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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-11-08 - Orange Coast PilotPi-ice -ikes Fe&re ' DAILY PILOT C0:rter .to ~hallenge * * * 10< * * * White-only C.hureh MONDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER&, 1976 YOL "·NO. >n. 2 samows. • "'"o•s .. I . • • • 0 fTwo BQats Aground • Ill Newport· I Gas Going llp ' I Oil Exporters 1 Seek New Hike Bf &k Ast0eflted Praa The oil cartel seetns sure lo raile oil prices in the new year. a move that probably will mean higher prices at the gas pump, in· beatin1 and electricity bills, at airline ticket counten and many other places. Ministers of the ll·nation Oreaniiation of Petroleum Ell· 1 porting Countries mftt Dec. 1S in f the Persian Gull sbeikdom of J Qatar lo discuss oil prices, but the most influential members ( have already said they want in· t creases ranging from 10 percent t to 25 percent. f Even Saudi Arabia, the largest oU exporter and the most reluc- tant in recent years to raise I prices, bas said it wants a "moderate'' increase. That bas , been interpreted as about 10 per· I cent. r Iran, the second Ja.rrest oil ex-. poiUr, ls thought to favor an in· • crease in the are a ol 25 pe1 cent, while Venezuela. another in- Ouenlial OPEC member, wants at least 15 percent. l I I t f • ' ' Tbe spokesman at OPEC head· quarters in Vienna, Ahmed Zaheri, said last month he belleYed tbe price would be "ad· justed," whkh in oil talk means increued. The present OPEC price of $11.11 for a 42-gallon barrel of standard grade crude has been in effect slnce Oct. 1, 1975. Oi I ministers considered raising Coast Weather Areas of dense fog along the coast are forecast for Tuesday morning . Otherwise sunny sides with a cooling trend Tuesday. A low tonlgbt near 60 with the high Tuesday ln mid-805. I NSIDE TODA~ Dcoth ~ the iolliltle on Bob Martin of Pfm-e and Sba F.alll, S.D. SM hi! death Oct. 16, it ha.I bttn 1'omed that M had a t.oi~ and JamJJr m ftleh city. S« Poge Af. I ndex prices 'al their meeting in Ball in May, but took no action, largely because of Saudi opposition. E~cb 10 percent increase in the price of OPEC oil, if pused alone entirely to consumers, would add about a peony a gallon to the price or gas in the United states. This takes into coQSldention the fact that the United States im· ports 40 percent of its oil. lo coun- tries importing all their oil the impact would be much greater. A price increase would also be felt wherever else oil ligures In the economy. Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yarnanl, the Saudi oil minister, said in August that some OPEC members want· ed a "very drastic" increase - "somewhat similar to wbal hap- pened in 1973." Arab oil nations put an embargo on exports dur- ing the October 1973 Mideast war, and OPEC followed with the quadrupling of oil prices. Yamani said bis government would resist a large increase this time because of coocem for the· economic recovery oft.be West. CSee OIL, Page AZ) Supre me Court Won't Delay Hinshaw Trial WASHING TON CAP) -The Supreme Cou.rt refused today lo interfere in a political corruption trial of Rep. Andrew J . Hinshaw (R-Newport Beach). The justices turned down a peUUon filed by Himhaw seeking a delay in the Orange County Superior Court trial now in pro- gress until the Supreme Court disposes of an appeal filed by the congressman earlier this year. Hinshaw, a Republican first elected to Congress in 1972, was convicted earlier this year of ac· ceptlng bribes from the Tandy Corp. in 1.972 while the company had matters pending before him as tax assessor for Orange Coun· ty. He was sentenced to prison for one to 14 years but has re- mained free pending appeal. In the current case, he is on trial oo charges of fraud. em- beulement and theft while in or- . fice as the tax assessor. ffinshaw's appeal to the Supreme Court, however was filed before his trial Md. was bas~ on ·• challenge to California's grand jury system. Hinshaw sought re-election Ulla year but was defeated in his district's Republican primary by ANembtyman Robert Badbam CR· Newport Beach) who went on to win the seat in the teneral election. I B S Birds of a Feather ) Fog Bank ~Cause; 10 Escape These birds, Wendy Potter, 16, (left) and Pam Maple, 24 , probabiy wouldn't have dif- ficulty finding sanctuary anywhere, but they've settled in Laguna Beach. Laguna's 0.l!y ...... SUit - beaches have drawn large collections of beachgoers with the unseasonably warm weather. With residents like these, no wonder they call it the Art Colony. At Plains Church C~rter to Attack White-only Policy ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. <AP) -Jimmy Carter will al· tend a meeting of the Plains Bap· list Church next ~day and hopes his fellow parlsblooe:rs will aeree to abandon thelr whites· only policy, spokesman Jody Powell says. N. the president-elect. rested among the marshes, woods and fishing streams of this Southern Georgia resort iJland Sunday. word reached him that the Rev. Clennon King, a black activist minister, bad been barred rrom lbe chur~b for lhe second week in a row. Po,vell said Carter and other church members with whom the President-elect had been in con- tact "hope at the conference to reach an amicable ~clusion and .ruarantee the right of all to worablpwtt.boutregardtorue." Powell sald that lf next ~n­ day's vote continues the wbltes· only policy, Carter would have to make "a difficult penooal d• els Ion" about what coune to take. He did not out.line ~ or>·"J lions Carter might have. Carter voted against a 1965 church rule excluding "Negroes (See CAB TEil, Page AZ> I He Was Down But Not Out RIVERSIDE (AP) -A hitcllhiker stabbed James Davis four times but that didn't stop the 63-year-old Perrls resident. Aft.et alleg4)dly stabbing Davis and commandeering hu car, Riverside Count)' sheriff's de- puties recounted, the hltcbhlker started to drive awa,y. A1thouch badly lnart, Davts picked up a rock, burled it tbroagb the car windoW, and hit tbe man on the bead. The car crashed and tbe hitcbbiker wu ar.-.1 on foot a half mi.M away .. InvesU1atora identified the bltebh1ker u Em- mett McAllister. 33, otSan Diego. • lmtmctiom For Cycle Vse Not Complete A Camp Pendleton marine who told police be didn't know bow to operate the motorcycle he'd just rented in San Clemente Saturday was reported resting com- fortabl)' today at the base hospital. Police said Steven Grant Mus~. 19, had not long left the rental aeencr when be realised be didn't know quite bow to stop the machine once he got it started. Musz rear-ended a car on El. Camino Real at Avenida Dom- inguez, police said. He was nol seriously injured, although he took the trip back to the base ln a mllilary ambulance. The driver of lhe car was un- hurt, police said. Reverse Sought WASHINGTON (AP) -A private ioternaUonal canference of economists ls urgine the world's lnduatrial nations to re- vene the anti-lnfl•tiooary "slow-irowth" policies ageed upon by President Ford and six other beads of stale at a summit COO• !ereace in Puerto Rico last June. I Thick fog that blanketed the Orange Coast overnight made navigation impossible for the crews of two boats that went aground in Newport Beach. , Capt. Bud Belsbe of the Newport Beach lifeguards said none of the people from the two vessela reported any injuries in the mishaps, although one boat. was listed as a total loss. The first boat went on the beach at I Street at about 7:30 p.m. while trying to find the harbor entrance on a return trip from Catalina. (Related story PageA5) According to Belshe, the 27· loot Santana sailboat began breaking up early today after at· tempts to tow her out ol the sur· tline failed. The boat is owned by Los Angeles resident Bruce Malasky. Her homeport is Marinadel Rey. According to lifeguards, she was carrying a charter group from Newport Beach and so was headed for Newport Harbor when the mishap occurred. The second ground occurred at about 5 a.m. when a 32-root. Newport went aground at 10th Street. The boat, the Gambol, was operated by Robert Meyer who had his three children aboard. Lifeguards s aid the Meyer family escaped unharmed and attempts were under way today to get the boat off the beacb before she could be severely damaged by the surf. Although the weather at the beach was clear this morning, weathermen are calllns for more ol the overnlaht log tonight. No 'Pardo,.,' For Ford? ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. <AP> -Humor columnist Art Buchwald says Presi· dent Ford lost to Jimmy Carter becau se be pardoned former President Nixon. "President Ford did for the justice system ln this country what Evel Knievel did for t he space pro- gram," Buchwald tol1 the New Jersey Education N.- socJaUon convention here. Nevertheless, Buchwald added, "I worshiped the very quicksand he walked on." Turnln1 to President- elect Jimmy Carter's con· troveralal Playboy ·in· tervlew, be said there is now a new bumper sticker in Wuhlniton which re- ade: "In his heart, be 1mow1 yourwlfe.'' En t erprising Pi«!ture This interesting pattern was created when a flotill a of boats welcomed the U.S. aircraft carrier Enterprise as it sailed up the Derwent River to Hobart, Tasmania. The "Big E " is the longest warship in the world. Childless Folks Happy Statistics Say Kids Don't Came Changes WASHINGTON <AP) -Mar- ried couples who choo.se not to have children are just as happy, sell-satisfi ed and interested an their community as couples who choose to have children. a new study says. The study , written by two social psycholo~ists from the University of Kansas, 1s based on a survey of 61 married couples in the area or Lawrence, Kan. It says that intentionally childless couples art' no more selfish than couples who intend to have children. Census Bureau reports !>how that in 1974, almost one-third of all muried women under 30 had not had children. up from one- fifth IO 1967 These census reports show also that Z1 percent of those ctuidiess Sitters Set Vp For Gorilla Cl!':CINN<\Tl (i\Pl TheCin· c1nnat1 Zoo 1s calling on a smaJI "rmv of volunteers to take turns sitting around the clock with a p1 eg11ant gon Ila Meger~. a lo""lanct gorilla. is ex~:ctcd to become a mother by tarly next year Zoo Director Ed Maruska said 1t s 1 mpossible to be more precise with pnmates. so the baby watch has already be~llll. '"There 1c; no wa v thal we could pertorn1 all th~ ('veryday tasks we hav-.. lo do and still have someone 111 front or that ,::orilla's cage <'very minute," hr o;aJd f 'ro"' Page .l I OIL ... "We are not jto1nf( to slaughter the ht>n fnat la)<. the golden e1gs. ·· he said "There 1s a limit· to what we can do. And I ttunk we' see that hm1t a little bit clearer Ulan others · · U.S. President-elect Jimmy Carter said at his news con- fttence on Thursday that an oi l price increase would be "a very senous blow" to coru1uming na- Uons but that all he could do before his inauguration was to express concern through publlc statements. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ,,.. .. ,, ... ,,,., ,.,..." o .. ~•• P11m ''"'"•"'· .,.,~ -l>i~'11MHtw p,,.,"' 'P'Wtl• "V(lt)¥t~0r "> ("" t ~1bl•\ft'"41 C"4"'\0•"'" c,.,_,,. .. -0,,IOM-,.,. 0+11)1 V"f'd Mi M"" lhr oJQI\' H•o..t¥ W (l\d4 ,,.,. ~ 'lr-wMtl n,. ... Pt M. f•"'-.IO'W'I ~ 11,, ·~.-. , .. I,, V•""• ""'"' \ .,,., ... """,' i,/4 '"" .. "'1 ~·Qtl'W~A h \l)ulJl'l(rit'I A.\ fll0lftf•9~•1"'~ l,,, 1\. NC4• V'1 ', '~V"1''" .,._, IO' fJl'I ~""'·~• ouo••-.f\•f'W) o•.,.t 1, "* o ..,,,. 1 ,.,.., ~tr.-.1 t.D\I• Mot .. CAI IO•f'l•• .,., .. ..... ,., ... w ... Ptf' 10-f'lt '"" ,.Mfll "" J.tO • (.,.,.,, V•u-Pr"'"•""'""'° C,,t,._,.. M.tflilt¥t ffUU9U1\IC••••I ( 1·'lf TM"'"' & MwrefM,.. M..ll",.4•"9E<Mo- O-.rttt M LH\ ••cNnt,. N.t" 4 \\1\t.tlnt M.tl\A(tt~ (rtll1>f' OftlCH f"Otl•Mlt\• JJOW•\lf'My',tr,.,.t la'1tJM8• '"" rtl•t';l,.,..,_,,,.,.,~f Hv,,tl""QIM .,.., I\ 1111\ .... M" loulh•td S~ltturlll Vlll"r 1\J'"JI l 11 PM Ao-.ct •t s,.,, 0 1t1Qn ,.,.....,,, '" Telephone (714)'42"'321 Claatllled Adver111lng 642·5671 \Mldlt~t .. ValltY Nt"W\Oftk• 511 ... 310 • r '°'"' \•n Ct•,....."'fll 4t5..ff30 """" H<trl~ Or•~t Covl>lf '"'""'"""''" 640-1220 .C0...1.,.t tolt 0••-«••" _ .. , ..... c.m. Nf'lr ... N "" \tOrlH lllV\O.th•" "'''Oii•• '"•Utf Of adw.,t•H""•nh M'ffll'I '"•tV bt /f'Orodwctd •Hf\•wt '~''' H rMh\19'f't •• C ODYf ., OWftf f ~o~ ''"' .. ,,,,., 0•1f •• ce,t• Mtu C..tlffHtHa '"'""DllOft It' C.tfrl•f \I \0 "'-"''"''' ,., "'°la11 \• ~O ~·"''" f'l\ftlUt' dlitltMttOM U • MMl"I' women aged 25-29 expected lo re· main childless. In the study by Linda Silka, a University of Kansas graduate student, and Sara Kiesler, who is doing research in Washington. 21 couples said they never ir1tended to have children. 21 couples said they wanted children and 19 were unsure. Among findings in the report: -Inte ntionally childless couples a r e not more materialistic than other couples. -Intentionally childless couples are equally interested in mankind and their communities and enjoyed community ac- tivities to the same extent. -Intentionally childless couples and those who were un- sure of wanting children showed less interest in interaction with people. a preference for being alone and were less gregarious than couples intending to have children. -Wives intending no children expressed a greater value for personal freedom lban did others. including men. -Husbands intending no children were likely to have a highly prestigious job and an- ticipated bjgher incomes than the others. -Wives who did not intend to have children bad jobs that were higher than usual in prestige. Fro nt P age Al CARTE R .•. and civil rights activists," and has said many times he hoped the rule could be changed. The church pastor', the Rev. Bruce EdwMds, also favors inte· gration of the church and his job is in j~pardy as a result. He asked for next Sunday's meeting so the congregation could vote on the deacons· recommendatJon that he be fired. Meanwhile. the President-elect is dividing his lime here among fis hing. s wimming. ping-pong and the study of recommenda- tions from his staff and others about ways to complete the transition between a Carter ad- ministration and that of outgoing President Ford. For instance. Carter is study· ing a memo from Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller recounting Rockefeller's experiences in the vice presidency and his thoughts on bow that office can be made more useful. Carter drove from his rented vacation home at Musgrove Plantation Sunday morning to' take communion at historic, s mall and unhealed Christ Church, the parish in which Charles and John Wesley pre- ached in thelate 1730s. John Wesley later founded the Methodist church. Carter has been campaigning virtually nonstop for almost two yea.ts. and said be needs the rest his vacation is providmg. His vacation cottage is near a swift. flowing creek overlooking a marsh at the end of a winding road nearly two miles from the nearest highway. The estate is owned by Smith Bagley, a Washington. D.C .• businessman, who was an early supporter of Carter 's presiden· tial hopes. Powell said Bagley will be paid up to $2,000 by Carter for five or alx days' use of the cot- t.qe, surrounding buildings. and the l ,483 acres of woods, water and marshland. ' "It looks as though intentions not to have children are not relat- ed to employment aspirations. but instead to employment suc- cess." the authors write. "As a group, those who had made a de- cision not to have children, in contras t to those who had postponed children or were un- s ure if they wanted children. were experiencing greater re- wards from employment and could expect greater rewards in the future." The authors also found that "men were significantly less likely than women to embrace· feminist goals, had more tradi· tional views about women, were less positive about sharing domestic chores and were also more uncomforatble with the idea of having a more successful or well educated spouse than were their wives.•• Tu:o Clwtists ~Entangle~' Die in Jump FT. STEWART. Ga. (AP) Two Army parachutists, return· ing from a training mis3ion in the Panama Canal Zone, died here when their chutes became en- tangled as they were "jumping in" to the Ft. Stew art Anny base, a spokesman said. The two. described as highly trained paratroopers, were iden· tified as Sgt. Major Henry Caro, 39, of Chino, Calif., and James Edward Quick, 22. of Cairo. Mo. The entanglement of the two parachutes caused each man's main parachute and later their reserve chutes to "partially deflate," said Capt. Harold Har- rison. a base public affairs of- ficer. Harrison said the men, mem- bers of the Army Rangers, were not "raw recruits ." "They do this all the time. These men make many, many jumps," he said. But. he added. "Two people can't share the same space at the same time." Korea Gift Sent Back SAN FRANCISCO CAP ) -Rep. Phillip Burton (O. Calif.) says a South Korean congressman once sent a larce topai brooch to his wife, but she returned it 1 totheKorean Embassy. The San Francisco Chronicle reported that Burtor and his wife. Sala, said they were surprised and outraged by the gift which was delivered to his Capitol Hill office in July 1975. Burton told the Chronicle that the gift was accom· panled by a card signed by Admiral and Mrs. Myong Soo Hahm, but neither he nor Mrs. Burton could re· call meeting the Hahm.s. The South Korean Em- bassy bu ldenUfled Hahm u a member of that na- Uon'1 Congreu. .. Blast the Bean Clwcolate B ar to H it 20 Cents NEW YORK CAP) -Candy lovers who watched prices rase during the sugar shortage are groaning at the prospect of more bad news next year: the ~cent chocolate bar. · This time, the culprit is the cocoa bean. The Nestle Company Inc. of While Plains. N. Y. announced to· -day that it was raising wholesale prices on a variety of chocolate products. At the retail level, a typical chocolate bar will 10 from lS to 20 ceni.s. the company said. ln some places. candy bars in· vending machines already sell for 20 cents and, presumably, could go up to 25 cents aft.er the new increases take effect. The Nestle move was pot unex· peded since the Hershey Corp .. M&M and' Peter Paul announced Cyclist Dies lnEI Modena Auto Crash A 16-year -o ld Anaheim motorcyclist was killed Sunday evening after he paused to wave, at a horseback rider, then lost control of his cycle, California Highway Patrolmen said today. Dennis Sexton, 16, of 506 Westgate Drive. Anaheim, was dead at the scene of the 4:40 p.m. crash on Chapman Avenue near Old Chapman A venue, in the El Modena area, the CHP said. Officers r eported Sexton waved at a person on horseback. lost control of his cycle and struck a car driven by Mark Booker, 26, Fullerton. He then collided head-on with another car, driven by Clarence Youngberg, 24, La Puente. and was run over by Youngberg's car, officers reported. .... Mmilar price boosts late last month. Figuring out the percentaie of increase gets complicated because the companies tried to sweeten the Impact ol the higher prices by increasing the size of their candy bars. A Nestle milk cEf.bar, for eicample, will gro f 1~ to lY• ounces: a millc chocolate bar is aotq from .}.2 to 1.35 ounces. Tbe NesUe bar is smaJler-1~ is equal to 1.2:5. The smaller, cheaper ll(esUe bar costa 13.3 cent.s per o\mce; the larger. higher-price variety will cost 16 cents per ounce; the increase is 20 per<:ent. For Hershey, the per-ounce price in· crease works out to 19 percent. Nestle said the wholesale price increases will go into effect e·arly in 1977, after stocks of the J.S.cent chocolate bars are used up. The increase is expected at the retail level next spring. All the companies blamed higher costs for the increases, noting that cocoa beans which sold for 75 cents a pound a year ago now are going for close to Sl.50. The firm s said the chocolate increases would have come sooner if it bad not been for the drop ln the price ol auiar wblcb bu declined about 90 pet· cent tram 19'7' levela. Most of tho world'• cocoa beans are grown In Africa a.Del the crop bas been tJgbt for two years. At the aame time, the de· mand has been strooa. caulng tbe price increase. Stephen Konen ol NeaUe 1ald · there 11 no actual ahortace of cocoa be&DJ. He aald, however, that the produclnl countries "are reeuJating the now" of beans. Political upheavals in some cocoa-growlna areas also have Interrupted the supply, Korsen said. Soviets Parade MOSCOW (AP) -'lbe Soviet government marked the 59th an- niversary o( the Bolshevik Revolution with one of Its smaller military parades that in- cluded no new weapons. It also received a message of con~ gratulations from China that seemed a little warmer than usual. Peaituttiest Tell All, Visit Plains LONDON (AP> -The tabloid Sun invited its re- aders today to enter a peanut contest. "There are millions of protein-packed peanuts to be won. and a fabulous chance to see where they come from." said the paper, which has a circulation of four million. The first prize is a 14-day trip for two to the Deep South, including stops in Atlanta and Plains, Ga. Ten runners-up will each get a giant pot of peanut butter, a gallon of peanut oil and a pound of peanuts a week for a year . "To enter, just tell us the nuttiest thing you ever did," s aid the Sun. . ~ ' ~ Delicious money-saving secrets of slow crock pot cooking! l\lt.thl<• lloffnrn11'-.: 1:1111011:-. < '/'f)('/,·1· /'If ('nr1l.-1 ·1·11 1·nold iook mak< ·s tlw mvsll'l'i('s ol' :-.lo\\' niokin~ t'l'\'Sltil <:il'lll'. · And il \\'n11'l <·i'isL _vo11a1wnn~· 1 o dist'O\'l'I' ils 1h•liC'irn1s "l'<Tl't "'· 0:uw thi '-' !!;l'l'<ll li1111k is yrn1rs- fn'<•-:1t California Fl.1d1·r:d. Eat better and save money. En.·n l<'<lling-throutrh t hl' pas.w" of Cnw/,.,., !I ( '1wk1·n1 j .... :1 mnul hw<1tt•r· ing-cxpcri('ll<'<'. l )is<.·m 1 r n11>rt' than ~{)() rt>t'ipt•s for h1>art ,\· n1.ti11 dislw-.:, soups. sa11dwidw:-.. appd i11 rs. ht•\· l'ntl{<'s-<•\·111\ hn•uds :111d l':tk<·s-t11 lwlp ~·nu l<•<·d .'·0111· famil.' '' • II and kl'l'J> ~·our l111di.!d t ri111. Tlwn.'s :1 Ii/ pa~t· r1111s111m·r g-uidl' to cnok1·r-.:. I oo. A11d :1 handy llH'll\I ph11111illl.! ~11 id1'. llut, don't \\':11 1 In .~1·t ~·our fr1•e copy. 'flw ~uppl."'" limitt•i l. 01w pc>r family whili• 1 lw,v l:1sl. Bctlt'I' hurry in. !Snrry. hook .... al'l' ll•>L ;l\·ailahl<• l1y m:id.) Other money-saving ideas. \\'lwn ynu c·11m<' i11. lake a minulc or lwo lo fi.nd oul :tl111ut our hi~h­ inlerC'Rl savim{:-. :1n·111 111l:-.: :-,i 1 % pas-.- liooks. Ccrlilil'all·~ up to 7 1 1 r;.,~ And lie sun· ln usk ul11111l 11111" rrce trav- eler:-. dw('ks. mOJH'\' 1irrll'rs and other fl'L'l' S<'I'\ in•-.:. Tlw,··,.l. yours when \'Oll lt';I \'l' ~l .OO() \~'ii h i1-.:. · Stop in 110\\'. You"n• hellt•r off in California M·d1•r:d. ··1. tlif' 11111 "'I ' '", '" ,, '"'' "'' ,,,, ,1 I '•ti 111 I" #II'''',, ,,1,,,, ;/ ,,,, ,.,, If ,,.,,,,, 11 ,, 111 , • ,, j (/I ' ,,,,,,.,. C CALIFORNIA FEDERAL Nation's Largest r-ederal ( ahf.11 111u fNi1•ral ~:I\ ini.:~ u11d Lcurn Aii~on;it111n lll''\Tl:-.<.TO;\ Lil::,\< II ].,M11:) liolh.ird St n1•1Ar l-.111111(•'•• Ill llu11111111t1111l'lu111il It >!!Ii ;lj(,j - , -~Wl .... 10 TRAPEZOIDAL FORMS IN WINDOWS AND C>oORS OF RUINS FROM ANCIENT CULTURE Newly Discovered Colony In Mountain Jungle of Bollvla Called 'l1kanwaya• I New Cult11re Unearthed 1 'Original Architecture' Puzzles Finders LA PAZ. Bolivia (AP) - Arcbeologists have uncovered the trapezoid-shaped ruins of what they say is a previously un· known culture that disappeared some 500 years ago. "We've come across an ex· tremely original form of architecture and we still don't ·• know how it developed," said Carlos Ponce Sanjines, director of the National Institute of Archeology. ' The institute is sbowing an ex· hibit of photographs of the ruins of Iskanwaya, a citadel dis· covered in mountainous jungle about 190 miles north of La Paz. The pictures show clearly the dominance of trapezoid-shaped 'buildings, doors· and floors. "This is something completely new in archeology,''. Ponce San· Jjines said. A trapezoid has four sides, but only two of them are parallel. •For centuries. the rectangle has been the basis for most architec· ~e. 1 1 lskanwaya covers about 34 acres and is among the largest ]Ire-Hispanic citadels ill South I America. rivaling in size the Inca 1itro.ngbold of M acbu Piccbu in I 1' ·Two Dead; . Police Seek lhird Girl WORTHINGTON. Ohio <AP) -Authorities were looking for the oldest daughter of Margo Davies, who was charged with murder after the bodies of her two younger daughters were found in trash containers. Mrs. Davtes. 20, was held without bond pending arraJgn. ment today on charges of killing her younges t daughter . An· tborities and further charges werependJng. The bodies of Caurie Jo Davies. 19 months, and her sis· ter, Christine. 21ti, were found Friday, bound and wrapped in plank bal(s in separate trash containers in l wo Colum bus city parks. SUU mi111ong was Tony Davies, whose fourth birthday is Nov. 28. Chief Deputy Sheriff William Lavery said the girls had been bound with strips of cloth and stuffed into the bags. Autopsies showed Laurie Jo either was strangle d or s uffocated and Christine apparently smothered. he said. Mrs. Davies. who lives with her parents in Worthington. was reported missing Wednesday by her father. police said. Officers tracked her down through friends. She told them two gunmen. forced her off the side of the road Monday morning and abducted her children. But police said the woman could not explain why she did not report the abduction. On Thursday. officers said, her answers became "vague" and .. incoherent." Officers Cite 3NakedMen Three men were cited on charges of public nudity during the weekend by Orange County Sheriff's officers who said they found the trio naked on a South Laguna beach. Deputies said they issued the cilaUons to Michael James Lee· d.le, 24, of 24332 Bark St., El Toro; Leon James Soltys, 19, of San Gabriel, Bryan Lee Vlink, 25, of Whittier after ordering the three mentodontheirclothes. DepuUes said they 'tere called to .~ beach near 9lh Street by a local resident who told them he found the nudity offensive. Ru1nl of PERU BOLIVIA 0 700 A~ Wlre.....,to M.tp MAP LOCATES RUINS Major Find In Bolivia Peru-, Ponce Sanjines said. He said the citadel was the center of a "collectivist-styled" communi· ty of some 3,000 persons. Scientists estimate that there was a population of about 10,000 at Iskanwaya and neighboring citadels. The culture flourished from about 1200 to 1480, and drought and starvation may have been responsible for its disap· pearance. The lskanwaya citadel was buitlt on the eastern slopes of the Andes at about the 5,000·foot level. It was surrOlmded by ter· races 10 to 45 feet wide used for growing grain and for supporting houses. Aqueducts up to two miles long watered the crops. Ponce Sanjines said in an in- terview that extremely careful calculations went into the con· struction of the houses, but nobody can explain the use of the trapezoid. He said using right angles would have been much easier. "We're having to study the structures slowly to see whether the culture based its architecture on some rare geometric concep- tion, or whether it was based up- on the climate or other charac· teristics of the region,'' he said. "Perhaps it's a combination of factors." Osborne Target Planner Distortion Charges Un/ ounded By GARY GRANVILLE Ot I~• O•llY PllolSIMf Charges that county Planning Comm ission positions are sometimes distorted when re· layed to the Orange County Board of supervisors are unfounded, ac- cording to a report to the board. County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas was ordered to in- vestigate the distortion charge made las t Aug ust by then· planning commission chairman SturleyGnndle. Target of Mrs . Grindle's allega- tion was county Environmental Management Agency chief George Osborne. The outspoken planning com· missioner chaq;ted Osborne was guilty of sometimes tailoring commission views to suit his own views and the board was not get- t.mg a true picture of commission positions. But Thom a s concluded otherwise. "The majority of (planning) commissioners beUeve there is no overt or covert attempt by staff to distort the commission's position on issues," the CAO said. ·'With the exception of one com- missioner. the opinions conveyed to the CAO study team indicated a general overall approval of the communications (lo the board)." Thomas added. Mrs. Grindle Sunday evening said s he has not yet seen the CAO'sreport. However. she added, "I expect· ed a whitewash and I understand that's whatit is." While Thomas' study team cleared Osborne of distorting commission views, it did find shortcomings in county Planning Commission operations. For example, it cited the in· formality of commission meet· ings as a possible source of con- fusion. "We recommend that staff work with the commissioners to bring more formality and direc· lion to the meetings." Thomas said. Suggestions made to improve meetings included having EMA staff sitting in the audience rather than roaming around the meeting room. It was also suggested that meet· ing room microphones before the meetings and during recesses be turned off "so pre-meeting dis· cussions between cominissiooers are not broadcast.•· The CAO's study team also not- ed that all p lanning com- missioners "expressed dismay'" at the way they were introduced to their duties. "None received any formal in- formation on duties or respon:iibilities," Thomas said in his report. He also noted that none of the commissioners was introduced to the EMA staff or given materials "to perform their jobs." Thomas said th at a planning commission handbook now being prepared should be completed "as expeditiously as possible in· a smucb as changes in com- missioners can and have oc- curred somewhatfrequeoUy." He also said commissioners should have a chance to review communications to the board before they are sent. "We recommend that a system be devised to allow the com· missioners to review all transmit· tals to the board concerning com· mission matters.