i•oo ouArlss~.-~r!o , .. ,.,;· locxpand Sll0.000 \1ew~ Oclux<> condo. :1 n1s11l<t<•I l.u,, cln. p~·1111 H'12·h42'i' "'"•l!<l 1•cl h y ~r:-~~a~?c~mbr:~'~:a~ Greentree bdrm .. 2 ba . 1m1ciu1:, 11.!l'. :i·~~114 2111'1 Duphni• t-: 11 r. L I' 1 • s ..: t. l. SPECTACULAR! l> ro0m . t:nlry iwtc lor Geor9lonSldrm den.wl•l har.dinrn i.:rm., tllli37·4HOO ;\l•\\' olfii·i· bmlcJrng pnv:.icy. POOL is 1 y#ar F:astcrn flavor stylin~. frpl .. special u mc111l1ci., ~~ l\c•wpori, He-.rh Chot ncw.Alllhis for S59.950. 1t orgeou s ll u mpto n deckl>, pool, vanl, llhl. Hewportleoch 1069 IO<'HIH•ll .\nxiou:.owni model. 5 bcdrms. 3 ------_ _ i.:ar SHl5.000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ON THE Ai.:i•nl lwti·•l 16:! bathi1. fam rm, dining OCEAN & mounta in PJ::G i\Ll,F:N IY OWNER PENINSULA PT. rm. bric k firepl a c e . ,·iews from e\'ery room REALTOR 1!14 757f Rayfront :g Colhn:. bll· YI-£ ... ~ Vi~w oH11·l· HwldmA Cera m\c I rlc d e ntry . Spacious 3 Br. 2 ba. din 1095 N r o:ist. 1.a~una T r 3 d t' 0 r r 1nu 11 n f'IH' ,... <;ood cxpo::.un • WHY PUT OFF CIMC to the park ond ing rm. i>ep arti~l studio, S2!JK.OOO li73 i'iiO 111 •AWARD\ :'\Nt"I;(; • ~1.ouo i,.1tJ.'· HAPPINESS pool. Take adrnntage. beam ceilings. Bonu:-2 LAGUNA 5S8..te72.1 3200 sq fl 4 Ht'. 4 lwthi.. Commercial .. uYLO .... GER? BKll.c:allS40 J720 scpdbl garages.J\buyat HIDEAWAY . LM hg rm.sl•parah•l>m Pro-"' J ~~ "'" " • 2 Ocdrm!>. & den m ra 1---------· m,IZ rm & Fllmil.1 rm :1 ,, ... •r 01 Super area. Super cond1· TARBIU. ~~3rE:5r'n REAL ESTATE nyon " S<'t'ludcd rear •-fwue Lane c:iri:ur ••••••••••••••••••••• tion &.rpt•r fam1lv home DC • $235 000 b O BAYFRQ T Thi.' 5 f/c..'<froom: 2 l>tory 49"-8093 yard. Patro, terrace & BALBOA. J usl lis ted ' Y w"er N Lree houi.e 1 ~lilt' lo town Custom bwlt hom e on For Appointment Office burld lns:. s p• 1.iri::c hom1· '"on ~ corne r ''#I lft Calif--=or" •---------& bcoch. /\II this for onl.\ quiet ctr"da Perfect for Call 675·20-i7 lot near all M'hools. :.hop _ ....... · ·' u tacular view, lt.1J1.un 1 d II I . 1 SW.950.Call nowtosce the t,.;c·ycle.set. iNcarb• ....,.. __ ---..._--.,.._...__.._~ c.·ccul1\"•ol!1<·".".An •· 1?1ng an un an~ on Luxury :J Br J Ba Twnhsc. 6"5 66"6 J '' " " ~ ~late lk.1r h ,\II for only at Rancho San Joaquin "' • "' tennis club. ocean and NEWPORT SHORES lll\l'l>lment at S630.000 ~RJ.!lflO r~dl ~11; <!3 13 C:reenblti., ol"rnptt' :.z ~ bay beaches for Mom W .. TERrnouy BILL GRUNDY , llCfore 11 too I 1l Lo J PR€HIG€ a nd Dad. 3 Bedroom . den '"" r" " R .... 7 I 11 • ' ' 1' sec pool & Jacz.. Cntrl air. --and dining room. LarJ?r right on tht• bci.H•h ~u.tor 6 5-6 1 , .. , •• 11 1 , w/e lcctrostatic filler & J HOMES 4-0xlOO ft. lot Sl37.500 Two-s tory 3 bedroom .:! [ purifil.'r incld . High • 3ilO N.Newport.NR CallS4-0·1151 b:ith.ll)l~ofpat1o&d<'rk· •LEASED• ' ~ 1m~·u·u11 beam <'lgs. massive fplc Commercial -- -ing Q\\nN a n i.1oui-.. Com mcrclal-lndus tn "' i;01•HW tiv~,~~r;'m~;cJ~n3~~e~ ~~~ci~: i ~~;~io('n°~n EM~~E~':.l>s'•DAEY m·:g5~~J.~~::sT1t;..: ~~~. ,ff:~~': o:~~rr: :Ill All WfSWel'ping Vtcw or Laguna Deach. Loadl'd ........ --------& Assoc ·~ .. J\j:!(!nl Ii hills. lmmcLlintcly :idJ to with charm & loca led 3 Br & dcn (or 4 Br), 3 ha. S 110,000? SI 05,000?. f.>.\0.17()11 gotr ro11rsl'&1·.'<r iurnc· ncxtto M<tm Deuell .1 Whii c wa 1er \'lcwl~~~~~~~~~~I $100000"7' quc·l c lub of lr\'lni:. s ~_1!l_!l_.OOO_by_own_cr4!l7·2724 • • • DuplexH/ tores. ;.. How mur h i~ a two ~tory Clnifs safe 18< Lower lc\•CI hdrms &1----------S p E C T A C U L A R HAR B v R V I E W :1 llr home. one dour 10 •••••••••••••••••••'• study. J\hlr burm opens Coas tline & O cc><i n HOMES Clrff Or .. w1vrews from onto encl walk•d patio. 6 U V1ewi-. l>pac1ous 3 BH. ~ By owner. 3 Rr. 2 Ba. II\ i/lg room & 2 Ur's. ~~nlan0a~ Su~;. S5 1 5 1 1 5 1·°!>°· COU~RAYINPTLACE !Ju. frplr. 2 )rs new. A fam. rm .. If! <·or'. lot. ~orth '.'? You te ll w.• ··n nl ni) . .,...,. · ior "' g rcul bu> al S!M,900 m a ny upg r a dl's, ll•C SOUTHLANDERS a ppt R .. m i> 11 n R c h a rm<' r nealtor1i 11rum1sc the) lanrl. Pnn. only. &t0-5345 t"12-6:1f;S WESTSIDE REAL TV INC 848·2J2J S & S HOME HEAR HEW DUPL.E~ t11\\ •1'•-'f• I t •11 tl1• tt ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 11111h I 'I lu 111 l,1111 • I.tit • ll•o·r 111,1100 S4 !•--------.... JUST REDUCED! tucked away on qua el ran M•ll 11 for SIOO.UOO th l:r ne in Coasi Royalc 110"' & sJvi: Owner· an·a. Short w a lk to 499·2109 8YOWHER Newport Heights arc~ .. Close: to heh, s he PlllR & i.c:hl1i. La rge pi frplc units. pvt r ar1 huge lot. Slli .000 0°'4'n 1, 1., •, 1 t , "" 11 '•'""' r1H11m1·rc 1.11 l·---------i •I • ,. • 1 '\ 1 r \II' 1 •• ·''"'" 1 .. r ,,..,,., ,\ of H•l 1~ '' \ I 1• ltlil "'i'11WN1 H~l PINCHIH I '\\ \ •' 1t I(, • .th 11 , .. ,.,,,,,1 1(1\\ \I t 1•' b7S-4l92 ....... ' ILlllt.1 1·~· •'}Ii j1 u"' 1111 II u 1111· '\, .1 r 1 \l.11 111 • ·1 111 1 u n tt. I lrpf. ,,., Ill .l)'Jlrl'I "~ ••WI II\ "" 1wr I) I S7500. Cash Out ~1p.·r plttt<b Tuwnhoml.' \\ rlh C'O\C:!r~ p.1t 1C1. "oud "hult\·r ... Ill krtr hcn S2111 per t110oth 11.1)' .111 A l'Ouplo•' p :1r Jcltl>C' li t ~. io<t mm u "· · 531 ~ ·•r; ~···,, "' • 11 •'t>< 111>-1 ln+.rnational R•al .! 1~1 "I J1 uf ht•J ul d 111 lbhrt M.tw--L 19 Cr~~• Circl~ ~J:t::',1,',' II~ 11~11; I\\:',~'.~~~ ~!~~•••••••••••~?.~~ l•_----e---~~~~~~ r11<torrl dr:q" .. & I· 11lorl•--------- IR4HDHEW Wolk to leach J b r , 2 bo. Ca m .rm . lrwhcpd.. r ul de <.1(' St \I q s t• 11 II y 11 w n r SW.\l5'l !"ill 391;~ The OC1tJ.thtfol O~tonj In Un i ve'l-!i!i l y P ark 's \'1llal(<• I ii It lcu\ures a pri\'UlC hideaway fo r Dad's ~londay nitc T.V. nr for th<' tcl'nager11 p00I room. Freshly parnterl. lush landscaping. up £radcd c arpe l • and drape!>. beam ed CNllngs and ma ny other quality rcaturl'11 . II '11 worth a look &nd you own the land :tt a l(Ood price of S89,!l50 red hill a ·. 55 2 -7500 beach. M a~y sl&tncd g lass windo wlo. Oa k floors & terr a <'Ol la Cullto m rrrnch ooor~ w ':.w cc-p1ng Ol'en n views Twn b i:droom i.. libra r y w r i r eplact'. winding Slaircn,t• to EXCEPTIONAL Park lake :.ettin p e nha nce!> thi4' IO\'ch• ~ bdrm . 2 b;ith fam1h home JuM redured to SSS.000 huge ~k y ht s lud10 . m· " A.... $250 000 : : u~ u.a~ · ~ ~nllw 499·2800 1-------- .,6-7222 831·0136 LogunaHINs 1050 ~~~~~~~~~~ ...................... . LAGUNA HILLS ROOM ... 4br /3ba/ fr /tpl/wel l>ar Seller motlvull•d 540-11922 hl1111!. rn.1 lt·r lu ,11111• " r.,1, ,..,. 1111d1 , k ,,. 1 r h••k. pool A 'l'•• " \.tell 11011.il 1111 " ~ II\ chn 111.: r n1 /I.. cl1 11 :-;11•1 son <1111•11 S11nd,1~ I ' I I II I> H \I I. \ I\ f': ~ 1 > n F s r " 1 ,1 k r pn\lli'j!.•'' S:11I, 'Wltn, h0rllll'. Ont~· SW ;,oo ~uh n111 111111 t Prm' 11wrwr. l'lli>T II K\I. ESfi\1'~'.. ... for tree houses & caves in the huge yard of this young romlly home. rn:i.1:~SM.~10N l.i\NI.; Large entry. sep. dinin11 011<•11Sun I 5 rm. with pass thru to * A ·FRAME 11 2·Sty 3 nn. 2 b:i. W:tlk to OCl.'~in. tennis & pooli;. .'.'ll.'("(ls T LC but u "" hak ol a bu~ · · at $72.000 CAYWOOD REALTY • 548-1290 1t Hin E BluH f1 oml' :1 Ur . 2 Ra. fom rm OP\·n lls<.' 1-'n SJt ~1111 !112 C~l<CIS Pl.AC:!-: IN-t·:!H-11 STEPS TO OCEAN :t Br. 2 Bu. f:tm rm. r1 pie• HARIOR VIEW HOME ~14'0.000. l(law 11pt1m1 01 0 r q : 1 n u I P o r lo ( t n o offer t>l5 2J:t0 or s;,2 7:1.'iO • -; Ocean Vi•w Dupf~x· Hr Dono Pt. Mari .. o :! Yl'ar' new 2 f$t• rm... 1lcn 1 ·', ha! lo 111 c 1JIJl'~'· "P OCl~u St 12,SUO : World Wlct. lrok•r Botboo 673·4545 )loocl. 3 Br. 2' ~ c•+ OPf: ... S1\T & Sl!:-.. 11 ~ bonus rm w/lofl bctrllJiif & 5301 R1H•r !\\!' lncorM PropH"ty 20V full b:ith . uir c.·ond . ~5·2016 own<'r h r •••••••••••••••••••+•• Spanish tale, pool, lots ol By owner . snr. J Ou. llm MAKE THOUSAHOS b11ck work. new lrldllcp· ing1dcn. xtr:1s nv t SSSSSSS ! mg+ m u<'h morl'. ho;.it <>lort1JH'. !'!48·3tOH fl Fixl.'r upper unil9 t orr-:N llOL'.SF. r-~. SAT &SlJN 11 5 or t1Plll. FC>H SA i.i-; or hw. 3 I cll'n """'la l\lc.sa Corner: I• 111:.!4 l'nrt Shdfi<'ld Nc•w cpL'i & t>:iint Wri lk 113x200. H-3 1.onln!'. f!il ,., L I muy ullhw Ill 11nil 11 to 11 cc a m Sl59.500 10 br h . l(·nn . 1rnol:. hullt.~Mkrwlll carry u fly owner t7 1tl > !l!J>M!2~ -~2-38.'iO. Property llouM• (rrwncinl( ;rt :i·. with JO' ---------•I d o wn. As kin)( onl THE COVE I hr, t 11m1t~ .. pool. Ask WoodbridCJe great working kilchen; mg ~l.99!1 Ownl.'r anx· This may be your last dramallc frr1lc. woll tn Your <'h u n cc ror llW\Ell '""1,1111 l.,,,1 ~\\!-: ltE C'om mi:.s.ion ~s'Call M2 ~50i\gcnt chancl.' to buy o new living rm. 3 Bdrms .. 2 cooperaossoclotes ~·~.~r~s~~~~·111:a ;.~~~~;~ s2 rn.ooo cu 11 wortt.. ll Jo:,\ L 1-.: S T A T.E Newport Terrace I\ I I I ' PA R K If 0 M E . 2 bath!I & laundry rm with ----- 1 "' 1111 l 1111 • 1•111 & • •1n1 l1u\ from ,1" no·r 3 Br 2 La Cuesta hm. J Br. 2 ba. BDR.MS. 2 bath.~; many skyURht. $72,$00 LCllJUftCI Niguel I 052 W11h 45' bout !!lip ut door 1111o· ~11~1 "1 r" Vf'i..rc 1 11.1 .111 •11111111., upi.:r.Hlcd 872.500 hy owner. Or extrai;. your choice of ARCH IEACH HTS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _1.'?_20_.oo_i_o_w_n_er &IO·Sltll 55tJ·77ii • -Su,,..-SSS Vafu• 3 Bed1·m. 211 ba. w'up FontGJtrt graded carJWl, drµ.s & lnw>Htfnent ,·lt•v.ir11·c• 1"1•1• l.1n1I lhruout ;!(Ml ltum l;lkt!, le as<' for SISO mo "1th l'llrJ>Ct~ U t l th 1 I h' ~ 11 i' non It' ,, II I' I full ··l11hh,1· 11rl\ .: ... in _o~ron Call 6 10·4f>43. sen o c qu: cl n l t5 1~1 I 1 ·;•1t1 I .ikl' Fort>~t. ~how<'a'lt• -3 bdrm .• 2 bath hilltop 1141me ~it\.!ISO iHllll2-l!lor 1 ,~TO RY 2 , br. 2 b9 home featuring 3 living NEWEL\.. floonng. ,\la!>ll'r bedrm We ll locull•1I pride o View of hai. benm t'el\tnJ.!'I, out u~irerhrp ·I pl<.'x only B kB I 'lt ll ndlnl( i·o m muntty block' frum occon. 11\p SPYGLASS '!:Ill 116~5 \ 11lage r acahc Condo rm. with beamed cell., ' __ Agl. 9684405 frpk .. bit-in bookshelvei; BEST nuv IN Tll E i\REA·West Nine charm. lng Spa nish ~tyl<.' condo, 2 Bdrm~ .. 2 bnths.& spacious with lx•1wtilrrl o r l<.'ntallon to '11 1.:uc•I Golf Cour!il'. 'Ta11tcful de· ror. Prit'crl for pr On'IJ)I t.aJc. $61.000 ac ay. rucrlitlci, \I, Ith 11orrl & prum•l 1n 'ellln~ prlci-0 !=iprawling exccuC1vtl on Jacut.ii SIS8.500 . .a Y<':.&rt< old. By Owner Fountain Voflry 1034 ---& o deck for dJning or <'n· tertaining . 2 Bdrms. on ~t·l ;rn1l.n 1• hr " h,1 •••••••• ••••••••••••••• Racqiitet Club lower level open onto a lus h. p rirntc around!! Cafffomio Coast fircplot'e'I. prineipuls:oo With n terrlrit• Vt('W or Propn-tiH ly f'ka~e call Lind. !'w>0lhpor1 mrll 1111 n i l <It• l1 1~hl y upi.tr a d l.'d . 3 \'Cry private patio with '· 11 • " "'t·11111" ''' '"10 k $46,750 bedrm Cond o.' S t t-p.s lush plantings. Ms lr. S;H'k Rny i\l'il>u1 3000 540-814'4 !-ichulc•r .it &12 5270 111 ~.ft lr\lllde. •I lx•tlr ms. 3 ~~~~~~-".""--•I '""' ·~02 " t rni.:ht ',. • .,. '""' ''' 1111" J rom the <'Ou rt Color bdrm has its own frplc ·-• . .., .>1 . a,..en . bath.,, fomrl,• rm. d ln1n11: ·II rt llrllll''' ch'c·ui,ih'd 2 u.•cl1oom ........ 1th. \11 roonJrnuled. Irle kitchen. tf513 CAM"'Sl>a:fRVIME Quality cons truction " 1 ni "'"I II',, 1 m 'I "" .. "-plo~h t'nmel t•arpct anti thruout $98 500 t rJllr' ,\ \\ .. 1 h.11 R ... 1 di\ lclunl ('on1lommlum 2 ma.~lcr suit<' wrth '!unk<-n OPF.N Dt\ll. V .-Col & 'JACUZZI 111 11'l' 1n ~1·~w1 ....... C.iric:ir,11(<'\I. l'll·r dour Homan tub. Trul y KA .M.ros r .M Uobl bl ~ ... ~' .(1110 ,Sl1l1" r1 11,' .111p1 u n t' 1h· t h 1 " h 1 ,. U ll • n s ructo e octa n & ""'"' " ,. ,.. " elPRant floor fll:in. ca 1 r lhl 3 onl\' l'\l l'tv 1;.1'1 'l'"~ •'n.1tlt•d ('11rrl(lt1n". wOOd TURTl,EROCK GLl!:N, nyon v ewi; ro m s ' • "' ,.. "' Century 21 Sun Realty bdrm 2 '--th h "· punt>Hnf,? & mlrrorf>. En· 536.1474 536-7542 Pinn 11. 4 Br & Atnum on l ·· ... A~ c;imh eb. ;;,ethp. Costa Mesa 1024 1ov lhl' 1•ommunity pool, lf(e lot. Avail. l>cc. '76. gues ...... s~ wit a : UASI0"10"4 ••••••••• •• •• • ••••••••• Jllcu111. knni~ courts & $133.500. 7~-71~ lw of blt·in storage & 0 c e a n v I e w 3 b r . /'\JEWEl...L I I•( , •• I tf1\1' I fl• t•, I) f,••,._1 rm :ire i& Obh• f1rcpl;1ce Indoor h c:a ted a nd filtered 'lwrm pool \'a C;mt. Move In' BKH. l."1tll 5'&0·1720 Collt•.:1' J'Jrl.. :1 111 2 n.1 duhhou~c Who'!C rlr:ct? LG. 3 br Twnhsc. encl. lovely pOol area with wet Twnh r 1 2 ti n<'w <'flt. tfr'I'" rnnf & all ,.....,!im"· gar. frpl. Nr. Hunt. Srnte RARE tJNfV. PARK bar, add to UM charm or Pvt. :ou.:mu'riitj'' :.g~· m NEIGHBOR! Here's a Pjtnl "p.11· l..1l . " hltn' C.r< _!)<'h Broker. 842·7•1_41 __ f.i"!~:~:'.o~l~·~:;;.2%::y ~~s~lllsl O bom.-. t,cnn. '!00 1, a('ttul'. roomy, homey, custom ~<'II din. t•nd ~cl ,t, p,1110 640-OWNl-:R 'S PRIDK f,uw upicradc1. o n cul-dcH1•c. Souna. i;~njoy lhe gd. Ilk. 38 R w1a lrg lovely pool. s:;o ,!150 0\1.rll \i.:t ANYTIME d o wn G I buyer8. 4 /\ppt.only.752·7126 Ji!1. s l1.curtis brndleynew .Xtriu1 Inc. 1901 { •. A. S-1' i t Ul b<.'<lrm11. Oreplacf', ook· ~ w I p h on e n u m 1> or =~~ ',j~r \!~f :cl~ I \ST~I 11 J, 3 n, 2 n.. planked floors. \•Ct '1ndu. WOODIRIDGI Iii •W•· ~5&C Ori\' b,Y 2Pl6 lr\'ln{' /we f .un Hm . frtr ~'IOI N •Jf --"Amerlcanu" decor . ?eek side homts 4 br , By OWOfr, 4Rd. 2Ba. qr <'Ome lo our Op<.'ll lll•ror .111·1.J 1-;z m .11nt Rr OWNf-:rt 3 Mr. 2 b.1. sro.ooo. submit ' Tarbell. S 'I <' 11 more PI a n . nos N.C-, ,,.....,.._ Laauna Nl;ucl. l..M Sf-r. Jl()U!<e Son. u.5 to ~c-e. OflCn h.~r ') ~ iH 1190 hnck frpk hm Xlnt I<><:. RLTRS. c all & save. Fnbulous locallon. By ,.....,,,...l.oguno ranos v 11 S89 000 Qill Mlkc Parkcr/llatel 548-tM2 &si .000 968 1811 s.t.2-2:561 ownr. ~wkd)'s. 494-1177 495-4800 • ' _!_IAlllr •ats. U9?""'850 1 1076 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••Ill LI.TOP fll-~i\UTY lmmurololl• 3 ll R, 2 ll;\. frplc. ~h11k(I ro<>f, lwo putios. ,on hceultrull~· ltl~rixl corn~r lot. .Jus t ll~l(.'<I ;it only $72.SOO. ~BER'l'RAlltNRY - REALTOltS 4!>2·4121 215 Del Mur. San Clrm Panoramrc ocean v iew. Early Calirornin rnnt'h 11tyle homl' on el!tal~ 1"7.od lot. S200.000. AMCHOl.AGI INVISTMINTS l114t 496-7711 3 UNITS Cl<.'Ull 2 Dr Duplex and : llr. I ' 1 So !louse;• 011 wide lot Close to nll oon ,. I e n c c s X I n t WcstminsLcr toe. $7'1,()00 Gil.j 1103 ----~-Ttipl('x, Orange, $79,m Trltih·x. Costa Mc:c u. trade 4·f'h•x, Tu!llln. trod• It Units. Anuhe1m, trade l"~r. only aat. 833 116t\ unlt.s. 2 br. l ba. blln11 patlo:s, enr l. gllr;iaes SlllS,000. Ownr/ Attt 546 ~ SELi. Idle Item s with : Dally Pilot Class1ncd Ad ~Z.56i8 . .. , _.. HwMt U•~ "-*•• U ..... ..._.. Ho.Mt U•fwllillill'd Ho.Ht u...-.her..t tto.rs.a U•fwwhhd Af>ateah ~ -. DAILY PILOT Frlefay. November 5. 1978 •••••• •• ••• •••••••••••• ••••••••• •••••••••••••• •••••• ••• •• •• •••••••••• ••••• •••••• •••••••••• u •••••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• •••••n••••••• -~le• bfot~ HcMnH ~ ..._... U.._.11!.d ......... o. leocll 3240 ln-5" 3.244 1rti... l.244 Mew,.,.. leec" 326' Mewport leec~ l.26' Corw .s.1 M• J7.22 ~. ·•······•····•········· ..................................•.....•.........•....................•.................... ······•···········•···· ···········••·•·•···•·· ••.....•....•••.......••.••.•.•.•............. ..... Property 2000 .... wporta.d lf6f CoshlM•to 32.24 4~r. 2 Ua, uail 9/1$ * RINTALS• W0008lll0Ct:: 2 UR , 2 OCJ-:ANFRONT VIEW BEAUT . new 3 br . 8ACH. All ullls pd. S,175 .:,,·_. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .... , ..... ,•••••••••••• Ch ildre n w11l co mc. Ou, upgraded. lui.u.ry CONDO 2 +Den, 2 ca lwnhJc. Nkc a.reu. Iii F~$15.8312t>Jl.~?~J ·'·' *UNITS* sT-<To1•·cH alo.""'AVERDECnr 2 8" $4M/m~63&·507o ___ ZBR.2"'1b1J .... "~25 Twnhm.toploc.hy µark, prlvutc p~r~lnii. luU ffil'j!!I. f)-pl, pool. $475.,~or;...;879-:..;._..;..1060 _____ _ . • u-~ .._ ... ......, . • ... t BR. den. it ba. .. · ,...75 1 ke 5450 ti1'0·0309 1ceurlty bwldmg. t.ease 675-l006 Spacious 3 BR, 2 Ba. no J>'!LS, 2927 l'tilll>l!• tree $8.R vi.µ::111t n1111r beach. 2 BR. & Pool ........ $475 11 · · · ~ p/mo All( a.u 72ll' _.:__ ________ 1 BACH opt, qalut nrcn, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 12 •. 16. 32, 4~, l•omp. furn, lower duplex La. 54().1720 J\larg11r1·t_ 3BA, J car . i;~r Brick 2 ff({, Plun A.. .~I 6'tO 1183 --· . ' • H.V. hm for lgc, 3 br , 2 ba, new pruut, <'Pltl, utll l>d. 48. 54, 60, 80_Y.1 Or11n8<' on Penl1uula. p:itlo,2 BR Furn & l/nfurn. pat10.$475.!1630J72 !lBR.28.1 S..50 t1 UNlV -l'ARK. Shllrp Bt.UFP'S l·lt>'vt•I 3 Bit, leemastbr.Comrnpool. $130mo.(2l3)00·2900 ,'\~nty. r~tso-;~~l u~1b O/W, w1uhcrtdryer, 2 l\bture AduJli;. Gd. loc. ••NEWER HOM K 4 br, 2 Hit. & Ot•n ~00 2Br, AIC, privall· ~ urd. ba. Lovely greenbelt $S2!Hncl curdnr. l mmac. J. • o-o l~e ' nt;11 ('~r prklng 673·3391 ~ 3 ba, 3 car Jo:, ~hllkl' roof 3 BH. •·tt. 2 f\J $495 nr pooli./tc1111i11. $375. ~ ~A.it 844-1133 W Andrew 840·6161. h Mno l724 commenc1al s1ropert y. ---Son l.ujs Hl')' St\25 ~ O'~ ' · •••••••••••••••••••••• : -f Br:ind ne w unils & rt' HouMf UnfunUthltd E/\STSU>E 3br, 2•~ba Su Pl' r b r' J: h l & 4 Hit. Jo'K . ~so . -H A ll l> T 0 Fl N D Newport lslu Dix 3 br 2 b1.1 WIBC & UP "$ales. We sell, h:it imd ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• Condo. 1 )r. old, purtly "spaclQU#" fonuly irn & 4BR. .. $.175 l'nt\' l•k :> br hm P11mt-1::11atblutr Exec. home. lower dplx. fo)"plc, bl\rui, $40.00 • l'xc ha ngt', from 3· GeMrai 3202 fum.$475/mo s.i~ gardeokltchcn .lmmuc Aod"t>haveotJlt'ndor Joe. l'\t comm ten & 4br, 2b:a, tam r m. Soft pal,cnclaor.AdJt#only, •StudJo ldBRAplB m1lhon $$ i. month in 111• ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond . Move right in lmmt:diatc <X'<'U.PJOcy pool. s5115 552.85s7, we.tcr. New crpt.1, drps, no pets. Vrly l&e SfOO mo. •TV Ir Ma.id Serv Av111I ' ' vut meol propert y NEED A RENTAi.? 3 BDRM, Fam. r m, focd. Slngleaok. $4!1S 841HM27 752 93111 p:unl. Walk to schools, G7S·9Sll2 •Pl)one~rv, HW pool Plu.serallforan appo(nl WchaVl'lh<-m' t4Bdrrn yd. Kids OK. 2103 4 BR 2 ba a-slo.:;-;.lh s ~ps, lrnnis c l ub. · '376Newport81vd, ~t ment now 1;<1ds: pelll, t:iin~lc ok Federal.1365. 54'1~71!1 hug~ patio' & but•k "yurd. $7'15/ mo. Lse. Re ts. llVJI llma. Rare 5 Br, ~·975SorM5·3987 NEW £RA·lee 638-8300 3 bedroom Broo'-vlew 2 Good neiuhborhood. 1 Log.a leach 3248 f>.W.6175or 6'5-2240 Somertet mdl, pvt pool, SUS CASITAS ,. " ••••••••••••••••••••••• A/C, avall now. 1~ Port !!a*Quall ~ TUSTIN Laure l wood story townhomti S<l2S. Yrs old. $4k50/mo. Agt. !lBr, Zba Hillside home. ""ck Bay condo •-'.J•vel. Dunlelah. A1,rt. 642·0758. Mlnuln to NB. Bach & I , , Plac puUo honw. Unrurnished mo . Cent r a 1 u t r. 963-56'18, As for l>lek. 1 ,,.. ... , " BR furn. Adults. no pels. • h & , . Ocean & coastal v tws. 3 br, 2 b1, 3 car gar. Pool BIG,.. .. "'YON "'WN11SL' 2 N rt Bl d CM ,.,.. t• lstory,!H.Ht,W/\,coun· re!rir,:erntor. was er NEVERLIVEDIM Univ. Jk. Village 1, 2 Washer/ dryer $480. +xtns $450.64S.7777 "'"' ' c.. 110 ewpo v .. ".~:· p..-1•0• _try kilchcn, f1rcploce, 2 dryer included. Pool story tnhorne, 3br, 2~ 499-4tl48 Prime view location Oil ,_,_. l7l 6 ·: '••oo ov.arisi-~r!"°4tr Hae .. ~· grarol{e. pool, pork. +spa. A mu~l sae! Aak l.ANDMAHK CONDO ba. ram rm. frplc & llUn· 3 + den or 4 Br. $495. goU t'Ourje. Sophlsllc:11.l· - ; ---------t.cnnis courts. A,\,so. du11s for Bob or Shirley Ben-Adults over 40 ):I'S. 2 Br. deck, xtra clean. Im med 3 Br 21.., Ba. d:1hwshr. Yearly. W;ilk lo beach, ed multi level 2 br, 2 ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• .TRIPLEX. w/pool 2 Br piud. Leui.e $425 mo. + ton. Agenls. 752 1700 2Ba, washer/dryer, dbl occpy. $425. incl. tennis. bllns, Oen Cyn Vu, lsc pools & tennis. 845-9794 or Cust cpt & drps. Lowest U p E R V I I I a unit:.. CdM $154,500. deposits. --oven, stove, dti.bwasher pools & jacuzzi. 552-0736 $500 1059Sanla Anu Ave. OO·S9!H Mrs JarVLS price avail In Newports w/Courty11rd. l br, pvt, 67J.17620wner/l\gt CallS·W·S336 SJWlP! 4 lir 2 Bu, new Many r e c. rac1hlees. orSS294-4•Mr.Ounn Cidl&l2·!1907 mostpresUglousnewde· nopet&.$18S.400.5293or cpts, drps, rooC & plurpb· $:175•mo. ~·0485 HARBOR JllGHLANDS, 3 velopmeot. $650. 644-8722 673-23.12 ~ewport Be<ich Tn·plex lal»oa lllClftd 3206 ing. encl y;mJ. t~ll Cove . WALNUT SQ·altract 2 Br, Emerald Terr. ndwd & Br fncd back yard 4' 1-------h-l-d--/ on Canal wtboal dock, ••••••••••••••••••••••• St. $400. Evelo; %J·ij2111 & Clean J br, 2 ba, cpts. 2 Ba, dmrng rm. 1>auo. s:lass ocn ~·u, 2Bd, 28a, tio F le walk to Oeeanfroot, yrly. Dix. 4 LG. Studio, no c I ren • . S17S.000.1·492·3710. 2000sq fl Children&pets MS-4471 drps , end pa110 ui1' cond., close to D.R. 2 fplc, dbl gar. PM~"'n'...-spchoo' I, library BR,2tia.lowerduplex; pets. $17S. 833·0821 or · · . , . $345/mo. 963·456\J '"' """ '-I l d 640-0700 ok.3hr.fllm rm,l!~·ba,:i ~ ... ~ ... •DR ., .. f· . 531.9~SAgt NoJo'ee. pool.avail. $3•10 mo. S55011sc-. 494-1714, &pnrk,En&ign&HbrHJ, ......... aun ry room. 1----------COSTA MESA pul1ois, bay views.'"""· •"0 · .• ~ ua. ~m · --552-0'l.'13 494-11~ lse $450 mo. 673·2425 Agenl675·7060 on .. och 1740 • ' · S650/ofr. Avail Nov. :>th. rm, everything sparkling s BDR~·2 B/\Tll I k d Call Now• 6'15·8771 new. Vacanl & ready. Cl · r bl h Jbr + den or 4 br, 2 bn, Coast Royale. whitewater cvs w n s. BLUFI'~ Br 2~ Ba. ram ••••••••••••••••••••••• DUPLEX · Agt.546·8640 ~n~~m;:aC~ll ~?~ 1o·.1t .. D.R .. rrplc . S3HS view,4Br,2'~ba,$595.in· ()('eanvlcw Condo. 48r, rm, torm. dine, yrly lse. Bachelor studio, frplc, >'•Just list ed . Just pro-NEW 3br.21i'l bu.sin.gle rno752·6ttOO ·e\'e644·4663 cld.s wtr/grdnr. 499·3296 dinrm 2~Bu pool ten· 644·7897Eves. 'balcony, vie w or I f y 1 tof ii MlSAiqORTH '114·963·ti7ti7 Nena. II.It\. ' -0,831 07.,,,, . • . '""id ' OK Harbour, steps lo bth • Cessionally andscapcd am. res. r y. arn y. Altr a-1've 3 Bil, 2 Ba. Evs/Wkncls 213·96!1·9767 LL'•"'ES A\'/\lL1\RLE • . <>v. rus, i;ecunlr-" s . WESTCLIFF. 3 Br 2. Ba, -... oA" 71184 and jusl huge lre Bill Hardesty, Realtor "4 "'~ $625 Cbns 644 !I060 Agt F t kl h ,_.,,,..,.., __ ....... ______ _ 's haded backyard. Room ti75·281Ai P.V. stone frplc, fncd te· 4 Bedroom, prime loca l..1ve in Irvine VillJge. Uouse for lse. 2 Br 2 Ra , · · · · · am rm, cus ' c · 3741 · · h --a r yd , s h u 11 e r s, ••ftn. Alosn to ~ti. Cl•an, We haw homes avail. for fam rm, Ofeun \'tew. Walk to shops, schls. leodi for one mon• unit wit Spaciou 3 Dr wshrldryr "" ~ '" ... "' l ease 10 •• c I ose lo Ile h . $550 library. Grdnr incl. $700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• varia nce .. Enl.'lo.sed rrplc, 1'yil , d'ining ar"a.' wallpaper. S385. mo. On mo\·e·in condition. Cull ESPECIALLY LARGE 0~58 ,. 6 P•t n( , b h t di \., lk l h " mlh-mlh or lse Call 1\gt. Hal. Agt. Walnut Square 4~·4127 c\'S. 4 Bdrm & Den. Front mo. &16-.,.. a1\ •• ea ron. a~ . s u o garage:.. '"a o s OP· t>'>Uc mo. "13·A~"" " '. I I --$295 U lit an c I No Pm" and hus. owner well ...,.., __ v __ .. _...,.. George Marlin to loce. 942.9371 nanch ...,a .I omel! . yard is green park witb a .. Br, 1 ba house. $360. · • .. 546-864-0 1.>e.;!rfield Uni\ Jlk I Br house. partially furn. . t lh bots.. k itchen. 497-3195; carrytnd.SW.500. S.OaPniftwla 3207 . Very cute 2 Br house <.:ulverdale Col !'ark $235 mn. year around. ~~doS py°g~:;~r-,Hijl. Abovuas~leinS1"mlc/dS .unOp3~n5 536--0321 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ftp!, 2 br. dup, child OK. w/dbl gar , fully crpltl. 2 bdrm, your choice of 4U7·l385 e\•es. $000/mo. Si6·ll66 .. l-"'"u_D_l_O_,_u_tl_l/_c_a_b_le_pd_, ' 1 11 jQuail ~ 38~, 2 b~~h Across from SZ30._Fee . D!W, no do~s. Close l.<l frcams:HOlo$400. . Clean 2 br, frplc, ocean WATEHFHONTHOMES single person onJy. No • Pl . Bay beat~. Lovely view. Mam R~nt:ils, 5'IO·S370 shops, f'rwy's .. S33S. mo. 3 bdrm, your 1.'hoece of14 vie w , $3 5 O. Soul h 631-1400 STEPS TO OCEAN. pets , central. $180. Pr act.. • $400yrly.675-l3~ $275 3 br dup Kids' pcls inclds water & grdnr . from$335.to$475 Laguna. (213>284·~ ~ Lovely 3 br, 2 ba, ram 494-8782 DP~,:~· Cottag~ Qu.alnt 2 br, 1 ba. OK: Fee. · ' ' Call Nan, 9G2·7787 or 4 bdrm your (•hoice o( -rm, frpl, hl·beam cell'g.l---------- uoo ou.a1l u. Ntw..c>11 llM:H stove, ref rig., sm . pri. Main Renlals, 540.5370 536--0907 from USO lo $495 3 BR, 2 ba. on the canal, $590. Lse/ opt. Op en $195 1 No Fees L-H ins l.250 Npt. Shores. SSSO/Yrly. R' uu·1s pd Oceunvu F"" patio, no s ngls. Yr y. JBR l lJba huge FR SJSO H 11t .._ T.Y --r-·-Sal/Sun 1·5, 5301 1ver • . · ~v DF-:LUXE i ndustri al S295.+Ul116H·0997. 2 B~. 1 ba Condo. ~ool. 48R 2baAvail n~~S37S RAHC R~L . ••••••••••••••••••••••• lse.Agent548·1290 Ave.64S-20lG MainRenlals,540-5370 Tnple~ only4yearsold ---paUo, gar . $295. 1649·11 . _, 5512000 411Yr.111d4 BR,fam.rm, H""-•THEOCE"'u 4272 .· rL M· . 'Qu:unl2.lir SO fllowater Iowa Sl #)J2 1J421 aft Bolhtmmaculalccplurp • lgeyrd,frplc.cul-de·SJ C. ~" A" BEAC11Livlngyrly.2br,.2 BR. 2 Oa. pool, maid 1;rove5~·enis. t~~o1:e ~E. &1boa Bl. $300: 6PM. .. C P bltnsd/\\ Agt 893·13~ UNIVERSITY PARK \'1 1mml'<1 J>OS!i. Bargain at 3 br, 2 ba, Cam rm. frpl, 4 $350. 3 br $425. Agt. service. uUI pd. Owners ~ 1, 02<1 mo I oo .ooo. 963-8.177 Ill. 3 Br 2' ~ JJJ + bo11u)) S350. Long lease possible. houses from the beach. 642·3850 apt. $450 mo. Howard ·,"' , .... R n•·' LTY 2BR,canbeusedfor com· Open S:it 'Sun 1·5 fle;iul rm. Xlnt l<K· Avail:-.,," S ubmel pe t s . Agt . hi-beamed ccilinl(s, Johnson,497-174•t 'r.Av.:. "''' • 32l2 merical or residential newJhr townhmc flunl 1 $-1!1 5. 5~7 7011 oe 1~_7211 ahi umw/waterfall.$590 3 br, 2 ba duple x n r l----------- 656-6171 Cor0tto ct.I Mor ~17-4834 art. GP .\1 II arbour ;irl·a 'fl·nn1~. ...,., .,.,,5 mo lset lsc option. l'av1lion •· beh. •uoo mo Mewport leach 3 769 ---•• • • • •• •• •• •• • • • • • • • •• • I f I ·••:u· """"' .,,,.,.. ui .;r.• PoO. rp c, i;ar., .. uo, OpcnS11t&Sunl·S yrly.675·8S67 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lohforSale 2200 Spaciou~2 Bll.+fam·r,m IT'S AHOME Hanch Viuw. w rncr <>I COLl.~GE PARK 4Ur.L09""0Higuel 3252 530llt1verAve,645-2016 IEST ••••••••••••••••••••••• wt lge private pallo, 3 Br, 2 ba. frpll'. Many Sims & Pl•arcc. Joan, :!•,ba , 1-'H, 2350:.Q rt •••••••••••••••••••••• . SGllCletneftte 3276 IUY LOTS COSTA MESA wood burnin.g Ci replace Xlras. All Isl quuhly. J.r~ 846·t3il or 8411-2597 Newly pair\lcd. Im med. 0l'l•nn Vu . 2 Or Condo 2 Or 2 .nn Twnluie, paho, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Some "'"'Pie suy )'OU nnt • . + garoge So. of llwy. 'd t 1 ~·z <'I I 1 w hr d yr & ...... v .. ~ 1 1\vo vacant. l·With olde r 5-125 mo. 673·66.51. ~~~ 2 !:,-g~~c w/~Pefl:r~ Nr llunt111gton Cl'nter ~·cup, $460 Own 640•1714 .. 1 lanai r~. & pool. Pac. ~ri· lldb~ ca~ ar ~lo • In hills N. s.c. 3 Hr. l~ wbul )'OU pay for! We or· Jiou:.c.ncxtdooris newer --Secluded cul -dc·sac. 4 lir, 2 Ba, frplc, lg Slgnby ll/lO&J?ct S~ S38Sll.J un.,d,O·Vl~~lla&ge5;".A2t1'is. nrs.fi..5.642-~ P ba, spec ocean/can.yon fcrmore.And1.lie price1.s cons l·ruclion. Can be S. of Uwy, Charmin Close in w/EZ frwy ac· backyd & front !J;Jlto, FREE RENT! Beaulifu -·-"'--~-"' view , low ma 1nl iess. Membership In .a bought us a p11ekage or newer, 3 I.Ir, 2ba, lndry, $1 556 8979 purl ied w a tr, 2 Cli e 4 bdrm, 2, ~ ba execullv~ 3 l>r, 2 bu, rrplt . bnck Bay:ihores, 3Br. lba, w/w lndscpnf!., mony extras. Health Club. A t ennis separate. Call ror more refrijl. No pet~. A\•ai cess. 25 · ·. · garage. $485 mo .. in home in Irvine . Pets paho. lge fncrl ll\'l yd, s hag ep t, frp l c. $425. Wknds/ eves, cl~b:f)-Ci!tennls les~ns. lnrormation. Ag t . 12 1.$495.AJ.'l 675·6900 2 Br. cpts. no pets, no eludes g rdor/wl r / kids, ok' 2 yrs new. 1 y 82'.l lt> on cul de·sac .wshrtdryer. pvt comm &11·1013. 81lhard~. S wimm1ns f>IJ.7601 HEAR OCEAN singles. $200. 980 U W. garbage. 847·5603 lease. SSl·2000. Agent Stn'i!l. s.iso 4!t.t J~l eve:. bch, gur, palio. fncd yd, S. .,.,_ Golf Dri vlng R ani;:>e. u---' • D _ _. 17lhSl. ner9 S.150/mo. 552·9635. Saunas + greol a c-....,_..,.,ain. eson '• Lo\'ely 3 bdrm. or 2 *EXCLUSIVE * _. c.a1trano 3278 livilies: Sunday BBQs. Resort 2400 hdrm & den home. J • Eastside, 2 Bil hou:.l', <•n t'OR LEASE· 3 bedrm. 2 University Park 4 Rr. 2 ba horn\·" IJ!. ~d liluffs 3 Br. 2 ba. near ••••••••••••••••••••••• Parties with live IJand:.. •••••••• •• •••••• • • • •••• Ulk. frnm Big Corona ly S2ti0. 3 llH hou!>C $JllS ba, brand new. liOO sq.ft Village Ill ~00 2 hr. 21.!u. EN S350, :J l)CMll, !ohO(r... $52.5 per mo. 3 Br 2 Ba, 2 rrs ol<l. 1750 sq Free Sonday brunch. I ilCr" mount111n rec.:\ lkJCh.1\rt'a w1lha lotol \'at·ant. Call Sue al 1.andmj? home w (J l'ar <S tanro rd m odel ) br.2 baE9S..175. F'aui.tn ~ewlyredcc.64-1·~ ft, fncd, 1mmac, $450. Cahl Sl200. TU P. S2S t'hJrm • S!'>2S :Uonlh, 551Vi7i7 ___ gar. ~5251 mo. 111c ldi:; lownhomc. End unit _\'it.di n ealtors.4!.10·2241 ,.r 1 ,. 1 hlk lo bch. 2 br. 1 496·6774 _____ _ mo. ,\ft 5pm 6Jt W71 )'l'Jrl.> bas1:. 1\sk fot -gardcnl'r. No pcb. -J BJrbatJ 2 Tnt. I plex. )l;Jr. lrnb, 1''0il L£AS1'~: 3 b11tlrm. l! ~aul1ful grcenbel.t lot·11· Mission Viejo 3267 I.la .. S285. 1 3~1 39lh Sl. LUX new 3 Dr. ~1r1 Ua. MammQth M11unla111 Con BA y & BEACH ~ls'. si:ls. ~25 .• Fee $15. ( l_io!I· 3 BH. 3 Bi\, sunk.<'n •••••• ••• •••• ••••• •• ••. I\ v ail now. tl73·3663 or l w n h s e '-"' m 11 e t 0 do "''" nc\'t•r lc11·cl rn R"•LTY 675·3000 6117391··12060~11. 547·2501 or ~·n~f~~dh~~~ ~~ro~~~j bnng r?Om, cozy farncl y I BR 2 Ba Den fully 645-4979. Marina. Ocean Vu, rec 4Br 2Ba. askin1;t Sti7.000. ..,.. ,.. room w1lh wood.burnln!! • · & 'c 1 --racil $425 m o 551·1537 t:vs. 9ti3 :\337 djn. rm .. C..m rm, wet fireplace, plus a nothe crptd, d r pd n ee · LOVELY Udo Hme, 4 Br. · · ----------1LGqwl'tbplx ongrnbllarlil!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I bar SS75./mo in clll ~ r!replace in the large Wwter paid. 768-4299 or 3 Bu, din rm, fom rm, Alto Capistrano Exec. 4 $75,000. Bcaulifol new bch. Cl-dar & ~la!>s, ocn gardener. No peu. master suite, alJ.electri 768-4259 WO mo lse, to right Br, '""' Ba, dining / (am home furn1sh••d w /82 vu.11o pet~&w·6l26 RoberhRealty kitche n AND rr eshly 3 BRCordova,\'iew,froo Camily ,673·0629 rm.$.S50mo.496-8808 llcr e 'I ovcrlonk1ng 1 Br + den rplc newly HEALTY C0\11'\:\\' ~ 848 1688 painted. too!! Use o 1 d Lg f c d t• beau~1tul Apple Valley, p· mted. StePs 10 beac-h & CUTIE !!I • community club house. ~~urp:t~!s -~ pe~n meo. 3 BR. 21,,~ ba lu~ury condo, NEW 3 ar 2~ Ba Twnhse, f 5. 100 h1~h 111 tht-moun. ::0 $350 lil pd Lovely. clean home in lennis court8 , pools 71;8.3-i117 · ocean, pr,k. nile vu. $450. encl dbl gar, dsh~hsr. • Ja1ns 111', -.ell carry .., ps. mo u l\I ni"'" nainhborhnnd Clean 4Br. 2 ba. Com pl iacuzzi included. Availa ___ . ___ --&12·3036/6.11 ·1153 drpe, fplc. pool & .Jue. 1 OllkwoodG11rdenApls b I . ,.., .. •11 •Jct 403 JJsminl'. lower. ' r ,,. " " f . \" D I .... _ h 3 Dana Hbr Ref . sml 3 Jnl't' ...,... . ::_ ~ IXlntlolato, 121;11776 ~l Pnvaw patio & fenced k11ch incl'g re "ll· "I . ii• immediately at SSOO ,_wport leac: 269 i llr 2 &. Cplc, skyhtes. rm . s. '();+ofCOWtty ort'\l'&. lilli!oli011:*9:> )ard. 3 lk!drooms • l! c pls. drps. S42~/mo mnnlh. 4! ~Ac.ace;.i Tree.••••••••••••••••••••••• beaut. lndscpd. /\II appli petsOK.$450.493·4260 Your rent dollars go even furthe r•••/\ te rrifi1· maintenance crew, pro· fessional maruigcmenl s taff that cnres, :ind friendl y nelg hl>ots. Models open daily 10·7. Sorry, no one under 21 & no p ets. Roommate service available. Mon· lh·to-monlh occupancy. 'p -. 2550 -balhs.$3751Mo.(,\f2J) !Jti2.447l lrvuie.55l ·•552 •HOWAVAIL.• +w!!hr/dryr.642·7358 Condom&nhnns r~. '' ~Ml mu l~e meMJt'rn :l Br 2 11"'11•• ''hasl' Ll't' li-14 li200 ~b r. 1 d"I ,. u S -----""·-1-1.-.. 3400 •••••••••••••••••••.•••• Ra dpl\, (pit· .•• ,,,., i•atm, ,. ~ v I r, 1 p c.. ,, gar .. nr WOODURlDGE 3 Br 2 Ba, THE BL 1o·F • $500 to IEW rwnw-1700 16th St Cat Dover) !-. \l.F:OH TH \In. ludry. t;.tZ.!rJlll... _ schools. Bl'h /~arncr din rm, fam rm, P<>pla S79Spcr month 0 H 1 A 0 RIOR 3 V U ••••••••••••••••••••••• (714)642·8170 f'r:11111.'r 1'.irk 3 Br 3 Br 2 Ba boal & trlr 111 .. urea 5425. IJ47·2273 or Model. Nr parks & Juke BIG CANYON, $750 lo 2 r en or r. very Newport \::res t. beout ~Irvine (Bl 1Glh) ( j 14 )645-0550 hQl1..,t' "1th :1 lob of frwt Ve,·w of <.)(;c•a11 & Lluy 1.·ess. wtr pd, bl & lai.I. MU 281 L. $470 mo. 552-1292 $99S per "lOnth clean. 6 mm1 or longer dee .. compl furn. 3 RH, 2 2 br, winter rental SJOO tret'' & i:.1nf1'11 :1 m1nu11• 'i•w :I hr, :! 11., 11nr or s.i~ S4H·Sll50 . -,--HASTINGS & CO. le:isl' S550. 6'10·85<!2, car gar. A!lenl646·3255 (213) 445·5963 or (21:1) 'Naik 1 •• 'lllP ' ~~·.11011 rur11 .Yrh or Wnlr ".ilk •. --. -Sl l.\HP 3 hr.:. ha, frph• • RENTALS Realtors 640·5500 833·3732. • '-~ . _44_7_·9443 _______ _ l>ll J·h hr Pl s· F I If --~rwnl ,. 1,3uon tl1n~1. 1 o .... rit•t lo Be.1o1 Cnrnni. U.•Jt'h 11r 01.X 2 lJr I Ha 1:1111110. II))., < s W!> : t·. '· • ingle ami Y omeq ! Br Duplex front unit. • ......._1_1.._..1 ~425 Beach duplex. year round ~Iii OR.'iO Ch1n.1 Ct" t· Duph'\ hltn!>, refrllo(. l'nd IMllo, d.rp!-• fncd yd. ~r (, W 3 BR 2 Ba $38 Jasmine Creek. 2 Bit. & __....._ • "1r ,unilo·i' lr"I lillei.·. 'eds. OK ~:lOO mu l\••t Collcgl' ,\, w. l•slm M11ll 3 BR. 2 Ba.····· · · · · $39 den, ne w lleautirully de· Adults only. 415 Emerson ••••••••••••••••••••••• rental. 2 Br, $385 mo. ' "' •· ·' " "' · .... "· SL I Santa Ana Hghts l "-n Clemeille. Brand new 968-8867 or 894-4652 Red &tote 2800 1·ll ~ mo ti7S ~or Hroct•. W2 li34i11 ~115. ~7 7:19:1 __ _ 3 BR 2 Ba... . S.t' cor S795 /\gt IH<H 133 .:>a be~ t>."11 :::ll."I • N .h S1 r nod.ii<: W 'Slm111!.lt•r 3 BR. 2 Oa ... , S.""l .Wwport Beach 3269 ~___. .. ach 3269 ~~uyrywa~olkodloosb. e2 flcrh .. 2Ubla1·1' OCEANFRONT ••••••••••••••••••••••• -VACANT-CLt:A :s arp. i 1,. ~ . 4BR '>•·Sa '"' ~,._... ..-.. o .. StudioApt $18S mo 'sc h I 3Pr 2 ba 1 lu~h Cl•ln" . -, . . . . . . ••••••••• •••••••• ...... ••••••••••••••••• •••••• pd ... .,..,..·*•()(), 1 •• 0 , WCI' ' . ""' . .. 11 .., ~11 L· h '-12S:!h1 ,lrnl••Jr.knls.~Br.2Ba.nrs<' :-., >. ·'· ... ·l lJH .C!•:Ba .. ~.,,., '" Adults,lOJMcF~·•dden '~. n l nU~ ''l' < \c nit .,. " h "·' d rp• l ll lS (n<:cl Vc1 " • 1 1 1~:1 .. 0 1\ "'"'' ctiurches. ~ opi;, ..... oomo "· 1 e · · · · Townhomes Aut. 498·1522. Pl. 675-1865 •, ' • 111 '' rt'.t 111 l>l'r'°''J '1:11n 11 .. 111.;lb .. i411 5370 ,,o ""'tl>. O""n Sal & Sun Kl!!Hli.25 !lft Sµm 2 BJ< 1 ll $325 ' --------- • Pf"lll'•\\ '"~"'h•·r·· ' l().•{'cor A~1st in ll< V1111 2 a1t ' 1 Ba ...... ·S:I~ b Brand n ew It arbor BAYFRONT ('J I ('.",;1''.~!.~'~.';.'. lllt'lll 1\1 'i(; St. 2 Rr 2 H.1. pvt Buren. !JliR J..171) C\'Clo. i\ftor<Jahlc Slli!'>. I br, kltb. 2 f!R: :! H~:: .. :: .... s.1iis macna I f rvlne Twnhlle, 2 Ur l'h Ba. nr $240 mo. Bach apt. Ulil • ""'""'' 1111110,\.1rrl.jt,u .ul1l1m ---JX•ls.~i:l:1 0l\.f~<:. 2 BH 2Uu ......... $<1 f881ty 1lntg Jtbr.$36S.Mli·l371 pd, 928 E. Balboa ~bt... ~ISO 011n Sa t 'S un IBr.~ewcpl~.rlrJ)!o,pnl .:! '_la11~Henlals.:>,10 5:r.o !!llH.2 Bu... S450 Sondru 675 . 4533 W•l'Cf 2900 ~I Uli t-nl'l µorchl'~. '1\ idrl!. :"Ir C>c:can l! hr S28.'l K11b B S52S ••••••••••••••••••••••• t'hJ111unn. •rrlulll'd S250 bi5·51110.t~l~!IWK •11\:l~.i-l?I-< f <'l: . ~~ft ~ .. ~ .. :. <>.~25 GNpt Be~: JBR. 2•~8~. Bayrront· 2 br. 2 ba, W .. i\f.·1111 l·<t•nt.1lw. c 10 .~3711 2 fl " "-'I arage '-" carport, poo · adults. 233 l!lth Sl. C. By Jrll h••u'" H• "'''"'n J ... ~min.·,t r1-vi... :! IHI. 2 3 He , Ii,: llwll HI. 1iutco, ' .,,. 3 RH a. · "'''" SPYGLASS HARIOlt VIEW rec. area. S450. ApplS485. 675-0236. Vt••Jn Will I u •li rt" lnr h,, rn11d11 l-'11rm11I rlin . ~Jt, ..,l\. rt•r, 1 Jib. S.:IOO ? 1 3 HH. 21: Ua . . · · $45() Call 545-3359 '·••h ih·n" "'t'I h.11 . 2 ht•Jut. i\\I 12 t.li':'i> lll2i ~.·~ j -~r it:ir Kub. !>I:'· 30r4 lir.2•~1>.1 S.195 4 bedroom. 2 bath home w /nice To..--1.-.,. 2 Br near bay & beach. l'1fl f""1en"'-nn f<1•Al11 1 ' 11 -"' · l' 3 BH 2 HJ . ·;,oo bac kyard . Area h"'S pool. J·acuzz1· & w...-05 Pool Ava1'l l(I June .,"'h ' '" .. -"' 1 uii-"' 1111 " '"'' Dono ~o nt 3226 .\lam Henl;il,, 5I0·5:r70 ... •1-&.-11h•d 3525 631 ,.;..,,,. ""' · ,.,., 111.1 1 ,._" .. :~ ~,..~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• -i :~.~.'~'ri:·t~ .i~: tennis courts. $680/mo. Gisela ··==··••••••••••••i--""'-'"'"------· "'1·hhu}"r tl111 .. fnr • "H"I n• ''"'"'"~A 2 l1 Ill, :lllt2Ba.1·m·rlpJllo. 3au.2•·B·.1 . ·''·"" Lumf00644-6200.(Nl6) H . B h B BEACJl"'RONTlbrf '. ... , ,. J ... ~Pl•l mu:--r.,. c en. •'¥> · 'r.n.. r :o . " I ,1n a. n1•ar new cpt--& ih I>~ " " "'""' " untangton . eac 2 r. .. or t't~•·r l'1111 ~"' '1 t lol Iv rl'flnrw ':'r.1 Opc'u ~Jl ~5 mu A.1tl 1% 27!10 bllnll, tplt'. 0; iwhl' &' 3 Dll 21;, ~:i. ti25 l h b u,. new cpt s & malure adlts. S22.5 mo ft I to It ~ llt•iu h 1 11 '' & 1 ~u1,~1 1117 ,\ t'<H 1 .i <'\''< 4!tll 1~1!1 PMk. $.'.l!IS. 2l:t·.illtJ·l•H7t.-3 BH. 21 ~Ba ~i25 3 l!OROOM -$475/mo dr,apes, dryer & ref rig in· /\vl.12116i5·382" • t"1rnw\1tion1.1nhnu"" i.1 ,,;i ST 3232 ·IHH l!'J Ba ..... s-m Immaculate adult condo m iniurA cJ.NcwpaintS275.<.:ull NEWPORT f>L',/\Cll.· ._, Jo'11t1•r <'•ommN• e.al ,.,1r «0 Ne"' pnrl lwuch 646 5 25 f S 30 H' A \111h1lt" llnmr 1•.ork 2 hr w lrpk . h!t> p11t111 & ••••••••••••••• •••••••• Huntift9fon 2 Br. 2 ba .. furn ~125 ' only minutes f rom freeway or . 1 o l : · lledroo m furn lahed. ,\no.,,1n\W'lt\t11>nH 1'1tchl 0 ll ~111.tll)·nrd I Br. 1-'am 1tm. :1 1111. HarbOur 3242 Westcliff s h o ppin g . S p ac ious BRANDNEW 3Br2•".l Ba, Steps Crom beoch. A IJ1 111• !1hDpp1n1:1"cnti•r 111s HI w. wrvu Mbrshv Sun Suil ••••••••••••••• ••• •• •• • r ooms _ fireplace _ s torage · 12 mi from Ooheney St . $3'75/mo. Agt. 752·7315 Worid Wide lrolcen Cost MH• U 24 <:J~mc-S4SCI 00.'J 1455 3 Rr. 3 ba to-. nhous~ space only s teps lo pool area. Dch. & Dana Wharl. SSIS •-1 icnb .,_...__ 673 '"S4S ' I 323 · kll •·o d · (N ) per mo. 634-8282 8·5PM. ~._.!!_i.a.._..a -o .... ••••• ••••••••••••••••• Fomttain Val •Y 4 Spur •.lit n~".'' .: ~, Paula Bailey 642-8235. 17 ~1-1012 E\~. ~MtTV " :0..C'('Clt"fi b)' l><-c J ~l J Ill< 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S470. Cal I • ti In ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~M.Olkl l'A.\tl lor uuit'. · hu hou~t· w .:·1r 't. va;d ~<lin~er Rrnokhu r,l IWt> 1371 or>l46·S<l5tic\t'~. ~xes Uftfwon 1600 lalboablClftd 1106 1ndu11tr1 11I '<hUJ>!C, :-In f l. , (' b b r I • ------LIDO ISLE ) wnr~. ofhr(''I 1.10.11,100 b) rt'~p 11'"1 V w ,re 11 super 3 r. 3 3• P 1' • New townhouse. Lennis • bo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~· -~nt 11H"rl35omo.l rcfcr DW,lndryrm.S42.'1/m11. rourl,pool.2br.i\o ()('ts. Pie r&s lipfor50 at.Jbedroom 1.-arge 3Bll, 20/\ o nBach.pvtentrnnce,bath. WANTt:LI TO Ill Y E"""uk PINuie phnne ~..1-45ro or S3t·9545 Aul s:irio. 1714 15:lli·22:l t nr home at $1300/m o. -will lease Pen in s ula a t 110 E . Vr ly. 548·5804 day:!, Muturl.' t:.ml<"n "illl or M5 i'8.1i afl lipm _ no fee_. _ _ ___ (213)592·:!288 usz3 C• ... PUSft..·. f"h'l"'E w /option to p urr h ase Lynne &lbou. Clean. ms with 673·3731 eves & wknds without hou"t' 17 1<1 > . , -'T ""' »a M" Roth e ll 644·6200. (Nl8) 6 mo lse. Cull Mr. Oolo, ~107 873.8!Jl7 Mt-:S/\ l>l'.l. M/\lt. 4 1lr. ltedec 3 hr. 2 h~i. UW. ;i llr J H11 . l~c fom rrn. Ol't::N OAJl.V 675·2653 art 2pm to see. lalMtaPenifttulo • I.: r'am ltni, bltn~. fplc-, dbl RIO. nu cpl'I, llrps. $37:i w welbw-. blln~. rlhl 1•1ir Agt., The Jack11on Group, ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.._. gJrw opnr.rncclhackyct 116.)·4~ or 53 1954S'AKl gar, ~rdnr Incl. $600 HA.M.TOtiP,M DOVEft SHOellS Ltd. S)l(). Vrly 2 br. 4! bo, 2 ~"C" .. •• w fruit tret-i. $113:5. lat + ~o Fee, ~-4442 F'OH Lf':ASfo: Vic w -p o o I -j a C U Z z i ! 4 story, 2 car encl. gnr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $t!'i0 rln. dcp No doirs . -_;.:..:.___;______ C<tM La. 2 Br. 2 Ba, Balcony.642·1003 ~founlished 544.5100 1 Bedroom. pnme loc·o· lrYtM 3244 NEWWOODIRIDGf bedr ooms. family room. dining ocean vu. tw-amed cell·---------t~··••••••••••••••••••• lion, cl~e to att Cltun, ••••••••••••••••••••••• CREIKSIDE HOME room . 3 1 '.:! baths. wet-ba r + 3-car ln1ts. frplc. 2 cur ~nr .. pvt ly The leach leltoaP.-..Mlla 3107 2212 Corot-II ColleRe move·in cond. Cull 11111, 0 f 11 .. 1 ., l S p ecl11cular "Sycu ga r aoe . Private b eac h es. bch privl. $44~ mo. 1 BR. r:irt f.'um. lnl'I .. . 2n A"' Cl•r IC e n (' uxe. II y .• "1 od I 4 nr ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• r a r" 3 £1 r · 0 ~--, ..... 937, 1 twnh~e 2 Br. 2\11 b:i. frpl, m(lrc •• e · .. · $1150/m o. Elaine Svcdeen 642-8235. C7S.3203 stove & refrtg. S:ZtJO mo. 'lorllng 2 Br l'ollag" Eve r Y th In 1' n ew . ........ dbl J(ar, patio. pool S37S. 2•.,ba, lge family rm. (N19) -N-.,.......,...,l-lt-11.-2R_r_._hc_a_m_r_c_il_·' Incl all ulll. No pcl.8, no "'I Pvt patio. n em od e It'"· I S 4 O Lo\cly Green brook. :l hr, 826-0878 sunken livin~ rrn. frml "' watrr b«I,;. 645·5714. · 6-16 5239 w/J?llrdener 95(; OIWG 2 ha f::imrm hllt' W:>lk I< ---dlnmR rm. laund rm 8t Ing&, new cpl, patio, All r .1--------- Cor0Nde4 Mor 312.2 ~1F.SA VF.RUE . 4 Dr, 2 pool'. park & school Pool WOODRIDGE f~~l~~~~·1 [f!::'u~ OCIAN It CITY "MIMI VIEW" No pets. $275 645·16A2. 2~Y~~~.~$~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ra. din rm. I& fam rm. fee, water & gardener 3 hr, 2 b11. nil smcnlllM i\vail Oe\' I. $495 mo. Cbeodrner loc3atbionth-Aprivahc~ -14 "-tnwftt• FufftltlMd Evs; M7·1lti9~ -,ms Cle{ln. Cute. ". o. of wtr grdnr "''· O\•all Im. pd. $450. 53&1120. Owner unable In mo"e .,~2.457". •-or ~,52 ...... 4 . ., room s. a s . rea as poo . ......,.- "' .,.. I C d I I ( ..., " "' .,..., u -' •• trecl\ •••••••••••••• ••• •• •• •• f>L'.EK·A·VIEW, ~ .. blk l~1 llwy 2 hr. l lfo. house me d. $<150 mo. <2 13) .... ...a-. .. och 3.240 n. onsl er al renta 0 · or12moslst'. Jucu z?.i & tennis cou ,o..:; . .v<.NVl mo. lldbo t-•• l706 r. • '\vi 'st/15 lhru 3 30 lf 31i7-l.W>.1or l711>~11215!1 ...... ".,..°" rers. 547 ·094l day1>, ----GlS' elaLamson~AA.62()(), (N20) •.. DC.t'lln,:Jroomy bdrm11.:1 ' ----••••••••••••••••••••••• 644·0700eves •WOOOBRtUGt-:• ~ ••••••••••••,••••••••••• bu, <'J>l'd & drp'd. J.,lt I you ~et'd '. 1 "h~~l term New Brookview l.:ondo. 3 3 BR. l V.. ba. Bi~ prt>lt)' ---Droodmoor 4 tir. 3 b11, 2 BR, gar, child, 1111ls. BK. patio, ''2 blk lo ~ t~nto 'call 67 5- 6688 Br, 2'1 Ho . reCrl~. w/ yd. Clean. Nice res. area. 3 Br 2 Ra. Collette Pork l.ge vi!w ~ 640·6752. llf9 C4MYOM TOWMHOMI $27$, l-~ce $15. 63t 21lll, OC'rnn. Cpt11, drJ)". Yrl> • MOVlltlGHTIH! dryr. no pets 1430. Gd.Sch.ls.nearby.Under hme P ark.!!. pools. Lease for 18-m onths. Terci(lc 3 541..t50lfll"879-1060 ~·133-ior842·74:JO J.ike prh11ry. CIPt•n "~Hll60 ~ IM7~ ,rhool Clean. S400 ln('I Deerfield. Uel ow m arket, b edroom -brand n ew -.... , ....... 3707 r...enn tun $175, Ul'lls ftd, .... _ • ..... h · lwn muinl. t).4().lS38 or s ub hr 3 br. lwnhsr. ·~· ,,,. ueams "' P"t . .,.,·a~ ar Spacious 3 Br 2 Ba Jn Two sty 3 Br 2 Ra. lge yd, 998-2322 Avail now. R3J.OJ08 community pools. lcnnl~ courts & ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• sh-. rcfrl11. 1-·l·e ees37 Comp. fur~ d & Mesa Verdtt, avail Nov. 2 <'Or au, $400. Nr ---------1w-urlt $795 mo Joyce Edlund Lae 2 br, 2 ho. P\"l bch & :\1aJn Rentals, MO.S3'70 one ol lhe nicest 2 br ln lS, ch.ildren & pelt OK. 8u.'lhard. Mil !~ 2 Story,' Br. 21, bo, F.xrc Sun11hlncy Sharp F.nd S-." y · . : ' I W town. Newer naturnl ~12S type. Btfly lndscpd. nr Condo. 2Dr. "" blln11. 642·8235. (N21) ~:~r!!!. C~1Yl'~rt 6e~t~,~ c.as"'-to leach ll 11 wood ke11•h w alt bltns. COZV 3 Br l~ Ba, den. ~vcrythlnit. l'h1lrlrrn. Comm pool. clos~ lo ... 675·'465. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·1g P\'l. pot10, cov'd . SUPElt dplx, 2 Br, fplc, fptc, d3hW8hr, tt!rlir. 2 Pl'IA OK. 1511.Stmo. 1ncld11 f rwy . No lse u2:i. HAalOI YJIW HOMIS --Outstanding new 2 UR. 2 •• ,k". Only $42S mo. yr. lndry rm. 487 Joann. carJ.ar, rciuonobly grdnr Now ~1v&ll. 675·6488. _ Neut ral colors w /ne w carpets & Lge2 br, 2 bs, b11y view. On, ocean view duplex · •, lse. O.K No foes. 548-4141. osk rorcarol pric . Evs. tl75·3447 640 OON --__ _..;C'-.,.---dr .. pe.•. Lt.ght •. ai'ry 3 bedroom. 2 pvt bch. & w11xh1ng foc1I. .apt .. frplc.2 car encl gar. AGENT 644-1567 --1'HF. TF,RR1\ "" be11ut 3 o " « Wint.er $42.'J. mo. C111l ,,ft 1325. mo. 528·7967 · 2Br 1 ba, r pt!I, dl"Pt'. d!lh· 2 en, 2 ba H'\lnt. Uay con Ortentre·. b\lout 3 br. 2 llr. Cambrtdgc end unit bath home at $600/m o . Gisela epm 67$-4'165 ---r leech 316' waiu:,stv,rhlldrrnOKno do. Qulel. Adlts. only. ba.lmo.frot rt"nlon )r on11mb\l.welbor,fplc,. L a m son644·6200. (N22) --.!-· CorOftadetM• lt2l , ..................... tets · S300 I m o 166 Pool Ii rec. dr. $2~ mo. ~. l18S. &40·4462. N·~ic. cvm pRU<l, l'lcc gar OPl"Jr, WINTER til June 11, $l90 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ~£ANF'RONT. beaul 2 tagnolla. $4~·1651. $$2-3280 IRVINE-TltE RANCH. ~J:c· $425 Ownr/agt util ln~I. 1.Rr. 673.$4t0 or Lovely 1 BDRM, 1 ba, :~::!c~= rental. EASTSIOE 3 br, 2ba ForLnse3br,3ba.frplc, Largtnixceutlvc homeln --·--------901~;:~~lw Har~!~OOCenter 813-7'26 \\•'w cpts. bltn!\, swim ~---· -+aame rm " woc-kshop, malnt yd .. c11tm PoOI. Hied area. 4 Bedroom , TtJRTL!ROOC P1an IU, Bach apt, furn. uul pd, POOi. lndry tac. So. of tJOOI. $395 per mo. CaU: walk to bth. iS30 mo. In· ram.uy room "Coscadt" • Brdln'1 Ir f'm rm. pvt ,,.vine -1 campus Vallty e»nier m uu u q u1 e l non· hwy. Short w11lk to bth. ... ••• flod. Ftrsuson Rcallore e ludes p ool Hrvlct wtlh 11ardeMr. $.US/mo. yd, view. JHS mo. 7$2·1414 •moker, Sl 75. y r ly. '310. 675·2311, uk ror '3Wlttl SU.MhrM3·2543 Agt. '152 '7315 M4·Ti"1Qot5S2-7083 673-5580 Louhle. ; T r -·-~· ....... '.'