·' the CAO said. 2Weeks Left lnPickeroo Siooepstakes Sharpen your pencils. There are only two weeks left to enter the Daily Pilot's Pigskin Pickeroo '76. Contestants have already won more than $2 ,700 worth of prizes in the weekly prognosticator's sweepstakes. First prize winners will receive a one year membership at the Nautilus Newport fitness center in Newport Be ach. Second place is dinner for two at Reuben's Newport Beach or Costa Mesa -or the Moonraker restaurant in Irvine. Third prize winners receive free car washes from Metro Car Wasb Systems of Costa · Mesa and Huntington Beach. Details and entry blanks are published 'in the Dally Pilot's sports section each Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday. Turn to Pllge BS for more information. Monday, November 8, 1916 DAILY PILOT A3 Oil Search Begins · 'Key,' Hunts~// 1Clemente lslarul By THOMAS llURPIUNE Of ll•• O•llf l'ilt.Ui.ff Gulf Oil Corporation crews are under way today in a new effort to find oil in an undersea tract 8S uliles southwest ct lA>ng Beach and 40 miles from San Clemente Island. ' Exploratory driWng is being conducted from a huge. apple- green seagoing oil rig named Aleutian Key and operated under contract to Gulf by Key Dril Corporation of Houston. Tex. Aleutian Key. 2SO feet long, 200 feet in beam and self.propelled. moved out of Port Hueneme Tuesday and was expected to start drilling Wednesday. But winch failure abOard a boat as-.' si.stin& m deployment ol .anchors delayed the start of drilling" aboard the floating platform un· til Friday. THE BULKING ~. which bas all the outward appearances of a permanent oil platform, is held in place over the drilling site by eight anchors weighing 30,000 pound each. They are dropped on cables three and one-half inches in diameter. Gulf's virgin oil tract lies in about 680 feet of water in an area known as Tanner Banks. Com- pany officials believe if they strike oil here, it will open a whole new era of petroleum pro- speeting off the coast. The company obtained the 5,760-acre undersea tract last December in a federal sale. Gulf paid $5.3 million for this piece of ocean floor and bought a total of six in the area for $25 million. Gulf expenditures alone sug· gest the the Tanner Banks ex- ploration is no fly-by-night fling at a wildcat oil well. · AFTER PURC~E of the tracts, Gulf joined with nine other companles in necessary en- vironmental impact reports that cost $5 million and filled five en- cyclopedia-sited volumes. Then came government permits. Gulf bad to file an ex- ploration plan with the U.S. Geological Survey. A hazard sur- vey bad to show there were no shallow gas accQmulations beneath the ocean floor and no faults in the sea flooL\ Then came an arcbeological probe. At one interglacial stage, the seashore could have been located in the area now covered by the sea. Now-submerged areas might have been occupied by primitive cultures. Gulf's investigation bad to show that no ruins of primitive dwellings were beneath the sea at the drilling site. Additional permits were re-· quired for permission to drill, on pollution prevention. navigation, dumping and communications. THEN CAME Ke-y Dril Corp oration's drilling vessel itself, the Aleutian Key . Construction was started three years ago by Mitsui Shipbuilding inTamano, Japan. · After completion, the self- propelled vessel was sailed from Japan to Port Hueneme in 49 days. 18 hours, crossing 5,500 miles of the Pacific at an average speed of 4.67 knots. Aleutian Key bas a "replace- ment value" of $40 million. Key Dril officials tout her as the most sophisticated seagoing oil rig ever built. Twin undersea hulls and six huge stabilizing caissons hold the vessel steady in the seas. She is designed to withstand a 100.foot wave-one with a SO-footrace. EXPLORATORY DRILLING BEGINS OFF CO-AST Seagoing Rig Aleutian Key Serves a• B••• In Search HEIGHT FROM the keel to top of the main deck is W feet, or about to the top of an 11 ·story building. Crewman and visitors get aboard from boats by riding a rope sling that is hauled up the 111 feet by a crane. It swings about and deposits its people on the vessel's helicopter pad. Disneyland bas no ride to eqmtl it. Aleutian Key can accom- modate 77 workers in ship-type cabins where the crew deck is complete with recreation rooms. galley and a hospital sick-bay. Crews work a straight 28 days and then get 28 days off. Gulf and Key Dril officials are quick to point out features to de· monstrate their environmental concerns. A PRINCIPAL piece of this equipment is the blowout preven· tor, a 28,000-pound two-piece slack piping that is sunk to the ocean floor and rest there on a huge steel plate. The exploratory well will be drilled through this blowout stack which contains a series of shutoff valves. These aren't valves like your kitchen water faucet. They are designed so that ih event a blowout gushes up the pipe from beneath t he sea, valves close in two halves from either side of the pipe -like hands closing around a throat - choking off the blowout. The blowout preventor can be controlled from an elaborate electronic panel in the control cabin which features visual dis· play of the blowout preventor with vari·colored lights calculat· ed to instantly pinpoint trouble. . SHOULD THE electronic shut· off system fail, the blowout p.re- ventor can also be operated manually. Key Dril's area superintendent Leon Steinocher proudly points out that Aleutian Key carries a full complement of pipe, fitting and supplies for oil drilling valued at about $500,000. "We may have more aboard than you•d find in a land-based warehouse," he suggested. 0 After all, when we need some oil fitting, we can't just send somebody downtown for it." And after all this preparation and expense, what are the chances that Aleutian Key will make a significant oil discovery 85 miles off the coastline? THE SCHEDULE calls for crews to drill to a depth of 9,000 feet beneath the ocean floor in • the next 37 days. Gulf geologist H.F. Hazel, the tJ company's area exploration manager. admits they might. strike "something significant" at as shallow a depth as 2,500 feet. Then he adds the chances or finding a productive oil deposit is one in 1,000. But then Dr. M.R.J. Wyllie. Gulf's West Coast Division vice president. says that same chance might be one in 100. THEN HAZEL adds. "I think the field might produce about 1,000 barrels of oil I*' day from each well. That's just about what we have t o have for an economically.producUve field." And Dr. Wyllie adds that Gulf believes its Tanner Banks hold· ing bas "more potential" for a good oil find than company ocean holdings off San Pedro. . If Altian Key•s crew strikes productive oil. the well hole will be capped off and never used again. The hole is strictly for ex- ploration. Other drillings would then be punched dowp in the vicinity to determine Just how large the undersea oilfield is. If the field is determined to be a worthwhile p roducer, perma. nent oil platforms would be built. Oil would probably be pumped to a land site via undersea pipeline. "IT WOULD be a minimum of 'five years before we could transport the first barrel of oil to shore," Dr. Wyllie noted. Thus the o.ilmen speak one minute of the long odds they face in finding oil and the next minute tell how they will transport the black gol.d_ ashore. a pendant for her thoughts Brett Walker hos the most unique pendant necklaces in town. All 18·k yellow gold with o single. sparkling diamond. Guitar .........•. $299. ; Qu~stion Mork ..... $255. Spiral ...•••••••. 5390. Dolphin ..••......• $250. I \BJdl CZl!a/heJ CJl1wfioH 35 Fashion lslOnd. Ne~rt Beach. Calif. 92660 .(71(1) 644-2494 I l 1 • ! . • . A.f DAILYPILOT Jost {:';) Coasting & ,,·, '\@ witb Tom 1U'phin~ DOWNCOAST: San Clemente, the community that guards the :southernmost extremity or our Orange Coast, al>pears today to stand as a good example of the Toy Balloon Theory of develop· ment. The Toy Balloon Theory is sim· ple. Consider the child with his red balloon. He bounces it about happily for awhile. Then he becomes disenchanted with the simple bouncing. Monday. NOYembedt. t91& Syrians Snuff Out Battling BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP ) - Syri1&n troops, acting in tbe1r new role as the vanguard of an Arab peacekeeping force, moved through Palestinian-held ter- ritory toward Beirut today to s nuff out continuing duels between Christian and M°"lem artillery. The Syrians moved out of their hilltop positions Sunday night as President Elias Sarkis pleaded with the Lebanese people to ac- cept the temporary occupation in order to end their bloody 19- month-old war. ( I NSHORT J ~ U.S.S.R. ............... ,,.. .. IRAN TOLL: 17 DEAD Scattered Ou•kff Repotted Quakes Dot Globe t' 5 Spots Hit, Temblors Unrelated 8 1 Die Auocla&ed Pteea Earthquakes bit Iran, Tbe Pbllipplnes, Greece and Japan and one wu reported in China durint tbe weekend and today. Casualties reported were 17 dead and 32 bUuries in northeast Iran. A volcano erupted lo Indonesia. A duty oftlcer at the Natiooal Earthquake lnformatJon Center in Golden, Colo., aaid be believed that wu no connection among the weekend quakes. THE IBANIAN QUA.KE ~-· curred Sunday morning (8:01 p.m. PST Saturday) and re- glstered 6.2 on the Richter scale. Most of the casualties were re- ported lo the mountain village of Vandik, '°° miles northeast of Tehran, where all 1SO mud·briclt houses collapsed. Al leut 10 more temblon were ~ported in lbe area .oo.y and aoolber at Loratan in southwest Iran. The Hong Kong observatory reported a quake in aout.hweat Cblna early Sunday mom.lng (10:07 a.m . EST) meaauring 6.3 on the Richter scale. The ob- servatory said the epicenter was about 970 mlles west-northwest of Hong Kong and about 205 miles nortbw~st of Kunming. There was no confirmation from the Chinese and no r eport of cQualties or damage. A quake measuring 6.3 on the Richter Scale shook: the eastern half of Mindanao wand in the southern Philippines early today (9:tl p.m. EST Sunday), and a mild quake wa~ felt ~ western Mindanao 3~ boun later, but there wu no report oo cuualU• ordama1e. THE EIPC8NT8a o r th• quake wu 5:IO mllea aout.hun ot Queton City, about 15 milts of· ft bore of the pro~ ot SwtPQ. delSur. Five quakea Jolted Saloalh. the capital of northern Greec-e. Sunda,y nlaht aud thil IDCll"Dllll. Most of the city '• ball mllUOR people spent the nlabt out ot ~ doors, but police aald there we ... no casualties and no serious dama1e. Pretty soon, he's poking at the little balloon. Finally, it bursts. Then all he has is a handful of shriveled up rubber. Then the tears or regret come. San Clemeote, it would seem, has gone through a similar ex- perience. Back in the 1920s when San Clemente was founded by Ole Hanson and a host of others, it was decided by those early Shakers-and· Movers that the place should look like a Spanish Village. In the wake or the Christian pre- sident 's broadcast plea. fighting decreased along the front line between the Christian and Moslem sections of Beirut. Hospitals and militia sources re- ported aobut 10 killed and 20 wounded during the night. Doub/,e Life Di.scovered The moat severe of the shocks bad a reading of 3.4 oo the Richter Scale. Amateur rad.lo operators added tot.be panic with broadcasts of rumors of heavy damage ih the suburbs. Long lines of cars left tbe city despite government pleas to everyone to return home. A WEAK EAKTBQUA&E shook Tokyo and part of northern Japan today. but there were no reports of dam(l"e or casualties. Japan's meteorological agency said the tfernor was thought to be centered in the Pacific. · Death Unveils Two Families, 9 Children THUS WHEN THE developers carved out wide, curving city streets, they put in Spanish tile sidewalks. Omate street lights with red brick bases, white stucco cov· ered poles and Spanish-style Jamps were installed. Parks, a community clubhouse and municipal plunge were built, all carrying out the Spanish theme with red tile roofs. wrute stucco exterior walls and iron grating on windows. Hanson and his associates did not build homes and seU them such as tract developers do to- day. They sold you a lot and you built your own home upon 1t. To assure that the Spanish theme was earned out. however. you faced certain architectural controls. You could, for example, put any kind of roof on your place you wanted , so long as it was red Spanish tile. Same Wlth exterior walls. Anything you wanted just so it~ as white stucco. WlULE THE LEGALITY of such public controls might be questioned t oday, it worked ln San Clemente in the 1920s and 1930s. Tbc place grew wtth a ccr· tain uniform charm to it. San Clemente went along hap- pily this way until toward l.he end of World War IL Then came a housing boom with many citJes throwing up box-hke GI housing and barracks·hke appartmcnts. Thus San Clemente s architec- tural controls came down. The balloon burst Homes, apart ments and businesses of all van ety or st) le or lack or 1t "'ent up all over tO\l.'tl Development acceleratl.'d into the 1970s and many or the old S panis h -style places wer e bulldozed lo make room for con- t1omm1ums and the ltke. NOW, PPAR ENTLY, some of San CIPmente·s Shaker-; and \10\'ers of 1!176 ha\•c paused to look bark a ha tr rentury to Ole I tJnson s time an<l what the com munit) had. and what 1t has lost. San Clem~nte 's arctutl'<'tural review bo&rd, an fart , JUSt rerent ly passed recommcndauoru. tc1 the City Cuun1·11 for downtown development Kcy among reconi mcndut1on-. 1s this one· "That the do~ntuwn be devf'lopcd to b4: 1 omµat1bte with tht' onginal San Clemente ~pan1 sh -.tyle." Cntena would "Include use of ule roofs and encourage use or keavy wooden bcam!I. iron .:nllwork. heavy stuc co tex- turt's · Thu .. dew:-San C"lc>m<'nlc come full circle to acknow1edge its lost hentage Strike DeadUne S et DETROIT (AP) -The United Auto Workers today set a mid· night Nov. 18 deadline tor re- aching agreement on a new con- tract for 390,000 hourly workers at General Motors Corp. or waging a national strike against the giant automaker . UAW Vice President Irving Bluestone said he expects GM to follow the industry's economic pattern setUemeot won at Ford Motor Company after a month· long strike and achieved at Chrysler Corp. last Friday. Nuke \'leae Barred TEL A VIV. Israel CAP) -The Israeli government has put its secret nuclear installations in lhe Negev Desert off limits lo a party o r U.S . sen ators check in g safeguards against the manufac- ture or atomic weapons, a leading newspaper reports. The newspaper Maariv report- ed the governm ent turned down numerous requests from the 13 senators to visit lhe facilities built with French help in the 1950s near the town of Dimona. in southern Israel. Batt le Renewed OSHA.KAI. South-West Africa CAP> -Angola's Marxistgovem· menl has launched an all-out at· tack on pro-Wes tern remnants slJU fighting in southern Angola, refugees who fled to South-West Africa reported today. HEADED 2 FAMUES Bob M•rtin SIOUX FALLS, S.D. CAP) - When South Dakota's director of econqmic development died three'weeks ago, he left a wife and four children in Pierre. He also left a wife and five children less than 200 miles away in Sioux Falls. Bob Martin's double home life surfaced because attorneys for both families inquired about his estate after he died of a heart at· tack Oct. 16 at the age of 52. STATE ATTY. GEN. William Janklow confirmed the arrange- ment Sunday and said an in· vestigation was under way, although he said be had "mixed feelings" about it. "All it's going to do is wreck the innocent kids. And on top of it, their father's dead," he said. Patricia Martin, the Sioux Falls wtfe, said Sunday that she did not know there were two families. Someday, she said, she would like to talk to the wife in Pierre. "I feel very sorry for her also," she said. ''Jl was just as much a shock to her." Mary Lou Martin, the wife in Pierre, asked Sunday about the situation. said, "This is not fact," and declined further comment. Her attorney, Gary Colwill, said he planned to file for the estate today. He said he had been una- ble to find a will. J ACK ALLMON, WHO as South Dakota's secr etary of economic and tourism develop- ment was Martin's b oss. A~ Wlr•pt'tOtO\ DIDN 'T KNOW P•trlcia M•rtin Freeze Warnings Issued Snow in North Carolina, Frost in Georgia Tenep e rat ure• "''" 1. .... ""•· Afbuc)..,._ u ,, ... ,_. ., u .10 •Ut•nl• M ,. 9'tlttrtl•tld " ~ 81.,.,•r<t ., u ~IOI\ t• H Bufl•lo •) 1S .01 OllC.O') 40 ti On<lnnall .. ,, O.vel-41 ,. DulVlll 14 , Frnno ., " Gt•~B•y 37 • Mo""lulu es 'l'I .01 "°"''"" I• IO 4iftdl;1n.enol1-. 4t II 6 K•tt,d\(1ty ·~ I• lA\V•O•\ " ., 1.1111• Rort '~ ..., ~\VIiie 40 n Ml-• I\ 01 Ml!Wllilh• n ,. Ml'IDI\ SI Pa•JI ]1 t4 ,..wOrltAn\ ,, ,, New Vor~ \I 1' Dllfly P'llol Otl•...., h O.w-..4 Mu''<i"v, n~1 IY If ynq ,,,, M t hA'lff' )'OUf rMOft tl., " 'C.' "m ,._, t.-.frwf' , pm •nd VU•H t..tiny w•11 t,,.1 \J1~1vfltt"f ~;,.h;tclJV ~/'Wt ~Uf"ld•v II '1'1'J W "ill tf'C""tn11tt ycmt c.atv l1v A ,. rn c •'' tv.too• to .. m .;l'\d v.-JUr m will Ott rt.t4,vtwtKt c1rc.....i-, .. ..,.,_. 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Vt 'fr•vtl •dvlM>rl-\ Wtrt Ill eilect In D<trh Of Ml<lllO•ft, lndl•n• _,,,, llQflt _.. ftlt If\ "'""•rn North '8<'041,,., ..,,.,,. f"Ot'>tr 11 .. ~t •dYl\Ofy WH Ill ttt.ct for Porllon\ Of tnt trt• A ltw 1101>1 '"owe" •tit <1crou soullltrn '1tortoe •"II oor lion, t1f t!lt Pfclllc Nort!lwt•I Clwntre, I"" dry wuth•r oatt••" Clb\.,v•O tl'te '"' w,..rat cM'fl e< ~· tnt nt11on con· tl- tarly 1T1or1111111 t•motr•t11rt\ '~ '"""' tl\ri>f •t ><lllOlllQ Mlun tol1 <11 .....,.n11 "'"' Caltfornla Hl'••v (Ooh l •I !llQ tfl•t ... ~ ... d -~~ MllOI~ ""' Dec--mort 09!1" IO'lltlll 1110 T .. lll-'1' ~"'"O but ot!lorwl at conll"v"' wn\lllM •lld s1101111v cooler wt•'""' .,, torecut for mott or Southerl'I C.ltrornt• tolTlld·••O At leHI • doro" t>oth wert betll<ll•H! I" ,,,. L..ot A"Otlt\ <OIJl•I •"*• Sun Clay 1'11r heny 111e •rt•._ log tOti.d 11'1 ltOM Ille CK .. 1'1. 8111 n<ffl lor lntel'ltlfltd nlqM •1'111 11\0rl'll"O ro0 co"dlllons. N<1llont0l Wutlltr ,.,vice f'Mt<Hle" iw-tcil<t· "' ....... 111' COITllOrt•lll• -•lllfr lllfOUQll ,..,. ~ y "'tdl<llOM C.11 ICW IH•Clt 1'911- c.r.tu'9' In Ille JOI durlno mi~ •"II -10 tbf tow SOI 11 nlqi,t lnttlld 9tli.r lllel l.O\ Antelfl •"*• 1111111• ,,. Hot< ltd to '•"9' lit h tow to\ 'f-y. wltll v•lln '°""' lfl '"" mid'°' tnd LMA ..... tHIOon-60 ftl. 0tMr1J ...0 "'-lllM -•I'° lortcut 10 11eve ITIOre moo.rate 1"trt 11fY retdl"O' -75 10 I) Ill 1"9 -1r.rftcl9$er1J, lntllt1T1ld--r 90\ 11'1 tilt w11t11ern dl"tlt, tnd.Slo 'l'I In movllt•I• ruor1 .,..,., Coa•tal Weat her Su<\•¥ •nd .. .,mt .,.,dft9 l.IOM v•rl•Olt wind\ nlqht lftd moM•no 11011" IHQll\ T uO\Ofty 111 tM 1Q'' Co•''"' l•"'~rtt•"'' wfll rtqoo betwr•ft SI •ntl ~I tnl•ntl te,,,_ ~'"''''"' wlll ,,.,f'IQf' f)ffl!N~f'" S.l •nd 81 1 nn w1t\flf' tf'..,U')f'r1tturfl wHI be' t6 S un, Moon. T ide• MONO"'Y o;.rnn<I low • M 11 m 0 O S<Kol>d hlQ!I 10 Hp m 1' TUISOAY ,.,r,, 10... ) , , • ,.,, 1.l ~t\l!llq!I t 1l • m 0 o s.c.,.,., 10.. • •) 0"' 0 ' "-c~ h•Ql> II II D m $ t \vf'lr1-•10atft ~h4Uoin­ Moollr•MU 17 0 "' ~"I •h m. described him as a reserved and quiet man who didn't socialize much. But Allmon added thal he knew the family in Pierre. and he described it as ·'very close." It's not known when Martin. married the Pierre woman, but the youngest of their children was said to be about 12 years old. Allmon said a son in the Pierre family had worked in the state tourism department the last two !lummf'rR. MARTI N T RAVELED fre- quently between Pierre. the state capital, and Sioux Falls, where his division was headquartered. He maintained an office in Pierre. Attorney Steven J orgensen, who represents the Sioux Falls Wile, said she married Martin in 1968. He said he had not been able to find the marriage license. The youngest child or lbal marriage reportedly is 14 months old. The wife in Sioux Falls said Martin spent Christmas a nd other holidays with her. THE DAY AFTER Martin's death, The Sioux Falls Argus. Leader carried an article about her recovery from a mastec- tomy. It described her as attrac- tive, vivacious and 33 years old, and quoted her as saying: "Bob has been marvelous. It never occurred to me when the cancer was found that he might reject me because or the surgery. His only concern was for mv health and with the fact that the surgery saved my life." Mrs. Martin of Sioux Falls wrote articles for South Dakota Industrial, a magazine published by Martin's division. ''IF SHE WROTE for the state magazine and worked for her husband .. it would be a violation Of the state law that prohibits a · department bead from hiring members of his own family, Janklow said. Martin 's last salary checks and his personnel file have been impounded by the state pending a legal determination of how to administer the estate, Janklow said. He said the Minnehaha County grand jury would be convened and would take testimony from several people, including the wife in Sioux Falls. A SOURCE CLOSE to the in- vestigation said vouchers filed by Martin for travel and motel accommodations in Pierre and Sioux Falls were bein~ checked. Two days before Martin's death, Janklow said, he received an anonymous letter about Martin's double life. He said Martin died before he could ask him aboutit. Martin, who came to South Dakota from Kansas where he was an assislant director of the state Department of Economic Development, was buried in Kansas. Indonesian authorities report- ed 9,550-foot Mt. Merapi, the highest volcano on the island of Java, spurted smoke 10,000 feet above its peak Saturday and rained ash onto the town of Magelang and the area around it. T . . Kill ra1n1ng s ROTC Cadet NEW YORK (AP) -The mock military exercise that led to the stabbing death of a 20-year-old ROTC cadet was unautboriud ·and showed poor judgment, but it did not necessarily amount to haz- ing, a spokesman for St. John's University s ays. .. It was probably a result of too much zeal on the part of the stu· dents in attempting to perfect their military tactical skills,'' said Martin He aley, the uni· versity's director or public rela.' lions. However, police said tht death Friday nig h t oJ Thom as Fitzgerald of Queens, a prospec· live member of a Reserve Officer Training Corps fraternity at St. John's, "was part of a hazing pro· gram ." Hazing -the act of intimida· ' lion or harassment designed to humiliate a pledge-is a crime in New York State. . Vera Valiant , Vera Valiant! Come back, I love you! Eve r y body loves you! ~-...i...;i,..,r Winthrop Smedley pleads with the lovely but star -crossed heroine of the hilarious new comic strip, "The Virtue of Vera Valiant.'' What the stuffy suitor b say ing ic. trut>. folks- Y ou all are destined to fall quickly and madly in love with Vera Valiant and the wonderfully emotional predicaments she anci her friends ge t into ... in H ackensack. New Jersey. They are the brainchildren of the legendary Stan Lee. of comic-book fame, who undertakes to spoof the soap operas of television and the old ·line comic strips. H e gleefully promises that Winthrop won't be the last one to lay siege to- ~5!1 ©\!/Mt<IA~ by Stan Lee and Frank Springer in the 642-4321 r • I I ' J I HE DENIES INTEREST Efrem Zlmbells1 Jr. 20 Vessels l.Dst in F o g In Bay Are a SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A murky coastal fog that bedeviled weekend sailors outside the Golden Gate was lifting early to· day, but one of its victims -a lux· ury sports cruiser -was still aground on submerged rocks ofC Fort Point. A tug boat and barge equipped with a derrick awaited a high tide to lift the 50-ton Argo from its '78 Race Hopefuls R e vealed ~ SACRAMENTO (AP) - Results of the 1976 presidential race are less than a week old, but there is already talk about who will chatJenge Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. in 1978. So far , four Republicans have been publicly named a spossibJe challengers for the Democratic governor or have indicated they might run, although none baa committed himself to the race. The newest name on the list - and the only one to deny interest -is actor Efrem Zimballst Jr .• star of "The FBI" television series and a delegate for former Gov. Ronald Reagan at the Ree>ublican National Convention last August in Kansas City. Three other officials have sent up trial balloons -San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson, state Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger and Los Angeles Police Chief Ed Davis. Brown, 38, has not formally an- nounced his plans for r~lection, and probably won 't unW around January, 1978. But he bas ~t no doubt that he will seek a second term, and possibly run again some day for the Democr atic nomination for president. He is viewed now as a heavy favorite for re-election. However, whe n asked dire~ly, the forme r Jesuit seminarian brushes off the .question with Jokes such as, "I don't know. I might return to the seminary and meditate." Al'Wlr.-lo Honore d by Academy Mary Tyler ~oorE'. a tten<;ied a reception in Los Angeles Sunday evening with her husband, Grant Tinker, before s.he was honored by the ~o~lywood chapter of the Na- t1onal Acade my of Telev1S1on Arts and Sciences for "outstanding achievement" in the i ndustry. Monday. Novemoor 6. 1978 DAILYPILOT AS Contra«!t Oka9'! Supermarket Strike Avoided LOS ANGELES <AP> -A strike agajnst Southern Cautomla and Nevada supermarkets by the Teamsters Union has been avoided a.fl.er opponents of a new contract failed to mU&ler the two·tbirds vole needed to reject the pact. The outcome of a vote by the Amalaamated Meat Cutters and Butcher s Workmen of North America wi!J not be known until · today but a spokesman for th~ supermarkets' managem~tsaid Krishna Pair We d After 'Kidnaping' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Hare Krishna followers Donna Slavin and Edward Walford Jr. have early Indications were that the meat workers bad accepted the offer. Teamsters voted 3,368 lo 2,~70 to tum down the pact Sunday, but union rules require a vote by two. thirds of the a ffected workers in order to reject the offer, Teamsters spokesman Jim Peck said. The two-thirds rule was adopt- ed, one union spokesman said, because "il we can't get supPQrt for a strike by a really large ma- jority, then we're not going to have a very successful strike," married, two weeks after they THE NEW CO...,.... acr ff accused her family of kidnaping ,,. •ftft • e ec-her away from the relig1·ous sect live impiediately, wilJ give warehousemen and truck drivers in an attempt lo prevent the wed· a $2.72 an hour increase in wages di~i.ss Slavin, 20, and Walford, and fringe benefits over three 27, were married Sunday in a years. ceremony patterned after an In-Clerical workers represented dian religious rile that is sup-by the union will get a 75·cent in- posed to bring peace to those be· ,crease in wages and benefits ing married. over the s ame period. Their case gained national at· Details of the offer to the ~ rocky cradle about 30 yards from shore. The 60-foot charter fishing boat ran aground in thick fog Saturday night with 40 passen~ers and crewmen aboard. On the GOP side, the political picture is still hazy. IC things follow patterns of past campaigns, most of those now be· ing named will pull out, and new names will be madded. There is only slight chance that the two Repullbcan contenders for gov· ernor in 1974, Houston Flournoy and Ed Reinecke, will try again m 1978, although Reinecke h~s for a political comeback. Boat Burns; Pair Rescued Off Coast tentmn two weeks ago when butchers were not made public Walford initiated legal.action by pending final tabulation of the claiming that Miss Slavin .had union's. vote. But Bob Voight, a beenkidnaped. s po k es man for the Food Wa lford claim ed. that Miss Employers Council, said the tot.al Slavin was abducted after being increase is the s ame as that for lured to the family home . al \ the warehousem en and drivers Napa by a ruse about a dying · but is distributed differently. grandmother. THE MEAT WORKERS' con· tract expired at midnight. ' Four other pleasure craft ran aground Sunday and at least 20 others wer e r eported overdue or lost in t he fog. None was con· side red serious. SAN DIEGO (AP) -A Coast Guard helicopter crew rescued a San Pedro couple after they abandoned their blazing boat 12 miles offshore near Oceanside. After the family took Miss Slavin back to their home in Arcadia, she sought protective custody from police and asked to s pend the night in jail. She said she did not want to return to her famUy's home. Before the contract was ap- p roved , drivers earned a n average of $7 an hour, warehouse workers $6 .90 an hour and clerical workers $6.56. Under their old contract meat workers earned $6.89 an hour. "This is fairly unusual," said seam an Lary Clark, a Coast Guard spokesman. "This fog is hanging lower than the usual summer fog we have here. It's also a little deceptive since we have clear , shirt-sleeve weather inside the bay, but Cog outside the Gate. Reinecke overturned the Watergate perjury conviction which wrecked his gubernatorial campaign and drove him from the lieutenant governor 's office. 1 lis comeback so far is concen- trated on running for v ice chairman next January of the California Republican party. Mr. and Mrs. WillJam lrtzman, both 55, were.Picked up Sunday from a small skiff 200 yards from the burning wreckage of their so. fool craft, the Mary Lynn. Miss Slavin told police that she had been kidnaped by her family in an attempt to "deprogram'' her from her new religious beliefs and to keep her from mar· rying Walford. THEY WERE flown to Scripps Memorial Hospital, where Len· na Ritzman was admitted and later reported to be in satisfactory condition after treatment for burns . Eighteen Te ams ters locals r epresenting about 10,000 workers along with another 9,000 meat workers had threatened a strike al 12:01 a.m. Monday. Ritzman was transferred to University Hospital's burn unit where he was reported in critical condition. The only member of Miss Slavin 's family to attend the wed· ding was a s ister. Her parents sent a note wishing the couple well, but said they did not want to attend. ' '''.fhe overdue vessels are just t~.