/" .... ..._. I • I 1 l ~: • I ' i.,a twww•h U...... Af;a tao•h......... I ApwhM•h U..W... .,.,.._. .... u.fwoa. Af;a laHt1 u.t.,... RomM 4000 Fr1d~. November 5. 1976 DAil Y PILOT 87 .......• ~· ••••.••••.••..•.•..•.•••...•..•... · 1 ·.•.....•••... .. • . • .. . . . . .. • • . . . . . . • •• . . . •. . . . . . . •. . • . • . • . • .•• . . . .•• • •• • . • •• .. . • • . . . . . . . • . • . ;.,,;.;.;;.;;.i;.;..;..;~::..:.. ;,;.;;.::..:.....;~,;;,;..;;..._ ______________ -=,...., ~ CorwcW M• ltU .ta Me.a )t24 Costa Mn a · 3124 ..... ..., .. 9-adi 314 .Wwport 9-ac• 3169 ecp ns rma S«>-llOS mo .• ~~~-~~~ ..... ~~~~ ...-ns Mott1111 .. Trvtt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••:•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• AJJ $&0. wk. Share krt/• C>pport.fty 5005 Deidl 1035 BRAND NEW LARCt: 2 Br z .Ba, yard, IUCH YEARLY bath. Shown Mon·Sat ... lrand ... ew 1W9o ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• n .. c;.., --~ ~·z.<:r_t•. CORONA DEL MA K :? Ur Townhouse. frplc Pool, tcM i.,, conUncnta.l break/~t. S01ne oeean & Catalina view'!, Ck>se l ahopplna & fine boach 644·2611 Lmeltand llielt tar. Brookhur ll t Dlx3Br2Baup~rdplit, "only", <.;all alt lpm. Offl('U with prlvote PASTfOOO LOANS9 °' &Hom111un. S275. IW6-90t!H ocean vu fr encl 1un Rer11 r~·d. 5.5t>~ or bat.N. '5 Cenl~ a sq.ft ."" /0 porch . $47S + Ulll. ~~ cll.ldu.\g utilities. 300-600 lduH!!~p~~,.Preunt· Abo hdTl> Lo.u ocw units. l & 2 Br• $2l(5( ~·l~ _ ROOMS S2S wk up with 1q.ft. unfts. 1 .. Mlp run, wcu tstab • 1''a.lrest Termt since 19"l9 lo $285. 7911 Slark, o R M C.,.. ., Beach Blvd. 894·SlS8 OUPl.F.X 3 blkl. bch, 3 Rr, kitchen $40 00 wk up O'f C cuy terms. A~'l. UBI. Sattler MhJ. Co. 2 ea. bltns. fpl<', p .. t10. 11pu..~9'7SSorG4s-~ llffltor lllOHewport 751·3'741 642·2119 545·°'1 I I.ARCE 2 br. ~undeck, lg glll'. Yrly $400. tl4S 1682 W;al,.-r -C ... -1-k-ll Coda MeN 541.1729 leer ""1-Ta"'-S II h i... •••• ~ r r k1lch $225 mo. 3 hr, 2 bu, '""'· cm .• unill on. / '"'--..... ,. We8'-')'2nd'l'nast l>oc<bc • tro I t> fl'1l11wc",, o a pin~ iorest. Me.lndet fl3SI lg rooms. SJZS. \Both l BLK BCH. lge 4 Ur, 2 Ra. prvl g, steps lo bch. N.B. COSTA MESA Ca:sh lmmedl MS-ll'GO tumbllr~ W<•lt?rfcills clnd q414?t pools. Listen to the W1.vvt. Y_d. cpts. drps, 1 ~wly dcrtd: I\~ pets. Yr· '150. 67H706. 645·2223 DM ~ to 1020 sq. ft. Xlnl ateu, fumlly pro· Turner ruw lnve:sl. Co. w und c1f bubbUng streams and grOW1ng things. cluld OK day11 847·3S41, ly lse $.525. ti42·344.3 HOTEL, CK'ean 1 bloc.·k. /\IC. newly d~coraled. bkm:s force slllv. n~a 'rour ,1Jult ..ipartmcnl home at Plnecreek VIilage is eves 536·3638 Newport Isle Waterfront 2 12$ week. Call 000·2e26 or Mw.ler:1, Brkr. ti73·.Cl20 co setter now 1 Alilt. URI, atot.,l retrem. Hereyouran enJoy unusual pnvdcy Hunti!'ll)ton Rr. adults only, s lip ~3Hnticnch. It You Need A Started & 7$1·3741 ,....,,...~/ I •*"*2 Bit, l~ lia, t bUt tu .i11J lux.un;. Harbiw 3142 avail. Yrly. 673·933S Hottl .. Moffit 4 l 00 l-urnh1hull Orelee. call Mex.lc.IRett..,.ant Lott It PcM.nd beach. No pets. Dave S: ·I\ RECREATION PARADISE. Two tennis courts. ••••••••••••••••••• •••• Modem 2 br, el(1c range, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1' 11 ~ EXEC UT 1 VE $3200. moothl.Y noll •••••••••••••••••••; ••• _A_it_.&&_.a._12_1_1 ____ 1 c.... l pool I .. lq II •h2ll I J .. -1 NEW3Dr ,2 Ba,CondoSO' rafn"g gar l••Asundeck Holiday'"~·•1h? SUITE. rtenl includcis Xlnl b~•Ch location, t••--~ S""OO vwimm ny Pus ura ue vo eyvu poo. i\C......... to tennis, pool. jacuui. " . .• ..... . -.. I/time i·eceft" phono & icals In & out. roal $$ ~ ~ ••• JASMINE CREEK Sand 110lleyball court. Mountain lodge clubhouse $4.SO. oos.s7ooev:s. Adults, no pe!Ji. $300. \ Lliguna urea re~idenl'e mnil sllrv ce. utll & maker. Good t\lrms. /\If\. •••••••••••••••••••s••• SUrt:RSPECIAL28R& 1Mlhflrepldce,c:onwrsationplt,bill1Mds,gym,s.auna. blkbeacb.6't2·3600 upcclln{: guest11. re j,mltor1.il. Secy's & ofc UBl,751-3141 T: Irish Setter mule. den. Ocean view from l~ln. 3144 PARK NEWPORT "View gi!lter them ut Castle rqulp avnil. Newport 1 yr, w/QJ!lo l<lgs. Lost 4 Patio. on Lhe "~n .. -lt. Huny to the good life and t .. _ re'-x. ...... ,•••••••••••••••• ·r nh 3 B 2 ... b Lagu n:i Ocean View <.:enter. ti<I0-5470 LAUNDROMAT wlls ago, Thalia St. Las. •' .. -.. "" •1t:1• kJ RCMCJto S ow ouse, r . "' a, Villa for .. u.,., ... or moro _..,., ,,. ,. .. , I 1 d I j f I 2 ti M 'lh l y " .. ~-... "' GROSS..,,,,.,,., Mo. lkh. Rewwv. 4--..1 nc tl es P<>O • acuzii. FROM $265 TO $355 • rp c, pa os. on ° & receive 10' ~ dtScouot. Plai:a ~xecutives Suites. _,.,., tennis courts. $72S moo· Including I feat & Water No Lease Required. Jooqii9n Aph month or lease. SSSO Nov/Dec only. t'or re· 2S6 sq fl view ore. All !?:~ c;ft1~~~:::5locf2 FOUND: .Blk Sprin~cr U\Jy on yrly lease. nenlln.: frorn $200. biJ.8Sl1or673·1368 ser valions clilll 494·2996 serv1~·cs. Airport Tower ' 1 k•. S pa n I e I fem . V 1 c. •••ON UEGONIA: Im· One Bedroom. On.> &ih /\dull apb .. Leaslui pre· SfOTL~ roomy 3 Br 2 '"---tu__ 4 l Plow. 2082 Michelson, dryers. x nt par ang. University & Jord.rn. maculale, charming, 2 Two Bedroom T"''° '3.i1h \•1ew nuw is a prestige Ba • & b ~ nvmw 50 lrvmc. 752.0234 Owner.onxlollS. Will ac· lrvtne SS1·4019 . bedroom :i partment. 1300Adams Ave.lnCos1a Mes.i, Irvi n e co mmu nity .steP6LQCX'ean oy ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ cept good terms. Agt ---·------- Comer lot. No pets or acros.s trom Orange Coast Coll..~ Twenty Pergola, Cu Ive; $37Syrly. G4S·IS7S Pvt· rms, hwrng cart!, TOP LOCA TIOHS 83'7-4200 LOST BLACK <DAR lo\ chtldren.S350.monlhly. bel'wl!enH4rborandFau\11ew. &Sandburg,2 blCX'ksso Spectao.:ular Lido Isle balanced diets, lovely llarbor area's best. 100 RESTAURA..._.T BFER"NtA)L~ ~"o~~~ri COUOF NEWPORT (7l4) S40·l300. of San Diego Frwy. bayfront apts. 3 bdrms. 2 patLO/grdnsS44 3833 To soo sq ft. From $S0 " 0 Rt:/\LTORS NOW R.fNl1NG 559 1100 balhs. newly decorated, V ati Rental 4250 REALONOMICS, Corp. Fabulous mountain set· MIX. MISSING i''ROM 67§..5511 ·c ta WOODRIDGE carpeted & draped. Call oc Oft S lirokers 675-6700 tina in area of Beau· CJ\ItDEN GROV~TOCT 2 Br, l ba apL So. of Hwy, •••• !~~::: ....... ~!.~~ .. ~! .. ~:::-. ...... !~.~~ PlNESAPTS for appt. 54().S222 ~:·:~;:;~·1:-..:.~·=~I;~·;~ ~ Sq fl. llarbor Blvd, ~~~be~l~y~1(:>'0~~ ~\OVE'jTEiI:'K1 NARl~~ adlts. no pets. $28S mo. 1, 2 & 3 bdrm units. 2en .'1banr.ocean.Gar. Sayullla Beach near <.;ostaMesa,S19S mo. shop. dining room and :>M-4033. Call 642·S9S3 wkdys CiRAND or&•t4G Designed like e arly S250 til June. dshwr. Puerta Vallurta. 4 br, 4 546·7W5 cocktails in 6300 sq. fl. -LOST--: _KJ_ll_e_n-3-m-0-0-1-11• 673-3983 or 64S-9399 eves FOX HOLLOW VILLAGE C;ili Cornia b ungalows l28'2·46Slrect644·43'10 ba. SSOO. wk 731·3777 F-h. 1 1 t fl bldg. on 1.5 acres co.m· bla"k fem. w/r-' coll 'r. & wknds. REFR_,,.., .......... _...S t" r om $ 2 7 o. 1 1 5 . -a,i, wn. i. ' 141 1 oor, I I d th , ....... .. ~• !! Pinestonc. Ofc hrs 3·5::IO WESTCL1FF 2 br, adults, On Beach Pcnlhoui.e Con· cor. swte, s~nctacular plel~ Y equ. ppe wi SantJogo Ave, San Clem. CodaMna l824 IOAM to 7PM SAT Ii SUH wkdays,9·5:JOwknds. no pets. $2fA'l mo. lnq do. Near Culturlil Cntr. ocean/mln view. lrleal furniture, fl'<lures and 498-1867nllS ••••••••••••••••••••••• SKWity~aaWaind 700\V l"ffD /\ 0 h ·1 f 2 3 Ci La Inventory. Heady ror ' -· 552·0400 1 cstc 1 r. pt. IM a u H nwa i · J•ully or or man irm w lum·key opcrotion. Seal· f'OUND: English Sh.ee1>-Newadult waterlronl apl5 ForQudifiedT....ts -----furn . yr lse. (714) Lib .. Zerox avail. 1 f 220 1 /d ..--. in Mesa.Verde. Deoulaful Townhome 2 br, 2 ba Im mac l br w/xtra:.. 968-2046 644·9'150 ng or P \18 W ance dog puppy. Vic. E'-¥son I d . E Live near the beach in a s parkling Poul. mce area. $330. mo. Yrly lsc. $275. mo. floor and 2 wood burning HighS<:hool. 968-3155~ an scaping. xcep· new lownhome of your own. Enjoy s.'\2.().1Jll a(t7. 673·0697. Bl~ De fir Cullin. 2 Br.CDMdlxsuitesfrom$1.SO. fireplaces .f"\lllpriccof tionally rich Interiors. d frplc. 'l>leeps M. Weck or Util incld, A/C, pkjt. only SMS,000 Includes 1-'0UND. Calico kll'tl•n. !!des"bvdremrdse Vfr1ollmas,$21!~~ privacy, woo burning fireplace. COZY3Br20;i.:urcond. AdltLuxury 2 br,2 bacon· weekend.li40·SS65 jamtortl75·tBOO above and liquor license. appnc. 4 mo's. Warwic•k '" .. ,,....., swimming pool & jacuzzi. Attached bltns. lndry rm, nr fwy. do w/~rplc. Nr Westcliff , • Owner will Cina nee. & Marian . Weatclifr. Mesa Verde Drive F.ast. garage. 30' back yard. 2 bedrooms, 1 lh A\lul now. $365. 963·2l87 shoppmg ctr. $350 p<.·r BIG B Ei\ n lloui;c for TA~ M/\N }SO sq~. share /\gent 979·2342 after 6 N.B. 646-2562 Cost a Mes a . <714 ) baths. Adults. Enjoy the· luxury of a mo.645·1528. rent. 3Br. 2ba. $22 per ex1sung Ull Ap111. Busy p.m. •·ouND: Femole 6 mo !'>W-8871. new home without havm· g to own •t. LCllfliftO leach 3141 w t r 1 blk r day. Call art 6· 496·4192 shop ctr, F.V. good loc. kitten. blkforange. \'ic 1. ••• •••••••••• •••••••••• a er ronl rom SSS mo. 962·1177 • , . . MESA VERDE area. RftlhC)U4m .. tffdforlyecr . 1 beach.3br,2ba duplex.Cabinforrentby wknd. • SEWING liUSJNl-.SS Cor Adams & Magnolio . Home atmosphere 2 & 3 621 W WihoR. C to M New 2 br. 2 : ba luxury t..g yd. Perfect for sm. wk or mo, Twin Peaks, luSIMH l...tal 4450 s~le, Atfg .. be~spread, 962·ofl7G. brdeluxe apts. 546·1034 • OS .-SO condu. Ocean vie'!. Wolk family. Must i.i:e to DP· easy access for snow. ••••••••••~•••••••••••• pillows, table skirts. seat•----------- CASA VICTORIA 642.-49'1 lo bch. /\II appUances. preciate $4SO. Yrly l!ie. 962·1025 formorcinfo IALIOA lHH cushions. elc. Call art t'OUND male cal. Wbl & $t;25 mo or can be fu rn. t;4&9714 500 fl . 1 k 7PM .~-4377 gray. Part Pers1 ,an l &2 Br, Deluxe Unfur. Costa Mesa 3824 Costa Mesa 3824 544--0899. I.A R C E Cf\ 81N .B1 G s~. . me. sm area w/flea collar. 546-0294 afl. odr f\lrn. gas/wtr pd. •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 B b 1 2 Br Nwpt Hi:ts. lovely BEAlt nr. ski slopes. & util. lOS Main St. M'anufacturing·Wcldln~ Gpm. • I\ ults·No pets Sec i:ote r, a cony, 180 tleg. quiet. Adhs no pets. $200. Sips 12. Col TV. pool ta· 67S-8710 .Machinrng·FabricaUng --POOL . R EC H. M. Lge l Br. bllns, cpls. drps. Newly dccorat~. clean. ocean vu. n r . bch & t>l~7".!:!l, l;.$S·941!~ ble 54K·34-lli/ 540.431-1 or Nets $25,000. )T.' Active LOST: German Shep pu11· ELEVATORS Allulls only. No pet~. Call lge upper 2 BR, i~eal loc. shop11. /\d Its/ no pels <lS-l·&il I *TOP * shop. /\gt. Sam Crane, py, 11·3. Springdale/ !:d· t.l;.1:..V1ctona 642·8970 aftSpm,645·3198 Families only. No pel.$. S.'.125.494-4200 2 Br nr. OC4'_an, dshwr. •LOCATION • 645-4170 Inger H.B. Rewar J. ------'---$22S. Mgr at 979·2531, ---S2SO wntr· see Sat i\;\I Rental1to Shan 4300 Su ccessful re la ii or 892·1039 WHY NOT? Brand new 8 plex. 3 Br. 2 28851\tendoza IA) uyE IN A CASTLE 128•2..ii;st: 641·43<10 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• service locatlon on E. Jr~ptOutletSlore 1--------- Sunkenllvinf' room Ba.ownrsunit,alsol&2 I.g.Stud1oapt.Gardens, l7lh Slreel in Costa Jdeal for couple. Nets LOST. Reward ·Grcut Cathedralceiilng Br apts, no pets. (714) · pool. Ma ture pro NEWPORT BEACH: 3 Male r oommate, 3 Br $1000 ptmo. $11.0oo lull borned Owl, $50 for re· 2 bedrooms, l~bal.hs 827·2A79 DanaPoint 3126 fessional. $26S. Pa rt. Bedroom. family room, dplx, nr bch, $1l6-f; ulil. ~~Squarefoel price. Some terms. Agt. tum.H.B.area.817·8000 Attached garage . ••••••••••••••••••••••• furn.494-C653or4!M·6017 ocean view, look·out. LogunaBch.49"·8400. 2 A l b SamCrane,64S-4170 , --t, Toy Colli'", ......,1,.. w h d hook Br 2 Ba, refng, pool, SUNNY sparkling clean, I $600/mo. Agt. 752-7315 ed • u 0 ays ....,,. " ........ ~ as er/ ryer ·up lndry, kids OK. no pets. Br, ocean vu, bltns, gar, LCICJUftGNiCJUel 3852 -----Fem rmml, 20.30 want •On·siteparking UUNDRO~AT Bm/whl. at beach, 3!>lh Pvt yard with patio $330. Aft 5, 548.6885 $205. 493-72Jl ....................... ..---------to share bse in Nwpt '* Excellent exposure St. N.B. 673·3377 ·-· AFdOu~~·IOS3SOLLO. mwo. . . 1 & 2 BR, 390-11 /\loma . orr 8AYFAOMT Shores. SUS+ '•a ul1l. lst •Large sign area Outs?:~n~·ur:;l°i; free ""' LGE2 Brmlnplx,w/gar,SPARKLING Cleun2 Br, Crown Valley. t chilcl Large 2bedroom.2 bath &lasl.G3l·oo.IS REALONOrtUCS,Corp. loc. 32 Was hers. 12 VILLAGE nr shops. I' 2 lia, adlts, bltos. yard, "ar, $235. OK &3l·"°c7 Brokl'rs 675~700 SCRAM-LETS · ANSWERS . 621 w. Wilson, C.l\t. refs. 637-11828 (714) 493.Tl3l 0 • vcw on Bayside l>r. Luvely Professional ma n. single. dryers. Xlnl parking. fi.12·4991or642·4226 . . ~wport Beech 3869 bay view. Dlln kitchen. No smoking, no drinking. l·Mo. Cree rent: ideal of· Owner moving out or ----------•East Side t br, pool, 10cl 3 BR. 2 Da, $285. mo. Avl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• nu crpts. lmmcd. oc· Seeking person to share tic e for u l lorn e y, area & must sell ! Goo<l patio. gar .• $190. AM. n 0 w . H e nry w u 11 P"'Aw .... Ew•oRT rupy. 5650/mo + ut1l. Yr· my beaut Irvine apt. 2 architect or accountant. terms. /\gt. 837·4200 Govern -Duchy· PIMECIWC UVISUP TO ITS ... AME 893-5594 Realto 496 1435 ,., "" r ly lease. 8ar1·ett Realty. lir, 2ba, excessive closet Good exposure plus pkg. Heady -Revise . . r. . A.PAATMINTS &t2·S200. space. Many"amcnities 1000 N. Coas t Hwy.. •SAN CLEMENTE• GREYHOUNDS East.side: 2.Bn . bath. lrg Hulwtlnqtonlleach 3840 Ontheboy ~-=--...---. incl'g club hsc. pool. Laguna Beach. 494-7SSI Gilt&Cards $1S,OOO l like the spirit and the llv. rm. bllns, beam, gar.••••••••••••••••••••••• Lu health club. $142.50 agt. Burgers&lcccrcam nume or those sen\or sundeck. Like new. $2~. New 0 w n er s 0 f xury apartment living NEWOORTSHORES mo+ 'h u t 11 . ( 2 I 3) on Del Mar $22,000 eiUiens who fortbcd Adults only, oo pets. Beachwood Apts. 19132 °,ve,rlooklng the water. l'h blks. l6ocean. Super 184·9586 aft 6 PM <col· Work Shoo for renl, $75. Burgers&bcer their own track lef1•1\- 6'2-1716aftSpm Magnolia,H.B .• offera 2 EnJOY $750,000· health 2br.duplex.Ownr. l714 ) led) Calta Mesa. Call an 5, onbeach $24,~ They'r e called Ute spa, 7 swimming pooltt, 7 870-9203 631-3897. Pottersandsculp· CiREYllOUNOS. : .. Exclusive Mesa Verde ~~~u2ti~;· alp~o ws/~.o~~: lighted tennis courts plus Urgent! 1-·c~. Student ture tlS,000 • Commuruty. 2 br, 2 ba, jacuzzi, A/C, d:shwbr. rrult.~ of bicycleblrailds. S.Cleuw11I• 3176 ,needs same for 2 hr l.AGUHAIEACH Crushed andcobed Found Boys Stingray rrp I c .• d s h w sh r .. putting, shuffle oar • ••••••••••••••••••••••• house. $1l3 util. pd. COMMERCIAL STORE ice $34 950 bike. Balboa PenJR.i\lla . narbage d1sJ)Osal, incl Adults only. No pets. croquct.land2bedroom WRITEWATER Vu, ...,...,..... ~aERTHAllENR•Y · Calltoldentify,675~ " S240. Call new Mgr at 1 d 2 t u•~ or office rental. Separate ~ OverSOOtalltreell ondJO gar .• xtra lge rooms. 962-l800 Pans an s .o r y gardeoselt.ing,lge2Br. bldg. & rest rm .. at REALTORS 492-4121 FOUNDdarkCalico}Cif· streams with waterfalls Across St. from park.1----------'?wnhouses from $329.SO. adlt.&. $Z6S mo. 24S W. AVOID INCOMPATIBLE Picadllly Circus. $160 215 De.I Mar, San Clem. t.en. Halloween night \'ic creatA?arelaxingsetl.tng Cpt.s., drps., $300. mo. IYTHESEA. ::r;~~lec pk~~f~:n:; .Marquita, '92·3967/ ROOMMATES!! Mo. ELEC. & WATER lSth & Orapge Ave for your spacious new l 7~1-8881' New 3 br deluxe tnhse, 446-S300 Hou~Moies832·'41H P/\JD. 6468786 2 b d t 201 t4lhSt 536-1718 balconies. c arpeting , Takes The Guesswork MISSION REALTY CORONA DEL MAil --·-.......:..· ---~-or e room a par l Br. stv1rclrg/cpta/dl'Jl5. · draperies. Subterranean OCEANFRONT lux ury 2 Out Of Finding 98.SS C l L Gifl &. decor ative ac· FOUND: Black cat. No'" m e nts. Fro m $2411 Ut1l pd. No pcls. /\dlts. 2b .... I I d parking with elevators. br, den. frplc. pvt ste"""-TLIA1'1'1GllTPERSON . oas • ag\lna ......,.,,_es shoppe. "'eady J, fem. blu -liar Crown Furniture av:iilab ll• '"""W Ba ~ "-'"·"c:16 r, c.,....., poo •Pay Y ·• n.. · I ,..... r ' Pltotw494 0731 ... ~........ " '"" Small pets OK. i\<lulls....., . y ..... .,., . .,..,,,., no pets. 2208 A , vvl1onal mad service. lobch.$S90 . .C99·2807 SGY•$$byShwfng • tomakemoney.$6,000+ Vly&Cst llwy,LagNig. only. Of''tcn O""n "'. ·.oo to l.itUe Beauty $1'5, slv .• Oelaware.536-0959. Just north of Fashion -1-...&.·-trial R__,,al 4500 loventory. Open house 8.'W).SOSOX19 : ~ .--" • Island al Jamboree and Cozy quiet 2 Br, ocean nr 2 ~ '"" Sat & Su l c. PM 2711 t>:OO. 2300 Fairview Rd . refng. Fee. S J . H'll " d view patio gar S2SO Roommate, ocea ronl •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• . n. .., . . •---------.-.. o ,_, c.•o..<""O * IRAND MEW * an oaqwn t s noa · • • • · bdrm house, rutn. $175 E.Coastllwy. FOUND: Fem. Gray &. Costa Mesa. Ph o ne 11.amnen ..... s ..... ...,, 1 Br $225 mo. 2 Br 5275 Telephone (714 )644·1900 furn.$235.unfurn.AduJts plus 673.4687 eve .. PRIME LOCATION IAY·&IEACH wMe cal, Deleware. & _54_.s._ZJOO _______ 2 DR. 2 ba. Enc. gar. d/w. mo. dlx apts. spacluus for r~nlal information. only. No pets. 493·3S89 . . Good e&xposure. r":,asy In,· REAL TY 6 7 5-lOOO Clay HB. 842-0049 aft J :3o LA RGE 2 nt>RM garb. disp, gas & wtr. pd. rms, "1nl loca tion nr ---------• NEW CON DO 2 Mature fcmal~ lo 11hore grc.>ss egress. enty o Upper Adull ~·No tl3l ·2283 llunt.lngtonCntr. Beach bdr b h 4RRhouse H B SlSOca. parking. On Brookhurst _________ IP9"IOIHll1 5350 Bl d/Ed. A PENINSULA PT. 2 m.,2 at · nn9086 ' . • & Atlanta in Huntington -lC_E_C_R_E-.A-.. -P-A_R_LO_R_1••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ls·$t95 7R7 W. Wil~on . ------t v 111ger ve. con· $350 S5113G4 ~ _ ,.. #D 6"U>IS35 Monlicello Cond0·3Bd. vcnient lo sbpp'g & fwys 2 RR, 1 ba unf SSOO yrly · · Beach. Approximately MAJOR Flt/\NClllSE Drinking problem? . Willer sonener/"""1 $325.. GAi.1-4""""' OCEANFRONT 2 B I all I 800 sq. n. or ground n oor s 0 c j Cull Alcohol llelphnc r""" '"" ~ r n sm comp ex G f R t 435( Si J $325/ • . range o., m a or El fluerlo Mffa Fam w/children under 10 ----------3 BR,2 ba. $550 near ocean. $225/monlh. croge1 or en space. gn ng. mo. shopping center. Owner. 24 hrs a day 835·~ ,2 IEDROOM or nrllts over 30. No pels. Lge2 bedroom, 2 bath, N~ltT TERRACE 332 Encino Ln. 492.2896. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Mr. Pl um mer. 640-5563 aft 6/wknds !ll.0·4018 eves. near bet1 ch. 3 RR, 2 ba condo $SOO ---------Storage garage for rent 963-6767. AIORTIOM Abo l '*"'Flin. $265. 536-!l9R7 SEA WIND CONDO Santo Ana 3880 See Mgr 1959 Maple Ave RESTAURANT CounseUng & Ref err.bl Nochllrlrni. nopN<o, 2 BR 2 BA TOWNHOUSE A••••••••••••••••••••• Apts. c. M. · Storop 4550 Mission Viejo area Preg. lest·avail. wkrlds Pool & RC!(r~:.illo11 • r.1tto & Lndry Ilk up Heer Lal&e Park :.! llR. den 2 hn $4!'i0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EvenJng only operation. :M Hr Helpline 547·94'95 19S9 M-'-A•e, CM S2'7$ S48-4971 Deluxe 3 br, 2\A.I ba, att. IAYNONT HOME --------•Balboa Island 2 c111 Storage garage E·slde, G $l3 000 ..,..... 3 BR b rosses • mo. ' PREGN/\NT? ---... "d 2BR Du 1 .-.-.c dblgar .• putlo.frplc.1713 ,2 a .$2000;1\fo )'rl,y •--Onelhdroofft garage+stornttc.S6Smo C.M . 12x12x28. $55. Owner returnlno to t&ZllR1ardcnapt,fprlc. c../"'1 e p ex .... "". Alabama, &36·3465 or STIPSTOIEACH --r yrly lse S48-.C970 tO'x12"door.&t2-6243 • Carln g confidentl n l c.l~ .. ~hr .• """1, pvt p ntio, CplS. drpt. stove. yard. c...,171,. Buillins, Including dis· _ · France and must sell. II & ( 1 "''ft """" .. ..-,. <> 2 nn. 2 baths. $40!1 h h S205 lh """-_.anding building 'n counse ng re err a nr. lrvinr Inti Arca. ResJ)On. c pl. no pets.1----------1 was er. per mon · Office Rental 4400 R.,...., W..ted 4600 ........... • Abortion, adopliofl &. $19.\. tn 1230. S57 2&11 f>IZ 2.S16, 646-21112 2 Br• 1 l'z b o . N <' w ~~o 2 Dr. l ba, utll. pd First and last. /\gent. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• m->or shopping center. keeping --1 cpts/drps, dryrr & ref rig MO-OSSS. ftRIME LOCA TIOH Yoong ChrisUan motMr ~'!1~~~alio setting. APCARE 547·25.;3 Mull i-: 11dc llt2 br, rncl. Delux~ lg. lBR apt. /\ 1 Incl. New paint. S27S. Goocl expO!'lure. Easy In· with well behaved 5 year1--"'-·--------1 .iar. Pool. pnuo l.1kr conveniences. Adults Cal16"G-512SartS:30. So.Cst Pla-zaarea,3bd2 gress&egress.Plentyor olddaughter.needsa l BEAUTY SALON. •SPIRJTUALREADF:H nrw $2001235 ""~ 0878 $l8S_._~_s.4.266 ______ _:·---------• ba. brand new cpl., k1'ds k O D kh t Br apt Costa Mesa or N t Be h •1 f"\llly Licensed ----. t-Block to Buch. Lge 1 par mg. n roo urs · · ewpor a c · " ust 312 N. El Camino Heal Adult ~ .,,dr z br lnhou~e. 3 n R. pool, kids. P._C!lS, Bdrms. Renting now! ok. 3626 Marine, /\pt 1. & /\llanta in llunllngton Hunt. Bch. Nol over $1SO. sell. Best reaa. off er. San Clemente. 1''or appt: 1,., b:a polio t'ncl irnr 51(1!.t. S27S. F ee Sl5. With pool 1180 212.220 ~~~~~~~~~I $3.'iO. mo. 962·8936. Bench. Approximately C:ill Unia 531·5292 (213)367·2566 · "92·90l4 492•9136 N l Uk· ~ 63l·20ll, ~47·2S0t or H ntt · Sl c 11 M -800 sq rt. of ground floor opt•. e new. 1179-1060 u ng\on . a gr. 2 Br, adulLc;. no pets , $200. 2 Br Ht Ba, adults only, spare. Sl~nlng. $-125/mo. Furnished· 2·, 3-.bdrms In lullneu W..t.4 SOI 0 Tiredof"DoohTubes?" 644"°'""' SJ&.3Sl9 2121 E. ltltb St, N. Hgts. n o pets. $210 mo. Call Mr. Plummer . NBorCM. Reliable cou-••••••••••••••••••••••• D t P t T k T ~ l.3rge 3 br townhouse w/2 S21>.~. 3 br, 2 ba, nears. Cit 4 llocb to beech r,w..1so1 Bn11tol/Warner. 636·3803 ~·11767, ~I~ ~!ld[:nr~~t'h~e HE.EO ACTIOMI a bu1i:,;;~d ~i~ls,r~ l>olh,, rrplc • patio I.. Plua. Upstalrll Cam. un· 2 br. p11nted, drapes, Eastbluff 2 br, 2~~ ha. Souftl LGCJllftCI 31161-----------i w /gar. W i 11 m a'i n t UnJtcd Business lrtVest· . 014)'& Use ' . i:aralle. lit.al loc. Adult,, it. Nopeu. M7-4831. crpt.~. l bo, gus ftlove, encl. gur. /\dulls. $365. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mc/yard. Up lo $3SO mo. menls. lnc. CallfornJ:a'1 EVE FOTO DA1E 2.~cN17o ptls. 6l5·3Jlll or 2 Br, 1 1,~ ba, 2 rnr a:ir, cl011ed gar. No pel8, no 640·5200: 586·6600 Ann Lge, quiet. luxuriou,· ex-XJnt local ref!I 673·159<1 . lurgcsl bus,tn1es11 saloa 834-0234, 134.1552.'J' .... , • ..., adults, no pets. $225. 240 children. S2t5 & depo11it. c c. 2 b r , 2 ba n pt. team. 25 o r ces atatc 2Pm~pm. , Mutt 2 hr w/en<"I. gar. E.lGUlPl.642-1073. 42S12thSl&Pecan. •DELUXE• ~levotor lo scenic priv. .le-...i•i-i-111 /\rlisl needs studio! wide,61n0rangeCounty ----'---.;;..... __ _ 2000 Maple. $225. mo. NEW 2 br. 2 bu, frplc, NEW 3 Br 2 Ba, rec rm. Enstblutr 3 br, 2 ba. bcl\. 'Party & game room. v'Mv•IC ~11rage. or sm. lnduslriu to service your needs, we *KAREN'S* MgrAptU,631....1217 d/w, jac .. ••,I, anr. vi·ew· etc. rm, BDQ. nr Ci'y Lensc.lnrl.sp11c.m11stcr total sec. Perfect livinJ? l,:t••,.. s pace. 6~5·9368 o r are desperate tor bual· O'""""ALLMASSA"~ ..,.., • s uite. din rm & dbl OI' wknd retreat for the v "'" _ _.. 960-24S6 nesses lo sell, wo have u&"' v 1 Dr, ~ar & encl. patio. of ocean. Teen child ok. Hall + HBUS, $350. ~llrnge . Auto doo r adventurous adult. $515. ~-:::;:;: .. .,._ Mltcefl...om people wllh $5000. · 6PM·2AM 83IJ.. AA Adult11. Ref&· No pets. 642-7992 968-5700eVR. opener avnU. Pool & m<>. yr1y. lse.C99-2835 /...,.. ,...,,.. $200,000. who ure ready, • _S2_2S_. u_L_il-'pd_G.c!>-_224_o __ • VILLA CORDOVA Vacant 3 br. 2 ba. fplc. recreation nrea. Adult.a Wntwlluhr 3891 •• ~.~~! ..•.•••.. ~~.~~ willing & ublo lo buy *oSUTCHAALRLOM~~sA'S<'f~ balcony, gar. patio. 1411 only. No ~ls. now. """' 2 Br, t b:t. 1 story, shag, llrtro.SZIO Alabama.846-9088 863AmlgosWay ••••••••••••••••••••••• __________ ,Contractors yard, hie lot CALLUll 499-1224 • drps, putio. frplc. be11m Mo. to Mo. Managed by I BR Condo. newly rtdcc. •1 MO FREE RENT• W/lltorage sbecf. $75. mo. 1525 Mesa Verde Ori•---------"- celL. di.hwhr, gar, •Spedal cablnetspace Oceancloee2Br,qulettri GranaduMgmtCo. Pool. patio, gar, adults. 1·2·3 Rm. offices from G42·l:l34or &tl-7430 E11st , Sullc 100, Costa IXOTICGIRL~' Adults. S2So0. 26SO £Iden, •Y-kedgar w/last,... plex, new paint, shag r no pc:ts . Afl. 6pm. 1125 p e r mo. Adj ... _ ...... __ i/ln•eit/ Me11a u -... ~0 ...... odclln" 537-3125 L""-' • 0 .... c"'•, c"'ld OK. aarage, scaclbut new 2 &. 3 "'"1·6814 • i 1 • __. • "-"'-"'m " ---------• •D/W dlspl Jndryrm ,,.... rn ., ..., A rporter I otel. No le111c £.L.-..:, 751-3741 Oulea Only ""2 31an ' • s:usano. (714)4118-1'"'" drmt,· 2 bath Un\l!! •-l 111!..-1.L....~ Tll ~ "" · ""' JBR duplu. n• ba. cpta, •Oas cooking, ht/wlr pd -acrou from oceanfront & .-.rm ·A•Mt ,.._....._ req. 833·3223 noon ............... :........ DeaJ w/the professional .. drps. frplc. hltn1 . •Adulu.nopets ~ ..... cious 3 Br, all xtras, -wcltyreereatJonaldc oru..funfshtd JtOO 60 -RS"'FT .......... , ._ t t PO BOXES / .... _,,.or•"< -30 2323 Elden ,cv• C... ..,.... ·~ • ,..., ""' ,.,_•a-fvn1.t-'I 5005 ..... w1wn r' -.-.~ .....,.. .... · ,, ... ,::...:• ..... Avall now. Kids OK. velopment. lmmed. OC· ••••••••••••••••••••••• -. .. ~~_...., Op -tL 1011 • • · " ~ S2l5 C t t T F ill & JG17WESTCLlFF·NB .......................po:hwny For R nf , Beaut.2BrlBa,compre. ----------1 . on ac erry cupancy. am e• TIIEEXCITJNG AGT.S4.1·503Z ••••••••••••••••••••••• e : ft\Pdeled & r ellniabed ZBrlBa.POOI bltns q>ts 84U323 pets accepted. SSJS, up. PALMMISAAnS. MAHR Animal• atoro rood, 631 0727 lfi'ru 'u1ta.' '.$211' 67H911 Brkr DaUXE OFACIS $8900 I ' ~tiM~·ors;!~.~~o ~&:t26!0•nopeia. 10 4d~~. 2s~~s.2.::;,~~o Nwprt Shortt~ 2 br. 2 ba MI~~:ONPT COrnmt ac lndatl •x:cea. Ideal for .;.~:oie Popi !~~~: :~leki~~~~·-.'THE--E-XP_._E_ru_E_N_C ... &-.. - 2 Br. cpti;, drps, encl. 3 Br. 1\.i b:t, cpl.9, drps pets,9&1-2532. • dplx. Avall Nov lS. s.us nir~~~-R. ::~.·~:Nl11u!f& ~!!f!r,u:io~~~0w':te~,_F_ood_Pro __ ir_a_m_._Ms. __ 5325 __ 1 Adult motel. Clo~c1I yard. K1dll ok. No dogs. pool. rhlldrcn OK. $275. 2 Br, avail lmmed, new mo .i i:JY · 646·84 73 Adu.1~1 No Pets Ml11loo Viejo aroae. lnvtntory. A1t. UBI, MeMy to Lo. 5025 circuit TV. Foe ReserYn· $225.6.cS-~8 Cull&JV7988. paint, cpta, drps, $210 e~s w " 1561MetaDr. Handy to s. D. J.'rwy. 751-3741 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Llon~.548·11'75.'I .. Li:. Bachelor , tcfl'lf, mo .. lat, hist+ $75dcp. Rc-ach Yearly (5BlbEastotNcwport Oall83H•OO F\i It ellPI dMfw ln,2.ndlrlrdT.0.'1 Houseboy-Handym:ui Good LocaUon, 2 Br 2 Ba. stov«-Incl. Small cat ok. flG2.8050; 96.1·13:14 3 br,1 ba, frplc. Blvd.) • ·.~~Wetr, ~i.CJ1111:i LO/\NS /\ VAJI..i\nt.E Llveln-out. Stralgh1 bltns, drps, !pie, gor. Sl'"' + ...... .,.,, uu 646-9218 ... 5. 548-9860 FOR UASI •BOOKSTORE Credit not lmPortant Rick, ... 1.n•""' .·• adlt, no pets. $200. .... ...... """1"'1.nO 2 BR, 2 ba Condo. Nr. _______ ... _._ ---------3 o-·cu "" ....... ff Hb m •DRAPERYWKRM 073 4883 Broker :v. S4M050 2 Dr 2 ba pret moture ot unt. r. $365 mo. Yr· Storott 4150 Sforegt 4550 SIH MO IACH --------PenoMll Senict• 5.160 t't d • ,.., ly. 213·941 ... 100 alt 3PM •• •••. •••• • • • RUG/\JPHLClo.oner ~ w~ "'OlO •••••••••••••••••• ..... •• $18S L1e 1 Br lower. Wolk rhilc ;e ·.::.0 .J'.,,e;!,.-., no or213-$Q2.1788all5P~I ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • ••• ••••• Fl.neCOSTA,MESA Loe •FURNmJRE Refill ::::;:! ••• ::-::: •••• :.... UP n#!t.HT 1 ;.~ to sholl8 .. Mature 11dllt ,.:c:.:.::::::re.::n:.:.=.,::"":.::·..::-::....._,.::==-......;J=:-=-:--:-::-:---"'-::"' 752-1700 (:(intact AJnt Sam Cran w · prel'd. No chlldren/pela. 2BR., lBA w/crpta, drpg Sl7S 2 br , 2 ba, Jar, pool, <i14lt4Ml70 S4 Dr. wauts S30M second oa Lum locope'wllh S~J• 1881 Monrovia. ~·7924 bllns. $2GS/mo. OPEN lridaOK. Fee bome. Value S70+. F\rat ullnlt RIO·PEEDB~ --------• s AT •-s u "' ., .. Main Rent.aJ1, 540-53'70 COffB SHOP . M. '8'7·l748 R g L A X A T I ·N c.ondo-i Br·l"' ba encl. "' "'• • • e. . PaUo, •ar. •'""'. AdJls on Avocado, C.M. DELUXE 3 Br a"' fplc, +~/mo. l • ~""""'" TrBt TRAINl~O. Call o • ....,., .... Lan rt 1ocat oa , QMdj" IOJI Muatlon Worb~ ly, nopet.tm1.sBS1 $150 \.o $160. l br trlrs. dshws~~aUo. pool. $350 •at.a 67, n al coiy. Atk· ............ :.......... P~CleonProtCdat L .. b t ... Mature adult.. Before 51 mo. lorM7·59411 1--------1 mlnt,.!~,SOO. Alt, UBI, ...__. •• ,.,..... lAsunaBeach 4H.NN 11e • r, new ep • • 6"5_.530, 2345 Newpon 1501 Wetfclff Dr ..,,,... nm~..-v"' -~ ~ paint.. b.amed. rdri,., Bl ·• SHTHISl.4 =tlnandalCtr• lnrl.ne Mtlc 'luul•l OUARANTEED 'Fl~re J>OOl, Nr Harbor •boo I · · ' 2 Br, dshwr. h'pl, encl. Wottdna partner -wanted Oo. arr11l(a Mc:ondary Control Proaram. fP.sc Mature ~ Ol.S. Bob, !/side 11e: Br, be'am.1, rnr. View llelc:onp. No Office Spece f« wrn establiahc<.t No~ real .. t. Cloancln1. llHSlt» naturally, 'ht i41•4Ul on &coll, llke new, edll.t, no pet.I pets. 205 m.b St. 5»1729 C.llonSilc Mana1tt elty Sl1n lhialnua Perhaps wo can bolp mo. or m oney buk. m.1120. Sl7S.MMl505 or•1m , __ m_•>_M2-_a_m_m_Z4_•_1 548.83()()8111Urae. JOa.MNZIQ. tsl.JMI ~ • • • - ' I ( D8 DAILYPILOT Frid!)'. November 5. 1978 Add it. •• Build ·;t. .. Oiapet Jt •.. Hammer It... Gri>et ·I it ... Cement it. .. Wire it...Hqe it ... Clean it ... Move it...Press tt ... Paint H ... Nail R ... Plaster it. .. Flx It ... • .. SERVICE \ t. .. . . . DIR.ECTOAY l , II . . " Pfumb rt ..• Pqt ch lt. .. Pipe 1t .•. Remoae1 1t ... , - Roof Jt ... L andse!epe IL.Tile it ... Trim lt ... Sew it. .. Haul it. .. Add It... Plant It... Alter ,ft ... J..earn it ... ~~~!T.!'; ...... ~!'?:!'!::-............ :: ..... z~~~~~~ ..... ~~~ ............. ~~~ ......... ~~ ............... ~~~~~!! ...... ,.,..=~ ......... ~~:!!':::~.1.:~ ..... . • APPLIANCt: Rt-.:PAIR LOV'SWOME REPAINS.~On lra ct or. Cull\ om J apa nci.~ c; 11r1Jc ncr. ll~t.'t'leaning & build In~ l"rue l'st Slum~tof)c Uh: •CU,,"TOM PAIN'f ll'lf.• '* AJll 'l'lTNINO• C.\1110?\'TVSVC CO. $10 ~rvicc~ull 30 Yr exp. C11rpentry, work: color_. »i>f!'e~ate, C:om41l..t.e m.1111t , fr.:c i\Jalntenunct•. Very hloc·kwills. brick, plan· H 1 QUA L·l "f y. ~ O AMtn.COru>·RodllerM ~H~ ltale!:i4?rv,1ce , . __ l7.!_.I) 549 2122 Cubnt, plumbing & elec. also concrete cuUiny. ,All ~ 83!Hl333altc~1 pm • reUM>nable M.').1$32 ler1>. Quality work 11t 're· HATES N~ orv~n!l 64.S 1530 Dt f1ur P.!:!,!..a ~ lab-~ SSl·l!OM. ~~~ g u ar. t.lc d , R • L S 1 ----.i~ p11ccb. Bob 7509.i.W CallRruec~noev• -1.~ "'-~~vie• ,.......... "'1U<K'U, insured m ·3728 Oft I own ff¥ ce HOUSECLEANING · "°"" ' _ .... "..,.... "·~ _..-• •••••••••••••••••••••••C.,.t Set-'lfc• ~ 4iYARDCl.t-;ANUP ·· !jjj()""W__ liUARANTEED Paint·•••••••••••••••••••••••••••-••••••••••••.••••• 8ABYSlTI'ING.My home •••••••••••••••••••••••L~EON ITE CONCRETE Collforl'!>t.!iS7~70!1 '1Sl·0066 Mo•fnv Ing. lntr,& Ex~r .. Fr~ll _.A~ll PC~T El\INC Rcimovub, trlmm1n~. Lake Forest Any ,.hln.carpetManwUl layyours STAMP I N.G . Co~----.. --Xlnt hous\!.c\eunlng by ••••••••••••••••••••••• N1t.expcrtwork.642.02'JS ••A.LL 'fYPl::S•• prunlna. free f$l. Lie d 7ti8·8.'l08 or mine. Repairs & blestone, brick & li'te G.......CllS..-vlce1 dny Own tranliPorlutiofl ~tOVl~G"l..et 2 ~;cpr'd FrccEll"\ 5'0·GU$ f\illyl~ured.G12·2f.2.t •··I ., __ . cleaning toCJ! Guar work patJos,etc~4~9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S?Sday.S..3-4825 'nM:n;,..o~e •ou R1:11llonu· Palntlng·lnt. & Ext. ' ''" -s nH s .-.-•ice at bluer aavin&s. Fr est -carpentry. 1>aintln~ & lil. ll f ~s-~ Custom palnUn& V•l/UC· VERY NEA'f PATCU • rlmmlna & rem.ovul. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ti4S-lt>t6 --···· --·• dome:1Uc Professional carpet cleoo· e, es. L'enl On neatness. 10 Yrs JODS&TEXTVRF. ~mi; exvc.ir. indlvuJuul. IJOOKK£EPJNG •••••••••••••••-•••••• s6.lOPMl\.12·8003 1ne, also floor cure & FtiendlyMovlngCo.t:l!I· el'pr. R~fs. P'f'•e eat . f'l"eoEst. 893-1139 ~lt>aa . Coll Darrel, All phases bookkeeping, WeCareCarpet Clcaners LEEM.JARVIS window care. Uut c h clcnl, friendly i.cn•ice. s.&2·1334or 673.$13041\$Pt•t &,.,C • tl4S011K _____ _ :.talemcnlli, puyroll. etc. Steam clean or shampoo Addltlons&Remodellng Grodlng .M111nten once Service t.nwe:sl poss rules &wkod1. ~l _... T~ 4 yrs. cxpcr. w/ CPA's. AlsoUpholstery-AJI work 962-56'73 Lie 31'7856 ••••••••••••••••••••••• :>3'11508 84'1·C)()Q2 • ~ •••··~··••••••••••••• .:;;:::? ••••••••••••••• Lg s mall accts 002 ll290 gu.1r. Ref:s/MC, fr est Sluploader. dum11 truck, . INTKRl?R/l!:~ERIOlt JSA INT S Pror. ret & . --J<easRates6"5·3716 ... llrilNJ baulln~ tree wk grad· Pats Janaton.11 Service. '~/,..,tnCJ Acoousttc3l cc1tgs2Syn. PIJlnl Care svs·ln hm. Tutor St'rv1cu, Slolc lorr&An oc iote1 •••••••••••••••••:••••• ing, d'emolitio'n,etc. Yoo din>• em. we clean ••••••••••••••••••••••• exper.89<&-G308aft6PM Pet tran11p. svs ava\l. Tcucber's cerllllct1tc. Husmc!Ss Servict!s HOLIDAY SP ECIAL ~"TRUC11JRALENG,. 7Sl·3930 em.!16~Ml714 Pu.lnt Repoil"as yi·s in '-"os F'roin $2 .50. Li e. blwn n oon It 4PM . MonthlyStalcmen111 SC~~~o2oRor SHt ~lam r.~~rlan cbh1Jgc:sk~2~ u_ .. ,_ J..ltorial area. workmans hip ............ , ........ ,.. r.t,A.U.S.847·86S8. •-~--~------Income Tax Payroll e ... ocv. ms. a or u"" ures, · ,_"..., guar Take advaol of m.> ••. •Tax l'lannmg• bath S1!5.9S. s.&1·3547 & ,.. • ..._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• exn.·~ ~'7~ · CUSTO~I Pj\TlOS ., .;1uss1fi~ ads sell big - 124 Broadway C M 53'7·7396 -•~••I) llaulin"tmoving cleanup Complete Janitorial _ .... · · •WoodPatioCo"ers •••••••••-•,,.-•••••••• items smJll Items or f;..12.0511 . $7/u1>. Trcework. !leas, !Services, ~otnmer( u Pl.'T£RSPAINTIN rn;uw ec s .o • . w/"". um tl)g, any 11,.em . Jus t cull ••••••••••••••••••••••• " ' · · •i I & / C •0 •·.. ood D k 1•~ off • .A Pl b' • ' -•CARPETSAVEHS~ Exprd Haw1lan g~rdel_ler. fast frceestS12·-'S97 res 1denttar. L3gun a Expr'd reas. rates. rreu l do my own work. Free svs. leaks. bathtm 642.5673 ·• Cabinet Mokinc) Hydro s team clean g. Yd cleanups. lnmmin!l· --·------floor Care. 497·:1727 est. Call Ge.ne 552-0458 t;st. SS2·8S83 encl. Reas. 832-2.168 •----· ------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2$~k i.ovlngsonallcarpel pruning. Ll Haul g Remove cement, asphalt, ----.-----·•----------ll&F'Ci\BINETS cleani ng. F r e S'ts. &&S.fll87. dirt. trees, elc. 1-'r el>l. Lc.cbcaptrtC) PaiatYourCoatl~ J11y's Custom l'a~o. re· F:'Umbin & & llealinl K ·h. b lh t 963-4297 &l2·26:M Lie msrd ••••••••••••••••••••••• Av'-ExLr lSly $345 modeling. t':lll any Ume. fRepair. No Job too small! It( en, • 8 • s orage. Sh3des of Green· Yard ----E r 'd r d '5 'SJo.6766 , ... • " l .rnl},· Davenport 751·967'1 He a s. Contra cl ors. Shllmpoo & steam clean· Care. Hoyal :.er v1ce, u~·---1·-in" xp Jan scapcrs. 2Sty ~/lntrS4Srm . ·-W('lcome. 551·3074 & . C 1 b-' ._, ,.. d t "E th" . ., ~ ...... "JI Sprinklers: Install & re· Pricei:incl mtr'l/la.bor p 1-538.1641 mg. o or ..,g,Kencr~, own o ar pnce:s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pair. Concrele & brick Guar, illllrd. freeesl. Cl'I...., PLUMBER-Re pair , re· --------1 wh t car p ts LO tn •.n ~10·9'85 Want u HEALLY CLY.AN work. &l5·'7978 l\f ulone Ted627·'7900or 552·0\34 ·-•••••••••••••••••-• p l pe' i n at o ti al ion Carpenter bleach. Clean liv r m, din Ex J 1 HOUSE? Call Gingham ser vices . G. Gidley, ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm & h all SIS. Avg rm C pr 1aP3~ese g~r\ cner& Girl 1-'r~e e!>l!>, i;.15 5123 . .ALL PHASES Painting. Int/ Ei.:l. Lie ASPHALT RlflAIR"f &42·93lS. h $7.SO, couch $10, chair SS. omp maintenance --- ---Spnnklers, turf. plans. ~~931. Her. Free est. ,-f' '-·--.. --------rioi~ I Carpcnltry. PuC~ell·I Guar chm pel odor . Crpl cleanup, fr esltreas lliro llousl•cleaninl{ Uy A1'N etc. State he 21!:1:.174. Work "aur. Won't be un· • IOI-(, I oors. ca JS, etc. a repa1·r. 15 yru ev. pr. o•~ 751-1937 fo:xru·rit•ntcd w 'refs. c ll l\I' h II !><IS l588 .. e \'u1(·e L<•nhoff 536·8475 ~ ,, '" "" --a itc e :____ derbld All. 61>m 968·0fs87 11\.'=i~!;_J. ------work myself . tters WEEOING·CLl::ANUPS _ 1!1J.(llJ80af\er 5pm __ M ltemudcllh~ Our !>J)ecial· 531 0101 Co 1 •1 · .. OSOfrY Exprt Paint111g & l'al)('r· . . . ,. mp ete" ainlt>nllnc.: South C'oJ:>t lloml' & Of. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1n" Custom work + Calf 631-2440 ly, r~pairs, resad f· . . . F'reecst l>t2000i fa!'e rll·;inin" Service " I .•....... , ............ . R e p:ilrs & Co mpo S hingles . l ni.pecttons. lnsrd/Uc'd. Lo pnces. rr e1tt. 830-5020 & or ~l-5!130 rnmm I. All \\Ork guar. SELL idle items with a Hl!lrnhle l-I hi':: S-t7 4281 Fireplaces-Planters matenals, 25 yn, ex per. Orange Co. Asph;ilt Co. l'alumho <.:un!>l. !162·11314, Daily P1lotClassi£il!d Ad. SELL idle Items witb a - _. -__::. _·__ Brlt·k Concretl! Putio r eferencci.. IH chard. SELL idle it ms 'th :!-I hrs. 642-5678. Dally Pilot Cl~sified Ad. Sell idle items 612·.5671l Block Walls UBQ Pitli 000-336l W-an_t_a_d_r~e-~u-1-ts--,,-"'--56-~-,g Oai1 .. Pilot cfossit:d Ad~ -------11----------1----------1 __ flef. l::sLs 646·0464 " .,..... " ., ... ~ ~· ~ ..... ~ t• • t?'"•.., ................ ,. TOYS • • ~ GAMES -. • ~ llKlS • it CLOTHING • '' • Col t.1U\ f"i tfh•"• \ uu Jt .. '"~· l "''"' • '1111 '·'" l"I lt .. 1h,•111 "" '"' ~ ........... l>o•\. • Un., :-1"· umlt 1 ou1 • It ll \ll.\' I'll II r .. ,. ('lf(ct"'{~I \:> I'll ~:I~ .. ,. Tum u .... tunuwu '"''"" ,. "n • 11\lo t'f1t1"11\111.8' f"J"'h' » ) .. 11111• 1·1.,,.,,11 ... ·111·.: '4111 . ,. ·'l'l"-';;ar '"kh Th111•"'I'" .. it 1111m ~\11 1 llh lhru U••• ,. ... lhlh 1 '111l b I~ ;M,;11 ~ ,1-.I. .. l1lr .\Ulll l:UI l'llll,.j,, \<I· It - It \ ht•r hw 1nl•1rn1.Htu11. Jt ................ mr..:~::t! ~~~~ ..... !!~ ~.~~::! ..... !!~~ ~r.~::!:.~ ..... !!.0.~ ~~.~~ ..... !!~~ ~r.~~ ..... !!~~ ~.~~!~ •• ~.!!~ ~-~~~ ..... !!~~ ~r.~~ ..... !!.0.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• APTHOUSE CARPENTERS DEL TACO .._.URSES "'IDES Schools & • AYON IOATS ~XEC. SECRETARY f~r Housekeeper, m ature MAJDS-Apl type senice. " ~ Instruction 7005 HEWPORT llm l 'r c:1."'•r rcn'd. P !'e1..'tls Kity hen llclp ·1 t n \'es l men l co. Hl ludy live-irt •owf\ tnulsp. Sa I a ri ed . ,.. r i n g e Ne1.."<fed al Huntington ••••••••••••••••••••••• Asst . Mg r -MA I NT· J p ., lime po.<,illons ""a1 · F'a!>hiun Ii.land. Mui.t si7.7252 • bt!nefits. llegulor hrs. Volley Conv. llosp. i\Jlp ----------c &"\ANCE. Couple. full He.dEllfroSS :\lust h:ive O'>'O tvvl:i & Day hell) S2 .50 hr. have4 yrs exper .. type . P~irk NewPortno.lP·ark Jy lft"Jlcrson . 1!3112 - IE A .ARTEuDER . limo. g. .. 1a~ open. Exp. To Mak• lran:.p. Top wai:t·>. & xlnl li:ll · J8:Jt l720 Su pcrior US-70 wpm, sh llHlO wpm. Housekeeping, Ute. Aft~r-Nvwport Or, N. B. N cw mun i\ v e . 11 1.J. ,. , " only.NochUdrenf pcts. ChristMOsMerrier? l.>l'nl!lit.,_.\pplylo~·c·uri · A\'LC:\1 · ·· ,\pply. T:\1l 3119 San noons. Top pay. N.B. hetw~n4 1'M&5 P:\1 ~ull or Purt·lime 64-1·261lor49-l·l268 ty <:uard, Wnhall C'11q1, :\li1eucl Ur. Suite 2.,0, tire:i-~."' ..... -• MAJ OS --He n·ady tu work as~ Earnabout$40 one~·ery 2;,, .\l cCurmuk t\\'.:, bt;NT.\I. ASST. i.ome Missioo lnn Hotel MYrws Al•s µrofo~wnal hartender rn A RT IST, free I an ce. SUlO you sell as an AVON l'11>.ta ~h·l>a rrunl office dullt:s. E'· ~. U. Housekeeper &~Various • SJC.493·\lSt & Orderiles I \\l'C'k. Free Job place fJmliar w /skctch1ng Represcnl al1VA?. St:ll ---pt"r Sat mor111ng & Mon· F"'CTORY Duties. •MeHloon'~hift. •------'-----1 & d k .. A l'f I '" · I C crous•I Op d Dr S1• h "' .. I l ma a ted Exper. ~cfld. Bay\'icw ml.'nl ass1s1ancc logos tr<! e mar s. .,.,au 1 u gu.s, Jewc ry, .. r .iys. . . .: um m . Work in "" air cond. & i\lao, kltdaen & dining mu If enunce n w· n t\mcnl·an Bartenders Work in our ofc ur your cosmetics, more. I 'II P/tlmc. &1. Coast Plula. 8't7·SSOJ carpet ed area w / ~·M ,·m help In guest hon1e. part lime Me Donalds. Conv. I-f>. 2055 Thurln Sc:hool hm. Contact Leet.1yn show you how. Call Call l:lubhie. 54tHitil!2. DE.UT-"L/"'SSIST m usic. l\Just have pa-646·6716. • $3.00 hr.556·9943. Ave,CMl>l2·3S05. 110.IE 17lhSt,SA 979-2991. 540·7041orZenilh7-l3S9. ----'"""' ,.. ---------l!lH!IOO Cashn~r. Cafetcna help. 2 CllAlRSIDt:. Expr only. ti~n~e to work w/micro Housekeeper, N.B. area. Manaaement-Women's poli1t1oos. One Gu m·2pm 2 days, 1 eve per wk. miniature part:. under a pl· li m e , 2 . Sl) tn . , 2 Conll!mPorary Clothing. Nursint --' AT EASE BABYSl'M'ER wbo can & one noon·!lpm . Call P /timc. Huntington mlc roscop 1:. Perm. ch ildr en ( 9 & ll-). Wj)are loof.lnglor anag· RHSUPERVlSOR J obs Wonted, 7015 love 9 month old . 548·0671c"t495bt?f.9am Harbor 816-0617 work. Hrs 7am·3;30~m. Eng lish s p eakibg, gres5i)'e person W/bac.k· 7·3:30 Shift. Must have ••••••••"••"••••••••••• Mature, reliable. my -i:op pay + c.o benefits. mulure.own trarnt•• &round in women's ac ut e ho s Pi l a I \l,\Lt: NuRSE, avrul for Of Newport leoch home 2•,o.i days a week, Church baby nursery al· Dent al Pedodont1c Lab (iaiser Tool Co .. 1701 .E. Days 896-4706 1 clotbin&: & access. as As· supervisory cxpcr. Xlnl prfr:itl' duty. Lue t•ook Presently Has An Wes tmansler /Boba lcndant Sunday /\:\I & Trainee. X-ray Lac. pre-Carncgje 1\'\'l', Santa Eves 6'6-3572 s t. Mhnager o f our benefit.£. Contacl ~lrs. - ang & h:-.kpg llds OpemnglnOur Chica ~20560. P:\l&WedP:\1 IH)rs or f'd. Non smoker. Some Ana.540-i . . · women's dept at our Jensen. Co'lta .:\le'-4 1~qt>J5 C T H -------over. C:on~ac l \lrs ch:.1irsidc & dcrical. --/ ~ HOUSEWIVES Westmio~ler :\foll slore. Memorial Jlos p1lal, -IOY'S SE I~ Bab) sitter. It hi.kpg for Borrlen, KJS-9623 ti+l·Otil\. ·-5 I -, · · b fl 'bl · h C:.111 for iutervw ap1>t. U42·273\. On a purl-lime lias1s for teach"t . Bab~· ~ mo·~.-. - -----Ft'"" ~D ICE P/Ume J-O s. ex1 e rs Custom111:d pero.;onal :ti'W· " "' ·' .... -hil kid · ' hool ~"500. i---------m)!. rcas fH'll'•''" me~ a mature womun: Would &im-3:30pm. Malure, llii· Clerk. f l ime•. mature D1<;~TAL . REPRESENTATIVE w e s arc·in s.: · tlamit.t·d i woml'll, chud. you l'nJOY i..erdC"lng our pendable, own tran" male or fcm:ilc l,aquor Orthodontic l'ha1rs1de as Westsail Corp. hus im-Apply, Dul Taco, 25252 ll<:ll~ 8-12 7K80 younger <'uslomers with Refs II R. area s.i1;.71o,i Store. 1525 .:\ll'~J \\-rdc ~•:.l i-;,pcr prcf'd. Cqsta med. vacancies for 8 l.;i Pa7. Rd. Lag. Hills. H_.pw~-... -7 100 tht>ir ,·arious fitting &-------Un,c fo;a~t.C.!\J. ~1csa.S.16·5170 l'e rs:ltil e i.ai llioal , ,... ..,,IC"U siiini: needs ? Reply to BAOYSl'M'l~G -----craftsman w/at least 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Classified ad no.128, c/o College stud ~nl or CLERK TYPIST l>ENTALASSISTANT. yrs cxpcr. in nil phases Housewives, or shul·ins. ACCOUNTIMGCLHK DailyPilot,POBox lS60. mature lady to babysit Xlnt typing skills, good l'o.rt time w /prevention of boat carpentry, male or fem ale, phone Accurate w/figures & de-Costa l\fesa, Ca 92626 afternoons/eves .. week-phone pcrsort'ahly. hcuvy exper, xray h<." for a hap-plumbing & electrical. from your bome. $3 br. I~~~~~~~~~~j Ir. may sleep over 1f de· phone:-. s da~s. S135 Non PY cheerful o(c in Uunl. """ -196 831 Jts6 tail. 10 Key by touch.1. sired. Call Irvine 559·16i6 Smokers Only. Call for lkh. 1162·11~ Thtre will be c:onsider:1-v•.,.' . or . . (;ood typl't. Attra<'live Aulomot1,·e --blc lravelina from pur l"rur"nce ~A~lCUHIST Full or part time Mrs. Giii. 645·7337 MANICURIST Needed with cllentele Cor sc.ulp l tir ed nails. ~-6296. • PAREHTS lla,·e }"OU 15·20 hrs a 14 k to work while children nre in school? Field En· lerpr1ses has p/lime ex- ceptional earnings OP· w : in school related sales. Call Vlrglr11a McsiM B•drnic <?lkin.o;, 557· 1041. - , NB 101: &I0-<1850 New Detail Shop needs BABYS I TTER . Nd ~:;:t~~\ew. tJ 5:30 pm) DISHWASHER plant to our waterside '"' " ACCTS t>a ;;;ble llkkpr. help. mature woman, 5 lluys. ------flellc!Shif~. '-fihowroom where you Fll. Stf-•iuTec .. iclon PARTS· Man . eJ<per 'd. - Ctm Seeking exp. bench man Willing to train marine. e'lper necc.,sury. Four to Top wages paid. t:niiine 7:30 to 4 pm. Exvrd. refs. C LERK TYPIST HOUSEt<E!PER/CHIEf will do warranty wor.k & ..., d.iy .. wk . rurn1turc Steamers. COil painters. Myhome.HB.ij462771 65 "'Pm or bell<•r. Some L1duC0!1\'t1lei.Ct'OlClr ~a~\ li~ ~r~r)a~~~r~· Expanding ins. agency with FCC RaJor Uc. 2.i3tW.Coa~tllwy,Nll . ,Im•· L•llHcll).i;.t:.!20s:l buffers & polishers, UP·n--lelcphnnt! :-O:ew ll:J:\1 t5S5SUperwrA\'C. ,.., 1 ! .' I \1 ltolstery shampooer s . ...,b)'!>llter need~ 5 tiny mat·h1n('.,, l rvinc• lol' 1' t Be· h 616 ~76-t :;.19 . .,,u , ext 4 or more 1t'"11 '1 tn.\. check out, pw•k·llP "·de· wk, 2 30·5:30.pm, N.11. 2 · e\\f)()r .ic · ·.i information. seek in!! r:rst..ac"url;l~e· Good pay & lieoef1ts. PIX Anawet". Ser•. dependa6J~norson. " N.R.645·3(>3.'> "" P/timt? shifls w /soml' I> \11.Y Pit.OT 11IH l!-t'T.:\1AS TJU:f. ... \ 1-;11Yn1nt.-.IM\' ( l.1"1f1<'d St-C'\1111, ~ "' S5i5 pt·r mo lo ~l.urL ---i----------lh·ery J\pply at ~ys '7 & 9. Salary open. M-0-H760 DONUT l\IAKER, ex per. 20691-larbor Bl, CM 642·99W ------Purttime. lntine. Good P~ • MariM E:t•dronic wk ml~. Paid while tru1n· All company benef[ts. 2 T~-lcl-mg. EOK 1133·33JJ. weeks '\'a'calion/ paid .., -· FOOD SERVICE 645-1030 _ B:\BYSl'M'F.R 1'et•ded. 2 Colll•ctor Trainee. \lust C:1ll art. 9pm. 552· \411 Cl ned Ad 2 ha\l' .:ood tdc \(II('(' & asst\ s 64 ·~II days wll. ~nfant. With type ul least SO wpm. DONUT MA KER . AM & All urOWld hefper, mini r~lauranl at new loc;il uer. alhletJc: club. Mon· F'rl. approx 10:30·2:30. Call for appt. ~'7-6232. · holidays. compan y M ust' ave sin g l e PBX/\ns14•er.Serv. sponsered health pl:in. stdebal)d & r~dar e11per. Or tel. co. ex1>er prcf'd. CALL DA I L YI F O il Xlntbeneflts.960-2441. Paid while trui111ng. All : ---------_.i.,;;=;._-....;==-=...