~ It. east coming back In· side, said Clark. "We're trying to help the lost ones find their be~rings. ~~d if we can't do that, we re adv1S1ng them to j ust hang Jooseuntil the fog lifts." Flournoy, who now is dean of the Center for Public Affairs at the University of Southern California. said last month: "1 'm out of politics as far as I can see. 1 don't have any intent to re-enter the field in terms of running for any offices.'' A COAST GUARD spokesman said first report of the fire came via radio from a n unidentified private pilot. About 8,000 stores from San Luis Obispo to San Diego and east to Las Vegas would have been affected. The fire destroyed the superstructure and deck of the Ritzman craft before fire fighters from a Coast Guard cutter brought the blaze under control. Continental A irlines' Strike Talks Continue THE EARL'S ,.lUMllHG HU.TING AIR COHO. IT1-. ,._., .. , ........ ...,., IF YOU WANT TO SEW SOMETHING ROUND, YOU SHOULD HAVE SOMETHING ROUND TO SEW IT ON. LOS ANGELES CAP) -The two- week-old stnke agamst Continental Airlines is expected to continue at least \hrough next week. a spokesman for \he aarlme says. Bruce Plowm a n of Continental clescribed negotiations with the s trik- ing Air Lane Pi lots Association over the ..-eekend as "friendly and produc· tive." buts aid he expected talkst-0con· tinue "well into next week " The negotiations arc being overs~n by the National Mediation Board 1'hich was called In after talks broke down f 'ord Fau ur~ MMll~d PALM SPRINGS CAP> -President lrord and flis family may discuss possibilities fo r has future dunng an ~ghl-da) gol fin g vacallon 1n tlus sun· ny resort town . an aide says. The l"irst Family amved here Sun- day from Washington and settled in at the home of U s. Ambassador to Belgium Le<>nard F'irestone PrPss Stcretary Ron Nessen !ia1d the Fords had no plans for any activities on the1 r first night. Army aide Robert Barrett said • .,ome options may be delineated ... re- prding Ford's activities after Jimmy Qlrter takes over as president on J an. 20. "But there certainly wiU be no de· clsions made,'' Barrett said. He in· dJcated the entire Ford family will have a role in deciding on the Prcsi· dent's post-White House role. Top Tea~lter Na•e d SACRAMENTO CAP) -A social , seience teacher rom San Diego County has been named California's 1977 Teacher of the Year. state schools chief Wilson Riles announced today. Riles said he chose Myrra Lee, a tea'cher at Helix High School in La Mesa from a list of four finalists. That makes l'drs. Lee eligible to be selected as National Teacher of the Year. The winner of the national competition will be announced MarchlS. ,raltfl GUde r Kiiie d SANTA BARBARA CAP ) -A 21· year-old university student was killed when bis hang glider went out of con· trol and plunged 400 to 600 feet into an open field on the northern outskirts of Santa Barbara. Other hang gliders who witnessed the mishap said Ben Ftctor, or Jsla Vista, was tilled when bis glider went into a sleep dive and there was a loud enapping noise. They speculat~ the dive caused a sect.Ion or the glider frame lo break. ( ___ s_ia_t_e _____ ) ~ B ujacker • S ought S•r""l'('~l"'l 'f,,.,,. A•ra-W• ""1<;<;•(»1 VIEJO ... ,~:-, C..1rn. • ... o1g ,.,., ' . 495-0401 O<;IA "'l<;ll ' ._ N 1t>N(l •I' b ~ J 6 42-1753 KITCHEN & BATH REMODELING FREE ESTIM ATES ••• o .... O•tpll't'S •• ... NA><l llool•M .. I .. OHic.f t-..i1w l n~..,,. n Aa" 'Off •f 41 772-3470 • " LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sheri H's de· outies. ~re looking for five young roen who h1Jacked a RTD bus at gunpoint forced the dnver to take them to a rural area west of Compton. and then ll'ft the bus without harming or rob· bmgthedriver. ~~~~=====~ Bus dnver Wilham Beacrs told in· vesllgators that the five men ap- peared to be between20and 23yearsof age and boarded his bus al Stockwell street and Wilmington Avenue in Los Angeles Disney R esort Area Project s Reco r d Visits TRUCKEE \AP> -The proposed Disney Corp. ski resort at lndepen· dence Lake would attract 3.25 million visitors a year and more skiers than two nearby ski areas combined, an environmental impact report says. The report projects that on a busy winter day 22.455 persons would use the resort's facilities. Among them could be as many as 18,000 skiers. THAT WOULD be more than the number that now use Alpine Meadows and Squaw Valley, considered among the largest ski facilities in the coun· try. Disney believes that 3.25 million persons a year would visit the resort, which would have year-round attrac· lions. THE REPORT says that "no one can truly predict what impact the an· ticipated million annual visitor days will have on the area's wildlife. "But obviously converting several acres of forest to a hotel or a rest aurant or a village shopping center removes all present wildli!e from those areas -permanently." The report expresses concern about the resort's impact on the Lahontan Cutthroat trout, an Independence Lake lisb which the California Department of Fish and Game hu already classified as ''threatened." Tbe project is expected to cost $73 million and involve a total or 17,440 acres. lndependenece Lalte is just north or Lake Tahoe. How much will do it for you? We find W8Y.StO help. Commercial Credit's been helping people for more than s1><ty years. So ~lever \.'OU need ... a few hundred · or a few thousand. just bring us your problem \M? 11 fmd ways to help. COMMEl\CIAL C~DIT PERSONAL LOANS Co'tn. Me1tn. 370 E. J 7th Str~t Phone : 645-8700 Ornn$?'C 111 1 Town & Country Rd. Suit.l• 26 Phone: 54'7-5871 C'....ilt Lite ln•U,.ftt" Av111lable In •:lt11<lbt. Uo1n>w1ro •I Cu111p Rat. •A tt rv1te oftt'"rHI b¥ Comm ... •1•1 c.....i11 l'lon, 111toraion1..i I IJI lml machinrs arc fine for \('Wiil& na1 1h111~~. Bui clothes aren't nJL BcC:IU\'7 rcorlc arl'n't nat. So, if you W.llll lo ~IV a round \lt:C\'(' In rn (lfl a round .trlll, >•)II need a 11111nJ :um lo sew ii on. S1nttcr has 1t. On our ~yhst• frce·arm macl1111l'. Ou1 frcc.:irm lets you get into cuffs. pants, ncd.\, wai~thand~. armholes :ind other tri.:ht \pots. Which means you don't have to \CW 1h~111 hy h~nJ any more. Or npl'n the WJlll\, Anet lhl'n ~w cvcrythin~ bad. up ag:11n. Ard the free.arm i.rn't tht' only great ftaturc 1111 out SJyfil.! nm.lune. 11 rn.rkcs bu11nnholes any length In four easy step$. h has a fwnl dmp·in huhbrn so you don't have tu fumble around lo put ii in. And, for knit :inJ ~1r~1d1 (Jh111:s, there's :rn JJJU~(­ able. neltiblc stretch slllch. And of course. for Oat sewing there's our push·bullon. sn~1M11 dolh plate. Sil come to Singtr and see the Stylist maclunc. H's made to solve~ lot of n111bkms. •C.-..... --,. -c--.... ,m' Including the foct that yov'rc round. Not nar. ~15!.~~~:; ~E SINGER "''"',..""~0..-,. ... ,... ., ... t~ .. ··~ ............... ,"" -........... . ::c::~=-.. ::.-;:: ~LY SINGER MAKES THE FREE ARM ~.;;:"..:~... :i: STYLIST MACHINE. ... ,_,,\"' -SJ.., c-... I t· A6 D ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • ' ' Initiative Confusion Twice this year, California voters have been con· fronted with ballots seeking their views on 15 statewide propositions. The measures that arrive on the ballot via the legislative process-mandatory in the case of money issues and a mendments to the state constltutlon- have at least had the advantage or public hearings before the s tate Legislature. Proponents and opponents ha ve aired their views, conflicts have been exposed a nd some ironed out, fl aws in wording corrected and the voters have a chance to see how their legislators responded to the proposed law. With initiative measures it"s another story. Under the procedure that came into being in 1911. any citizen or group of citizens who can rustle up enough signatures on petitions is entitled to draft a piece of legislation and have it presented to the elec- torate without benefit of public hearings. The iniliative process is valuable in that it enables concerned citizens to step in when their elect- ed representatives fail to act. Unfortunately, it also can result iri flimsy pro- posals in conflict with existing laws, zealots' shortsighted overkill (as in Prop. 15, the nuclear in- itiative last June); self-serving promotions (as in Prop. 13, the recent dog racing initiative); or legisla- tion so complex it may take batteries of lawyers years to interpret , like the Fair Political Practices Act of 1974. And once passed by initiative, a measure cannot be repealed or even modified by the Legislature without another popular vote. It's on the books for at least two years. There is un answer to the problem-mandatory public bearings with an OPPortunity for fuU dis· cussion, plus amendment or clarification on all in· itiative measures before they are placed on the ballot. Logical d ecisions cannot be made on the basis of little more than a barrage or emotional. last-minute propaganda. Properly conducted bearings are the least the voters deserve and th.is is a task to which the Legislature should address it.self before the next elec· lion. Investment in Energy Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley has sug- gested that county government apply !or a federal grant to finance a demonstrator solar operated heat· ing and cooling system in the planned El Toro library. . The Federal Energy Research and Development Administration is welcoming such applications as a means of demonstrating the practical use of solar energy. It might be, as Riley suggests, that county gov- ernment will have to cough up 10 percent of the amount needed for the El Toro demonstrator. Based on current cost estimates ol $90,000, that means the county's share will be about $9,000. As the world supply of conventional fuels con· tinues to dwindle, that's a small investment to make in an energy source that someday might turn out to be man's best friend. And , although initial installation cost is high, there could be a real economic advantage in long· term operating costs. County supervisors should approve the grant pro- posal when it comes before them this week. 'It1s like a wishing well. We drop the money in and our wishes come true!' Literary Virgins Sell Books Dear Gloomy Gus Action on Capitol Bill ( PAUL HARVEY J Thc wages of sin look prelly tempting. Elizabt'lh n ny, the kiss-and- , tdl ~irl whose trlhng destroyed the t•;ircer of Hep Wayne Hays, 1s now in the pay of magazines. her hook has sold 11 ~ million copies, s hl' h;.1~ been offered an acting role in a movie -:ind s he's miserable. B<llh the prospenty and the misery are genuine Before long, you'll see Ml'anwh1k. a R r 1 t 1 !'> h ,, u t h o r c ~ s . R .1 r b a r ~· Cartland. ha °"rlll Cn 19 novel~ in lht· pJst ) i:ar Jll o f them arl' h e.-;l !-.Cllcrs hl'r heroines arc all h1)!hl) mor.il. r hnstc: her hooks ~ire about old fa!>h1oned romantic Ion• And ~hl1'll :-.l'll 10 m1lhon of hl·r books th1:-. yc..tr' Britain s Barbar.. Carllrind h:~ written 200 hooks l\l lhe age of 75 '>hl' ~till turn~ out ;1boul 20 honks a yeur This }car s title~ mcludr· "The Elu,1\'e E.1rl." "An Angel in lMl '· Thl' Wtld Cry <1( Love " If tho.,c t1Uc•'\ ~ound lurid. I.he r11ntrnt~ an• not Tht• heroines or Curtl.rnd book-. an: all entirely prCIPl'r I ,id IC~ ~1m1• mon• lilies ''The ln- <-rl'dtblt> Hone~ moon,'' "Con- qut•rc-d by lA>Vl'," "Hungry ror Love " TW•:NTY S CH novels a )'ear sht• an•ra~ci. wlt.h a now and· then C'ookhook thrown m. Rook dealers rt'port that her books need nu promotion People come m ask1n~ for "the latest Cartland book " And there are? sometimes two new ones every month. Her books head n.11 of liritain 's best-seller hsts It took <1 1()1. w cnnvince American book dealers th;1t Egos bruise easily, but how could Jerry look quite so down in the mouth with the prospect of a $150,000·p lus a nnua l pension for life as a former Congressman, Vice Presi· dent and President with more than 20 years in of- fice? s.v. Gloomy Gus comment.I •r~ subm4tt•d by rt4'dttrs <1nd do not n•C:t\.\arUy reUtct ,,... view\ of thf' MW\Pdp•r Send vow pet pet Ye to Gloomy Gu~, 0•1ly P1loL Cartland innocence would sell but now there's an increasing American appetite for her books. How come? Miss Cartland's heroes are handsome, wholesome and nice: her heroines are beautiful, bashful, virginal. She has been writing since she was 5 -70 years ago -but onJy in recent years bas she come back into style. She hasn't changed; we have. AND IN the literary bazaar crammed with pornography, as The Wall Street Journal explains it, "Miss Cartland has cornered the market on virgins." Despite the titillating titles of her books, their settings arc mor e likely to be a moonlit ~a rd en tha n a darke n ed bedroom. A 11 of the fictional characters in her novels keep their clothes all the way on . "I'm always a little in love with the heroes of my books," she says "l would not want them to be crude, rude or vulgar." The most racy resolution to any romance in a Cartland book is a final fadeout on a fiery kiss. HER SON helps with research. She dictates three chapters a week -every week. She insists s he neithef" knows nor cares about money. She rinds her 350· acre estate ''comfortable" and her white Rolls Royce a "conve- nience." Dul she's happiest when s he is working, most fulfilled when she is falling in love with her own fic- tional heroes -and it pleases her to know that the world loves them too. .Bradbury's Magic LONG APTER MIDNIGlff. lly Ray Bradbury, Knopf, 271 Pages. S7.95 Welcome back Ray Bradbury. It's so nice to have you baC'k • where you belong -publishing stories. "Long Arter Midnight" is Bradbury's first collection in seven years and most or I.he 22 stories in it were well wort.h the waiting, although it's to be hoped that another seven years won't have to pass before another col- lection is published. THOSE WHO know Bradbury's work don't have lo be told of the very s pecial kind of magic to be found in his work -the lovely way in which he uses words, the unique plot11 that spin to sausry- mg endings. Thoso who Aren't Jamm•r with Bradbury couldn't do better than to read "Long Alter Mldni11ht." althouah they should be warned that two or these 22 tales -•'The Better Pa.rt of Wt1dom•• and "Darling Adolr" -are not Bradbury al bis best . .. ( THE BOOKMAN J Even so. the two are better than a lot or short stories being hailed these days. As for the rest, the remaining 20, they are good things, all. To pick at r~OIJ\, there's "One Timeless S _· • "for example, a wonderfu ly sad-happy talc about a young boy who didn't want to grow up -but did, and found the experiJ?nce he dreaded qui le joyful. Bradbury la rgely is known as a writer of tine science-fiction and fantasy · and there are a few stories of that type here. But there also are others -stories or love and childhood and death all ftlled with the aense of wonder that marks so much ol Brad· bury's work. PH'JLTHOMAS AP Books Edi lot' " The South Korean Connections WASHINGTON -The South Korean effort to seduce members of Congress has been lwo-liered. Rev. Sun Myung Moon, the Korean holy man. took the hlgh, ecclesiaslical'road, and Tongsun Park, a Korean entrepreneur, followed the low. wayward road. Both men have been tied to the South Korean lobbying campaign b y t h e · Was hington Post , which cit ed ''elec- tronic evide n ce ." According to the Post, a tape record· ing apparent- ly exists or a di sc u ssio n between South Korea's President Park Chung Hee, Moon aide Park Bo Hi and the shadowy Tongsun Park. At lhe meeting, the three men worked out "a plan to influence U.S congressmen," the Washington Post reported. The South Korean government has denied any connection between President Park and en- trepreneur Park. Moon's man has denied the meeting ever took place and has challenged his ac- cusers to produce the alleged r e- cording. There have also been over-the-shoulder denials from Tongsun Park a• airports from Tokyo to Paris. 13oth the ecclesiastic and the entrepreneur, ncvertheles~. sud· denly became active on Capitol lllll m the early 1970s. Ry the beginning of this year , we were uble to count 19 Moon mis· sionanes operating on Capitol Hill. We reported on Jan. 12, (JACK ANDERSON J 1976: "They s troll the hallways daily. buttonholing senators and congressmen, offering free trips and other inducements." MOON HIMSELF made two evangelical appear ances on Capitol Hill before our calls made it impossible !or rum to find a s ponsor who would :ir- range a room for him. At no time did we question his right to de· liver a religious message; we were troubled only by the politica l overtone s Congr essmen reported to us, for example, that Moon missionaries had offered them free trips to Korea. Those who heard Moon preach on Capitol Hill say he delivered a strong anti-Communis t message, laced with Chris tian philosophy. They recall that he linked the United States. Israel and South Korea as the three great bulwarks against com- munism. H e also d efended Richard Nixon dur ing the Watergate crisis . He spoke in Korean, with Park Bo H i delivering t h e translations . Koreans told us that Moon 's ·r emarks were often rambling and ambiguous, but the t ranslations Invariably were pre· c1se and pointed. Our sources have the impression I.hat Park, indeed. is the Rasputin behind the benevolent, smiling Moon. Each of the evangelist's ap- pearances on Capitol Hill was at· tended by a bout 100 people. Perhaps t5 to 20 were members of Congress, the remainder aides and secretaries. Rep. Bill Chap- pel Jr., D.-Fla., introduced Moon al the first rally; Rep. Richard !chord, D.·Mo., made the second introduction. THE MOON movement's big- gest catch in Congress was House Speaker Carl Albert. We report- ed on Dec. 9. 1975, thut Susan Bergman. a young, hazel-eyed disciple of the Korean religious- political cultist, had developed a curious relationship with the · powerful speaker. In the mornings, she would greet him in the hallway and pre· sent him with flowers. Then she would brew Ginseng tea for him in the small kitchen down the halJ from his ofCi ce. She would serve tt to him in the speaker's ornate chambers, where she stayed for an hour or two each morning When the speaker left to pre· side over the House, sweet Susan would often appear in the House gallery in the special section re- s erved for congressmen's families. She would watch the speaker in action hour upon hour. Albert described the Moon mis- sionary to us as "just a nice girl, a very nice girl. a Jewish girl from New York. She got all hepped up on the Lord J esus and she just wants to share it. I think that's a nice thing. She's trying to convert me." WHILE THE Rev. Moon quot- ed the Bible lo religious con· gressm en, Toogsun Pal'k al· legedly passed out cash and gifts to the irreli giou s. Th e Washington Post, quoting federal investigators, has charged that he distributed between SS00,000 and $1 million each year to con· gressmen and other Washington officials. We first got wind of Park's ac- tlviliei; in early 1974 when we caugb& him on a strange trip with Rep. Richard H nnna, D.-Calif. We told the story on April 1, 1974 . A classified cable from the U.S. embassy in Sana, Yemen. reported ttiat the congressman "w,11s joined here by a Mr. Park, a tormcr South Kor ean national engaged in shipping, elaboration of for eign investment op· porlun1lies and appa rently political l obbying i n Washington.'' The curious pair also visited Saudi Arabia and Egypt. Indeed, an obliging State DepL arranged accommodations for the Korean operator. Jn a classified cable to the vanous em bassics, the depart- ment asked "each post except Cairo" lo ensconce Park in a "single room located next to or near room reserved for" the con· gressman. ln Cairo, lele· grammed Slate, "Mr. Park re· quests n suite on the river side of the Hilton." WE ASKED Park why he hap· pened lo be touring the Middle East with a congressman. They tr aveled together, said Park. because Hanna ''is like my brother." We also )earned that Park was e ntertain in g member s o f Congress in the posh, exclusive Geor getown C lub, which is established in Washington. Despite these reports ~n 1974, the State Dept. didn't get around to investigating Tongsun Park's activities until November 1975. A New Press Freedom Threat Although. momentarily, the al tention or the press and I.hose who care about its freedom has cen· tered on the struggle ror the re· porter's rig ht to confidentiality. another threat to an uninhibited press Is brewing. This is the at- tempt to compel the substitution of a nebulous doctrine of "right of access" for editorial news judge- ment. Whal the proponents of the doc· t.rlne seek is a modicum of con· lrol by t he government over n e ws · papers t o compe l th e printing o r anyone and everyon e's views regard· less o f t h e news wor l h i· ness of such opinions. They hold that the coo- 'situllonal gu a r antee or free speech will become useless un· less I.he governm ent impo11es re- quirements upon newspapers similnr,to regulations or the FCC for radio and television. That the threat is real is seen in the ''right or reply" statute adopted in f1orida. Although it was struck down by the U.S. SUprcme Court the eftort.ci for some form of government re- gulation tor compulsory space in newspapers have not diminished. IN SUPPORT of these efforts the reaHtles or news paper ( EARL WATERS ) publication in today's world are cited. The high costs of equip- ment and newsprint and payrolls have worked to dwindle compcli· tion. The merging of newspapers and t..he acquisition or indepen- dent journals by chains h ave created a "monopolistic in- fluence" held by "news corpora- tions." Viewed with great alarm is the disappearance or opposi· lion daily newspapers in I.he ma· jor cities throughout the land as well as their absence in most or I.he res t of the com munit1es. The opinion is that because newspaper owners are now im- portant industrialists they think and act as m embers of the economic group lo wtllch they belong and block rmm the page~ or their popers political view· points counter lo their interests. THERE IS a certain validity to the critic i s m s mude of newspapers . No <touht some hor. rible examples of one·sided cov· erage by a specific newspaper can be s hown . nut most newspapers demonstrate a r e· markable sense or resl)Onsiblllly (« !airnesis bolhjn the news col· umos •nd editorial pages. Almott a ll devote space, ex· pttndcd by many. to refider opi nlons. Mahy hove In tituted om- budsmen to field complaints. But to compel, in the name of free speech, newspapers to give equal space to everyone's counter views would have a chillin~ e r- recl on the publication of all news. Neither is the contention that free speech de mands the right or access by ever yone to the established newspapers . True the cost11 of competing financial- ly with an established pres!! is prohibitive to most. But the cost or pamphleteering is not. Anybody with a mimeograph can get into circulated publication. An article In last month's New West describes the proliferation of newsletters and reeants bow o recent shoestring newspaper ef. forl in the Bay Area h as blossomed into a profitable 75,000 circulation. TUE SUBJECT or "right or ac· cess to new11papers" is treated in depth In an article ln I.he latest S;anla Clara J.aw Review by Civil Liberties Union lawyer Michael Guy Ch atiky and 1976 lnw graduate William Eric Robinson. They trace the tre nd o r ncwspgpcr monopoly and the various court declslon11 relntlng to the pertinent first amendment rights. Conceding the acccptancci of the access doctrine "lie somewhere ln the delJcat.e pro cess or implementation" and t.hrtl t1ny regulation should be careful· ty controlled with compulsion "expressly limited to the pro- vision for space ror responsible public interests groups and in· dlvidunls on a revolving basts" 'they project lhat government poli cy to foster commerce "mu~t be reaffirmed and implemented as swiftly a nd prompU,y and de· cisively as possible if our 11ociety iis to be as contemporary in its ex· change or lhoughLc; as it is in I.he exchange of products." ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT RC/tlt,t IV Wttd. Pul:>l1ih<'T 'fhnmo:i Krf'111l. F..d11or /1arbaro Kreibich. f':dllr>f1n/ Pngr f:dltar The edllorlol fl31lC or thr Dally Pllnt ,t•c•k5 lo infotm 11nrt ~lunulate I l'adei s liy prt'senlini.t <m lhts Pllll<' dJ\Crsc ('Omn1l'ntnry on tnpt('.s of intt•rr~I by K,'Odlc11I· c'tl <'olumn111h und ca1loonl!its. by rrovidlnll 11 fnn1m for rc11<lers' vh•w!! anrl hv prt•Rcnlln~ this Mwspnper·~ opinions ond lrl('o!I on rurrfJnl toplr!'I Thl' l.'dllorlul oplnmn!! of lht• Daily rllot uppear ooly h1 lhl' ('1!110 1 lul column ot the 1011 n( the POil\'· Op1mon~ ('X• p~~:·w<l hv th <' rolumn~\.5 :ind cortoonhL' nod l<'llrr writers ore their O\\I\ ond no rndO'l'llcmcnl of their viN"'-h\· th(' Oi\lly Piiot 1hould be lnferrl'<I Monday; Nov. 8, 1976 L r t , { THE F I LM WAS actually based on goings-on in Modc!jlO, site of Burgies' and Al's Drive~tn. That, too, closed down years ago.' Like their counterparts around the country. Mel's and Burgies' have been replaced by Cast-food franchises that dispense across- lhe-counter hamburgers, tacos and fried chicken to take out. Royce Hailey claims to have introduced curbside food service t o the world in 1921 with a drivc- in near Dallas. At one time he had 70 Pig Stands fr9m Los Angeles to New York, but most have s ince been converted to cof· fee shops and only five still have curb service. A MAJOR REASON for the de· mise or the drive-in was the ap- peal they held for teen-agers. Hailey said . "There were disruptions by the A~W1"9Mlo PARKING LOT STANDS WHERE CARHOPS ONCE HUSTLED Taxes, Other Costs Led to Demise of Drive-In Restaurants. with fancy designs and putting curbside waitresses on roller skates. ing," she s aid. "The trend is to fast-food chains that at most might have a drive-up window." MC>f'day, November 8, 1976 DAIL V PILOT A 7 THE TITLE OF "PIGS with Wings -The Sexual-Political Diary or two adolescents" comes-from a book by British writer-psychiatrist David Cooper. . teen-agers and we lost some adult custome rs because of "that," he said. "The teens liked to be seen. and would spend more time than m oney there. That made it unprofitable." Two such drive-ms in Austin, Tex. are doing a "booming busi· ness," he said. There are economic reasons for the shift, loo. A RECENT BA NK of America report on restaurants said drive- ins average profit rates of 6 to 12 percent, compared with fast-food profit rates of 10-20 percent. ''There's not many left any more," said Rod Raskin or Bob's Big Boy. which opened its first drive-in in 1936 in Glendale. The chain has 930 r estaurants across the United States and Canada.butonly5aredrive-ins. · ••MAKE SURE ev- "We haven 't built a drive-in ' erything you said was ac- since 1964." said Raskin. "We · curate and it was un- closed one last year and we won't derstood," be said. "Ir OCC ,2nd $7,000 At Bi~Ia for only $135.07 Orange Coa s t a lftonth •. .. Weiss said, "I think the pro- blem was that years ago. people felt very secure in eating at drive-ins. But in the last few years, the re was a fear , for some • r eason, a nd people weren't com· fortable eating outside.'· "TH E OLD-FASHIONED drive-in or yesteryear has gone by the wayside." said W 11. •·Buckshot" Price, executive vice president of the T exas Restaurant Association. "What a shame. I enjoyed them So did mothers with kids "ho didn't want to have to haul them 1ns1dl· a restaurant." Price said a few entcrpnsini.: businessmen are keepin,:: the idea a li ve, upd;.it111~ drnc 1n ... Taxes are 2 to 3 percent of the operating cost for dri ve-ins because they need more proper- ty, double th e rate for other r estaurants, the sludv said, not mg that payrolls at drlve-ins tend to be higher. No one knows the precise ex - tent or the dr ive-in decline. Susan Mills or the National Restaurant A ssociation in Washington said res taurant 4'ta t1 s t1cs areo "t compiled M'paratel) on drive ms "IT'S OBVIOUS THAT dnve- in establishments arc disappear- h you both k n ow why build anot er." yoµ're doing it, then it's ONE OF THE LAST holdouts is the Five-Spot, which opened in San Jose around 1937. Twenty years ago the Five-Spot was serving 800 meals a day, said Paul Watkins, head cook for 23 years. "It's down to about 150 a day. and falling," Watkins added. "Back in the '50s it was four cars deep and double-parked in the s treet almost around the clock. We had fo ur cooks in the kitchen. four hops on the lot and still couldn't keep up with the or· ders." okay to ask if they un- derstood what you were s aying." Justasthespeakerhas to concentrate on saying exactly what is meant, the listener has to ask: "Am I hearing that right?"hesaid. UNDERSTANDING each other's words. however. is only part of the batUe, Edelson said. "What you say is im- . portant, but how you say it is even more impor- tant." he said. College's forensics team captur e d th e second pla ce s w ee p s takes trophy at the Biola In- vitational Speech tourna- ment a l Biola College in La Mirada. OCC's individual win- ners were.Judy Brown or Costa Mesa. second in split duo interpretation; Billie Tun,lg of Tustin, second in persuas ion; Ben Watkins of Costa Mesa , third in ex- pository; E ric Postle of Huntington Beach, third in impromptu; and Can. dy Artell of Costa Mesa. third in split duo in- terpretation. Whether you need $3,500 or $10,000 get it from the people who lend millions. Co'1'tmercial Credit. Monthly payment based on a $7.000 HomeOwner loan. for 84 months. at dn annual percentage rate of 15%. Total payment 11.345.88. NO 'POINTS. NO PREPAYMENT PENAllY. We find ways t o help. COMMEl\.CIAL Cl\.EDIT CO"PO"ATION @ Homeowner Loans i.L"illii 1\ 1...,n •. r ~r, uoo nnJ °"', niu•I I~ '''C\J1<-d tv o uwnti.n.il vu uf n.~>I df\J IJ\.'T"IVrt.."1 prU(k'ny. Costa Mesa • 370 E. l 7lh Street • 646-8700 Orange • 1111 Town & Country Rd. • 547-6871 Suite 2G Cl""dit l.ifr ln•U1"11n«• Ava1lahl" m f:hRibl~ 801ro•era at Croup ft.at.al Short Play-list Hurts 'Country' NAS HVILLE. Tenn. <AP) The Assoc1.ition of C"untry Entertainers says tountr) m us1c ra<l10 stations aren't playing enough varil'ty of country i.ongs It called the situ ation "the worst l'ris1s rountry music as an art form faced an 20 years " with the honesty or creative instinct and infuriating the fans." It i.aid the entire country music industry is to blame. "Much product not wanted by the consumer 1s being pushed down his throat. and he·s being told he likes It ... it s aid, adding that country music fans have been complaining about the situation. C}esterdayS dreams The assoc1:itlon said that tili?ht play-hsb at country rnus1t· ... tat1ons are "destroying careers. tamµ<>nng What makes dinner and entertainment at The Registiy Hotel such a g6od idea? Because The Registry is the the happy landing place where happy evenings happen naturally. In the Grand Portage Restaurant and Saloon enjoy o great d inner of gourmet food cooked table-side. Enjoy dancing. Stay for one or even two exciting shows. So come for dinner. Or dancing. Or the shows. Come for oil three. Now thors·o happy landing! TH E REGISTRY HOTEL ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT 18800 Mac Arthur Boulevard, Irvine. Phone 752-8777 Other Reglslly Hotels Dollos M 1nneopo11s I s·t Poul Airport. soon 1n Sconsdole Ar11. Owr>ed 11nO Oll<l<•lf'd by H01po•hty M""a9ement Coto. Dallas r .. u It's time to start doing something about the shape of your future. And Holiday Spa can help you gel there Make physical improve· men I a pleasure with steam. sauna and whirlpools at all clubs. Even heated swim- ming pools at key locations Gals. ask about Jazznast1cs -tun group exercises done to uptempo music So.Quit dreaming Call us today for your tomorrow. . ,, Holiday Spa has dltferent .. membership programs available. Call about our Introductory 2-week membenhip program. c.. •• > Announcing our newest location serving the North and West Valley: 9143 De Soto Avenue at Nordhoff 213-882·5!>12 ,. .......... .. 11.J ~V!tlh EhMr,h B1l'''"""'!' ~uu!f\ 1,1 l m. 11n /Jw• 0\.1• f I' ll}fl4111M 1 Ceal•M.•• ,•100 tf.,l">tt8 ,1lfh"''" tt.•rb!., (,.(' nhu /I~ ~<1~3l•.8 •ttcf"o t I 1 I \t• f"lfu' 1 l' • 1 I 1 W1 +lh.M t 1\ 'oo t ''" ~~~~!"J~~~ ~.~~· .. n~1n 't 11 (•r t 11 ll I 11~ t!H I~ •1 Lo"t •••oh r.1 I A.1 t '" f i ,1, t• I , '"•' •l(,1•, t t I •..t0tr4 Or•rt•• • ·:t .• ,1 .:1•1 1•,A,' • Wt• f I fu hi r\ 1 ll<i .. '1 ,; 4 .. ' We''"''"''•' t f't I V+lf Iii lll\lf' 1~_,,., "' ~111 l11'1n .. 't•• t I •I'll I 111 t1''·' Ml "•"•••ff ft .,,. tt I , A w14I fU ' .,.,., l ,H,, •• f\,11 ,., M .i' "A' '• ti( 1•1 l1•1 ltJ l'ttd .,, .. ~ DAILYPIL.OT Monday. November 8. 1976 Cedars Still In Lebanon? Seniors' Views Sought Meeting Ti.es in With Newport Center Talks Senior citizens rrom throughout Orange County have been encouraged to attend the monlhly meeting or the Orange County Senior Citizens Council, scheduled Friday in Newport Beach. H. Ross Miller , spokesman for the council, said the group·~ meetings are held tn different cities each month. He noted that this month's meeting will coin· cent.er. Miller said no act.Ion oo Newport's center will be taken. In addition. Miller said, those opposed to the Newport Beach senior citizen center are being encouraged to attend the bear- mg. The council's meeting will get under way at 10 a .m. at city hall, 3300 Newport Blvd., with a dis- cussion and study session of ex- isting senior citizen programs in the county. During· the afternoon public bearing, seniors wiU be asked to give tbelr views on transporta- tion, housing and information and referral services for the elderly. The council serves as the ad· visory body tor senior citizens Yule Cards on Sale lly Uil Kt'unc Recent wa r ione mm footage I've seen falls to show a ny of the renowned. cMars of Leb,anon. But they're still there no doubt, high in the back hills. This comes lo mind because a client a sks if the Lebanese newspapers still print an obituary cverytime a cedar tree dies. Not likely. Such was the case several years ago, though. In fact, several hundred giant cedars st and above the Lebanese village of Becharre, and whenever one of thQ.<>e died, not only did the newspaper print an obituary, but the local government held an inquest. • cid e with the debate in Newport Beach over the proposed senior citizen center there. He said part of the council's ar. ternoon session will be a public hearing in w hich the senior citizens will be encouraged to air their views on the controversial The afternoon session starts at 1 p .m. One of t h e pnmary items or business is the appointment or a task force to suggest improvements in mobile home parks in the county. Christmas cards are on sale at the American Heart Association. Orange County Chapter. "Thi1 i1 wot• from the bothroom. I want.cf The cards, in five selections, KITCHEN water." Somehow the Ou~h word "wijssegher" meaning "sooths ayer" would up in English are on display at t he Heart office, "iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiM~iiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiii~ii 100 Civic Center Drive West, I It Santa Ana . Br och ures are availa· trans1at1on as ··wiseacre." · · · ble by calling 547-3001. Ask the clergyman or your choice which is the most-quoted book of the Bi- ble. If he doesn 't say Prove rbs, he's not in agreement with that famous expert on familiar quotations named Bartlett. WomanSues Publishers .,.i.YJ .~!. ... · <!l, INSURANCE When Valuables Vanish il'<'~j}j'~ BELLADONNA A woman who claims the operators ~----------- of a Costa Mesa book publishing agen· ( ~ Q. "Wh at's the medical t erm for 'belladonna·?'' cy disappeared immediately after she BR J E FS handed over val11able materials to be ~ A. Alopine.Comes from that herb com- monly known as deadly nightshade. Italian ladies of old used it lo dilate the pupils of their eyes so they'd look fetching. That's where it gol the ''belladonna" name which in Italian means "fair lady." used in a projected book has sued -_ t hem for 111ore t han $145,ooo in BB Mart s-1at damages. --:I' Client ask s what we re Gen . George Custer's last words at the battle of the Little Big Horn. Nobody knows inasmuch as nobody survived except a horse named Comanche. His last words of record, however, were over- heard by a military bugler named John Marlin who was dispatched to the rear by Custer for supplies. Upon first seeing Indians thereabouts, Custer reportedly s houted, "We've got them!" MY NAME ISA POE M In checking out potential officers for the "My Name ls :i Poem" Club, we oug ht not overlook Toby Scobee of Omaha, Neb .. what? As for the nomination of Siripreddy Reddy. a medical resident in the same city, that will ha veto be taken under advisement. On the payroll of Sheik Khatifa of Qatar is <1 r l'lati\'C of his whose primary function is to supervise the She1g'sofficial clock winder. Evcrylmdy remembers the Wizard of Oz. hut nobody recalls his full name: Osc:ir Zoroaster Phndriz Jsa:ic Norman Henkle Em- manuel Ambroisc Diggs. His initials, please note, spell "Oz P inhead." Death N otf<"e# STOllM~ Death N otice• Co<""~ <!!'I AA.or. tltr"" or...OClt ldr•n SH•<~ T.,.\d•v Novt!mber ~ l l'O Nam ed as defendants in the Orange County Superior Court action filed by WiUadean W. Vance are Randy Cl.if· ton Busbee, Western Literary As- sociates, Kenneth Wayne Hunt and Paul Cook. Mrs. Vance c laims she delivered manuscripts and other documents valued at more than $10,000 to Busbee in return for his promise that he could persuade book publishers to accept her completed project. Mrs. Vance states that when she next visited the Costa Mesa office, she found it closed with no forwarding ad· dress for the defendants. Their San Diego location was similarly aban- doned, she alleges. Parolee .Jailed Again A parolee who admitted in the courtroom that he took jewelry, credit cards and a calcul ator Crom a Newport Beach home after breaking a window to gain entry has been sen· tenced lo six months to 15 years in state prison. Orange County Superior Court Judge James H . Wals worth ordered the prison term for An1?el Martinez, 31, of Santa Ana . after the d efendant pleaded guilty to burglary charges filed last June 3. Newport Beach police said inform a· lion given them by a neighbor of teacher Donna lleidbrink, 1801 Mariners Drive. led them to identify Martinez as the man who broke into her home. lE.-,TFR & <;TORM; ~I <j...,11 "~• r I ,,,, t o .. ~ .. o• ,.. .... ,,.. N~v-mb-, .. 1 )tf) ''°'' ''V.0 by h• VIP t .. ~·'"' t .,.t-1'•" At "-lrtl .. 0 '~ \1<)1'•1\\ < t r,u •. , AV'·~ r l l'"''"' Jr !\ Ern~t ',1 tl'T\\ I PAri. .. , N,.w ,,.,._,.., RC)(W'rt.t PM n Gr•c.• Ctteo.I 4it A~rf!'w•. ~ S .,. •'>•••··•" c"u«" Nowpc>rt &•'" ~011s ur in Death l"t,.r~nt P•t•t c V 161t11 A.¥mor•.tf '''""""0-'? o• "'4 8•'<1"" N•w ~WV t )' '"" P\1lf1ri-1t (ir • .,,. ,.,,.. """''""" ~ •"\1•.-) ')I) DM u P tt1f ,t \l••'t'll M mt'lf'1.JI P,,.,. ~""'O"'tt '°"'"'°' r~ J11 I I . .,.M '1" ,. 'f ,,,. .. fl)h Gii EEi.EV P••' Nowoo•• e .. <" P•<1'"' v ... # Two sons of an 87-year-old man who _., .. .,.a .... ~';;~~ died last Sept. 1 a fter he broke his leg <;•'-' GuA ~E" J A 01 Nn•e>0•1 while watering a lawn in Huntington 8t•C" '" P•'"•d ..... ., ~·' Hoaq B Mr_.,., HO\Pll•I on N~ ... ""'°'' S each have SUCd ttiS CmployerS for •H~ Bo•n ••<111•1 •~ 1 .. 1 "' damages to be detcrm1ned in tria l :,--~~~~·~~,_;~,~~~1".1'!;.:,~:~, ~~,6~~ court. A warrant h as been issued in Orange County Superior Court for the arrest of a Huntington Beach man who failed to show up at the county jail to serve an eight-month sentence imposed for a burglary conviction. J udge James H. Walsworth, who had earlier ordered the jail term and three years probation, issued the war - rant naming Christopher Rod Gruner, 20, of 21016 Shepherd Lane. as the wanted man. Gruner. pleaded guilty to burglary chaq~es !tied last Aug. 18 when police identified him as the man they found inside a BrookhurstStreetstore. 300 Students To Seek Horwrs More than 300 students from 53 Orange County high schools are ex· pected to compete in the Ninth Annual Orange County academic Decathlon <OCAD) Nov. 20, according to Clirf Benjamin. OCAD president. This year's event will be held at Troy High School, 2200 E. Dorothy Lane, Fullerton. Also particip ating will be four schools from Los Angeles City Unified School District. The OCAD will test skills 11nd abilities in 10 academic areas. Scholarships will be awarded to the two top winners in each category; award winners and their coacht.'5 will be treated to a meeting with 6l ate legislators in Sacramento. Bar Association Chief to Speak r:a.-,\tr w r,qf( EV "' c~,1~ ,,,, , c , • ... . n ,,,. • ~•···•'" .. .,.,_ , '"I,,· n '''~ C)\lr¥1~•d b'; ""' r; "i..t11J '1 P'\1 '· c,r.,.,1 .. y 11t (rr\t• ""'1' t 1" ~IJO-'I ~ l""j A!"" W ;,,,.,hr .,,;~ 1' fo t M ll'\olt ~'"''"""" ••111•r 1N •r ,n 11_. tC ''' I""' n I 1 • ~.., 4.., f 1 i r 1 l lcriq .-4jlll ,,.._,\ • Co,.,ma n<kr I" 1M U4S N••v """'" wor10 w~r 11.•nc1 11......,.n Named as defendants m the Orange Ralph J. Gampell, newly installed ~7.;,;~·01"::.~ .. c:,:_:0;. ·;:,·~;,.,'~ ,: County Superior Court lawsuit filed by president of The Slate Dar of t tftfl'1 1 11 ,,.,,, f •J'""'·I' '°tltHf"\ fU.,'\ tSet ) •l PM H• 8 '°'''""',.' f MP"f "'' " ~. ...,,,. • \ .~mo' o•f·~ •1''1f I f•" 1ft , \'T\.\, ''' l' 9 I •H•JwW1W\• •Atrfu1H f "An-,'1 H " "It) t1~ t1.1 8 1) P M ..... , "''°'t ,,,_ .... M 1•1 'II ~""" tr>r\ MOMMll(E ~-I-,~., V;OH..,1rr ,, ...... '#'O'J,.. fM t t f; """ 1t "1f'<tln N """'"'•' \ • t '• '· J'" v 1 ht "'•• ~v °"''Ht "1 t '""°'' 1 IV 1,..,. • r r lf\•r (111 ,.,0-- f: t •f r "lo • f I , t"-' > f fl't f .. jlll,,.,_¥ ,f SMM•n cei.•o•,,,., 1n ~""" "'"' Robert L Snell and Arthur L. Snell California. will be guest speaker at ;::"· .. ~·. T~I·~~~.:::· TH• ~.;~Ir;~·~ Caro~cp~~ryl.els7S400tcrBnrooankdhFu~rsttuSrat.,RFeoaunlt~ ThCoursdaBy's Ameet.ing or the Orange ~·oor1 8•~<n "'"· Pltllllp S Gurl•Y unty a r SSOCtatiOn. nl S<lt•n .. lody Nr w Vo" ~nd lain Valley. It will be held al the Newport Beach douont•r SU\•" c''''"'" Cnok ot M . .. , .. ll'I" n.,,,, 11••Mt1t•1drtn, ..;~.,. The plaintiffs blame the defendants arnott Hotel, 900 Newport Center ~;,1;,' ,,~:~·;,.~~·,':.i•. ;~:.,,;~~·;; for the death of their fall-er, Arthur c. Drive. start0i,ng with.lla ·s,oc1 ial hour a t ""'' •t10•I•• w.,,,, •"l•r '" •·•"" Snell They claim that he broke his leg 6:30 p .m . inner WI o low at 7:30 11\H Rov Gvttu Mr Gu•"'V Wd\ " h p. m. ' ..,..m0tr 01 ,,_rou• club• inciuc1it10 when e stepped into a planter box R ti be bt . ed b r1t• B••b°" a • ., c1111'>, B•q canvnn hole covered by a growing lawn and eserva ons can O am Y c.ou1>1ry ciu'> Jo11t1~•" c1ub. AacQUol died 11 days later of complications. calling the OCBA office, telephone ON CHILDREN'S SHOES Mow in Pro9ress Continues Thrv Wed.. Nov. I 0 30 FASHION ISi.AM> NEWPORT IEACH • ,., .. ,.,_ f 1 I • r ,.,, 11 'Nt\t\ '""' tM • r • "'f ,. , '' tn• .. """'·""'A r-' C'111t1 Metroll(ll•I•" Cl\lb ot -Vi>n 838·9200 . ~IV Mr Gw~. ~•t ~tn t~l~•n ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _., -Of AmertC• And-·· Who -. ''"'', l •'' t M-•n• • ,.. ... ,,, r •"W.tf• (1t¥ t-t,r .,.. ... U r ~"8'l I• IV>fl"ll4' ,...,,.,, -.• {')l"ltQ• t '"" 1 't/t "1•..-f ('" .. .411" -.f , • ._ •• ""., I , • • 1JP"'1 .. 1 flf 1~'"tt-' t : ~M ,, f .. t V•"• ~M"""' • t i l•1t•• """"°''"' 'l-t P\ (. ••ec1•1 v •..,\II ,., .. t , ' 11 •" 9u\tM\' f·o, m•nv ., • .,, He w•\ ti nf"WJ Ott'•• M •\()n tor lO Vt•'' YNICn w111 ~ ,..Id Thur..,..,. No•· •mbrr 1 t 1 00 PM P•<•fl< V 1#0<# ~tr\61'1•1 P•n (l'l~Olll HOO P.c-1f1(. vi-· o ... .,. Ne woo rt 8••<"' GI '" •••U 'JI'~ t~ .. '•'"•tw \\t40f\1' contrthu t "'"' Diii' '"""' .. In Ho•Q M-rT'l(U ... Ho\o•l<I C 0 T~ S•m G<I"..... )r Mfl'l¥IO••• 1-vttd P 1 c1tit v •• MnMu•r '# o.,., ''"' Free Health Seminars UMOfll\ f 1'"\¥fl-.,N ·~ ''"'\ f t'"T l t ¥111 1 < tf '"''\I Y••ia • 'lr-•'" l'f!\rf"l't\Ot"f I\, 11•, -.. •• ., 1111•tf'l1t.i'"''•"n~ •C • .. .., ,,.r 0"1 '' '"\ .t~d"'" '\f H ""'" ,.,_ 1' rl""'"' H••lr M "-" l•t of HO'#El.L llEVI! At 'f I HOWELL rO\•-Of """",,qi°" 8'-•r It t elllorn•• 0.t• *' -----------::~':.:o,:~c:;,,:, ',~!. s;:\:~"" A Comnutify Forum for your education, and awareness in how to survive todays Maior Health Problems. Tuesday, November 9 -7:30 p.m. 14lT't-Hl .. f.lOH FUMHU HOMI Coron 1 d~I M.ir fi 73·9450 Cn..,ta MPsa 646 2424 HLLHO ADWAT MOl TUAlY 1 t 0 Broadway Co'lta MA'icl 642·91 50 McCOl MIC• MOUUARllS Laguna Beach 494·941 5 Laguna Hille; 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 'ACIFfC YllW MfMOllAL 'AH Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newoort. Caltforn1a 644-2700 NB ,AMILY C~OHIAL 'UHllAl HOMI 7601 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893·3525 SMITHS' MOltTUUY 627 Main SI. Huntington Beach 536-6539 SMITH TUTHILL LA ... OUI WISTCLlr' CHAf'tl. Mof1vsry • • 6'46·4888 '427 E 171h St .. Costa Mesa """IOI Hunt "01'>'1 ""'"" IQ<' I~.,...&,.., ~nd wA-. •m ployfl'O At Do,, Jo\r'\ Dr. Uoaet Sllnr, 0 .0. fnd t.11 Or. Gary Coufutt, D.C. lridolocjy (Eye Analplsl Pyramid fnel"CJY MutritiCMtist Chiropt adw Ms. MCln)Clret O'Brimt CJhtlcal HYJlflosis q.,t•u'""' Survtvlr'Q Mr\. ~I .,.. .,.,."" I <h•IOr•11, 1 Orolherund H I\ t•' Fun-r.I \•rYlt•' fu~y No._... tml'ltr • 61 ti 00 "M WAv•rltv °"1"Ch In l'AlrM••ll ~mo,.31 PMk ~14 A""• C• Aft•nqtm,.,,h by Sm't"\' MO•tu•ry Hunllno1011 8totlt Ca. Wednesday, November I 0 - 7:30 p.m. 1111 Ul6 T"41 '*"""" would •--.:•~t• _,,ti <Oftlrl!>ullon\ toward" tn1•I lul'ld tor 1"-mlnot tllllllrtn. OWIN GEORGE oweoc. OI Sovlh lAQunA, Dr. J..ice de Monff911, M.O. Or. Uonel SllYtf', O.D. Cardio•asculor, Pre•...tf•• ~cln• lridolOCJY IEye Anafpist Presented by Dr. Gery Couhlr., D.C. HutriffCMtlst Chiropractor C•llfOrr\I•. Pf\\td ltWttV at hi\ ,,. ''d•ntt on Mo"d•y mor nfnq. """" •mb., a. t•l6. Sv••l•td by ... , <lotUQhler, V••• Cowie ol S<>ulll L"9U"l C• "rr4n~me11h •r• pend I no 11 ~I 1 .. 1..aQu"• Oo<h Mortve•v McOOUNO COUTURE CHIROPRACTIC OFFICE 2043 WESTCUFf DR.--HEWPORT IEACH 645-5300 Tear this od out so you will remember to attend. SHffng Is limited. J ANI! M<GOUNO ol l.•IJ'Jftl Miiis. Calllt>fnl• Pt\~ •W•Y No.....,ber •. 1t1• ti i.tr rnlelen<t SM Is turvl-!IV htr sl•lor Vl(IOflt 1(11IC~ Of lMl\iNI Hiiis Ito ... ,, 1 JO PM Tue\dav tnd MtH ~OMM!ay 10·00 AM, llOlll It St Nlcl\ol•s C.tll\ollc Ch11rc1t. t.aou,,. Hills IMt rmtnt Atc:tnslo" CeflWlel'V ~lltr UOlirwl 8 .. <11 MortUMY dlr~· COIMMJ Dec. 8, GMSt Udwet, Dr • .,,,crd Jensen, D.C., H8frfffonlst HHlth Mews ••• HYPOGL YCEMIA-{Low llood S91JC11") ly Or. Gwy C_....., D.C. '"'~ NIUMANN URSULA NEUMANN, r·e\ldeftf of Go\IJI MM• Ca11tom11 {)fl• Of dfflll No~btr •· 1'7•. Svnlved by ,.., husb•nd. Mtl ftf I', Nt 11m3,,n, 0.tUO"ltr . MonlU t"d '""°titer, P9w lftl .. menl w•ll IM prlvttt, Ill lltll 0C "-" c°"trllKtlloM mav IM n...i. to T ........... ,c ... C.11ur So<letv .. "' &.•~r°" CotlJI Mes. MortU<WY dlrK• to"' PUBLIC NOTICE "But Doctor. ir I hnve feedln ~s are necessarv. low blood SU.(ar. shouldn't The d1el should i:cnerallv I be able lo eal all the · sugar I wont?" As much be hl.(h in fots and protein as I would (-;lnw conversion to like lo tell energy>. Obviouslv. a rlict them yes, high 1n '\UJ!3r ·contrnt the answer would /'ust compound the 1!1 no. p r o b e m b y b.e I n ~ Bas1rally, l'Onverted to .(lucose and II y po ~ I y "humed up" in the form of ccmrn 1s an energy even more rapidly. ,.CT1T1ousaus1N•H ovcr·serre· An attack generally NAMI! n•TIMIN'T l t I 0 n 0 f occur:o1 nflt>r the virl im has ,.!!':.'.011ow1n11 IM'"'" 1• OOlnQ l>vtl· ~ 1 n s u 1 I n .(One without food for CAB"NA CATElllNO. 21JO Fl-·· Dr. ..., h y 1 h e severnl hours. Al fil"!lt he Sl ,Co\luiw,~.cA C4Nthh,O.C. pnnc r eas. ma y appear to he i111en llob"•I Gr•tltv, ,60 "'-' '""l• ... ,...Jus insulin me•n~ inloxlcalf'd, as a slurrin~ s1 • c.o., .. Me'" cA .,.,, • 11 "' "-.. ....., r ~,.A,. h d di•"""'· hypoglyc~mla ci,nvcrt di~o <-ntutlon 11re likc•ly Lo Altn ~1,., lhelr food to en<'rgy much o cc u r . F. m o t I on 11 I T111, <1A1tn1111t wu llled -'"' '"' more quickly lh•n normal. Instability may also be OMll• Cltrtl OI g,,.,.. COllflly on Ott. I n d t c a l i v e 0 r While the term "low blood sugar" would se<-m lo indicate that a diet hiah in suJ;ar content l'I needed, such is not the case Th e idea is to maintain a healthy blood 'luger level. not try Lo "cntrh up" with insuhn production Cam1y and fruits with a high natural sugar content mav be an excellent source of quick f:nergy for people with normal sul(ar lcvclo;. but they can he th e downfall of th e hypoglycemia victim the nerves pus down the spinal column and emerge through nerve openinw; In th e vertebrae, Chiropractic Is the only branch wh o!le main conccm is with the f ~r ma1ntenence o the relationship. rr you suffer from hypoglycemia, it is quite possible that you have a s p inal !l ubluxali o n· {misalignme nt or lhe vertebrae > whi ch 111 lnterfcrinR with the now or 11erve Impulses to your pnnrreas, liver, or adrenttl ahmds. An cxamlnaUon by yo ur D oc tor o r C hlrop ra c ll c ca n determine Ir !\uCh it t.ho case. <>CMS1f74 Tiii\ .,.,''"'" '' <011d11c11d bv en~n th a l p e o p I e w I th 0 5 '"" an genera to. m.. ~ For lhls reason, fr'f'QUent h)'PO&lyccmia fl'llbll\htd °''"" CM•I o.llY PllOI, __________ ..... _____________________ ...;.. __________ __. . Nuture intended for your gln nd:\ to fun ction properly. but thl.'IY mu~t have a normnl low or nerve lnpul!le" lo do so While AH branches or lhr ho•ling arts reco(ni:r.e that ----------.. ,Ott H Nov I e It ttlt 4471.,. 9 91 ...... SCHICK HAS A BETTER WAY! ,. Many happy Schick Lot's of people are discouraged with qu~k weight ~ kw plans that"- ·seldom produce lasting results. Schick Center•s new Weight Loss Program ,,... doesn't ' customers are. ' . . . reporting that they L i not only lost the pounds but are having no difficulty MAINTAINING use pills, shots b . afterward without or fad diets! dieting or unusuat willpower. for informauon or fre/t We~aht Analysis, ·call 558-8404 SCHICK CENTER Weight Loss Program A name you know you con tru~t MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED r ... Got a partridge in a pear tree to sell before Christmas? Move them under our tree. On e ach Thur s d ay from N ov-e m h e r 11th th r ou g h December 16th, the Dail y Pilot will publis h spe cial pages to make it e asie r for you to convert your sale able items to Christmas cash. Buy a box under our tree & sell your toys, s ports equipment, luggage, appliances, furniture , antiques, handmade & unique gifts and no matter what your business -we have a box for you! Putting a box under our tree is easy 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 tim e. For more information and to place your ad just call 642·5678 and · a s k fo r your Chris tmas Ad· Viser for more information. .Your credit ls good with us . we·n bill you or you can charge your ad to y our Mas ter C harge or BankAme ricard. DAILY PILOT . . 642-5678 Monday" Afternoon Prices NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Pu~lisher Eyes Sea World SAN DIEGO (AP) -Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc., a New York publisher of textbook.'$, Is offering more t.h•n $45 million to acquire the outatanding shares oC common stock of Sea World. Sea World. which operates aquatic P.•rka in Ohio and F1orida as well as 1t.s ma.in attraction in San Diego, said · a special meeting of tM board urged shattholdera to accept the $28. 75 per. abare offer by HattOUrt. Tbe new proposal Is Ult s~ ln recent days. MCA, Inc., an entertala· ment contlomer ate headquartered at t..lnJvertaJ City, made a S22 pcr·sbare tender o!ftt to t.ue ovtt Seal World ~bout two weeks a10. Monday November 8. 1976 s OAILYPILOT .48 Babies Grow\ So Gerl>er Triea lt, Too } By MIL'roN MOSKOWITZ Gerber Product& la alill at It, tryln1 to niure out bow to escape from the one-product strailhtJacket il tailored foe itself. We all know Gerber ror lts baby roods -and indeed Wt should. Thtt Fremont, MJch., company commands mo,,. than 60 percent of the U.S. baby food market. Camp~U hq 80 percent of the soup business but I can't think of any other food processor that owns 60 percent of a maritet. Kellogg's slice of the cold cereal market la 42 percenL The trouble ii), the birthrate has 'been decUning, which means Money Tree that Gerber's customer base ts being eroded. Gerber pac~ a product you graduate from -and you don't return to It un•' less you're. waiting for your dentures. With · Americall families having fewer children, Gerber bu been In tho frightening position of watching its market recede. WHAT TO DO? WELL, ONE thing you can do is think about the rest of the world. The multi-national revolutlorr swept right by Gerber. It never paid much attention to ovef. seas markets. Now it has built up intematio.nal operations.- to the point where they account tor 20 percent of the com- pany's $400 million sales volume. Gerber license$ other companies lo make and sell its products abroad. However, that'ssWJ the baby food business, and there·; a worldwide crusade to keep the birthrate down, which cal\ only be bad news to Gerber Products. So the obviows move is to diversify. That's easier said than done. Big companJes do it all the time, acquiring other companies and dispatching a steady stream of new products to the marketplace. But Gerber i$ not a big company. It moves at a slower pace. 1'JfE LOGICAL WAY TO EXPAND is to build on your. past successes . Gerber presumably knows babies, and so i~ has gone into the business of day.care centers (catcbin(. them after they have grown up on Gerber foods). It has als~ become a small producer of nursery items and infant.wear> And it has launched a We insurance company under th4>" Gerber name (lo make sure that children will be able to gel their Gerber foods iC Daddy passes <Away). · All of that is still puny stuff, compared to the baby food. volume. · It's the food business that should have the greatest potential for Gerber, but the company has struck out con~ sis ten Uy when it sought t.o establish a product lhat w uld W consumed by adults. · FOR A LONG WIBLE IT tested a line·or meat eotrees' under the odd brand name, Singles. Many people made th& mistake of thinking that this was a produd for the "singles market.•' Singles has now been scrapped. Gerber is currently testing a ketchup in Wisconsin. Th& rationale for this product is not clear, except that kids arEi great consumers or ketchup. Also, the No. 1 producer oC ketchup is Heinz, which Gerber trounces eAsily in the bab)t food business. , The latest Gerber food entry Is a peanut spread. It has been tested in Wisconsin and ts now being moved int.<1 markets in Illinois, Minnesota and North Dakota. Gerber i&. trying here lo capitalize on children's affect.ion for peanut butter without going to the trouble oC making a peanut but• ter. : PEANUT BUTJ'ER HAS TO BE at least 92 percent peanuts. Gerber's spread is only 80 percent peanuts, ands~ it can't be called peanut butter. Gerber hopes to convert peanut butter users to it.c; product, which has a generous- helping oC honey (5 percent of the content). Whether Gerber can succeed in this effort, we don't know. Bigger companies than it have tried and failed wtlb peanut spreads. But we do know that Gerber is desperate to develop some products that it can feed to children once they're out or diapers. rt wants very much to be able to live down its old battle cry, .. Babies are our only business. •1 Housing FutJ119e Backed by Aide SACRAMENTO CAP> -There Is still a "hell or a future" in the state's housing loan program despite last" week's defeat of Prop. 1, the housing bond issue, a top state official says. Donald Burns, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's business and transportation secretary, says the state Housing Finance Agency (HFA) will continue to make loans by issuing re- venue bonds. which do not require voter approval. BUT HE SAYS REJECTION of Prop. 1 means that HFA borrowers will have lo pay higher interest rates. The housing agency was sel Up last year under a(t. ministration·backed legislation that put the state in the business of issuing loans for low and moderate income hous· ing. Supporters envisioned the program as a way to helri California's then·slumping construction industry and to pro vide housing for persons who could not afford or quaWy for private financing. THE BILL THAT SET UP THE llFA also authorized the agency to sell up to $450 million in revenue bonds and puf', Prop. 1, a $500·milbon, general obligation bond measure, on the ballot. General obligation bonds are backed by the st.it · treasury and therefore can be sold al a lower rate than re venue bonds, which do not car ry the same mandatory statt : support. As their ndme indicates, revenue bonds are supposed t' · be repaid Crom revenue resulting from loaning rnone' · gained by selling the bonds. ' BURNS SA VS THF. llFA IS..'JUED $100 million in re :· venue bonds last month. Funds from the sale, he added •. should allow the agency to make 3.000 loans on slngle·famil: ~ homes at about a 7 percent interest rate. Approval or Prop. l would have allowed a lower intere11"'.; rate. Burns says, adding that he would l>e "very surprised i' ·: the legislature didn't put another bond Iss ue on the ballot h :; 1978. .• •• Prop.1 was defeated by a 57.37 percent vote. ' "I DON'T THINK PEOPLE understood what they wer1 · doing," Burns says. "It cost the people or the sta\e money. ; "It means that instead or being able t.o borrow mucl • cheaper by issuing G.O. <general obll1ation) honds, we'r1 • going to have to have higher interest rates with revenu1 • bonds. • "That m eans that the housing produced has to be mor1 expensive because the borrowing costs are more ex : pen.11tve." BURNS SAYS mE $500-MILUON "dollar sign" on th1 proposition may have scared some voters into votln1 no Others might have rejected it because they had read ba1 : thin«is about public housing proje('ts, be 11aid. I "They think thia ii1 lnstant slums," he adds. "This ha· nolhlng to do with that. But that Is what they think, l sus · pect." The $100 mllllon ln single f •mlly loons, Bums says, wil , be Issued through private lenders, with the private fim-: maklng the l .. n and the HFA buying the mortgage from it. • The state plans to issue more revenue bonds h : December to finance direct loans for muJU.famUy housln1 : projects, he s ays. • AJ• DAILY PILOT .. - P U BLIC NOTICE P \JBLIC NOTIC E PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE -t-~---------,J-,-1-----------t--~--~~~~-N-o-.... -m--be-,-,--1,.,,_I• ~----,-,C'T--,-T-IO_U_S __ •_U_S_IN--IS_S ____ _. ___________ c~,.~ .... '!'!""~~----~ lllCTITIOUI •USINIU NOTICI! .. honby , ..... llV\ jlj!OllC• NAlllU IT AT IMENT NOT1ca TOC••OtTOIH Dolly Piiot 1'1toto• by AlmOll l.ocblley NAMI STATIMINT Itel\ wu !'Mo. 9ft Ill• tlM 411 of Oc: Tiie tollowlft9 CM•M>n h 00!"9 llU\I SUl'llllO•COU•TO,TMI Tho tollowl,.. INtSOfl\ ii•• dol"ij -· ttr• 111 IM We\lorn Unoon Tel• ,_un· STATaOl'CAl.ll•OaNIA"'Ott llooMM" OJ O'llPh eo-onY to tho """'°' 0-HAABOR P-'llNT CENTEA 41, TMI COUNTYOl'O•AltM AAIH&OW COl'l'l!E SHOf'. lttl m•lf•IOI_. ComMl\\IOf\ to -.Ce tM noooS1reet.N11WPOrl Booch,C,..._ ... A- Nortlll!uclld, Al\o ... lm, CA -\o!WO lt'l\Ul\-.. nr•toelllwir Orlon C Ao11•" •"cl ldo "'4• Eu•tt 01 ti.Sii! M, Ol!ISl.(IC, C"'lJ Co<-otlOO\. • Cet•+onllo -ya4ll<•l"Coot•Mu o,Cillfl0<nl• A-"· ... Aml9 .. Woy, Aot. A. Ot<M..., Corporollo.,, t1H North Eu<llcl, t,_t..,.Pt9'onlh0un '"-18okft,CA9'..0 NOTI CE IS HEa l!•Y OIYIN .... _, .... CA MoM•y-Frlcloy; IA.M. lo •. JO Thl~llu\l ... U .. t Ol\clu<l.0 ...,.o'l lft> ,. Ill• CrodlUr\ ., , .... OllOVO Tllh lluSl""n ,. tondVcted 11y "CAW· p M. dlvl-1 ....-dt<-nt ttwt •11--ho•lnca p0r.-1... S.t...,..y •A M to4P M 0r1.,.c R0<10" c101 ..... ~ln•tthlwld-.C:...,..,., .. C NI J Co<ooratloft $u"°"f· CIMOO Thi• •i.'-111 we• flied wllll tt.t .,_,..,to tti. ti..m. will\'"'-'°" Aout.n Otr Ho<ooltfl, 101M ~ C.0...-IY "-" o1 C)f-CounCy °" "°"' -her., II\ Ille Oltk• et t .... , ..... ol IN' P<ft'Mf>I MONt•y·F<looy tA.M toSP M. ,,,.,. ..-...c11t.c1c911rt orto-Mftttllefft. T .. 1, 51•1•-"' •O\ •••td .... , .. ,.. S.tur"'y·•A M IO I P.M. ....._,o--&•r-wllll tho ... CMW•V~ ..... ~to"'9 ...... Couftly Cler-of Or•AV9 Coo;My 011 ~cl .. CIMO<! P.O .... nt? ~el \ho l•w ottl<• Of MA.TIN N9• t • ..,._ lft,,.opplluUonl••r•ftlecl~l' ... .._. .. eco,CAfJ.U 001.0Bl!tllG. 11'11 ltvlM .......,-'"' ir.snt wl>ollllll• Mrvlc• wlll o. ov•ll-'"'11 ,...1111, ClhlorAI• fJ..0 -kl\ k tM MOa"""N Sii.OMAN, A Ml -•a "''-" 1 ... Wnl .. n Union t.nlrolitecl Pubtl~ Or ... oe ~•I OtH'f Pi191. place ob tlAIM\\ Of Ille I.I"*"""" lft 0 , OAaCIA ON Sll.0 "'4N, INC. Ttl_..._ &uroou M Rtl\O, Ntv..i.tarld No• •• IS, n , tt, 1916 611 mott.r\ P9r1•1Al"9 10 , .... Mi.le ol mt llHt -St., S•lle 00 lllO WKl .. n Union o!ltct lft S.Wa An.a, 4S1• lt utd •-t, wlllllll tour~ ell1"' °"'*MY. CA "'41 C.llfoml• 61 "° ocklll-.tl C-!IK IO tMfi•\IOUbllc•llOAOflhl\-le•. Ttl: 11111 .. ,.MU 1 .... oubllc. Dllecl NO_..m_ ), tt>•. Pubthlled Ot•"ll' Coosl O.lly POOi, My meMlltrOI tl\O 1>1.11>tlc dt\lrl"QIO P U BLIC NOTICE RUTH ELVIN !No• I, IS, tt, 2t, ltlt prolot or \Upport tho reduction lft C .. culr1•ott .... Wlllof 1-----------......;•"'Sl:.;7...:·1""'4 "°"" ·1 '1 '"'' 01'1'h'et,,.m•vFcodmmul\I CIO!t NOTIC• INYITINO •1os MAtllTl~~~o':~~..Odtt.0...1 in wr 1 "Q w 8 e era ~ Notlc~ h ..,.r•b1 •lvt l\ that ow Boord PUBLIC NO'l1CE munlc•tlons ComtfllHlo11, WDSNft9lOA ol TrusteK of lhll Coast• CommunllV tlUtlr~.,,.,.,.. l-------------------4 ~f.: 70~S4 °" °' l>Olor• No,...mber n, co11e11e Ol1trlct ot Or•"Ge c.,.,.,1.,. ~=~\~,~=tt C.lllornl•, wilt re<tlva. \Ultcl bkb "° l'ICTITIOUS •USINIH PublllMd Or•ft911 Cont Oally Pilol, 10 ll:OO • "'·· TUt\dOY, No~-JO, "*-Yl ... l •tcwtrh' NAMESTATEMI NT NOv 1,1. 