-~~~/' CdM area. Smull plc:1s;int ofc, C.i\1. P\t Shifts,Culltlnfe.18or urea. Contact Mr. Kane, O\·cr. Apply in person APPT. ' MASSEUSE 0 8.28) legit. :;hiRs incl· wkods. EO~. 549 .. 161 full t i me position in Call betwn 9am & 4pm, Co1111t flu' bf(•ssit19s ~,.,,, luu·~ f o oflc•r! •***********• • -Christmas • • Gifbfor • • (yeryoite 11 : \\'hJl :f w11nll\1J'l 11I w:i~· to: ii t<cl l ~our g1)C1ft1l'li r.,r • <.'hrii.lm.._'! • ri11ht oul • rrulf'I umh•rour • ! l'llll!~l.)l :\.t.; Tit .. : 1': 1'. ...... ******* • * * •• * ... * •. * * * • '4r ~I~ YOUR• : IU!IMESS « ·~ .. • <; 11·,.-S TO\'S « • Sl'OHTlNO OO<+DS • • l'L<rrr11~c; 1•f91n:nr • ._ Jt:W1';1,ny llAl k • « ~I USIC 1-'U H~l'fUH~' « ii ,\~1'1QUk:S llOHllli-:S « « UOOl\S Al'l'lt1A:'o1Ct;.'i -M « llO,\'l'S l 1 K.~:S ; « :\ UTO:\I 01111. ES .., S1•ll thcm t hc.o 111mplr • « unll l•U r Y.'ll~' from « urnk.'l'o11r · il « L'HfUS'f~IAS •rnF.~ it * * * * * •• 1t ·* "''* It * ' t'' --,,---.... - t>tS·2640 Sachse 's Donut Shop -25571 J eronimo Rd. MV. Lo a n Pro c es i. er I Companion/Drinr i'\o expcr necessary. NY COQK P.fassage. No exp. nee. Mon·f'ri.640-lllO. JAMITOR IAMlUMG P:lcka.-:er. SavinJ?s & for hl(htly handl<.-n'pped . Apply, Dick Cliurch's Full-time, night shirt, We train. Call 540·~3 PEOPLE PERSON Loan exper preferred. woman in CdM 20 hr D?N~1:Shop llelp, f/l1mf Re s t aura o t. 2 69 8 wknds. overJ'.!})Q hr. anytime 1 Exec needli pftime as· Ap p l y i n P erson : wcckurnngedlom .. tual I.~ .-.h1fl. No expcr nee. ~WPort Blvd.C.M . APPLY!Ar ·i-E R 7PM. Man ners Savings & convemcncc. fem pref. ~emaJe,age25·4S.Apply G..._..LF"'OT-RY So.Coasfl'lna Meclian lc. exp er'd. M{Jline prefd. but nvt nee. 2431 W. Coasl Hwy, NB Loim. 1515 Weslelirr Dr. SSOperwk. 7\.1 '&IO !ll45 ·~ pers~ . .:\tr . Donut. l3S ....., ,.. v #l ,.......~3 1n Newport Be:ic h . ----E 1'7lhSl. Co!>t.J ~te_s_ .. _. _ W01tk 415 Sultflowet" <;.M. EQUAL Oppor Emplr coot-.. Ch1lacare CC'nlcr. -SPorting goods company. . Mech1 Asa....Wer •--------8um·l1>rn M·F. SJ hr . DRAFTSMAM 7:30-i.:'><I0--01'12. Kitchen Helper morn rl · BANKING IOOIO(Hf'IR Danie exper. only. Contact Bob Cre1~hlon Irvin~ National Hnnk 833·3700. E.0 . t:. Menu µl11nnin ,.,. preµ. P;tlme. 111 Home Draft· ----l!h lft. R ale l g~ H iiis Reqrdtope ormv.:mous s .. n 11."c. cleanup for 22 Ill" ore, Dano Pt. needs GL • .,~ II 1 8 ,.. factor y functions for ,., . "'6'°'' ospita • N. . 645·;;u07. syiall marine electron1ci. yoon~c~1td_:.en ll45 ll570. tntermed1ate Jrch1tec· NI aroond ·ror general ·---------r co. Good benefits. Apply. lural draftsm"Jn wfgood sernce shop Jn Orange New p 0 r t M a r i n e C OOK knowledge of residential County. Paid Vacation. LAMINATORS Engineertn,;. 897 w. rnth Ocla c~itcs!'<'n :<lfy le &multiunit~or~&some Medicul l'l~in. steady Wcstsa'll Corp. sailt>o:it B 9632 1·esla11rnnl now tak1ni: knowledge 1n Ille sleel employment. :>36-6561 ma n uf'. hus in> med . St, N. · 645· . · applacutions 111 person, work. Exper. in concrete vacancies fo r hand Medical F ront & Back IAITINOlR for full time cook & asst blk & concrete tall UR de· Governess/Lite hsk'pr ror lamln3tor~.1w/:4t lea't l Ofc. Exp & refs a. must. cook rios1t1ons Xlnl pay. ?Cirable but not req'd, home In Dover Shores for yr exper. we have open. Over 30. Newport area. ~!!,~yt s1nhl!;,!0~r. :, ::i~~~ C a r n a b y S t r e e t Salary nego. Dana West 2 girls, age!l 11 & 14. X.111\ lngs on the regula1' ~on J>() Box 8122. l"ountaln soc. in whsle supply. 1"11 I· ly cnpitall1.cd. H73-2223. PHONE SALES Phon~ SnlNI pcoJ)ll'. male or female, 16 lo 65 years of age. Guaranteed wages or commission~. 250 Ea&t 17th Street . Suite O. Costa Mesa, between 5:00 & 8:30 p.m. ti46-42Zf. ~ t;quul Oppottunity Employer ..._ "" R ~ i. l a 11 r a n l • 2 5 3 I Urafting, 493-5..'lOJ. oppty foe grad student or thru Thurs !!hill of 7 AM Valley, Ca 92708 Resta u r ant. 320l E . EustbluffDr. N.B. former schJ tei1cher. Ap· w5:30PM +a part-tJme -• ..-;.~-------1-----------~ __ t_f_lw_y_._C_d_~_~ ____ ,--DRIVERS WANTED pllcanl must have ge· tihJft I-Ti tbru Sun aame MEN for LA Times home Phol~rapher. some ex· COOK. cxperiencl•d in Earn S200 wk. Must have nu In e i nterest in hours . Apply to the delivery in Co.'lto Mesa & per in !>hooting chldrn. llAUTICIAH Mexi1:a n F'ood. 34224 reliable ''eh icle . th11dten,enjoyt1portsac· securll')' guard, 275 Nwpl Bch. $27S·S300 per Cam. etc., lieply to. P.O. HAIRSTYLYST Cou:1t llwy, Dana J•t. Knowledge of plants \J vlties&havelnterestin McCormick Ave. Coslu roo.Mll-1740. Boxt.&ti,CM,Ca.9262'7. Wanted for chlldrens 49iHl'70 helpful. Apply in person. the urts. <1 yr des:ree pre-Mesa. "'l'mt Trno. ""'rm. Earn V Ch salon. X l n t op1>ly. COOKS,EXPER'D Tbe~lant Pushcr,524W. terrcd. M1111l drive: car II .. v PML M ortJe .,_'768-__ 880_1 ______ 1 In modified diets. Also, l9lhSt, Costa Me11a provided. Should be flex · $l7S·SZOO wk . Fuller HURSE llAUTYSTYLIST Dlshwu:cher neod~d . OruJ: Sa l eslady · Ible regar dlni: wknds . LaundryPMIOll BrushSalea,SS.\.7851. t'/t ime. Lido Cnn1r. "· d 1 d . Oayvi'ew Cunv. llosn, Cosmetician, m•iture "X· Lovely pvt rm & halh. Malunt. Bayview Oonv. 1 i,':enler. lSSS Superior .. 1uat o atest tren s an ,. • ~ $aJary $.550 mo. + rm & llosp. ~ Thu1lo Ave, Ave, N.8. IJ4t;.77f;.t, natur;tl styling. 837·4250: 205.'i Thurin A>vCJ, <.:.M. p~r only need apply . board. Send r esume to C.M. C.42·~:l. t4EID - 837·8'179. ll42·:l505. Downt-Ow n llntg Uch. 'u s p 0 n . j '.o.Jo EY? Ptlnt Sl\op nl'Od!I exp . • .., 27 '". CO¥ei-, . . OX d' ,., .. ~. :;;,,,. 01 J!l547 lr\'lne. Cu 92713. Le11 ing ln·ltome fashion person for r nste Up"' to Boot Manufacturer ---co. has full & P,/tiroe do Bindery. ctr 540· 135~ SAIUOAT MA~UF.' COOKS RECTRONIC \.O\fF.RNFA<;s. hve in, full p<>s ations. \8 or ovr. We ha,·e openings for Accepting TECHNICIAH lime for 2 children. Mu11t Manager oppor . nvalt. ('°°)~le to work ap· P /Time help w /some AppUcotion1 For T h e Jo 11 Y R o tr er Background <llgllal & have Calif. driver~ lie. & Jntervlewina Holid ay prox 10 duyii delivering koowl~*c ol electronic •Clllliaet At..,,..ert Resta urant Is acrepting 11 n 0 I 0 g c Ir c u I l r y . spcAk t;ngll:1h. be uble to l n n • ch a p 111 n n & teleJ>hone directories In parts. &10·489'.t PWtlt U.. applications (or Expcr'd Olver11ificd work lood in swim. Elvon, 76t!· 7645 MancHesler. 1·30·8: 30 the Orange Co. nrl'il. * fo'ry <looks. Xlnt fringe de~ign & tesUng of in· oft. 6 pm. NO\'. 8th. Call for a ppl W=k your available l>/t Sales. $40-$70 dtc up. C111111ftrS henenh & hour~. Apply s trumenl atlon . Ad· 963·23.53orS30·5663. day igbt hours. Men or Men, lli.dlc8, stu l.l~t:<. ••11ti-1te..n • in person. ~8~ Luke vanced Kinetics, lnc. GUARDS -ovcr l8 wilh c:.ars, Eves /Sat SS4-7M;il. BOAt EXP ER. PREF'O l"orest Drive, El oro. 1231 Victoria St., C.M. C•t• M.to LIGAL SICRITARY ~l!il.l:<f~ w11gon1 ord li te 839·1006. Btrr WILL TAK.Jo.: AP· 64&•'7165. E.O.E. Permanent. t'ull & part.· Experlenl'e<l CorPorate. t ru~ nre nee e d. PURCHASING CLERK P LIC ATI ONS FOR COUNTER HELP, at lime. Phone&transpre· Nwpt Ctr. 64o-e800 Pl,, t outdoor worr,. 12)-fo'•,l hrday. Apply TRA1N£E.S Al..SO. Kuste Cl · ' · t5:W cfd. Retired welcome. u ......... Va 'fl drivers lie.~ Cal r. at personnel ofc, J.oguna G OOD P AY XLNT N rs.l ~i"e~s·C~l EN~INE£R CallS46•0214,of<:hrs lO·i . LOO"fHGrvll llftasepl11te1 reqd.Oas Beuch Unified School BENEFITS. ' e~po r " ' · Closed Wed. A FUTU'lt. E7 , ~ all*•nce paid. Pally Dililrlct. before 1 l/13f7tl. APPLY ~ IZIJ • Mnjnr c<>11>. need' q feW . dr•--~ avau . fl'or 1rnmed a1csoM YACHTS couNTER HF.LP Manafacturinr HAIRCUTTING good J>ti'<lPle· to trAin '" 011d1#1ment1 touo~tng l'3J Deere Ave, S.A. • Musl be neat, clean Jo Fot production dev:for>· PARLOUrt man3gemer1t pos. In a rl!· "hoc\ \raining SJ!l!Sl<>n- •----------• appearance & willing to menl o( smull electro· 2 AssillMls Nceckd tall OQOr. wall & pntn\ Ap"'y at the Joca,lon IOYS AMO GIRLS work w/people. Apply lo m"ttli:>rncal assemblies. Must Ile Liccnsrd business. Oood tnCMe)', nc11r(Wt you at: t.fisslon Viejo " F.1 Toro person between 8-ll1u11 Ex per. lo document a-675·0808 xlnt future, Cttntllstlc 10:30AM or 1 :30P l\t area. Earn you I' own or 2-4pm. \Ion. p rod uction I lne benefits; ·ro 11ucceed l>llilily BeglnnlnJ! mooey seJUng subscrip· Taco Bell troubleshooting & cost uostESS between 21·30 musl have ambition & Ttti?aday Nov· 0th tlonsafter school.Forin· rosS.Cst Hwy,LogBcb reducllon . Uegrecd de11lredtowor~ononeof common acnsc. Call for 204~1i'wCarM90 Ave formation,call&»09\l enaineerpref'd. the WOJtLO S MOST appt Color Tu• 6'5-U21 Orange COUHTB HllP STACOSW11CH IMC 8 EA UT I f UL AND .Mondaybetwn9~m.9i)m. OlfOlassell 'c•IDlllVBS ~Ultf/llme.ApplyDel J139 DakerCoeta Mcsa LUXURJO\m VACRTS. -•Kutella) Men0rWo1nen T•l'O. 25252 La Paz Rd, 549•1041 Charters are in the LVM 3·1 l:JQ 1 3G Woodland Drive ~1 t "-"'" La"unll HUia French Rlvl('ra, Gt-eek ""-··rao N11-0 ., Mtdlo !· Ana.h~I , A~i~:f~~:r " ' 'f,qull()ppor l mplo)'t1r bland.$ and the C"1b· u~. 1-·1t1~ Apply Part CNr Mil iii/ 1 Velew Ctlt . Delivery penon w•-.ted '>ean areas. Must 11\ave Superior 14'5 aillpcri.or La Pa ma> llJSlSlatet Avenue forbollday aeuon. A,ply Excltlac ~'ftOdnd noor" i UPt ll APPEARANCE Ave, N.B. e.u-:au o. • :ms W. Hl Strttl Fowit.alnValJe" tn P•rto•, L l o )'ds oppottel\J with \f'lllY 1nc1 Jove lr&v 1. w~tl'r S11-nta Ana , Nuntr)'.1 _. Newport •• "'"'1 lt Deco 1..-. adven\u.re. No u~ MACUl,NE OPR o~cd (Between 'V• unused HelN t OUICI 8lvd.C.M.646-t 441. ~.; '1ll•• t l!!".ence ~., wlll train. tor our,OpUCial ,Gia•• lfarbor/t'alrvlew) be aomecilt&'s I QwUtmjs1 Dc-llverv" Aulal NCIW .. can Mr' SumnV --~ foupPl ProdYCta. Mull be wm· • J'air Dr I Olde 14 \\1\1 ~ ~U them undc!r In nO.;er shop. ror detail• J49-i006 or "".'..,.HS ln~ lo lu m how \0 m alice Or.nae Co. Falr1rouod1 R.E. SALES Join #1 #I In Sail•• # I In U1Hnq1 #I a. Ad¥trlialftt NlntllM)tonSeoch Pa.t•Valley Unlken~ nr llc{'nsed. Fr ee 15-da)' "Quick· Start" trttlnttl1t ~rarn. Call Mnnd:ay.f'l'lday. uk f~ Bev • ldor.Dill 848 OM4 83i· 54<&0 TAIBElL IU;ALTORS Equal Oppty Employer U.. Dally Ptlot Chriltmu .,u.17.,, ~ ~~·-mactµ'l!' 1et•uJ)l!I. ADP C41u Mf!la ,.,.... Yor WormatJon call ......,. '" Mon Uft Fri lH .. · ~l>'.1>11 .c.ors>.1.. B\clJ , t, 5\e. t<ll. <EMtr From Newpor\ Have 110mct.hlng you wanl our QidM.mAs Ad•Vlser, ~-ll ldlotte-• Del 'hoo. 2S2A UI Paz 300J 1tedbln ""· Colfl ~1 81v<J) to MU? Cla.•JJtried ad11 do &Q.a11, -'"" 642·56'18 Wanla4retulll t42.-<56'11 Rd,L1.-.Ht111. .. Ma a,Ca.t:l626919-14U ' l\w1U.M2.M78.. • . l I I -a.:-, T I ' I • ~.~!':t~.~ ... ~!~~ ~.~~~ .... ~1~~~~~ ..... ?!~! ~ ....... : .. ~~~~ ~ ......... !~.~~ ~!':~.~~~ ...... !~~ .• FrlcftY. Novtmbet 5. I~ • DAILY Pll.01' Df . --------.-lj~LF.<)LADV. upcr 'cf..Strv(ce :Ste. Atlcqaan_t. ~ 10 i!Qr"cd blk¢. 21 OAK 9AX C)'er)•lhing is GAM GE SAl 6 s l & G.,... s• 1095 Jew.try ,070 ... M IOIO Real Jo:.lalo maturw r /time A"itti' F /time d•Y•· Exper'd h tncb ri"a rn . E 't• O•K. uprl1 .. t pllrno. Sua, afrl5 ~:. Sc·b!,lno •••••••••• .. ••••••·~·-•••••••••••••••••••••••'-••-••••••••••••••et•• BROKER duys, ev~·!l 41 wknds. App.' <i n I Y. L It t !" 4IC h 'I tdJe~-,Ll.K E-NEW l S't(JO, dlnin6l fi,C!t , $500, bllu~, tlletci~t' biki-. b•.,Y AndQueis. b•bY (urnfhare, WANTED 17.t-n\tb color TV w/roi:n . · . ly in penoo, BUila• 14,,. ~Jett.o pref d. Nt111t $80. Call G42-0l38. t bina cob, '130<>, bufh!l, Curo & to)'s. 36 .. elec junk. 21022 ll11ge111tuwn TOP CA:SH OOLLA" Xlol cond. $110. Or1.111iler Lunation a l Girt S llul) up~:ar. & h.odwrlUng. US £1> RE BU J LT • mo, ~ht>:1l, 1150, 4 Cu pt vibrator. 16" port TV. C r , ( A t t u ll t Ji I· p A I D lo' 0 R y 0 U R ~-IW~·ll_20S ____ _ SERVICES M3W~tcliffUr,N.B~ ~~l?'.,.Bmlovd,.,'!.~; 25-90 Ou•r11~teed. All typH. c:Ho1rs, l131P, al:iss Cop 11mlupplic&mt11<'.20931 1!r 1>okhuri.t. Fri & Jt:Wl::LKV. WA'l'CHt:S.l.&z"bOv,,oldlwoed $~. •~ ......... • ""'' ~rtee tabl. $2~. sofa, Ch11rw0od l.n. llntg Bch Sut. " ~ ; AL ES I M GMT • new J)j&JU. CfPalN. Trude lo• &old. Sit~., Oun I.lb mod IAtLmt:i & Uu11l•hurd) "-""u'•• dill'"l.. '""rr1" ART OllJ ~CTS. GOLD, wrou'ht ron lea earl Need a profcn10n11I whc 11tore, meni./ womcn11 l'lfllNK'.R acccpted631·210l c h a ir :>25 ~h\·et1:1 '"'"''' ....... ,.. .... '" . "' SILVER St;RVIC t;, f65.(M().0074. hus ownl.'<lur m:inoaet co ntemp o r ary ~fTl. t> i.prca0d s. ~urLa111 i.:st.Pl-~K Q U 1\L1·rv drup'·~. b5d:.prcads. FINE 1''UKN & AN·1.,... 1 bl Jurge rei.ldenlHal re1all 11p0rtswe:ir . Po~1tion• wa,.,ted ror d iesel WA~T.E : M an 's o r tiJI llii5 21i27 Sant1t /\nJ HOLISI::SALt: Cd~!. Sat ~!I. Sal. 264Ul Via de TtQU&'i.645-2200 ~r Jiuy~oo .~• { o(face w1tb u 11ucc•uf• <lVatl In bOtb deµla. i:;JC· po11er<.-d yocht. Plt'ase Ladie_s 5 or JO spd tour· CM. · & Sun, On,·nL,11 rugs & Ania. l.u Nig KJl-100-l Mu$t sell Diamond. Mar· ftr~~or~m 531~~~ 0 • btlckiround of rucru1 I per ooty n.eed ;,ipp&y In ei'·ealldelaiU,locluding inc bike, pay cash. rare ---unaqul' unuquc,µ1cces. Sat \1 ·3 <.:hris tnrns, qwse.Cut.li...rt. !i.l.A.~....;.. _ __;, ____ _ 111£, traln1ng ond 1ntrn1t1 person. Kenneth l,loyd 0( exp., quallficnllons & book!!. S34·3M6 Estate Mo-..incJ Sme mai:mf rurH'<I \I<' bed, tbt'hkl. baby itern1o, furn. uppral.&ed. ~'8 8636 Clvblft\Us craft sale. Sot mg J)eUple. l!th111t ~ 11~ Nl'WJ)Ort, 2700 W Coai; nll•. salary req'mts. to Nislukt ''16 mdl sliver 10 C...eo ShorH l'la~1t· Ari ll<uuH·Ju huf 17'll Port Allhley, Npt. &r Sun, 10 AM • S Pl\t. to romm1.111icutt1 w1tn Hwy.NB t'lwosi!iedadno.1>96.DaJ· Sfld. Coal new $217.2.S. Wi(•kerHull1'rccs.ooaut ftol , \'Cl\'cl down·llll<'d &w&.M!O 24392 Apbena, M .V. broktt/Ownen. ly Pllot. P.O. box 15(,0, Wiii sell $l!S. 644·0.Ul furn .• antiques, clothcb, l'ouch. 1111·rc!I. c,11'\ cd U•estock 8075 (nearGemco> Jtxccllent u lary. e~· SA.llSPAltT·TIMl ~ua~Jes~cn_.~ _ ..... ....__M~_..8025 Girl items. Sul only !I·• l'nrncr rub .. tabl\•s, Antique Muhoi: dr@11~r. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pen•es. car allowanqt PRl,SAT,lrSUN • .....---..---__ ._.,,, ........-.-4!'Al1Cumden Dr.CllM . · bookcui<e11, thc~scrs, Murche11t,A M /l-'AJl>f.Reg.Morg11nm11re,bro~cC'hrfstmasDoutlque,No\•. medical/d ent a l i AfTEltHOOHS ~-~ ....................... --treulllc i1cw mn('h, f111c rm.ho, Cro11111u11 ulr ri fle, to ride & drive blk 13, 10 am • 4 pm. Doll q 1 ran c e . Dyna rn c jh 5' 1'lort Loan Ofer SZSK APPROX. 2.50 sheets or F' 1 "e pi cc e b 1o11 d c old stove. 11110µ.,, frame1J h>Y sOld1on1 . .Sut & Sun par3de Morgu11 1(4.!idlu,, clothes, de<"oraUons, an· 11~\ itrowth JIOtcnLiul with a ~ur ~~ogram is rtcx rl<l. f' It: Bkpr/Constr S850 3/8" t'Xl,rior plywood, bt!droom set. Ex<"ellent print:., Mo~ul Arl ( urnb >, 10·4. :ll8 A Jo:. llith Pl, CM. t~ 0 g, We 11 tern t 714) tlquea. 23762 V la Lu solid bu'd ttr111, "'1· HJU cun work part-tu:nc ~~."Pl/Secretary toS800 used. Mk fqr Dave. 17'1 cond.1llonSl~. 552 0043 je,.•elry /\ll>\1. rd1 11~. ---:--• --338·1011 Coruo a M.V. l•omll In S<'ope. iioor home in a ma1or ~.Y/Fullertoo toSSOO E. 22nd St. CM btwn w u ~hr I d r r r k '' "h CfllU:>T.\JAS Bout14ut &1---------- For confiden tial~-dept.store&i.t!llpu~ut lrvme Personnel Afeocy 6am·5pm,644.087g ~Sal. 1055 thmg hook" 'd 'bi~~cr G11r:..ge S:..le. Sul uull'• Matthews 3 whl blcychi ~ tcrvlew send resum eiu ou Ls\de act l\•1t1ei> 4SHE17thCo6laf. esa .. •••••••••••••••••••••• IJl.lrJ~s clothe,,~ 0;1sc 9-S at I Poml Sur Ur. Machin«y 1071 wl3 gears SSS. Scat''s l'U. Rox 10975 Sa;ta Demonstrate a rcvolu· S.Ule224 • 1142·1470 DrandnewRam Set Gun, F'ri/S;it/Sun . t;ampet \:hotchlUs et<' el<' elc Spyglass.Ceil! ••••••••••••••••••••••• CraClsman m aoual .\na,92702 ' · U·:111ary cookmgutenslltn ~~ w1i.bots&pins. Re:u.ona· Shell, Stl.'reo 1·all1oet ... ' . · · · . lawnmower 18". SU ~~~~~~~~~ a st.ore near you. $-I.SO , ble.536-7674 (Zeo1th ), Vrof c~r ~c~mro~I0·7SlM __ Patio table & 2 chairs, ~ANdT&D . S m . woobd F'ireplace sc~n It lool11 -per hr. + com mission. Tl\XCONSULTAN'T hairdryer. Fi·osl·proor Hook s, mag. lrl!iod. umbrella , blk1whi.e a n s aw, PO)' ca.1 • $10.613-2230 II lnlerviewinn Tuesday needs partner. Re ply 1'13 pcs ZJ(6 T&G v J oint lo'ng1dair", n)··~·~. +' l·•t• \' ''h l\lag navo~ TV. ~ood book s' p r oof COl n t i---------. .. I L···l n-i.:-6' I ~ ,. ~·...., v " am:. a, pwr mowers, <' o o d A<' co r .. ,. :1 n . 53i-~ Md.al S•ocage s~. 5x!O. ---------Nov. !I. Ciill (213) 447·8~ BoX' 17214, Jr v oe, CA .X ect ~IUJ•g, 1 ong ~misc item &. 260 Joann candlt?s. h1 ngeb. ~W u • ~ HESalH days or (714) 673·5348 9'l713 at$325. per 1,000. Below St, CM . blwn Harllor & lrJn sceavcr . toys , lo'ramcd beau!. µrio t $50. No phone calls, SUCCESSFUL ;ifter 5 PM. mkt value. All or 5.a·4984 Fair view, 1 blk nu of kitch e n i It• ms, c:i r museum rcpro, ceilg rl><· Mbctil..._. 80tO Dunes Trlr Park. Space Costa MHo Offltt-SALESPEl'SON, ""xper. t•r.t -HO.._.., purt. . Wilson. 642·9492 <' :1 rtr1 u g I.' s 1c re0 . ture. l)>lc basket, trays & •••••••••••••••••••••••t-23:..:.,_N...:pc...t_. ------' .. ...,.,.._ "s s l ..,.. a 30 t 1 30 2822 mlbc t'rom rt· to SSO 276 hus openlogs for a As· only. CloUiing, !-'/time, Dogs 8040 •ESTATE SALE• di '.""'n °: ~ 1 : • l\1ag~olia St CM !>AM-UqMldetlon of Au•ts Red & whlle canopy, tent ~ociale11 .. Experie1ced ('all for HPPt. S40·Mll SECRET AlllES •••••• ... ••••••••••••••• FRI/SAT 9 lo S La ::;alle Ave. c M. 4PM, Sul & &tn . .Mertie f\lrnlture for VW bus, w/posls. $65. only. Lac~n s ed real Part time or full l ime AKC Dachshunds• ANTIQUES Sut. Nov.tith9-4 Fluoreli -----1865Hart>or•.CM 1_962_·7_969_. _____ _ estate salespeople. Call Sales we.rt. XJnl opportunity. Sld11 <'h . stk• s hot s • • • • • • cent hght fixtures. 26 .. Sat & Sun, Nov 5. G. !Oain Ca r Pet 5 • d es.ks , 12'x20' redwood patio in · for inter view. As\: for W.tMoreh•c:onM? f<imtervlew,call : wormd• PSY tsld• $100 Incredible AdverllSlnJl ~hwinn •bike & parts o,fl· VTll S2SOO. TV S2S. pay rollmslr fil e lnct. 2217 Miner St. CM . .Ball Lacbenmyer,o·Nncr. Stay on your prei.enL job, 4-94-3474 up. 1·7284485 Art & Posters from 1800 TcKils. Lots more. 20; 1 ~t· S20;_,__lkt'~\'O, ~!1£h·, cabinets, book~as es, 548·3193. Call AM UIOONewportBlyd.CM learnlherealeslate held to 1945. IVaudeville. Santul:.·1bcl C~I .am1>5 ....... s elc. c deskdlrs • 646-3928 evcs:Sb-4577 w/pror help. Quahr1ed Alaskan Malumute AKC <;1rcui.. t-:tl.'I • . ---~o.rk s ! Cheap !. 12<1 1D1\VONLY Mile.._.OU - persons ha\•ean unlimit-'P)>plsl.60wpm:Parl puppies & br'8d1n i: •u•• YARO SAL~SAT&SUN Grand Ca nal. L1ttll) SUNDA Y NOV 7 W911fed 8081 .; ed ruLure, no cost to call time-.,~;s ~xable. C~\~s~:k~ds 5 4 6 • 7 2 2 8 DISPLAY CASES. 7182 HewmClft, H.I. Balboa lslan~73·8~ lO·llAM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Geo. Frey al 6J5·2886 "'"·lovv. · • • • • • --------PUILIC A.UC TION --- - -SSS CASH FOi Gal11 Properties, lnr. VORKSIURE TERRI Ell Gl9,~ Popp", Cd:\I :\lov1nj? .M IH'. a rHqs, Ci\RPE'I' Contructor has -llliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-_:_:.... UPHOLSTERER , 22Util Cup1sl runo Ln. !\!ANY ~·1 NE ITEMS OF iO yds red !'iylon Plush. Good used furn/rerric:s ----------1<:~ALE.':i fUll time. permanent, PUPS Ch a mp blood Call640·0893 H B. Sat u uly 10 4. ESTATf; JEWELRY. :\lus t sell! 675·5906 & fnrs/s toves546·0768 WomenNced Xtru $$! clfstom furniture shop. ltnes. tiny 3' lbs stud GARAGfS ... LE llti2·ts9-18. _ _ __ AHT OBJ ECTS, AN· &12•2210 · RHpirator PIT, l''/T-N1tt'I Vitamin N'ust be expcr'd only. servke530-6455 "' -TIQUl::S. FINE f'URN. WAHTID :rwr. opyT~lh ~c;;,knyd~u~~~l~r~l.~~~ ~ .. ~iZ· .... ' . . . Lhasa APlioPups ~o~~ l~~~cow.:i.o~~~ ~r~u~u{~· V~V/~ll:I~ ~e~t: e'TCo.·· ;.119~f:o:c"1'0l>R.Jl'!·.· WANTED . p~~~r~~~~~~hso Ccrli 1ed or llcs•slry S40. ea. No papers alum cots rhttdren's r "' v1l lf'l{'}; t:ligible w/exper. Must comm . Call for i.o · ... 7 .,,,...., · • typewriters metal fold'g 645·2200 TOP CASH DOLLAR Tapestry, Pvt Pty'sonly. · (7 )6730091 1' ~AREH' OUSEMAN .-ves,S5 . ...,.,.. books. s mall bike, port·a -c r1°b & mis c . -•-!?'All> P'O ll ~OUR 64().7014 be able to do atl~rial LerYlew. 14 · · bookcue. presto deep 4""41" llamilton. ,. ~.1 .. •-t II JEWE"0 Y, WA""~HES .. 1..---------blood aase 11 7 "'h ft -F' Adorable I ris h Sette r uo " "" n ullques. m see aneoos. un. '"' " · 5· · ~ 1 ~ample maker wunted. r~. 2 VW. mag wheels. Sat/Sun. -123 Poppy, Corona-def ~RT OIJJ E~,. GOLJ> Lawn. :>Vfef!'PCr wonted. <?<>nlacl Belly A~roso. Must have rectory e xper Puppies. 7 wks. !oho~. nusccampmggea.r. ml!tt> SILV Eu SER•'tCE. oood rond1tlon, rea~na· '"2 27·u Cost~ l\1 ... o I FAil WIST wormed. J\KC. ~how & PRICED TO SELL! :\br. l''n. Sal. Sun. 9J " v el ...,..., ""i : ...... ~ e •• ria on quality x:irmenls. items. --.--FINE FUHN Ii AN· ue.~ll)-.......... I osp1tul. Also industrial machine SEttYICIS IMC. p e t. S 9 0 to S I 2 5. 2till Albert Place Sat. Nov G. 711 K Thangu Ol':LTA ltAM :II,\ ltUM TIQUES. &IS.2200 Mu --tsi-. ·-~------- ---\-inhme. C:ill9ti8 0077. Call Cor Appointm<'nl 9&?·5829e\'S --Costa ~te!.J Or , Cd!\1 . Speed Qn ~1:\(:t: S,\ L t:' 2891 UGG .&G£T~S .,....._,.,ts 8083 H l-::S P IR/\TOllY -.--, 979-0275 Poodle Puppies. white, _Sat~nOamto-lJ>m _ Was her, Norite (i,1:. \'el!Ji.l'oLn.<.':lf ,Sa~& L " A-•••••••• .. ••••••••••••• ' TllEl~APIST Must l'o•?rk sg;~~~\o L ~~·~ ·"sHh~ Equal ()ppor Employer ~pe·n,t l>qOu':J~tsy .. ~0~~4,5' Js6how SAT : Plants & L\.'ftuvcrs. 0 r n : r. 2 Cu I l' ma II ~~·~sul1~~; .. ull kfn~s of r.,rom YOW' business card.1Co11n Min..0-l\lutil.' clcc ·•." shifts. APPtY al Sun day. Apply personnel .. • """' Moving next• wk. 9912 f''on·eri Air Furnul'l')o, --Send one card for ea<'h organ excellent cundi-<.:111~ n:i e nl ten Gt:n oral oh;, Lagun a Beach Merct.ndiM AKC Afghan Pups, blk Star0 r.Jl .B.961S-965S L gc (i 1-:. H e fri g, NEWPORTCREST lag pl1,1s one spare. We lion s6oo P.P.532·12Slt osp1tu , e~p1ra\ory U T d Sh 1 0 . t 1 l ••••••••••••••••••••••• k .1 , / ht & Tiicrmador dbl o\'Cll & return 1>erm a ne ntly --·--·------Therapy Oepl. 496-1 li2 m ie c 00 15 r <' .&~-IOOS m as. • 5 1 \er w 3 F'umily G.arager-Pullo clcl.' r<JOl(C, ueror W••0<ll'n GARACi! SALE sealed allr <1ctl\lc ta" &, Hoffman Studio u.pri"'ht ---before 11/30/76. ~"'""°I a Pr 1 cot . Lo\' ab I c Sal, I kitchen hood w exhaus t Near Hoa~ Hospital l · Ii • REST ... UA"..-i.•••••••••••••••••••••• ~oalities s.is.os23 · c •. very ow pnce~ on f b 1 st rap, ml'e mg u1r nc p ia no refini s h e d "" "'"' Seamstress • exper'd 1n r·~ · · sterl.ing & silver plute. an. icydl'. sk i~ & ~k• lf ltiGoodwal Crt N.U. 1.0 . requirements. Pre· w/matchlng bench $495. ASSl$.T.MGR alterations, mu~t have Wonderland Alaskan Malemutei;. xtra Stacked washr /dryr, clothing. M ' Ouraflex SatiSun9-s ___ wnt loss & theft! For a Vibraphone w /malle~s 3 Ni~hls &'Sun, need bod shop exper & ref. 675·3095 Of ..t. _....1.ques.I pedlge •. ~~-c935, s 9 hots, champ. Sl~. Scars table saw, ~~~m DI\ mg board. ~loving. must sell. 1f0l' personali~ed tag enclose $150. 646·2562 )o\.'rvace exper. Growi!': blwn 10&5. l"UfI .,.... $20. many goodi!S, col point U1mght f'reeler wallpaper, fabrM: •Or Offlc ......... Ii co w/oppor for advaace· . H UGE ware h o u s c lect1blcs, tools, Junk & . . . 20. Was her S25 1-:1ec ··oay Glo" pa~r & we e ment. Call ror a ppt. *Se-c:refcries to SI 500 crammed wiA.h over 500 Hel_P~ mo\•ing. BtO blk sm stuff. Sal/Sun/M(ln, 4208 Siu Sale, Junior & ndlt Drver s2s. S ki Boob ,.;11 back & -tiim your Etpi,_... IOtS •' 5SHl232 •Secretsies/Lecid musi~1>oxes, nickelo· '!"ruature male Poodle. River Ave.: NB, <'umer dolhmg. Sal Nov 6. As· si0:S20. 4 P~ter queen lags. Or try two cards ••••••••••••••••••••••• I I l Fin Anal Ast Cntrlr HK deon pianos, cireus or· 6mos. $45. 962·7989. 43rrl & H 1 ver on the sl!.l League ~hn!L Shop bed S!llJ. Twin mattresse~ back lo b;u·k. -8' Conference Table •R•e•s•ta•u•r•a•n•t ---.. 1-1 EmployersPayAllFaes gaos, wall clocks , fTfftoYCMI 1045 ~~nel.:.b::7S·\355 10·2 SOSJ2nd:Sl.N.R -S.'>00.Tblo\·en SS.OO.l'wr PRICl-.:S. LlkeNew l.iz Reinder:; Ai:enry gr a .nd r.athe r. <'Io~ ks. ••••••••••••••••••••••• mow(•r SI !'>. Vacuum 82 ea or 3 S5 979-llS33 To1'!L~NIRNll,.BJNn ~tCISKs:J_z.~ 4020 Bi.reh Sl. Ste 10..I fa~cmatmghnt1qu1Js. cleaner S.'>.00. Small ~arlli .1 5 tags ~.,;o ea. Portable elec Typwriter .-_ " ro" :'li<'WPortBench 833-8190 Overil .000,000Worth FREEARfWOOI> hike, $1!'>. -+ many uther o !l tag:.$1.50ca. v 11-;Jo. ancl nuw Laklni; C1.11lforAppt/Estab'l'5 American' lnlcrnationnl 9AMto4PM~6·32Jl bur~;.iins Sut ~.2. 20311 Hloro,orcSI to ca, ~~~islPower.$115. upplications rur· Galleries; 1802·T Ketter· . ~ Bayvil•W, Santa /\na llto. :>all's Tax lntludeu COOKS !Set·reLary & General Ofc. ing Sl., Irvine . T e l. Cat Spayed Fe1f!ale. fluf. tnr llri:.tol, Ju m borcd NOCAllD'' . IP'-'os & OrcJ41ns 1090 Matwe WAITRESSU Heq 's accurate typist, 7.>i-ln7 Open Wed thru fy gray & while. good 540-ti.136. Draw your own or senC! ••••••••••••••••••••••• hrs 10:30-7:30. Salary Sat.9A.\tto4 PM. Visit! w/kids, hsebrkn.bi5·2826 " na~1c, addres!o. p~nc & FIELD'S Wauho\lse IUS IOY /GlltL'S SS75-$000. 979-0751. P'tllUC "UCTIOu Fem Samoyed 1 yr, free to l''ri l·S. Sat 8·S. Cmpr s bl. we II make on~ card per Sale. 400 pianos & or-"' " g 0 0 d h 0 m e . L 0 v e 5 lM lb sci, wstrn s addle, tag. Add 2S" ench. . / sed S . et MANY FINE ITEMS OF chlldren. 536.5182 eves. misc. 15-161 Cedarwood Send check or money or· ~~~wp u • p~n . .s. Neal apper:irance. A~ Se<"ret.ary I Re«Ptlonist ly 1n person 286S2 for Newport CPA firm Ma r guer1 le, l'r k wy. Giffonl & ~tonroe CPA·s. M.V. 500 Newport Ctr Dr, Suite ESTATE JEWELRY. off '.\fcf'uddcn/bLwn Bch dertQ· r.......... layers. omg ART OBJECTS. AN· 962-4S2ldys. &Gothard. PILOTPlllHTiMG-'" 'OUt for business. Rcr!t ....QUES ""NE~UR ----. w/opt lo buy. Kawai, ... , .. , N .. Abandoned black L ab/ P.O. Box 1560 Steinway, Baldwin, ~·PHONE OR IN· Doberman puppy , Garage sale, Sat. & Sun. Costa Mesa Ca 92626 Chi FO. & BROCHURE. rcmale 3•12 m 0:>. :>weet 6331 Glenrox Or. H.B. off • ·· . ckering. 1Yamuho, --------•t .~;;A11., •. .-N B. l>W-6156. RET/\IL SALES F/11.;;lsECRETARY-Good posi-6'5-2200 d isposition. lovc:ihle. Edwards&Ti.ilbcrt. BecrdraJ'ter.holds y, Ke~ Kimball. Wr lzr (714 ) rct;ul ~alci<person WUllt· lion. xlr1l CO benefits ror 1...::~--~-----I h -----f be d ""()O 6 3 8 • 2 7 7 0 . 1 2 0 7 2 ' ""WP't Needs a ume. G<IG-7!;35. Plu~h N''""· sofa & love o er. new con . ..,.. . e......i.hurst. GG. c<I for rapidly grOWl81( mature ~wn . .,., .. 17th GL •ss •> ~.... 673 5276 c II alt11AM '""" ~IX'l'1alty l(anlc storeto typ111l(. S6!'>0 mo. Nr O.C. " Handsome Puppies. 9 wks seat. Xlnl coml. Pd. $700. 1 • ' 8 • ~lusL be ~•·nous minrlell. ,\irport. C:ill 11/8 & 11/9, Show 'e" Sal• old.~ Germ Shepherd + Bstorfer. 640·7629 CUS.f0M Wurlitzer Spinet Pia no. ~<'If m1>l1\:llrn,i: & llc1'1· 7S1 -llC>l __ ._____ • .. Lab " W'elmtr:rntr • xinl cond. Just been b.lc. ;\pp_ly in J?4!rliOll. ~-rl>tar)' for ad ai;ency Mov ....... 6 & 7 557-1892 Got seven lig ~a~/~-~-e WOVEN WOODS ,_t_un_ed_._S4_99_._64_2_-1_73_1 __ (ht."IS & <•:•m~ t.;nllmll n1'1-rlt-O inuned N. B. ofc. 00 Dealers from 8 Slates. Blaek & white kittens, ...., Mis<' merchandl11c. some •SCir'r T080% Ot-'F• Piano & bench, mirror· "'° z;oo ~ (oast ll'A ~. Toµ I) plAg kills. phone Antiques to C:ollectibles. Stamese. Box trained. • O\•er 40 In 11tO<'k patterns upright, nds tuning. rair Ncwpvrl llt'Jth !.. .ien tic. l'>o sbthnd. Depression lo Art Glns:1! 5:16 ...... "o. swans a SWI m -antique ~ 209 Onyx , Also MINI-Bl.IN OS :.hapc, good beginner Meet J eaa Florence. -..o Ba __ l_bo_a_ls_la_n_rl_. ____ 1 IHS-8950 833·9'170 $70.842-9761. rt'.;'s Lo work P Time. Qualified onJ)' nttd aPP· Kentucky D.G. a11lb0r & Fumihlre 1050 rue. Wl'd & Thurs afl· 1Y_~_2l_19 _____ t.eon ard J> ud ge lt, ••••••••••••••••••••••• m1• ng you'd 11• ke noo n' 1n C \I are;i Marr .nd quthor/J~c· 'll•\11t·:.il Ofc. ~·or Jppl SICAETARY.UIC lurer. * *' BUY** t 11 b f c.1ll h-lai:i1n Satloam-tpm,Sunl2·6 Good used Furniture & 0 se e ore --To Pt~s. & V.P. Top pcm· Cosmi<' A~ Lodge, J71'1 ..; \C.l''.S 111 F• c ornco-L1 00 for pe r s ohable So 11 bo Appliances-OR l will (.• \t /l pl "' •-t h · ar r, sellorSELLforYou. Ch • t ? Ol'flb Cl!'lta \':O.I O<' per"Sen w y n., « An a heim'. St.SO arl -r1s mas !'-1111.ir), -.:hit h1lurl' t'ur ~kilb. Savings & lAtun mission. Cimeo Produ<'· MASTHS AUCTION • MOVING SALE · FUrn, household itrms. han<t. power, & garden tools . All pn<'ed to sell fast. 433 Woodland Pl. C. M. ( l blk N. 20th oHTustin l ---1 CARPET Elec. Tbomas orean. 2 Yrs old. Nevr learned. 4.00sq. yd. Moving. Drums. chlmes, PLUSH SHAG etc. $2200 new, bst ofr. Lowest prices on any _67_3·_14_39_. ------ majQr brand. Call for TV, Redlo, Moving: Plants. tools. free quote. 10·5pm. HIFi St.r.o 1091 clothes, furniture. clc. (714) 497·134S ••••••;•••••••••••••••• 1nlt•n1ew, C'.111 ht~n exper.prefd.lrvineS3V· llOl\S 6,4M6861i83J.9.25 11 o no n & :z I' ~t on t y • 10R,_'.:..· 7_SZ_-6456_~·· -------------4 •:!13)ti85 ~:S t; vi St tlo Allen· Part ~ my Collect10n of SAVE,! Ne"': & us~ rur~. 278Ho:1e1.anc. CM. CLOSING OUT SAL 5411.69().1 Drain off extra pounds & · E ----------1 inches. Easy, no drugs . ColOC' console TV's, Ile· . .. . • er ce 3 .n A 1 -:int1q uelcl ocks. to appl s. misc. Wilson s ;:,,\l.t.S ~}~.I.I WJntt'd d,ant, over 21, :;ap.,.y 461A weights. Grandfathe r, Barguin Nook, N-Ow 2 p II~ tMm<'lnlog_v ex· <.1 mpu11 llr (corner Mantels Ser-vie.-repair Stores -545 & 814 W. pt•r prd'd (\111 l'lt IU ll, Mat'Arthur) ND. ___ &r~.~.2l3 19th, C.M. 642-7030 & t.a11un11 ,_ s.u!·3262 -WE BUY 11 ----nice Sta .. Attendant Wa1nutdt'W>leaftbl,41xSJ · It; ! • • ~ • • • • • • • * • p1tlme. J\VArl. •'·e~ & 5250. Eat\y pine ~hest, MOVING· S panish gold • wkncb. E11JWr d Neat r.lab sidet$23S.631-1018. velvet Couch & l.ove • 00 YOU MAU t appear. ar handwr1tm(I. Seat, Coffee Tbl, 2 end ! CHlllSTMAS « Apply morns· 2590 Antique 11>ak wardrobe. T bls, 2 Lamps. aho • GIFTS7 • Newport Ulvd, C M. can atSo.be'used as a gun Gibson Refrig. $350. for • ! eablnetf300. '42·8845 all. 675-5052 :~ •\\ti\ ntit .1th•rl'""'' ''••'TI • . ---------• • 1n ,1 , •• , ""' " ,. '"''"'' 4 Servlct" S l•l!on Allen· Antique match.Ing bdrm 8' sofa & 5• Joveseul, • llw dant, l'Xper 4. Day & sllile,\lllrlwnlnut.ornaLe w/matching corne r & I • n \It.\ 1•11 11 r : Kves. Full le p/time. AP-carvings, 2 d reucrs coffee tbls in modern Si • u111h1 \I" IJH ~; • pl)'. Shell SUtlon, J7tft & w lbeveled mirror~. colors. $195.'Vinyl reclin· i'J • th1rlh"''"'"Tr'"'"''"• lrvtnt ,NB. aipoire ~full n bed.1760 ing <'hr & ottoman $60. •• ., t• ' .J -I , , ... • ,1,1 •. or , ..o•" I lm•>ll·" •~.St /\ t M h . ~larvx>v10 Ave. Suite /\·7 552·1008 • """' '"' 1111111111 ••···· • Do · •:.-~ .. o..,;o.ec 8111<'~ CM .... U• ·.. ----------1 • 11>111 1 .111 111 • . .r.:11 " J'' • · you ·~ ~.,.ooo yr · Waterbed, huge <'Ustom • 111r • ""' 1 11m1m.L• ,,1 • Lets Tr ode. 4173·3330. R.IA MAIUCIT 1 m ade. /\11 a<"cesa. $250. or • '"' • '"" 111''''' 1111"' "'·' • ........ W__._.. 1 11 1 l-.. , ... A.Y ,,...t'l'M'\UI bestorrer. 644-7438 . • II•••• .. ·~ -I ~· _,,,. " ~ * • • • • • • • * • • ••••••••••••-•••-.••••• ~AY ONLY t-4! Btll. mahogany drop Crnl 1mlture and variety of desk w I m a t c bi n g • 1 ~ htiq~ unique booll~ue Hitchcock type chr $380. ems. 18l El Camano 642.mw~ Rcstaurcant FAR WEST SERVICES Has A New Ei<dting Concept In Restaurant Service. It is to be named SUNDAY'S And It is located in Mission Viejo al 37750 Crown Valley Parkway on the East corner. off Sao Diego • Freeway Now lnterviewing For: ... , ........ ........ ,..._,, Jntenlewina Mon 'l1lru Fri. 94tn-Sptn At Our Temporary Office In Tbc 'tra il•r On Premises W• .. .,.. equal oppc>(tunlty ~ -..,. eal. Tu s tln .---------h4 )5'4·1901 Must sell! Avocado vcl vet I .. ~.... n .•L•··b f I So(11 "Loveseal. &st or- 11 n..,. ...... unu ot 18 e. rer.963·7* haw feet. Cood cond. ---------~oo. 645-2188. Love sent & sofa, xlnl '"k • • rond, avocado i rn. $150. .. table 45 round Xlra long lWf\ bed $25 ~~~:1~/4 chain. am3. • • ~ 8' Gold acrylic pile & 11!SlE auort.ed a ntiquu, walnut trim, sora, $15, lnony piece~. pvt pty. <'Or group, wlnul/ gld M0-7518 _:. twe ed. 6 ' Jo n g. $50. ~•ns · -~o _ss_1 .... -4_604_. ____ _ •••••••••••••••••••••• New k"mg size Osleopedlc ullt·lns : gu doulile Mattress aet S160 bven, 1aa stove lop & dis· Rcclyner $50. CaU Ju he, hw.asber. To be removed 114&-~'70. ~buyer. All ln good.con• --------- dili°""a11 for $200. Call Walnut din.rm ~l. bufrct. &42-0138. 4$" square md tbl w/'l lS" extensions, 6 th.nlrs. cotsroan Ice Maker. Asking $ol-OO. ~2.&D uf\. New-used I month. $250 4. 1n11~1ect. m 1%32. 1--------t--~------Kroehler llO" sota & 60" ~aut! Frigidaire eltt. rn11tchln1 love seal, gold ranee "'/lrg oven below. color. ColCee tbl. S48·2776 s mall OYen up. Neat' n~. Harvest •o\d. $1H. Auortecl An liq u o 4"3-~aflS. Furniture , see larte tfotpoint Uort.1't f'r~. aerqesaJead; &40-'\'StS f:20. Wt.ahs-, szs. !:lee Sala I ' rust tolor, Medlt. ~" szs. 540-Gl6 evu style SlOO. Like new. C.11 -~~ ~-... 1-Retrial~. ttt. 1'e futnt draw In ta. IOo03U cl.a.,., or l'n-TQO Weat. • .a l>all.Y PHot .,.._ aa..lned Ad. MWl'lt. .: Move the m under our tree. On each Thurs da y from Nov em her 11th through Dece m her 16th, the Daily PJlot will publish special pages to make it easier for you to convert your saleable items to Christmas cash. Buy a box under our tree & sell yo ur toys, s ports eq uipm ent, luggage. appliances, furniture, antiques, handmade & unique gifts and no matter what your business -we have a bbx for you! Putting a box under our tree ls easy and inexpensive. Rates ~re $4.00 for the sm11le11 ·box to $22.50 for tfle larges t ~ox. BIG , BIG SAVINGS lf you run more than one time. For more hit ormation and to pla ce your ad Just call 642·5678 and ask for your Cbrl!ltmas Ad -Viser for more. Information. \:'our credit is good wJth us. We'U bill you or you can charge your ad to your M.aster Charge or BankAmerlcard. • \ .'.i •J -w I 642•5678 • ' . - SS For Christmas SaltSun. l'rlced to On! Bikes. T V, et.c 9872 C h eshire /\vc . o ff Brook hur s l /JI ua r d , Wstmnstr. Complete nutrition pro-cond. w/t. yr picture lube gram. $23.00 replaces GO 'Wnrr. $16S·S225. All meals al "°' a meal. wHI Service & Repair Co. 807 help you to lose up to 29 W. J9thSt.C.M. 1,bs in 30 d ays. Ope nlsansu l 5000A Ster eo :>esame. ~ Cst. Hwy., Receiver, recently r e· ---------1 NpBch. 646·707J,, d' · ed b s i (4 ) Family S ale . 10·4 con auon · Y ansu . Sut/Sun. 241 Virgini;i !Jost eleclloi:i bets, 809 Retsonable. 536-76'14 Place, Costa MesH. Eu_ropea~ & Am~lcun CB R:f.1o R E/\LISTlC on g. 011 palntrn.cs. T C • I-urn. games. 11 little bit of custom fra mes. UAM to R · 1 1 mo old. $195. ever)'lhtn~. Sat 10-12 618 8PM Fri . Sun. 6 Mi s11ion t\FT SPM, 548-8313 A<"acla. CdM. ~Y Dr. CdM. <Spyglass Must sell Sansw QR 1500 BLOCK SALE.Nov6 &c?. llill)640·0291 Quad receiver. BSR 9·5. Lots or $10odios. Custom Pool~. t ~~at!fs~ 1~50 <0~> ofr: Ran<"h Area In lrv. 1.5061 $300. ~:1931. f15'G1J .. , Glass Cir. ----''?-"------ SALESMANS SAMPLES Es La l e Sa I e-Cam eo14lapetrart console 6' enteT· Tree 'decoration s ~kre~ A'9lisques, tainment ctr. AM/FM w r eaths p o t t c ry ' c er , M). IH 1lt. on· Mel'eOJ aQlo lurn lbl, 8· b k l ·•• 'fl it • IY. 4501 CA'rl\de h Dr. track tape playor 2 re· ns e s, "' g1 ems. CdM k • 14671 Ffr Awl. College • mole SQCll ers. costC1eW Purk Irvine . $59·0131 l32S, asking $1:50. t-0am-4pm S11l/Sun. RIMMAMTS ,_sn_io_· •-~-·----- • Carpel draperJu It Brand Newt n1ver \l.8ed Garage Sale: 11\A rn. bouti· vinyl. 1' DAV O~LV 'slill "Hit~!*' s'' port ~l~r que cll)thlna. cldldrens ltH Nov 6lh . .iem Hale. 'l"V. MOdcl CUl20. Sohd toy s • 11 n t l q u e s • Jrv, SUghtlyS.~ ol Bar· St. A1C•p1c, 1unscreen Wllhr/dryr. like new, TV\ .ranca Rd & Mllllken. ~ '10 po1tt100 detenl Ullt' dshwsph1r .. Fr0i &NSB~ 9-~: tunlnc, other fouturcs. 1226 o am r . ~ . $299. '44-4a2 aft 5. PUIUC AUCTION Honn t060 MANVITEMSOFFINE ......... ... ••••••••'•••••••••••••• ESTATE JEWELRY, ..... ......... ART OBJECTS, AN· ••••-•M!:::_::••••••-••• Palamino mare, must st!e ~ __ l o 11ppre. EnR or TJQUE.<;, FINE FURN., __. 90,.0 W E'OC. PHONE FOR JN-P'"""'"" 111 estern. $550. 548·952,7, F'O & B .R QC Ji U ff E . ••.'"••••• .. •••••••••••• Arabian/Morgan Colts. 645·2200 Superb confttrmatlon ---------1 IROADllU xlnl blood hhe, reg. Must Toronado lawn val'. S75. PLANK !lclJ 846_3186 Pait used &Ide pipes $10. 18, cu a l 0 m m ... d .. ----~------"' ltx.24 H.D. cutter ror • "' cardboard or U1ht metal. alumlaum. Beautifully Plnt.o horse. Canters Uk~ a rockinll cl\alr. In f:ood healtll. Only ownt;d J>y girl. G7WT74. lhp 8-phose motor szs. Clack for 30' boat. WIU Flit exlo & whl1 for 1~ MlJ cheap. ~2200 or Chev~el $15. Emblems1_'7_5_,·3862 ______ _ ~ hllllcht}or ·u ....._,.,... 9040 2Hor st Reg. ·MORGAN, 'Packard. 36 screen ... ~• .. •••••••••••••••• 1a ~ maiden more, good door, gd qual, $10. 333 E. 18• Lyman l•Pltl'ake ln· trait hors~. $$00. Neg. UAA St, CM. 642-3379 b ,,, d ., l b a APPALOOSA., T yr ~4· o .. r • p QQU • y In• Eni or wat w ~ Room Divider Dor S175. arulJtr or ocean fisher, bla~ket.' lGb IQ~c~ 0 Gold An• Rua. veiy sou n d . 13600. Jump. f700. St111>1ec1 :-at ~ &I0-8ao9 lr~lne £qunttfan Ctr.1.enJth colarTV 1100. wtll ZZ'C.bbt~tr.Xlntns. ~ I -1.nlde BabJ' Grand Plwt ~iDI .,_t. ta.a lnbrd. ·-·~tul~ .... MH ldr~11Htfl . M8lt '8lJ Qeapl *960. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lJVING 1llff~., J>ft-J'l!!f'!7', _. srERlJNG SUver Of1'att cu Plu'fe d na lft. tlmtiYUN&A Ila. 2'0 "OuBarl')''' MrV. tor •. RdriJ, padd«t paUo fff· VOIYO, VHF, RJbridae Perfec:t. N~ '1•. s.o. tnf fl much more I m•n1 xtr&1, low •u: $750. MCM3IO Mo1oo • ...... '.-. v .~ ... -_........ .... . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ··--~ . • .... ..... ~~~~·~ ......... ~~ ...... -.... ______.-1-.~-~"ft*••'t..-.••.._. ..... , ................ __ _.,..,...,_ ...... . -.. .. . ·• . j I l \ I I I I 11 f ' '" I ' t j I j I I _I ' .. ~1 '\, '~ .. .. ' , DJO DAtll'PtLOf Fr11:iay Novunb11rS 1976 Van• 9570,Vant 9570 lulto~Want•d 9590 Awtot,lmport.d Auto.a,l"'port.d AMtot.IMprwttd 1 ..................................................................................................................... ·••··········••••···•·• loah.Power 904 Motcwcydes/ Trailers, Tra•e-1 91 70 * * * * * * * r BUY JUNKCAHS IMW 0 9712 Dahun 97-J.... 9730 •••••••••••••••••••••• Scooters 9150··:···········:········ ***** USF.DAl.M'OPAl\TS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• lJoal & trail~r for ~ale, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 21 .OOShnst iS/C i\~nln~. 540-5125 847 96Ji 73 Duhun 240Z, alt, "73 XJ6. Silver w/blk Int., newt!n&ine. S'l~. 00<? 1025 •75 HONDA 750 ~t l ~· b(.1~:~ ~~ n d · :stcrt'O, mu11~. xJnt cont. luxW")' w/aJI ictru. 36,000 for more Info. Semi·<..~tom (8.;Ul9) eic J c. Autos. Imported $3950. 581-3476 ml., mint C!OQd thruoul. $1495 StJr<'r"rt Lent trlr, di'\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Muid 1011 tmmt!d. mdl, but.1nl· 1'l:ln1;, slf>!' 6--d 9701 "73 DalSun 610 Sta w ~ S48-«D..8.orMl-62lt,. loah. Sail 9060 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hoble 16, trlr, new trans & more. Sl.~. 646-82.SS or 5&J 7~. 75 HONDA 550/4 C2K07S8) $995 d Cd.. Air oond., Jui raclc, C IS. U'>l' J lirne~. •u ••••••••••••••••••••••• 494.~ 'S8 XK150 Jacuur. u 7 s- 17 t1-• * Every Kind Of Van WORTS CAR FAHS! BUY OR Restored & beautiful, •74 ERICS ON 35 & Newport J\1oo r1 n t. $32,900. (714) 963 J.sJij: 536·$767, '74 SU%UKI 125 (817845) $195 !~~~.~~!~t:Y .... !~.·.~ * Every Model Of Van ~~~t~vt;0~5~c~;.~:~ LEASE NOW ·~~::e~s~~e l~~c!~e so.ooo.Cal\645-Z&ntaftG. * From Plain Vans 1-'lats-TR's -'1G"s-bumper, cust. lntelio 9731 Trailer frame'. l anJcm whrds. 8' w1dl', 38' IOllJ!. S300 172 Monte \"lsta,CM To Surfer Vans Po~cbes, etc. We buy, IMWTRADE-IN's ~~:i~o Pb aft 5:30 bell, lrade, lease. "7028QOCS. (23SCFS) Lido 14. One yr, bkc new. Sunburst Yellow & wht. 1\1 ntcb10g s:iils·trlr· xlras. Da ylront Or slorage av1ul. $2500. 646..s387. '71 TRIUMPH llonnevlllt• <900037 > S59S '6STRIUMPH Cafe Style• C368J.l3) $595 Auto Service & Pc:rh 9400 •.•••..••..••.........• 'G3 I' I y. U u r r .t c ud,, lra ns mis:.1on, brand new. ~O m1. 1.2 l1r 1ce, SW-OO'n LATE MODEL TRADE-INS ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE HAVE THE UNIT YOU ARE LOOKING FOR 9520 • •• •• •• • •• • •• • • • • • • • • • • ht & HARIOR • SANr A AHA •l>\'l.;H-;o(',\llS• 531 6000 531 3421 •CORONADO 25 2131E.l.,l.S.inl:iAn:i 1:\1:-.1\'ENTOltY • • Cust int. Cl~an! $8400. 83S·!llll A\.'TIQUES&CLASSJCS * * * * * * * * * * * * PP. 714.530 984!.I '71 HONDA er. li5. 3000 From Ford!i lo nolli. 4 WL--1 D . 9550 Trucks 9560 mi lmmac cond $-t.2!> Hoyccs· from ~500 to llC'a nves '74 Coumbl:i 23. Trailera-~·-i592 · $50.000 <'~rs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••:••••••••• ble. like new. $4995. BUY SELL·TRADE '75 DodRe 4~,I. Hm, tape, '57 Ford •la T. V..S, auto, !197·2m8all7PMwkdays. '74 Suzuki T~ilOO dirt ElZFARGO&CO air.__ :1• t~1n.: H' bed. ictras. S uper! Call • bike, buill for r acing, 675 6237 21Jtb34·18l9 848-0347 VENTURE 23 MacGregor $t5Q w/gcar. l\lolor<'ycle 830S. :'llain·SJnla Ana • · yachts own de . lra ilcr :t.a place $250. l Otoli, Mon.·Sat. Vans 9570 monslrator. Outsta ndmg 5-I0-4G84 afl 5 Clm.ed SuruJays ••••••••••••••••••••••• ('OO<i. $3300. MacGregor · · * 547-9709 "': Yacbl Corp.642·6830. '7S Kawasaki 400. Mint--------- • • . sh:ipc. S750. After ~pm, l!W6 Ford Wootly Wal{on GlennLlOSailboaL Used #;:fl·Ot8S lieaut. orig. c<>nd. 4 times. See to ap· Possibly be!>l in Slate. preciate $2SO. 494·6482 ·oo Sui. X6 JlusUcr w/case 6W-8208 '75 JEEP . . 2 stk oil, winds..r.:-cn & CJS ..... Pvt dock avml, up. to 55 Chilton mnn.S35-0/bst ofr Plymonth. l t1 18 . Huns l,,,,,m,i.-C•u4 ,0811 ,100 pwrboat.Dover Shorcs. or.trd +<'ai.h for P/U. good . N et.'ds work. Ull4ROJI No live abonrds or party &1G·500l aft 6 642-2073. $700. or work on boats, ple01sa . ...:..:.:..:::.:.:.::.:...:_ ____ ,. ________ _ 1975GMC SURFER YAM Automatic, chrome wire wheels , s unroof. ixwtholes, highbacks, air rond., pwr. steering & 8 track tape. (0749 >. S.AODLEB.ACK VALLEY lMPORTS 83 I ·2040 495.4949 Limit your electrolysis & '65 Suzuki SL 2S(I. Xlnt '46 De Soto, partially as· se<'urity. $3.75 per fl. tra nsportation. Must scrnbled, rel.Ill COi!, good (213) 9244495 sell. $200. 645·9557 ~!~.ssso. or lii!st ucrcr . 1975 CHEVY VAH .,.,.;...,....1 Lido 14. 3 mos old. very '72 Yamaha 200 street.---------c...,..-.ldbJetop light & fast. 1 of a kind. b600 mi, :i..lnt l'On<t. incl LONDON TAXI Automatic, pwr. slcer · $2300/ofr. 673·7418 helmet. Call 962·W2S. '57 Austin, xlnl cond, 3 ing, air cond., porla· dr, xlnt prom otional l'ar v<>lly, s tove & icebox. 20' All Wood.Sloop '72 Jlonda 750. Fa11tasl1c s.5000 ur best offer. Mui.t Sleeps6. (49S4:L"<>. $2900. rondit1on. Complete sad· St!IJ. bi3-3397 ---------1 OHL Y $6399 1;73.1m • X3 6209 die bags. windshield. '72 IMT'L MAC HOWARD , . Low mileage. You must TR VEL LL '•.ton No. Slar Lu'C Sip. sre to believe S1500. Call 4 Wheel Drhes 9550 A A AUTO &TRUCKSALES Comp eqpd., rull e_ll'c • 646-5967 after 9 30pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Speed 12Gt fU•:Tl Jc:t & Harbor, Santa l\na /\tonuc-4. XJnt. 4t14·~7 1973 BLAZER Sall' Pnccd 531·6000 531-3421 Boats, Slips/ MOtor Homes, Aulomatic wath aar cone! $1795. Docks 9070 Sale/Rent 9160 <225LJlI>. This week r<: ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ducedto Dock space \-Live aboard Motor Home Rental OML Y $4298 GARDEN WEST YW 2 Blocks W of fteach Bhd '73 ,Dodge, auto, sunroor, mags, S·pipes, drps, crpts, panelling, xtras. $3,800. 548-8735 7WO Wcstmm~lt.'r ~l\d Wcstmmst<·r ~3 7551 up to 40', reft slips 20·2.'.i' 181/l' to 32' MARQUIS TOYOTA pwror sail. 67S..8330. l''Ull.v st'lf·rontained M ISSlON VJ fo:Jo 1974 GMC Rally Wagon ( Wmdow Van, 50 gal lank BRITISH CAR CO. '122002-A(UtFTQ>. Femri 213 1nlMl 2525 '72 Bavaria-A ("8Jo'OF) •••••••••••••••••••••• .. ---------, • ..,. '74 Bavoria· <348LF~ ). '68 D> OTC. Mint. faC'l 714/694--2854 '7SS30lA·A, (70SNJJ). uir, drk blu/tan Int. •••••••••••••••••••••• '74 Jcnsen Healey, Very SADDLllACK INW $14,000.6'4-0U>/Ma·OOM dean. Low mileage, AM· MISSION VIEJO Rat 9725 FM s t ereo, r adials. 831·2040 49S.4M9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $5.~. Tel. 83S-494i eves 2IOSIDAHS- . GREAT· SUCTIOHf &wknds SAYE $$ '73 240Z Lie. 394MSU (4808) •$4699• CREVIER 0 I S1' 6 IROA!MlY SAN TA AHf. 835·3171 Tllf UUlMAft DllMHG M.\CHINI! 1961 RAT In stoclt now wide varle- 150 SPIDElt ty of used 280 Sedans, Unbelievable coodltlont f.'colonandappoln&.- One owner vehicle, & In ts. mi~t coodltloo. Must HOUSE OF see. (862CQl't1). NEWPORT DATSUN IMPORTS 888D6veSlreet I 2131121.e518 NEWPORT BEACH 714/52~7250 833-1300 •USED IMW'stt '73 Bavaria-(906LVY) '7~2002· (629NBK) • • • • '762002A. (0499) '73 Fiat 850 Spider, •73 DATSUN 1200 CJoted O. s.u.days AM/FM' r ad., radials, ''4Ml%220SE CLASSIC COUPE JUre • speed, 1unroor. le•tber. 8 b'ac:k stereo & 2Scl engine. B'O' or lease. <oa>M:E). z DR fOmpg, xlnt cood. 4 s peed, tinted glass, OR.AHGECOUHTY'S 1_4_96_·_507_9 _____ _ radlo, heater. Stk #4655 OLDEST Movin)tto Pitts, Pa. Rave •$1799• cleab '75 Fiat 12& Spider SAl>DLHACK • • • • ~ w/AM/FM. lug r k, \;I/I. burgundy. 12,000 mi. V AU.IV IMPORTS 131·2040 495-4949 '73 DATSUN 610 494-6263 Lk. 494HDA (1792) Snles-Service-Leas'1g 1---------•~rcectea • 4 apd, •$2399• Roy Caner.In"° ~~~~;Y,Y~1;2~.;ia AM/ •-t~~nmlew in· • • • • Rolls Jloyco BMW · afl2·JO PM • ~. ~ per 1S4.0Jamboree · 1al. st offer OI" trade 72AMCJAVELIN Newport Beach 640-'444 7s X19 priced for quick for ~lckup or panel. Nice car. 451M XC sale.' Im mac. cood, 67~0 days or 673-9676 (50461) Capri 911 S Comp cust int & ext, aft.6Jm. •$ 1999• ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo 8 traclc, special , _ __;;...... _____ _ •••• '73 D.ATSUM Lie. 849HOV C46SS) •$ 1799• •••• '67DATSUN RD STER 4 s peed!. radio, hc:iter. UIP802. :slk 1143631 •$1699• •••• '68DATSUN RD STER Ila rd to find I 187LTV Slk "4005 •$1799• •••• 1976 CAPRI II mags, lo mi, 83J.-083t aft Leaw 4 speed, air cond. & 6; 539-2512 Mew• Used stereo cassette. Buy or '70 • .,. Spt "-., pd OVER I OO lease. (613MWE>. """" • "~· .rs , SADDUIACK st~reo_. nu paint, int. MERCIDIS V ... 'LEY IMPORTS Mich ures. 30mpg. Must ON DISPLA y ,_ sell by wlcnd. See to appr . 831·2040 495-4949 !!~1!~~~days, 833-ZJJ2 ~~R~~gtiS '74. Caipri 2800 MERCEDES DEAL£R V~ eng, auto trans, fac· EXECUTIVE 6862Mancbester, tory afr. Dix int & sun· Buena Parlt roof. xlnt mecb cont. * DEMO * 523-7250 $'Z650. 548-1487 SALE OotheSantaAna Fwy. '71 Capri, air cond, 4 spd. -u u 280SE .. "' xlnt. super cond. Pvt ply. "S Ff ... T I l I '"-.-$7~.-· Sacrifice/bst offer, 1 • "' • 673-85 73-1368 Eves/wknds 675·1186, Auto, all', AM/FM rad.lo. llorS days6M-lll4 Ser.D0.37493 '73 45058. $4199 Lorn!, Mint6'7S-m). DOCK FOR HENT lle!'iervc now or 831-2880 495-1210 · A Cf t & ... 1.1 d 2 · 28. I lohrluy Wknds "67 J t•<'r> (',JG ti Q'I . $2,000/ elec ign, I · ron re -'6 7 DODGE VAN "e~part .:; _::in : (m)· · HE(:t-:NC:Y :'oiOTOH b't ofr i;.14 8111> wknds or ar. P,S. P /U, Till s teer 4 spct-d. r:idio, heulcr. ti73-300lafl .111 llO\IEJll•:NTALS 1974FORD4X4 Jftli whl.5'1500.894-6618 UQF197 (5053l) '73 R/H. stereo, air cond., cust. paint, $2500. 493-6214 ?6 Ff.AT Ill '72 280SE 4.5 MB. Beige 2 <lr. 5 s peed, oir, netallie w/brn leather "M/FM Stereo Ser no hrt .. , AM/FM stereo, PS, •••• '67 IUICK \.'8, 4 SJk't'll, :11r 1•onrl , ---------1 NEWPORT Bf~i\Ctl , !12.>N.llarhor l\hd.~.A . ~vr. sttwin.l! + hr<tkt''> 71i Dod1o:c BIOO Van, cusl •$.1499• i\tarcus<.:anal,uptn 21;1' ••531·2.'.0J •• with lncknu l huh" mt,a1r,A:'ll /FMl!Lrk, StiS. I •IUZ 37 10 Z!i' OPE.'\I HO.\U-. -f-ul-t.v 157201110 . n ,.ty 4:1.1a1, m:1.t:ts. d ean & sharp . •71 ~;D\•EDAM ~elf·rnnt. Winter i .ill':-mill's. H73·3803 --------OW $4399 --------r Sceittoday!318CUV.Stk :Newport Slip, no s.ial 6-'4-8385 M 'm Dodge Van. 6 c~l. gd. lf506ll bo.ils, up to4u· fo'or S31c ·1-1 GMC :?6" !\I.II MAC HOW ARD '74 FORD mileage, paneled & cptd. •$ 1199• G7J .• l(;.c6 <.:le .... •1400 fully cquippl•tl, lo m1. AUTO &TRUCK SALES lltONCO 4a4 .._ •" · loots. Speed & xlnlshape. &10·7400 lsl & Harbor, Santa Ano v.11 .,.., •••n. -~·-1,....· 545-7179 Sid 9080 • 531-6000 531-3421 ~;:'''6°';':,:.n•,;.i::•,;:~ '71 Capri , air cond, 4 spd, s upe r cond. Pvt ply. Sacrifice/bs t ofr. Ask for Don, eves 67S·8883, days 634·1114 '74 CAPRI CPE 2000 e ngine, 4 speed, radio, heater. Nice earl (677PKQ) $2499. "' • · · PB, PW, w/8 trk ta~. 70MS $4499 xtra ni<'e clean car, (710 6ll·l'n6. •7 6 FfAT I 31 73 2{)8 Sedan. xlnl cood, 2 d 11 t like car or truck + r, met. s ver, ~u o, ~ 500 payorr 536-9153 air, AM/FM stereo cia'v.. • Ser .M. 04039 J ~ $4799 1167 MERCEDES ·Ben!! '76 FIAT 1 l I JlO. Air & auto. $1995. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dl'JUl. 28 [)1plom:it ---JIO</li"'""" (l~ll"'""J' • 1974 Kona Oaycrw~<'r all Motor Home for r••nt_ ·72 Toyota Landcruh.cr. xtras new Joe Mondello Daily, 14kly, mthl) · /')/p., Hone ""l'rrlnn'. ci..tr:is. Olds 'eng. nev~r u-;ctl 10 llas sttoreo. air <'<,!1111 \l11~t wll $4000 ;·1;a lli21! 6 3 50 1)4!1 1 '5' crUJ>.l' e:onlrol t. I(, .1.1~1 '7S Dodge Van, cust. int., W ... Gou /\MI FM 8-trk, low mi, "' " s.c:ro. 494-4401 Lots or room! 670MXB ---------· (100072) ~~.~~:.~~!'!1 ...... !~.~~ •$999• 540-5630 1011 \SO\ & SO\ • LINCOLN MERCURY STATlONWAGON ,_m_-H.29 _____ _ Met. bl~. 5 speed, air, "ZS 3COD, auto tram, air AM/FM Stereo cassette eond, elec. sunroor. new Se.r.oo.43187 tires, AM/FM, recording •. S7995 7 ·~!!.'.:...__: 13 aft.5pm lllKmurn 4\\hldn\t> No BILL MAXEY TOYOTA t r. loots, Sfor~ 9090 --.\ltJl> SH 111111 .11·tual ••••••••••••••••••••••• milt"· 01 1 ~ t·n~llll'l'r 20''C 70 'C 22' ro' ••rt•d .1rr.1 for )uur ho.it c•nl') ... trut · tion. TPll'phonc puk:. w roof & ch.un ho1~ ~ to :.JWltcr JO) tyi>t.' OI crJfl t>IG-!WH. '74Esfablishmenf uv.nr II," hu1l ~uo1I 11111 l••ir:"'I'•'-lt7 l \S\ HUMTIMGotOH IUCH T rcansportotiOfl ··•···•······•······•·· 9120 .••............•..•••.. Ll' 1-:r. 1>oral111, self r o n t ' d w , s h o w '' r t.oiufrd w1extras. 197-& l ton Ford Ranl(er XLT. lu rr\I $f1Jlf.O. ~·Hl ~4 7 nr M2 t~ -----Motoriwd IUiles 9 140 .......••.•.....•...... ·;r. rue h • yrllow, !\32 mi "lnl ron<I :I \I n·~ 11111 S.175 "'' . :lR.11 an ., Moton:ycles/ S<ooten 9150 22' Mini Mot11rhom1•. Oodgc 300 V 8, auto P s r B. air e:omJ. J\ ~I 1'\I IS lfl., slpc. t,, full\ "'t'lf c uut . a real buy .it S<i'l!l:i <~"r.!Kr'Jl '72 PACE ARROW :?<!. M1n1 M11torhn1t1•'. l> o ti >! c ~ l .\ \ K .1utomatir, l' IS, f' H ,\\I F;\l ~h'rt•u. rnol .111 , >11\W t;rn1'r,1tor, 1,H·I.. t. l,uld1•1. l11td1 ''"' 8, flllfl ~di rnnl <.!:HI'\ C J ~'.l'J.1 '74 FLING 20• 'lllnl ~h•l111homC" l'IOoli:t• ~M,() V K I' S. I' tt r,11i1tl, rvof .-11 ~IP" ''· '"11 t•nnt l tl l\!!l,l'E I r,1,.-; 11 t;( i t:"-:C"t \HYfO It 110 \11': H F::"\T \I~" 9c.:i "' Jl.trbor Hh d. ~ I\ • •~.JI 2.:>IH ....................... ,_ _______ _ Go kart. 2 t•nl(inf'~ """ F'nr ~,.;;--·;r, f ,1r14 ,,.,l brakr. rlran \lint b1k1• I \ttnl ,1 II .,,~ i; l"ah hp. nu. $100 t.'11ch,toHrr~ :ur dav wk• mt• fi ll Cl'i.il< llf'l·431H ' ' -·--- '65 Honda l'IO, 5700 orii: Trail•rs Tra•el 9170 mile~. run~ ,1trtat. l ~l ••••••• : •••• ••••••••••• S175 lakts ~il\.JOl 1 ---n· R11:tdhn1•r Tr.1\rl Trlr it Yamnha ll02.'i(), 5.000 ~ps II, lully 1·11u1 pv1:d , mi, xlnl cond. $SS(). Call /\ I.:, L.11>1.l d 1·1 k, )(I nt &t6 82.19 c·ond. s.:r.IOC> Ph . "4-1 0163 inumtcnam••· :\.Int c•onll !\di> lilud>UOk Hclu1l -::i 1;50 T11i.•0'> 11. t'Jll Truc:lcs 9560 hcl ort• nonr' ~•nydu.) ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~JJ 'Wi:.! 11.:w _ __ 1975 EL CAMIMO "A BETTER BARGAIN" LAND CRUISER $ALE •4 WHEEL DRIVE l~ S.t•ctiOlt H•w & Used I 0 to cttooH from WE'RE DEALING SHTKE GOOO GUTS AT BILL MAXEY TOYOTA I 1111 l•och tl•d. Hu1ttln<Jf-leach 147·155!> ,\11l11mat1c, pwr. steer· 111~. air cond .. ~ilvcr & '' h1tc. new m.ins + tires 1'i< hrn•kd SC'lllS. (92fi10Z). OMLY$4199 MAC HOWARD AllTO & 'l'HUCK !)ALES hl & ll:H'l10r, Santa i\na 531-6000 531-3421 117t'hl'\1· ·', ton. 1 .. hll l'nl. 1ww t1 ;,no;, ·I \\hi dr, &tor 'mpr 11.'IO •1:1">4 '74 FOR D LN600 4~2SpHd Iii 1-'L. 1\lum1nru111 Van with llfl Nlc. C!i781i'l'C 1. OMLYS5499 MAC HOWARD Al'TO & TRUCKS \Lt~S J-.l & llarhor, Sanl<i Ana 531-6000 531-3421 - '71 Co11r11•r t:T Shrll w 'l'llt 38,000 Jlll s:?:100. 1175 0.'l'~I C'V('.., . 1974 CHEVY AMtot, H•w ttoo Alltos, Hew 9100·.Auto.. Mew 98011 '12 TOM SHORT IE Automullc. "wr. 11tccr1n1t & hrnke~. oflrnacl tires w I !I p IJ k u w h I' I! l s . Cl.'>til70) ...................................................................... ONLY$3999 MAC HOWARD AUTO &THUCK SALES I'll & Jlurbor, Sflnln Ana 531.6000531-342 I •n Forti •., T. Custom. i\sking S2700. Call 544-5344 •72 Oat.sun PU. ,2.S,000 m1. R & II SlSOO.. !li!I 3!123 'SS Chevy'' ton l'/U. V8 auto. $S15 OI" best o((er. 64&-0_l58....;__ ____ _ '75 Chny l/J Ton :i ~Jl('Cd. radio. heater & l o nl( wh c f'lh n11~. Ui\282t3). ONLY $1599 MAC HOWARD /\UTO & TRUCK SAl,ES l!lt & Harbor, Snntli Ana 531-6000 531-3421 !!Yr.I Fo~ nu'I, S4 Jl8SS, lllue Bird body. P/S, P/8, 54,000 ml. Aaldna $6.$00. n Ad; 1914 Dod(t Mini bu.,, 15 p3i'll, PIS. P/8 & NC, SJSOO. Call 631-3010 . is Dodi<' 0 ·300. 11reen cabin. p/~. c:u11t sll•lvlna. pull d o wn d oor. 8'x14 'xll6", SUOO. 548-0791. HEW'76 CAPRI II MPG Complete w ith rront disc llr akes, steel belted radials, styled s teel wheel co\•ers, rack & pinon steering, reclining bucket seats, fold down bench seats, vinyl top. $108.87 Mo. .• ... ~ 188.1~ UlACH Bl V(J HUNTINGTO N BEACH s.i2 ne 1 !>·I0-0442 With only lax & lie down Alfa RCMMO 9705 ($326.34) for 48 months ••••••••••••••••••••••• on approval of you.r g<><>d . , . rrcdil. Total price mcl. narc 63 1300 Spld.<'r taic & lie. & interest. Veloce. Superb. All om:. Deferred payment price $4950. G44·08SO or including tax, lie. $4315. _642_·_00!_54_. ______ 1 annual ~~~cnta~c rat~ l 2 . 9 6 ,~ • S c r . Audi 9707 GAECSK2Aa42. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd . Hun:mgto n Bench Audi Fox '75, AM/FM ster. 4 ap, brn w /tan. 25M. a/c. Clean. $4500. SSH288evc 842-8844 75, 4 dr, Audi Fox. auto Autos Wanted 9590 trans, /\M (FM stereo ••••••••••••••••••••••• tape, lo m1. hke new, CASH FOR CARS! ~k~~ S4soo. 9·4: 30· Top S Dollar $ paid for 1----------i clean used cars, trucki. & '74 ft.udi 100 LS, AM/FM Corvelt.es. /\sk for P aul stereo, clean, $4000. O'Nl'ill. 675-6609 HOWARD Ch••rolet 17._3_l_O_O_L_S,-I m_m_a_c_u_I a-l-t<' Oove &Qua1JSts. cond. new tires. silver __ N_E_W_PO_R_T_B_E_A_C_l_r _1 blue, sunroof, air, uuto, ~-51!J-fl2<~t Wf: PAY TOP DOLL/\ R f'Oll TOP USED Cl\ ns l"OREIGN, DOMESTIC or CLASSICS -----1 BMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• [(your car is extra clean ~ _ see us first. ~ 2626 HARBOR ILVD. -$4999 f~et~~r~ ~~!~~~~ COSTA MESA '7 6 FfAT X I /f Maple yellow. 58,000 ml. Llc. THEY $11,500. '72 Capri V6, Headers, ch o c. b r n. • m a gs , 1144-7572 mags, Stereo, spoilers, AM/FM St~eo. Ser.no. 1--------- com p susp. 45m mi. 49215 '61 Mercedes f 50SE 675·1995 fr S48-3S65. $5499 Coupe, rare 4 apd . $2500. beauurul cond. 62,0CIQ Mi, sseoo. 549·3637 anytinwe DatUI 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• *MB '744.SOSL Blue/blue Sales & LMsing Im mac $14,500. TOP Ddlar Paid Wisco 2 <TI4) 554HIS9L On ALL trade· ins •72 Ml% lSOSL HEWfORf D.ATSUH Both tops, Jo-ml. Con-888 Do•e StrHt courso cond. Buy/lease, Near M'cArlhur 120 W. arner 5\ Main 7'°FYL. Must see! &Jambo eeRoads Santa Ana 55 -2132 833-1300 '71 FIAT 850 SPIDER, HOUSE OF DRIYiEA convertible. 46,000 miles· IMPORTS Runs good. Must se\l, 2131921-8588 LITI~E ... Private party. $'995 full 7141523-7250 price. Call ~nytime, SAVE A LOT ~6 70MIZ280SE SHOP&C~PARE FIATS F\tel inJ. 6 cyl Elec. sun· BARWICK ATSUM GALORE-Jf. Air. Stereo. Pwr wind. SanJuanC istrano SPIDERS! BDRM. 831-1375 3.3375 X19's, 8SO Se\ed from HOUSE OF TOPIUtElt rruwy. Cine selection-EZ IMPORTS See us fU"St, &~astl Top terms. 2131921-8588 dollar paid for i ports. BRITISH CAA CO. 7141523-7250 COSTAM S• 213/990-2525 DATSUN 714/894-2854 '75 Ml% 240 DIESEL 4s pd. Buy/Lea s e. 2845 Harbor Blvd. '74RAT 124 Beaut ifully appointed Cost.a Mesa MO.flUO SPIDER G88MY1',. <:ull fur :.pec1al TWO TO CHOOSl Mint. Al\111'M Stereo. 5 q uote. spd. l owner. Lo pay. 1976280% ment.s. 7966 No. HOUSE OF BRITISH CAR CO. IMPORTS cassette & s~cial m s 213/990·2525 213/921·8588 BAUERIUICK 2925Harb0r Blvd. DEMO SALE l9J4 26oz Honda 9727 '73 450SLC Cost.a Mesa !!7!1·2SOO L dedl "·· r 11 4 speed, air cond .• ster +tiros. C889PhU). 714/694-2154 714/523-7250 OUR 1 •sr 4 :r;peed, air c-ond .. ma" ••••••••••••• •••••••••• J,oo .,.,nroo • a oy WE llUY ~ &I II (376NDZ> I and u~ '76 wheels , tnpe. 1.o m i, •USEDCARS& owm es. • r nwW Buy/Leosc. 648PKH. TRUCKS· 5301~~t'?f:, ue, v!~~~:~R~S HONDA Cars t.oaded·Beautifull ComelnorCall automallc & stereo. 831-2040495-494 OVER 100 HOUSE OF ,_H Approf1al (#2917). , T~ ChooM FroM! 0 $ Grott. che~roa.t -·1a 24oz. 31,000 mi, a UNIVERSITY IMP RT Ul211 aeach Blvd. 200'l·mal1ga/tan, "SJ>l'ed cond. AM I fM • .au 2 131921-8588 Huntington Beach & s tereo cuuettc . trans, brown out11ld otdsmoblt• 714/523·7250 847-6087 * 50·3331 1#0239). m ag wh1!1, xlnt co Hondo c GMC ----'------ TOP 001.LAR ROY CARVER $1900. Ph 556-0460 9 to T=b· ~ ............. !?.~~ PAID BMW pm. 2850 Harbor Blvd G U1M.EDIATEt..Y 75DATSUH1210 I ~a Mesa 540 !IC'i40 1975 M I FOR ALL 1540 Jwtlboree Rd. 4 speed, radio & b eatet '7l HONDA 600 Sedan, RO.ADSTIR fi'ORJo.:JGN CARS NEWPORT l!ACH Super au economy ... ". ood tiUV\ or besl A benutlful car thruout. CALLORCOMEIN 640-6444 (911MtlY). • ... .., g · .,.,.,.,. (70047G). TO SEE US ClOSlD SUNDAYS S.ADDLHACIC ocrer.83S-G44l ONLY $4498 N!WPORTIMPORTS VALLEY IMPORTS '72 llondn Coupe. ;ro.40 3100W.Q!tHwy,NB '74 3.0 cs. Snrf .. Ve.lour 831-2040495·4949 mp~. crrt'dlliSnllr200. NSeicc 642-9405 lnl., air, stereo & tape, --cnr, mus. st'; , .. e ---------auto. Slll,000. 750-9415 '74 2007.. Auto. lmmac ai lmlJort Spcc1oltsts . TOP --$4995. Forced to sell am Nwpl, CM ___ _ DOLLAR ·~65~1~~~· biS..J385ot63S-4l08 "75 5spd lug rock, 11tcreo, PAID 831H54oe et; 260Z·l974. Jmmac cond 16M ml. xlnt. $2900. Call FORCLEAN 1------v_. __ , very lo mileage, askiq !>I0-4083. "10 BMW 2002. Xlnt cond. $5400. ACL Spm q'J---------IMPORT CARS new paint&. r ndlals. Pb wkend~,640-5436. , CllJMG" 9730 ALL MODILS <710 9'79-3483 .. • •• • ••••••••••• • • .. • ~~7i 1111l J', Bff•C " Il l ~ O 11U~4 '1NG T 0"4 HI A(>i ""~ '1111 ~40 o.i~.' • • · "'13 Sta. Wgn, air, low ml · JAG-XJ tm BMW 2002, xlnl cond. xlnt cond. S2•00. 646-717 all xlr.u + aun roof (Doria> or 631--0383 All models, ~any C!Olort mike ofltY-. Mu1't -.11 hero now. DL'lcuu lca11· ~ nos or early '73 240Z. Air , slereo Ing.. 60 Mos nn. Many moms ask for Cindy. mag.s, $4600. Call program1'. ·m BMW 3>02. Xlnt cond. 549 °'34· BRITISH CAR CO. AM/PM, rndl1lis, rcntly '70 Datsun Sln. Wgn. 213/990·2525 tu.rwd,$2800.8'5-6'199. SIJSO. 551-249 714/114-2154 1974 MG MIDGoET Tn excellent condilion! (Oll LIN>. Now reduced lo OHLY$2995 MARQUIS TOYOTA MlSsJON VIEJO 8l1·211049S.121f MG-MIDGET All mod~l1, colors. R.-e now t Discuss leulnl(. eo Mos rtn. Many pro- ararnt. BRITISH CAR CO •• 213/lt0-2525 7141194-2854 I. ... '73MGB-GT Sharp. Super deal lhb weekend. J,n pymnb . Call for quote. GOOJ 1'0, BRITISH CAA CO. 21 3/990·2525 714/694-2854 Opel 9746 ~ llnvl'Slrcel ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nfo:\\ l'OHT Bl':ACll '72 Opel Cpe. 36.000 mile'> 833-1300 $1050. Vcrv .-;tl lOnd ------ Eves. 67:1 sm TOYOTA CELICAs 1•17J 4 t>pc1.'tl. air 1 w11I & Porsche 9750 mJ)! wht.-cb. 1a.>0Jt.f1 .'.\uw •••.••................. '75 PORSCHE 914 lllack on blJt'k, 5 '1111, .1p pearance )lrp. 1\ \I I "\I :.ler eo, alloy-,. l.o" m1leaRe. a beaut1l11l t·.1r' See Lo Jpprl'l'IJll' (423Mlll) CREVIER $1 ST & lltOAOWAY SAl'llA .Al'IA 835·3171 "TME ULTIMATE DMIVINO MAC.HIN[ PORSCHE 9 I 4s ONLY $2598 1\ II l 0 r11aI1 t'. ,\ :\J I P ;\ ..... 11 .. & ;1 'lllll'f lt1Vl.111g l'JI". t:.!.i:!iOVI I. ONLY Sl495 NEWPORT DATSUN !WI l)m <'St rl'l•t !lil::WPOltT HE \Cll 833-1300 '67 VW Sqbck $400 4!l6·9lil0 ---' \'\V Ilug, run-; great , • 50. Dys, 673-4ti70; Evs. ·1. ·i!i6l Bill. ------ GARDEN WEST VW .! lllul'k'" of llt'J l'h BJ,ot i600 Wt·~tmm,,ln Hl\d Wt>~lmm!>ll•r 11!13 7!>.'.11 W Camper Poptop, relilt ..-- t·n~ under v. rnty. >.Int •75 VW Scirocco -•SALES· •SERVICE •LEASING Onrseas Deliv~ry Sen-ice & parts now open on Sat's 8 to 4 for your CC?nv~nicnce. 1974 1'175 Three 'To Choose All m gr1:;1l rnncl1tio11 <:ALL FOii UET.\ILS _ 1 c.:· . ~I' c I I' . t·ond, $2300. G-16·6010 a(t 6 rully cqw ...,d ' OrllllJ • •-J, u •' P\! • .-~ 1%6 Hurhor ( M 646 930) l'<1u1ri111·d. \lr..i,, 'Int_:_ Offer. 675·91!78 ---------BILL YATES VW-PORSCHE S;m Juan CapLSlr:i1111 837-4800 493.4511 ---- 1973 PORSCHE 91 IETARGA 5 speed .. 11r concl . o;!t•rt•11. tnJgs. Huy or .\l.:'<f Jeusl' plun. lliOOlll'l 1. SADDLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS 831-2040 495.4949 1'176 Por,l'hl• T11q•;1, mclallit• :11IH•r "1 hl.1l·k :innd11.C'd lnm. C11n 1•rJ mags, :Ht' 1·.,ncl . l! 11 .wk -,11·n•o e.,. 011lv ~1!WU mil•·' 122llf'IU.'1 :-.11:.;11111 1'11 11ty. C.111 11-lh II 11~, hour· .1l work an· 111111'! '"-''''I' try inf.( 'GS Pors<'hc•, )!r:t}' n•d Int, Mlclicl1n XAS t1rt.' .... Becke r radio, l nl' .. ) 11 j!U~C. ski fOt'k. ~t·rYl•'C records ... mcc PH~I. 'l11L ('Ond ~1o\ In.I! In fo:urn11<• S:JllJU 1~11 I .I ;111•1 • 11.)\... Ill -1" ,•1ij l'lt>:! I'\\'' \\j..11<1 ror'I h1• Id Ill Ill lo·I I.ii • "111 I :--"111 • \ c r 1 .., ~1;u1 lo 1 •Ir •·II ::m 1 '73 PORSCHE 91 4 J.:,1111 , .. 1c1 1h,1r\ C:herr' 1-.Zlt ll!I• I .di lor(lUOll' h(MIH r:t... BRITISH CAR CO. 2131990-2525 7141694-2854 '61 lbOll .Supl'r I 11111•;. cvrnplt'f 1·I\ I •' rut ,.,, ;\fu,I :;1•11 th1 '" • J.. lu· .t uffcr 1>.1". 1.:11 .lt11H1. E"'' 1!11 ::.)l.x 't,t) l't>r 'ht 'Ii' • pd Bnll-.h r.11 m~ •I•• 11 lllJ.. 1111 Jll'"' II• 1 ull1•r ~10 iXd ·1.i l'or~1 tw '' \ 1111 • "' ol l\cw 1·111 111 " 11ol l .. 11 \'\M f;7S 111,~ M 1:1 IM , , <'ond. S'.!'ilMI ulr !lf,J !130ti Autos. Used ---'72 VW '70\'\V Gug. Sonrf.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72TOYOTA MARK II W AGOM AU~),,,. -t 1tf-y .. •rG()n1,._ t i'( ' "'!') l..!f'J J8 J9 f..U, llf, 'JAC.1"'11 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA UU• I•..:• II••. U 7-U \\ HUNTIN<. f()M llACH '72TOYOTA CELie.A I o;1wNI, :11 r comfit wm n ~ < lllFOli I :,oh! )'need $2395. GARDEN WEST YW 2 lllcx-k'< w of f\e ;ich Rhd 7600 Westmms~r Blvd. \\ estmin3te r 893-7~1 Triumph 9767 CAMPER loaded S1500/b:.L ofr. LOADED 498 2068---- 1.ic 288.J"JU 1;c> \'an, 1600cc motor. $3295 :'°'Jll'> p:unl S750 ___ 548·~-"--- GARDEH WEST VW 2 Blocks W of Be tffh Bh d 7600 Westmmster Bh d Westm inster 893 7551 1i!; \'W SundtJI 1·.1111J.1t•r llhlt & mo<l1fu•t1 lbOOt>r t•11g. lthll trans, hrl-.,, 'tt:"'nng. N\'" t1rl·i.. l'!\I J!-lrk. v .. ry t lt•an Sl400•ol kr l~lti 2•~1\ IN Kornb1 Camper. top Ctlntl H:111i,1 b . s:! 1:15 of fer ~>-15·2!.~ evci. wknds '69 VW \'unant New eni:: .• $1300/bst ofr 536 9585. '70GHIA 4 sp<•cd, oran~e 11>13AKll l SAVE SS$ $2195. GARDEN WEST VW 2 Hlot'k!> W of Bt•.i1·h l!"rl 761111 We,tmmsl\'r Blvd Wc~lmmskr 893 7~ ... "11 -1 "' ., '67 VW Bui:. a i::ood car • .,uper oectle. ne•w from a ~ood home. $950. P •lnt, only 41.000 mi. xlnt 675.1323 cond. S1535. 675-79-15 ---------------- '68 BUG · I \'G Z3!lO) S/\VESSS ' $995. GAPDEH..WEST VW oQ ~loC'ks W 0 oM~~hHlvd 7600Wes1n11nstPr Hh d Westman~t'r 1!93 7551 ·c.s VW Fastback. Very i.tood cond. New llrcs. Call 494-!1300 9772 .......•.•••...•....... 1974 VOLVO 145WAGOH 4 ~peei!. stereo & a ir <'<>nd. R eal s h a r p! (itilLBP I. ·········'············· '70 TRI • 1 nu-; STRO~G 'ii cni; I h:.rn I l'lw;h 1111 \l .ike BILL YATES YW-PORSCHE SPITFIRE .. 11,•r. mu't .s1·1l t.i5 4!171i San Juan Cup1slrano 837-4800 493-45 I I lllll\ •'' m1 ..,h,u I'' 111•1111 1 ~'l"'I ll1'.1I ' BRITISH CAR CO. 213 '990-2525 7141694·2854 TR-6'S 'l 111' 11 •hu11 ••ltt•fl\ \\, h\I\ ~· 11 I I II 1, l ·"I ll Jlll\.\1 BRITISH CAR CO. 2131990·2525 714:694·2854 '75 TR7 I • I ,. ' \I •I lJ"-•• tu \\ < •·•l l • I .111 h· I ' 1111\ • II l'I I' i" VW l11•1•tl\', llf'W I trt'!-o, nc•w hr:tl.1·~. 'Int cond. l>l~l :>1111110o 1tn.1 \"ol\o Hi4E. Sedan, ----!:•>Id w/hlk inl, AM/FM 1972 VW BUS .sll'fl'O, & tape. F'ull pwr, s u p1'r 1•!1·:111-reu I ni<'l' ~ 'lt>'ll::\.1 ). BILL YATES YW -PORSCHE "'·'" 111.111 Capi~trano 837-480 0 493.45 11 '75 RABBITT I tl1 •I• ltl\•' mwlcl, 4 I" , .. 1 ,1c·n •11 low m1flos ~>.!\lJ()) ~ U ." ~.'\fl SPE<..IAL $2995 ru<•I injl•ction, ;111to. air, radials, lrnmac <'Ond . (213) ;)2.5·4275_. ---- 1!170 VOi.VO BE.ST<H'Fl-:Jl (;111 7187 ------- ORANGE COUNTY · VOLVO EXC:Ll'SIVELY VOLVO t .. 1rj.lcsl Volvo Dl'alcr tn Or.ini:e Count~ ! BUY 11r I.EASE l)llt[';(...i' '68 CAD ELDORADO Lo mi. Comp. lac equip. A:\l/F;\l stereo, till whl. air, Must see lo a p. prec1ale (132LMl) $1999 76 MERC MOM.ARCH 4dr sed. V-8, Auto, Fae Atr, PS, PB, Radio, h ealer. B est buy! (261PAA) $4999 '74 THUNDERBIRD JIT. auto. Cac air, PS.PU. pwr windows, AM/FM s lt•rco, V top, r ally wheels. (156000) S5299 '74 MARK IV Fully powN equipped w/pwr ant. dual pwr split bench seats. stereo tape, trunk release. ilium vis- or mirrors. Beaut. orii;:. special paint ·Showroom fresh! C301J PT> ~99 SAMTAAMA LINCOLN MERCURY 1301 N. Tustin, Santa Ana 547-0511 General 9901 A.MC 9905 ····~·················· '74HORHET STATION WAGOM W ck 9910 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Friday. November 5. 1976 · '72CADILUC CPIDIVILLE FUii power, luxury with AM /FM tape, air cond., leather interior. landau DAILY PILOT DI J GUSTAFSON l INCOL N MEHCllRY 161i00 Bt>,1d 1 Blvd ttun t111yton Be,ll h 842·8844 top. Sensallonul value. --===-==::=:==-• '75 MARK IV (3520VA> Don'tS..UsFlrst-Loaded wltb •It the $2986. a.rt Sfie Us Lastl!l goodies. Must see lo :1p· GUSTAFSON LINCOLN Mf RCURV 16800 Al .. 1ch Blvd liunt1nqto11 Be,1ch 842-8844 '70Coupe DeVllle. Full power . $1, 795. Call 548-4752, 642-4603. '1f You Don't preciute. ('831.PW) a., Ft-om $1616. COMMILL. You're Paying TooMtlchl" GUSTAF SO N LINCOl N Ml IH'UIW 16800 Ul'.ICh 111~.1 Hunt1nqtun B"·" h 842-8844 CONNELL '69 MARI Ill '76Seville, Sl0,000. CHEVROLET V·8, automallc trans • Must Sell. power steering & brakl':., '75 IUICK Call 675·7829 2828Harbor Blvd. windows, & seat. radio. RIVIERA COSTA MESA heater, wsw tires, vinyl F\Jll power. cruise con· Lmmuc. 19J4 St Dorado, ____ S4_s._1_200 ____ , roof, t inled itlass. A I I h I d 32.000 m1, loaded, DU cJ0 u1c1 Slk ........ lrc.1. ll l w cc, air con ., d ' 1 pp 497 2783 1976CbeveUe Malibu A/C, -· • • .. ~. AM/FM tape. padded ra ta 5· · · vinyl top, VS, PS, PB, $2999. vinyl top. (859W1') •72 Fleetwood Brougham, $3400. 496-34.lO. D.P. 540 • 5630 $6189. 1 owner. Exec. car. '68 Chevelle 307 H igh GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd Huntington Beach ~·Call 640-1360 betwn performance. Mags, Sac. 9-6 &494·5256 eves. Must sell Bsto!r.673·5276 1011\SO\ & SO\ • LINCOLN MUlCUHY '69 Cad E l Dorado, ,74 Monte Carlo R/H 2626HARIOR ILVD. Peacock blue. Nee.ds A/C P/S sky blu~ vinyi COSTA MESA work on hood. Otherwise • • . ' ---------• xlnt cond. $1000. 639·2913 top. As king $3SOO. Corvette 9932 eves. 548"5344 ••••• •• ••• • ••• • •• •• • • • • 842-8844 '72 Llmill'd A Luxury car w/cvery xlra. Super cond. Will lake bst ofr this wknd. Co11silier Molorcyclu us part. 496·°'133 . Codilloc 9915 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (!) Nabers Cadillac Quality and Price Guaranteed lr1~;nl! SC"eti.1listc; 1'1 l lull J Rate~ L.ui:est Selection ot New & Lf,cd C ;idill.tc~ 111 01.tngc County Open ~onday Cadillac M:istcr. Dealer 2r.no ll.1r hnr Blvd. C.us ta McsJ 540-!:l 100 Nabers Cadillac · '71 CADILa..C 4DOORSEDAM V-8, auto. trans., factory air cl>ndilioning, power steering, power bra kes, power windows. power s eals, radio, h eat er, whilcwoll t ires, tinted glass. wheel covers. Duy il right! (456DCH> $2999. 540-5630 1011\SO\ & SO\ • LINCOLN·MFRCIJRY 2626 HARIOR llVD. COSTA MESA 1973 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLI! FUii power . leather, tilt wheel, cruise con t ., stereo tape & pwr. s pilt seat. (481018). OHLY$4699 MAC HOWARD '73 CADILLAC Corvair, 4 ·door 3·spd. 1974 CORVETTE Yellow 1967, 58,000m. 4speedtrClfta. CPE DE VILLE Xlnt trans. Sat am. $450. Power steering. bralces, Loaded wlth V •8, 107Sapphire,&JlsL windows with 11ir rond. uutomaUc trans., r adio, • Ch . ster"O & only 39 770 heater, power steering & 64 ev. (Classic) Im· • • brakes. air conditioning. ~la S.S. V-8 327. Gd run· miles. (684KLM ). (74.SRDH) rung. Make ofr. 546-3856 OHL Y $6 799 $3986. •73 CHEVY MAC HOWARD AUTO & TRUCK SALES SS CPE 1st & Harbor. Santa Ana Auto. trans .. factory air 531 .1..000 5 31 342 l GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd Huntingto n Beach condit ioning, po wer -• 842-8844 steering, power brakes radio. heater. Loaded! '76 Seville, $11,000. All xtras. lS,000 Miles. Must • sell! 613-7900days. (OIJZNLE > $2499. 540-5630 '61 Cadillac SdV. Reblt eng, new top, seats & paint. Loaded. $1500. Pb ~96. 631·3616 1011\SO\ & SO\ • LINCOLN MERCURY 2626 HARIOR BLVD. COSTA MESA CORVETIES CHOICE OF 15 1961THRU1976 4 spe«fs &Automatics Orc.ge Cowity•a LarCJest & Finett Sefedlon E Z FINANCING WE LEASE 1974 Moote Carlo. l ownr, CORVETTES Camero 41917 fully equip'd xlnl cond. HOWARD Chevrol~t • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • sunroof. $3300. 546-6700 8·Swlrdys Dove & Quall Streets NEWPORT BEACH 1975 CAMARO '66 Chevy Impula. Xlnt 833-055'5 lmmucul nte thruoul· transportation. $600. Ph '--------- Equipment includes pwr. 548·2461 '71 Corvette. White T·top. sleerin~. air cond. &1---------lmmuc. Many extras. Ph A M I F M s l c re o • '76 Monzu Spydcr, Lld1 963·7608 oft s. (502NCE). Ed. Plush red ant, cstm OHL y $4995 wht ext. Xtras. $3500. '75 'T" Top, ora nge, air, MAR"' UIS TOY OT A. Firm. 64S-Ol07. xtras. $8195. or offer. P vl. ,. pty. 552-0143 aft. 6 MISSION VIEJO 'n Chevy Malibu, sml VS, - 831-2880495-1210 auto, AC, rs. PB. vin Cougar 9933 • top, new tires. 962-2012 ••••••••• • • ••• •• ••• • • • • '70 Camaro 3SO VS, ai~ •63 Chevy 11 6 cyl xlnt 1974 XR7, xlnt cond, well cond, PS, PB. AT, lo m1, gasmi'g $24o Ma~ynew equipped, make offer. very clean $2295. 548-8210 parts. 642.5138·. _4_92_·_0348 ______ _ '67 Camaro Rally Sport, I 9925 ~ 9935 wht, auto V8 radio air er ••••••••••••••••••••• •• c o n d • P 's • n' e w •••••••••••••••••••••• • radiator /brks/muffler . ·~New Yorke~. rs. PB. '74 DODGE DART Smog device, xlnt run· air cond, radials, runs SPORT COUPE ning cond. Asking $1425. great $250. 991·4~ blwn Automatic. VS, 'pwr 644·5059 8&11AM. steeling & brakes, v1nvl CAMARO. 75 LT; air . '70 Chrysler 300 ~ ll·T, 4 auto VS P/S xlnt cond dr, full pwr, air, new 18M '$4 Soo. 64°5-6161 · tires, xlnt cond. Consider • · Pickup in trade. 540-7873 '69 CONVERTIBLE SS XJn~~=~ofr • Continental 9930 ---------· ······················· Chevrolet 9920 '72 COUGAR XR7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• V-8, auto. trans., l uctory air conditioning, power steering, powe r brakes, tape deck, radio, heate r , whit ewall lires, vinyl root, tinted glass, wheel -covers. (435HGC) $2666. 540-5630 roof & air con<f . (463LPE). HOW$2698 MAR9UIS VOLVO MISSION VIEJ O 831 ~2880 495-12 t 0 '72DODGE CHARGER V-8, auto truns., power stccrini;, radio & healer. Chec·k this one n ow! (320MWZ> $1789. GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd Huntington Beach 842-8844 1011\SO\ & SO\ AUTO&TRUCK SALES ---• LINCOl N· MERCURY Rol1 Royu 9756 ..•••.•................ •1 DEAL£R IN U.S A BRITISH CAR CO. 213/990-2525 714/694-2854 GAIDEM WEST YW .!. nlm·J..~ \\ of lk' ad• 111 vtl 7600 Westmmslt•r Blvct lst&Harbor.SantaAna Try a D:i1ly Pilot t!f M!f ., .,. p ACER. AM "'" s~;~'~::~~::~21 262tg:r~~:s'#'.VD. ;:~~~r=m~~.·::.:~·. "'~ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ slerro. A/ C, auto trans. Seel D •11 Autos, Hew 9100 Autos, Mew 9100 Autos, Hew 9100 2025 S. Manc"-~-er speC'ial interior. while aft ev1 e ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ClOSfO SU~•OAn Autos, Mew ,..,.,~ w;ills. Ruy or take over All xtras. xlnt cond, Anaheim 750-2011 lse.556·0.1ti0,9nm·7pm. $4200.831·1600 B·Swkdys WPstmmster l!'JJ..7~'>1 \.\A TI. 'II fo'() R 'M H•; PAIL\ PILOT . Autos, Hew 9100 Autos, Hew 9100 Autos, Mew 11 llUST\f AS Tl<F.J•: t·;vr.u y ·n fURSDAY -----"(;L~: !\('(lien" triicLur~ b<>lowl 9800 Autos. H•w 9800 .•.••••..•.•.•............•.•.••..••.......... ·················••···· YOl''LI. l.IKE TllF. TOTAL BETTER at Hl-:Hn FJUEOLJ\NOERIMPORTS :? or·-.. 1 Dr's, Cu!.loms, W:igons • • "75 610 4 DOOR 0AM/FM radio; yellow. 6736 miles. rmgs, radlals. moulding. pinstripe, un de rcoa t ing . (Se r. #HL610040634) (Stk. #4331). SAVI 13244 MOW e "76610WAGOH e 4 speed. air conditioning, AM-FM stereo. mouldings. only 7,835 miles. Demo 1885244 St!(. llt0018. SAYE s4550 MOW e '76 710 2 DOOi SID.AH e Factory air conditioning, AM/FM radio, stereo cassette, green. 5559 miles. mags. radials, m o uld i ng. pin s t ripe, undercoating. (Se r . #JHL71007663§J_ (Slk. #4829). . SA.VE S3824 MOW •·75 710 2 DOOi coun• Factory air conditioning. AM radio. yellow, 3711 miles, mc>Yldlng. undercoating (Ser. No. JKHL710026383) (Stk. lf4529) SAYE '3644 .HOW' .. , =r=:~~~~ i~~~ $ 50 °'' ;:;:~ ... Turk Sfl Mvrk1•t isourwnr of thonk· ll'l u-.~how ~'Oll wh11~ we mt•nn wlwn we e 76 610 2 DOOR CPI. e Auto trans .• fac tory air conditioning, AM/FM stereo rad io. aq u a , 6568 m iles. moulding,· undercoating, radials. "(Ser. t~L810·0 71 t 74) (Stk. ••71710 4 DOOi SIDA.He Factory olr conditioning. AM/FM stereo radio. red. 9932 mile9, moulding. undercoating. (Ser. #JHL710040025) (Slk. #4405). -+;;;.;;.....;.;:.--.--.'""""'...;..;..;'-+- J . • i .. \~k to 'rt' tht> iniolcr ******************* Many to Choose From Plu~ fllr. ln~tall<'d 011tion~ <if an') Jmnu'dlate f..ow Oown Ftnancln« Av11l111hle On IPPfovcd CrNllt Stli:. ~ · l-'1196, n211. F1212 FUIS.Ft?97, Fllot 1 in~ \'()It for muklni.c rn~ihlC' (\ mllMlOOI' ,..'IY 1hrk Sa My<·kel. thnnks n million • 11\Sal&l>:.i hi,lnry: thcsal1,,1f with thr U<'Sl y<'ar end throne millionth ~:inb thi.. vr1lm~wt.'veev<'T'o£foredun yrar. \ Su:lh. the rood ror. And to !I how you our 'J.. Ami. 11s rm <'Xlrn lhA11k dl'C'IH1Jlprt•d11t1un of yl)ur in· ........._, you. wht'n you visit l)llr t<'"•-1t in ~l:lh. w1'N offer-~ showroom durinit our 1l1<'k inJ,t thr Jtl'<'11t1..,l d1tal'i 011 Yi •1ttthlo"-'""'* Sil Myckctday11.youronwln "''t•r,v Jll7ti Sunh modt'I we 11Jc!:=..~...ui. u llancroft. Bjorn Bo~ outo- hnvo in stock. Sedans, ,,..._...,_..,._.,.""· lf!Vl.lhtcnnisrnckct..simplv Wu,qonDllck.11, nndeven the ~-A~ byfiUl!lRout.11ncntryblnnk )'.porty EMS. ~ Como in and let. us So rome. Com1' now THE 81\&I\ CAR thllnk~lll<<>yoo'voncver nnd ~l drivt' a Saab. Then ""9UI been t.hankl'tl I fon» •IA~H IMP•TS. :!=:! * 712•0.900. I , .,..,..._ ____ ~ :::'· s4459 MOW • 76 DAT5Uj 710 e 4 Door. Stick s hift , air conditioning, ste reo aQe 8 trllCI<. Lo mlle1ge. Part~at Factory Wemnty remaining. Stk. #5099. ~ft '429 tff'W. SAVI 13449 MOW • 76 DATSUM 710 WGM •• Loaded with extras. Lo Lo miles.. tS02e. • SAVI '4695 :AlllMe.fOwlZ ...... Wau_,r ·•· .-eu-mf 1414•u ; .. -.................. . Q lllfl:~ ..._ , .... ·- ............................. \it ...... , ... .. -., ... .. ~ ....... . • . . D 12 DAIL V PILOT Friday. Nov .. mt>tor 5 1976 Autos, U1ed Auto1, UH d 1•uto1, Used Autos. Used Auto1, UHd Autos, UHd • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Auto LeaslncJ 9580 Auto l ea.sing 9580 Ji.ados, Used Doctg. 9935 Ford 9940 Ford · 9940 Okkmobll• 9955 ptymcMlfh 9960 Ponffoc 41965 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '-!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'jl ~~Pl~~~~~~ ~ 9935 6.1 Dodge <.:onvcrt Top 1974 FORD •75 FORD '72 OLDS 1975 POHTIAC HEa""'1a1nT.-II !ii ....................... '"""'· l•mo'g .• """"'"1 GR"' .... TORJ .... O CUTL"'SS ATLAS GRAMD PRIX JS ~•P'.> • • • das:.ic. $675. 5-tu ti33t. ~" " RAMCHERO ~ FOR SNARt. FRfE ~filli'C)~fi 'iG Dodge Charier. 6 Mos. eves oc 833-4669 days. 2 DOOR HAaDTOP Auto. ll"uns .• factory rur SUPREME Chrv$1w /Ptwntouth Full power. tr cond., Lill lWINQ "W".~~ old. 5,000 Miles. 60140 Automatl~. p~r. teer condi tioning, po we r V.S, auto. trans., factory Open Dlllty '&&.tn. 'til lO wh el & b Itel iu:uts. ~. Bcnrh .i.t>at. ~U power. 71 Dodge Colt, A!C. auto. 1nK. air cond . stereo sleenng, powl'r brakrs, QU' rondit1oning, power (~RV). LEASE r•~""'-"~'1 • Maroon $5500. 8 A.M. to radio, runi; great. t.ipe & vi nyl roof. radlo,beater (45006Y) sleenng, power brakes. PM ONLY $5399 '~ SP.l\l.wkd.iys,558·2841 Sl2,500.G46-75titi t!JKJKBJ>. $4999. power windows, power 2929C~~a~fe~~vd., MAC HOWARD NOW fOR ~'('' Ford 9940 OMLYS3199 seuts, r adio, healer. 54L 1934 AUTO&TRUCK $ALES · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 540-5630 whitewall tires, tinted v-lst&Harbor.SantaAma I! •RLY D '72 FORD MAC HOW ARD glus:s, wheel covers, door 5llll EUVERY!! AU'CO&TRUCt-. ::,l\L~ locki;, b\ll:kt'l seat.s, etc. 1974 PLYMOUTH 531-6000 531 ·342 I COUNTRY SQUIRE .bt&Harbor. SuntuAna Sharp! t91>1EAA> Custom Suburban two . . . A.LL MAIO I MOOILS CMS I 'llUCIS IMCUIDIMG lMI NAii V ••• AMD THI AU. MEW DCl'TIHG COUGAI 11711 •f&~ii ILMDUJ MEANS FULL MAINTEHAHCE l FU l SEIYICI!! ......_Cooou Fr1<1l.._.F • ......_,, .... ,.. llTIF_llll LINCOLN MERCURY 70DODGE DAU Auto ,,.,.. l>U-,,._,"9 ?'J4'd ft•n1001te11on (U?')ABTI 5 1599 Bi ll MAXE Y TO YOTA 1111 I•••" lhd W41 C' ,\ ... u,..11 ... c,•o ... u ... .-. 10 Pass. Station Wgo. 53 l-6000 531•3421 $~ 195• S4!at Station Wagon stan· 13 Firebird Esplrit. Air 6 c:yl, auto trans.• 2626 HARIOR ILVD. ;II dw-d equipment includes cond. pwr ~teer & AM /FM s tt1reo, :Hr '75 LTD Exec. car, am __ COSTA MESA 540-5630 e lert ronic f.gnition, brakes, Al\1 /1'1\f , Xlnt. cond., power steerrng, mac. lo m dca1otc. aar 'iO LTDSta. WAn. ll)pa~s. power disc !rent brukcs. ~~~) ~9~s~J· ~~) roofrack~(352EtllU t·ond, lovel y gret•n. air. PIS, l't H. $695. power s t eeri nl,!, • $ 1586. $4300/best ofrer. Pvt pty. 1115.5359 autumatic transmisslon,1_337_·_127_1 ______ / GU STAFSON LINCOLN ME RCURY Hi800 Beach Blvd t~untington Beach 842-8844 813LQB. 540·7!100 8-S 2626HARIOR llVD. Nbber bumper guards. 1976ftONTIAC ~ weekdays, 5?4 ·215767 Galaxy 4 dr, 390 auto, COSTA MESA AMradio,light pac:kaae. GR"' .... DPRI~ weekends. Ask!or Bud. air. PS. T·gla!ls. Just s t and a rd s i 1 e "'" tuned. 6SM, I ownr, rear ..,1 Olds Cutlu.ss oonv. Im· wbllewalls, deluxe wheel 2 DOOR HARD OP '69 LTD 4 DOOR ended. other'41se xl nt. mac., loaded w/all xtras. covers, tert remote mlr· Automatic, air cond., Jus t look' \1 .8. auto FirstS475 orbstoCrtakes ~/bstolr.64S-662S. ror, electric clock, Jug. pwr.wlndows&steering trans. A!'IJ / FM s tereo, now. 645-7312 gage rack! tailgate aulo with only 10,000 rruJes. l.974 Ford Mustang JI, 2 dr alr cond .. pc>\\ er steer· '71 OLDS Vista Cruiser lock, 960cad. 4 bbl, V8 <:llC>PDM>. bardt.op, 4 cyl .. Must sac. ing, vinyl top .. Ou bland· l 9 7 2 G r a n ' Tori o o • Station Wgn. Orig owner engine, heavy duty SU.S· ONL y $5 799 1 _________ 1 552.3734 or 551.0275 art lng! 1661AFY) Michelins, !act air. orig gd cond , $1700/bst orr: pe nsion package, air M .. C HOWARD :f 6100 llACH llVD. HUNTINGTON IEACH 1966 Charcer. gd cond, 6PM . $886. ownr,loml,644-4R73 5.'><t-4514&847·7946 ~~~~~lbiteio1dn ilnDJ(P, .!)•n t~d AlJT~&TRUCKSALr2> 842•88"" ~3~0. No ph~ne calls. '73 Ford LTD Broug ham, '73 Ltd Brougham sta Pinto 414157 .. u...., $ l.995..... lst&Harbor,SantaA~ ... Space 1123, Npt Dunes 4 dr, AM /FM, air, pwr wgn, wife's car, lo miles, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 531-6000531-3421 lliiiii-iiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-U Trlr Park. brakes & strg, split (rt hi sterl!O. E·Z hft hitch, 1973 FORD See in garage area ''-9.utt•Mo<-.... ,,..o.,...c-1 back seat, new tires, perfloond.CdM.ti75-1784. PIHTOWAGOM Ask !or Rick '74 Grand P rix, air, D•AllV PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS Have somcthin~ lo sell? $2500. 673·4396, Hes. Hus. U o( 99"'5 0 C f A,\l/f'M stereo + many " 1.1 Class1Caed ads do1t well. 1 642·5200. nc " .. Aulomatac. •ur cond., ,.~ oas xlras. Xlnt cond. P~t. '"-----------------"'• ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo, mugs. roof rack, Daily Pilot Autos, New 9100'4ados, Mew 9800 Ji.ados, H•w 9100 Autos, N•w 9800 Autos, H•w HOO '71 llNCOLH wootl s1des·an outstand-330 West Bay St. Pty, $399S. 673'3599• I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 DOOR ing car! (432HDB). Now Costa Mesa ti5 Pontiac Catalina, $600 v 8 f · reduced to --------or best offer. XJnl coQ(l. I LARGE INVENTORY OF '76 DATSUNS STILL AVAILABLE AT '76 PRICES A NEW SHIPMENT O~ '77 Z' s ARE HERE An earlv droP·Oll enables us lo make pre-showing deliveries. Come & take a took! IMMEDIATE DELIVERY THESE ARE BUT A FEW OF OUR 1976 1976 8-210 HATCHBACK MODELS IN STOCK! LOMGIED PICKUP I .. auto. trans .. a r. arr, 0 .... LY $2598 '73 PLYMOU·TH 646-0939 • • power steering, power "" brakes. windows, :.eats. MARQUIS TOYOTA FURY CPE. ·74 Ftre bU'd Esprit 4o6, AM /FM :.terro r adio, MlSSION VIEJO V41, auto. ~ans .. factory A/C, AMIFM stereo. 41 heater, wb1Lcwall tares, 831-2880 495-1210 wr cond1t1orung, power new radials, pwr wifl · yinyl roof. llnted glal>S, 1--------steenng, po~er brakes, dows/door locks, 48,oeo .Wheel covers. (322KLJI) '72 Runabout. auto, air, AM/FM radio, heater, mi. Xlnl cond. $3800. Pb $2999. AM r adio, new tires, vinylroor. (789GIP) 675-0384 540-5630 ' very dean, low mi, runs $2188. 1--------- f.(reat. Must sell. $1,450. '73GRAND PRIX IOll~SOX & SO\' 546 211.'>5 540-5630 Lo m j ,, $3400 Trade/afi.. 631-3388 • LINCOLN· MERCURY ·74 Sta. Wgn. 4 spd, A/C, 2626 HARBOR llVD. Riii, 2300cc, orig. owner. COSTA MESA S2400 bsl ofr. 548-4284 Mercury 9950 '74 Pinto Runabout. ••• •• ••• ••• • ••• •• •• • •• • Stereo tape deck, center console $1850. 951-8342 or . '75 MERCURY 545.9331, ext435, art 2:30. MARQUIS WAGON Auto. Trans., factory air Plymouth 9960 cond1t ionin1t, powe r ••••••••••••••••••••••• steering, power brakes, '75 Duster. Cully equip. radio • h e a t c r , 9 Low mt, xlnt cond. S2850. passenger. <S~N DV) Call anytime 545·9178 $4888. ·12 1-~unv Ill. Super clean ! 318. Air, radio, 540-5630 P S, vi nyl, stl radials, I w,!BJlltl -~_2_i~-~-~1_:1_r_k_1_~24_20_~-~-· _P_h_. 2626 HARBOR ILVO. lin9le JC!fls!! '70 Tempest, 6 c:yl, good IOll~SO~ & so~ • LINCOLN·MERCURY 2626 HARIOR llVD. cond. $800 or b:.t ofr Or trade. 586·3244. --~C~O~ST~A~~ES~A,;;,_~ltn....d.N'h, ird 9971) '71 PLYMOUTH ••••••••••••••••••••••• WAGOM '73 T·Bird, F\Jll pwr, p"r Auto. trans .. factory air s eats.-A/C, A l\t I F U condillong, Power steer-tape, Firestone 500's. Air ang, power brakes, radio, shocks, auto trnk opor, ht!ater. Lots of room! Continental kit. 45,000 <l.K3BZV> mi. S39SO. 552-7500 Ed or S 1495. 1 _N_ao_cy_. ____ _ 540-5630 VecJG ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9974 IOllXSOX & SOX • LINCOLN·MERCURY 2626 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 1974 VEGA Vinyl top, rallyc wheels & cus tom inte rior. <206KPE). COSTA MESA ----Are you confused & won· Must Sell, 69 Plymouth 1i6 Mere Purklane 4 dr dr nnJ: how lo advertise J•\iry II, s mall V8, just R&.l l. AC, J:00tl tr :.insp. )Our Chris tmas g art tuned.Air,comp scrvre· Can·t beat prm.'. $250. items'! For an inex. cord. $700. Be! 4PM, ONLY $1695 NEWPORT DATSUM 888 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 833·1300 (714 ) 963·W70 ~nsive way lo go, just 675·!W32 ---------1 rall Q\Jr Christmas Ad· ..::..:.:~=-------1---------'70 MERCURY V1sl·rull.i42·5678. WantAds Cnll 642·5678 CLASSIFJEDwlllselli.t. 4 DR SEDAN Auto. tram. , factory air Aados, Hew 9100 Ji.altos, Hew 9100 cond1 t1 on1n ..:. power •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• steering, power (disc) brakes, r:id10, he:itcr. See it today! <715CTO) $1595. 540-5630 IW,\hiDl!il 2626 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ----00 Mercury Marquis. 4 dr hardtop, rull pwr, xlnt cond. $800. S.17 tWO!I '74 Mere Comet. 2dr. 1; tyl, IJke new. Only lll,000 m1. 12700. 673·8821. ----Mustonq .••...•.•........•..•.• '6.'i Must::ing. ra1r cond. Bc!>t off11r. Wknds, 846-·l04i '68 Auto, xlnl 111-,arlc & out. new pnt & Ir.ans PJS. P •B . radt-.. $1500 492-7437 7-1 Mustanf.( II. radials, air . .f spd. \'In roof, sharp. S2ro<l fi7:1 1.1053 '68 V II, auto I rans. P S, nrw hrakcs. gd cond. SI 0!1.5. 5'1.'i 261 I i;7 :\tu~tang. Ii cyl, auto. P S. J\ :\1 FM raclto, good CCtnd. S950 546 0310 aft 5PM. 9100 BUY A NEW TOYOTA , .. from HERB FRIEDLANDER 537·5464 GARDEN GROVE FWY. and HE WILL GIVE YOU ' (With this ad at time or purchase) OFFER EXPIRES 11·30-76 100 GALLONS 100 GALLONS IOOGALLONSFREE' . OF GAS e FREE FREE • NEW '76 MAVERICK Cru1somat1c transmission front & rear bumper quardS etc Ser. 6K91L 162565 88 :?50 6 cy linder e ngine NEW '76 MUSTANG II s3588 2000 4 cylinder engine. 4 ~oeed trans . radials wsw tores. power s(eerlng & Power lront disc orakes. ~ IJ6R02Y172857. • 55288 5700 GVW Package. AMP & 011 gauges. pawer steering. lett hand & right hand chrome swing lock mirrors. custom decor group. tinted w1ndsh1eld. extra cooling radiator. silver metallic finish. custom pain!. mags & tires Ser. !ffl 1YRC00558 NEW '77 MAVERICK $3288 ~!!!.~ Cru1somaric trans .. steel belled 4 Door Sedan 250 6 cY1 . C r u1so ma 11c t r ans. OR78:x 14 steet belled radial tires '1PIUXP bumoer orouo interior decor qrouo. tinted glass complete etc. Ser •6Vt'8 1L 198666 Radial tires. front & rear bumper guards. Calif emission control Ser #7R10Y100216 radial tires. power steering. power front disc brakes. front & rear bumper guards. tinted glas s c o mo lete. S er. #7K91L 104061. LTD 4 Dlt. H.T. V-6 auto trans factory air c o n d •t1on 1ng . power s l e1>r1ng po w er disc brakes. radio. h eater (173GXF) CU STWOOD WGtt. V-8. auto trans • factory air cond it1on1ng . power s tP.ering p o w er disc oraltcs rad1<# neater. luggage rack (757HGIJ '2476 $247 '74 CHEV. '72 DATSUN MOHTI CAltLO l'ICICUP UM4HS J Dlt. H.T. V·S auto trans .. factory air conditio ni n g . power steerl ng po w e,r dtsc brakes radio. hearer. vinyl roof. Landau top. (898LIR). $2976 '74 MERC. .;;~c-...... DAILY PILOT DJ :J 250 NEW CARS & TRUCKS TO CHOOSE FROM! NEW '76 TORINO NEW '77 F-250 PICKUP $4288 !.'°,~.3~ Allt COHDITIOHIMG steering. d~al western mirrors. tinted wrnds h1 eld. extra T in ted glass. A M radio , cooling radiator. 800x16'11 8 351 V-8 engine. auto. trans.. p I y r a I e d Ii r es . Ser. power steenng & power front #F25BR02035 1 disc brakes. dual accent paint stripes. vrnyl seat !rim wsw tires. Ser #6G25H113352 . MUSTAM•H.T. '72 BUICK SKYLAltlC C'I. V-8. auto. trans .. 'factory air cond i t ioning . c o wer steering. r adio. h ealer. (639E0F). '1576 '70 PLY. AIRY Ill 2 Dlt. H.T. 169 FORD I f2IO C4MPll lrEC. V·B. au to. tr ans . air conditioning. radio. heater. Rang,er. ( 15391 E ). $2176 173 PLY. V-8. auto. trans . factory air cond 1tion1ng. power st eering . c o w er disc brakes. radio. heater (089LIB!. 1th deluxe shell. 4 cy1 . 4 soeed. air cond . R&H . !'Mg wheels Hustler pack. (Ser. 753629). V-8. auto. trana., power steering, radio. heater. (318BEP). V-8. auto. trans .. factory air condi t ion ing . oow er steering, power brakes. racho. heater. tinted glass (551APY) 91276 91276 FIRST IN IDYICI BRAND NEW 1976 PLYMOUTH ARROW 2-Dr. 4-speed. power brakes, bucket seats. tilt steering wheel, tinted glass. Serial No. 7L24K67301357 . WHAT MORE CAN A LITTLE CAR GIVE? '75 CHEVY MOVA SEDAM 6 cyhndet. automatic. fadOtY 11r conditioning. powe< steering, radlO. heal• (355MC8i •2495 '76 PLYMOUTH llOADIUHMB V·8 automatic power steenng. racuo. heater. bueket seats & con~e. space ma'<er. rallye wheels. (067PCV) •4295 '71 CHIYY IMPALA SIDAM V-8. automatic. f.ctory 11r, POW9I' ateering'. PoW9' bnlkes, radio, heltlf'. wflitewtll trres. vinyl roof (310ETCl •1391 '74 DOD&E MONACO SIDAM V-8. automatic. factory air, power steering. pcwer brakes. radio. heater. wtutewall tires. V1nyl rt?<>'· Cl~1somatic. (878JOZI. Bench seat vinyl, standard transmiS6ion, bumper guards front & rear . Ser . #HL41-C6F-264355. '76C IVY~ Scooter Cpe. 4 cylinder. if speed, factory air. radio. heater. whitewall ttm. deluxe Interior. rack (392NRP). •2495 OY TA LANDCllUISER 4 cylinder. 4 speed. radro. heater. 4 wheel dnve. (850LFH) •3691 V-8. automatic:. factory aif. power steerlng. POW8r brakM. AM/FM l'ldlo. 8 track. huter, wmtewall tires. vlnyt roof. tilt wtleel. cruise control. (75&MBT). • •2795 '72 CHIY. YODEi Sedan. V·8. automatic. factory air. Power steering, brakes. pr. wdt.. seats. AM/FM radio, heater, wsw tires. vinyl root (669GIU). •1795 '73 FOID Pl 4 cylinder. 4 speed. tape dedc. radro. hell•. mag wheels. raised white letter tirta. (763JEKI •11t1 •1195 '73 ME CURY 9 PASS. WAGON V-8 automatrc. factory alr. PoWGr steering. brakes. pr. wds. seats. door locks, AM/FM stereo radio 8 track. htr .. wsw tires, lug. rack. (564KEJ). •2495 Fury Salon Sedan. V-8. automatic. air condrtionino. pcwer steering. pcwer brakes. radio. heater. whitewall tires. vinyl roof, side mouldings .•• 191 (319PECI • '76 CHIY. COIDOIA Coupe. V-8. automatic. fldory air. pcwer steering. oower brakes. oower windows. AM/FM radro. heater. whitewall ttres. vinyl top. (22SNIN)• 5595 AU. CARS All MJICT TO PllOI SA&& AU PllCIS All f~ UMl1I. 11 PM. ~ PlllCIS All PW1 TAI AMI UGIMIL MU aes 11·1·16. -...... ~ COMPLm , "HEA V:Y DUTY" SERVICE ( AVAii.AiLE FOR YOUR R.V. ONE OF THI I FINEST SERVICE FACILITIES ~ IN ORANGE COUNTY ~~ Ol'IM SATUIDAYS 1:00AMTO 1:00 PM ..,,,,,, ... MONDAY TttaU NJOAY 7:)0 AM TO l :JO f'M ---· .• • 1' "c.. ,,,. ....... , ...... -•Iii"" '" --" ........ " "" "" "" ... '-'* .. "'"'" Huntington Beach .Foi•••tam-·valley , • EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FOR NIA • untm OD 'Voter Fati gue?' Allell's Win: Name, Place? TO BE SEATED TUESDAY New School Trustee Allen : Supe rvisor Seat Fille d By Anthony Orange County Supervisor- t elect PhHip Anthony was ap- 1pointed by Gov. Edmund G. I Brown Thursday to fill former supervisor Robert Battin's unex- pired term. Anthony's appointment means ·Jle 'll sit on the Board or Supervisors about six weeks ~before his newly won term begins in January. · Battin's First Districts~ was ·vacated last August wt\en the former supervisor was sentenced ;tollowing his conv iction or using 'county paid employes in a 1974 political.campaign. . Both Anthony and his general 'election opponent, Santa Ana City 'Councilman Harry Yamamoto, •said an appointment should not be made until the electiondec:ision. That don e, Go"emor Brown ;wasted no time notifying the win· ner of hts appointment. \Heroin Sale iEnds in Jail J A Huntington Beach woman who admitted in the courtroom that she sold heroin to an un- dercover officer has been sen· tenced to 120 days in Orange County Jail. Superior Court Judge James H . Walsworth ordered the jail term and three years probaUon for Jill Charlene F\lnke, 20. or 8022 Ebbtide, after she pleaded guilty to drug charges filed tast Jan. 23. She admitted that she gave the lawman heroin in ex- change for $50 in cash. Judge Walsworth ordered the defendant to attend rehabllita· lion sessions or the Straight . Ahead drug program in Dana ' Point as a condition of her proba- tion. ' lSextupkta ·IJom; 2 D ie NAPLES, Italy (AP) -A Neapolitan mother gave birth to sextuplets -four etrls and two boys -but two of the 1irla dled shortly after birth, hoepital of· ficlals said today. Tb~ mother, Pasqualina ~anese, was reported in 1ood. Condition at a city hospital. The aurvlvtna tnranta were being kept •in an incubator 'abd·their condi-. t tion was not di.sclosed. I According to the Guinness Boole . bf Records, only aome two docen I ~ cues of aextupleta ha~ been re-~ lhrouaboul &he world al.nee By RAY ESTRADA Of the O•ilY f'lltll SUH "Name recognition" left over from an unsuccessful 1974 school board campaign was Doris Al· len's main reason for winning a special election for a Huntington Beach Union High School Dis- trict trustee seat, the victor says. Her opponents disagree with Mrs. Allen's analysis of the elec- tion. All three losers said they believe her name in the first posi- tion on the ballot was the key fac- tor to her success in gathering 30,193 votes. Mrs. Allen's name was followed by those of James Hamilton, John Hundley and Michael Vandor. Even though the order was chosen at random it was alphabetical. ' "She won because or voter fatigue," said Vandor, a 22-year- old Cal State Long Beach student who gathered the fewest votes. Voters were more concerned with national candidates and ballot propositions, the political science student said. By the time voters reached the trustee can- didates. "They voted for the first one on the ballot,•• he said. Vandor said bis name's posi- tion on the ballot •'hurt me dearly." The student claimed Mrs. AJ· Jen "WJS not a serious can-dlda'•e tlle eled.lon c...i]>aign because she did not aUend public meetir\ls with her opponents. None ol the losen even knew •hat the election winner looked like utaW her picture and cam- paign iatatement appeared in the local press. They'r e Cool Not a "Vote for AlJenfposter or fiver aooeared in the ~fstrict 's neighborhoods. Mrs. Allen said she spent virtuaJly nothing on cam,aign expenses. Vandor, who spent about $200 on ~ year 's campaign, said he intends to run again in March when the terms of Mrs. Allen' and current board members Zita Wessa and Ralph BalM!r will ex- pire. Travis, 4, and Wendy Finnem, 7, team up to douse their playmate. Cisco R,ios, 6, with garden hose. The Costa Mesa youngsters res~!1ed lo this method of keeping cool as Santa Ana condition drove temperatures above 90 degr ees Thursday throughout Southern California. Weatherman is predicting more of the same for the weekend. .Mrs. Allen will seFVe the re- maining rive months of former Trustee Robert Knox's term. The winner of Tuesday's elec- tion said she is saving her major campaign drive for the March election. Judge Orders Move Of Chowchilla Trial "Not that maO(. people voted for me just becau~ I was first on the ballot," Mrs. Allen said. •·1 believe I won because I have taken a position on several moral issues in trre district." Mrs. Allen was active in the 1974 attempted recall or then· trustees Dennis Mangers and Ron Shenkman. The new trustee was the leader oC a group called the Citizens for Parents' Rights Committee which charged the former trustees with fraudulent use or funds, neglect of duty, lack of fis· cal responsibility and conflict or interest. • The recall charges stemmed from displeasure with the former trustee's handling of the in- vestigation into the showing or the X-rated film, "Deep Throat •• at a school administrators con· (See NAME, Page AZ) MADERA CAP) -The Chowchilla mass kidnaping trial today was ordered moved out of Madera County. Superior Court Judge Jack L. Hammerberg also granted de· fense motions lo keep the grand jury transcript sealed at least until a trial jury is sequestered. Both rulings bad been expect- ed, and Hammerberg said he granted the venue change to avoid any possibility that the case might be prejudiced and overturned by appeal. The county where the trial will be held wlll not be known until Hammerberg consuJts with the administrative Office of Courts in San F.rancisco. Hammerberg said that office will provide a list of counties that can hold the trial, and he will select one of those. Hammerberg fil ed his rulings with the Madera County Clerk this morning but there was no formal court hearing and the de- fendants were not present. Hammerberg had to read stacks of newspaper and magazine articles and radio scripts before deciding whether to order the trial moved to a county more metropolitan than this rural area. During a hearing last month, he viewed more than three hours of television film and videotape, all devoted to the bizarre case in which 26 school children and their bus driver were abducted July 15. The defense argued at another hearini that the tr~crtpt of . grand jury proceedings that led to indictments should remain sealed u.nlil trials are completed so prospective Jurors won't be prejudiced. Bipsnorting Visitor~ Visions of Earthquake• ·Danced in Hu Head Johnny Molino, 9, is allergic to architect, carpenters, glaziers, dot dandruff, chocolate bars and muons and interior designer are -he learned early Thursday -finished with the wreckage and to cars that come smashing rebuilding. through bis bedroom wall with Police who arrived at the the roar of an earthquake. Moll no home just off Slater ''I thought it was an earth· ~venue at the comer of Point quake!.'' says Johnny, who Jives . Loma Drive and Coronado Lane. with his paren~ Ml'. and Mrs. were ahoclred. John ~ollno, at 6201 Point Loma A small, older Japanese im· Drive, Huntington Beach. por:t car 1Ue1•dly driven by The younsster, a student in tbe ,lAITY W. MOOfe, ~ or 17151 Mentally Glftec:l Millon (MOM) Camelot Ctrc1e, Huntln1ton program at Roblllwood School, Beaeh, 1ppa.-.nlly mltled the s, es~aped lnjury but• by much. tum md amu'hed tntothe house. 'The car bumpet came about Moore u not u lucky as U• 18 incbes into m1 room.'' says Molino .,.,.lnve5tigaton arrest• .Johnny, who occupied the front eel and.,.~ him on suspicion bedroom of the Jlolinoe' corner o( dnanken drivina. He was held home 1D nortll Huntlncton Beach. a lew boun and Nlr11td oa Id He •on't occupy t.he fro11t own r~opbance. t:1 a .nu. b e droom airaln until the promise to appear ln court. and : .. _ face the charge. "It could have been wotse," says Johnny's fatMr, a purc:'Ms- ing executive 'It the Lona 8'111Ch Naval Station. The impact o( the cv crashing · ~to the house caused an .Umat· ed ll,200 to $1,500· damqe and slammed a chest of drawenover ootoJohnny's bed, ashe laylnlt. T.hioklng tb• San Andreu Faak h•d finally Just ~ rent uunder. the terrified boy curled up and c linched his hands behlod the .... ct df )\it oeck to protect acalnat i1'futt. 8' t~t lo acbool eartb4o.te d.rtlll. .Lucidly. he • 11 aot .bit bt fl)'· -i:· tbe~t"e the drtnr .qaad• • t'ftR turn • off Slatet (See VISITO•. PaceA2) ~lain Former Husband Sought By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ille O•llr Pit« S~fl A Huntington Beach woman and ber new busband were shot to death in their ups tairs bedroom Thursday night and her ex-husband is being sought in the sl~fug. Police identified the suspect as William Gene Campbell, 40, an ~ ex·convict .wbo they described as armed and extremel y dangerous. Investigators identified the victim s as Mrs. Beverly CJmpbell Howell. 39, and Verne Howell. 42, who lived at 17847 Beard Lane, Huntington Beach. Both died of mulUpJe gunshot wounds fired from a .38 caliber revolver. Homicide detective Jack Welsb said Howell was shot in the back. Mrs. Howell was shot in the head and arm . Huntington Beach detectives said suspect Campbell ls belie\'ed to be driving a 1969 Pon· liac GTO, dark brown, with licen15e plate 562 EQP. He ls on parole from a five-year to life seµtence for armed robbery and is also wanted on a warrant charging him with burglary. llow~ was a pipefitter, ap- parentJY currently unemployed, and Mrs. Howell worked at Don Jose's, a ltuntingtoo Beach Mex- ican restaurant, Detective Welsh said. '-. Patrol121an Stevl'" Dutton was ~·b•totMtwo-...., ... 1can adobe·style st.ruclure near Talbert Avenue and Newl&Dd Street jp ceatr al Huntington Be~cb after a 10: 14 p.m. telephone call lo police. '·someone j ust shot m y mother ... I" a hysterica1 young woman screamed into the re- ceiver. The dispa her noted down at that snomenl at a car's squeal- ing tires coul be heard in the background aqj officers believe it was Campb~ escaping. Detectives tOday were begin- ning what appeared to be a com- plicated task of unraveling the tangled marital relations and simmering ·emotions that ap- parently exploded in a bloodbath. Police s aid Campbell and his wife recently separated and her second divorced husband, the slain maJe victim, returned from Saudi Arabia. H~ was apparently employed there as a pipefitter for the F1uor Corporation. Still another ex-husband who also works for FJ uor Corporation in Saudi Arabia was being con· lacted by telegram today to in- form him of bis former wile's murder, police said. Detective Welsh said it was not Immediately detvmin. ed when Mrs. Howell and Campbell met. marned and separated. leading to confrontations involving the second and third husband. "They h i,ve had a few beefs, but not too recently." Police Co"flmunicatlons Supervisor' Sam Marberry said Thw-sday night when contacted shortly (Seet KILLED, Page AZ) . Co/C Seeking T'!P Citizens The Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce ii seeldnc nomina- Uom for its Cltiten of the Year Award. The award winner will be named Dec. 3 at the chamber in· stallation banquet. Nominees muat be Fountain Valley • resi- dt!hta who have "blade • COD· U'UNtioa to the betterment ol the community" and belooc to at leu t oae civic orpnizatioa, ac· ffrdins to chamber director 4qu Warner. ' lndiYidualt and orpnintiona may submit nomin•ons to the A!bamber offloe, 18135 Bnoldturst St.. DeJdllne tor nominationi is N6V.IO. . The '9111D'~n Valley Chamber of Commerce wllf bold ill peeraJ memberalaip m"'-ln1 'J'ue1da1 al nooo at lbe Cl'Ollroad.a Jleataurant. ~ Brookbunt St., f'ountaill VaU«J. WANTED IN S~YtNGS Wllllam Gene Cempbell Five Seized On Heroin Rapin BB Huntington Beach police cap. tured five suspected drug dealers and confiscated nearly a hall· million dollars worth of narcotics m separate cases Thunday. The baul Included 2.5 pounds ot heroin purchased behind a coffee shop at the city's Five Points Shopping Center and a pound of South American cocaine seized .inaTustinraid. N..-cotlc• D~te~ve Sgt. Carl Vldano said it was pure coin· cldence the two major drug ar· rest casa occurred at the same tirQe, about 1 p.m. Thund-r. No resJatance was encountered in either drug arrest situation. The tieroin h aul, which in· vestigatorS say involved three previous purchases from the same suspects, all analyzed and confirmed as Mexican heroin,: was seized at Main Street and Beach Boulevard. "The street value or what we got would be about $400,000," Sf- Vidano said. -· Suspects in that cue were iden· tified as Joe Dell Holland, 35, of 3513 Boyer Ave., Santa Ana, and William "Willie" l\alph Jef. ferson,27,of3222S. MainSt.,San· ta Ana. Holland was art'ested on a pre- viously-issued warrant carrying $50,000 bail, while Jefferson was held in Ueu of $5,000 bail. Both are charged witb sales ofberoln. Police said the heroin was packaged in plastic sandwich baggaies. .A separate three-month in- ves t i 1 at ion l e d to l b e simultaneous arrest of three men at a motel on First Street in Tustin, where officers allegedJy purchased $50,000 worth ol co- caine. . The pound or stimulant drug fr<>r;n the South American coca plant was seized alter alleaed n egotiatio~s with s usped s Donald ~nthony Orban, 28, Leo Godines Medina, 28, both ,ft! Tuatfn, and .terry Bob Beasley, . 28, ofSilverado Canyon. Investigators booked the triQ lnto Orange County l'all in lieu of $10,000 ball eaci.. on charges oC sale of dan1erous dnl(s. · · Co at Weath er Clear through Saturday. but with coolln1 along the coast. Highs near 80 on the coast, lows to about6S. I NSIDE TODA~ Ther1'1 more to c&ain than fult .utmg on tM?rt. Today'• Wuktndtr vhttof thb lwwehol4 object oa an and fCUlpturf. ,·.42 D~LVPILOT H/F .._ c, NEWS ANALYSIS agenda for change, it · be as president, testing his strength in office, and the margin that put him there will be or little con.se-quence .. Carter's goals will be gained o·r lost, his presidency will succeed or fail, on the basis of what hap- pens in the future, not because or bis narrow margin over Presi- dent Ford. "Although I would have ·pr~ ferred a unanimous vote oo Tues- WAGE-PRICE CONTROL UNLtKEt. Y: HELLER--A12 RACE WON, CARTER'S RELAXEO-A4 day. I think that the mandate was broad-based and certainly ade- quate," Carter said Thursday night. Carter won with 'l!11 electoral voles, 27 more than the minimum needed to win. He gained 51 per- cent or the popular v.ote, to Ford's 48 percent. His electoral college count was the lowest of any winner in 60 • years, even though the electoral · coll ege has enlarged in that time. But three of the last five presi- dents won with less than half the popular vole, and Gerald Ford came to the White House with no votes at all. Harry S Truro an was elected in 1948 with 49.6 percent or the ,. popwar vote and 303 electoral • votes. John F. Kennedy won in 1960 with 49. 7 percent and 303 electoral votes. Richard M. Nix- l on wu elected in 1968 with 43.4 percent and 301 electoral votes. Their reputations and their roles in history, good and ill, are based on what they did in the While House. not on the size of the margins that put them lbero. Landslides can be userut. Lyn- don 8 . Johnson pushed his Great Society social programs to enact- ment a fter trouncing Barry Goldwater in 1964. He did it as a Democratic pre- sident with a heavily Democratic Congress, but two years later. Republicans made a c on- gressional comeback. F,...P~AJ NAME .•• ference in San Diego in 1973. District officials in attendance at the confere nce Included Man1ers. Shenk man and then Superintendent Jack Roper. The former trustees said they never saw the film . Roper publicly' apologized for the film's show- ing. Mrs . Allen also led opJ>O$iUon to aUecedly "dirty poetry" in books In district libraries in 1973. Referring to hersetr M "a oon- aervaUve on educ atlonal issues." Mrs. Allen said her involvement lo lhe Orange County Status or Wo men Co mmission and Westminster culturaJ (roups has added to her name recognition. "I have no idea whe~ the votes came rrom, •·said Mrs. Allen. ,,,. new trustee, who wm at- tend her first board meeting in that post Tuesday, said she will run "a much more vls1ble cam- paign in March." DAILY PILOT ' ~- Cart~ 'B•rt_' California's Assembly speaker, Leo McCarthy (D- San Francisco) says that Pres ide nt-elect Jimmy Carter hurt himself iri . the state by not allowing Califor- nians to run his campaign here. HB Council Sets limit To Sessions Huntington Beach City Council members are expected to take action this month to limit council meetings . to the first and third Monday or each month. They have been holding meet· ings virtually every Monday night for many months. An agreement to decide to cut back on meeting nights was re- ached recently at a retreat at· tended by city council members and administration leaders and department beads. The agreement was reac.hed after several members reported- ly voiced displeasure about the weekly meetings and that they interfe red with business de- mands. It was learned that the city council meetings will generally be preceded by study sessions and executive sessions at 5:30 p.m. The action meetings will be scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. Meetings in the past have had an 11 p.m. curfew. A spokesman said that with just the two meet- ings, they will be allowed to con· tinue until a ··reasonable hour," presumably after the 11 p.m. breakofl time. ' Fro• Page A l 2 KILLED ... after the murders were reparted. Detective Welsh said Camobell was recently fired from his job with El Don Liquors, whJch has two outlets, one at 8462 In- dianapolis Ave nue near the restaurant where Mrs. Howell wa.~ employed. Campbell was recently dis- charged following a door·pry burglary of the Indianapolis A venue liquor store and Detec- tive Welsh revealed today a war- rant had been issued for his ar- rest in connection with that break-in. Detectives assigned to the case said today they have no idea where Campbell might attempt to go into hidin~. knowing he would be the prime suspect in the double murder. "That's what we're trying to run down now." said Detective Welsh. He and Detective Phil Nolen were expected to question Diane Schroeder. 23, reportedly Mrs. Howell 's daughter by her first husband. Police clamped a tight patrol check on the residence of both Ms. Schroeder and her fiance about 2: 15 a.m. today. when fears arose that their lives might be in danger. Detective Wel1h said be was also attempting to contact Campbell's former parole officer regarding circumstances of bis previous arrests and conviction involving armed robbery and escape. GQ8. Use -UJI A/ter. ~Crisis' WA SHINGTON (AP) Despite continuing warnin&s of dwindling energy resources, American motorists are setting records in using gasoline. The Federal Highway Ad · ministration ~ald Thursday that the iasoUne consumption rate th.ls year will be greater than any in history. The agency estimated that motor fuel consumption would total 118.8 billion gallons this year, including 115 bUlion for tll&bway travel. It said the nation would use 4.4 billion galloos more mot.or fuel this year than ln 1.973, when the previous record was set. At pleas for conservation go unbeeded. the agency said. the increased usage apparently com- es not only from ~ blchway driving but also higher speeds. Aitbough it did not take a national average, the ;Highway Administration said highway s~ are increasing based on a sampling or states. Guoline con1umpUon ls in- creasing at a rate ol s. 7 perdent, comparable to what it was before the Arab oil em barao of 1973 and more than twice the 2.S percent increase recorded in 1975. The government hoped to keep an- nual consumption increases to less than 3 to 4 percent. . Current agency projections are based on state reports or motor fuel consumption and Of1 current trends, motor fuel production figures and other factors. Supgorting its claim that highway speeds are on the rise, the agenc;y said, fQr example, U:ae average speed of free·flowing traffic measured on., highways with a S5 mil~ per hour speed • limit in Texas was S8.4 miles per hour tor the quarter that ended June 30; California, an averaege of 54.8 miles per hour; Maryland, :>4.5 per miles per hour; Indiana, 56.8 miles per hour ; a nd Virginla, 51.4 miles·per hour. The top figure was reported by Connecticut -60.8 miles per hour -or five-tenths of a mile per hour faster than the 1973 na- tional average. California will burn more gasolloe, 11 .4 billiongaJlon.s, than any other state in 1976, the FHW A estimated, but several other Western states will have larger percentage increases. For example, Alaska ia expect- ed to burn 9.6 percent more fuel for hiehway use in 1976 than in 1975 ; Colorado, 8.9 percent more; and Idaho, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota afld Wyoming all will use 8 per~ent or moreJuel for highway purposes. The increase in gasoline and other fuels for highway us~ will offset a small decline in fuel uses for nonhighway uses such as agriculture, construction avia- tion, and marine. ' The highway agency said the nonhlghway total would be slightly below the 3.6 billion gallons used in 1975. I VISITOR ... Avenue at high speed. over- corrected. lost control and then accidentally stepped on the ac- celerator pedal instead of the brake . The car slammed into the cor- ner curb. then hurtled over a tree stump and caromed into the Molino residence. Investigator s rear it tnight have shot all the way into the room, crushing the Molino boy and his bed against the far waJI, but its rear wheels snagged on a four-inch high brick pl anter at ground level. "But some or my wall posters got ripped up." the boy lamented as wor~men began the task of boarding up the caved-in front bedroom wall. Affiliation Okayed LOS ANGELES (AP> - Newsroom personnel at televlslon station KTTV have voted to affiliate with the Na- tional Association of Broadcast Employes and Techn1cians. Fire Non·exit Chhf W-uu New Door Huntington Beach Fire Chief Raymond Picard hu informed city authorities that ht bas an overhead problem. He sald his department hu been runnint the very definite rlsk of not being able to cet a fire truclt outo(t.he aging Lab Street Fire Station. Picard asked for and received au&horiraUon this week to apend up to $4,000 to salvage or replace tbe station's overhead exit door. He said the door ts pres-'ly baqiq ~clamps and action la Deedecf soon "or we may not be •bl• to aet fJr. equf»mtnt out of the at.atiOG ln emer1encl•." P\card says ht bopea tbal wort wUl surt wiWn bro weea on the proJed. The fire station building was constructed ln 1923 u an F.dison eo.npany warehouse. It was re- modeled in 19M and converted in· to a fire station to serve the downtown area. Picard said that the building bas deteriorated In other rdpeetl and has an old, leaky Un roof, I . "When it rains. n rains as. much Inside and as it does out· alde,"beaars. Tbe station ho"8es three fire f'i&bU., unita as well u two parameclJc t•ms. Picard says that he u.pects a new ftre hO\Lle will be built ul- Uiaately when plans ar. Im· pJemented to widen Lake 5'red.. ·~-...... VIEW OF CAMARILLO STATE HOSPITAL WHERE PATIENTS' DEATHS ARE BEING PROllED Grand Jury Inquiry Scheduled After lnYH tlgatJon by Citizen• Group Abuse in Hospital Noted by Patient VENTURA CAP) -"They strapped my hands behind my back and strapped me OJ) my stomach. I b ad to lay that way all night. "They gave me a shot which hurt the back of my skull • • • I banged my bead on the wall bec:au.se it hurt so bad. The doc· . tor came next morning and said I was imagining the pain." This statement from a patient at one of California's 11 state mental hospitals was recorded by one or several citizens' groups looking into alleged abuses at the hospitals. . Scores of similar cases have been reported -and a few suc-c~sfully prosecuted. Last month a Camarillo State Hospital psychiatric technician was arrested after a witness al- legedly saw her l>eat a female pa- tient with a fly swatter and an ice tray, then loop a towel around her neck and begin cboldng her. A registtted nurse who works at Camarillo told the Associated Press that "choking out" -us- ing a strangle bold to render a pa· tient unconscious -has been often used to quiet rebellious pa- tients. Beatings, verbal abuse, tying patients to beds with painfully tight restraints, sexual advances to and rapes or mentally dis· turbed patients -all these have been reported by va rious sources. Next week, the Ventura County Grand Jury will be presented with cases of questionable deaths of patients at Camarillo, and finally allegations of brutal treat- ment may be substantiated or found groundless. In any case, the public sessions will like ly t h row a harsh spotlight on staffing problems and the uncertain ruture racing California's mental hospital system and its 15,000 patients. The probe is to determine if criminal negligence -or worse -was involved in deaths from strangulation, drug overdoses. drownings and other causes the past four years. JC indictments are returned. says Assemblyman Ken McDonald or Ojai, "it will be an indictment not so much of in- dividuals but of the system and the Leicls lature for not doing something about this situation." McDonald said be has heard about poor conditions at the hospital for 16 years . The bearings, whi c h authorities say may deal with "as many as 75 deaths," will be held in open court under a seldom-used provision in law. "We hope that the proceedings will be therapeutic" in improv· ing conditions at stat.e hospitals, said Asst. Dist. Atty. Micbael ~rad bury or Ventura County. Carried out over the past year, the district attorney's probe was revealed last month at a time when a series or four unexplained deaths at Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk led to the scheduling of coroners' inquests. Prompted by news stories last month about the Ventur-<;owity death probe, the Health Dep~t­ ment recently sent investigators or its own to various hopsitals. They already reported that about one in every 12 deaths studif d involved some ir- regulafity. Raymond P rocunier. installed recently as a Health Department troubleshooter by Gov. Brown, said the investigators were also finding "gross problems" Ltt:lud· ing a drug ring and aJteralion of ,records, perhaps to cover up pa- tient abuse. All Of these groups began iSSU· ing s tatements or concern or ~n­ demnation after the first qUes- tiona ble death this year at Metropolitan. Mark Holcomb, a 19-year·old Garden Grove resi· dent. was found dead in his hospital bed June 19. The apparent cause or death was said to be choking on his own vomit, but a n autopsy examina- tion showed Holcomb had suf- fered bruises and cuts on his race and neck. His case ls still under investigation by a district at· tomey's office. Tip Solves BB Hit-run Near-fatal • A tip by a suspicious Hunt· initoo Beach woman who read a Daily Pilot story describlna a blt- and·run vehicle involved' ln a near-fatal accident a month ago bas cleared up the case, police said today . The anonymous informant was correct in her bunch that a damaged green pickup truck parked behind a downtown apartment house was the same one police were seeking. Investigators obtained an ex· cellent description of the make and year or the truck which clipped a car driven by Heather J . Herd, 33, oC 7611 Talbert Ave., in early October. · Her auto veered off Beach Boulevard near Liberty Street and flipped over, landing upside down in a d1tcb with her trapped inside, unconscious with head in· juries. Investigator Orva Akin said the vehicle owner was traced and admitted hls truck bad to be the one involved but there will be no criminal hit-and-run charge filed. The motorist told police he knew he struck something in the 2a.m. incident. He claimed he did st.op a short distance down Beach Boulevard but could see nothing when he looked back toward the intersec- tion where he Celt an impact. Investigators said that was en· tirely possible because the Herd car came to rest upside down in a ditch a nd considerin g the roadway grade and the predawn darkness it was probably not vis· ible to the motorist. "He was definitely very re· morserul," orncer Akin said. The victim, who police say would surely have been killed if she hadn't been wearing seat belts, was found quickly and rescued by police and paramedics. She is recovering Crom her injuries. It's What's Out Back That Counts? Our store is like an iceberg! No -we're not chilly to deal with -it's that you only see one tenth of our store from the front. People visiting us for t he first time are • flabbergasted when the spacious interior unfolds before them. The huge showroom has thousands of samples. (Customers tell us we have the largest selection they have seen .) ·Our warehouse contains an inventory of infinite variety. Hundreds of remnants inhabit a 25x50 remnant room. Add offices, a spacious drapery roorp. plenty of parking, pleasant people. and you 'll have the "Big Picture" of our successful operation! DEN'S u...r~: iiisiaiiitiaii: ·custom~ draperies linoleum • wood floor 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 9'26'27 • PHONE 6A6-A838 -6A6-235S - - Irvine EDITION (vol. 69, NO. 310, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A T oday<s C lo I ng N~Y. S t oek · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1976 ' TEN CENT~ Judge Moves Chowchi.Q.a Kidnap ··Trial I MADERA CAP) -The overturned by appeal. rendantswerenotpresent. JulylS. sealed until trials are completed brother Richard, 23, both ~r l1Chowchilla mass kidnaping trial The county where the trial will Hammerberg had to read Attorneys ror three young San so prospective jurors won't be Atherton -have pleaded iMO· today was ordered moved out or be held will not be known until stacks of newspaper and Francisco Peninsula men ac· prejudiced. centto27co·untsofkidnapingan_d !Madera County. Hammerberg consults with the magaiine articles and radio ed ed . 18 of robbery involving personal Superior Court Judge Jack L. administrative Office or Courts scripts before deciding whether cus of the kidnapings argu T~e prosec1:1tio~ 0f~~ rbo!:' items taken from the victims. IHammerberg also granted de-in San Francisco. to order the trial moved to a that a change of venue is mo ons. argwng. a . e e en · The victims were abducted l~ense motio~ Jo keep the grand .Hamm~rber~ said tha~ office c~unt1 more metropolitan than r~es~aryghtl;e~:~~~af~~~~r~ ~~ts c~~i~e~~~~ld ~~o1!:r-:.v~~ from their bus while on their way Jury transcnpt sealed at least wtll provide a hst of counties that this rural area. e P~ . home from summer school. They 1untilalrlaljuryisseqlfestered. can hold the trial, and he will During a hearing last month, California county becamd emo-~~anspi~ed. in the case raJ~er were driven around in two vans I Both rulings had been expect-select one or those. he viewed more than three hours tionally involved. an re aymg on rumor an 10• for several hours, then were ed, and Hammerberg said he Hammerberg filed his rulings or television film and videotape, The defense argued al another nuendo locked in a moving van buried at granted the venue change to with the Madera County Clerk all devoted to the buarre case in hearing that the transcript of The defendants -Frederick a rock quarry near Livermote avoid any possibility that the this morning but lhere was no which 26 school children and grand jury proceedings that led N. Woods, 24, of Woodside ; almost 100 miles northwest of case mjght be prejudiced and formal court hearing and the de-their bus driver were abducted to indictments should remain James Schoenf~ld, 24, and bis here . They'r e Cool U~lly PtlOt Pf\oto • ., Lfr4 P•vne I Travis, 4, and Wendy Finncrn. 7, team up to douse their playmate. Cisco Rios, 6. \\1th garden hose. The Costa Mesa youngsters rc>Sortcd to this method of keeping cool as Santa A na condition drove temperatures above 90 degrees Thursday throug hout South ern California. Weatherman 1~ predicting more of the same for the weekend i$500,000 in Drugs, '4 Held in HB Raids Huntington Beach police cap lured five suspected drug dealers and confiscated nearly a half m illion dolla rs worth of narcotics in separate cases Thursday. The haul included 2 S pounds of heroin purchased behind a coff~e shop at the city's Five Points Shoppln~ Center and a pound of South American cocaine seized . in a Tustin raid. Narcotics Detective Sgt. Carl Or:::ed 7 Coasl Weathe r Clear through Saturday. but with cooling along the coast. Highs near 80 on the coast, lows to about65. I NSIDE TODAY There's more to choirs than }wt lilting on them. Today's Weekende r v iews thi1 household object . cu . art . and $CUlplure. Index . , CM Alt Al •• . ., ., .. ,. Cl c .. Al •• Cl•I Vidano said it was pure coin- cidence the two major drug ar- rest cases occurred at the same time. about 1 p.m . Thursday. No resistance was encountered m either drug arrest situation. The heroin haul, which in· vestigators say involved three prevlous purchases from the same suspects, all analyzed and confirmed as Mexican heroin, was seized at Main Street and Beach Boulevard. "The streel value of what we got w9uld be about $400,000," Sgt. Vidal\<> said. · Suspects in that case were iden· lilied as Joe Dell Holland. 35, or 3513 Boyer Ave .. Santa Ana, and William "Willie" Ralph Jef· ferson, 27, of 3222 S. Main St.. San- ta Ana. Holland was arrested on 'I\ pre- viously-issued warrant carrying $50,000 bail, while Jefferson was held in lieu of $5,000 bail. Both are charged with sales of heroin. Police said the heroin was packaged in plastic saMwich baggies. A separate three-month in· ve s tigation led t o lhe simultaneous arrest of three men at a . motel on First Street In Tustin, where officers alle~edJy purchased $50,000 worth of co. Caine • The pound or stimulant drug from tbe South American coca pJant was seized after alleged ne10Uation1 with suspects· Donald Anthony Urban, 28, Leo Godinez Medina, 28, both of Tustin, and Jerry Bob Beasley, ~of SUverado Can.yon. .. . Couple Mtirdered In· ·Bedroo1n of Ho1ne Look Libel Case Former Husband Sought AliOto, J11rors In Deadlock By ARTHUR Jl. VINSEL SAN r RANClSCO CAP> - Former Ma yor J oseph Alioto's $12.5 million libel suit against Look Magazine ended in a third mistrial today after jurors re· ported a 5·1 deadlock in favor of Alioto. T.he jurors had declared a de· adlock Thursday. but were or- dered by the judge lo try again. After" about an hour of de- liberation this morning, they sent U.S. District Court Judge Russell Smith a note saying "Further de- liberation would yield no further results." J udge Smith, of Missoula. Mont., said one juror believed lhal there was insufficient f'vidence provided by either side to prove the case. The sole issue before the panel 1s whether the 1969 Look article alleging Alioto was "enmeshed in a web of alliance with the Ma fi a" was published with malice. The magazine is now de- funct. Alioto was not present. At· UC Irvine's 'Epidemic' Now Waning UC Irvine health officials say a flu-like episode which hit 57 stu- dents on campus this week, ap- pears lo be waning. And It doesn 'l appear to be the so-called swine flu, or food poisoning, according to Dr. Gerald B. Sinykin. director of the Student Health Center, which began treating sick s tudents Tuesday. The center treated 57 students, most residents or Mesa Court on. campus. for flu symptoms. The victims complained of vomiting, headaches and diarrhea. Health officials today discount- ed food poisoning as cause of the Illnesses, s aying they in- terviewed ailing students,. and many not affected by the illness. Officials are still wai\ing for results of cultures taken from the ailing students . Results are ex- pected M o nd ay, a UCl s pokesman said today. Fire Injures Irvine Youth A 16-year-<>ld Irvine youth suf- fered first and second degree bums io a kitchen grease blue Thursday evening that caused $1,0SO damage lo a home, Orange County Firemen said today. Sean Timoney, 5022 Barkwood Ave., was treated at a hospital ror bums to the hand and fingers, firemen said. The blaae occuft'ed a1 the ~ager tried to carry a pan of nam1n1 1rease outside. firemen Hid, but Ute create 9pilled. The blue erupted when the pan waa dropped t.o the noor. . Firemen said the nre was out by the tlme they urived, and dam11e was collfined t.o lhe kitchen noor aru. torney Lawrence Alioto said he would request a new triaJ on behalf of his father. The first trial ended with a hung jury. In the second, jurors agreed parts of the stoey were false and defamatory, but dead- locked on the malice issue. Of llte Oolly 1"11111 Slaff A Huntington Beach woman and her new husband were shot to death in t heir upstairs bedroom Thursday night and her ex-husband is being sought in the slaying. An appeals court reversed dis· missal of the suit by Judge Smith and.ordered a retrialont.l}eques· ~ tion OfmaUce only. WANTED IN SLAYINGS Wllll•m Gene Campbefl Police identified the suspect as William Gene Campbell, 48, an ex-convict who they described as armed and extr e mely d~aerous. Investigators identified the victims as Mrs . Beverly Campbell Howell, J9, and Verne Howell. 42, who lived at 178'7 beard Lane, Huntington Beach. After deliberating Thursday, the jurors sent· a question to the (See ALIOTO, Pa1e AZ) Semester System Vqted In at UCI Both died of muklple gunshot wounds fired from a .38 caliber revolver . Homicide detective Jack Welsh said Howell was shot io the back. Mrs. JloweU Wai shot in the head and arm. • • Huntington Beach detectives said su s pec~ Campbell is believed to be driving a 1969 Pon- tiac GTO, dark brown, with license plate 562 EQP. He is on parole from a five-year to life sentence for armed robbery and is also wanted on a warrant charging him with burglary. By a 16 to 15 vote the Irvine Division or the University of California Academic Sena).e ap· proved a recommendation that the Irvine campus begin operat- ing under a semester system. The Irvine Divison, made up of a representative . group of UCI faculty members. voled in favor o( the semester system by a one- ballot margin. UCI has been un. der the quarter system since the college was founded inl96S. The governing group or the Irvine Division will meet Nov. 17 lo discuss the vote and a statewide meeting of the UC Academic Senate will meet Dec. 7 to make a decision on a California switchover. Arguments for retaining the quarter system were presented by students, who said the quarter policy promotes a fast classroom pace better calendar breaks. Advocates or the semester system claim there is more fa cuJ. ty and student contact hours per year, the registration system would be reduced to twice a year instead or three times, and the majority of stale universities and community colleges are on the semester system. Howell was a pipefitter, ap- parently currently unemployed, and Mrs. Howell worked at Don Jose's, a Huntington Beach Mex- ican restaurant, Detective Welsh said. Anierican ·Drivers Set Gas Use Mark Patrolman Steve Dutton was. dispatched to the two-story Mex- ican adobe-style structure near Talbert Avenue and Newland Street in central Huntington Beach aft e r a 10: 14 p .m . telephone call to police. "Someone j ust s hot my mother ... ! " a hysterical young woman screamed into the re- ceiver. The dispatcher noted down al that moment that a car's squeal- ing tires could be heard in the background and officers believe it was Campbell escaping. WA SHINGTON (AP) - Despite continuing warnings of dwindling energy resources, American motorist.a are setting records in using gasoline. The ·Federal Highway Ad- ministration said Thursday thal the gasoline cons umption rate this year will be greater than any in history. The agency estimated that motor fuel consumption would total 118.8 . billion gallons this year, including 115 billion for highway travel. It said the nation would use 4.4 billion gallons more motor fuel this year than in 1973, when the previous record was set. As pleas for conservation go unheeded. the agency said, the increased usage apparently com- es not only from more bl&hway driving but also hi&her speeds. Although it. did not lake a national average, the Highway Administration said highway speeds are increasing based on a sampling or states. Gasoline consumption is in- creasing at a rate o( 5.7 perdeot, comparable to wbatit was before the Arab oil embareo d um and mor• than twice the 2.5 perce6t inc.-use recorded in 1975. The rovernment hoped to keep • .,.. nual conaumption increases t.o Je11 lban a t.o ' percent. CUrrent llUC)' projectJom are buecl on state reportl of motor tuel comumpUon and on clll'ftDt trend•, motor ruet product.loo ... • ... figures and other factors. Supporting its claim that highway speeds are on the rise, the agency said, tor example, the average speed of free-flowing tratfk meas ured on highways with a 55 mil~ per hour speed limit in Texas was 58.4 miles per hour for the quarter that ended • <See OAS USE, Page AZ> Detectives today were begin· ning what appeared to be a com- plicated task of unraveling the tangled marital relations and simmering emotions that ap- parently exploded In a bloodbath . Police said Campbell and hi!f- wife recently separated and her: (See 2 KILLED, Page A.2) Godly Victory? Thief Finth Jail at Church GRANADA HILLS (AP> -A knife.wielding would-be bandit has learned the biblical lesson 'Thou Shalt Not Stea)" the hard way after a Catholic priest. wrestled him into submission at a ehurch. Father Peter O'Sumvan, 66-year·old parish· priest at St. John the Baptist LaSalle Church, tt>Jd police he was awakened at the church Thursday by a man holding a knife to his throat and demanding money. Father O~SuJUvan said he J{ave the man $47 from his pocket, but t~erobber ordered him to open the rec· tory sale. The priest did, and handed over another $647. Police said Father O'SUlllvan caught the 20-year- old assailant off guard, Jumped him and wrestled him '\mtll police arrived. .. We're really proud ot Father O'Sullivan,'' a police spokesman said. ..He really showed some spunk. He's great." } r.; Friday. November 5. 1976 Peut 'Nat Vital : Margin Enough To Suit Carter 1.cartft9 'Burt' I - California's Assembly speaker, Leo McCarthy CD· San Francisco) says that Preside nt-e lect J immy Carter hurt himself in the state by not allowing Califor- nians to run his campaign herE>. 1- By WALTER R. MEABS ... ~ 5-1•1 c.,,._......, WASHING TON -It only takes a word lo describe Jimmy Carter's mandate for the pre- sidency: Enough. He is the president-elect; he will be the president; and if margin of victory is much noted now, it will not be long remem- bered. When he swears the oath or of- fice Jan. 20, not many people will remember -or care -how many votes put him there .. When he goes to th e Democratic Congress with his agenda for chang·e, it will be as president, testing his strength in office, and the margin that put him there will be of little conse- quence. Antlwny Appointed To Just-won Seat Orange County Supervisor- elect Philip Anthony was ap- pointed by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Thursday to fill former supervisor R obert Battin's unex- p ired term. I Anthony's appointment means 1 he'll sit on the Board of Supervisors about six weeks before his newly won t erm begins in J anuary. Battin's First District seat was vacated last August when the former supervisor was sentenced following his conviction of using COUl)lY paid employes in a 1974 political campaign. Drive-in Plwto , Slwp Rapist ·Strikes Again I SARATOGA (AP) -Police said today that a young m an they're calling the "photo shop rapist" struck agctin Thursday night, assaulting a clerk in a local women's clothing store. I The assailant is believed responsible for at least fi ve at- tacks the past month, and three • of his victims were employes of drive-in photo stands. according to San ta Clara Sheriffs Lt. Frank Gonthier. Most of the women were forced to accompany the man to motels where they were assaulted, he said The latest attpcVoccurred at a store in the i>?a'~~ dcl Robles Shopping Center, police said. i After surveying the premises. the young man pulled a small pistol and forced his victim to the rear of the store. I Similar attacks have occurred in San J os<'. Milpitas and Los Altos, the police said. Teamsters Pact Invalid? Both Anthony and his general election opponent, Santa Ana City Councilman Harry Yamamoto, said an apPQintmentshouJd not be made un Ulthe election decision. That done, Governor Brown wasted no lime notifying the win- ner of his appointment. Frmt1 Page Al 2 KILLED .. • second divorced. husband, the slain male victim, returned from Saudi Arabia. He was apparently employed there as a pipefitter for the Fluor Con>or ation. Still another ex-husband who also works for Fluor Corporation in Saudi Arabia was being cnn- tacted by telegram today lo in· Corm him of his former wife's murder, police said. Detective Welsh sctid it was not immediately determined when Mrs. HoweJI and Campbell met, married and sepa rated, leading lo confrontations involving the second and third husband. •·They have had a few beefs, but not too recently," Police Communications Supervisor Sam Marberry said Thursday night when contacted shortly after the murders.were rep0rteCI. Detective Welsh said Camobell was recently fired from his job with El Don Liquors, which has two outlets, one at 8462 In-·. dianapolis Avenue near t he restaurant where Mrs. Howell was employed. Campbell was recently dis· charged following a door-pry burglary of the lndia.napolis Avenue liquor store and Detec- tive Welsh revealed today a war-• rant had been issued for his ar- rest in connection with that break·in. Detectives assigned to the case said today they have no idea where Campbell might attempt to go into hiding, knowing he would be the prime suspect in the double murder. "That's what we're trying to run down now," sctid Detective Welsh. lie and Detective Phil Nolen were expected to question Diane ~Schroeder. 