1916 4040-16 '"'·al I~ Purctwtl"9 OeDI of wlcl Pul>llShe<I Otefl(Je Co.st Oitlly l'llOI, ,..!~:.e>11owlft9 "'son I• oolr>e l>vsl· PUBLIC N011C E schOOI district located ot lllO Ad.om~ l'tO•.l.1'.tt.2',nl6 •US-14 LA FEMME UHIOUE. UOOHortior Awftue. Coste Mew. C•lllornl•. Ol 1-----------------8•..0 . CO\la ~\41. '" -----------------1 wN<ll tome w lcl bld$ wm be publicly PUBUC NOTICE All-M Cro-11, IS"J C<lr\i(" l'ICTITI~~r:tstN•SS ~ .. ~~~'AN O 8 1NOING Pl .• CO\ ta Mew . c" ,,,,. MAME ST ATEMt:NT c 0 As T L ' N E c 0 M M u N ' T y ..... ST-,.-,-.-M-l_N_T_O-,-.--.,-.. -o""•""·-·----1.- c11!::.c:u•lllffu h condvcted by.,. 1" The following person i\ 001"9 11\Hl· CO LI.EGE SPAIN G •.. 11 CLASS l'aOMPAa TNlaSMll' "''•MM Cro-11 r>esus· SCHEDULE. OPla ATINOUNDI • Tiii\ .,., ..... .,, .... llltd ...... ,,,. A 6 J AUTO BODY 9S7 Wost 17111 All btcll an to .... In ~cordMc•wflll l'ICTITIOUS•USIMIESS...,.,.. Cou<>fy Cle~ o1 Or•nge CouACy °" ~ ~t CMto Mew, C" '26Z1 1119 lft51t1Kl-5 dftd Concllltons al\d TIMI follow!~ "''°" 1\66 ---_,, "" HmH R Gr .. avH, 1010 No. sa.tlflUJ~ .... lch ••• -°" ,,,. ... 0 .......... , ... , lrOlft 11\e ' · ,..,.. ....,"'°', S.11ta ""• CA. '1103 ...., may b9 s.cured In the olli<l' o4 IN -1,...,•lllo -•""' ~ Ille flt.. Publl,,.,.. 0r•"99 Coa5I 00,,., PllOt This 1>us1neu I• conOO<tod by.,~ :;;~ng "'9MI oC sold K-clll• tltleoll tlu\1"9n ,._of -mberl. n. n .2', m• OV·1t Olv1-1J•-• R Gru·m £6c"bl<lder ""'51 w""'llw4th,.bbld MA.:f GR:~~~~. ~;~.~~~~,~~ This \l•t•""""t w•• hied """' lhe a <Ml\ief''s Cl>e<ll, c1trlll..,. cllt<ll or lloul9vonl. Tu•tlft. CA .,..., P U BLIC NOTIC E County Cl•r-OI Ora1\99 COllJ!ty on Oct. -r's ~ m-~yabl• to'""' Of• TN llctlll.,... t>uslneH ....... SI~ ------------------!'°· 1916. °"" Cl! Ille Gout Comfftun•ty Collf!9t -"' tor Ille tN<'IMf \,.IO wa lllecl °" l'ICTITIOUS •UllNHS Awn O>strlctBoerdofTruslttsll\onomouftl No~ 11. Hn In, ... C-y Of NAME STATIMENT Gt110Y1a 1sc•o w co•PO•ATION ,..,. ~\ 11 .... "••percent IS,, ol I .... Or-. Tiie follOwl,_. IM•M>n Is dol"'9 llusl• Ill $ellltl 1111 .... t WM M He -••nlff lhol the biddH Full tfflNt eM Add,..U of tM ,,.n•• ,.....,.,,..,CA.t2'H wrn ent..,. ;,.. 1 .. 1o the orooowd c-~Wlt-owl"4: EVERS AH O ASSOCIATES. ?10 EiC,.., •'2SWI AG t•act H Ille same 1• ·--·-•o him. In WI I. LI AM A EST IVO, :un Pro'"°"lory Or. E., NowC>O<t Bototll, Pubtl~cl Or•"IJl' CH\t Qally PllOI, II>@ ewnt ol lollure lo entl'r Into SY(!\ Hui"'" lnrlM.~Homl•'l?H• • CA'1660 Oct.>S.el\dNOv t .8,lS,1911• 41~1·1' contrK t.thoorocM<ha4thoc1,.,owm w1111emP.Retllvo Ht~rt JOUPll Ever<, Jr. 710 belorteil.,.,.or In IMCO•t ol •-.lhe Promontory Or, E • Newe>ort !Moch, PUBLIC N011CE lull sum U..-.01will1>9 lortellecl tosolcl CA 92660 ~ d"tnct. T bu\I 1 I ------------------! Nobieldermoywtlhdr-hlsblcllore cllv~I. """ • COtlclU( eel by •n 1"" l'ICTITIOUS •USINESS oeriocl ol lort1·llve IO I ci.vs alt•• IM lierbe•1 J. Evers. Jr NAM• STATEMENT cl&lesel lor Ille Q0eft1"9 lhcrt!of. l't16ft Pubtl'11tll Or•-'"" o.lty Piiot. NoV9ft'lb<trl , IS, n . 1'. i.n •sn-16 PVBUC NOTICE LAST MINUTE PREPARATIONS FOR 1,000-MILE YACHT RACE Los Angeles Yacht Club Dock a Beehive of Activity "Th•\ ,1418,.,.,nt was lll.0 with 11-The follo•lll(I Pl'•\OM lire cloltl(I l>USI· The Boa<d ol Tru.ien r~-Ille 1-------------------- County C.lerll 01 Or•nge Coullly Oft NOv MSSes: prl•lleo<iof relKtlnq any-alll>ldlor CP-304t P"CtFIC LEA S I NG, 8691 10 -Ive illlY lrreoulartllt\ or 1n. NOTICETOCa EDITOtllSOI' l . "1&. '4S.J W."mlr.ster Ave , Suite J, C...den tonnalltltslftllnY blclor In tt>tblclcllllQ. 9Ul.K TRANSPE• ANOOI' Publls,.,.cl Oral\Qf>Co .. tO.llvPllot, Gro119,CA. SIQftecl : NO RMA N E. INTINTIOHTOTaANS,atll • No• a is. n. 7'.1•1• ~::;1~1 ~.~',';.~~;;:,',"'~•• si.; WATSON of T au:-:Hs!~'~:,~~.~~oc•c1.~~ • i----------------4M_t_'6_,G.t<MftGr-.CA m .i ODen·NO~~·~:cl t1';.;'!'~ M1>P4 U .. ~ '"" Duslftt SS Is conctuc1otel by • &rel· n -tS-J& ' -· · · Notice Is hereby olven lhOI • tlulk P UBLIC NOTJCE qofttro1p.,tl\Orshlp Pullli\ll<'d ou,.0e cout oaoy "''°'· transter. lftclucllAO •n alColloll< 1---------------1 Vl..cent Fermer Novem~a. tS, 1916 4~16 .,__-oellceme, ls4bout tobOl-ol l'ICTITIOUS 1us11u:ss Th•• .i1temeftl was filed w,tll tf'4 i----------·--------tlh1t u rtel11 tlquo• store b\l\lne•• NAME STATIMENT <:oun1~ Clerk 01 or ... oe County°" Oc:t. PUB LIC NOTICE known n wuniwooo 1.1QVOA NO. Two Boats Pace Field SEEKS NEW RECORD IN LA TO MAZATLAN RACE R•gt1me In Duel wtth Kl•lo• for Line Honors Ragtime and K ialoa w e r e still lea ding the 39 b o at M a zatlan yac ht r a ce fle et late Sund a y after a s low first day's r un. The e s cort vessel Aquarius anc hored off S an Martin Is land o n the Baja California c o ast s aid a 10 knot w este r ly h a d the fleet on th e m ove and w as e x pected to h o ld d u ring the n igh t. S an Martin is about 200 miles from the s tart off the Los Ange les B r eakwater. RAGTIME, C O S KIPPERED b y Bill Whit e a nd Bill Pasquini, Lon g Beach Yac ht C lub, h o lds the e lapsed time r ecord ol five days a n d s eve n h ours s e t in the 1972 r a ce when s h e was s ailed UD· d e r a d iffe r e nt ownersh ip and c rew. T he 1974 r a c e was th e s low est o n r ecord w ith the first boat not c r ossing the line until after nine days a nd seve r a l o th ers a ban- d o nfog t h e race altogethe r . C lass s t a n d in gs afte r the first 20 h o urs o r sailing : CLASS A -I, Whis tle Wing, H as tings H a r court. SBYC; 2, IGaloa, J im K ilroy, LAYC; 3, Sha mrock . R oy Disn ey, LAYC. C LASS B -1. R agdo ll John H all, NllYC ; 2. Invade r , Malin Burnham, S D YC: 3, S hillelagh , Paul P e a rson , SOYC . CLASS C 1, Vecto r , H e.rb J ohnson , S DYC: 2. Cottontail, J ohn Are n s. BYC; 3, B ingo, Den - nis C h o ate, LBYC . C LASS D -1. Capt. M arvel, Larry Fols om . L BY C; 2 , A m e ric a J a n e 111, Geor ge Toob y , N HYC ; 3, T a huna , Rue l C ame r on . Nvy Y C of Long Beach .: B each . n.t 1011-1no-\O!l••rt0011\Q bu•• 20.1.,._ 11 and 10,e tecl •• tno Hu bor ,,.,, '"" F4Jelll &oulevoro. City ot Co<1t• Ml?w. '*""'r B AN 0 W E NG INC. E ~ING Pubtl~Od Oren~ COilst Ooily PllOI. FICTITIOUS •USI HHS a40r-. Stat1ol G•hloml1'2627 SE RVICES IHI P•r~vlew Cote le Oc:I ,\,Nov 1,1. IS, 1916 ~lb NAMIE STATEMIElfT Nomesol Tr.tn,.efor\lftdLlc~ CO\ta Mew, C" t'l&?7 The lollowll\11 penol\S are dOlAO M>dal security number on<I buslneu JitO M B•-n ,,., Colo.i•• Or•w PUBLIC N011CE buSl""'us: -nure: • Cosl•Me .... CA. 9'6U BEICINS.l.INI( SELF STORAGE ANGE 1.0 CA II' A 4 R 0 , ••11 H.,.,.,, L Wll•t•. 11111 Par••·,, -PASADENA, llO H•woort C..rw ~te<Orl..-"'"'"''"'·"'tn04· Circle. CO\la Mou CA lt"/677 l'ICTITIOUS I U51MESS Orlve. N•woort Beech. Coll!Ot'l'lll s s Ho. S.S.7 .. 11'1 and FEANAOA Th•\ buson•" •S conduCtf'O by ., NAMI STATEMENT '2660 CAPllARO, ..., Col<1cheS1ff' Orl119, -ralparl~r\hlO T ..... tollOWl"IJ-IC)f"lreOOinobu\i· 1.INICLETTER MANAGEMIEHT -ift'l.CA'1t04,S s No.S46-1S-lll?. Hu«>-rt L Wn•I!' ,...,,A, CORP , • C.lllornla coroorMlon. llO Homes, M>Clel security ....-- Tlli\ slat<m•nl WAS lilf'd w•I" "" El. TOAO "NIMAL HOSPITAi., !W_.Ce,.t••Orlve.Newoort8e.ul. bu\11\~\S eddren ol lftteftdect C®"IY C"·-Of Oral\Qf' Counly ... '"'" ll•t? l!I Toro Fr0ftt""9 R-. El Toro. C..litorl\la 9'4J60 Tr .... 1 ....... IACfucllno &Ill, ___ : .->. 1916. Cal tornla'16JO Tfll\buSIM .. f\Con<luclecl l>Y llhmll--ANG£ LO CAP R 4 AO. 9U2 FU•n L• ""' CorooratlOtl. " COlitomi• eclP«IM•Vtlo. Colckhe•l<I• Or., Aft4'114!11ft. CA '2904, Publl\l\ed Ora"oe Coa\I CM•IY PllOI co•oo••t•on 2ltU El Toro FronleQe 8elll"'·Llllk5e11Slor.,_ SS No. S0·1'·$19t ; FEANA04 NoVt!mbe•l, I\ 11, 19, "" •SU-16 RO<lcl EIToro.CahlorftiOtlbJO Pa.-n• CAPRARO, ... , ColdCl'!fllOf' Or., Tho \ t>u\lntt• Is c-u<tecl by a tor· By: Llnlllellt•Mell409f:mt'ftl ""'"elm, C A '110•, S.S. No. -•llon Cori>. ~• lS.:181'; Pl EA RE BERTOLINO, ~~~ ;e~~r":n~ AA T •ON ~nke~~1J:~~':; ~~o ~3~es~n:f:.'~s:i~: .,:~~: , PUBLIC NOTI C E PT'eslMnl Tiii\ st•lement WO\ "'"' wl\11"" NA BERTOLINO. 1310 w. OtHn!ront.. Thi\ stale,,,.,nt was lllt!cl wllll thlt County Cler._ ot ~•"II' County°" No,,. llewoort Beech. CA 92643. S.S. No. FICTITIOUS I USI HESS NAME STATEMI NT County Clerk ot Oran11t County or1 Ott . ....,,be, 2, 1'1~. OS.014-2139 T,_.. •0UOll[llftn9 Ot'f'!tOn i5 dotnq ~"J. nM\.'1\ 1, 191•. F6Sl7l Total cor.slclcratlon to be Pi>id tor tt... ~1 Publlihecl Orange Goe•t O.lly POot. r><.,,,.rty o.s"lbecl, In lll'ftllr•I, .s SO CO"ST AUTO & TRUCK ELEC TRIC. 1•6 W l/lh Sl•e•I. CO.I• /W'\o c" •1•11 P,,1)11,~ Oranot Coa\t D•llY Pilot. No"""'""' 8, IS, ll. 2'1, 1916 •W-1• oert~nl OI the •lock 111 lrdcl ... fl~IU<TS, 0<1 7S Nov, 1.8. tS, t•l6 «}S-1t1-------------------•QUIPm(>At .. ncl qOOd wlll toc,ielhff with Thom•\ w Fotht•ll•ll. '941 V~rclc:' M•r Or liul\ll'll)IOft e~or h CA .,!>Aft T~,1; bu?.•f~'" '' c.oneluch!d by dn In· d1v1d1Mt Tllomd• W Fotll.,qlll Ttt1\ '\tatcm""' WftS tHed -"'" '"' County Cler~ of OraAge County°" Nov. t. ,.,, ... 116. PUBLIC NOTICE OIANGI COUNTY HAA80A JUOICl"I. OISTAICT MUNICIPAL COURT 001 JemborH lto..t, Newport ... < ... CA. t26'J SUMMONS C.st NlfmN~: UM? PubllS,,,.cl Ot'a.,qe Coa•t Dolly PllOI, Nov 9 1\,11.2'.191• Pt1lntltl ROBERT COLES. Otlendllnt· Ll·OEB INVESTMENT -16 co AL SCHUMANN. and DOES I, 11. 1-------------"""--" I 111 IV •ftd V NOTICE I Yn llan -..0 TM celltt ,,.., "''" .,.ift•I "°" wl-t-----------------------1.,..... 11o1,.. lttard wnlt n you re'90fld F~C:~'~~~!:~~':;:s wttlll• JO •m. At..i '"• ,.,.....,..11 ... P U BLIC NOTICE T~ lollo"''"9 °"''°"' d•tt clOi"'I bu\I· -::.Sol Ut...S Ila ~tda dem•-· El ,.,,.u;~tCO ,00 Pr•ncf"ton Ot" CO'\t• Trf'41"'-1 .-.. de<ldlr certtr.i Ud.. sitt Mr ... 1 t:A "26lb ::!:'.:: :0 ~.~\::",.U~I\.:= Co•};,!~~ ~-\;,u~;6 ~00 Pr1ft(f"t0" Or • qt.M \kf\M O LdR•••"~ !.ftUll .fOO ""•ACtlon I TO TliE OEFENOANTi A clvil Ot t:.,,18 M•'• CA .,1616 come>l•int ""' bf>ell foll'CI by l'M!'plalntoff Ttti~ bu\.tnf ... ~ I'\ ronduCtt'"d bv .,If\ un d9~'"'' YOU fSff IOOtf'!!~·~·l :;;;:;;:~'.:" .o•wt•a11on Olfttr tMn • =:;i,:.•!::"!~~:;,-:~:~~~ '"' ';,,;: .. ~;, s;~!I fitPd Wth ttowt COU'M A written pie Jd1n9 in r~W' to Coon1 -t C.:tt '• ot Or•n9t-C'>vnly on NOY :.,~~0!,:1't~ ,~ 'c!,/,~'::::.~ie=. J 1910 FUUI 1nqo• •Uu\t•AO•ll DICadl"<!IObecn- Pu,,.l\~f'd Or,.,nqc Coa\t DdllY Pilot. 1erf-d In 11w" OO<kN '" re-.oonw to tM Nov.a.1s n n . 1916 •m -76 ~::;::!:;.~'i,:.":~~~01~.,~~r a""" 1h" o Uni,.\\ vou \o rtt\Pond your de-- P U BLIC NOTICE PUBLIC N OTICE INI Ileen ... ~ S&l.814.34. Description •nd amoun" I P•lf'°'1411 Ch4'Ck \?, S00.00 NOTICE TOC•EOITORS I de""'ftd 11<1te to be r•pla<ffh\c~ SUPt:RIOR COURTOl'THE lll•ouql\~r-\71,SOO 00 STATE 0 , CAl.IFORNIA l'Olt 1 ln\ttllmotftl AGie and \ecurityaonie-THE COU NTY OF OtllANGE rnoftt 1n la-oheller SS6,l14_,. N•.A-n Kll\dof Ileen" to be traM•--E<t••e ot GEORGE F LINT()ff, Alta ..._, ore: Oit·Sale Gel\Clt' .. l.kluor • GEORGE 1.INTON, aka GEOAGC LICt!nMtNo ?1·4483'. FRANKLIN LINTON. 0l'Ce65C!d Thewle-transler willbctc-NOTICE IS liE AE8 Y GIVEN IO Ille l'Ntecl•llO•.lft.Otl« •lier u.""'oav crt!dl!o~ of the •bo.,. r.arrMd dec.edent ol Novomber 1'7•. at Ille Hcrow - '""' "" oerwns Mv•no cl*lms eq,oifl'll PO<lment ol Prot•ulol\01 e~ .,,., U ICI CH<eclent ••e rl'QUlrc.:I IO Ii .. Se•VoCe\"' .,,, H Tustin·-· s.&1\-"""" with lhe ,...<.,. .. ,, •OUClll>rs. , t•AM. Cahtoml•.,101. tho> ottoce ol Ille cler~ ol the oboY9 e<>-All olh4'r b~llfU "•-~ ..,., ~­hllod court. or 10 ore .. .,1 t,,..m wit" Ille Cll'esw' U...O by !he Tran,tere>r'J """"" ..,.<~S¥Y '"'"'"""·to the ..-,,,ll""d !tie""" th•HJ yN~ w tar 01 Is""°""" .. 1 ..... office ot TliOMAS c KING, IOllleTfon•le•ee•rT SAME ESO , '°' Oover Or1ve Su11e 700 Tht' oa•lll' "'I'" llWI ,,,. consider• Ne""'°'"t lll'kh. C•lllorn1a '?6t>O wtl«ll ''°"'°'the '"'"''er ol Ille buS1nHS- 1s '"" Pl.tee ol bu\ofte\s of '"'-' un-I"-Iott"'° I• lo bO paid •II.,. ""' cl&rs•Ql\ed 1n all maH•rs Ol•M"""" to Ol!i>erlft'lenl ot "'collollc 8oftf'- lhe Miiie ot wlcl clece<Mnl. wllh1ft tour Cot'llrol t\al ffproved 1"8 II"~ • monlhS .i1e, the lin.t publlUllOl\ol tllh tronsler. ,. AOlko. 0.19<1 Ottober ti,""'" "' Oatt!clOct-r 1'76. Pierre &ortollno • HARRIETT OR ENA LINTON, A""" Btrlof•M E•Kulro• °' lhe Wiii ol Anoelo (OprittO ti.e •bo.,. Aal'Mcl ctececlellt. f'trftedi C•or•ro Tl40MAS c.. KING. IESO. T<aftsle•MK tot oo .. , o n .... Sult• 200 ""!IClto c:oor .. o Nt_., .. .ell, talltomla •2... FtrAaclo COpr•ro •.' Tel: 1710 MS-1000 Tra~ttrors All_, t..-llnotrl• l'raltnleNI IS<rtw Slrvltn j; Pubtl~ Orange Coo$1 O•lly PllO! lt11 N. Tvstl" AveftlM ~ ~v 1,1,1s.22.1•1~ 063 .. 76 SM!tAAfta,CAtllfl t Escrow N•.16·1t~·MI' ~ Publl\Mcl °'""<Je CoHI O•lty Piiot, .. Nov I."" 4-16 t, PUBLIC NOTICE Wildcat Top Class A Boat Harbor Yacht Club FICTITIOUS IUSINHS NAME $TATEMI NT Tl.-lollowlll(j 1>9r\On I• clolnq bu>i· "4!~S d\ lault will be cntert d uoon oPollc•llonot tn--ot~lntitt ~nd thl\ court may enter a 1U<1<1menl &Qlift\I you tor '"" rclkJI 119· mMt~d In IM complaint, wAlch could rl\ult In g.arnfihtnfnt Of WiltJf'· lat(1'M) ~ '"°"~¥ o.,. proPe'1f' or ot~ relief''"· 'IUtl\led I" the complalnt SUl'ERIOtll COUAT OF THE. STATE OF CAl..,ORMIA COUNTY 01' Of' AH GE No.2-SUMMOHS ----------------~t• ·~ _O_tll_A_N_G_E_C_O_U_N_T_Y_S_O_l'_E_a_l_O_"_' •' PUBLIC NOTICE In Dana R ace Wim S chenck Cup "N ORE WS PRI N TING CO NSUL TAN TS, 1 ""a' Court. Nfw-l 8UCh, CA Marilyn Stelan1a li•1totm, l\1S Oel MM .......... L .. Paltfl .. CA ll06l1 TP\t\. t>u~m•"-\. I\ c.onchKled by "" 1n CliYldull c. 11 you wh ll to utl< tr.. lclvlce of on 1ttorMy II\ IM• -lier, you -Id de .. -mptly •• ti.at you• ...,".., r .. -... 11.l"Y· m1y be llltcl°"ll-. l>atecl August 11, 1'1' M HAMLI N Cltr• 8y Jove• E Pillm"" Ol!PUIY Wild cat, 3 M o n tan-27 s k ip pere d b y Pete Schoonmaker. Bahia Connth1a n Yac ht C lub w as lbe C lass A winne r m Dana Point Yac h t C l ub's final r ace or the sev e n -race PH RF Sen es Sunday. W i nne r 1n Class 8 w a s SUnsh ine, a Catalina 27 sailed b y Ron M ala n osk y, OPYC. a nd the Cla."s C "'inne r w as T o rrey. A C31·25 sailt'd by Dave Cooper C apistrano Bay Y acht C lu b Troph y winne rs · CLASS A -l . Wildc at: 2, Anes (Colum'bta-36), Bob Burkhardt, D P Y C ; 3, B ig K a huna ll, O s lan· der-36), M a rk Townsend, O PYC. CLASS B -1, Sunshin e : 2, Windfrie nd (Cal-29), Tim Kahn, r.1mo R YC: 3. Vivace. <Cata lina - 2'7) BiJIC lore, DPYC. CLASS C -1, T orrey; 2, Peggy L y nne <K ittiwak e·23), C h u c k Pie r ce. DPYC: 3. Whal A T u r k e y <Columbia C h allenger ). K eith llinette . O P YC. New port H a r bor Y acht C lub won the J e an S c h e n ck T rophy s ymbolic o f the dinghy team r ac· ing c h a mpionship in one or th e closest regattas in the tustor y of the Lehman· 12 even t. Eight y acht c lubs p a rticipated in the regatta. G o ing into the final rac e s o n Sunday the r e w as a four way tie for r1 rst p lace. THE N HYC T E AM whic h broke Balboa Yaeht C lub's three year s tran g le hold o n the tro phy was com posed of H enry S prag u e, Tim H ogan , B ill Symes and Tom G loegge. The r e w a s a f ou r -way tie for s econd on w ins a nd losses, b ut in complllng t h e point s cores S a n Diego Yacht C lub eme r ged a s th e runne r ·up with the te am o f M ark Reynolds, John Driscoll. Chuc k Driscoll and J o hn Buc hanon. Defe nding Balboa Yacht C lub was third on points with t e am m e mber s Dave U llman , Jack J akosky, J im Tyler a nd Mark Hughes . Hobie Crown Won Hawaiian H o b ie-16 sailors a p- parently thrived on the strong Kona winds \h a t blasted lhe first 1t'Orld c h a mpio n sh ip regatta for Uie c lass a t Waikiki, taking s ix o f Ole first 10 p laces ln the final .dla mpion s h ip flight. The w inne r a nd first world champion in the c lass is Dean Froo m e who with c r e wma n Jury Drisco ll s urvive d the heavy weatber lo win with 1214 potnta. RuMer-up wltb 13~ pointa wu • mainland duo. Jett Canepa or 5'nta Cruz with R ichard Loufek o(N e w port Beach u crew. Jerry KJn g o f Newport Beach, with P a t Love o f H a w aii as crew. ftnlshed in fourth p l ace. Top lOlroph y w inne rs: 1, Dean Froome-J e r ry D riscoll; 2, J eff Canepa · R i c h a rd Loufe k ; 3. H arold H u tc h in gs-How ard Llnd, H a w aii; 4, J e r ry King-P at Love; 5, Ric k N a is h -J e tr Folkner, H a w aii; 6, K e ith Baxter-Malle, Haw aii; 7, D a nny Hale -Doug Pos l y , Haw a ii; 8, Herb An· d erson -AJ Lin q u ist, Hawaii; 9, Geoff H o rsley·Uob l'·o rbes, Australia ; JO, Bill Sykes-Lynn Krt"lb ig, Aust ralia. LONG BEAC H Yac h t C lub and Missio n B ay Y acht C lub w e re a lso involve d m th e l ie a nd finis h ed in t hat o r d e r o n points. Ma•llv" s Mtoo•m Th•\ st.att-~nt w,1, t1f~ wit" '"'° COUl\IT c1er._ ol O•anoe Coul\IYOft Ocl 10. ,.,. F4J«Jt Pvot•'""" Ora"qe Cont D.>lly PtlOt Otl 1\. Nov 1 I. I~. 1'1~ U'll.1A P U BLIC NOTICE ISEALI • T"f 'tllf'Ord ''Ct>""CJl1t1nt'" tn.cludt\ crCK,<omc>l••nt. •'p••1n11tr·· fl"(:hJdts cro\\·Como•elnant .. o~••ndttnt" fn,.. ct\ldf's cro\\.defend11nt .. 1nqu1,1J11r tn· ctudil\ I~ otv-ra• an.a '"•s.c.uu"4! 1n. ct~\ ff"f'l\inll"!if> .tno nitul~r .. wtltttn Dtettdlnq in<h;d1nq .an ""'wer ct.mur· ,,., "''< '"U"\1 IM" in lfWl tortn ~ir.-O Othe r c lubs c ompeting in the e v e n t w e r e Alamitos Bay Yacht C lub, Lid o ls le Yacht C lu b a n d St. Fran cis Yac h t C lu b . ---,-1-CT-IT_l_O_U_S_&_U_S_IH_E_S_S---l l>Y lhe C•lllornla RuiP• ol Court Your -.4ME STATEMENT O)<IOl""I Olta<ll"9 ft'IU\I "'° lolf'd '"this r,,.. follow•no Pl''"'" Is dno"O buSI court '""" P'OC>ll• lohnq '~'Md l>'OOI ~\ ~" '""' 1 tocrt t"4rf'Of was. served Oft •«-1'1 South Shore SAOOLEBACIC GLASS 8 MIR pln•nllll' aHo•nev 1"'1 on •Kh t>ld•n· RORS 71712 M•rqucr ue Par'-w•v tl'f not r•nr•Ytnt•o by an ~ttornit'( n,,. M•\\IOft Vlrio. Cl\. 0 61s lltfle wh•n • •ummon\ '' """""'d lt•Mtlh F 081tt, ,,,,, NoqAI Mt\ '•*"V•tl ~·. p .. ,., m~y ···~ ""oen<IJ"'I ''°"V•f!IO CA 97&1S on t~ mfl'tt\od Of ~rvlC# For e•AmDIO. Tftl\ bll\i~" I\ CorldUC\td..., •n 111 'l"~CCP llJ 10111rouoh •l5"' dlvldual 1'11(1!, 1.0UGHAAN. ME INLY, Top Winners Get Trophies l(Mnelh F Oelt OSTltllMOUT "T•E&l.EA T'tll\ \Ml•mt'nt Wd\ llll'O with :t>r> :::i;::.~1.".;:0,No, 71•, County Clerk ot Or•"oe Cou~ly or1 Ocl. T.i: Clt4l Q4.tU• ~. 1''6. ..,,.,, Atlorl\OY ler l'lal"Utl PubllsMd Or.t~ Cool 04'11v PllOI, P"bll\fttd OrMc;ir CoHI 0..11v l>llOI, Ott. ,s, .,,., NOY. 1 8. IS, IU6 44,S6.16 Novt1mber •. IS, 11 ,,, 1'76 •563-76 P U B LIC NOTICE T roohies to t h e ove rall winne r s Nor1c1 1NvmNo ••OS an Sou t h S h ore Y a c ht C lu b 's B:..0:~c•0,tsT~::~::, 0~~·~h!h~0~':; J I • g h p 0 1' n t S e r j e S f Or CDMmU<WtY Collt>ot Ol1tr1c1 Of Or-i • County. Olhfoml.t will rtcel"" ,.,alect Perfo rmance Han dicap R acing blM UP to 11 00 • m Wl'cl"tMIAV Fleet Yachts w e r e presented No""mt>e•" 1•1• ., ,,,. r>urc.,..,1.,., S a turday nl. a h t a t a dinner mee t · OePI. a4 said 'KllOOI cllstroct locatM "' " 1370 Aclafft\ AvtAUt, Co\18 Me>~ ing at the c lub h ous e . CaHfornlo, di whO<h lime W•cl-••11• The series c onsis ts o f e ight :,i:=vP::~;fgL~oY "•" •or r aces fro m which s k ippers c an ""bl~•·• to"" 1n •«orcl.)n(;woth discard the ir wor st t"Wo races. ~::i~~r;:::~ .... ~~ .~:"~~""!. ~ Ove rall winne r w as Cats Pa· ""'m1y.,. se<ur"' •n the OlllCUI '"" jamas, s k ipper ed by Carl Last, :;~,•''"9 All•"' ot u 1c1 \Choat Voyage rs Yac h t C lub ; C lass A e~ bldder ""''' •u1>m11 '"4th hi• winn e r was M atao g l , Ed lblel a cw.ter'sc,.K• cer1111ec1c1wo , iOlr bldclef'S bonO m-P•Hblt to I~ Carpenter, Balboa Yacht Club: ~of ttte CCM~t Community Coo._ Clas s B W81 w on by Lumaran, 01\lrl<I Board of Tru\IH \ 1 ...... Bill R ohrs, V oyagers Y acht Club, ~":"~' ~\a~!"o~;:n;;:;-.:,.:s~ and Cats Pajam as was the win· _, w111 •nt•• 11110 •~ .,,_ Conlroct ii lllP Wrnt!' I• •-•o.cl lei n e r ln C lass C . 111m. 1 .. ,.,. ev•"' ot '"''u" 10 •nlor Troph y w in ners ; n10 wc11 contr•ct. ,,... oro<l'f'd' of 11111 CLASS A -1, M a t nm•, 2, Se <"-'• wltl"" torte•ttcl or In ti.•-•• -o• • Of • -cl. lht lull 'um th~reoi w111 be quoyah , Jim M oore , SSY C; 3, orlt•t~ 10 w111 ""0011t1•1r1c1 Ti G 'l K .,._ SSYC No blclclef' may wltlldr•w hi\ bid ll!f gress, I n u ..... en, · • oerloct o1 rorty.flv• ('i) oaY\ •ll•r CLASS B -1, Lumaran; 2, 11e 4,.1, Mt 1or '"' lllM"'"9 '"""'°' Debra, Ric hard R a uff, SSYC; 3 ' the Boord o1 T""'"' rOMrw• ,,.,. k • """"• of r•lt<tlflt ... y 84'11 ell bid'! S u njamme r , "o il-R einhart, 1>r 10 we•v• •"Y 1rr,11u1ar111 .. .,. NHYC. =•llllOI Ill Ally llld Of Ill , ... CLASSC -1. C ata Pajamas,2, s1011u: NO•MAN E Pe~aaus , Jerr y M ontgomery WAT'JON s.t1,. eo.wo C 1 • OITN\IH\ CB ; 3, Z ive a , Jan Fluegge, l'u1>11.-0r • ...,. ca<1•t oo11rv '""°' SSYC . Nov I A i.IA •jOf.14 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTIC! TO CtllEOITOAS SU Plato• COURT 01' THE STATI 01' CAl.l,OANIA FOA THI COUNTY 01' OAAHGI NO. A·llllt E\t.t" 01 LOUISE GENEVIEVE TUTTLE Ol!<H\•d NOT•CE 1$ tiEREllY GIVEN 10 "'9 r r-011on 01 th~ •bov<' """""' "*'<•.,..,. ltwt •" oer~ 11o•no <•••"" ..,_..,,., '"t \l'~O o-<. f'Oiei't •'" rf!'t'lu•r-t'd to tUtt '""m. willl tMI ""u'"'' y vouc.ltt,... In "" otlito ol '""clerk O' tl'le -en-llllod court or lo ort\enl 11\o'm ""''" U\t nKnury •ouc11trs. 10 IM~~~ .i '"" olllc~ of GEOAGE C WOODS ANO CHARLES F HOW"~O Al· tortll'Y\ ti Lew. &171 Holly-Slvcl, s..llt SU Holly-. C.lllornla 'IOl»S. Wll'C" "lht PlllC• of bU\•n•\\.,. , .... Ufl-cltnl.,.ecl In •II mlll•r\ 1>9rtd•"41\Q lo lf'4 H lo1t ol \Aid cleC~ttPnl Mlhln tour mon1111 o•t•r '"" '"'' oul>llc•tlOl\o! this """~ D.»ltd Oct ), IU6 MARY M WITTEHBUA() E ucutrlx OI '""Woll ol Ille •bo.,. naffttcl d<!c~1 l)IOAGSC WOOOS AND CHA•l.H I'. HOWA•O '"-Y••tl.aw 6171 Holly-• llvt ., Swile tl4 lttlly-•, Ctlllor11il toOH r.i: 121114/oS.lttt; H1·J116 All-n tor 1 .. u trl• Publlll\H Or•"" Goo" O.ltv Piiot. Nov I, I, IS, tt, 1'76 . ~16 Don't give up the ship! "Ust " It In cla ss1rled . Ship to shore r esults! 64,2.5678. TRUMAN 8 STIVERS encl JAMES N STIVERS. JR . "\ Trusle"\ unclff lh~I Ot,<1•1r,.1oon ot T ru•I .. ccute<I Ol!c@mb<!r JO. 1%•. Phllnltll~. ... Th• ~Ir\ •~cl cle•h t H 01 " L PEARSON 811cl IAENE PEARSON_ all ottt.-r CH!f"Wft!t u,,known ctt11rn.no llr'I• r1C1l'll. !It~. ts•.ite. ''"nor •nt•~t in tM teAI Pf'ooerty M\<r•bod 1n ,,.,_ c.ornatalnt •Ov~r~,.. to 0141nt1u .. , OW""''"'"· or <1n1 cloud upon pl61ntlll s t•tte tlV'r•to. ~tenottnt\ AVISO' IJSl..O M \lclO clen'I-El Tr•bUnal ~de dec1dtr Cor\tr.) UO Sift oudif'ncla e ,....nos QUC' uo ...-. °""'"' oe JO di"" Le" la ontormacton QUo slgve TO TliE PCOPLE OF THF !.TAT!: OFt:ALIFORNIA fO. Th(> O.,tendonl\, dn<I .-fl °'""' oerson" unknown tta1rn•nQ anv rlQht, U tie, tt"\1tlil~. h~,_ or tntnr,.\1 ln tho ~•l ll'ooerty cle><t1bfod '" lht comol""'' •"" Wlf"U" to Oltt•f"lllf'' ttwn<·'""•O or •n• c•nuft upnn '""'"Uft'!l title lhereto, C.REEltNGS. YOU AREo HEREBY NOT1f:IEO to ~ar 8AO flftt it wnttrn f)t,.&<Mn<16t'W1 r~'"'°"',. to tr~r rornolDH'll of 01~nt1tr. ftt"fl w 11h Ow t lerk ot ttH'· dbt\V• .. ,·n1ltl,1d court '1nd countv. within th•rtv flO) 0'1V\ •fff}r Oti!l \Vmmon•. I\ •.tr~ ot>Ort you and lo ~ lorth whlll lnt~rlt\I Of II• ... II o>nv vou M•e. Ill pr upon ,,,. 1011-1no or..crlt.d real prooertv lot~t· t!cl 1n lhe County of 0'4tAQOl Sidle ot C.lllo•nl,J. •Md more perlltulO•ly cle',<ril>e<I •• lollOW\ All,,. Loi 13 lf>r Ea"I 'lll 11 I~ ol lot 16 and Ill,: E•\I JI 'I lff\ ol l..Of 1\ln Traci"''· e\ ~·map"'""°' rO!totcted In Boole 3'. p,."" 21 ot mo',cetl~ m.lPS, record., Of.,.,., Countv Vou .J<e ""•ebv "°"''"" lh.1t untw. YOU 10 ... ll')Or OM Ol\\W~f ""'OIMl\1111 Will •OlllV lo Ille court tor lllt ,.11,.. cit """'°""In till' CO.,,PI01nt 10 ,..;1 I~ II bt od1UOQf!cl lh•I the 1>l11<ntoH I\ tn. -OI ••let orootrty In l<'t' slmP•• ab\Olule. lh<Jt •h llti" IO.,..., l>"OO"rlv bet est1bll-IM <IU•"NKI 1 ... 1 ,,,_ 'ourt Hc~1•1n • .,o clel•rm•nf 1111 tslalM, "'""· llllt\, lnl•rHH •nd Cl .. _ II\ ....i lo Hkl ptOOllrlY, •ncl •-Y port l"9rt'OI wf'4111t• I~ wmt be 1119a1 or e<111ll•bt~. P'O'il'"I or llJl"'1' ..,.,led or contin~I. aAd _4....,, '"" -COtl\1\1 ol mor1oa119s or li<ot\\ OI 0tW O.,<tlDllOI\" lhat lll•lfthH rl'COV'" Ill CO\IS hor••n .incl Mvt \UC" OllW -further MP1'411 •• m.v bt met In""' P<t-ml- ti YOU •ISll 10 Mlf-1< Ill<' &cl•ltt ol on &I lor""Y "' thl\ me"~'. you should clo 'IO 11tomo1ty so lh•I your plHd1nq. 11 Mly, be 111oc1.,. 11m~ WI TN ES!. my "~"(I and'"" ~·I "' Ille court OATEO: Jun. I I. H1S. WILLIAM E.StJOliN Clerk 8 y: ee111Tonor1, Oeouly I.AW Of"l'ICIS 1.0Nl•OAN.JOltDAN, Ga l SMAM, Y Aa M I• llAYAO• ,. ........ ~ 5-.......,._•,C.Mt. ....... (11 ....... .,, -11~tw l'tahn111e Pulllklltld OrtftQO Cuo O..lly l'llot, ~t tl.2S •nCI No• 1,8 !tit 4JJ0.1' COURT. 100 CIYIC CI NTl!a OfllYB. • WIEST SANTA AMA, C.Al.ll'OANIA. ~ t1101 :. PUlolNTIFF: TRUMAN 8. STIVEll'S• l'lcl JAMES N STIVERS, JR , H , .. Tru11tes uncle<' tllal ~clarallon of :f Trvst t•Kut~ Oeceml)er JO, IM . 1 • OEFENOAHT T"e t>elrs -dtVt9" •' Of H. l PEASON dl\d IAENG ~ PE4RSON -oll olllt• e>erwis un• ~:::, <\~:;:~ ·~y ;~~h~.~~·; •) cNl<rlt>ecl IA Ille comol•l"1 -w to ~ olitlnlltl \ owrwrslllp,or IAY dOUcl UI>-'..-: Otlplalnlill $1111• 11\ereto ";"' SUMMOHS { CilM N.,111 ... r: 2-NOTICI I y.., i..vo ._... swf. Tiie '\ '9"'1 .... , --0 ....... TOli -~ .,_ .... ,.. .... ,..,..1en yH~ "'"''" >O d•J• •.... Ill• '"'-119ft bOIOW. AYISOI Ult.cl Ill t ide .. ,,.-..,. l!I Trl-•1 PUOcle clecldlr contra Ud. '"' ......... cu ~ "''"0' ,..,. Ud. ,_...., .. "" ... >O •lo• ....... ,,,,_..,.. q"'•ltwt. '· TOTliE OEr ENO"NT· Aclvllcom .. :• P11ln1 h" tx-tn 11~c1 by the ptolnC1" ,• -IMI YOU IStt looll\01~' I : :: vo: .::o~:i:' w7::.'n 1:0 :~.,~,:=~~~=, ·~ mon\ I\ )ti" Vf"d Of'I you, fll'" wtth th ft :~ court~ wrlttel\ Ple•clln9 111 r•-10 ~' Ille comol1111t. Ill a Ju•tke eo.wt. VOit • mu\I Ille w1111 '""court• wrl"•n plead-•! lnQ or cause 3" o••I p1 .. c11119 llO ~ tn• 'I t.rl'd In tllt clOc-•I lft rt'llOMe lo 11141 como1t1n1. w1thit1 10 c1av• illllt' 11111 \ummon\t\\-trvedon you). ' b Uftlt\•YOU \0 ro\DOnd, JOUtelefllull ll wlll be eni.rNI ""°" ,.,plleatlOtl OI lho pi.Inti II """ 1 "'' court moy enter " ,...,_..1 •o•IMI you lor Ille rel ... ,.,.. rtw1<11td •n Ille compla1nt, wf>l('I\ tould •r rnu•I IA ~rftl\IW'nent ol w•IJM. t..,lftq ot ,,_,Of pr_rt, '"other relit! r.,.. q.,.,,.., II\ 111ttomptaln1 ( II row wltll te wt-tM ff¥1cltef ... .tt .. .,., lft 1111• mMltr, yew -.. ·! te •r•m•llY IO I ~It '!'Ill" ..... n ... :,f ... -··"•"Y .... .., ............ "-· Ol•N Juno 11 n1• WILl.IAM E ST JOHN, Cieri< :f By 8~11y T AOoart. • Ofl>\lly •) ISEALI ~ ''"""'°"''«omo•allll"l..clllde~ ~ ton'IP••lnt • pl•1nt1tt .. ll'Ktude\ 0'01llliio• comc>lal"'°"'· ' ~oMent" IMllldel' • crM\-(ffof•ndal\I, \ift9ular 1Mluel9t 11\9 "• plur•l •nd m.nculln1 IAClucletloft'll"',.. ~ encl nt111tr A wrlll•" Plffdl"' lft<l\111• '1 tnq 4ln ttn\wrir dflmurret. •tc., """-' t>e .. 1 II\ tNr lorm ..oui•~cl by lllt C..N'4t111A ~uln ol Court Your oriQIMI plNICllftQ "''"' bt llltd 111 lhl• courl With prOl)et :·~ tfllnQ ltfUllcl o•ool 11141 HOO'!',,..,. .. Wt\ \t<~d Oft \'it(h pl~lfttllf'\ MIOt,...Y -on HC~ '>l•lntlll not 1eprcwnteo 11y ""anorn•y Tt.. llm~ wh9" a·~ I\""-"" •ervacl on fl party may v•ry ~l'"I OA llWJ -lllOcl of Mtvl<-9. ~ 9'M"l!ll, M• CCP 41J tOthroUQll 41J «), 1.0Me•OAN, IO•DAN, O•ISMA.M, VA.Mi ii AMO IAYAOe MWt•'-111StrMt 1111 .. ,..eNIM, CA tt4tt Tel; '1141 ... t111 _,,.,., l'lalnlllf• 11'\e!u•he(I 0<1'1oe CoHt 0onv "'._-r ~I 11.1\. •"<I Nov I ••• ,. .... ,. I \ Cot u prublcm'> TJ11•111J nl1.' 111 P<JI I>u11n l'ul u ill cut red tape. gctriny Ilic "'1.,1h'Y~ a11d al'twn 11uu need to s11l ul' 11wqu1t u:s 111 yun•rnmt•nt Ull(t lw~1 M SS. Mail your qut'.~lwns tu /'at Dun11 At You r Service. OrutlCJl' C:oC1.\I Vw/11 1'1/ot , I'() Hor 1560, ~ta Me:m, (,',\ !12/i:!fi lm:ludL' your lcl<'phone '1lumber . 'J'lte co/1111111 UflJ.k.'ur s dat/11 t'ICt'pt Saturday~. How to Chet'"k Nur•lng Borne• DEAR PAT: My mother is in a nursing home in Massachusetts. 1 would bke to find out what gov· ·ernmental agency, if any, I can contact to find out how they r at e the home she is in and what standards I can expect rel a ting to reasonable care. W.R., Coronadel Mar Congr~ss passed a statute ln 1973 gJvlng citizens tbe rlgbl '°see government inspection reports. Sum· maries of inspection reports, or detailed reports, if speclfkally requested, are available for Medicare homes at the district om~s of the Sod al Security Ad· ministration in the area wbere the home is located. For nunillg homes parl.ldpatlag in Medicaid, re· po.rta cu be requested at the state agency respoDJI· ble for narslng home lnspectlol)s, usually the welfare or health departments of the cou.nty involved. The address of the Social Security office in Massachusetts which you should contact can be ob- tallled by writing '°: Boston Federal IJlformalion Center, J .F .K. Federal Building, Cambridge Street, Lobby, First f'loor, Boston, MA 02203. Inform atlon about Massachusetts' state aicencles should be re· quested from the Offtce of Consumer Affairs, John W. McCormack Bldg., 8ostoo,MA02108. Keeping Track of Bflb DEAR PAT: How can I request a copy of a bill soon after It is· introduced in the Stale Legislature? Also. is it possible to find oul when a particular bill is scheduled for hearing? M.M.,NewportBeach You may receive one free copy of any bW from Legislative Bill Boom, Capitol Building, Sacramen- to, CA 95814. Assembly bills are lndkated by AB and Sena te bills by SB. Order bills by number ud la numerical order, A B's and SB's separately. Enclose a self.addressed, stamped envelope. You automatically get the la.st amended version in print. You can always write to the author or to your own legJ.sla'°.r for help. Address them simply as "Dear Senator -" or .. Dear Assemblyman -," Capl'°l Bldg., Sacramento, CA 95814. Public hear· ings are announced ID advance. Your le~lslator, or Lbe autbor of the bW, can tell you when a bill you are interested ln ls scheduled for hearing. 