23. rep0rtedly Mrs. r NEWS :tJvALYSI S Carter 's goals will be gained or lost, his presidency will succeed or fail, on the basis of what hap- pens in the future, not because of his narrow margin over Presi- dent Ford. "Although I would have pre· !erred a unanimous vote on Tues- day, I think that the mandate was broad-based and certainly ade- quate," Carter said Thursday night. . Carter won with 291 electoral votes, 27 more than the minimum needed to win. He gained 51 per- cent of the popular vote, to Ford's 48 percent. His electoral college count was the lowest of a ny winner in 60 years, even though the electoral college has enlarged in that time. But three of the last five presi· dents won with less than half the popular vote, and Gerald Ford came to the White House with no votes at all. Harry S Truman was elected in 1948 with 49'.6 percent of the popular vote and 303 electoral votes. John F. Kennedy won in 1960 with 49.7 percent and 303 WAGE-PRICE CONTROL UNLIKELY: HELLER-A12 RACE WON, CARTER'S RELAXED -A4 electoral votes. Richard M . Nix- on was elected in 1968 with 43.4 percent and 301 electoral votes. Their reputations and their roles in history, good and ill, are based on what they did in the While House. not on the size of the margins that put them there. Landslides can be useful. Lyn· don B. Johnson pushed his Great Soci!?tY social programs to enact- ment after · .J rouncing ~jlrry Goldwater in 1~64. He did it as a Democrat_ic pre- sident with a heavily Democratic Congress. but two years later, Republicans made a con - gressional comeback. And within four years" with the war in Viet- ·nam escalating, Johnson was in political trouble so deep that he quit the campaign for renomina- tion. It was during the term he won by minority vote that Nixon opened U S. contract with China and went to P eking himself. Jle didn't last the term he won by landslide in 1972 , resigning rather than face likely impeach- ment over Watergate. Jobless Rate 'Still Rising WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation 's unemploy- ment rate rose from 7.8 percent to 7 .9 percent in October, the government reported today, providing · fres h e'v idence that the economic slowdown Is con- tinuing. (Related story, A3) . • J ............ VIEW OF CAMARILLO STATE HOSPITAL WHERE PATIENTS' DEATHS ARE BEING PROBED Grand Jury Inquiry Scheduled After lnveatlg•tlon by Citizens Group Hospital Abuses Cited -~ Patients Recount Mental Ward Treatment VENTURA (AP) -"They strapped my bands behind my back a nd strapped me on my stom:a.ch. I had to lay that way all night. .. "They gave me a shot which hurt the back of my skull ... 1 banged my head on the wall because it hurt so bad. The doc- tor came next morning and sctid I was imagining the pain." This statement from a patient at one or California's 11 state mental hospitals was recorded by one of severa l citizens' groups looking into alleged abuses at the hospitals. ' Scores of similar cases have bt:en reported -and a few suc- cessfully prosecuted. Last month a Camarillo State Hospital ps,ychiatric technician was arrested after a witness al- legedly saw her beat a female pa- tient with a fly swatter and an ice tray, then loop a towel around her neck and begin choking her. A registered nurse who works at Camarillo told the Associated Ptess that "choking out " -us- ing a strangle hold to r~nder a pa- tient unconscious -has been often.used to quiet rebellious pa- tients. Beatings, verbal abuse, lying patients to beds with painfully tight restraints, sexual advances to and rapes of mentally dis- turbed patients -all these have b een r eporte d by vario us sources. Next week , the Ventura County Grand Jury will be presented FraaePageAl GAS USE ••• J une 30; California, an averaege of 54.8 miles per hour: Maryland, 54.5 per m iles per hour; Indiana, 56.8 mile s per hour; and Virginia, 51.4 miles per hour. The lop figure was reported by Connecticut -60.8 miles per . hour -or five-tenths of a mile per hour faster than the 1973 na- with cases of questionable deaths of patients at Camarillo, a nd finally allegations of brutal treat- ment may be substantiated or found groundless. In any case, the public sessions will likely throw a harsh spotlight on staffing problems and the uncertain future facing California's mental hospital system and its 15,000 patients. · The probe is tu determine if criminal negligence -or worse -was involved in deaths from strangulation. drug overdoses, drownings and other causes the past four years. H indictments· are returned, says A ssembl yman K e n McDonald of Ojai, "it will be an indktment not so much of in- dividuals but of the system and the LeJ!iSlature for not doing somethmg about this situation.'' McDonald said he has heard about poor conditions at the hospital for 16 years. The h e arings, which authorities say may defll with "as many as 75 deaths," will be held in open court under a seldom-used provision in law. "We hope that the proceedings will be therapeutic" in improv- ing conditions at state hospitals , said Asst. Dist. Atty. Michael Bradbury of Ventura County. Carried out over the past year, the district attorney's probe was revealed last month at a time when a series of four unexplained deaths at Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk led to the scheduling of coroners' inquests. Prompted by news stories last mdhth about the Ventura County death probe, the Health Depart- ment recently sent investigators of its own to various hopsitals. They a lready reported that about one in every 12 deaths stu died involved some ir· regularity. records, perhaps to cover up pa· tient abuse. All of these groups began issu· ing state'ments of concern or con- demnation after the first ques- tionabl e d e ath this year at Metropolitan. Mark Holcomb, a 19-year -old Garden Grove resi- dent, was found dead in his hospital bed June 19. The apparent cause of death was said lo be choking on his own vomit, but an autopsy examina· - tion showed Holcomb had suf- fered bruises and cuts on his face and neck. His case is still under investigation by a district at- torney's office. In the Camarillo deaths . authorities have not given details· of specific cases. But the Oxnard Press-Courier reported that a check through coroners• records beginning in 1973 turned up at least three vie· tims who died of strangulation - two of them reportedly while be- ing restrained by staff members; a couple of drug reaction deaths and some 10 patients who died choking on food -although there is s u p p osed to b e close supervision during.meals. From Page Al ALIOTO ••• judge, asking: "With regard to the authors' state of mind, does a 50-50 chance of falsity constitute a r eckless disregard of the t.rtJth? .. Judge Smith replied that he doubted he could put a percen- tage figure on falsity. Rather than using by percentages, he said, he "would be governed by motivation, depth of interest in the matter. awareness of the whole picture and the general balance of the whole article." DELANO (APl -Precedent· setting hearings are under way in an effort by the s tate Agricultural Labor Relations Board to dece rtify the Teamsters Uni on because or alleged violence I The hearings -the first since the defeat of Prop. 14, the con· trovcrsial farm labor initiative Howell's daughter by her first husband. Police clamped a tight patrol check on the residence of both Ms. Schroeder and her fiance about 2 .15 a.m today, w~'° fears arose that their lives might be in danger. The unemployment rate is one economic indicator President-elect Jimmy Carter is watching as he considers whether to pro- pose a tax cut after taking oCfice in January. ' tional average. Raymond Procunier, installed recently as a Health Department troubleshooter by G<>v. Brown, said the investigators were also finding "gross problems" includ- ing a drug r!ng and alteration of But he said if they wanted to use the 50-50 percentage on awareness of fals ity, "then you are instructed this could con· stitute reckless disregard of the truth." <ire looking into charges that the Teamsters used violence in an attempt to force workers to strike against the Zanimovich. Farms in Delano. If the allegations are upheld, the Teamsters could be de- certified as bargaining agent for the farm's workers and a new un- ion election could be ordered. The Teamsters have denied the charges. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT tfll1l()f'attot C.0.'1 ().Ally Pll~_ wltt1Wf'lit~h1 tf)m b"'f<tlMN•*°' Pf~\\ l\OUotiYwod01t'-~A,_et C0.~1 Pu04•\h1nQ (omp,.ny S.-~r••t ~it~.,. pvrMl\h•<I Mof'd•y U"Qf.19" F'kilY fOf" '°''• MhA .... ~rt fhKh, M\tfttl,...on &itkt\IF~· L~;!."~'.'!·,.;s;;~Co~~~~,,~~r=•~ l•tw' 4\ tJ1,1t.11~(t S.thir-04~ ~ Suft<My\ TN-or1n<:ID•I ~bU,folirtq Ol1U'lt ;, •t JlO W.\t OA'f ~UHi, CO\tAI ~u. C•llfornla ~)t.. hl>fftN.-PrHIOttU •Ad P11811~ J•(-• e ... i.v VI<• l'r••IOe~I •nd 0.-•1 Mii"'"<!"• Tll-••IC....-11 Eollor ~ .•. ,.. ............ ~ft•41"9 Edilor °'"'"II, L-Ale.._.. ... Moo AHOl•ftl MllMOlnQ Eelil<r• OfflcH Co\t•~u: llllW•st 9'1VSl"'l't U911f>t •ucn: 1•'4 G••MI'"\''"' H=:c~~~~~!~·;:,:~~P'!':"ll~d •t S•n O•eoo Fr...,.•y Teteptlon• (714)~ Ctantned AdvertlllftO M2.se7a Soddltl>A<k V1lltV -Oftl<• 611 .. 310 r,...m S." Ctt-495-ff)O ~;;'f: :!~°:.:':?: •. ~!tr=~:= ,,, • .,., 6' •d.,..,, ... "'."" ,.,,.,,. ~y b• nproduc•d wltftOY\ ,,..,,., ..-i mlnltf\ ot (91tY<IQll\9""'0f. t.~1::',,.~~·."s:::! ~?;.1'!!''b:t ~~::, ~·:, :n!:~~,b~ ;~~.~ mon,I'\,,; mttltuy c Detective Welsh sctid he was also attempting to contact Campbell's former parole officer regarding circumsta.rl(!es of his previous a rrests and conviction involving armed robbery and escape. The murder s uspect served prison time on a five· years-lo-life sentence before his release in- vestigators said. ' Ironically, detectives begin· ning their investigation a t the scene early today sctid it is un· derstood Campbell was arrested just recently in Westminster, where he reportedly lived. Onofre Beach Work Planned -Work js expected to begin within the next two weeks on campsite and sanitary improve- ments a t San Onofre State Beach. The state park will re· main open d~ring the IO.month job. Louetto Construction Com· pany of Escondido won the $897,000 state Parks and Recreation Department con- tract. Work will include installation or a major water li ne, septic tanks, 16 comfort stations, im- provement or 240 campsites, landscaping and pavin&, and building of a parking lot lo ac- commodate 650 can. The number of person s unemployed in October was 7.6 million. the most since 7.7 million were out of work in December. Sextuplets Born; 2Di~ NAPLES, Italy CAP) -A Neapolitan mother gave birth to sextuplets -four girls and two boys -but two of the girls died .shortly after birth, hospital of- ficials said today. The moth e r, P asqua lina Chianese, was reported in good condition at a city hospital. The surviving infants were being kept in an incubator jlnd their condi- tion was not disclosed. According to the Guinness Book of Records, only some two dozen cases of sextuplets have been re- ported throughout the world since 1900. • Instruments Taken From College Wirq§ Muslc~I instruments valued at .$1,552 have been stolen from the music wing of Saddleback · College in Mission Viejo, Orange County sheriff's officers sctid. Deputies said intruders who entered by unknown means took an organ, a tuner and a piano pedal extension from the storage room at the muslc building. 28000 Marguerite Parkway. It's What's Out Back That Counts! ( Our store is like an iceberg! No -we're not chilly to deal with -it's that you only see one tenth of our store from the front. People visiting us for the first time are flabbergasted when the spacio u s interior unfolds before them. The huge showroom has thousands of samples. (Customers tell us we have the largest sele~tion they have seen .) Our warehouse contains an inve ntory of infinite variety. Hundreds of remnants inhabit a 25x50 remnant room. Add offices, a spacious drapery room. plenty of parking, pleasant people, and you'll have the "Big .. Picture" of our successful operation! 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 646·4838 -646· 3SS I I Friday's Cloaing Pricea NYSE COMPOSI'I'E TRANSACTIONS o.i.ta1i-i..c._.,_, ... u._y.,,.__,t."-1n<.~•w.-O..,orlt9lt-c1"'1tt~llJ~" e.a<llenfn---lty llw N.Ci..aJ Aa~l<oC .... of $«wll,., Otelen-tftlCllWC Frld1y, November 5, t976 . l/N DAIL y PILOT A J' 1976 Ta% Late Changes Enter Winner's Circle BJ ""VIA POaTEa (La.It m ci Sn-t.•) Winners or more than $1,000 lo horse races, sweepstakes, lotteries and the llke now may flnd that 20 pu. eent or their winnings wUl be wilbbeld and twned ovn dlrectly to the tRS:"'3'hls wlll be almUar to tho w-.y employers withhold ln· come tax from salaries, except that the amount withheld from 1ambling winnings will be a flat 20 percent rate. Here are the winnings from which the 1976 Tax Money's Worth Reform Act requJres 20 percent wilbholdlng by the payor starting .Jan. 3, urn: -More than $1,000 received from a wager ln • swee~takes, wagerin1 pool or lottery <except state lot- teries). This \ncludes all pari-mutuel betting pools, includ- ing on-and off-track racing pools, similar types of betting pools -More than $5,000 from state·conducted lotteries. This does n't apply to st.ate-conducted sweepstakes and wagering pools. These are subject to withholding on winnings of mor,e than Sl,000. -MOllE THAN $1, ... RECEIVED from any other wagering transaction tf the odds are al least 300 lo 1 or bighe\:-_ Winnings rrom bingo. keno and slot machines are ex-: empt from the withholding. The amount subject to withholding is based on the net pl"OCeeds less the cpst of the ticket, taking into account all tickets for identicaf wagers. For instance, if a person places one $100 bet and two $50 bets on a single horse to win a single racetrack event, the track is supposed to total the winnings from all three tickets and subtract the cost of the three tickets to see whether winnings top the $1,000 subject to withholding by the track. WHE N A WINNE& IS SUBJECT TO wlthholdlni, the payor will requit~ him to furru~h a Jlatement -under penalties of perjury -giving his name, address, taxpayer identification nun> ber and similar data for anyone enUUed to sharej n the winnings. Those who participate in wagers should retain their los· bag tickets or other evidence of losing wagers, for gambling l~ses may completely offset winnings for the year. Winners of one or more wagers subject to the 20 percent withholding wlU already have paid the tax. To offset it, they must list the total losing wagers as an itemized deduction oo their tax returns and claim the 20 percent gambling withholding as a credit against tax for the year. IN ANOTH ER AREA, PROFESSIONALS or bu!tiness people attending professional or business-related conven- tions will be subject to new deduction limits on altending foreign conventions after Dec. 31, 1976. First, the new law allows certain specified deductions for attending no more than two foreign conventions dunng a taxable year. For instance, deductible transportation ex- penses cannot exceed coach or economy air fore; deducti- ble subsistence expenses cannot exceed the perd1em al- lowance for U.S. government cmployes al the convenlton site, etc. Second , deductions are barred from attendance at more than two allowable foreign conventions. "Foreign" means a convention, seminar or similar meeting held outside the United States, its possessions and the Paclfic Trust Ter- ritories. TillRD, THOSE WHO TAKE such deductions must at- tach a kind or "report card" to their tax r eturns so the IRS can check compliance with the requirements. This will con- sist of a signed statement that lists the total days of the trip, hours spent at scheduled business activities each day, pro· gram of scheduled business activities, etc. Blue Chips Plummet In Big Dow Loss NEW YORK CAP) -The stock market fell sharply to- day, with selling pressure concentrated on some big-name blue chips: Trading was moderately active. The Dow Jones average or 30 industrial stocks was down 17 37 points to943.07. Losers outnumber«! gainers by about an 8-5 margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. Newton D. Ziner at E. F. Hutton 4' Co. said it looked as though some investing inatilutlons bad grown uneasy as they tried to calcuJate the prospective impact or the ad- ministration of President-elect Carter on the market. DmD.lone•A .,e,..9f!• Ntw Yot~IAPI Fl"•' Dow"°"" •nr•qu STOCK$ OD<!" HIQll Low 0-0'9 30 11\d '5• " '61.., •4q 1' 'f6i 01-11.31 10 Tr" 216 !? 111 64 1U II 1h U-I jf U Utl t9 ·~ 'It 11 '1 14 'I 00-0 42 .S St-)(M .i )Cl& 14 ,.. 1' 300 II-4 01 • ...,~ 1~76.600 Tr•" OS IOO Ulll\ ll!I 'llO 6S St IC • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • 2,714 JOO Anteriean Leader• NEW vo"•ic 14P)· Stiff •• om. llf'lc• -""' CllM>OI Of ll>t te" ""°" .oc;tl .. A,.,...ICtft ~toe:-&KCl>tft .. I-. StO«!lu '" Tiie Spotllgltt NEW VOlllC IAP). Slits, 4 11.m 0<lc. -Ml Ci>aft(I• Of Ill• ClllH" "'°'' <H• u.. N..., Yof~ Sloe:-E11~ "'11es. l•edlft(I nAllon•lly •' mort '"'" l t tu•co '"c . . . . 112 XIII 76 tit Wh4tt•ttr t'H «JO &•~, • • • "'"' Home 710 1!11 JI t. C.0..1 OI•. • 1)1,61)1) )I" t"1 Tt0tr tnl .... •• • • • • IM,.00 10\'t-.... Dow 0t . . .. • . IH «JO 40 -IV> GI!" Moton • • , • I') 600 I0~-1 StOOit CAI 1''.J,JOD ;w -1\.\ Tr~.,.lt<t .. ., , ,., 000 lf\11-1~ G<ltl Oii • • • • .. .. 18,,300 16'.\ v. Flll'owl.I .... .,. 111.acl 14'" • Vo "'°''Co .. . . 181,200 77\11~~ !1\1 KO<IA-.. •• • • 111400 17~"1 '"' .,.......... • .... 111,.00 •s~ w. llCA • .. ........... 111,IOO 11-.-~ :;=,.~·~~·!~:.. 146,100 ~ ~. GCB•t Pel....... 111.:IOO 41/H V. t----------------Cdlllh 00 .. .. • '9.IOll s.v. • ,,. AlllKJ Al rt , ... , • • • • JJ 100 J.\j,-•-11 Ot.tmp Mo..... . .• .. too 3'4-.... see s eo.,r . • . • .. • ..o 200 11•4-1 Au•tr•t Oii • • • .. .. •• )t JOO IA"-• ..,, POE e 160C.. • • • • n ,100 n v.-"'° t<11"' t...i • • • M.000 1Jl<-s. 0.l•MO<I •• • • .. •• • ll,100 II~~. What St~lu·Dld NEW YOAI( (APt Adv Ml< el O.Cll .... V"<ht,..,.d TOl&t I\\~ ,...., .. ,. lllqll~ New ltl& low> A J 4 DAIL V PILOT Friday. November 5. 1978 4x8SHEET ~,, SOLID CORE PLYWOOD 790 3x3x7FT. CEDAR FENCE POSTS 50! srr. REDWOOD GRAPESTAKES 20! TRANSLUCENT . VINYL . . . I •• WINDOW SHADES .. Cul lo ai.&e free to 36" wide 90c PEACOCK SPRAY PAINT t Lots of Colors 40~AN I l f 9'xl2' DROP CLOTH 9 ~. IO'x2S' HEAVY DUTY PLASTIC TARP 175 COOL CUSHION SEATS Choice of Styles 75c DASHBOARD THERMOMETER S0!.150 ~~ -r.-~~~ A1· ax ~ i;,. '=6'1 r.'IP \ po~; .. BA rf , t -,' 11 ( j A nw•w:.ru;, TH \\ l · HARDWARE . ~ CDD f 4.) Antique ' ~ ) 'l SUver F'tniah Garment Hook ~£-0:~. 1.~5 '~~ AahTr?Y ·~· 2.70 ~ .a> Single tr'°'' ~'\....:. ..'''~~ Switch Plate .I 90c R~aaed " Double Tiaaue Holder Switch Plate S.00 1..3S Tlaaue Holder Combination 4.00 Switch Plate StandinJJ ~Olah 1 ..3S 2 .60 18" Towel Bar Wall Soap Dlah' 4 .00 1 .70 U " Towel Bar Tooth Bnuh and 4.AO Tumbler HoldeT Towel Rlng 1.70 2 .60 ,_,~ ........... . SHORTY'S ONCE-ONLY OVERSTOCK AND Remember when you had to throw a garage .ale to get.rid of a lot of thing• you had no room for? lt Jdlled you to Mil it ao cheap. rl.f ht? That'• where we are. $o dOA'ti!E ml1ty eyea. march right in and acne. Nobody felt eorry for you wbea yoo bad to sit•• ~ay that gteat ead for Sl.00. We'll nm mor. Cl~Cff aa we find ahaff that • °""tock-4-but ~u WOil t find th1a lluff eM prtc ... eo don't mH• arowwL ~• ln early. ACADEMY TUB ENCLOSURES # 180T Temt'ered GlaaaTub' Encloaure 2545 #2001' Better 3265 Tempered GlaH Tub Encl awe ...• #300TBeat Tempered Glaaa Tld> Enclosure 34•s Either Swan Dealgn or Plain •••••• #400T Gold 34•s Tempered Glaaa Tub Encloawe ... •• WISPERCOOL GALVANIZED TUllBINE VENT 1900 G.E.LAMP SOCKET DIMMER Replaces Exlatlng Socket ,soc 20 ·FT, GREEN EXTENSION \1 ~CORD . ~ ' ·soc \ .. 8Fr. TWO TUBE FLUORESCENT FIXTURE 9~Erua ALL DECORATIVE CEILING LAMPS ~OFF REDWOOD TABLE SETS 6 Ft. With 2 Bencbea ....... 1 9 00 '8" With 2 Benchea, 2900 Square or Round .••.••••.• 6FT.x 15 Fi. BAMBOO FENCE 3tc: 6 FT. x 15 Fi'. REED FENCE 7tc: PLANT PRIDE PLANf PRODUCTS TWO FOR THE PRICE OF ONE CHEINCO PLANT WATERING BOTTLE soc 10 LBS. CHARCOAL BRIQUETS 90c KELLEY GARDEN WHEEL BARROW 900 DICHONDRA SEED 1 :.o DEFEC'l'IVE LAWNMOWERS AND TILLERS YouFix'em STAINED GLASS PANELS 2'x4' 9oc 2'x6' 1 ·35 ,. -.-.., :---~ n Tf nn:ntf REDWOOD ,.~ [ ) r: ~! aon ., CHAIR • . 1 :1 n ~t mrnn ., o; urr , .u t ~u n~1 9 00 l~ l1 ~rip~ Y.~. ~-~p~ GRANDOR BIFOLD DOOR SETS 24" 1 s.oo 30" 20.00 38" 25.00 Pad • Extra .. ., GAF FLOOR TILE Sure Stick or Plain a~ 15! BIGELOW CARPET CLEANER KIT 2so DOUBLE FAC~ TAPE 30!u JADE HARDBOARD PANELING , %"x4'x8' Finl Quality 3so. TEMCO FREESTANDING FIREPLACES Small 7500 Large 10000 C90KN' CROCKPOT 7so R ubbermaid SHELFUNER SOLID COLOR # 1603. # 1613 60C Roll PATTERNS # 1606. # 1618 95c Roll CORNING WARE SET 1 Qt.Sauce~ 1 ~ Qt. Saucepan. 2.1 ~ Qt. Pana with Conn. 5~ . WHILE STOCK LASTS Ad Good 'Tll Nov. 10 No RAlNCHECKS REORD~ i -- Litguna/South Coast EDITION VOL. 69, NO. 310, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1976 Afternoon N.Y. 'tot.tks TEN CEN Judge Moves Chowchilla Kidnap Trial I MADER A (AP) -The overturned by appeal. fendants were not present. July 15. seated until trials are completed brother Richard, 23, both of ChowchiUa mass ki<Ibaping trial The county where the trial will Hammerberg had to r ead Attorneys for three young San so prospective Jurors won't be Atherton -have p~ead~ inno- today was ordered moved out of be held will oot be known until slacks of newspaper a nd Francisco P eninsula men ac· prej udiced. centlo27countsofk.idnapmgand Madera County. Ham.rnerberg consults with the ma.gazine articlt;s. and radio. cused of the kidnapi..ogs argued The prosecullon opposed both ~8 or robbery involvin~ ~rsonal Superior Court Judge Jack L. ~dm1nistrative Office of Courts scnpts before deciding whether that 8 ch a nge of venue is motions a rguingthatthedefend· items ta~enfromlhev1ct.ims. Hammerberg also granted de· in San Francisco. to order the trial moved to a necessary because everyone in dants ca'n el a fair trial here and The victims were abducted ~ense motion~ to keep the grand .Hamm~rber~ said Uta~ office c~unty more metropolitan than this lightly populated Central the publi~ should know what from their bus while on their way Jury transc'r1pt sealed at least will provide a list of counties that th.is n~ral area . California county became emo· trans ired in the case rather home from summer school. They until a trial jury is sequestered. can hold the trial, and he will D~nng a hearing last month, tiooally involved.. than ~elaying on rumor and in· were driven around Ln two vans Both rulings had been expect· select one. or those. . . he view~ mo~e than ~ee hours . nuendo for several hours, then _were ed. and Hammerberg said he Hammerberg filed his rulings of telev1s1on film and videotape, The defense argued at another locked lo a moving van buned at granted the venue change to witll the Madera County Clerk all devoted to the bizarre case in bearing that the transcript of The defendants -Frederick a rock quarry near Livermore avoid any possibility that the this morning but tllere was no which 26 school children and grand jury proceedings that led N . Woods , 24, of Woodside: almost 100 miles northwest of case might be prejudiced and formal court hearing and the de· their bus driver were abducted to indictments should remain James Schoenfeld. 24, and his here. They'r e Cool I rc.1\ l!l, 4, .Jnd Wendy Fmncrn. 7. team up to douse their playmate. Cisco Rios. 6. with garden hose. The Costa \lesa ) oung:,tcrs resorted to this method of keeping cool .1~ Santa Ana condition drO\'e temperatures above 90 <lt'Vt·e-. Thursday throughout Southern California. \\ catherman 1s prcchcting more of the same for the wc•t·kPnd. Couple Murdered In Bedroolll of Hollle A pprov al Likely Teacher Unit OKs 6% Hike The five-member board of direc tors o f the Laguna Beach Unified Faculty Associa- tion ratified a new teachers con- tract today that raises salaries six percent. The board or education was ex· pected to approve the employ- ment agreement this afternoon in a special meeting at district headquarters. Kay East . Laguna Beach Unified Faculty /\ssociation pre· sident. said teachers won a good contract which, though it didn 't address a ll the concerns or teachers, laid the groundwork for further negotiation next year. Dr. Robert Sanchis, superin· tendent of schools. said he would recommend board approval or Ute pact . Each side, teachers and ad· (See 6% HIKE, Page A.2) WANTED IN SLAYINGS Wiiiiam Gene Campbell A vote of the Cull faculty, 148 teachers, will be taken Monday for approval. The procedure Is a formality. how~ver, according to association bylaws, the board of directors is empowered to accept the contract. Beginning teachers with no ex- perience will be paid $10,402 a year. Teachers with 18 years or more of experience will get $17,761 annually. Storer Easily Gets ·Cle01ente Cable OK Extra pay can be earned for college credits and degrees earned above the bachelor's degree, attendance at workshops, conferences and con- ventions and educational travel. the city council. No blackout wa s threatened to the company's 87 San Clemente customers. Storer got wh at it wanted. ·-Former Husband Sought By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of lfte Oally Piiot SIAlll A Huntington Beach woman and her new husband were s hot to death in their upstairs bedroom Thursd ay night and her ex-husband is being sought in the slaying. · Police identified the suspect as Wilbam Gene Campbell, 48, an ex-convict who they described as arme d and ex tremely dangerous. Investigators identified lhe victims as Mrs. Beverly• Campbell Howell, 39, and Verne Howell. 42, who lived at 17847 Beard Lane, Huntington Beach. Both dted of mulUple gunshot wounds fired from a .38 caliber revolver. Homicide detective Jack Welsh said Howell was shot in the back. Mrs. Howell was shot in the head and arm. Huntington Beach detectives s aid s u s pect Campbell Js bebeved to be driving a 1969 Pon· tiac GTO, dark brown, with <See Z KILLED, Page A2) Long-term substitute teachers, who were paid $45 a day -below par with regular staff -will get the same six percent raise, to $47.70. Teachers had initially asked for a 9.2 percent pay hike, at the beginning of negotiations in June. The school board's initial offer was four percent. A new franchise agreement with Storer Cable TV Inc. has been approv ed by the San Clemente City Council. in a hearing that contrasted marked· ly with those of the city's other cable franchiser. When TM Communications Company's franchise came up for renewal earlier this year, it precipitated months of stormy public hearings. TM wanted a rate increase and a contract structure for automatic rate in· creases. Suit Claims Laguna Liable in Fatality 1 Proj~ct Shortcut Killed The franchise was approved in September, but only after a day. long blackout of service to TM 's 7,000 customers and a fin al hear- ing jammed with tnunUng, jeer· ing residents who demanded the council give in to the company's demands. The city of Laguna Beach has been hit with a $250,000 claim al- leging the city has through its ac- tions permitted a hazard to exist by opposing improvement to Laguna Canyon Road. signed c urve where a high number or accidents occurred before. " . . the city of Laguna Beach hindered efforts to correct the d anierous condition b y straightening or conversion to a four-lane highway ... and creat· ed a reasonably foreseeable risk, substantial hazard and danger to traffic ... "the claim alleges. Wuncil R everses Arch Beach Park Action Arter hrst aoprovmg a set of actions to short cut envi ronmen- tal studies for Oro Park In Arch 1 Re:H•h lleaghls the Laguna Beach City Council reversed itself shortly before adJouming Thurs- ' day The council's reversal mean~ th<' park proJN't will have to go 1 through the city's entire environ- mental revi<'w program. a re· Oran~~ Coast L .r.L: - \\'eath er Clear through Saturdav, but with cooling along the coast. Highs nt>ar 8() on the roast. lows to u bout 6.5. l ~SIDE TODA~· There's more to chairs than ju~t Stltmg on them. Today's Weekender views th i s household object as art and sculpture. . I ndex · Al V ovr knlo A 11 ... tlnq •• L.M .. ,, At ~111...,.1• A& IJ G.,.••CMIWr IJ O t\\lllff 0 I 14 e.mlo cs Ctw\•wo•d C, O.•ll11tol1cu At l!dll.,.l•tP•.. A6 f'll'!lMt Alt U.e S ..... «... .. IMwrno "°" C4 "' cu AU A4 At .... 4U IJ Cl c ... .u ,,. Cll quirement which may delay its development for more than a year and end the po~sibility it could be funded by a $200,000 federal public works program. The Oro Park plans called for SC Approves New Road for Heavy Trucks The San Clemente City Council has taken steps to maintain pro- tection of neighborhood streets around the Shorecurrs Junior High School construction site from the pulverizing effect of heavy trucks. A new tease agreement for easement over an alternate dirt road access was approved with new owners of the Reeves Ranch property. However. as with Ute previous agreement, res idents along Camino San Clemente and Via Socom> will still have to put up With occasional heavy vehicles traveling down their streets. • Special permil5 will be issued during inclement weather or !or heavier trucks unable to negoUote the dirt road, to allow regular street access to the school site. The clt.y ls suing the Capistrano Unified School Dlatrlct for $100,000 to cover prtordamaces. ---.,;:o-~=-- construction of three tennis courts, a volleyball/basketball half court. other recreation areas. and rest rooms. • At one time, an artificial lake had been envisioned for the area, but It has been dropped from con- sideration. Jn its early discussions, the council agreed after sharp de- bate to find that there would be no adverse environmental im· pact and that the project was in conformance with the city's general plan. The ~ite for the project is a steep ca"hyon just off Oro Street. Construction of the park would have required significant filling of the canyon noor and Installa- tion of a pipe to accommodate water runoff. The first vole found Coltll · cilwoman Sally Bellerue dis- agreeing with the prevailing <See SHORTCUT, Page A2) San Juan Burglar. Fm;i Open Door Bureiars wbo entered via the unlocked front door carried off an electric organ and stereo equipment from a San Juan Caplstrano home. Orance County sheriff's or- flcers said the property, valued at $1,87$, was taken from the homo of Richard Wayne Bluler, 29, of 32243 Pueo Carollna, While he wu al work and bis wile was oavacaUon. TM got what it wanted. On the other hand, there was this week»s council hearing on Storer 's franchise. There was minimal comment from the council, and none from residents. Storer asked no rate increase (fees are S6 a month) and any future rate hikes will be pursued through normal application to F~it ·Man 'Repairs' TJI' -ToMexicO A Laguna Niguel woman who took her television set to a Laguna Beach fix-it man told police Thursday both her set and the man had repaired to Mexico. Lori Parker of Via Chico. La.runa Niftuel, Listed the loss as $750 lncludmg S60 she had left as a deposit on the set's repair at lbe shop on South Coast Highway. The victim said she had left the set at the shop in f:ebruary. had comtacted the fix-it man repeated· ly and finally, when she became ted up, we.at to the now·empty atoretorelrieve herTV. She aald sbe waa told the re. · oatrman had gone to Mexico UJt. Ing everyt.htng with him. PollcC) areinve1U1aun1. The claim stems from the death of David S. O'Connor in a July 17 accident. The council routinely denied the claim Wednesday and referred 1t lo the city's insurance carrier. The claim by O'Connor's sur- vivors alleged the accident oc- curred in a spot on Laguna Ca· nyon Road whi ch was in a dangerous cond1t1on. unHghted, msufficently marked. and hap· pened along dangerously de- * * :..* The claim names as well the state department of transporta- tion, <CALTRANS). ln addition to the $250,000, the claim seeks funeral expenses or $2,400 and ambulance and medical reimbursement of about $630. * * * CanyonRoad Radar, Improvements Eyed The Laguna Beach City Coun· cil will consider intense radar en· forcement along Laguna Canyon Road and creation of a multi· agency safety committee to forge short and long term improve- ments to the accident-plagued tlloroughfare CounC'll action Thursday com- es In the face of increasing com- munity demands for improve- ments in the twisting two-lane road. one of three accesses to lhe city Police Chief Jon Sparks told the council there have been lwo fatalities during the first nine months of this year within the city's portion or the road. However, estimates are that between five and six other people have been kilJed on the road as it puses through t.he county and ci- ty of lrYine. The Laauna Beach C\ty Cow>- cit has in the past officially op- posed widening or the road in the belief it would only bring more congestion into the city and· wouJd induce development. Chief Sparks declined to ad- dress widening, saying only that il it were expanded an "impact" could be expected. He proposed a daylight tralnc radar e nforcement u;iit, he added. The city already has one radar unit. He was directed to come back to the council with cost estimates for the additional enforcement. Councilman Jon Brand pro- posed formation ol the safety committee lo include h.imselt, and representatives from lhe county, the city or Irvine, lrv1ne Ranch, and the CalTrans. Chief Sparks said an average ol 25,000 vehicles use Laguna Ca- nyon road daJJy. as many as Pacilic Coast Highway. DAILY PILOT u se ~arter 'Hurt• C a l i forn ia 's Asse mbl y s peake r . L t>o McCarthy <D· San Fran c isco} s a ys t hat Prc s i d c nl-cl cct Ji mmy Carte r h url himself in the st ale by not a llowing Califor- nians lo run his campaign he re. Supervisor .Seat Filled . By Anthony Orange County Super visor- elec~ Philip Anthony was ap- poin ed by Gov. Edmund G. Bro n Thursda y to fill forme r supervisor Rt'bcrl Battin':. unex· . pi red term Anthony ·s appointment means he 'll s it on the Board or Super visors <.1 boul s ix wcek5 before his newly won term begins in J anuary. Battin 's i;irst District seat was vacated last Au~ust when the former supervisor was sentenced ·following his conv1ctwn of using county paid employcs in a 1974 political campaign. Eoth Anthony and h1!:> general election opponent. Santa Ana City Councilman Harry Yamamoto. s aid anap~intmcnt should not be mad<' until thc\.lct·t1on dec1s1on That dor.c , Governor Brown was ted no time notifying the win- ner of his appoint ment F ro• Page A I 6 o/o HIKE. • • m inistrator s . c omplimented e ach other for s mooth and pro- fessionally conducted contrat·t. talks. Among tl'acher concerns left unresolved by th<' contral't WJ~ the issue of dass '\Ile De~p1k ll'Jt•ht•r 1ns1!:>tc nee, stat('"' 1de <1' "'el I d~ in the J 1:-. trict, that l'las'> ~llC "'ould be paramount 1n tht.> nt>w conlracb, ::.11r, "'t'rl' ldt unchanJ?cd. ·reacht>rs secured. though. a statement or . intent" from the district tha l '\ludcnt·ll'acher ratio::. not 1ntre .ist• over rurrent le\ cb. Tt•acht.>rs 1111t1all~ proposed ahsulull' 'tudcnl lc..ichcr r atio of 25 1 Current r atios r ang1• from El Morro Elcmcnla ry'!I 24 1lo1. lo Ahsn Elt'nH•nt.in ·~ 2Y 59 lo I llmH ·H·r d 1-..t r1c•l 11ffit·1als say th1>M r .1t10~ rfo nol 1 cncct true n 111d1t1nn-.. and in<'IUdt-tcacht>r 's .11clt•s .111d M>lll t' -.1•1·rpt,1rial ,torr Dana Op~n Window 'Invite ' Burglar Guns. 'k t c•cp11 pm r nt a nc1 Jewelry hu\ t· ht't•n '\t<llcn from a Dana Point hnmt· b~ burJ.'llar~ who n•mo\ t•<I .1 'rrel'n and en tered lhc hou-,t• 'Id the· open win dO'A< OrnngC' <:n11 111 y 'hertWs uf ficE'r" st11d lhc lus~. vulu<'d 3t s:J,047. was reported by salesman Merl Dean Reichel, 33, of 33945 Calle I.a r r1m a \era. Officers said the home was ransacked while thC' vu·t1ms wl'rc in Las Veiias OAANOE COAST L '' DAILY PILOT ,-~" ,,_. '~ C_,,.,, n ' ly P11ot ""''f'l •l\•rf'I ~' ..,., h•~dl.,.,N••· p,.,.,, 1\f'VC>• J'Wlottl)yt~~·~ ,.,.,." "'"tM• ,II\.~ Cnmo•"• Y.°"'rMwt·t"""'~'" tiwOtl\f\•41 Mt\"d4Y ,.,.,N,qf'I lltttr)A• • ., CO'\M M-"1 ~4'Waott At•(" ttul"ltl,.M f;il>M'P\ J'.l'MI" t•l 1111 Y•H-" I• v•n.. , .. rttllf'~f II V•ll-• .. ...,, L40V""fi~4""' \ttytP\C 't A ·~""""'l·'""'"''_., '"°" ,, po...of, J\ .. J ,., ... ,.u •"•' ~d•• ,,.,. 01"11W1fUtl ('M1f\l1 "-·~J "'""' •• '"" ~ I OAi-. ,,, .... '°''• ..w,. (•ltrO'l"ll • ..,..,. .... ri H W ..... 9t, "'"''°""' MCI Pvbt•W' ,., ... c.--.. , V•<r Pn\•Ofnl •"4 ,_.,.,,. • .,. M.t~ 'f1itHIU \l( .. '11t E«HM fMMlt A MIM'WN• Me"•?'"''J ftf ,,., "-'"" l.ff• Ilic ... ,. I" N•ll A\\t\t•"I "'-"•••"41 (4htOt\. Laauna Beach~• ri ... c; ... t'l"--·'"s.e'"' ""''""" '"'"'"" p 0 11o ..... '101 OfllcH (O\t.&Mf>\• J.JOWt'' fhf \f,....f ti""11not9" hte" 1rtT\6"~f'I l'\t)W•v•rd S•ncU•NO v.1 .. y 1)101 l• P.r Rn.(1 •1 s.~ O••oo F ,.,... .... TelephOne (714)1142-4321 Cla .. lfled Ad••1111lng 142.5179 L•oun& Buell All Oepanment•: Telephone 494-MM r ..-.M \.A" ( lt,,_.Mt 49&>0830 C...Yffeff\t 1t7• O"•"o.-C'>4•t ""'l,..•"O (',,..,... ..,_, No M w\ ,,.,.., lllU'\I,... • ..._._ tlldU6f'1.tf "'•U•t 0" td¥"11U~UH\ fll•••I-. MI Y ~ "'fttHIWCff WHf'l•Wt UHtC't•I ..-rml"IOrt Of t...,,,..,._.., \+tof'd t14'0 •• ~,, ••• ••4• •• ~"· .... " 0 11terni• \Mb\r t let1t'I"' t\¥ t11ur1-. U lO meftl.,lt" .. ., M •lt •• \f ~fMJ' f'Ulif•ty ,...llMI""" •110mon1n•• ~tld;iy Nov&Mbt'r 5 1978 4Held In Twin BB Raids Huntington Beuch police cap· lured five suspected drug dealers and confiscated nearly a half. million dollars worth of narcotics in separ3te cases Thursday. The haul included 2.5 pounds of heroin purchased behind a coffee shop at the city's Five Points Shoppin~ Center and a pound of South American cocaine seized in a Tustin r aid. Narcotics Detective Sgt. Carl Vidano s aid it was pure com- ciden<.'<' the two major drug ar- rest cases occurred at the same time, about 1 p.m . Thursday. No resistance was encountered in either drug arr est situation. The h eroin haul, which in- vestigators say involved three previous purcb a ses Crom the same suspects, a ll analyzed and confirmed as Mexican heroin, was seized at Main Street and Beach Boulevard. "The street value of what we got would be about $t00,000," Sgt. Vidanosaid. · · Suspects in t hat case were iden·. tified as J oe Dell Holland, 35, or 3513 Boyer Ave., Santa Ana, and Willia m "Willie " Ralph Jef- ferson, 27, of 3222 S. Main St., San- ta Ana . Holland was ar rested on a pre· viously-issuetl warrant carrying $50,000 bail, while Jefferson was held in I ieu or $5,000 bail. Both are charged with sales of heroin. Police said the heroin w as packaged 1n plastic sandwich baggies. A sepa r ate three·month in- ves t ig at ion l e d t o t h e simultaneous arrest of three m en at a motel on F irst Street in Tustin, where officers allegedly purchased $50,000 worth of co- caine. The pound of stimulant drug from the South American coca plant was seized after alleged negot ia tions with s us pect s Donald Anthony Urban, 28, Leo Godinez Medina, 28, both of Tustin. a nd Jerry Bob Beasley, 28, of Si lverado Canyon. Investigators booked the trio into Orange County J ail in lieu of Sl0,000 bail each, on charges of sale of dangerous drugs. Fro• Page A J 2 KILLED .. • license plate 562 EQP. He is on parole from a five-year to life sentence for armed robbery and 1s also wanted on a warrant. ch3rging him with burglary. llowelJ was a pipefitter, a p·· parently currently unemployed, and Mrs. Howell worked al Don Jose's, a llunlington Beach Mex· 1can restaurant, Detective Welsh said. Patrolman Steve Dutton was dispatched to the two-story Mex- ican adobe style s tructure near Talbe(t Avenue and Newland Street in centr a l Huntington RC'ac h afte r a 10 :14 p .m telephone call to police. "So m con <' j ust shot m y mother. . ' .. a hysterical young wo man scream ed into the re· n •1vcr. The dtspakhc r noted down at th.it momt·nt that a car 's squeal mg tires could be heard in the background a nd officers believe it "' as Camphell escaping. Detectives toduy wt•rc begin- ning what appeared lo be a com· pltcated task or unraveling the tangled marital relations a nd simme ring emotions that ap· parenlly e xploded in a bloodbath. Pohre said Campbell and his wife recently separated and her second divorced husband. the slam male v1ct1m . returned from Saudi Ara bia lie was apparently employed there as a p1pcfittcr for the ~1 uor Corporation. Still a nother ex-husband who also works for F'luor Corporation m Saudi i\rahia was being con· tacted by telegram today to in· for m him or his former wife's murder, police said. Detective Welsh said it was not immediately deter mined when Mrs. Howell and Campbell met. married and separated, leadinR to confrontations involving the second and third husband. "They have had a few beefs. but not. too recently," Police Communicatio ns Supervisor Sam Mar berry said Thursday night when contacted shortly after the murders were reported. Detective Welsh said Camobell was recently fired from his job with El Don Liquors, which has two outlets, o ne a t 846 2 In- diana po lis A venue near the restaurant where Mrs. HoweJI was e mployed. Instruments Taken From College Wing Musical )nstruments valued at $1.552 have been stolen from the . mus ic · wing o f Sa ddle back College ln Mission Viejo, Orange County s heriff's officers said. Deputies s aid intruders who entered by unknown means took an organ, n tuner and a piano pedal extension from the storase room a l the m usic building, 28000M or guerlle Parkway. ORO CANYON PARK Gas Us.e Up After · 'Crisis' WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite continuina warninp ot: dwindling ene rgy resources, American motorists are HtUng records in ullnC gaS<>ilne. Tho Federal Hlgbway Ad· mlnlalratJoa aald Thursday that tho 11aollne consumption rato W11 year will be greater than any inhiatory. ARTIST'S RENDERING DEPICTS PROPOSED ORO PARK IN ARCH BEACH HEIGHTS Environmental Review Progr•m M•y Oetey Project tor Ye.,, Kiii Feder•I Funding The acency estimated that motor fuel consumption would total 118.8 billion gallona this year, including 115 billion for hJghway travel. It said the nation would use 4.4 billion gallons moro motor fuel this year than in 1973. when the previous record was set. Abuse in Hospital Noted by Patients l',....P9fJeAJ SHORTCUT council (4·1) position that no ad· verse impact would result. The second issue, that or con· formity with the general plan, found Mrs. Bellerue and .Mayor Phyllis Sweeney on the short end of a 3-2 vote. As pleas for conservation go unheeded. the agency aaid, the increued usage apparently com· es not only from more highway driving but also higher speeds. Although il did not take a national average, the Hiebway Administration said highway speeds are increasing based on a sampling of states. VENTURA (AP) -"They strapped my hands behind my back and strapped me on my stomach. I had to lay that way all night. "They gave me a shot which hurt the back of my skull .•. l banged my head on the wall because it hurt so bad. The doc- tor came next morning and said I was imagining the pain." This statement from a patient at one of California's 11 state mental hos pitals was recorded by one of several citizens ' groups looking into alleged abuses at the hospitals. Scores or s imilar cases have been reported -and a few suc- cessfully prosecuted. Last month a Camarillo State Hospital psychiatric technician was arrested after a witness al- legedly saw her beat a female pa- tient with a fly swatter and an ice tray, then loop a towel around her neck and begin choking her. A registered nurse who works at Camarillo told the Associ"ated Press that .. choking out" -us- ing a strangle hold to render a pa· tient unconscious -has been often used to quiet rebellious pa- tients. Beatings, verbal abuse, tying patients to beds with painfully tight restraints, sexual advances to and rapes or mentally dis- turbed patients -all these have bee n r e porte d by v arious sources. Next week , the Ventura County Grand Jury will be presented with cases of questionable deaths of patients at Camarillo, and rinall y a llegations of brutal treat· ment m ay be substantiated or found groundless. In any case, the publ.Jc sessions wi ll li k e ly t h row a har s h spotlight on st affing problems and the uncertain future racing California 's mental hospital system and its 15,000 patients. The probe is to determine if criminal negligence -or worse -was involved in deaths from strangulat ion, drug overdoses, drownings and other causes the past four years. IC indictments are returned , s a y s A s se mbl y m a n Ke n McDonald of Ojai, "it will be an indictment not so much of in- dividuals but of the system and the Le~islature for not doing something about this situation." McDonald said he bas heard about poor conditions at the hospital for 16 years. T h e h e a ri n g s , w hi c h authorities say may deal with "as many as 75 deaths," wiU be held in open court unde r a seldom-used prov1s1on in law. ··we hope that the proc~ings will be therapeutic" ln improv- ing conditions at s tate hospitals, said Asst. Dis t. Atty. Michael Bradbury of Ventura County. Carried out over the past year, tbe district attorney's probe was revealed las t month at a time when a series of four unexplained deaths al Metropolitan Stale Hospital in Norwalk led to the scheduling of coroners' inquests. Prompted by news stories last UC Irvine's 'Epidemic' Now Waning UC Irvine health officials say a nu-like episode which hit 57 stu- dents on campus this week, ap- pears to be waning. And it doesn •t appear to be the s o-called s wine flu, or food • poisoning, a ccording to Dr. Gerald B. Sinykin, director of the Student Health Center , which began treating sick students Tuesday. The center treated 57 students. most residents of Mesa Court on. campus. for flu symptoms. The victims complained or vomiting, headaches and diarrhea. Health officials today discount- ed food poisoning as cause of the Illne sses, s ayin g they In terviewed ailing students, and many not affected by the illness. Officials are still wniUng for results o( cultures taken from the ailing studenUI. Results are ex- p e cte d M o nd ay, a UC l spokesman s aid today. month about the Ventura County death probe, the Health Depart· ment recently sent investigators of its own to various hopsltals. They already reported that about one in every 12 deaths s tudied invo lved some i r - regularity. Raymond Procunier, installed recently as a Health Department troubleshooter by Gov. Brown, said the investigators were also finding ••gross problems" includ- ing a drug ring and alteration or records, perhaps to cover up pa· tient abuse. All or these groups began issu- ing statements of concern or con- demnation after the first ques· tionable d eath this year at Metropolitan. Mark Holcomb, a 19-year·old Garden Grove resi- dent, was found dead in his hospital bed June 19. The apparent cause or death was said to be choking on his own vomit, but an autopsy examina· lion showed Holcomb had suf · fered bruises and c ul6 on his face and neck. His case is still under investigation by a district at· torney's omce. In the Camarillo d eaths , authorities have not given details of specific cases. The problem was over the park's impact in a natur.-1 drainage area, which according to some interpretations of the general plan is to be protected. The council later rescinded those actions on a moUon by Councilman Jon Brand. Brand said that due to the len2tb of the eight-hour meeting, and the lateness of the hour, about · 1:30 a.m., he felt the council had acted improperly . Brand proposed the project be required to go through all the city's environmental checks. The council had been trying to meet a tight deadline for applica- tion or federal public works fund- ing. but Brand said it was more important to address all the en- vironmental aspects than to rush through just to m~et the grant de- adline. By unanimous action, the coun· cil agreed. China Boycotts TOKYO (AP) -China's new top leaders failed to attend a Sov- iet reception in Peking today celebratin g the S9th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution. Gasoline cons umption is in· creasing at a rate of 5.7 perdent, compar able to what it w&11 before the Arab oil embargo of 1973 and fllOre than twice the 2.S percent lricrease recorded 1n 1975. The aovemment hoped to keep an· oual consumption increases to Teas than 3 to 4 percenL Current agency projections are baaed on s tate reports or motor fuel consumption and on current trends, motor fuel production fii\lfes and other factors. Supporting Its claim that highway speeds are on the rise, the agency said, for example, the average s peed of free-flowing traffic measured on highways with a 55 mile per hour speed limit in Texas was 58.4 miles per hour ror the quarter that ended June 30; California, an averaege of 54.8 mlles per hour; Maryland, 54.5 per miles per hour; I.Ddiana. 56.8 m li e s per hour; and Virginia, 51.4 miles per hour. Onofre Beach Work Planned Semester System Voted In at UCI Work la expected to begin within the next two weeks on campsite and sanitary improve. ments at San Onofre State Beach. The state park will re- main open during the 10..month job. Louetto Construction Com· pany of Escondido won the $897 ,000 state Parks and Recreation Department con- tract. By a 16 to 15 vote the Irvine Di vision of the University of California Acade mic Senate ap· proved a recom mendalion that the Irvine campus begin operat· ing under a semester system. The Ir vine Divison, made up of Services Set For Mr. Nebel Christopher Nebel, son of Mrs. Frederick Nebel of Costa Mesa, died Sunday in a San Pedro hospital. Mr . Nebel, who was 39 years old, lived with his mother in Costa Mesa. Thcy·were formerly of Laguna Beach. Memorial ser vices will be held at 11:30 a .m . Saturday, at the First United Methodist Church in San Pedro. Burial will follow at Pacific View Memorial Park in Newport Beach. a representative group of UCl faculty members, voted in favor of the semes ter syst.em by a one- ballot margin. UCI has been un- der the quarter system since the college was founded in 1965. The governing group of the Irvine Division will meet Nov. 17 to discuss the vote and a statewide meetin_g of the UC Academic Senate will meet Dec. 7 to make a dec ision o n a California switchover. Arguments for retaining the quarter system were presented by students, who said the quarter policy promotes a fast classroom pace better calendar breaks. Advocates of the semester system claim there is more facul- ty and student contact hours per year, the registration syst em would be r educed to twice a year instead of three times, and the majority of state universities and community colleges are on the semes·~er sys tem. Work will include installation of a major water line, septic tanks, 16 comfort stations, im· provem ent or 240 campsites, landscaping and paving, and building of a par king lot to ac- commodate 650 cars. 'IDief Steals Coins From Dana Home A burglar who broke a window to fain entry took a jar of coins va ued a t $80 from a Dana Point home. Orange County sheriff's officers said the break· in and theft was discovered by waitress Mollie Sue Adams, 24, when she returned to her home at 24831 La Paz Road. The coin jar was taken from the master bedroom. It's What's Out Back That Counts! Our store is like an iceberg! No -we're not chi lly to tjeal with -it's that you only see one tenth of our store from the front. People visiting us for the first time are flabbe rgast'ed when the spacious interior unfolds before them. The huge showroom has thousands of samples. (Customers tell us we have the largest selection they have seen.) Our warehouse contains an inventory of infinite variety. Hundreds of remnants inhabit a 25x50 remnant room. Add offices. a spacious drapery room. plenty of parking, pleasant people. and you'll have the "Big Picture" of our successful operation! DEN'S :iiisiailatiaii:·custom draperies . linoleum • wood floor L1C. r~. 2lom 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 6 '46·-'i39 -646·2355 .. f - ' 1 Orange Coast· EDITION VOL. 69, NO. 310, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Clo ing N.Y.Stoeks FRIDAY, NOVEMBERS, 1976 C Americans Set Record in Gos IJsoge WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite continuing warnings of dwindling energy resources, American motorists are setting record.a ln using gasoline. The Federal Highway Ad · ministration sald Thursday that the gasoline consumption rate this year will be great.er than any in history. The agency estimated that motor fuel consumption would total 118.8 billion gallons this year, including ll5 bilijon for highway travel. It said the nation would use 4.4 billion gallons more motor fuel this year than in 1973. when the previous record was set. As pleas for conservation go unheeded . the agency said. the increased usage apparently com- es not only from more highway driving but also higher speeds. I I They're Cool . Travis. 4, a nd Wendy Finnern, 7, team up to douse their ~ pla ymate, Cisco Rios. 6, with garde n hose. The Costa Mesa youngsters resorted to this method of keeping cool • as Santa Ana condition drove temperatures above 90 degrees Thursday throughout Sout he rn Califo rnia . I Weathe rman is predicting more of the same for the we<>k<'nd l Semester System Endorsed at UCI By a 16 to 15 vote the Irvine Division or the University of Callloroia Academic Senate ap- proved a recomm•ndalion that the Irvine campus begin operal· to discuss the vole and a statewide meeting of the UC Academic Senate will meet Dec. 7 to make a d e c i s i on on· a Ca Ii for n i a switchover. ' ing under a semester system. Arguments for retaining the quarter system were presented by students. who said the quarter policy promotes a fast classroom pace better calendar breaks. The Irv ine Di vison. made up of a representative group of UCI faculty members. voted in favor or the semester sy!'ltem by a one- ballot margin. UCI has been un- der the quarter system since the college was founded in 1965 The governing group of the Irvine Division will meet Nov. 17 Advocates of the semester system claim there is more facul- ty and student contact hours per year, the registration system would be re'1uced to twice a year instead or three times. and the majority of state universities and community colleges are on the semester system. Although it did not take a national average, the Highway Administration said highway speeds are increasing based on a sampling of states. Gasoline consumption is in- creasing at a rate of 5.7 perdent. comparable to what it was before· the Arab oil embargo of 1973 and more than twice the 2.5 percent increase recorded in 1975. The government hoped to keep an· nual consumption increases to less than 3 to 4 percent. Current agency projections are based on state reports of motor fuel consumption and on current trends, motor fuel production fieures and other fact.ors. Supporting its claim that highway speeds are on the rise, the agency said, for example, the average speed of free-flowing traffic measured on highways with a 55 mile per hour speed limit in Texas was 58.4 miles per hour for the quarter that ended June 30; California, an avenege of S4.8 miles per hour; Maryland, S4.5 per miles per hour: Indiana, 56 .. 8 miles per hour; and Virginia. 51.4 miles per hour. The top figure was reported by Connecticut -60.8 miles per hour -or five-tenths of a mile per hour faster than the 1973 na- tional average. California wlll bum m01'e gasollne, 11.4 bllliongallons, than any other state in 1976, the FHW A e s timated, but s everal other Western states will have larger percentage increases. The highway agency said the nonhighway total would be s lightly below the 3.6 billion gallons iped in 1975. Couple Murdered In · Bedroolll of Hollle1 Former Husband Sought By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 Ille 0111, Pilot S~tt A Huntington Beach 'Koman and her new husband we~ shot to de ath in th eir upstairs bedroom Thursday night and her ex·husband is being sought in the slayi ng. Police identified lhe suspect as William Gene Campbell, 48, an ex-convict who they described as a r m e d a n d ext re me I y dal)gerous. Investigators identified the v i c tims a s Mrs. Beverly Campbell Howell, 39, and Verne Howell, 42. who lived at 1'7M7 Beard Lane, Huntington Beach. Both died of multiple gunshot wounds fired from a .38 caliber revolver. Homicide detective Jack Welsh said Howell was shot in the back. Mrs. Howell was shot in the head and arm. Huntington Beach detectives s aid s us pect Campbell is believed to be driving a 1969 Pon- tiac GTO. dark brown. with license plate 562 EQP. He is on parole from a rive-year lo life sentence for armed robbery and is also wanted on a warrant charging him with burglary. Howell was a pipefitter, ap-· parently currently unemployed, and Mrs . Howell worked at Don Jose's. a Huntington Beach Mex- ican restaurant, Detective Welsh said. Patrolman Steve Dutton was dispatched to the two-story Mex- ican adobe·style s tructure near Talbert A venue and Newland Street in centra l Huntington Be a c h afte r a 10 : 14 p.m telephone call to police. "Som eone JUSt shot m y mother ... '" a hysterical young woman screamed into the re· ceiver. The dispatcher noted down at that moment that a car's squeal- ing tires could be heard in the background and officers believe it was Campbell escaping. Detectives today were begin· nlng what appeared to be a com- plicated task of unraveling the tangled marital relations and <See 2 KILLED, Page A2) Diving Suit Stolen A diving s uit worth $380 was taken from the apartment of Bruce E. Morse sometime Thurs- day. The 21 -year-old student told ~ta Mesa police the diving sult was taken from the second-story balcony of his apartment at 1300 Adams Ave WANTED IN SLAYINGS Wllllam Gene Campbell Mesa Joins SCAG 'Despite . Control Issue The City of Costa Mesa, one of the last holdouts in the county, joined the Southern California Association of Governments , (SCAG ) this week. amid grumbl- ing that the six-county body is ·'just another layer of govern- ment." Councilmen voled 3·2, with Vice Mayor Jack Hammett and Councilwoman Norma Hertzog opposed, lo join the organization comprised of 126 cities in Southern California. The council last month heard arguments for joining the re- gional association during a study session. At that lime. they were told SCAG membership gives cities local control over regional issues. SCAG executives also said the organization provides cities with a local voice at the state and federal letel. Hammett disagreed, telling councilmen this week, "I have a. feeling you 're going to find your voice crying in the wilderness." He said he was proud that Costa Mesa had refused mem- bership in the group for so long, saying, "I think someplace along the line we would make a stand. I just don't like to be told we have to do this or government will take over," he said. Councilman Ed McFarland said he did not like to see another layer of government. "but It's already here." He said he believes the state and federal governmenLs "are passing some of their authority to SCAG," indlcatln• Costa Mesa (See CONTROL. Page A.2) Kidnap Trial Moved MADERA CAP) -The Chowchilla mass kidnaping trial today was ordered moved out of Madera County. Superior Court Judge Jack L. Hammerberg also granted de- fense motions to keep the grand jury transcript sealed at least until a trial jury is sequestered. Both rulings bad been expect- ed, and Hammerberg said he' granted the venue change to avoid any possibility that the cue might be prejudiced and overturned by appeal • The county where the trial wm be held will not be known until Hap:u,nerberg consults with tbe administrative Office of Courta in San Francisco. Hammerberg said that office will provide a list of counties that can bold the trial, and he will select one of those. Hammerberg fJled bis rulings with the Madera County Clerk this morning but there was no formal court hearing and the de- fendants were not present. Hammerberg had to read stacks of newspaper and magazine articles and radio scripts before deciding whether to order the trial moved lo a county more metropolitan than this rural area. During a hearing last month, he viewed more than three hours or television film and videotape. all devoted to the bizarre case in which 26 school children and their bus driver were abducted July lS. Attorneys-for three young San Francisco Penins ula men ac- cused of the kidnapings argued that a change of venue is necessary because everyone in this lightly populated Central California county became emo- tionally involved. The defense argued at another hearing that the transcript of grand jury proceedings that led to indictments should remain sealed untH trials are completed so prospective jurors won't be prejudiced. . The victims were abducted from their bus while on their way home from summer school. Soviets Hopefol MOSCOW (AP) -Soviet Pr,esident Nikolai V Podgomy has told President·elect Jimmy Carter that he hopes relations between the Soviet Union and the United States will continue to im- prove after Carter takes office. Longtime Costa Mesan Nathan L. Reade, bas been named executive manager of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce. The 54-year- old former planning com· missioner has been assis- tant manager of the chamber. He also serves as a director of the Costa Mesa County Water District. Man Found Shot in Mesa Cemetery A cemetery caretaker called Costa Mesa police Thursday, telling them there was a man sit- 'lin g agains t a wall or the graveyard, holding a rifle .. A patrol officer responding to the call, found the body of John Earl Taylor, 55, of Glendora, slumped over his shotgun at lbe Harbor Rest Memorial Park. 1625Gisler Ave. Investigator s today said Taylor had been dead for several hours when discovered at ll: 30 a .m. Thursday. He apparently died of self· inflicted shotgun wounds in the head, poUce ~aid. Officers said Taylor left a note at the cemetery. Police said Taylor was despon- ·dent over his divorce about a year ago. His ex-wlfe lives within blocks of the cemetery in which be died, investigators said. C:oast Weather Jobless Rate Still Ris~ng WASJfiNGTON CAP) - The nation's unemploy- ment rate rose from 7.8 percent to 7.9 per.cent in October. the government reported today. providing fresh evidence that the economic slowdown is con- tinuing. (Related story, AJ) Carter's Pl11rality: 'Enough' Clear through Saturday, but with cooling along the coast. Highs near 80 on the coast. lows to about6S. The unemployment rate ' is one economic indicator President-e lect Jlmmy Carter 11 watching as he conslder1 whether lo pro- pose a tax cut after taking office ln J enuary. The number of persons unemployed in O&tober was 7.6 mlUion. th~ most since 7.7 mjllion were out of work ln Oe~mber. By WALTER R. MEARS Al'S-l•ICerre ........... t WASHINGTON -It only takes a word to d escribe Jimmy Carter's mandate for the pre- sidency: Enough. He Is the president-elect; he will be the president; and if margin of victory is much noted now. it will not be long rem em· bered. . When be swears the oath of of- fice Jan. 20, not many people will remember -or care -how many votes put him there. When he goe s to the Oemocratlc Congress with his agenda for cha~ge, it will be as presid~nt. testing his strength in ( NEWSANAlYSI S ) office, and the margin that put him there will be of little conse- quence. Carter's goals will ~ained or lost, hls presidency succeed ferred a unanimous vole on Tues- day. I think th al the mandate was WAG~-PRICE CONTROL broad-based and certainly ade- UNLIKELY: H!UEA-A12 quate, ·• Carter said Thursday niOlt. Carter won wUh '2:97 electoral · RACE WON, CARTER'S vot.a. 7:1 more than the minimum RELAXED-M needed to win. He 1ained 51 pel"' ~•nt of the popular vote, to or (all. on the basis of what hap-Ford'• 41 ,ereent. pms ln the future. not becaule of W. electoral collec• count was • his narrow mar1in over Presi· the lowest of any wlnner in eo dent Ford · years, evell thou1h the electoral "Allhouah r woald have pre-colle1e bu enlarced in that Um&. 1' But three of the last five presi· dents won with less than half the popular vote, and Gerald Ford came to the Wtµte House with no vote\ at all. Harry S Truman was elected in 1948 wltb 49.6 petcertt of the popular vote and 303 electoral ·votes. John F. Kennedy won in 1980 with 49. 7 percent and 303 electoral votes. lUcbard M. Nix- on waa elected ln 1968 with Q .4 percent and, 301 electoral votes. TbeJr reputations and their rolea ln blJtory, good and ill. are bl.led on what they did in tbe Wlllte Boule, not oo the size ot the marshal t.bat put tbem U... INSIDE TODA'° Thtrt 's more to chait• than ;tut lftting on them. Toc'.ay'• ·weekender v lewi this houteho"1 object .cu .on .end aculpture. ' lnth11x MY.WltrYlce All .... ,~ •• L.~· At ca • .... , CMet#C-r ., ClfftlflH D1·14 Ofllk• cs ~ cs --~ "' =:'p... A• :=.9:.'left . . . """"·•> ., C4 -u~ •1 ,_.,'" c ... .......,,.,..,.., Alt ................ Af =~J At .... , MA1119's A11'tl Tetwltleft Ct n...n CM --A4 _..._ c~ ... ,..,, .. , • 'A2 DAIL V PILOT c Friday, November 5, 1978 ., Mistrial Decl&red Jurors Stuck at 5-1 for Al~to SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Former Mayor Joseph Alioto's $12.S million la bel suit against Look Magazine ended in a third mistrial today after jurors re· ported a 5·1 deadlock in favor of Alioto. The jurors had declared a de- adlock Thursday, but were or- dered by the judge to try again. .After about an hour or de· liberation this morning, they sent U.S. District Court Judge Russell Smith a note saying ''fUrther de- liberation would yield no further results.·· Judge Smith, of Missoula, Mont.. said one juror believed that there was ins ufficient evidence provided by either side to prove the case. The sole issue before the panel is whether Lhe 1969 Look article alleging Alioto was "enmeshed in a web or alliance with the Mafia" was. published with ~upervisor Seat Fille d By Anthony Orange County Supervisor· elect Phili p Anthony was ap· pointed by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Thursday to fill former s upervisor Robert Battin's unex- pired term: , Anthony's appointment means he 'll s it on the Board of Supervisors about six weeks before his newly won term begins fa J anuary. Battin's First District seat was vacated last August when the . former supervisor was sentenced following his conviction of using county paid employes in a 1974 .political campaign. Both Anthony and his general election opponent, Santa Ana City C~uncilman Harry Yamamoto, s,aJ.d an apoointment should nol be i:p.ade untJl the election decision. That done, Governor Brown ~asted no time notifying the win-.ner or his appointment. TONIGHT ORANGE C O U NTY PlflLHARMONIC CONCERT - Polish Nation al RadJoSymphony Orchest r a . Santa Ana Hig h auditorium. 8:30 p m. FOOTBALL Costa Mesa v:. El Toro, OCC stadJum, 8 p m Me:.a Hi g h ho meco mi ng Newp<>rt Harbor "~ lluntington Beach. D a\ id son Field. K p m OCC DRAMA "Chamtwr Music." Dra ma Lab Theater, No\ 5·fl ,8pm SI OCC P l.ANETARI L'M ··v ariations on a Stellar Theme." 7·30 and 9 pm F RIDAY NIGllT F'ILMS - "Thi.' Em1~rants," OCC Forum, 7 30 pm Sl OCC Lt::CTL H fo:S "World War II," Fine Art:. Aid~ 119, 7 30 p.m "Earlhqw akcs," Science Lecture 2. 7 :JO fl m "fntroou(" 11on to Assrrt1on Training ·• Science Lt'cturc l . 7 30p m SATl'RO \\',NOV. 6 FOOTBA LL OCC ,.,. Cer· rit06, Lt' Bard Stadium. 7 JO pm ~tanc1a v Villa Park at El Modena, 8p m "SATU RDAY , SUNDAY MONDAY '' South Coal;l ~epertory Thl'aler. opening rught, 8 pm OCC FILM WATCH -"Dis· tant Thunder." Forum. 8 p.m. . SUNDAY, NOV. 7 OCC JAZZ ENSEMBL ES Free concert, Auditorium 2p.m. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT '"'°'•"4tl CAM'' n .. 1,., o • ...,, ... '"""'"''"'•'"""' ftil•'1f,,. firrifAW\ ,,,.,, l·1,,.0Jihil1\JY•ttwlfvnt~,,. C~t P\1bh·fil•f'Wl''"ft0•"" ~'4' ....,.1 ~ ,,. Nf>i 11\f'tlj ~nl'Wf ... 0\f0\1'1" lo1t'11• t f 1 ,, •• ..-.. \4' ,.....,.OI),, fh• '<Iii."""''~""""". ~ ' '"' , .. ,,.. 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D•'d .tt (•\ta "'-ta CAt•to""• lvt>u 1 ''"n" •• <•"''" u s0 ,....,,..,.,. b• m•tt U \Q f'fteflthlf . mlll•M• ""'"""'-U ,......,,,,.. malice. The magazine is oow de- lunct. Alioto was not present. At· torney Lawrence Alioto said he would request a new trial on behalf of his father. The first trial ended with a hung jury. In the second, jurors agreed parts of the story were false and defamatory, bul dead· locked on the malice issue . An appeals court reversed dis· missal of the suit by Judge Smith and ordered a retrial on the ques· lion of malice only. After deliberating Thursday. the jurors sent a question lo the judge, asking: "With regard to · me authors' state of mind, does a 50-50 chance of Calsily constitute a reckles s disregard or the lruth?" Judge Smith r eplied that he · doubted he could put a percen· tage figure on falsity. Rather than using by percentages, he said, he "would be governed by motivation, depth °'" interest in the matter , awareness of the whole picture and the general APWIA!llloto Ca rter •Burt_' Ca l ifornia's AssembJy speaker. Leo McCarthy (D· San Francis co ) says that Pres ident-e lect J i mmy Carte r hurt himself in the st ate by not allowing Califor- nians to r un his campaign here. F r o• Page A I 2 KILLED ... simmering em otions that ap· parently exploded in a bloodbath. Police said Campbell and has wife recently separated and her second di \'Orccd husband, the slain male vict im . returned from Saudi Arabia. He was apparenUy employed there as a pipeh t tcr for the F1uor Corooration. Still another ex-husband who also works for Fluor Corporation m Saudi Arabia was being con· tactcd by telegram today to in· form him of his former wife's murder, pohce said. Detective Welsh said it was not immediately determined when Mrs. Howell and Campbell met,. married and separated, leading to confrontations involving the serond and third husband "They have had a ff'w beefs. but not too recently," Police Commu ni cat ions Supervisor Sam Marherry said Thursday n11:ht wht'n contacted shortly after the murders were reported. Detective Welsh sard Camobell was recently fired from hi s job "41th El Don Liquors, which has t wo outlets, one al 8462 In-' dianapQl1 s Avt'nue near the restaurant where Mrs. Howell was employed. Campbell was recently dis· cha rJOted following a door-pry burglary of the Indianapolis Avenue liquor store and Delee· tive Welsh revealed today a war- rant had bet'n issued for hi s ar· rest in connection with that break-in . Detectives assigned lo the case said today they have no idea where Campbell might attempt to go into hiding, knowing he would be the prime suspect in the double murder. "That's what we're trying to run down now," said Detective Welsh. He and Detective Phil Nolen were expected to question Diane Schroeder . 23. reportedly Mrs . Howell's daughter by her first husband. PoUce clamped a tight patrol check on the residence of both Ms. Schroeder and her fiance about 2:15 a.m. today, when fears arose that their lives might be In danger. Detective Welsh said he was also atte~ti o g to contact Campbell's former parole officer regarding circumstances ol his previous arrests and convictlor. • involving armed robbery and escape. The m urder suspect served prison lime on a five-years·lo-Ufc sentence before his release, In- vestigators said. balance or the whole article ... But be said if th~y wanted to use the 50·50 percentage on awareness of fa lsity, "then you are instructed this 'Could con· aUtute reckless disregard of the truth... . ·Five Seized On Heroin RapinHB Huntington Beach police cap-tured five suspected drug dealers and confiscated nearly a half· million dollars worth of narcotics in separate cases Thursday. The haul included 2.5 pounds of heroin purchased behind a coffee shop al the city's Five Points Shopping Center and a pound of South American cocaine seized in a Tustin raid. Narcotics Detective Sgt.. Carl Vidano s aid it was pure coin· cid ence the two major drug ar· rest cases occurred at the same time, abQul 1 p.m . Thursday. No resistance was encountered in either drug arrest situation. The heroin haul, which in· vestigators say involved three previous purchases from the same suspects, all analyzed and confirmed as Mexican heroin, was seized at Main Street and Beach Boulevard. "The street value of what we got would be about $400,000," Sgt. Vidanosaid. · · · Suspects in that case were iden· tified as Joe Dell Holland, 35, of 3513 Boyer Ave., Santa Ana, and William "Willie" ltalph Jef. ferson, 27, of 3222 S. Main St., San· la Ana. . Holland was arrested on a pre- vtously-lssued warrant carrying $50,000 bail, while Jefferson was held in lieu of $5,000 bail. Both are charged with sales of heroin. Police said the heroin was packaged in plastic sandwich baggies. · A separate three-month in· vestigation led to the simultaneous arrest or three men at a motel on First Street in Tustin, where officers alleJOtedly purchased $50,000 worth of CO· caine. The pound of stimuJant drug .Crom the South American coca plant was seiz~d after alleged negotiations with suspect s Don~ld Anthony Urban, 28, Leo Godinez Medina. 28, both or Tustin._ and Jerry Bob Beasley. 28, of Silver ado Canyoo. Investigators booked the trio into Orange County Jail in lieu of $10,000 bail each. on charges of sale of dangerous drugs. Drive-in Plwto Shop Rapist Strikes Again ' SARA TOGA CAP) -Poli ce said today that a young man they're calling the "photo shop r~pist" struck again Thursday night, assaulting a clerk in a local women's clothing store. The assailant is believed responsible for at least five at· tacks the past month. and three of his victims were employes of dnve·in photo stands, according to Santa Clara Sheriff's Lt. Frank Gonthier Most of the women were forced to accompany the man lo motels where they were assaulted he said. ' The latest attack occurred at a store in the Plaza del Robles Shopping Center, police said . After surveying the premises. the young man pulled a s mall pistol and forced his victim to the rear or the s tore. Similar attacks have occurred in San Jose , Milpitas and Los Altos, the police s aid. Movie Buffs Ge t Chance A t 'Oscars' Home movie buffs will have an opportunity to display their talents, and pos~ibly win a Home Movie Oscar Nov. 14 at Maude B. Davis Middle School. The Costa Mesa Department of Leisure Services is sponsoring the home movie competition, open to, Costa Mesa residents . Four! rilm categories wiJI be judged beginning at 1 p.m. in the school's multi-purpose room. Amateur producers may pre· sent silent or sound films up to 15 m inute s ln length in these cate"orlcs : humorous/animat-ed, travel/documentary, fumily or dramatic acting. For rurther information, call the departmenL of leisur e services at 556·5300. VIEW OF CAMARILLO STATE HOSPITAL WHERE PATIENTS' DEATHS ARE BEING PROBED" Grand Jury Inquiry Scheduled After lnveatlgetton by Citizen• Group Hospital Abuses Cited Patients Recount Mental Ward Treatment, VENTURA <AP) -"They strapped m y hands behind my back and strapped me on my s~omach. I had to la,Y that way all rug ht. ··They gave me a shot which hurt the back of my skull . . . r banged my head on the wall becaus, it hurt so bad. The doc· tor came next morning and said I was imagining the pam." This s tatement from a patient at one of California's 11 state mental hospitals was recorded by one of several citizens.' groups looking into alleged abuses at the hospitals. Scores of similar cases have been reported -and a few suc- cessfully prosecuted. Last month a Camarillo State Hospital psychiatric technician UC Irvine's 'Epidemic' Now Waning UC Irvine health offici als say a flu-like episode which hit 57 stu· dents on campus th.is week, ap· pears to be waning. And it doesn't appear to be the so-called swi ne flu, or food poisoning, according fo Dr. Gerald B. Sinykin, director of the Student Health Center, which began treating sick students Tuesday. . The center treated 57 students naost residents of Mesa Court o~ campus, lor flu symptoms. The victims complained of vomiting, headaches and diarrhen. Health officials today discount· ed food poisoning as cause or the i llnesses, saying they in· terviewed ailing students, and many not affected by the illness. Officials are still wailing for results or cultures taken from the ailing students. Results are ex· peeled Mond ay , a UC l spokesman said today. was arrested after a witness aJ. legedly saw her ~ta female pa· tient with a fly swatter and an ice tray, then loop a towel around her neck and begin choking her. A registered nurse who works at Camarillo told the Associated Press that "choking out" -us· ing a strangle hold to render a pa· lient unconscious -has been orten used to quiet rebellious pa. tients. B_eatings, verbal abuse, tying patients to beds with painfully tight restraints, sexual advances to and rapes ol mentally dis· turbed patients -all these have b een reported by various sources. Next week, the Ventura County Grand Jury will be presented with cases o( questionable deaths of patients at Camarillo and finally allegations of brutal treat· ment may be substantiated or found groundless. In any case, the public sessions will likely throw a hars h spotlight on staffing problems and_ the uo~ert~in future facing California s mental hospit a l system and its 15,000 patients. The probe is to determine if criminal negligence -or worse -was involved in deaths from F,....PageAJ CONTROL • • should not miss out on the action. The cost of joining SCAG is $901 a year. based on the city's popula· tion. The city can withdraw at any time. Members hi°p allows Costa Mesa officials to sit on regional committees. Prior to this week's decision, Costa Mesa and Glendale were t~e only two cities with popula· hons of 30.000 or more that did not belong lo the six-county group. In Orange County, only three other smaller cities do not belong toSCAG. strangulation, drug overdoses, drownings and other causes the past four years. If indictments are returned, says Assem blyman Ken McDonald of Ojai, "it will be an indictment not so much of in- dividuals but of the system and the Le8islature lor not doing somethmg a bout this situation." McDonald said he has beard about poor conditions at the hospital for 16 years. Th e he arings, which authorities say may deal with "as m any as 75 deaths," will be held in open court under a seldom-used provision In law. "We hope that the proceedings will be therapeutic" in improv- ·ing conditions at s tate hospitals said Asst. Dist. Atty. Micbaei Bradbury ot Ventura County. Carried out over the past year, • the district attorney's probe was re~aled last month al a time when a series or four unexplained deaths at M elropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk led to the scheduling of coroners' inquests. Prompted by news stories last month about the Ventura CoUl)ty death probe, the Health Depart- ment recently sent investigators of its own to various hopsilals. They already reported that • about one in every 12 deaths studied involved some ir· regularity. Raymond Procunier, installed recently as a Health Department troubleshooter by Gov. Brown. said the investigators were also finding "gross problems" includ · ing a drug ring and alteration or records, perhaps to cover up pa- tient abuse. . All of these groups began issu- ing statements of concern or con- d.emnation after the first ques· llonable death this year at Metropolitan. Mark Holcomb, a 19-year-old Garden Grove resi· dent, was found depd in his hospital bed June 19. It's What's Out Back That Counts ! Our store is like an iceberg! No -we're not chilly to deal with -it's that you only see one tenth of our store from the front. People visiting us fo r the first time are f labber gast ed when the spacious interior unfolds before them. The huge showroom has thousands of samples. (Customers tell us we have the largest selection they have seen.) Our ~areh ouse contains an inventory of infinite variety. Hundreds of remnants inhabit a 25x50 remnant room. Add offices. a spacious drapery room, plenty of parking, pleasant people. ancf you'll have the "Big Picture" of our successfu l operation! DEN~s . ••••••••••••••••• ·installation· custom draperies , linoleum • wood floor 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CAllF. 92627 • PHONE 646-4838 -6<46·2355 .. .. Grange Coast EOlT I ON .. Today's Closing .J N.Y.Stoeks OL. 69, NO. 310, 4 SECTIONS# 44 PAGES <?RANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBERS# 1976 N TENCENTS' ehate Expected Over Senior Center~· By JOANNE REYNOLDS Oi 111e oa11, l'ltot~i.tt Debate is expected Monday · ght at I\ public pearing slated y the Newport Beach city coun· · on the grant application for e last installment of fwids for e Corona del Mar senior citizen enter. Controversy over the center merged after an error-filled eaflet was circulated by the Harbor View Hills Homeowners Association which likened the proposed center to a skateboard park and called it an unpopular proposal. The bearing is one of two re- quired of the city COWlcil as part of the application process for the final phase of a three-year, $702,000 federal Department of Housing and Urban Developme.nt grant. Travis, 4, and Wendy Finnern, 7. team up to douse their playmate, Cisco Rios. 6, with garden hose. The Costa Mesa youngsters resorted to this method of keeping cool as Santa Ana condition drove temperatures above 90 <l egr ees Thursday throughout Southern California. Weatherman is predicting more of the same for t he weekend. Semester System IEndorsed at UCI By a 16 to 15 vote the Irvine Division of the University of California Academic Senate ap- proved a recommendation that the Irvine campus begin operat- ing under a semestersystem. The Irvine Divison. made up of a representattve group of UCI faculty members, voted in favor of the semester system by a one· ballot margin. UC I has been un· der the quarter system since the ~liege was founded in 1965. Coa~• Weather The governing group of the lrvine Division will meet Nov. 17 to discuss the vote and a statewide meeting of the UC Academic Senate will meet Dec. 7 lo make a decision o.n• a California switchover. Arguments for retaining the quarter system were presented by students, who said the quarter policy promotes a fast classroom pace better calend ar breaks. Advocates of the semester system claim there is more facul- ty and student contact hours per year, the registration system would be reduced to twice a year instead of three times, and the majority of state universities and community colleges are on the semester system . The leaflet was originally circulated unsigned throughout Harbor View Hills. It prompted a rash of protest calls to city ball, according to City Manager Robert Wynn. He said that about a week later, it was sent to members or the city council, this time bear· ing the signature of Sonya Buck, president of the homeowners' as- sociation. Mn. Buck said today that the leaflet was sent out in an attempt to inform residents ol the position against the proposed center adopted by the association's board of directors and to generate a crowd for Monday's hearing. 1 The center that Mrs. Buck is opposing is to be located on a $450,000 piece of property formerly ow11ed by the state at theU)~ter~C:tioll ot Fifth and Marguerite i\ \.eti'oes. It is the one-time Hak'bof Da'.y ~boot. City wor~'-011 tit~ 'Cepter beg.an in November.1974, when the city council agr~ed to participate in the county·administered block: grantfrom HUD. The project picked for the grant money was to benefit senior citizens and the council decided to use the grant money to buY the eorona del Mat site for\. senior citizen center. Wynn said that there bas been no citizen opposition to a senior citizen center in the two years the city bas been involved with the HUD grant. Since April of last year, the council·appointed Community Develo11meot Citizens Advisory Committee 'bas been surveying (See CENTER, Page AZ) •. Couple Murdered In Bedroo1n of Ho1ne Former Husband Sought By ARTHUR R . VINSEL Of Ille O•llY Pllcrt Siii! A Huntington Beach woman and her new husbal\d were shot to death in their ups tairs bedroom Thursday night and her ex-husband is being sought in the slaying. Police identified the suspect as William Gene Campbell, 48, an ex·convict who they described as armed and extremely dangerous. Investigators identified lb• victims as Mrs. Beverly Campbell Howell, 39. and Verne Howell, 42, who lived at 17847 Beard Lane, Huntington Beach. Both died of multiple gunshot wounds fired from a .as caliber revolver. Homicid e detective Jack Welsh said Howell was shot in the back. Mrs . Howell was shot in thehead and arm. Huntington Beach detectives said suspect Campbell is believed to be driving a 1969 Pon· tiac GTO. dark brown. with license plate 562 EQP. He is on parole from a five-year to life sentence for armed robbery and is also wanted on a warrant charging him with burglary. Howell was a pipefitter. ap-• parently currently unemployed, and Mrs. Howell worked at Don Jose's, a Huntington Beach Mex- ican restaurant, Detective Welsh said. Patrolman Steve Dutton was dispatched to the two-story Mex- ican adobe·style stru.cture near Talbert Avenue and Newland Street in central Huntington Beach afti!r a 10 :14 p.m . telephone call to police. "Som eone just s hot my mother ... ! "a hysterical young woman screamed into the re· ceiver. The dispatcher noted down at that moment that a car's squeal- ing tires could be heard in the background and officers believe it was Campbell escaping. Detectives today were begin· ning what appeared to be a coin· plicated task of unraveling the t angled marital relations and simmering emotions that ap· parenlly exploded in a bloodbath. Police said Campbell and hi!t' wife recently separated and her. second divorced husband, the slain male victim, returned from Saudi Arabia. He was apparently employed there as a pipeCitter for the F1uor Corporation. Still another ex·husband who (See 2 KILLED, Page A2) WANTl!D IN SLAYINOS WlfUam Gene Caq>bell Despite Wantings Gasoline Use Sets Records WASHINGTON CAP ) - Despite continuing warnings of dwindling energy resources, American motorists are setting records in using gasoline. The Federal Highway Ad - ministration said Thursday tha~ the gasoline consumption rate this year will be greater than any in history. • The agency estimated that motor fuel consumption would total 118.8 billion gallons this ,_ar. lJtclucling 115 bl.lllon for highway travel. It said the nation would use 4.4 billion gallons more motor fuel this year than in 1973. when the previous record was set. . As pleas for conservation go unheeded. the agency said, the increased usage apparently com- es not only from more highway driving but also higher speeds. Although it did not .take a national average, the Highway Administration said highway speeds are increasing based on a sampling of states. Gaaotine consumption is ill• creasing at a rate of 5.7 perdent. CSee GAS USE, Page AZ> 'Pigeon' Try Foiled A/,ert, Clerk Praised /or Saving Victim An alert clerk at the Balboa branch of the Bank or America was credited today with foiling an attempt to defraud a local woman of her Life 's savings. Police said the woman, age 72, drew the clerk's attention when she withdrew $4,000, so he called police. Detectives followed the elderly woman and her two young com- panions and arrested the two companions m oments later, charging them with grand theft in an alleged scheme known as a pigeon drop. ,In custody today on $25,000 bail each are Anita Elise Marquardt, 19, of Los Angeles, and Esther Jean Lawrence, ZT, who gave a Youngstown, Ohio, address. Del. Todd Wilkinson said the near-victim was walking near Alvarado Place and Balboa Boulevard Thursday ,morning when she was approached by the two women who showed her an envelope full of money they said Destination lJnknown they had just found. Included in the envelope was a note that Wilkinson said was in- tended to indicate that the money had been obtained illegally. One or the women told the elderly lady that she knew a local attorney who would advise them, so the three returned to the lady':; Balboa home where a call was ostensibly put in to the at- torney. <See FOILED, Page A2) Chowchilla Trial Moves --. MADERA (AP) -The Chowchilla mass kidnaping trial today was ordered moved out of Madera County. Superior Court Judge Jack L. Hammerberg also granted de· tense motions to keep the grand jury transcript sealed at least until a trial jury is sequestered. Both rulings had been expect- ed, and Hammerberg said he' granted the venue change to avoid any pos&ibillty that the case might be prejudiced and overturned by appeal. The county where the trial will be held will not be known until Hammerberg consults with the administrative OUlce of Courts in San Francisco. Hammerberg said that office will provide a list of counties that • can hold the trial, and he will select one of those. Hammerberg filed his rulings with the Madera County Clerk this morning but there was no formal court hearing and the de· fendants were not present. Hammerberg had to read stacks of newspaper and magazine articles and radio scripts before deciding whether to order the trial moved to a ~ounty more m etropolitan than this rural area. During a hea.ring last month, he viewed more than three hours of television Cllm and videotape. all devoted to the bizarre case in which 26 school children and their bus driver were abducted July 15. Attorneys for three young an Francisco Peninsula men ac- cused of the kidnapings argued that a change of venue is necessary because everyone in this lightly populated Central California county became emo- tionally involved. The defense argued at another hearing that the transcript or grand jury proceedings that led to indictments should remain sealed until trials are completed so prospective jurors won't be prejudiced. • The victims were abducted from their bus while on their way home from summer school.. Clear through Saturday, but with cooling along the coast. Highs near 80 on the coast, lows to a bout 65. Carter's Pl11rality: 'Enough' Jobless Rate Still Rising WASHINGTON (AP). - The nation's unemploy- ment rate rose from 7.8 percent to 1.9 percent in October, the government reported today, providing; fresh evidence that the economic slowdown is con· tinwn1. (Related atory, A3) I NSID E T ODAY There's more to chairs than ;wt sitting on them. Today's 'weekender. views this holuchold object a&. art. and sculptur(' Index AIY-S.nlo All ... ""' .. L.M ... y<I At c.11 ..... 1. as.ea CM•rCotntr aa Cla\\lflN 01-14 ""-"' cs =-=·~'" ~! ,........... .. f'IN!Ke A1MJ,IJ ....