1 I ( "THE FRONT" IPGJ BAHAMAS CPGI .. A MATTER OF TIME" CPGI "OllAT SCOUT & CA THOUSE THUllSDA Y" ''NORMAH IS THAT Your· trGt "HAHY & WALTBl GO TO HfW YOO'' (f'GI "LETS TALK AIOUT MEH" "IRll!F VACA TIOH" .. MIDWAY .. -..HAT SCOUT Ir CATHOUSI THUUDAY" "TIAalDOWM'' ~sHWITHASMtlrlRI .. MUltDH IY DUTH• ... LACK111D• (PG) "SHOOT" "SOLDIER IUIF' CRJ "MARATHON MAN" "FROM NOON TIL THREE" Monday, November 8, 1976 ~Mr. T.' Shrugs It Off By JAY SHARBUTr LOS ANGELES (AP> -On the final night or "Mr. T. and Tina" on A.BC, Pat Morita. star or the canceled show, was at an awards dinner here ror James Komac k , whose c9mpany made the prograQl. You wouldn't know the series was dead by look- 10 g at Morit a . Uc laughed. cracked Jokes, gave no hint or gloom. His only regret Is thal as a guest speaker, he didn't have enough time for just one more joke. "I would have said many people offered me condolences for being off the air," he said. "And that people asked me why they took 'T. and Tina' off. I had no answer . So I went to Mr. Komack. ••1 SAID, 'Jimmy, wby 'd they take us off?' He said 'Bad ratings,' I say, 'wby'd we get bad ratings?' H e says, 'Well, we were on in a very bad time s lot. People were still up.•" Thus spa k e Pat Morita, stand-up come· di an, actor, native of Berkel ey and a performer now getting his night club act back in Al' Wl...,i.oto 'THAT'S SHOW'BIZ' Ex-Star Morita shape while doing a guest TV shot now and then. A series cancellation has been known to cause a s t a te of deep depression , not to men- tion repQSsesslon of the family Rolls-Royce. But Morita shrugs off his progr a m 's demise as part of the hazards of s how biz. HE SAID H E hadn't expected the ax to a fall so quickly, despite the com ed y's low ratings, but added: • 'Hef, things happen. It's that kind of business." "I HAVE A weird theory on that whole thing. People didn't do Naturally, be said. he was dlspapomted and "the depression htl me about two days after I got. the word. 1 felt bad But 1 didn't feel bad about the show. I don't think we'd hit our stnde yet. that to WI. The times did ~...;.;;:;;;,;.:;:=;:;.;;;:=_;:;;;;c,,,;;;;;;o;;..,_.. it to us. Everybody was involved In that war in some way. Let me give you an example. "I have· a very dear friend who was a sur-MORITA IS one or two ABC stars -the other is Jack Soo of "Barney Mille r " -who were among hundreds of thousands of Japanese· Americans the govem- m e n t uprooted from their West Coast homes and put in internment camps during World War vivor o f the Bataan ~~~~~~~§~~1 Death March. He taught I me much of what I fun· •u<-•••·...-•"'s. darnentally know about 1vuYOAY'fu•~•<M.-11.n s tand-u p comedy. 1 liillilmH !~W never k,new he was tn the Waft~,i.:.~ ••• ·~~ Death March until years B £• ,...) later. He kept It well hid· am ~ den." 1 .. ,, .... n [~( ! 11. liiiiiiiiii!iiiiii He relived part of that sad memory early this year when playing an old Japanese photographer ~~:!lleltliZllll(:ICZll in NBC's "Farewell to E M.anzanar," a drama 1661 w suNFLOWEA about one s uch intern· w oF eA1sroL c M s•o ~ ... meol camp. He acted the A MLITSTAUCAIOUTMef",I part in the actual camp, V "SliX WITH A SMILE" (RJ Tule Lake in Northern California. in which he ~~~l~~~~~~- and his family were in· terned during the war. ·zoo 1 S,ACf ODYSSEY" "It was kind of spooky IPCil after all those years," he "THE MA~~~ Fill. TO said. But be said he Celt no bitterness because "I've learned how to put it in its own perspective. My battles are bigger now. DUmN~ UUl9NCI auvm llO'f~ THE CITY SHOf>PING CENTRE O•AMGof 04-ltl I 1'-" CITY CEMTRE CIMlMAS •• S.A FAWY \MANCHESTER £)(.I a.a. FRWY ICITV OR. E>U A.."HtOM HOOM 'TILL THI& V "CiATOI" IPGI 2 "WOODSTOCK" Ill ~~·1.------------. -"MAMTl«lH _. ~~T&IH VALLE. Y I ............. I• U ........... .......... . .. .. ~· ... maswHT Lovr "RHlll AHD THI llAH" Ill By tlae Associated Pttss SOUTH CO.AST Pl.AU The following are Billboard's hot record hits for Costa Mesa 54t-ll52 m.---------., the week ending November 13 as they af>Pear. --t'ctt--+---- next wttk 's issueorBilJboard magazine. CIHEMAL.AHD THU TU H<Yl'SJNGLES AIM!hei,. U~7'01 "SEX W1lM A SMR.1" 0 "SHAMPOO" Ill 1. TONIGHT'S THE NIGHT <Gonna Be Alright) -Rod Stewart (Warner Bros.) 2. DISCO DUCK -Rick Dees & H1s Cast of Idiots RSO 3. THE WRECK OF TJIE EDMUND FITZGERALD -Gordon Li ghtfoot (Reprise) 4.LOVE SO RICIIT-Bee Gees CRSO> 5. MUSKRAT LOVE -Captain & Tennille (A&M ) 6. ROCK'N ME-Steve Miller Band (Capital) 7. IF YOU LEAVE ME NOW -Chicago (Columbia) 8. J UST TO BE CLOSE TO YOU -Com· modores <Motown) 9. ~HE RUBBERBAND MAN -SpiMe~ (AUantl<t."". 10. DO 't'OU FEEL-Peter Frampton CA&M) TOPLPS 1. STEVIE WONDER -Songs In The Key Of Life (Tamla) 2. LED ZEPPEUN -Soundtrack From The Film The Song Remams The Same (Swan Song) 3. EL TON JOHN -Blue Moves <MCA) 4 PETER FRAMPTON -Frampton Comes Alive <A&M I 5. EARTH. WIND& FIRE -Spirit (Columbia) EASY U STENJNG 1. THIS ONE'S FOR YOU -Barry Manilow (Arista > 2. MUSKRAT LOVE -Captain & Tennille CA&M) 3. AFTER T llE LOVIN' Englebert llum- perdinck (Epic) 4. FERNANDO-Abba (Atlantic) 5. DON'T Tlll NK . . FEEL -Neil Diamond <Columbia ) COUNTRY SINGLES l. SOM EBO DY SOMEWllERE-Loretta Lynn CMAC> 2. LIVlNG IT DOWN -Fredy Fender (ABC· Dot) 3. HE R NAME IS ... -George Jones CEpic) 4. l 'M GONNA LOVE YOU -Dave & Sugar <RCA > 5. 9,999,999TEARS -Dickey Lee (RCA > WILL RING DOWN ON D11P THROAT IHMAl WIHI -IHDS THUllSOAY. MOY. 11 E IU## , .. , ......... O,..Wor12 .... 11 llW .. (R) CINEMA WEST wu ' .. "''flllll"t•OlN•wt" •l \t .. IH~t ( • Cl .. 110 Hf ... CU ls11;11 .. -J ~2400: u.,. ... lt••Ht ....... -~ SJMSIO ...... .,_ 531·9SIO .... , -~ 531-9580 ...... •C.--531.gsao ,._ .. .. l ... •tl 525·3526 ,,...,. •'tt ...... ...... l21·M>10 ....... , ... .., ... ...... .,.,,kl K2-2'11 •tlttil I•• .... ··-5 H 71 _,..., .... ~ .. ..... ·~· .... .. 534-1212 ,.,..,.... ........ ... ._. ..... ·~-M 111.1112 , ...... ......... tt 527-2223 DAILY PILOT A J f I SO COAST PLAZA >'1UtnltlSU4lllll 1•11"""' "MARATHON MAM0 Wl.eAn 111 .. t:O . ..,,. ........ ., .... , ... _, .. ,. J4 I01rn11U1 ~Ult I 1111 16H1•5 "MAD DOG MOIGAM" t•l-JATf'ijM-)1ll.J, ... l .. lt "ASSAULT OM PllCIMCT 13" lllUlAT /'IUM-lll l·l <f .... 9' S . C AST PLAZA 11MAliTHOM MAH" ............ ,. "',,..... ..... ,~....,....., .. ,_,. CINEMAlAND 1114Se llMMI .._..U)/501 llll 1111•"" 11MAliTHOH MAH" ,.~ ...... U.TIWM-11'9-"l .. J:J .. 7:0·\~ .. CINEMAlAND 1ms1 lb.., , ....... w1w1 LHMAltVIM ltOCiH MOOltf "SHOUT AT THE DEVIL" WAll DOHIY llUO IUflV&U IAMll 101 •tus UCAPI ro WITCll MOUNlAllC101 •• "°' "-''°' llArl" ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13111 •IU I CAPONl111 ''WMlll IT &U llO&MI" WOODSTOCK 111 "us GIMMl SH£LTH111 --Sil wmt A IMIU r•I l'\111 WMIU OOU n HUm twl HO IMTINU fOOAY 000Q OftN AT t • '°• WOODSTOCK t•I •1us GIMMl SHllTlltt1 HOIMOHOl'OOA'f -OHH Al •J.M. STAY HUNGRY 111 •IUI TUCK DOWN 1•1 ~NTNlf __ .. ,,,.,.M. MAD DOO MOIOAN twl ""' IOlWIAUc-1 HOMllHU I09"Y . -°""''''· .. ASSAULT ON PllCINCT 13111 l'\UI CAPONl ttl Tll•U IUN' I .CAI WASH 11'<11 2-IAMllY ,lOf tl'<ll i.Fllllll & fHl llAN 1•01 flll'\I &CllONI 1 .• srx wmt A sM111 ,., 2.-GUISS WMAT wt UHNl01t t 3 • ..COVllOlll MOOIU (ti "Wlllll n U L UG&H!" WOODSJOCK111 l'\Ut OIMMl SHILTll!e1 M L nAA CAin WOWAY1,..1 I'\"' TMI HINOIHl'-IO tNI 11rr ltlOOU e l&U Y llUOI STAY HUHGRYtt1 'LUI TUCK DOWN 111 "" H IOOU e ULLY nlLOI STAT HUNGRY 111 "UI TUCK DOWN Ill WAii IMIHIY llUA IUllYAU IAMll101 OIUI IKA" TO WITCH MOUNTAIN 101 A MOI HIOMI Of 11&11 ' ASSAUll ON 'RICINCT 13111 'LUI SWITCH llADl SISTIU 1•1 WALi OUHIT llUll IU•IV&U IAMllttt "us I.KA" TO WITCll MOUNlAIH101 DAILY PILOT ' l , A J2 DAILY Pl' OT MondJY ~:ov<'rrbcr 'l 1"76 ,_ • ;i Warning : The Su rgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. 13 mg: 'tar:· 0.8 mg. nicotine av.per cigarette, FTC Report Apr'.76 / , . .Marlboro LIGHTS LOWERED TAR & NICOTINE New Twist : . ' For Therapy By DENNIS McLELLAN Of IM O•oly Pile4 SUit Whal's it like to be the only female in a room full of 60 or 70 football and basketball jocks clad in nothing m ore than gym trunks? "It takes adjusting," admits Kathy Karos. who two years ago became Cal State Fullerton's first female athletic traine r. "You kind of feel like crawling into a corner a l first." She's a lot more confident now and, in fact, is a regular part of the scenery. as arc the six other women currently enrolled in the school's athletic training pro- gram . Miss Karos a nd her colleagues -Kathy Pisciotta. Kathy Wolfe, Jo Silken. Dolores Espinosa. Maureen Hanna and Rita Bernal -are studying to become pro· fessional athle tic trainers, a heretofore male-dominated pro· fess ion. But because of expanding female athletic programs in high schools and colleges, employ- ment opportunities are extreme- ly bright for women. Head athlet ic trainer Jerry Lloyd says that eight out of 10 let· ters he receives from employers request female trainers. NEW JOB Miss Karos, a 22-year-old senior, recently got a part-time trainer job at Orange High School. "I really enjoy it." she said. "What really attracted me to it is that I enjoy working with peo· pie and I wanted to work in something tha t is service- orie nted. ·• · She said she became interested in the field whe n a trainer talked to her junior college class. A recreation major. she switched to physical education. "I didn't rea lly have any idea what I was stepping into," she said. "I started in the spring, wluch is usually much quieter. The m en trainers kept say- ing, 'Wait until fall.• " BEA ANDERSON, Editor Monday. November 8. 1976 81 OCC's Recycling Center is tended by student volunteers who run a tidy ship. It is ready for a full-time coordinator. .. I Kathy Karos, who two years ago was Cal Stat~· Fullerton's first female athletic trainer, tapes Ray Dabela 's ankle. Women now are a -regular part of training room scenery. That's when the training room is packed with football players waiting to be taped, massaged or have heating pads applied to sore shoulders, elbows, wrists and knees. During football season the trainers· schedule runs from 2 to 6 p.m. five and s ix days a week. It's all part of the 600-hour in· ternship that leads to taking a certification exam, which must be passed to become a pro- fessional PROGRAM R EQUIREMENTS Along the way the students take suc h classes as anatomy, physiology, first aid, nutrition and sports medicine. They also get a teaching credential. Miss Karos. who was in- terviewed one afternoon before the training room became de· luged, said "the g uys treat us re· al well. "On the whole they s how respect for us -they're polite. I've made a lot of friends." When she first started. she said, often a player would be seated on the treatment table witb his foot out to be taped. She'd walk up and the foot would instantly be pulled back. ''A lot of times the guys didn't think a girl was capable of taping an ankle. Taping's the least of it." That has changed. "You get used to it real quick," says basketball player Steve Shaw. •·1 don't mind at all." Keith Anderson said he wasn't surprised to find women in the training room. "They do a good job -jus t as well as the men." Lloyd noted that there has been a .. tremendous change" of at. mosphere in the training room since the women arrived. The main rules lhal had to be en- forced concern wearing clothes and cutting down on the swear- ing. EDUCATIONAL He said he received "a lot of static" about the regulations at first. But he felt having women work in the men's training room was the right thing to do because of the educational opportunities. He said the constant exposure to almost every possible injury imaginable -from shoulder dis- locations to torn ligaments - more than prepares them to become trainers for women's athletics, where injuries usuaJly occur less often and are far less severe. The locker room language. which Lloyd always tried lo keep to a minimum, has been cleaned up considerably. lie describes tbe women as being "almost a constant reminder just by their presence." , Miss Karos, added with a • smile, however, "There's jt.rst some guys who 'II never clean up: their act. They're a lways: apologiiing." ' Most of the embarrassing inci-i dents. she said. havetodowithoc· 1 casional nudity by sometimes forgeUul athletes. Last year. Miss ~aros re- called . the first game of tbel' season was won by a slim, one- point margin that came in the last 10 seconds or the gamf). "The whole team Wlllf just 1 ecstatic," she said. "One guy · came running into the tr-.ining room with nothing on. Ht came- in singing and didn't eveo think of it. "He saw me and turned red in· stantly," she said with a laugh. "He came back and apologized afterward." Reclaiming Resources One empty Jar, an aluminum can and a few newspapers. It doesn't seem like much, but when this list is multiplied by all the recyclable items in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa the total is monumental. Orange Coast College's recycling center would like to get a bigger share of these items to exchange for scholars hip funds and now has hopes of doing so. The center, according to Lee Johnson. is at a turning point and about to enter a new phase of its existence. It has reached the point where a full .time. paid coordinator is nt'eded to administer the program, Johnson said. "Last year we made S9,000," he added. "We fe lt if we could double the volume we could support a full· or part-time person." "We have peaked," said Bjarne Nelson. a student volunteer. "With a full-time director we can lap all the resources avaiiablc We will qu·adruple our business in the iong run " When the coordinator is hired, OCC will become a leader among com munity coll eges. Johnson believes . "There should be a recycling center at every community col· lege." he said. "It's a iogical place because of the heavy traffic and good communication systems.·· At OCC all the profits are put into scholarship funds or used for the activities of Help the Children, an organization dedicated to enriching the lives of underprivileged children. Some of the profits are put back into the center to support and maintain·it and the energy lab which has been built at the site. The "lab" is a geodesic dome which students covered with an adobe mixture. It is a model for natural heating and cooling systems and bas an environmental library. 1 It is cooled by vents at the top and bottom and heated by solar energy. Music is provided by power generated by the wtnd, and coffee is made on a camp st.ove which is fueled by made-on-the-site· methane gas. ' Jn spite of the involvement arid interest by students and some citiiens, the recycling center is not being used lo the fullest by the community, Johnson and the other volunteers believe. Part of the problem is motivalipg people to get into the habit of saving glass. aluminum and newspapers, they agreed. "Fifty percent of our waste probably is recyclable," pointed out Terry Timme ns, a sociology instructor at OCC who is in· volved with the center. "By hiring a coordinator here we are stimulating the economy with a job and decreasing the waste the city has lo ban· dle." Many corporations throw away massive amounts of glass and cardboard, which would be possible for OCC to get with paid. help, but "the bottom line still is the individual," Johnson -~, stressed. To kick off the new phase of the center, a paper drive has been scheduled for Saturday. Nov. 13, from 8 a.m . to S p.m . in the OCC parking lot at Merrimac and Fairview. Pick-ups for senior citizens with large amounts of paper will be scheduled throughout the day. J ohnson said. He is proud that OCC has taken a major step at the center and • hopes for more community involvement because of it. Apartm ent complexes. for e xample, could have large drums next to the trash bins for recyclable objects. ''I would gunrantee that this program would work or we would pull out," Johnson said. "OCC has a good re putation." The dump, in contrast, is a disheartening mixture of junk .. and salvageable . · -...: goods. What would it look like if everyone saved •'t: their glass, ; paper and cans? ~ '• .. ; Programs Varied •':::-•% DAILY PILOT Monday. November 8. 1976 .. LAS BRIZAS DEL MAJl: The Children's Home Society aux· 1Uary is adding a special funding feature for the Arts and Crafts Fair. to take place at 10 a.m Saturday, Nov. 20. in the Foun ta in Valley R ecreation Center. Space for booths is being rent· ed to anyone who wants to sell wares. Deadline for rentals is Wednesday, Nov. 10. Mrs. Jackie Bowman may be contacted at 962·3018. AAUW: Women's Rights in Our Judiciary System will be the t.opic or Delores Farrell when sh& addresses the Huntington Beach Branch. Members will meet at 11:30 a.m. Saturday. Nov. 13, at the Crossroads restaurant, Fountain Valley . FRIENOS OF THE LIBRARY : Newport Beach members will meet at 11 :30 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 16, in the Promon· tory Point Clubhouse. California, will address West· em State University College of Law group The public is 1nv1ted to the session at 12: 15 p.m . Tuesday, Nov. 16, on campus. Ms. Rlpston Is responsible ror all phases or ACLU programs ln Los Angeles-based affiliate. WOMEN'S COURSE: Chang- ing roles or women will be studied during a nine-week course at Orange Coast College. The one-unit class, to be con· ducted by Dr. Geraldine Pickart, will meet at 1 p.m . on Tuesdays, beginning Nov. 16. MELODVLAND HOTLINE CENTER: Two special banquets will be given this month lo com- plete a necessary housing project at the Ranch Academy. The first will be....at---7 :30 p.m. Tuesday. Nov. 16, at Melodyland Christian Center, Anaheim ; and the other will be at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 23, at the Anchor Inn. Hemet. •, . Speaker will be Ruth Hilburn nf Newport Beach who will dis· c u3c; he r creative cookbook, ''They Laughed When I Walked Into the Kitchen." The center and a cademy have a two-fold operation which counsels and houses troubled youths. • • ' ~:' Just a 'Show-off' A I" WI ••Photo :Vl_rs. Sig rid QI son of Antioch, Ill. says she 's "JW:it showing~uff'" by lighting a cigar. And n ghtfully ~he should show off, as-the oc- ta~10n was tie1: lOOth birthday. Her son, IlC:ly Olson seem s a little surprised. h O\\CVer. She was inspired t.o write this book by her daughter who re· turned to college in midstream while Leaching. The author de· cided to help her out by designing menus which could be prepared four weeks in advance. LAW WIVES ASSOCIATION: Ramona R i pston, executive director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern Further Information is availa· ble by cal ling the center weekdays from 9 a .m . to S p.m . al 778·1000. HUNTING TON BEACH WOMEN: A fund·raising Jun· cheon is planned at noon Tues· ctay, Nov. 16, in the clubhouse. Irene Pursell is taking r eserva· lions at 536·4060. Americans Seeing Red Weddings ~ and Engagements DEAR ANN: l was 1rntated by you r kind w ords fo r the American Red Cross. As a veteran of World War II who served overseas for three years, J'd like you to know that the or· ganization you praised was no favorite of the m en and women In unjform. countnes. The Red Cross, which bas never accepted a dime from the • U.S. government (and to UUs day relies totally on voluntary con· tributlons) was asked to establish club facilities for U.S. s ervicemen overseas where troops rrom all allied forces would be welcome. The Salvation Army did NOT have this responsibility. Ann~ Landers To :.ivuid cti-.<1ppmnlmcn1 p1 o:-pccl1\ e hrnlc·s ••rt' rl0m1ndccl to h,1,c thl•1r \\l'd<hfll:t :-IOl'h':-\\1th hl•1 ck and \\hill' i.:lossy phutogra phs to I hl' Du1ly Pilot Pl·r1ple 11\-purlnwnt <11\c "l•c·k bdorl' till'" <'<lding P1t·turt•s r cCC'l\'C:d aflt•r that lime \\ill 1101 bt.• llSl'(I. Fol' l'l1J.::Jg<'ment annnunN•mt•11ts it is impt-rati\ l' that th<' :-tnrv. abn ;ic·rnm· 11.iniNI hy u blat'k and "hill' ~l"""Y pie· 111rf'. lw -.uhm1tted "ix ''l'l'k" or nwn• hd•ll'I' llH· \\ t·drlinJ,.l <fall'. othc·1 \I'""' II \\ 111 not ht· pulJllsht•d We had lo pay the Red Cross for coffee. doughnuts, mPals anct overnight lodg1 n ~ while thl' Salvation Arm)' :.upphcd coffee, doughnuts and m eals free. So please. Ann, don't be so J?Cnc:ous "1th your bouquets Toss them onl)' to the worthy ana presen·e your cred1b1ht) G I J OE OF LOl'iG AGO DE.\R JOE: A blizzard of let· lt>rs similar lo yours bit m) de'\k 11fter that column appeared. I wrotf' to the top officials of the Amt'rican Red Cross for an ex· planalion and receivf'd an eyt· p oppin~ res ponse. It wa s dO<'umenll'd hy a <'<>PY of a lf'tler dated ~larch 20, 1942, from Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson. to Norman II. Davis, (11airmao of the American Red (.'ross. Here's the lnside stof) - and prt'tly It lso't . The Britis h High Command then made an official request that U.S. servicemen be required to pay for whatever they re· ceived, just as their men bad to pay . The R ed C ross wa s adamantly opposed to th.ls con· cept and protested vehemently. The) lolft the fight. bowever, when a "request" came from Secretary Stimson. Hls lette r was tantamount to a command. for a decision made by the UnJted States Army. Today, 35 years later, the truth ls known by only a few. DEAR ANN : Somebody goofed or you don't know your Men· ningers. It was Dr. Walter, NOT Dr. Roy who disagreed with your survey that showed 70 percent or the parents in this country would not have had children if they could live their lives over again. Ten lashes with a wet noodle for you, Kiddo. -SHARPER EYE THAN YOURS All E n glish and Aus tralian men ln uniform had to pay ror ofr· base food aod lodglnit because ,·oluotary giving <which Is <'hara<'terlstlc of tbt' t:nlted StalN•) is not the pattt'm in other Allegations have persis ted !>ince World War JI that the Red Cross made a prom overseas. Nothing could be further from the truth. The clubs operated at a loss and reprt'sented a heavy financial burden to the Red Cross. Moreover. the public Im· agt' of the Red Cross was badly tarnished when they were forced by Stimson to go along with the British H\gh Command. DEAR EVE: I've known "my Menolngers" for 15 years, hav· log served as a trustee of their fine foundation since 1960. My in· formation came out of Kansas Ci- ty from a reader who dJdn't know ms Me nnlngers. My apologies - especially to Dr. Roy. How unfair that this splendid organization bas to take lhe rap Libra: Travel Focus 6.) svo~n·o~ARR Tl'E OA\',NO\'t:MBER9 ARI E ' <March 21 Apnl 19 1 Accent on test· 1ng challcnJt1ng, chan1ung routes i;tating case before relat1\ e~. 1mprovtnft communications v. 1th <'lose neighbors TAURUS CApnl 20-May 201 You arc able to rl'ach one who had Ileen · out of touch " Money <iuestion can be resol.,,ed 1f you -.hake off hurden not really your own GEMINI (Ma y 21·.June :?01 . You confront what you reared. You c·m<'ri:?l' a winner. Applies <'Specially wherc ll'gal matters arc concerned. CANCER (June 21·.luty 22l: Don't reveal all -be discreet Acccnt on wtuH is hidden, tem· p(>rarily away from view. Light touch achieves ~oal. LEO (July 23·Aui:: 221 · llii:thlight versatility -ask questions. Give full play to lntelleclual r.uriosi~y . Writt•. publish, publi cize -open addi- ttonal Imes or com municat1on . VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sepl. 22): Practical matters dominate. Past obligations could come home to rt>ost. Legal affairs command attention includ. iag agreements that supp(>sedly are long-term. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Highlight creativi· t~. tr.ave I. ~i alogue wi.th m~mber or opposite sex. Special pro1ect can be intelligently discussed. SCORPIO <Ocl.23·Nov.21 ): Be aware of cos· ts. shopping procedures. acquisitions. One who seems the "opposite" of you might turn out to be anally. Diplo macy is best now. SAG.rTTARIUS .<Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don 't rely ~oo heavily on promises. Do your own investigal· mg. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan.19): Your natural capabilities arc hi~hlighted. Organize priorities. Accept added resp(>nsibiltty. Concentrate on services. ways to improve '¥hat most persons take for granted . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Your appeal broadens -more people become aware or you. Accent on change, travel, variety, children, your emotio~al responses. PISCES (Feb.19·March20): Whatsufficedin past may no longer fill requirements. $109000 foronly $155.26 -------a ntonth. . ~ ' . . . , .. : I . ; JOHN M. MURRAY, M.D. C.M .• f.R.C.P. D1plomate of the Amarr can Board of Denretology Announoes the establishment ol tho AS SOCIA TED DERMA TOt.OGISTS MEDICAi. GROUP WestcHff Meck~ PftRIOft #4 2011 WHtclff Dr., M.wporl hoch Practiee llmlted to Olseases and cancer of the Skin Modem Acne Therapy and Prewnt1on 171 41 '31-19'0 Whether you need $3.500 or $10,000 get it from the people who lend millions. Commercial Credit. Monthly payment bMed on a $10.000 HomeO..Vncr loan, for 120 months. at an annual percentage rate of 14 % Total paym1.mt $18.63 1. 20. NO POINTS. NO PREPAYMENT PENALTY. We find ways to help . COMMEl\.Cf AL C~EDIT COl\.POl\.ATION Gl ~Loans __ , U•OUI A ""'" nl S'• (ltlO ..... ,_ ""'" ... •0<11,...f by e ,.,.,'4l1""'"'" ol rffl tl'4 ~rtona1 p<~ Cotta Mt11a • 370 E. 17th Strtet • S.C&-4700 Oran"o • 1111 Town & Countr, Rd. • 1u7 .,_1 • Suite 18 • 11• ...,., f Ttl lwlp fill rl'qwrcmenl:-on ::lllh \\t'd 11ing and en~ageml•nl ~loril':O.. form .. .ll"l' available 1n all Dull\' Pilot offltt•;.. Fur· lher questions "ill lx; nns\\l'r<'cl by Pl'ople l)\•pa rtmt·nt -.talf ml•mher;. al 11-12· 1321 COSMETIC SURGERY MEN-WOMEN Look younger - Improve your f f::.~ f !Jr .:.., ' ~~ ~( :· appearance ,,~~~ •Eyes • Nose • Ears • Facelift :_""6 • Breasts • Stomach • Hair • Transplants • Dermabras1onl • Skm Peel \... -- Call For Free Brochure -Free Consulting. Easy financing a"anged. AMERICAN COSMETIC SURGERY CENTER INC. 6552 Bolsa Ave., Westminster 898-8705 Member American Medical Ass'n. la.Zllor OVER 200 /,_~HAIRS On Display for Immediate FREE DELIVERY WHITE'S SHOWCASE TWO lOCATIOHS !!!!' -369 E. 17th Street Costa Mesa 28892 Marguerite Pkwy Mission Vieio (•H Awery Plt•yJ , •• , ... , '"'''" & l?lh •• ' , ...... .._ ..... ,......., t93l?9.~ UT. 1 .. 1 H~ .. -.. N••ll • •••e• l~t!~~J hi I ... , .. _, to 11••• 1 ~~"'"'~'' ou.s. Tonight's 1V Highlights NBC I) 9 : 00 -"Gone Wlth the Wind." The conclusion of the television premiere of one of Hollywood's all-time great movies with Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Leslie Howard and Olivia de Havilland. ABC fJ 9:00 -''The Chase.'' Marlon Brando, Jane Fonda and Robert Redford star in this 1966 movie drama of an escaped convict coming home t-0 an un- faithful wlfe. ,. f CBS 8 11 : 30 -"Bob a nd Carol and Ted and Alice." Elliott Gould, Robert • Culp, Nat alie Wood and Dyan Cannon play mixed doubles in this 1969 movie. TV DAILY LOG MONDAY •V•NINQ 8:00 a @ mrn cm """ a IHl ({) CD GI ""1 e a StM r.-m r--~ D ((ltl ([)) (81 lllonday lllaht FlltW Los All&tlel Rams and the C.11Cin111ti Btnc~ls. Cl Mewre: a:J (1•11011) "Tiit HeMtn" (com) '72-James Coburn, Slim Pd.ens. Lois NelUeton. m hltlWtt r.-, mw...u GOldric~ &91.it1t1111Kais -6:30- D Oiuh! Guests tncludt Bonnie r ran~hn. Jack Albert50n, Rrch.,d ~tch. Cart Bur1hott, ~It JKUon Cl) Wy Gritfi1ll (fOJ Men Griff111 Sllw m r.-, AHW llli Q)~e mz-1 m ,.,..... .,. lhl llNd 7:00 D ® CD m llews U Liln Clllll {)) My Tlttee Sells CU Tt Tell die Trtllll mt LM lJlcy Q) TIM fll fl) Clllt "' [lp.ttlOI falWJ Griffit11 m ~til/lellrer ltepO(t m DmMtk s.ries ft)~111ShmilJ -7:30- D CllilOfnia BllYlint 0 llO!lti111 lof ~rs m Tht Odd c..,i. ()) Nl111t That T- CD lfady llMcll fI1l m Dolly hrt• S11tW Q}l (I) Wild WerW ti AllttMls f3) Heptl's Her.es 83 ~ 211..ipt ll)flalllC.... 8:00 a (Ill CD Cl) lliltO Rhoda plans a Mldly 1mpulsln Kt lo sllow her eilrlllftd lt~nd illt's lat lrom betnc a dull person. 8 @(])<11eo..1111t1m•s llM IW ~If ltM Dtan hosts I llOSll '&IC look II 1llt 1920' S II Ill is Sc>ecial lea1111ift1 cuests Jonal"'n Winltts, Dom Deluise, Hermione &ddelty, Abe Vicod.l. Gto11il Encel, CUrtene Ryan and Ult Coldd1uers. 8 r.i. s,.dll "Baja Cahlorn11" A documenl•'Y on the sun·drenched peninsul1 10 the south. CD Mowlt: (2h1) "H1111tioat" (com) '58-Cary Giant. Sophil Loren. Cl Motit: (C) (21w) "A Man Aleltt" (wts) 'SS-Rar Milland, Muy Murphy, Ward Bolld. CD Sllll II Clhll AMvt • Htf a.., l4lt Darrin's HIYlftt Colllplications 8'1witd1M .., """' ...... 12)) Merit: ct) (2111) "The Ott· Me(' (clta) '&7-0lflen McCav1n, Slllfley 1C1111hl. Edmond O'Boen. fD Tiit Ml•s Clu .. klts .. John Quincy Mll'llS. Set1e1Jry of Stale" D1Y1d Birney stars u John Quincy Adams. appo1nltd as Prts1denl Mon1oe's Seartl!Y of Slate, •Ito rtl111n.\ lrom [111ope lo serve. m s,lllilll .... m ,.,..._ IMCWtt ~ -1:30- " ITT)(}) (.I) P~rlll1 Phyllis 1nv11es.ht1 lntnds lo a pos1 funtral funeral when w decides lo 11loule he1 dtP611td husband, lJrs, in San F11ncosco. m ett.Wib e:oo * 1Y s-Witll °"" lawi•' brt ...... CDllttt'f CriffilSMll • Tiit ¥lflWall • a. tMlwelVI ID 1t1 ,.,.,_ It w.lf T11f1 "Ca~na and Valery Paw· The for· mtr SUit ol Ruuil's lli!ow Ballet perform. (IB Cl)) ...,..: CCJ (Zllf) "'CID r!k1~ (dra) '71-Cene HackrMn. QI) .......... -9:l0- • (J?) Q) Cl) All's fek Richard loses his obtteliv11y 11111 his cool when an unelj)t(led pliolo &s:siln· menl IOI Charter IUlllS thtir pl1n.\ IOI an fd'lllt< weekend He aocusa Clltr· ley ol puh1n1 llcf ureer aht•d of hrm alld $Ile accUSH ~hlld of bt1•& I seUISll WUWllllSL 10:00 0 EXECUTIVE SUITE· * ~filtWOfb 1t comp1ny bl1bttue a cn1 m (Jeaitift w. As a pub!< relllions mO'<t, Oon Walhnc llOllft Ille COlllPlllJ ~btcut at ~1s home, tven lhou&h his '"1e w1rns 11 will put the family o• d1spl1r. upemUy dlu&hltl Slmr. -free Oft ~11. e.-n a Clllews -~· • 0.. tf A KW: Jalln hint Ml c.,tlin & T Mlle m111au•P~• -10:30- 0 Tiit •silk $191J mmm""' 11:00 • fJ m ot> llns CJ (U fJO ~ (I) News e ((21) Cl)) (8) Lff• A11uicu Slyle (6J s.. Htlnt Cl Ctlt~rilr ltout Hetschel Btr1111d1 hosts CD Mary & TOl!I Walth A * 1Y Test f'atter11 Tllt11 Muy Wants to Move On • lllMJ Mlf1all. lllMJ Mart.• a>Tai.t1a.11Drr1 (U') CJ) St-. .. Sbn fD ~ MA a.