-..c:.,. ., llltNllMIM c;• " CH AU •• At ... , AIMJ Cl C'-'I A4 A4 Cl-I By WALTER R. MEABS Al'$tNCl•I c.rre~ WASHINGTON -Itonlytakes a word to describe Jimmy Carter's mandate for the pre- sidency: Enough. He is the president-elect; he will be the president; and if margin ot victory is much noted now , it will not be long remem- bered. When he swears the oath Of or- fice Jan. 20, not many people will r emember -or care -how many votes put him there .. When be goes to the Democratic Congress with his agenda for change, it. will be u president, testing his strength in office, and the margin that put him there will be of liLtle·cons~ quence. Carter's goals will be gained or 195t, his presidency will succeed WAOE·PfUCE CONTROL UNLIKELY: HELLER-A12 RACE WON, CARTER'S RELAX!D -M or fall, on tbe basis d •hat hap- pens in the future, not beeaUH of his narrow margin over Prell· dent Ford. "AlthOQ&b l would have pre- ( NEWS.4N.4LYSIS J ferred a unanimous vote on Tues- day, I think that the mandate was broad-based and certainly ade- quate," Carter said Thursday night. Carter won with 'S1 electoral vota, 1:1 more tban the mlnimum needed to win. He pined 51 per- cent of the popular vote, to Ford'• 48 peretnt. Ills electoral eoUece cou:nt was the lowest. of any winner ln eo 7ean, •vtn Uloulb U. electoral coUece has enlar14d ln that time. \ ' But three of the last rive presi- dents won with less Oian half the popular votc;1_ and Gerald Ford came to the white House with no votes at all. Harry S Truman was elected in 1948 with •9.6 percent of the popular vote and 303 electoral ·votes. John F. Kennedy won in 1980 whb 49.7 percent and 303 electoral votes. Richard M. Nix· on was elected in 1988 with 43.4 percent and 301 el~al vOlea. Their reputations and their roles In history, (ood and ill, ue bued on what they did in the White House, not on the 1ile ol the marctna that put them there. . . . The unemployment rate is one economic indicator President-elect Jlmrny Carter 11 watchinl u he considers whether to pro- poee a tax cut after tak1na olfice in J anu•ry. The number or persona' wsemployed in ~tober was 7.1 million, the most since 7.7 mllllon were out Clf•ork in Dec.ember. '·1 Bart Anderson, 15, son of Mr. and Mrs. Stewart An- derson of Corona del Mar is the fourth Boy Scout tru~ year in Troop 330 to achieve the rank of eagle scout. J re is a freshma n at Corona del Mar High School. Supervisor Seat Filled , - By Anthony Orange County Supervisor- elect Philip Anthony was ap- pointed by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Thursday to fill former supervisor Robert Batlin's unex- pired term. Anthony's appointment means h e'll s at o n t he Board of· Supervisors about six weeks before his newly won term begins in J anuary. I Ballan 's First District seal was vacated last August when the former supervisor was sentenced following his conviction of using county paid employes in a 1974 political campaign. I Both Anthony und his genernl election opponent, Santa Ana City Councilman Harry Yamamoto. said an appointment should not be made until the election decision. That done, Governor Brown wasted no lime notifying the win- ner of hls appointment. I Fro,. Pagf! Al .FOILED ... As part of the alleged scheme. H was reported to the older woman that the attorney advised that the money could be split three\.\ ay!., \.\1th one condition. Thi' s t'rial numhers on the mone) might hl• wanted some\.\ t\('re so each of the trio had to pul UI' CJ !.hare of their own inone) to show they could bve without the fouod money while the attorney checked out the sen al numbers Thl' onl) problem. snid Wilkinson. as that the attorney doesn't exist. the found money was phony, as was the money the two younger \\omen came up with as their good failh monev. Al('rl<'<1 h' thr hank clerk, pohet· folln\.\t•d lht• lno to the or- fl('t' bu1ldin1o? ::lt 33.13 w Coa!;t lh~h""' "hl'r1•lht•'4oman,whn "':i' tht· Jtt11rn1' ' fnt'nd. wac; ):!otn~ \ti h.inrf m rr the• fount! mont•\ for' 1•r1f1<· .1110 11 1\1 thJt 1111101 , lht' second woman hapµencd to recall that she had left h<'r ~lasses an the woman's Balboa homf' and she and the older woman !itarll'd to return lo Balboa. It wa~ at that point that police clO'I ed an . W1lkmson a lleged that the In- tent of the pair was to have the older woman go into her house to retne\'f' thr glasses, al which point ht'r > ounger companion would drive a way. He said that if it hadn't been for the bank clerk, tl\e woman would have bet'n out $4.000. ORANGE COAST " DAILY PILOT 1tw>O.• ..... (Ofi\t 0 41fy p,~M W!tt\o!llNCI\•\,..,.,, ~,._,,,rw....__, .,.,.,._ t\Owb41~.,,,.,o..~ ( a.t\t P\;l)llY11"Q (f'ltna ... l'lv -...~, .. ~ "11•~ •'Ill ft ''°"''"-"d M.,".J"-ll\, MIO~ ._,10•t ll'W '" tA W ._A N., .. DOf' f'r °''"' MW''IH'•l~M A.o,.,fil f ·">Ylf" l•t" V•ll_.., t•v1n~ ,,. jt1111tJ,.t,_ V•ik _, •f'W'I li1t'l"f'•l•l##f\~Wff\(,..\ I .\ 'Nl-1"''-.q•"lf\•l•J I,.,_, t\ P"frM11.JIW'(I S,,1 ;rd•Y' t'W4 ~~ TM "'tf'WI .... ovt)U\'-lno DI~\ t\ +t Ult W.\I A•t ~frfft, GM~ lrM'•· (•l1for"'•.,_,. .... '1N Wttl(f P•nt4e,,t tM Pv9' ~ , .... c--, Vr<• PY-fll\l•nt a"CI C...MfM Mtf~r T-nKMtll ftlllOf' ~ ... M_ ~ ........ , ... tor °""'"" "... Ill(-~ """ A'"''•nt Ma•.-41"0 ldlt~ • Oflic:H C6,, • .,..,,. UO'W,.\t a.,.~,,.,,.,.. l.tQ\i"1.t8-M" tl .. ()l•,,...¥"r•SttWt "~i1~,~~~~,.!n;,'.:;t',",.~..,,~'(1 tt S.n O••QO f t .. w.1¥ T•lephon• (714)M~t CIHlllled Adv•r~lllngMa.5e71 • ~lqllt ltl• Or-Co.t\I l'Mlll•~ .. CA>"" ~., Ht '-'#'\ 1t0f'l•i, m,,,,,..,.~W'fttt. •·•••• m•tl•r •r •d••••h•m•n" f'l41,..lft f'W' N "•'•Ov<.., •H~vt '"'•" .. '"'''••oft ol ......,,...,._ ~=~,l~"s:::!~: .. ::•d,;4, ~;~t ~':' ""°"'"'•• .,,. mt•• l' t.O ~•M'~ m1Uu n ... 1Nt-U•-1MW . Friday November 5 1976 Look Liflel Case Alioto, J11rors In Deadlock SAN FRANCISCO (AP> - Former Mayor Joseph Alloto's $12.5 million libel suit against Look Magazine ended in a thlrd mistrial today after jurors re- ported a 5-1 deadlock in favor or Alioto. The jurors bad dedared a de- adlock Thursday, but were or· dered by the judge lo try again. Aftel' about an hour of de- liberation this morning, they sent U.S. District Court Judge Russell Smith a note saying "Further de- liberation would yield no further results.•• Judge Smith , of Missoula, Mont., said one juror belleved that there was insufficient evidence provided by either side to prove the case. The sole issue before the panel is whether the 1969 Look article alleging Alioto was 0 enmeshed in a web or alliance with the Mafia" was published with malice. The magazine is now de· fun ct. Alioto was not present. At- torney Lawrence Alioto said he would request a new trial on behalC of his father. The first trial ended with a hung jury. In the second, jurors agreed parts of the story were false and defamatory, but dead· Jocked on the malice issue. An appeals court reversed dis- missal of the suit by Judge Smith and ordered a retrial on the ques· tion of malice only. After deliberatiru? Thursday. the jurors sent a q.uestion to the Fro• Page Al 2 KILLED .. • al6o works for Fluor Corporation io Saudi Arabia was being con- tacted by telegram today to in- form him of his former wife's murder, police said. Detective Welsh said it was not immediately determined when Mrs. Howell and Campbell met, married and separated, leading t.o confrontations involving the second and third husband. "They have had a few beefs, but not too recently," Police Communications Supervisor Sam Marberry said Thursday night whe n contacted shortly after the murders were reportoo. Detective Welsh said Camobell was recently fired from his job Wlth El Don Liquors. which has two outlets. one at 8-462 In-" dianapolis Avenue near the restaurant where Mrs. Howell was employed. Campbell was recently dis- charged following a door-pry burglary of the Indianapolis Avenue Liquor store and Detec- tive Welsh revealed today a war·• rant had been issued for his ar- rest in connection with that break-an. Detectives assigned to the case said today they have no idea where Campbell mjght attempt to go into hiding, knowing he would be the prime suspect in the double murder. "That's what we're trying to run down now,.. said Detective Welsh. He and Detective Phil Nolen were expected to question Diane Schroeder. 23 . reportedly Mrs llowell's daughter by her firsl husband Polacl' clamped a lii:?hl patrol rheck on the residence of both Ms. Schroeder and her f1ance about 2 IS a m today,\.\ hen fears arose that their li ves might be an danger. Detective Welsh said he was a lso attempting to contact Campbell's former parole officer regarding circumstances of his previous arrest& and conviction involving armed robbery and escape. The murder suspect served prison time on a five-years-to-life sentence before his release, in- vestigatqrs said . UC Irvine's 'Epidemic' Now Waning UC Irvine health officials say a Ou-like episode which t<lt 57 stu- dents on campus this week, ap· pears to be waning. And it doesn •t appear to be the so-called swine flu, or food poisoning, according to Dr. Gerald B. Sinykin, director or the Student Health Center. which began treating sick students Tuesday . The center treated 57 students, most residents of Mesa Court on campus, for nu symptoms. The . victims complained or vomiting, he3daches and diarrhea. Health officials today di scount- ed food poisoning as cause of the Illnesses, s aying they In- terviewed ailing students,. and many not affected by the illness. Officials are still waiting for results o! cultures taken from the ailing students. Results are ex- pected Monda y , a UCl spokesman said today. judge, as king: "With regard to the authors· state of mind, does a 50-50 chance of falsity co~titute a reckless disr egard or the truth?" Judie Smith replied that he doubted he could put a percen- tage figu re on falsity. E'ro.. Page A I CENTER ••• Newport Beach residents over 60 in order to recommend the kind of center lo be established by the city and the programs it should encompass. The property, which coosists of about six acres located on both sides of Marguerite north of Fifth, currently houses Carden School, a private day school. Earlier this year owners of the school tried to get the council to change their plans for the center in order to get a long-t.erm lease on the property. At that time, the council re- newed the school's lease for one year. Since then, the committee has r ecomm ended that the center be opened by the summer of1977. According t o Tim Cowell, a member or the city's Community Development Department who has been working with the ad- visory committee, Mrs. Buck's leaflet contains "a number of substantial errors concerning what is proposed for the site." In addition, the leaflet contains what is described as a quot.e from the Daily Pilot describing the HUD grant. The leaflet fails to mention that the quote was a paraphrasing of remarks made at a city council meeting by Councilman Paul Ryckoff and the leaflet inserted the word "expensive" into the quote -a word not used by the councilman. nor used in the Dai- ly Pilot story. Mrs . Buck offered no explana- tion for the misquote. Mrs. Buck claims the commit- tee's report recommends that the city "reconstruct a totally dif- ferent building on the site," but Cowell maintains that the com- mittee has merely recommended that the school building be slight- ly remodeled to accommodate the senior citizens. Cowell a lso disputed Mrs. Buck's contention that the center would be '.'huge" or "govern- ment welfare offices.•' He said the purpose of the center is to provide one location where senior citizens can obtain information about services, such . as Social Security, and where they can participate in recrea- tional programs as well. Cowell also s tressed that whatever counseling or informa- tion programs are to be offered at the center will depend on the wishes of the people who use it. "Those are nol firm recom- mendations the committee i,s making. They are more in the line of outlining what could be done." he said. Mrs. Buck s aid she had no in- volvement with the school or its oper ators. When asked why she was opposing the center in such a manner. she alluded to increased traffi c causing a decline in pro· pcrty values. As rar as the leaflet and the subsequent letter .to the city council, Mrs. Buck said she and the directors were doing "exact· ly what <city councilman) Ray Williams told us to do." Wynn explained that the third year grant for which the hearing as being held is for $351,000. The firs t year allocation was for $117,000 and $234,000 was the second year's allotment. The funds not used directly for purchase of the property have been partially used to pay the committee's expenses, with the balance reserved for remodeling the buildings and paying for equipment for the c~nter. Wynn said that if the council changes its mind and decides not to develop the property for the purposes s lated in the city-'s grant aJ>plication. then it is likely that +rtiD would demand return of all funds. The money could probably be • raised by sale or the site, he said, but then il would go to a de· veloper which would destroy any chance of a public use of the pro- perty . Newport Rape Try Reported Newport Bea<'h police are seeking a man with a mustache they believe tried to rape a Corona del Mar woman Thurs- day afternoon. Det. Sam Amburgey said the 25-year·old victim had gone home at l p.m. on 3 hmch break and, while s he was in her house. the man, armed with a handgun, came through the unlocked front door . Amburgey said the would-be rapist ncd without banning the victim physically. ..... ,....,. .. VIEW OF CAMARILLO STATE HOSPITAL WHERE PATIENTS• DEATHS ARE BEING PROBED Grand Jury Inquiry Scheduled After lnvettlgatlon by Citizen• Group Hos:(>ital Abuses Cited Patients Recount Mental Ward Treatment VENTURA CAP) -.. They strapped my hands behind my back and str apped me on my stomach. I had to lay that way all night. "They gave me a shot which hurt the back of my skull ... l banged my head on the wall because it hurl so bad. The doc· tor came next morning and said I was imagining the pain." This statement from a patient at one or California's 11 state mental hospitals was recorded by one of several citizens' groups looking into alleged abuses at the hospitals. Scores of similar cases have Pedestrians Blamed for 4-car Crash Two pedestrians crossing East Coast Highway in Cor-0na del Mar early this morning set off a chain-reaction collision that left four vehicles badly damaged, but no one seriously injured. Newport Beach police said the two unidentified pedestrians were crossing the street at Iris Avenue about 6 :45 a.m. and drivers in the westbound lanes began to slow for them. According to preliminary police reports, one driver, Mark Scudder, 33, of 2865 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar, was apparently unable to stop and tried to swerve around the cars and pedestrians. According to police, Scudder's car collided with vehicles driven by Susan Bertotti, 42, Dana Point, and Richard Bostic, 22, Orange. Officers s aid Bostic's car then collided with a motorhome parked near the intersection. The only injury listed in the mishap was a cut nose suffered by Bostic. been reported -and a few suc- cessfully prosecuted. Last month a Camarillo Slate Hospital psychiatric technician was arrested after a witness al- legedly saw her beat a female pa- tient with a fly swatter and an ice tray, then loop a towel around her neck and begin choking her. A registered nurse who works at CamariUo told the Associated Press that "choking out" -us- ing a strangle hold to render a pa- tient unconscious -has been often used to quiet rebellious pa- tients. Beatings, verbal abuse, tying patients to beds with painfully tight restraints, sexual advances to and rapes of mentally dis- turbed patients -all these have been reported by various sources. ,..,... PGfl'! Al GAS USE · ••• comparable to whatit was before the Arab oil embargo of 1973 and more than twice the 2.5 percent increase recorded in 1975. The government hoped to keep an- nual consumption increases to less than 3 to 4 percent. Current agency projections are based on state reports of motor fuel consumption and on current trends, motor fuel production figures and other factors. , Supporting its claim that hlghway speeds are on the rise, the agency said, for example, the average s peed of free-flowing traffic measured on hlgbways with a 55 mile per hour s peed limit in Texas was 58.4 miles per hour for the quarter that ended. June 30; California. an averaege of 54.8 miles per hour; Maryland. 54.5 per miles per hour; Indiana, 56.8 miles p e r hour; and Vir~inia, 51.4 miles per hour. The top figure was reported by Connect icut -60.8 miles per hour -or five-tenths of a mile per hour faster than the 1973 na- tional average. Next week, the Ventura County Grand Jury will be l>resented with cases of questionable deaths of patients at Camarillo. and finally allegations of brutal treat- ment may be substantiated or found groundless. In any case, the pubUc sessions will likely throw a barsb spotlight on staffing· j)roblems an~ the uncertain future facing Californja 's m ental hospital system and its 15,000 patients. The probe is to determine if criminal negligence -or worse -was involved in deaths from strangulation, drug overdoses. drownings and other causes the past four years. l( indictments are returned, s ays A sse mblyman Kea McDonald of Ojai, "it will be an indictment not so much of in· divlduals but of the system and the Le_sislature for not doing somethmg aboutthissituatJon." McDonald said be bas beard about poor conditions at the hospital for 16 years. ' The h earin gs. which authorities say may deal with "as many as 75 deaths," will be held in open court under a seldom-used provision in law. "We hope that the proceedings will be therapeutic" in improv- ing conditions at slate hospitals, said Asst. Dist. Atty. Michael Bradbury of Ventura County. Carried out over the past year, the district attorney's probe was revealed last month at a time when a series of four unexplained deaths at Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk led to the scheduling of coroners' inquests. Prompted by news stories last month about the Ventura County death probe. the Health Depart- ment recently sent investigators of its own to various hopsitals. They already r eported that about one in every 12 deaths s tudied invo lved some ir- regularity. It's What's Ont Back That Counts! Our store is like an iceberg! No -we're not chilly to deal with -it's that you only see one tenth of our store from the front. People visiting us for the first t i me are flabbergast ed when the spacious interio r unfolds before them. The huge showroom has thousands of samples. (Customers tell us we have the largest selection they have seen .) Our warehouse contains an inventory of infinite variety. Hundreds of remriants inhabit a 25x50 remnant room. Add offices, a spacious drapery room. plenty of parking, pleasant people, and you'll have the "Big Picture" of our successful operation! 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUC • COSTA M ESA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE '646-4838 -6 .46-2355 -- Saddlebaek VOL. 69, NO. 310, 4 SECTIONS,« PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, NOVEMBERS, 1976 I Aftern oon N.Y. Stocks TEN CENT Judge Moves Chowchilla Kidnap Trial MADERA <AP) -The Chowchilla mass kidnaping trial today was ordered moved out of Madera County. Superior Court Judge Jack L. Hammerberg also granted de· feme motions to keep the grand jury transcript sealed at least until a trial jury is sequestered. &th rulings had been expect- ed, and Hammerberg said he· granted the venue change to avoid any possibility that the case might be prejudiced and overturned by appeal. The county where the trial will be held will not bt known until Hammerberg consults wilh ,the administrative Office of Courts in San Francisco. Hammerberg said that office will provide a liat of coClnties that can hold the trial, and he will select one of those. Hammerberg filed his rulings with the Madera County Clerk this morning but there was no formal court hearing and the de- Travis. 4. and Wendy Finnern, 7, team up to douse their play mate. Cis co Rios. 6, with garden hose. The Cos ta Mesa youngste rs resorted to this method of keeping cool as Santa Ana condition drove temperatures above 90 d egrees Thurs day throughout Southern California. Weatherman is predicting more of the s ame for the weeke nd. Semester System Voted In at UCI By a 16 lo 15 vote the Irvine Division of the University of California Academic Senate ap- 1~ proved a recommendation that the Irvine campus begin operat· 1 ingunder a semester system. I The Irvine Oivison, made up of a representative group of UCI 1 faculty members. voted in favor I . of the semester system by a one· ballot mar.llin. UCI has ~n un· l Coast ... .. Weath er Clear through Saturday, but with cooling along the coast. Highs near 80 on the coast, lows to 11bout65. I NSIDE T ODAY There's more to chairs than jwt 8ftting on them. Today's Weekender views th is household object as art and 8Ctllpture. l adex ., «-t All A4 A• ... 1 AIM) Cl c ... A• A• CH der the quarter system since the college was founded in 1965. The governing group of the Irvine Division will meet Nov. 17 to discuss the vote and a statewide meeting of the UC Academic Senate will meet Dec. 7 to make a decision on a California switchover. Arguments for retaining the quarter system were presented by students, who said the quarter policy promotes a fast classroom pace better calendar breaks. Advocates of the semester system claim there is more facul- t y and student contact hours per year, the registration system would be reduced to twice a year instead of three times, and the majority of state universities and community colleges are on the semester system. Thief Gets Cycle A burglar who broke into a Mission Viejo home while tbe vie· tlm was attenditig her husband's funeral drove off on the dead man's motorcycle. Orange County sheriff's of· ficers said the theft of the macblne, valued at $500, was dis- covered by tbe 37-year-old woman when she returned from her husband's last otes. Officers said the thief forc:ed open the garage door to gain access to the motorcycle • f endants were not present. Hammerberg bad to read stacks of newspaper and magazine articles and radio scripts before deciding whether to order the trial moved to a ~ount1 more metropolitan than this rural area. During a bearing last month, be viewed more.than three hours of television film and videotape, all devoted to the bizarre case in which 26 school children and their bus driver were abducted JulylS. Attorneys for three young San Francisco Peninsula men ac- cused of the kidnapings argued that a change of venue is necessary because everyone in this lightly populated Central California county became emo- tionally involved. The defense argued at another hearing that the transcript or grand jury proceedings that led to indictments should remain sealed until trials are completed, so prospective jurors won't be prejudlced. The prosecution opposed both motions, arguing that the defend- danls can get a fair trial here and the public should know what transpired in the case rather than relaying on rumor and in· nuendo. Tbe defendants -Frederick N. Woods, 24 , of Woodside; James Schoenfeld, 24, and his brother Richard, 23, both of Alberton -have pleaded inno- cent to 27 counts of kidnaping and 18 of robbery involving personal items taken from the victims. The victim s were abducted from their bus while on their way home from summer school. They were driven around in two vans for several hours, then were locked in a moving van buried at a rock quarry near Livermore almost 100 miles northwest of . here. Couple Murdered . In Bedroo1n of Home D esp ite Warni ngs Former Husband Sought Gasoline Use Sets Records By ARTHUR R . VINSEL Of IM Dally ttllot St.fl WA SH IN GT 0 N "AP ) - Despite continuing w~gs of dwindling energy resources, American motorists are setting records in using gasoline. The Federal Highway Ad · ministration said Thursday that the gasoline consumption rate this year will be gre1ter than any in history. Saddleback Names New Band Chief Terry Newman, Mission Viejo High School band director, will be striking up the band and other instrument al groups at Sad- dleback College in January. Newm an, 31, has been selected from among 52 applicants for the job of directing the coJlege's band, woodwind choir and jazz ensemble. He also will be teaching applied music classes. H~ will be filling the job left open when Monte LaBonte was made director of the college's division of fine arts earlier this year. Newman. who has taught at the high school for five years, or- ganized the school's participa- tion in the California Cavalcade of Bands which toured the East Coast this summer. Last month, he was honored by Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees for his work with the band. In 1975, Mis· sion Viejo students dedicated their yearbook 'to him. He was named "teacher of the year" by the Saddleback Valley Exchange Club in 1973. LaBonte said Newman was well received by students and faculty when he taught part-time at the college two years ago. "Terry has the ability to create an excitement about music in his students," he said. The division director also has two sons who worked under Newman at Mission Viejo High School and are now studying at the college. "I'm saddened at not having the opportunity to direct my kids but at the same time thrilled Terry will be doing the job," he said. <See BAND, Page A2) &xtuplets Born; 2 Die -NAPLES, Italy (AP) -A Neapolitan mother gave birth lo sextuplets -four girls and two .boys -but two of the girls died shortly af\er birth, hospital of- ficials said today. The mother, Pasqualina Cbianea~ waa reported in good cood.iUon a.t a city hospital. The surviving infants were being kept in an incubator abd their condl· tion was not disclosed. According to the Guinness Book oC R~ords, only some.two dozen cases of seittuplets have been re· ported throughout the world since UIOO. /" ., • The agency estimated that motor fuel consumption would total 118.8 billion gallons this year, including 115 billion for highway travel. It said the nation would use 4.4 billion gallons more motor fuel this year than in 1973. when the previous record was set.. As pleas for conservation go unheeded. the agency said, the increased usage apparently com-es not only from more highway driving but also higher speeds. Although it did not take a national average, the Highway Administration said highway speeds are increasing based on a sampling of states. Gasoline consumption is in· creasing al a rate of 5.7 perdent, comparable to what it was before the Arab oi l embargo of 1973 and more than twice the 2.5 percent increase recorded in 1975. The government hoped to keep an· nual consumJ>lion increases to less than 3 to <J percent. Current agency projections are based on state reports of motor fuel consumption and on current trends, motor fuel production figures and other factors. Supporting its cla im that highway speeds are on the rise, the agency said, for example, the average speed of free-flowing traffic measured on highways with a 55 mile per hour speed Hmit in Texas was 58.4 miles per hour for the quarter that ended June 30; ·california, an averaege of 54.8 miles per hour: Maryland, 54.S per miles per hour; Indiana, 56 .8 miles per hour ; and Vir~inia, 51.4 miles per hour. The top figure was reported by Connecticut -60.8 mile~ per hour -or five-tenths of a mile per hour faster t han the 1973 na· tional average. WANTED 1H SLAYINOS Wiiiiam Gene Campbell UC Irvine's 'Epidemic' Now Waning UC Irvine health officials say a flu-like episode which hit 57 stu- dents on campus this week, ap- pears to be waning. And it doesn't appear to be the so-called s win e flu. or food poisoning, according to Dr. Gerald B. Sinykin, director of the Student Health Center , which began treating sick students Tuesday. The center ·treated 57 students, most residents of Mesa Court on. campus, for flu symptoms. The victims complained of vomiting, headaches and diarrhea. Health offtdals today discount- ed food poisoning as cause of the illnesses, saying t hey in- terviewed ailing students, and many not affected by the illness. Officials are still waiting for results of cultures taken from the ailing stud ents. Results are ex- p ected ,Monday , a UCI spokesman said today. A Huntington Beach woman and her new husband were shot to death in their upstairs bedroom Thursday night and her ex-husband is being sought in the slaying. Police identified the suspect as William Gene Campbell, 48, an ex-convict who they described as armed and ex treme l y dangerous . ' Investigators identified tbe victims a s Mrs. Bever ly Campbell Howell, 39, and Verne Howen, 42, who lived at 17847 Beard Lane, Huntington Beach. Both died of multiple gunshot wounds fired from a .38 caliber revolver. Jfomicide detective Jack Welsh said Howen was shot in the back. Mrs. Howell was shot in the bead and arm. Huntington .Beach detectives s aid suspect Campbell is believe~ to be driving a 1969 Pon- tiac GTO, dark brown, with license plate 562 EQP. He is on parole from a five-year to life sentence for· armed robbery antl is also wanted on a warrant charging him with burglary. Howell was a pipe(itter, ap-• parently currently unemployed, and Mrs. Howell worked at Don Jose's, a Huntington Beach Mex· ican restaurant, Detective Welsh said. Patrolman Steve Dutton was. dispatched to the two-story Mex· ican adobe-style structure near Talbert Avenue and Newland Street in central Huntington Beach after a 10:14 p.m. telephone call to police. "Someone just shot my mot.her. . . ! " a hysterical young woman screamed into the re· ceiver. The dispatcher noted down at that moment that a car's squeal- <See 2 KILLED, Page A2) Jamioi:ettes at, Work Membe rs of the Rancho Viejo Junior Woman's Club Juniorettes group for girls 12 to l8 are preparing for an ice cream social membership event set for Saturday from 1-3 p.m. at 27142 Pueblo Nuevo in Mission Viejo. The seryice group raises funds for Philanthropic projects in the ·community. Shown working on decora- tions and plans tor the event are, from left, club /resident Dianne Weathers, Karen Wafi and Jamie Walton. , , r • l A2 DAILY PILOT SB Friday. Novembor5 tg78 l -Ca1·ter Had Enough Mar~n of Victory Inconsequential By WALTE R R. MEARS Al' \,..cl•I Cerro--.,1 WA.SlllNGTON -ll unly taktt a word to d escribe Jimmy Carter's m andate for the pre· sldency: Enough. \ f.: JJ ·s .-f ,\'AL l ·1~ He is the president-elect. he wlJJ be the president; a111I 1( ' margin ot victory is muc h noted now, it will not be long r emcm· be red. agenda for change, it will be as president, testing hls 'lrength in office, and the margin that put hlm there will be of litUe conse- quence. Carter's goals will be gained or losl. his presidency will succeed or fail, on the bas is of what hap- pens in the future, not because or his narrow margin over Presi- Whe n he s wears the oath of 01- flce Jan. 20, not many people will r emember -or care -how many votes put him there. dent F ord. • Wh e n h e goes t o th e Democratic Congress with his .. Although I wouJd have pre- ferred a unanimous vole on Tues- Pilot Logbook Mission Gives Religion Dose By \\1UJAM SCHREIBER Of uwr oa11v P1101 St•ll APART •'ROM ATIENDING a historic event, Dr, Lydia Deane, vice president of the Saddleback Hospital board, confided a more ~rsonal reason for coming .to this week's bicentennial birthday fiesta at Mission San Juan Capistrano. · She told Bishop William Johnson, the new spiritual leader of Orange County Catholics, that it was her "annual dose of religion " She also explained why hospital board president Willia m Edgar couldn't make it -he had an important bowling date. When she told Edgar she'd pray for him, he re- portedly responded. "Even )Our prayers couldn't help my game " •** JOHNS. SIMONS or Laguna ffills, best known in county circles for his phenomenal publtc meeting attendance record and hom espun comments, this SC'fllElllEll week had something to say about Saddleback Valley Unifi ed School District trustees and teachers. Aiming a barb at the school board, Simons remarked on executive sessions that arc called when an audience is pre- sent awaiting action. "They go int.o that little cubbyhole and leave us silting out there like a bunch of stuck hogs," he s aid. "Then they come back, meeting adjourned and that's it." As for the teachers. Simons doesn 'l much care for 'a gripe he overheard voiced by a young teacher who wanted assurances he wouldn't be tranl>ferred to other duties. ''Here's the young guy who couldn 't be over 30, making $18,000 a year, and he wants to be sure he won't get laid off or transferred Do I have that'' Oo you .. *** WHAT /\RE "RADICAi. and l'lhnic minorities?" They are those people dcpa('t('() in j ~lade presentation on new laws go11crnan1? adult anc.I 'or:illonal edu('at1on A state o rf1c1al sho\\ed th~ c,hde.., Jl a rct'ent me-cling or a Saddl('hack College basl'd c>ducatun; ad\'1sory committee on adult t'du('allon and had a :.omt'\\hat h..ir<I time C'tplain- ang the curious phrasl' Then he f1~ured out that soml'body had goofed . It should ha\'e react "racial and ethnic mmoritic~ .. Well, nobody's perfect. espectall) state government Fro• Pag~ .-IJ 2 KILLED IN HUNTINGTON \Jlg tires could be heard in lh<' back ground and oHiccrs bcl~H' at was Camphl'll ('SCjp1nl( DNect1H•c; lod;1y "'<'rt' bl•gan· rung what ,appear('(! tu be a com- plicated ta~k of unrJvehng th•• tangled marital rel.1t1un' and simmering l'motions that op- parently exploded 1n d bloodlwth Mrs . llowell a nd Campbell met. married and separated. leading lo confronlat10ns involving th(' !lccond and third hushand. Pohc-e saul Campbell .md half wife r<.'cen tl\ '"ll••ratl'd ;ind hc·r second d 11. cirud hu~band, t ht' slam male' 1ctim. returned from Saudi Arabia 'They have had a flow beefs, but not loo recently," Police Communications Super visor Sam Marberry s aid Thursday night "hen contactt'd shortly .Jter the murders " ere reported OC'lt'('l 1ve Welsh said Campbell was recently fared from his JOI> with El Don Liquors, which has two outlets. one al 8462 ln- dianapoli-; Avenue near the restaur;rnt where Mrs. llowell v. as emplOH'd He was apparf'ntly t'mployed there as a p1pditter for lhc l-1uor Corporation. Still another ex·hu.c;hanrl who also works for Fluor Corp<1rat1on an Saudi Arah1a was hcmg con- tacted by telegram toduy to in- rorm him or his former wife"s murder, police s aid. Detective We lsh 11aid it was not immediately determined when .. OAANQI! COAST s11 DAILY PILOT TM> 0r.,__. GNU Da1l't i-1._. •tft _,_,,_ "'4"' blf'W'odtf'W> ... ¥rn Pfh\ l'C"lb4•~bvtN 0t~~ C'A.t\t ~IYll"'O C.0""°41"1¥ w..rat_.fif'h!M'\ ··~ ovori'"'-Cf ~"410 IM~qf\ I HGn fOf' '"""'" Mn111 .... •08'1 8••'"· H"°"tl"QtOfil f»-'<" r tw,,,,. tau' Y•lf•Y. lt~•n•. fiaOGl•b-.-. VeU"'f _.I'd l'"l~ .. t<h ~If\( .. ,, &"~~41••1 ttoft i\ ~l'-f\"ct \at~tdU'\ 6Nt ~\'\ ,,_ Ol'•N1 .. I riiu.-h"'l"4 otaf\t " •• rQ W,\I ft•V Sffe9t, GMt• w ..... C.•htot"••f'1th 11_,,N _ ~.\i.o.ftt tM P\,Ct """"'" J10ll c ... ~ Vlul're•io.•t•l'dGo,....,MI_ n.... •• ic ..... [O<IOf TM""fte. ......... .. ""'"'''"' , .. ... 0..tlttN ~-"'-' ... ft A\,l\t~t M.lf\.et•"'t lttitor' t.dcllel>•clt v ellty OMc:. tut1 u '• • llue •Is... DI...,,,_.., OtftcH O.loM9 .. ntwt•l .. y\ll"Nf H""'IAOl8'1 .... ft. 17111-ftf\ftul .. ,'lt u_ .... ft:ll .. O ....... .,,.M..,1 Telepftone (n41~ Cl•Hffled Adhrtlllnt14a·M11 ieddl•bMlll YaUtv """""Of'1<.e 611·'310 From'•" (ft'""' .. 495-0t'° ~~·:: !:! °:.::~,.<~~.,~1=.~::. m•tt•,. f ' •flwft'H'•m•nt' "•'•'" "''' M ''''fHlivc•d ""'-•wt t0f(1t1 ••rmln le" •f <•TfOM9'IJlfllM1 S.C•nd 'l•u "'t•o• o•td tt Ot,,. MJu, (Mtf~rf"ll. iWb\U1f)UOf'I •w ff'""' U )0 "'"'ttrrttY' ., Mtll )I U ....... ,, '"llll•r., flMttMlu•"' U M f'Plonlftty. f LH Woman Cited In Mall Theft A Laguna Hills woman has been cited o n ch arges of petty theft a fter being identified as the shoppe r w.ho took goods from a Laguna H ills Mall store without paying for them. Orange County s heriffs officers said. Deputies issued the citation to Jone Keck Anderson, 72, of 2045.p Mariposa East, Leisure World. They said she left the J .C. P en· ney store without p aying for nee- dle point m aterials valued atS15. Carwash Break in Earns Jail Term Oneal Salnl McCUiiough of El Toro has been s entenced to fi ve months in Orange C<>unty Jail alt-er pleading guilty to burglary ch arges filed by sheriff's of- ficer s. Superior Court Judge J am es ll. Walsworth ordered lhe jail term nnd three years probation for McCullough, 18, of 24432 Twig St., El Toro, after the defendant admitted breaking into the Arco Carwas h, 25122 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo, ~pt . 29 • day, J think that the mandate was broad-based and certainly ade- quate," CaC'ter swd Thursday night Carter won with 297 electoral votes, 27 more than lhe minimum needed lo win. He gained 51 per - cent of the popular vole, to Ford 's 48 percent. ltis electoral college count was the lowest of any winner in 60 years, even though the elt.'Cloral college has enlarged in that lime. But three or the last five presi- dents won with less than half the popular vote, and Gerald Ford came to the White House with no votes at all. • Harry S Truman was elected in UM8 with 49.6 percent ot the popular vote and S03 electoral votes. John F. Kennedy won in 1960 with 49.7 per~t and 303 WAGE-PRICE CONTROL UNLIKELY: HELLER-A12 RACE WON, CARTER 'S RELAXED -A4 electoral votes. Richard M. Nix- on was e lected an 1968 with 43.4 percent a nd 301 elee\oral votes. The ir reputations and their roles in h istory, good and ill, arc based on what they did in the White !louse, not on th·e size of the margins that put them there. Lands lides can be useful. Lyn- don B. Johnson pushed his Great Society social programs to enact· ment after trouncing Barry Goldwater in 1964. He did it as a Democratic pre- sident with a heavily De mocratic Congress. but two years later. Republicans m:.ide a con- ,llressaonal com eback. And within four years. with the war in Viel· nam escalating, Johnson was in political trouble so deep that he quit the campaign for renomina- tion. ll was durin~ the term he won by minority vote that Nixon opened U .S. contract with China and went to Peking himself. He dadn •t last the te rm he won by landslide in 1972, r esigning rather th an face likely impeach- ment over W atergatc. O.lly '11ot SI.Ill Pllole These member s of the Lake Forest ll voluntary homeowner s association are dis playing some of the handcrafted goods that will be sold at the group's first an- nual Christrnas bazaar on Saturdav from 11 a r'I. lo 4 p . rn. The bazaar wih take place at the Lake Forest Sun and Sail Clubhouse, 24752 Toledo Way. Pictured arc, Crom left, Donna Brown, Jimmie Lascola and Lois Duitman. Mrs. Duitman will be on ha nd to do qujck charcoal caricatures of people in attendance. Anthony to Fill Post Orange County Super visor - elect Philip Anthony was ap- pointed b y Gov. Ed mond G. Brown Thursday to fall former su~rvisor Robert Batlin's unex- pired term. Anthony's appointment means he 'll s it on the Boar d o r Super visors about six weeks before his newly won term begins in J anuary. Battin 's First D istrict seat was vacated last August when the former supervisor was sentenced following his conviction of using county pa id e mployes in a 1974 political campaign. Both Anthony and his general · election opponent, Santa Ana City Councilman Harry Yamamoto, said an apPOintment should nol be m ade unlll lhe election decision. That done, Governor Browt wasted no time notifying Lhe win ner or his appointment. Abuse in Hospital Noted by Patients VENTU RA (AP) -"They strapped my hands behind my back and s trapped me on my stomach. I had lo lay that way all night. I m ent may be su bsdtiitiated or found gr oundless. ' $500,000 in Drugs, 4 Held in HB Raids "They gave me a shot which hurt the back or my skull ... 1 banged my head on the wall because it hurt so bad. The doc- tor came next morning and said I was imagining the pain.·• This state ment from a patient at one of California's 11 state mental hospitals was recorded by one or several citizens' groups looking into alleged abus~ at tl'je hospitals. Jn any case. the public sessions will like ly throw a harsh spotlight on staHlng problems and the uncertain future facing California's m ental hospital system and its 15,000 patients. The probe is to determine it c\iminal n egligence -or worse -was involved in deaths from strangulation, drug overdoses, drownings and other causes the past four years . Huntington Beach Police cap- tured five suspected drug dealers and confiscated nearly a half- million dollars worth of narcotics in separate cases Thursday. The h aul in('luded 2.5 pounds of heroin purchased behind a coffee shop at the city's F'ive Points Shoppm~ Center and a pound or South Amera('an cocaine seized inaTustmraad. Narcotics Detective Sgt. Carl V1dano said it was pure coin- cidence the two m ajor drug ar- rest cases occurred at the same time. about 1 p.m . Thursday. No resistance was encountered in eithe r drug arres t situation. The heroin ha ul, which in- vestigators s ay involved three previous purchases from the same s uspects, all analyzed and confirm ed as Mexican heroin,· was seized at Main Street a nd Beach Boulevard. "The s treet value of what we got would be a bout $400,000," Sgt. Vidanosaid. · Suspe('ts in th at case were iden- tified as Joe Dell Holland, 35, or 3513 Royer A \•e .. Santa Ana. and William "Walhc" Ralph Jef- ferson. 27. of 3222 S. Ma.in St . S an- ta Ana. Holland was arrested on a pre- viously-1ssued warrant carrying SS0.000 bail, while Jefferson was held in heu of $5,000 bail. Both are char ged with sales of heroin. Po lice said the heroin was packaged in plastic sandwich baggies. A separate three-m onth in- v es ligation l e d to the simultaneous arrest of three m en at a motel on First Street in Tustin, where officers allegedly Fro• Page Al BAND ••• Newman is a graduate of the University of Redlands who hold." a m asters degree from Cal State Los Angeles. However, a college spokesman said the band director said be was "fortunate" lo have been working with the teachers, ad· minis trntors , s tudents and parents at Mission Viejo lligh School. • .Instruments Taken Fro~ College Wing MusiJ aJ instruments valued at · Sl,SS2 have been stolen from the mus ic wing o f Saddleback · Colle ge in Mission Viejo. Orange County sheriff's officers said. Deputies said int.ruders who entered by unknown means took an organ, a tuner and a piano pedal extension from the stor~ge room ol &ho music bulJdlng. 28000Marguerito Parkway. ' purchased $50,000 worth oC co- caine. The paund of stimulant drug from the South American coca plant was seized after alleged negotiations with s uspect s Donald Anthony Urban, 28. Leo God~nez Med ina. 28, both of Tustin, a nd Je rry Boh Beasley, 28. of Silver ado Canyon. Investigators booked the trio into Orange County J ail in heu of $10,000 bail each, on charges of sale of dangerous drugs. Laguna Hills Man Cited in Theft A Laguna Hills man who al- legedly look a wrench fro m the t()<)IS department of a local ~lore without paying for 1t has been cited on cha rges of petty theft by Orange County sheriffs officers. Deputies s aid they issued the citation lo J o hn Thomas Whisler. 18, of 25192 Adelanto, after the a l- leged theft was reported by employes of the Scars. Roebuck Company in the Laguna Halls ~fall Scores of similar cases have been reported -and a fe w s uc- cessfully prosecuted. Last month a Camarillo State Hospital psychiatric te<:hnician was arrested after a witness al- legedly saw ber beat a female pa- tient wilh a n y swatter and an ice tray , then loop a towel around her neck and begin choking her . A registered nurse who works at Camarillo told the Associated Press that "choking out" -us- ing a strangle hold to render a pa- tient unconscious -has been often used to quiet rebellious pa- tients. Beatings. verbal abuse, tying patients lo beds with painfully tight restraints, s exual advances to and rapes of mentally dis- turbed patients -all these h ave been reported by vari ous sources. Next week . the Ventura County Grand Jury will be presented with ('ases of questionable d eaths of patients at Camarillo, and finally a llegations of brutal tre at- U indictments are returned, says As se mbl y man Ken McDonald of Ojai, "It will be an indictment not so much of in· dividuals but or the system and the Le~islature for not doing something about this situation." McDonald said he has heard about poor conditions at the hospital for 16 years. Th e hearing s, which authorities s ay may deaJ with "as many as 75 deaths," will be held in open court under a seldom-used provision in law. "We hope that the proceedings will be therapeutic" in improv- ing conditions at s tate hospitals, said Asst. Dist. Alty. Michael Bradbury or Ventura County. Carried out over the past year, the district attorney's probe was revealed last month al a lime when a series or four unexplained deaths at M elropoli tan State Hospital in Norwalk led lo the scheduling of coroners' inquests. Prompted by news stories last month about the Ventura County death probe, the Health Depart- ment rece ntly sent investigators or its own to various hopsitals. It's What's Out Back That Counts! Our store is like an iceberg! No -we 're not chilly to deal. with -it's that you only see one tenth of our store from the front. People visiting us for the first time are flabbergasted when the spacio u s interior unfolds before them. The huge showroom has thousands of samples. (Customers tell us we have the largest selection they have seen.) Our warehouse .contains an inventory o f infinite variety. Hundreds of remnants inhabit a 25x50 remnant room. Add offices. a spacious drapery room, plenty of parking, pleasant people. and you'll have the "Big Picture" of our successful operation! DEN'S ••••••••••••••••• • --· .. ---installation· custom draperies linoleum • wood floor 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA. CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 6.46-.4838 -6.46-2355