-.. LM" -11:30-• <m CD (I) cas ult Merit: "MIMCdeMT•MllMkt• (ch)'69-ElllOI! Gould, Robtrt Culp, Dyan Canno11, N1t1he Wood. G OCDOID.....,r... w Tiit m a. .,.a.. .... .... QI) Tiit 190 QA (QI) CJ)) SdeMA Fktioll llltetrt <Bl lillltlt: CC) •Ailzle" (d11) '63- Robert Mitchum, Petet falk. 12:00 • lest ,,, Ct'1ldlrt Glllotit: ~ Prlltf" (com) ·~a-Robert Yount M1Yretn O'H111, CllllOll Webb. Richard H1ydn. • llllwif: "Tiit s.... •• ,... u..r (com) '47-W~l~m Powell, Ella Raines, Peter Lind Hayes. -12:30- • AK·lli111t Slltw: "Sltth Mt PIM," .. ,.., Dlys." "SW -..-.... : "las....,....... (d!a) 'S2-MdlHI Rennie, Robtt1 NewtOll, Debr• Pacet. Edmund GwtH. 1 :00 D ID CD <II T.-mw m Tiit ma.. -l:JO- 2:00 ...... CC) MDI '" 1'1 .. 'IMs Sb1111trr (dra) ·10-Gene 0.riy, Lloyd 8'1dces. D11ne Biker. 11J 0..~ltlHlure lillwlts: "ltl'J '"" Uldt, ....... Mtllt Milll" -3:30-. ........ 8 (ll) Cl) ()) flbtlM WaHtr has 1 weird dieam and wllen Arthur llnds ~ oul, he panks al the thou1ht of Ihm weekend 101elher. .. 9 {() QJ • .,, .... tltlll: ct) (2Jw) ~c... -.. ..... Concl. (dla) '39-Qark G1b11, Vrvien lel&li, Ol1vi1 dt Havlll1nd, Lesltt How11d, Hattft Mc01niel, lhomu "'''"""· YICIOI J(l('f. [wtlyn Keyes. Jane Duwtll, (ddit "Rochuler" Aftdentft, One Moson. Au Rulhttford, W1rd lloftd, llllttetfly M<· Queen. Tiie COlldlldiftC l*llOll of lh ltttndllY 01c1t-1riftn1111 1~111 mSIOll of M11pret Mlltlltll's DO¥tl ol love ~ vtnt!JnC• "' lht South dunn1 lllA CMI W11. a TrMI Ai. "b1111b~•o" A hut Me 16¥tnture wtt111 ""°'" l.,.. Collow. • ......, --..... CC> (ZIW) "Tiit Clint" (dr1) '66-M11lon Brando. Jane r 011dl. ltobtrt Redford, E.G. ~. Antic OicMMol. Wlltn 1n iMoetnt 1111n coctwlcttd of lllWdet eSCll* '""" prison aad lltldt home to T IUS. lfle $11enff of his .. IOW!I tries 1n oln to avert lmpendinc lragedr. He knows lht convk:f$ wile iS h1'1lnl an atl1ir with lhe 50n of a callle baion. CD MerY l.oois At Tht New llOmllO t ... ... ,.., ••• , .... .,. tlle ..,. ...... lo:tO •...._~(mus) '33-[ddll Cutor, lut1lle 8111.CI:> ''n• Sterr tf Dr. w..r cm> ·o -taty eoo,.r. hflint 0.,. a·-.c...-.·cCOl'll> '4S-Gar1 Cooper, loretla Yount 0.. Owyta. 1 l:tO. CC> ....... ..,.. (dra) ·~-James Siem, lol•11t Dlu, °"' OurJu. Gilbert ltolen4. 12:09 .......... (drl) '44-Alt•· andtr llno1, Clifrln Coburn, t.raldlnt rittcerakl. 1 :ti • CC> "Tiit , ttltf ..... (Sus,) '71-DtH Stoc• .. 11, $tetlllie PO!ltll. J...es SUcy. HI• Cl:)...,... ... WIN ti ftlnrtll" (adv) '54-To•J O.rtb. J1114t l ''•"· 3:)0 • CC> "1'IMI IWldllC...,.. Miit" (tOm) '61-Don KllOllS, Arthur O'Connell, Ltsltt Niel~n • bJan f IHIMll. KOCE Television (50) )!OO SISAMI ITltl IT 4:00 ~QOM •:• 11.ICTlllC COM~ANY I :" M1$Tlll 110011tS NCIOtttottltOOO l :llt Yll.l.AAl.10111 , ~-llOOOt "'°"THI MOOlllM ,AMII. y • .., ...... y Mow· 6.llt A TIMI TO OltOW "I.a,,... ...... l'rftithoel C11114" 1:• AS MAM alMAVH "HYmefti,_"..,""~n J:M flltlMCM CMlfl "fl'-'!O'oltMfll" - , ... ADAMSCMllOfUCl.H"JelWIOulftty'--·~tuvofSlotte" t,~1,!"' DAYIO SUHICIMD IMOW ... ._Te'°"' w1111 l'M Ml-91 II.• TMI MtcMlll./\.IHltllt ltP'OttT BOOM CR INSIDE WOODY ALLEN ~ SU i'\ l.O(\)b l.JN6 Of C.OM~A'f A.tfRS ti\) 'iol>li: f').."Jf FUNKY WINKERBEAN M'{ U'XU '?Hof ~u.lo'J \a..) IZJCtt1"140F€1V 'S ft,NJt. by Joe Marthen lJtJfoRfllNl\T~1.Y, IT WA'1 t-\Ml61~b ff\J A. 6€fl."'1N.J f'A,\YSf-UM 11.T fti~ 1iMe. by Tom Batiuk OJELL, r1-11ei r!:> ouR FrNAl FOOTBALL HIGHUf,HT rtll''1 5E5510N FOR "TH 15 (,)EAR / Af:J (.,00 KNOlll, TH IS WAS A f\£BUILDIN6 <.>EAR AND UJE'VE c:oT A <xx.JNG TEAIY\ ! 00 mobT OF THESE KtDS Will BE COMI NG BACK NEXT l.,lEAR ! TANK McNAMARA by Jeff Miller & Bill Hinds ~~~~~~~~~.......,..--, (('AU.\ KJN6, If uf'R~ t) FINO 'ntG: .$0UR(E OF Va.JR i:;tEP ~07Tll.IT\I A6M,J?T ~ 1£l1£~ ~ TH£ ARM.A.OIL~ . NANCY ( 1 LIKE THE OH, OH ···HERE ) CO"' "\ERCIALS COME THE '---- COMMERC'ALS---· THERE'LL BE ~ AE30UT SIX • ( / "°1 IN A ROW • UNITED Feature Syndicate ACROSS 4£. fr 90 'OO•' ' ' P'T~.- trlr "'i;i" !<ii I Sou owlul 11\Vrll !> Mu•e11 ';0•\1 f I(; II I'll C.1 ''Of'!•\ 48 ~ ...... t IOL Oy•• ~ \.~00•1·• 0 df s 5 1H&bl'I1 1 ··11 A 1• • 10 •• '. r ' ·o f I .. • t;rl"i ,. 'i ~r r •) " l R ,,_ ~ " • llo I i r A L I A , .. -~ C 11 T I v " • •• ' A R s . 0 S l L ... ~ I .. ' ..I ,, 14 ~N• \ ,'!.I' SJ S "'31H•( • •I • • F , . I D " l • T If R 0 s " P I P r I S f R T ~ I ., E N 1 I . A 1 A I\ T A •e ~son·l'"'' 1551\011 ""1•~' • •Con~11A '"'~ I ,. L f .. I P U B ' t . l .. l p • l 15 tfi f uH ~ A'a·~• '• I' f<rr 18 O• t~c rl!o ':J'2 Ja.n~r:,,,. oo .. i J Be.t• .><'.J 24 Be ot 51'·· ~·ti' 25 Pu b l thorouon'••e 28 Atrplant Wltntng s•on11s 32 Btlore 33 /.n entwtty J5W1dlng b1td 36 Laugh IOOlllV 38 C0'1SUl!ll' greedily <10 Shine brightly <11 Channel .CJ Russian 11volu11on· ary .cs Verse lorm I , l"'lO"llol'!l•' ~ ...... ... ,...~ --' . :r: I~ ' t 11 ~ ~ ' F r P A F 1 h H Dt'<' f\4 (,~rd ill"'" 1n•t11m1 f\' "l'O"•' r::J 6~'~· er., 111 f• Jl'I F.T Cno., J 1 RPaealeJ a r P•ll)f · ·t'~Or' r-"'l"rp I. f'11' ll •ra•d t I (I ·I:·~~ 010 1 UGQ 1 ' ""I •?Gotlc'wir :;>Al"•·~· 1 J i""'~a..,,. ,u,us ~~'IQ 4 4 (' 1fOPnlPt ' OCN·~ 1 ~ 5,.,a nP\.PSS ly 1 r.ain \ )'rO<l~ s 4 7 ( 'll'ct b•oltler 2 1 ~~rl] 4~ f,01ter s 2 Tal<f' on 2 4 FamP1 '~'Cl concPrn ca•oo tauir ,,.r '5 t F11nc'1 3 St1 telluce 25 Buo 52 Position " ••••• ,,,,,, 26Soda-b•ne SJ T0<ontc. mer dopos 1 loo1baller 5 Auto ?7 K1noe1om 54 N111rate assemb''I ni Roored 55 Winemaker s 6 Very s~1lled 29 Uooer ~•IP otan1 i Arrived natr~e 56 Tile Pen· 8 Freudian 30 Lvr•C com tateuch concern oos•l•on Var 9 Knocked to J 1 Waste wat&f 57 lJtter the can~as p1oe 58 Soc1e1y IO....... 3 4 Oellbl'tale newcomers es 60 Crude #JO tUE.'lL AAVE ro CON71~R ™G F-ACT rnA.T ?HZ£R 'S TE"AMSi 14AVi; !*ATHl 'ibUK' l~'J UK{; A ORUM ~ ~£. LAST Fl\/f: YG.AR'":L . by Emie Bushmiller AT LEAST I KNOW' THEY WON'T BE INTERRUPTED ! lft !:'1 ~ JUDGE PARKER WHE-N GAlh FAVOR ""'~rt. r ... AT ;,HE Tf l >4'\\ WMETMHl St1E V.l\N1~1JLATfD TUE (.ARD!> ·"I mr POl(E~ ·AMF T.J JO Fl\AN..,, ,1, Bh.OMES A-.u~Y ' l/41.. I I • I TUMBLEWEEDS MISS PEACH 0 / 0 HOW CO\\E WE VE ONL4' BEEN ~ TUO'<ING ABOUT 1At:N IN HIS TOR'!'? ·-• ft;,Y'\tt·~u A~llllf Sf~ V1Cf . ~ 1 At)'il~E" ~OU Of.J Hew io • r ALWA tr. 'Do T~E' f2\~HT ; ~-i)--11NG. I . . I . i . ' Monday. November 8. 1978 DAILY PILOT JU THE VIRTUE OF VERA VALIANT DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK A~e YOU L..OOK1NG A-r A New cu1.:T'uRe:, POC'f"OR ?' GORDO MOON MULLINS -AND W'Hl::N S~f GOT 6AO<...TH£Rt WAS A 11CKE.T ! HA.RPL..Y, K1Pc:IO ... GE:RMS HA.ve: eee:N AROUNP SINCE: 11-fe eEGINNtNG OF 1"1Me ! Hee: Hee.' OUR G/l/E- US--THIS-DA'I- OVR-OAILV-LAP PRAYER //AS eEEJJ HEARD! by Charles M. Schulz NwXT: WHA'f HATH Mlfpt$ ~ I 1 ••• I by Rodger Bradfield by GeonJe Lemont YO U Rf: 'T'H tNKlt-JG or:= GIVING AAe A .;uPO CHOP 01-J i'He eACK OF MY NeCK, AReN'1" Y'OLJ !' by Ferd Johnson THE GIRLS Al<:EN'T WE 601NG TO 5 TU0'1' ABOOT WOMEN ? I HAD A GRANON.OTHE~ uJHO WAS KIND OF CllfE ! . r by Harold Le Doux ")~there any kind at all lhat by the tune }OU get 1u Je\\crl you won't wish to heaven' you hadn't 11.1irn~· DENNIS THE MENACE by Tom K. Ryan ~ 11·8 by Mell ·' • MAflQA'S ADVI C.f Co~" -------NEW M oPE'YlN APVl(f ON H~W -ro Do m W~N&. 1H»~G. AHO ~1't0NAL~ Ii. w ~ . - 1'1""-LAU, r'l.J.,f. II 8 "~I USE ')WR 00~~.A~. W1LSON ~ IF l 00 ! ~ lll<t lHIS ~·LL SCREEQ{ Al.£ OOTA A '/FA~ &00~ .~ I I _( II DAILY PILOT Monday November 8. 1976 Rams Face ·Beng8Is, Freez~g Weather • uss1an Netters J ~anned J> ARIS -The Soviet Union has ,fen banned from 1m Davis Cup $mis competition for refusing to itay Chile in this year's ~'final round for political re- s. he Davis Cup management ~mittee made the announce- nt Sunday. The committee (hat any nation that enters competition and then draws for any reason short natural disaster should be iltomatically excluded from the c4)owing year's tournament. i t the same time, the commit- of the International Lawn nis Federation gave Russia, ;~choslovaki a and Hungary un- il' Dec. 15 to pay fines and !~ages resulting from their .rithdrawals in late August from he Federation Cup women's ompetition in Philadelphia. Each country was fined $10,000 or quitting the tournament to •rotest the presence or South lfrica. Connor• Breezes COLOGNE, West Germany - fi mmy Connors needed little nora than one hour Sunday to ·rush South African Frew ¥1cMillan 6-2, 6·3 to win the :S0,000 Cologne Grand Prix ten- 1is tournament. J'a11n er Trh,,,.ph• TOKYO -Roscoe Tanner de· fe ated Italy's Corrado Barazzut· ti, 6-3. 6·2 on a court made slip· pery by intermittent light rain 51,111day to win the Japan Open ::hampionship. Wendy Turnb~ of Australia, won the women's ingles with an easy 6-1, 6· l ictory over Belgium's Mich~ Gucdal. Pot t ison .tin• BAKERSFIELD -Andrew Pattison of Rhodesia wo11 the $6,000 fir st prize in the Bakersfi eld Tennis Classic Sun- day with a 2-6, 6-3, 7.5 victory over Jeff Borowi ak. . ·lrea Dri11ers Roll S ONO MA -Ted F ield of Newport Beach a nd Danny 09gais of CoS\.a Mesa teamed to capture t he 17th Northern California Racin~ Club four-hour enduro Sunday at Sears Point International Raceway. here. ' Driving a Porsche RSR, Field aQd Ongais covered 121 laps on the 2.5 mile course. beating Gene Bathello and Gary Carlan by n~rly twolaps . Slaoe Win • :l gain ARCADIA -The st akes \\eren't as large as the day beforl', but world champion Jotkey Bill Shoemaker still en- J11) cd a prosperous afternoon !:iundav 0111~· 24 hours after capturinj( th<' SJS0.000 Champions race. Shoemake r came back to auidt• ht'uvll)·favored Habitony .... lo a l 1 2-len1o?th victory over Replant m the $100.000 Norfolk Stakes at Santa Anita Tif le f o LofH': ~CCRA , Ghana n anny Lopez of Los Angeles won the W,!>r ld Bo xi ng Coun c il featnerweigbt title Saturdav night by beating de fe nding champion David Kotey of Ghana on n unanimous 15-rou nd de· ctsion. l 4 KE RUEflf4Vt'iTA ~'" F=1n'*l1"COrtt\•nO n\CIW'11 w'""'"O' Su'l\<1~v fl"I 1¥ t)Ol')l)OO ""•t•rtn,1 f r "fl'n G'>lf (f'IAmO•l"'n'"•O• o" t~ r 1•1 11aot u·..-'21 M~q"n1 .11 cour\t At w .. it Otc.ntt' W04'"'0 h Wl'"'4t1'1111tn 19;. 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'"" 01 •1 .,._.,. .,,., 61'41 ~., _,., OA &I•~ 6-1 1•1 ~'-•16)116 1111 i.67....... 7•1 M-'>l>-611·•l 711 10..S-111 6' 1• I •\ &7 ....... ,.,.. 66-"4·•1111-101 "'"'·611'6 l•I 6•••5'-M·Of> lM .S-68-6•·6'> l!>& 6S·f>t.lll·M Ni 6'·M·61&1! 1M 1~5--M "' 1'1 6"-6S 68 M l•I M 611.1 M l~I .... , 1>11·6'> ,., 1D ~-Ill M 1•1 6'"611 11 ·68 IMI 68-t.S 6•·1>'1 1M 61611·611-t.S-168 ~·--168 CINCINNATI (AP) -Numb· Ing 30-degree cold is forecast for tonight's nationally-televised batUe between division leaders Cincinnati and Los Angeles, but two hot-banded quarterbacks are likely to keep the opposing de- f eo.ses on the grill. The even-rated National Foot- ball League clash should warm a nationwide audience tuning in to see Ken Anderson and James Harris attack two of pro foot- ball's stoutest defenses. The game is a sellout. and des pite the near-freering tern· peratures, is expected to attract more than 50,000 fans for the Rams' first invasion of Cincin natl. The Bengals. 6·2, and Rams, 6·1·1. go into their second meet- ing ever ranked 1·2 in the NFL in fewest points allowed. Cincin- 0 11 T1' Te11l91at clla1111el 7 a t 8 nati's young defensive unit has given up just 102 points while the Rams have grudgingly yielded 106. Anderson, who tossed for a career-high 447 yards against Buffalo in bi.I last Mont.lay night appearance, may peed bis top ef- Red skin Plays I t Close fort of the season lo swp the Rams. Anderson is throwing less ·this season under new coach Bill Johnson, a former offensive line coach who set out to re·vitali%e a Cincinnati ground game that ranked among the NF1.:s worst last year. "I think we're able to run in· side more effectively now," said Johnson, wbQ stepped into the shoes of coaching legend Paul Brown. The result has kept the de- fenses more honest. helping An· derson connect on 60 percent of bis attempts. The Rams, who are seeking a fourth consecutive NFC West ti· tie, relied on the arm of Harris to ' carry them to a 12·2 record a year ago. He returned to the lineup last week aft.er inia.slng two games with a bruised rlaht shoulder and propelled the Rams to their hiabest scoring total in 10 years with a 45·6 victory over Seattle's first-year Seahawks. Anderson a nd Harris have shown they can carry their clubs single-handedly if the ground game stalls. Anderson, the only quatterback in the NFL last year with more than 3,000 yards. hit 30 Sa n Francisco receiver Gene Washington (left ) looks for the pass. but Red.ski ns comerback Joe Lavender re· aches over to break it up in end zone. No interference was called. Lavender intercepted late in the game to keep the 49ers away. /The Redskins won. 24-21. See de- tails, page B-5 . · I H ad to Retaliate--Simpson FOXBORO. Mass. (/\P > \ the first period in a game agajnst O.J .. who had run for 1,506 0 J . Simpson, one of the National the New England Patriots. yards and 14 touchdowns in 13 Football League's all time great Simpson not only took a couple previous games against New running backs. forgot a golden of retaliatory punches from England, managed just eight ruk -and got a n early seat on Lunsford, he was ejected and yards on five carries. Then he theBuffaloBills'benchSunday. s pent the r est of the game waspiledupfornogainonan end "There's an old philosophy in watching dejectedly from the s weep . Luns ford fo llo wed footb all. S1:11pson SJitl latC'r, sidelines as the Patriots posted a through and put him down hard. "The only thing f1ghtmg on the 20· ltl victory and kept alive their "This is the first time in my life field does is make vou llred. You hopes for a wild card berth in the I've been thrown out of a game.·· can't hurt anybody "ith all the ' playoffs. Simpson said. "The whistle had equipment." • "Yes. I did throw a punch," blown and the play definitely was Simpson, lured back from an Simpson said. "I got him right on over when that guy slugged me announced retirement by a $1 the jaw -and I know that's on the head. I don't mind taking million multi-year offer from the wror1g. But I've got to protect any legal shots. but I'm going to Bills just before the start of the myself. When anyone busts my let the man know when it's not a season. came up swinging after head, I 'm going to defend myself legal shot. bemg tackled by Mel Lunsford m and Jet him know about it." "On the play, two players let ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-----...._~~~~~- go of me . but one (Lunsford) kept on me and slung me to the ground. I don 't feel he was doing it maliciously. but just doing it too enthusiastically. · "When I was told by the re· feree that I was thrown out. I was stunned. It sure wasn't much of a fight. 1 just throught it would be nothing, no penalty or anything. I thought I had gotten it straight and the other m an had gotten it straight and that would be all there was to it." Lunsford, who escaped penal- ty. wound up on the ground as he was jumped from behind by Buf· falo guard Reggie McKenzie. '"He was messing with the pride and joy of the Buffalo Bills." McKen%ie said. "It's natural they want a shot at him. My immediate reaction is that I look at the matchup and I say, 'Hey, wait a minute. They's my partner.' l think he'ddothesame for me. Throwing him out was an injustice. It was a late hit." of .a in la1t. November'• 33-ao& vie· toey over Buffalo. Harris passed for 436 yards lut. month in a 31·28 victory over· Mia.ml. But. the two will be fadnl tJMf't. minded secondaries that rank first in their respective con- ferences and sack-happy front. fours. Harris bas a better backfield supporting him, beaded bY Lawrence McCutcbeon and John Cappelletti. McCutcbeob bas 664 yards this seuon and Cappellet· ti, the former Heiaman Trophy winner from Penn State, bas•· Jabhar's Play Aids INGLEWOOD <AP) -The .Lakers roared baclt from a 14· point s~cond quarter i. outscore Kansas Ci ty 26-6 durinl the early moments of the third period, and Los Angeles coach Jerry West said the uprisinc centered around Kareem Abdul-Jab~. "In the second half, Kareem completely dominated tbe boards, getting 13 rebounds, and that turned thio1s around for us," West said Sunday following the Lakers• 107·96 victory ove.r the Kings. Abdul-Jabbar finished with 24 • rebounds, his personal hip of the season, and also had 24 points as the Lakers bounced back from , a 49-45 halftime deficit. West was not happy with Los Angeles' play in the f11'8t half, which saw them blow a 31·21 first quarter lead. "We converted only one of . eight fast breaks in the first ,. half," West said. "We should be . converting at least 50 percent for buckets." The Lakers coach said he was particular ly happy with the play or reserve forward Kermit Washington, who scored nine points and always seemed to be . around the ball while be was in the game. • .t.. Washington, hampered by in· juries for the past. two seasons, . said, ·'I'm happy to be playing at all because my injuries have kept me out of action and I ha-, ven'taccomplisbedanything. , "This year, I'm gettln1 to .. move more with the offense and • to feel more a part of ~ game." '· Cazzie Russell, avera1in1 ,, more than 20 points a game for .- the Lakers this s eason, added 24 against the Kings. Kansas City. which turned cold in the third quarter -hittin1 but eight of 27 -was led by Ron Boone with 25 points and Brian Taylor with 21. Two former colI,giate stars at UCLA had inauspicious outings in their first appearance as pro- fessionals in Los Angeles. The Kings ' Richard Washington, a former Bruins All· · American, made just one of seven field goal attempts, and former UCLA guard Andre Mccarter missed all three of his shots during a brief stint in the game. l(ANSAS CITY (Ul -R00Dln1i"" 11, Wedman ,., l•cey 17, Boo"" 75 T~ylor 11, Barr•. 81~tow 2. Ea•IM S Wa\hlnQton 1 I.OS ANGELES (1011 -Ford U . Rus~tt 2', """ dut.Jabbar 14. ""•" 13. Cheney 9, C•tvln 6. Ku~< 1 Lamar 7, Wesllln91on '· l(Ansos CHY 71 '111 tO 2t -'H> Los "noetes JI H 34 29 -101 Fout•o out -Robln1fn•, Lacey. Tol•t louts - l(anus City 1J, Los An9el•• 74 Te<Mlcat - L•c•v KM.a\ Cilv cooch Johnson Abdul·Jebbar 1 ... Q,101 Girl Breaks Barrier BALTIMORE'S LYDELL MITCHELL IS TWO-TIMED BY SAN DIEGO TACKLERS. A,. Wlrnlloto BoysAccep t 140-pound Tackle CONCORD. Mass. <AP> Susan Laub is very feminine, un- til she lunges into a hardnosed tackle . This year, the 13-year-old, 140-pound eighth-grader plays right guard on the Concord Mid- dle School football team. It's the first and last year she'll play ball. "I love the s port and they ctidn't have a girls' team. so I went out for it.•· she said Friday. Her mother was not as en thusiastic. "There are a couple of kids - well. I'm not scared, but I wouldn't want to go up against them." S h e plays n ext to her boyfriend. Susan said her appearance at the tryouts didn't stir much con- troversy "because they didn't take me seriously. They thought t I'dquit." In her first gp.mc, she threw a key block in a touchdown play. The player s he blocked, she said, told her to ·· 'leave me alone.' 1 got upset and punched him in the stomach. He was goin1 to fight me, but my teammates broke it up. !Jones No Kid on Football Field ~ "I was against her playing. 1 do not want he r, .. Ann Laub said. "But the boys have been marvelous. They protect her, I think, even though she doesn't like it. They didn't have to accept her. but they did." "Honest, s h e ·s better than some of the boys on our team." says halfback Wally Magurin. "It doesn 'l bother me that she's a girl." "He had a runny look on his · race later in the game. I think be found out I was a girl." Irvine Poloists Top Arizona, 9 -5 SAN DIEGO (AP) -"Who's that kid down there?'' some or th.<t-fans wondered as the Baltimore Colts lined up against ~ San Dte10 Chargers. He was Mt Jones, and by the lime the g.tne was over, nobody wu like· lytoforget. ~ lones, who is 25 and looks 19, fiMd lhr:ee touchdown passes, propelling the Colla to a 37·21 vie· toty over San Die10 &mday in a : N.:t.iooal Foo\ball League 1ame. J,ydell Mitchell aot the 1ame's filit score, taking a two-yard paia from Jones and running 38 y~ds. Mitchell racked up 91 • yards rushing on 17 carries and 125 yards on eight receptions. J ones boosted his season pass- ing yardage to 2,067 by hitting on 18 or 25 for 275 yards against the Chargers. In the second quarter , he tossed a 16-yard touchdown pass to Roger Carr. then hit Carr with an 18-yarder opening the third period. "J had a lot of open reeeivers," explained Jones. San Diego never threatened, althouiih q uuterback Cltnt · Longley paced the Chargers to a somewhat respectable loss al\er relieving Dan Fouts, in the fourth period. Longley fired a 28-yard touchdown pass to Artie Owens with 11 minutes left then lobbed a 10-yard touchdown strike to Dwight McDonald. But it was Jones' game. His lather thinks Bert should be the NFL Most Valuable Player this season. ' The rather is Dub Jones, who set an NFL record in 1951 by scoring six touchdowns for the Cleveland Browns in a game against the Chicago Bears. Bert was 10 weeks old at the time. Bell•"'or• ' 14 1 q l1 S•n O<oQO 0 1 0 14 11 Saft Mitchell ,.0 oau from Jon,., Cl lnn"n llt(ld Bi11t McC&ul"t1r1i1n CL•nharttiiickt SO -Wnoch~run CWPr\CP'llnqliel'1t) 9.,1t C1rr ''P•,.,.from Jon~'\flln!'\1t'1 .. 1r\:\ &alt-Carr l~CM" from Jone• •l..lnl'l•rt k10 I &an-FG l•nfl•rt ~ Ball-Tr0<1p6run lki<klalledl SD-OWtM 2t o.tn from LO"Qlty 1Wor"4:111nq k1C~I S~Oonatd 10 pan from l..Of'Ol•Y u•ull•r '""' A-tU21 "IMldo~' RuSM\-U rd\ Pe"lrl<IU•O• Return yerdl Pn.es Punh 1'-n ·lo•I ""n-IUt\ yero1 STATISTICS C.lta so i• u ~191 Zt·U JOO uo ,, 0 , .. ,..1 n ;w..o 04 s •l 1.0 1 I 12·110 ._IO "Susan does a good job block- .ing, mostly with the (ullback go· ing through,·• adds quarterback Joe Delorey ' And the coach admires ber drive. "Susan is quite capable of bringing down nearly any player with a hardnosed tackle," says Dave Weeks. But Susan says she won'l play next year. "The guys are a lot bigger. and m y mother doesn 'l want me to get hurt," she says. In fact, there are some players this year who tr9uble her . Gary Figueroa Clipped in three or bis six goals in the third quarter to lead UC lrvine'a water polo team to a 9-5 victory over tbe University of Arizona &.anday In • action at Newport Harbor Hlth. The UCI Anteaters held a 3-2 halftime mar1in before Fllueroa went to work. He now &u 71 goals for the sea~on. · SC•rt lly Ottil19r\ ""'°"'' , I I 1 UClrvl"e 1 O f i UCI uorlnq Fiqueroa 6, PllilPOI. t. 1441Mell 1 , MARK MOSELEY (3) KICKS THE WINNING FIELD GOAL FOR WASHINGTON. 4P Wtt...,..,lo Official Costs Bears TD; Redskins Upset 49ers An official's inadvertent whis- tle cost the Chicago Bears a touchdown a~ the visiting Oakland Raiders took advantage to bold on to a 28·27 victory Sun- day in National Football League action. Oakland's Ken Stabler, who hurled three touchdown passes, including a pair to Clilr Branch for 75 and 49 yards, went back lo pa.ss and was hit by Wally Cham- bers. Stabler fumbled and Roger Stillwell picked up the ball and raced 50 yards for an apparent touchdown. However the ball was caJJed back. "I just blew the whistle when I shouldn't have,'' referee Chuck Heberling said. "ll was an inad- vertent whistle . 1 blew the whistle when l shouJdn 't have, so the only thing I could do was give Chicago thebaJI." On the firs t play after the touchdown was taken away, a Bob Avellinl pass was intercept- ed by Oakland's Ted Hendricks The Bears mounted a drive m the closing minutes, moving to the Oakland 14 with 15 seconds left, but Bob Thomas' 31-yard field goal attem pt bit the upnght and bounced back. Elsewhere in th,!? NFL Sunday· WASHINGTON AT SAN FllANCISCO -Joe Theismann passed for 302 yard'I, h.it Jean Fugett on TD passes or 18, 33 and 3 yards and ran for a first down oo a fake field goal play to set up t he winning field goal with 1 :57 left to pace the Washington Redskins to a 24·21 victory over the San Francisco 49ers. Tbeismann 's performance negated the runnmg of 49ers back Delvin Williams, who rushed fo r 180 yards, including TD runs of 80 and 22 yards. Williams also caugbl a Jim Plunkett pass and made 1l an 85-yard sconng play. S T . LOUIS AT PIBLADELPHIA -J im Bakken kicked a 20-yard held goal In the fourth quarter after Jim Hart ·s 40-yard pass to Ike Hanis to pro- pel the St. Louis Cardinals to a 17-14 victory over th e Philadelphia Eagles. Philadelphia had threatened with a 48-yard TD pass from Mike Boryla to Charley Smith and Dave H ampton's six-yard TD run. St. Louis equaled it with TD runs by Steve Jones and Wayne Morris from two and seven yards out. PITTSBURGH AT KANSAS CITY -Franco· Harris rambled for two touchdowns and Terry Bradshaw bit Frank Lewis with a 19-yard scoring strike as the Pit- tsburgh Steelers buried Kansas City,45-0. Brads haw h it seven of 18 passes for 132 yards and the Pit- tsburgh defense extended its scoreless s treak to 13 quarters. fl was the first shutout or a Kansas City eleven since 1963. DETROIT AT MINNESOTA -Rookie Sammy White hauled in two scoring passes and set up Minnesota's oth er two touchdowns with key catches to lead the Minnesota Vikings to a 31·23 victory over Detroit. White caught seven passes for 210 yards and nearly had another TD. except he was hot-dogging lbe ball inside the five-yard line when Lem Barney hit him from beh.ind, causing him to fumble the ball away. Fran Tarkenton completed 17 of 25 for 347 yards and his two TD passes raises his lifetime record to299. Former Costa Mesa High and OCC star Benny Ricardo had a 22-yard field goal in the first period for Detroit. CLEVELAND AT HOUSTON -The Cleveland Browns turned two fourth-quarter Houston turnovers into touchdown passes by Gregg Pruitt and Brian Sipe, breaking open a close game and Corsairs to Forfeit SoCal Grid Games? Santa Monica College re· portedly has a player who may be playing his third or fourth aeuon of junior college football. 1be player, linebacker Frank Smith, allegedly played for El Camino College in 1973 and/or 1974, before seeing action at San· ta Monica last season where he was an all-Southern California Conference first team pick. The conference, of course, knows about this and bu given Santa Monica the chance of an- nouncinJ that it will forfeit all or its victoriet this season. If the Corsairs say they are not guilty, then the coolerence will take action. But as one prolninenl con- ference rootball coach says, •'There is no doubt about It, San- ta Monica ia guilty." The Corsairs have an 8-1 re- cord this season and are 5-0 in SoCal Coftfettnce action. In last Saturday'• win over Cypre11, Smith dJd not play -which will mean that gam e wlU not be lorfeited. So, when and ii t.hele forfeits come about, Rio Hondo College '-will ba~ a 4..0 conference record, Golden West will be 3-1 and Cypress will be 3-2. If Smith had played against Cypress, the lat- ter would now be 4-1. · Thus, if Golden West defeats Rio Hondo this coming Saturday at OCC. the Rustlers would pro· bably end up sharing the title with Rio Hondo and would thereby advance to the Avocado Bowl Nov. 27. Santa Monica is not a victim of circumstances. The coaching staff reportedly knew all along of the situation. And this is not lhe first time this bas happened in this con- ference -which undoubtedly is weak administratively. There has to be a c r ac kd o wn somewhere and a suggestion might be to put any offender on suspension for a year or two - meaning no conference titles and no bowl games. * * * SaddJeback's string of four straight shutouts in Mission Con· ference football play is remarka- ble -especially with all the good place-kickers today. The Gauchos have now gone 18 quarters without being scored on -and they h ave only had nine points scored on them all season in the first half. In two pre- conference games, ~ Gauchos led Cypress, 14·3, at the halt and were locked hi a 0-0 tie with Oran,e Coast at the intennlaion. They oet both or those games. The Gauchos meet Citrus •Saturday, needing a win or a lie . to lock up another championship. the Browns beat the Houston Oilers. 21-7. The Browns took an 8-7 lead in- to the fourth quarter but a fumble recovery by Thom Darden gave the Browns the ball at Houston 's 3.S. Sipe pitched to Pruitt. who passed to Brian Duncan for 10 yards and the touchdown. Mo- ments later Bob Ba bi ch intercept- ed and Sipe flJpped a 23-yard TD pass to Oscar Roan. B UF FALO AT NE W ENGLAND Rookie Mike Haynes returned a punt 89 yards for a touchdown and Sam Cun- ningham ran for 141 yards in s parking the New England Patriots to a 20·10 win over the Buffalo Bills. The Patriots capitalized on numerous Buffalo errors and O.J. Simpson was ejected from the game in the first period for fightm~ after being tackled by Mel Lunsford of New England. • Former Golden West College ace Randy Vataha caught two passes for 50 yards for the win- ners. MIAMI AT NY JETS -Bob Griese threw a pair or touchdown passes and the Miami defense turned in its s econd straight solid showing as the Miami Dolphins beat the New York Jets. 27·7. Griese threw scoring strikes of 18 yards to Jim Mandich and 16 yards to Nat Moore. wh.ile Garo Yepremian kicked field ~oals of 44 and 34 yards. The Jets were held scoreless until 3:34 remained when Clark Gaines plunged over from e yard out ATLANTA AT SEATl'LE - Scoring 16 points in the th.ird quarter lo assume a :J0-6 lead, the Seattle Seahawks ripped hapless Atlanta, 30·13. at the winne r's field Four interceptions or Atlanta aerials a nd the running of Serman Smith, who becam e the first Seahawks back to rush for over 100 yards in a game, keyed the triumph. Seattle's first over an established NFL team. The clincher was with 8:48 left in the third period when Al Mat- thews intercepted a Scott Hunter pass and returned it 40 yards for a TD to m ake it 23-6. TAMPA BAY AT DENVER - Quarterback Steve Ramsey com- bined with Haven Moses on a 71-yard pass play to launch a 38-point second half explosion as the Denver Broncos routed win- less Tampa Bay. 48·13. Dave Green had put Tampa Bay ahead, 13-10, with a 35-yard field goal with four minutes left in the third quarter. But a minute later Ramsey hlt Moses and then Denver's defense took over. contributing three touchdowns a s t he Broncos scored five touchdowns and a field goal In a span of 8Y.t minutes NY G IANTS AT DALLAS - The winless New York Giants al· lowed the Dallas Cowboys no touchdowns. but it wasn't enough as Dallas held on for a 9-3 vie· tory. The Giants had a shot at the up· set in the waning moments, but Dallas defensive end Harvey Martin knocked the ball loose from quarterback Craig Morton ort a' fourth down play at the Dallas five-yard line. NEW ORLEANS AT GREEN BAY ....... Will Har rell scampered 32 yards to the New Orleans seven-yard Une. then swept over from the two with 4:47 to play to r ally the Green Bay Packers to a 32·27 victory over the New Orleans Saints. Lynn Dickey's 13-yard pass to . Ken Payne lttnited the decisive drive and Harrell broke off tackle ror his tun oo the next play. Monday, November 8. 1918 DAIL V PILOT .. Prep Football Mustangs Bid For Loop Title 'l'he scramble for the South Coast League foot. ball championship and CIF 2·A playoff berths come to a conclusion this week with Costa Mesa .Higb's Mustangs sitting atop the heap following Friday's wave of upsel.s. The poss,bilities are numerous wJth this final salvo, which includes the following Friday night tussles: Costa Mesa tS·l) vs Corona del Mar (4-2) at Newport Harbor ; Dana Hills (3 -3) at San Clemente (4 ·2)~ University ( l ·4) at automatically, having a l rea dy bea t e n Westminster and Foun· l ain Valley, combined with a one-game lead with one game lert .. Also Frtaay will be Marina of· Huntington Beach and N ewport Harbor at Westminster. Saturday's schedule finds Estancia closing out Centul"Y League ac- tion at Tustin and Mater Del and Anaheim's Servile clash in a S o'clock Uff at La Palma Park in Anaheim. • Laguna Beach (4·2); and J hn k El Toro ll·S) al Mission 0 COC Vieio C2-4) in a clash of traditional rivals. If Costa Mesa wins or ties, the Mustangs are Captures I c hampions . B u t if USAC Corona del Mar wins, along with San Clemente Title and Laguna Beach, it PHOENIX (AP) - would. lhr~w the final Johnny Rutherford lost st and_mgs ~nto a four· the U.S. Auto Club na- way tie for flrst place. tional dri ving cham- Another thought: Ir pionship by 20 points C«;>sta 1!fesa a nd Dana S unday to Gordon Hills wm, and Laguna Jobncock B_each loses, it would .Althou0gh J ohncock give Mesa the crown and came in second in the leave S~n Clemente, Bobby Ball 1 50 at ' Dan a Hills , Laguna Phoenix International Beac.h and Coron~ del Raceway to Al Unser Mar m a four-wal-'. tie for that was a ll be needed to second place -with pro-win the USAC cham· bably «;>ne ~r t WO or the pionship. four 1nv1led to the Unser, driving a playoffs. Coswort Ford led from In other games Friday the 89-lap th~ough the night the Edison. High checkered nag. He cov- Chargers of Huntington e red the 150 miles in ~ach will be _al J:lunt· 1 :23. 34.14 and earned mgt.on Beach H1~h IJl an $10,578. attempt to claim the But J ohncock took S~nse~ League c!lam· home $20,000 of the p1_onsh1p over the winless $50,000 purse on the point Oilers. . count for the c bam· F o u n t a 1 n V a 11 e y , pionsbip ranked No. 1 in the CIF Ruther cord and 4-A and O~ange Co.unty Johncock were in a tight , before bowmg to Edison, batUe before Rutherford . f a c e ~ d a n g e r o u s went out on the lllth lap Westm.mster at Or~ge of the 150-lap race with a . C<?ast tQ .a game which broken oil line. will decide the No. 2. Mario Andre tti •Sunset League en.try f<?r finish e d third a nd the playoffs. Edison is Johncock's t eammate t h e N o . 1 e n l r Y Wally Dallenbach was f our th . Roger McCluskey was fifth. WIN PRIZES WORTH $3,600 IN '76. Sponsored by Weekly Pigskin Pickeroo •75 winners will share prizes worth more than $330 by selectl(lg their cholce.1 of the win- ners of 30 weekend football contests. The' Daily Pilot reader best predicting the outcomes of Pigskin Pickeroo '76 games will win a one-year membership at the Nautilus Newport physical fitness center, 4220 Von Karman Avenue, Newport Beach. Second place winners will enjoy a di""' ner for two at the Moonraker Restaurant in Irvine, Reuben's Newport Beach or Reuben's Costa Mesa. · Third place winners wlll be awarded free car washes by Metro Car Wash Systems at Harbor near Baker Street In Costa Mesa and Beach at Ellis Avenue in Huntington Beach. ..,qSlu1' Pich•-;,~ requlAr 1u1ureoll1W °"""Not~·~ S.tJtOftC:illCftMond.1y. T~•d•Y•ftd~w. RULES Servile Tops Poll There were three times the race was slowed down. The first mishap came between d 1. S<IOt'nll tM flllrv "1""~ below°' a ,. • .....,..., 1acslm1111 ol '' to .. ,·. •:· . ,'( .... •,, l .'..._. , .' '1 ' l' the 2Jf a nd 27th )ap "'I~ llW ~onlf\I "RU\on•bltlKi<l'Nle" "*IUltillUn ••u•<t when Lloyd Ruby hit the =~·T~o~';;,e.~~;:~·~:'=.!.~1·~·d=:J.01•<11iu•c , • Angelus League power r bet th fi t ' ence ween e II'S 2. 5eft4 •t to: PIGSKIN PICKEROO, '7', s~ 0.-lmoftl, P.O. Servile High of Anaheim andsecondturns. 11o .. u60,co•u"'-.a.c"'•m•. has taken over the No. 1 Again the race was 3.0tiiy_..,.,,.,.,,..,un"""'""N<""'"'~·Co<1W"•""",. ,~ spot in the orficial slowed between the 47th ~'!4.:!:1~~~·:::,a,::·~:~~.~!.:=:;~':'~.~:~.!1~1~1~: .~ Orange County r ankings and filst lap when Spike ~-1 ..,,,.., """ d•wo••""' o.cn'°" 011...,,.,"" ""' '°'"' ~ '\ following the wave of up-Gel h ausen a nd Tom mt6t1>e ac:ceio1t<1•••1t•"'tv•11c .... 1••••n•" '1'' sets the past weekend Bigelow collided in the "'"'"'o•~• 0 •• 1, P1101co•1u ..... 0111coHP M. "· Entntt rnu>I be p0tfm•rk~ not l•ltr ,...,.,. Frl<l•Y <W mu•t be d9-~·". ra~~h ~aa~ I ~yo .. 1 J'o~j third turn. A final cau-s. ~~I!'.1oump101u•nd1i.e.r1,..,,..., .... ,.,.,11, .... ,.,...1e11gn11e tion period luted from •. TIE BREAKER BLANK MUST tlE f'ILl..EO IN OR ENTRY 1$ • Cypress and No. 4 La the lllth lap to the l2Slb vo10. ·1.o Habra ambushed. la p whe n Ruthe rford I•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ~ ingt.E~j~~"ea~~~hof~fiL~~~: b~oke an oil line. putting : ENTRY BLANK ,~ ... h.im outoflhe race. : tory over Fountain • Valley, moves into the : No. 2 slot, a notch ahead. Area Prep . of the F V Barons, who : were also ranked No. l in : theCIF4-A. F b U : New to the Top 10 is 00t 8 • Garden Grove's Pacifica : High, a 3·A Power with JUNIOR VU SI TY : su ... 111,0...rten • unbeaten credentials. NflW110r1H•rt1o• , & o t4-n . Pacifica moves into the H""' &e«11 o o o o o No. 8 position. A\~~on-.c':."~~J.~!;i•Qu•n, Corum. ORANGE COUNTY ~1mlns~:,•0 h°""7,-'! 1 ._,s TOPlO ~,1,,.. o 1 o 0-1 I. Servile (7·1) 52 P~~:i.'cortno: To-c:.,-. 2. Edison (6·2) 50 SOPHOMou · 3. Ftn. Valley (7-1) 48 C0>t•Me.!<.,..,.,a....~·r; 0 ,.~1 4.SA Valley(7·1) 28 E1 Toro 0060-6 0 5. Villa Park (7·1) Z1 CM scorlnq· TOs-Lun<I, Ting, • 6. Anabel·m (6·l ·l) 23 Miller PAf-Elt>ourn. N•u-n : toanl. ET; TO-ShV"r\, • 7. Los Alamitos (6-2) 17 sorellyOu•rt•rs • P · f 08"1! Hiii• 0 7 20 0-77 • 8. ac1 lca(8·0) 13 1..a9una8"<1<11 Jo a 0-11 • 9. Cypress (7-1) 10 OH tc:or1nq· T~-P•rker, Sales. : JO. La Habra (7·1) 8 ~ .. :~~1~~1;4T-s11•sl.LB~1"'.: "I live in $5@11W© &tJUM but bought my new car in ~~~from • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • JOHNSON 6 SON" ~ Low Pnce and being rreoted lll<e o member of 1he John!>on Family, was w orth going out of my way for Thor's why I recommend you drive ro Johnson & Son Their Golden Touch service 1s •he ONLY woy 10 buy Give em o rry They make you feel real 1mporton1. And ro me. thor is 1mporron1 Jock Hix Sonto Ano ORANC( COUNTY S Ol0£5T ll~N MERCURY OCAllRSlllP ~YEARS Of. IRl(N~Y fAMll Y ___ SfllVICEt Ir J1cL *'""'* **''·-I . -W-+1m3ue+•t;!f . ohnson&son 2626 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA ~O·S6JO • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • . • • I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • N.ame ..................................... . Address ••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••• City •••••••••••••••.••.•.•.. Zip •••••••••• Ptlctntt •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .., ,;. ... ·' Circle tHms you think will win this WHk's g.irnes ; . St. Louis vs Rams Denver vs San Diego Green Bay vs Chicago Houston vs Cincinnati Kansas City vs Oakland Miami vs Pittsburgh New England vs Baltimore Phlladelphla vs Cleveland San Francisco vs Atlanta Seattle vs Minnesota Tampa Bay vs NY Jets WaShlngton vs NY Giants Stanford vs Oregon Waahlngton vs USC UCLA vs Oregon State Kansas vs Colorado TexaavsTCU SMU VI Texas Tech Alabama vs Notre Dame llllnola vs Michigan Ohio State vs Minnesota Nebraska vs Iowa State Missouri va Oklahoma Oklahoma State vs Kansas.state West Vlrgf nfa vs Pitt Brown vs Columbia Baylor vs Rice Syracuse va Boston College Mfsllulppl vs Tennessee Washington State vs Cal TIE BREAKE R -My guess on the total number of points Kot"ld In •II JO games Is DAILY PILOT ! t• .j :. >; . .... ,., .. ,,•, : .. , ~ ., ... : ,, . w . . . .. • • # . .. .. i ;- • .. • • • • . . ... • • -.. • • . . : .. , • • • • :· r . -~ • • .. , • • .. • • • . • • • • • ·t ~·, ..~ :~, :3 1'.:i :v : t < .~ ••..............••..................•.•••. /. ~ Oilers Champions Reunite The 1926 Huntington Beach High vars ity football team returned to the Oilers campus recently for the 1976 Homecoming . Coach Cap She ue's team shared the Orange Leag ue championship and all of the starters r e· turned after a half century. Kneeling (from left) - Boyd Davis, Carl Stricklin, Harl Crockett. Tom Berry, Keith Farrar, Bill Gardner. Gardener Willmarth. Stand· ing -Nelson Barry, Don Murdy, Alfred Stinson, Luke Davis, Sheue. Gauchos' Mitre··Kid in Candy Store By CRAIG SHEFF Of Int O•tl~ Piiot Sl•ll Two years ago Tony Mitre. a top high school linebacker at St. PauJ in Santa Fe Springs, wus heavily r<'cru1ted by Stanford University. But Stanrord wanted Mitre, a 5 ·11 , 215· pounder to go to a junior college for a year, and then transfer Mitre didn 't want any or that. "I dldn't want to go lo a JC. so when Arizona of fered me a scholars hip, I took it," says Mitre. He earn e d a l e tter at Arizona. but became dis· en chanted and came home. A few months later he look a ride to Saddlcback with his brothe r John who was interested in playing f ootball and basketball. Tony liked what he saw, asked if he could try out for the football team a nd was immediately granted permission. Checking Out . Pro Standings E'ootllall NATIONAL FOOT8ALL lEAGU" llMERICAN CONFERENCE E.Httrn Otv• .. '~" W L T l'tl fM'htT'I '' · 8 I f) ~.\• ~ NE:•ql,,.'1 *> 1 'l .. ~I Mi 1rn• i., _. 1 \\~ PF PA 11~ t t? ,,, ,,._. JIQ l~I 0 ;H 11 ' " I 0 17 '"'' I~" NV J• h ? ' n 1'1 1' 711 CC"ntr,11 D•""',," WESTERN CONFE~ENCE ~jdw'U 01v1111on II(.-"' •l\,. • ., i'lf;J "'. I ~ 1 M) '% M '""'t'k"'•' '4 J').1 •, P .. c1t1c. Olv•\1on p, .... '"' I'll ' '1~1 '...,.HP,. ' f\"'111"" ' --.Jl ) r./Jl·l-""v., . ., I II; <1l'\!'•"1f'll1• 1 ,., .. a> P•H\O•Jr 1•1 C•··Y'"·l 1n1 Ho1•ll)'1 I fl • ._, 11" ) • ,, ~\I) ti) ,,, i \ I) U t tri 1-.1 Wt\1U n 0 1¥1\IOn Olklrln'1 ., 1 ') •tl tO ,.,. 0--n"• r i 1) .... '11 '', ~,,..o .. , i -. n u1 ,.,, ,., "'""'"' (ty , -· It 1'4' T1tno,q1v 'I q• n'V) Ii.at .11 NATIONAL COHI'( llCNCE £•\t•'" 0 •¥•\•on ". ..... 4. ... ~ ,,.., .. ' . . . .. I I IV) C•"'".tt 0 1¥1\•'tl"I ... . ' I Ill w'''*'" o"' ,,.,. ' ,. ..,, . I\ •·' . ' <I• I 1 ' I t ii t •'"lo •\lo ,. ,, ' . ' ,, • ' I Sund.iy 'G•'"'"' It.• t•1I 'I ''Jl (h· Vf'I \n107 (>.ff'l)•l \I~ "'4ttN t)t'I t"\ fflt f 4 "'J· 1""• I('" t (Iv Hr. ,. •'1 1'1 t •1 "''.,-'("I i. I \. t'' •'t C'"'I ,., ,.., ' I r-"'tt•Qttl \G4m~"" ~., 1 ..,, "l 1J 1 HATIONAL .. OCKEY LEAGUE CAMl'afLL CON l'E II EHCE P•lriCll 0 1,nt10" W l. T i"cl ~ 0 4 N Y t l1nd-t ti\ ) ) 17 \J "'"' I I) , h \,.I 1t "' ·"·· I\ ~ ) 1 \ 411 \.t '• I ooi t , \ ,. 1 , , • 1 w, Sm1•"-t O•¥•tto1111 ' ~ 0 ·~ "11 ..., ' jt t H Sit <.P V ''"' •t• , t I 1' 4t '· 3 M "',.._"'' t .4 11') 1 ' lt M r1.11 'r, l<'t ' 1n ' 1 ...,, ... ._ WALU COHl'IEltF .. CE HOf'rt' O lv•\IOl"I '. 1 1 ~\ \l •l'l.4 11,. ; \ IO And tha t turned out to be a bonus for him and the school. His play, t hus far, borders excelle nce, says Gauchos de£ensive coach Dick Stuetz. ·He's one reason why Saddleback is 5·0 in Mis· sion Conference play, ha s s hut out four straight opponents and has had only s ix points scored against it in the five games. "He's like a kid in a candy store on the foot· I I • ,. ' D ''"" 1•t • l>-'11J1 N,,,,,,., '' I ' \ q p • ,,.,U))"lf't--...._ 1 " , • 11 "'. •,\ f).1 • Ao~"'' O•v,\11',, ball field," says Stuetz. "He's the best all-round linebacker we've had, and we've had some great ones," says Stuetz. "We've had guys who were great against the rush and other guys that were great against the pass, but never have we had someone of Tony's caliber who can play the rush and pass equally well." Ile is talented because he is quick and in- telligent, says Stuetz. "H e's intense, he knows the ga m e, he studies films a nd he re- cognizes things that we give him immediately. But the thing he does best as a player Is to shed the blocker . In seven games now I doubt if he's been thoroughly blocked two or three times. He's a lways rig ht there around the play," says Stuetz. Mitre has never played on a losing team-in fact he's only been involved in five losses in six years -two in four years at St. Paul . two al Arizona and two at Saddleback. Mitre is confident and realistic about his ability and his future. "A s a middl e linebacker I'm mostly responsible for the inside running game and l 'm a little hesitant to get back on the pass. I 'm not a complete player yet, but r m gelling there, .. says Mitre. a business major. Now a standout on the JC level he once wanted to avoid. Mitre hopes Stanford is s till looking. ''I'd like to stay in California and a degree from Stanford really means so methin g . Academics mean a lot to me and I am playing rootball so I can com. plete my education." lf Stanford isn't look· Ing; the-re probably as a long list of colleges that are. GWC Kick er s Bid for T itle • 1 I • I ~ ,...., '1 ' ,, )'t Wl ,, '';If•'"' ' \ 1 1'> '19 --- Golden West College's soccer team bids to WTap up the So uth er n California Conference championship Tuesday, ilosting Santa Monica at 2:30. . ,. j •t ' "• • t01 ., J At t t I T"11t1'tM \ (j ,..,_ '\ 1111tft t G 1"'\C• 'v "\I \ r l I, \\ l •••• ,,, J 4 I l l' t\ 5Yftd.ity \ Ci•rnt• J\,,,, t i 'I Pf\ •4'.,.l('>f\1 t 1 P '' rt ''1" 1 n • .,., '""u 1 At ,n,,.') Q.•t""' 11 A'"' I• J " .. " ",,..,,I -·- Gwc·s Rustlers have a 7· i con ference mark SAOOLEBACK'S TONY MITRE while second place Santa W 1 \h•l'IQI .n .t M tt\"-""'' 'J' ( l.._~ ... ,jn ,.,, Aq11 --------Monaca 1s 6 ·l ·i. The College Footbal l Scliedule circuit winner will face the South Coast Con- ference victor (probably Santa Ana ) in the first rouna of the Southern Cal playoffs Nov. 16 . • ,. 1 .._.._,.,. .. ' -..,. 1' G•m" Jt•1•1. ' H.1t1en41t ""'''Ut'•" AH~Ctltl•f'I E•~Tl'ltN CON"l'lllEHCE Afl1tf'ltl( 0 1Vl\t0" p"111ftt•t,,.,, N V 11t o1 111 "" '"P'\ Ji+,Pi•I• NY N"' -_, L P<t Oil m t I •I ...... ..., t Cflntf 11 Olvl\l'-n ("l•\f"I ,,._ t ~ l ilt-1 N •NO•',. tr\ 1 .,,, J 1 ..._.,"''""' V t l \Va,1•un11t i., VW) t Atf;11"t 1 Ci•"'".,,, .... "' .. ... 111 \., ',., .. .,, ' I "ttn I WEST •J~ A at t'lr,.,,..,, \t-tt• W•\h•n'l'OI\ •' U\(. W•'"'""l',...., ~,,.,,. 4' (<1' •""'"", \' ''"''f)f' t •I f)r• onn ""'"' .. "• St.lt" "' M1'w 1 ., qM '-'" •n• • ,, .. ,,. ,., P" t rtQ"t1 UIA~ \tAt,. 1t ~Art tJ 1 > \! •'-•'hQl-\1 N"• M• •ffn \1,.1111 *"' 1, '"''St•'"' l\lqf\t f" At ... ''" t F ""'"' ~0"' • ,tt C"' \t,1'"" fl.81 nlQM llOC!t:ll'S ColnrM'k> \t"t• M 4 r11n"' ""l~' 1Jt1" "' -.rltl')l'IA ~' "" "''l'H OVUAf N~wMI>• ,,, nu')M ICA"''"' At Co•nrl'On Wv11m1"q11t T'""' <r• P.-. . .,. n.qnt MIOWfH tlhnG1\ •t M lth •QAn O'\~o ~11'1• ~' Mmn,.,.,,' At 'b--"'T' 1 11 Notr• Q,vn• N•t>f•''-• 4111 tt)w} c;tAt ... Ml~\l"l•lfl'I ""o~t.itrtnm .. o"'•"'°"' .. St•t• ,11 K 1,,,"' ,..,, .. w,c..,"' •. ,q,,1 ,.,, ~1,."'<1""\1 .,,. ,.,,. ''"""'" '""''n ()11rtfJ ti c,,,,.,,,n111 \o*-""""" 11l1no•'AI """''1"'1(..,,.~ l'Yf .. ,,_,\l-41••tWlcf\1t' )tf\I,. r ~· , l~ of'.-,. Kenl 'StA1• \t M •<1'1"1i tO• ~OUT .. f'lf')f'Q•• At 4uOun\ M•"'\''"00• 111 f"'n"'''"'• l it;U Al M 1 \!\\•DOI f\t,llf• C,,.,,,,,,,, 41 Maryt.,nd f'lryru1.1 ,, !(,.,,,,,. ~., 0,,., • .\t NM It'\(. Ul')linA '1 "l" V1rrt1ni.• ,,, Nl)rt"' '=""'lln" C1~1'd"' At W1!t11tm AM 'HV ~"'°"'' Sl ''" ,, t'>Ut\¥111,. PM,,n Stat• ~I M1•ml, ~•• w.,., .. Fore't •I South Cerolln1' vo1 .it A1ctH"ono Aut!1"'r\ "' T oli\n• 4,, ~ore• M v.'""'''"~"' SOUTHWEST T•ca' A&M at Ar-.,.,,,., R.tylor at At<" ~1orid• Stat• -11 North T••:c•\ ')tattt Nabers Cadillac has something you should know about A l~asing plJn fur the CadillJc of your choice. .lust ~frc 11s a call und we 'II show y1111 hnw easy If is to least any 11/ nur Cadtllars -and for less than>'"" m'i~ht Nabers Codillac 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costl Mae (714) 54()..9100 ....- \Mu1w r.-,.., Ter i\ f,.,, \tf(U N ( l.u.J1\1,_,,.,.. .ttl Wt\t T•"tt\Stal,, EAST W.-\I V1rQ1n1• it! P1lt Y ,,,,. ~I H6rvAr,, Col')•I~ •t Army ~., .. , ,, .-'' 6'>"'10,, Co1••on Ar,,.,.n u f .. flhJmbf" Pftr1n ti Curf\ttll Odr1rn0\Jt.,, l~ Print•tl'J" Ho•y Cr'l\\ "' Vttl V'IOVi1 r1"'1)tt)l4\ f,.rn "' ,.,,.,°'" The Rus tlers · Abel Dorado and Juan San· doval, both fresnmen, continue to lead the state in scoring. Dorado has 'Z1 goals and Sandoval has 25. ( llH)\11 I ~ WMIM141 A 11 popular make cars a nd trucks at competitive rates. Ford, Buick , Cadil· lac, Chevrolet, Chrysler, Oldsmobile, GMC trucks. Many '77s on display and ready for immedi ate delivery, or order now for early fa ctory delivery . Free loan cars to lease customers . THEODORE ROBINS LEASING CO. l.f "!1mU8 20:.~t~~.:'.vd. 540·1211 or 842-0010 Irvine Favored .. •, In National ·Finals.:; UC Irvlne is the over· And Miller says Scott whelmlng favorite to re-has also improved. Scott peat as NCAA (Dlvlslon was a finalist in the JI> cross country cham-1,500 -meter Olympic pion when the annual trlalslasts ummer. meet is held Saturday at All of UCl's rUJUlers Springfield, Missouri. will be back next season The Anteaters, behind when the Ante aters t h e r u n n l n g o r switch to Division 1 and sophomore Ralph Serna, Miller is optimistic freshman Eric Hulst and Irvine can be a con· junior Steve Scott, have ·tender for NCAA honors. brHzed past the opposi-"We're going iflto tion with relative ease Division I next year with this season and fig~ to the thought of winning win the NCAA title the NCAA c ham · without too much pro-pionsbip. We are re· • bl~m . , . . dei1igning the program In fact it. s a possibility and recruiting toward that Serna. Hulst itnd that goal," says Miller. Scott could tie for the No. 1 spot ln Saturday's race. The top six runners in Oak Tree the Division II m eet will LEN MILLER advance to the Division I championship the follow· ing week a t Denton, Tex. As usual, UCI coach Len Miller is optimistic. Race Results , "We have a realistic -chance or breaking the NCAA re cord of 33 points," says Miller. The Ante aters' chief competition will pro· .b a b I y c o m e f r o m Soulhwesl Mi ssouri State, the hos t school which won the Division 11 crown two years ago. Others running for UCI include freshman Don Moses and juniors John Koningh, Robert Slick and Ed Ahlmeyer. Serna won the NCAA Division II individuaJ ti· lie last season, Scott was fourth. Slick finished 22nd and Ahlmeycr was 30th. ··serna has h ad a s uper year," says Miller. "He gained a lot of con- fidence as a freshman and now he 's a world class runner. And it's helped Ralph to have Hulst and Scott to train with." Hulst, sa ys Miller. has had to make some ad· j ustments in college after an ou tstanding prep career al Laguna Beach High. "It hasn't been a piece of cake this fall for Eric. lle's had to make a lot of adjustments. There was no way he had to extend himself in high school the way he's had to ex· tend himself running in practice with Serna and Scott.·· says Miller. .. And he didn't have the type of com petition in high school he has here. lie didn't have to get up as much in high school ... but at Irvine every race is u hard race." ' How much ~ willdoit for you? We find WBY.StO help. C nr'1mcrc1al Cred11 '<. be,'n tw1p•ng pPople lor more tJ111n SI)¢\/ y~MS. So what l'Vl'f you need .. a rev. hundred . or 11 f('IA• 1hou<."1nd. 1ust bring us your problem Vk'll find ways to help. COMME~ClAL CR.EDIT PERSONAL LOANS ro~tn :II •'" :1;11 E. l'ilh !'1r .. ·l Phonl' 1: l :i-117011 Clrl\Oll't' 1111 'I "" n & rn11r1lr>· Hd. :-\11 ilA• :!•· l'h••l\11 ;, 17-rlSil I I• h• l,lf, If' UrtHtr• A, •ll•l1lt ,, f'.ll~'h"' "''"''"''"' •' • .. , ,1, n.,ft .. •A 'ft'' It, """rr•t h>" t'111nl'l'H:rr1al (. ,.ff'dt l'I""· lt1ft"f"'"''M OPPORTUNITY knocks nflt>n when you u•u• rl'sul1 11rttlng Doily Pilot Clu11s1f1cd Ad~ to rruch thv Ornnge Coast rnurk~t. Phom~ t.42-5678 l'orSutHlay Ctur&l'a11 l'lllST llACI! -1"" m•lt\ Oft turl J 'l@c1r olds 6. uo Allowanc"\ Pur~ , .. 000 Calc•dor (Toro i ' oo I tJ> 3 loO Gume<tlnOO II IVe•v•••' JI llO '~ !oer•flno CP1•rrnl 1 llO Time-1,.t73''\. Al\O Ran -Newburg II, DltYOll!d EffO<I. Sir Al•Un<ler, Prince H•rold, Envel-, C•lbally, Mour•I, Alpny Bov. Scratched -Amal9am•te. Foxy Hiii, Sl!COHO llACI! -6 lurlonQ• hHt old 111110. Allowance\. Pur\•\12.000. Oon'sM~a•c IT0<0) 1l 10 ~ 00 I 00 FrltnCll Row (CorMro Jr I 6 60 • 00 Palrl>Olnl ( Poerce I 6 )() Time-I lOl1S At so llan -Cute S••I••. Com· pensator, Mr "n CollrPn Poficv Quoen. Bib•. lnceltbrAhOft Pwnny Pueblo Jtl\lka Fly A-rou"" Scr•t<Pled -Gral\M 8 t1q llKamt A L•rti.. Wnere Art Tt\ou C..nely B<on1e O.lly Oou~I•. 11·C••<•doo a l·Dotl'• '''"'IC, ,.1 d\'5 00, THllllO llACE -·~·, lurl~ 7 year otd ma1de>n <Olt\ & qe10109\ t>rt'O '" C•lil Pur\e \10,000 L<>'d V~t•nt n • (PlnoyJr) • 70 1111) 1..0 SolllOpin10" IV••Q.,ol J 20 1 NI W•MV O.nctr lLamborll J 20 Tlm<1 -I l& 4 'I Al\O R•" -Crafty Al C~nl•••>r>l•I Pr•OO. P•QinQ Tiie (la\\. AIOia Orlve NO\t-'41(h~s. FOURTH lllACE &', ruriono\. Maidttns l year old~ & uo Pur\l' \10 000 !>tare~ IM~nal 0() Fl iinQdU\l V CMcH rHQUi•) , ,.., \ ¥1 Rom~,,,,,. q~VP.1M fSnl')~n·hf•i·r) \ ,.0 O()O••quellf1ed from '" & Ol~c•<I ,.,., Tomo-1 16111 Alw Ra" -Sentry II. F1._..1 Gfonot Latu•. Ou\lt To Ou•~. Sor Com """""''· Tlmb<ook S.ut 'r s...,, Sri• Ro•o Raooor-t. Oamaitu\ Sword. Brovm Fo• '-->i.vo (Sllorm•kerl P,-eoi<ltMy 1011\ICOl•l Tl""" 1 •9 Al\oO R~n -Fl"t StW'tcll, S!*>Qltt At>d EH""'· Sky Cllnrllt'r. Pw•Jil>•tli R•k"r Str .. et. Bron1e Tombln, CNer \ Dully, S_.t L•d, Fuy Grampe. :l. StrattlleO-Aoy•I Rella. • ... I SIYI NTH llACI! -1 1116 miles, S Yfl•• otd\ & up. Allow•n<H. P\lfw \11.000 A.tdi•nt 8ov CToro I 38, '° 11.00 •.40 TOllYi Oouble (McHugue) 1.00 •.OO Shan"" CC.Or.i.rol (,lo() Tlme -1011~ Also Ran -Miity SIOl\e, LI,,. Of. 1ocer Coft" Groul\dl. YerOll\ II, E6-lnqton Ho.er etches l!IOHTl4 llACI -I 1116 mites. 2 ~··· Old\ Sl•ku Purs. SI00.000 •dOtd. Nor1ol~ SI.Ike. H•bolOllY (Slloe,,,8k., I A Atot41'1• IT oro 1 340 JOO H O 1.0 uo 4.00 l Hty Hty J P IC.ot!Mro I Tlr~• 1 •1 A El,,,..l\<loft_,,.defttry NoKt•I<~\ NIHTN ltACE -P"t tnitK 3 yWr ·.,, ol<I\' up. St•rttri allowa"cei. Pune ,., 000 R~bo'I q4l<1er ITorol 1160 uo S.00 C1lla<1t Umb ICUPtdtll S.10 l.tll Mo•! 91Qded IOllvartO ,,.. Tl,,,.-1 '91 I Stratclled -Tit Tit Volle yball OlllLS VOLLIYaAU. YAllSITY LaQUne Brl>C~ d~I CO<-del Mil, 10-1\. 116 II • • JUl41011 VA HI TY ,• CVD'I• del Ml>r <111 Ulg,.... &tech ll-11 16-U U·l? No \Cratch"s l'IP'TH lllACI! -6 lurlooo' l vra• -;:=1;;;;9;;7;7:;:::C;=A:::::;R;:S:;:;;;;; ot!t\ & up C.tA1m1n1 Pur\,.11l 1),0 N~•t (ti11rn IP•iv.••' I •O 1m 1 l!ll & TRUCKS C•~n ICO•~rol I lO • bl) W1tr\Ao•omb 1s-i11cr\f \ 40 Time l ()II I I • At<o R•n -P"ddv w ••~. <h•o Lout\ l J,.rry JOt\'1 Hi1' TO Rut\, .. At-ttfmttn, 8r.tt\ 801 Srr1tch'"d -C. Cru1\tr It~ 4 ~•'1uo. Yew H•w Ju,..ct1oh U £0<11 ).HHI Cl•1m a 9·CrCICNn, 1>110 14.MI. SIXTH llACI! ·-l'to mll•• on lur1 J Yf'ar ohH & uo Allowantf·~ P\Jf'ie \U 000 H11>0y Slrtng> fRamu~1 (OIMUIC JUIOHY MEN • LOOK YOUNOtll IM'110Vl YOUl AmAlANCt •fr•••,..M •hn • ...... ,,. ... ..,.... ••• f.M .. ,,.. fOtf (J .. I ~~ It# tOf'twlMl'IM AMlllCAN COIMITIC IUIOllY CINTH INC. •SJl ..... A••· WHtmfntNr ...170 LOW LEASE RATES! All makes! 833-0555 Please ask for "RAY" ,:::;;,,, We offer to buy your old vehicle. HOWARD Chevrolet RARE SAU! 2 quarts: s 2J.OO 1/2 gallon: 1845 You save s2.5 86 PIOOI ~ed Scotch~ 1976 P.ddingt0n Ccxp.. NY ...._ ...... , .. What's OB Mean? In this case, OB means Ocean Beach. That was whe re RacheaJ Polisher, 17, was bound recently when car picked her up in Laguna Hills at Paseo de Valencia entrance Monday. November 8. 1976 to the freeway. She was en route from Venice. Hitchhiking is not a r ecommended m eans of travel for young women, even young wome n with big dogs. DAILY PILOT •1 · Purchase~; ~ Of 'Jaws'r Planned A "Jaws of Life" power rescue tool used to extract accident vtc· ! tims from automobiles will be "' purchased by the Cily ot Costa :• Mesa. .' The Hurst Power Rescue Tool,:. along with power shenrs, will be •• purchased fi'om Western States ~· Fire Apparatus of California, in Diamond Bar, Cor $5,031. • The gasoline· powered device Is capable of lifting, prying and separating crushed metal in or-• der to pull accident victims from ! a vehicle. The tool can also move heavy ; objects, and can be operated by one man. The Diamond Bar firm was the only bidder to meet city specification for the power tool purchase, city officials said. Pact Approved SUNNYVALE (AP) Teachers here have voted to ac- cept a new two-year contract • after a nine-day walkout. Haroard: No OM 'Mush' Student, 63, Endorses School's Policy From AP Dispatches Freshman Harry Gersh says he picked Harvard University because it fits his "theory of education for the elderly -no feeding them 'mush' courses and talking down to them, not making de· mands on them ." At 63, Gersh is the oldest man to enter Harvard, as far as officials can recall. The 38-year-old tenor, a convert to serious music since 1965. is in fact the principal grandeur or . the new production which opened in New York City Wagner's classic. often regarded as one of the most sluggish in the entire repertoire, was last done by the company eight years ago. ' KoUo bas a voice powerful and warm, of greal range and dramatic capabillty, Glover wrote. * By tbe-~lated Press Higher paper costs and bigger advances paid to authors for blockbuster novels have boosted the price of paperback books to record levels. But some industry spokesmen say the increases have leveled of C. Gersh, who graduated from high school in 1930, retired last March as a writer with a n actuarial firm. He said be got the idea of going to college "when the prospect arnved that nine years of tui, Milli Theodora.Ids, the r enowned Greek com· poser . said he 1s considering a move to Sweden in the face or increasing friction· with the Communist party. Many paperbacks are selling for $2 and more, although you can find a few volumes for as litUe as 75 cents if you hit upon something that bas been in stock for several years. ONE COMPANY, DELL PUBUSmNG, re- ported that the average retail price of one of its paperbacks this year is $1.68, up 65 percent from the $1.02 average of 1971. ti on till ls for ·my son and daughter would end. I guess 1 just liked paying tuition." * New Mexico's newest U.S. senator said one of the nation's biggest problems in coming years will be reconciling the sometimes conflicting interests of the East and West. "The big political debate na- tionally in the next 10 years or so will be how do you balance the interests of Western United Stales with those of the East," sand Republican Sen.·elect Har- risoa "Jack" Schmitt, a former astronaut. SCHMITT The balancing act becomes crucial, he said. because the West is the primary energy-supplier for the industrial states of the East. That leads lo differences over environmental con- cerns and energy prices and supplies. * Moshe Dayan's garden in Tel Aviv has two empty spots following a decision by the Department of Antiqwtaes to claim a pair of sarcophagi he uncovered 1n pursuin g h is hobby of archeology. "My wife was using them to grow flow ers in," the former de· fense minister said in a telephone interview. The authorities examined and regist ered the two barrel· shaped items when he found them five years ago, Dayan SaJd . DAYAN "I don 'l know wh y they decided to take them now They gave me a rue~ lhank-you note and took them." * Britain. whose imperial glory provided a set· ting ror many Rudyard Kipling's stones and poems. Is to be the beneficiary of the author's rovalties The incomt> from K1phng's works, estimated al $.12.000 a vcar. 1~ to li(O to the National Trust at the re· quest of his late daughter, Elsie Bambrldge, who died in May at age 80. The trust, which pre- THEOOORAICI$ A press statement by the 51-year old composer said be was "not afraid of the Exterior Communist party (the pro- Moscow faction) but simply felt disgust." He said he had suffered public insults and threats be· cause or the moderate political stand he took after restoration or democracy in Greece two years ago. * Bertin C. Gamble, founder, chairman and chief executive officer of Gamble-Skogmo Inc., said he has beaten back an effort by some members of the firm's board or directors to oust him from his top management position. "A bunch of fellas tried to take over the com. pan~, they misfired, and they're out," Gamble said. The Mmneapolls Tnbune reported the resigna- tions came after an abortive altel'l\Pl to move Gam- ble up to .. chairman emeritus," a position without dJrect power. • Dr. Herbert B. Fowler, an expert in the mental health problems of American Indians and Alaskan natives, has been awarded the Soviet Union's Lenin Prize in Science, the University of Oregon an- nounced. Fowler , director of the university's Whitecloud Center, is the firs t American Indian honored with the prize and the fi rst American winner since Dr. Linus Pauling in 1971. The Soviet government awards the prize each year . Fowler's work includes writings on J)6ychotherapy in the Soviet Uni on. * The hlghest-pa1d state employe apparently is the chairman of UC San Francisco's surgery de· partmenl, who earned $00,350 this year , UC officials said. But a UC spokes woman noted that only $33,000 of Dr. Paul Ebert's s alary came from state funds. The rest came from a faculty pooling arrange· ment. common at UC medical schools, ln which some teachers maintain offices at UC hospitals to treat patients. UPIPl>oto Honored The government's Consumer Price Index. or a cross·section of goods and services went up 42 per-B o s t o n P o p s cent from 1971 to September 1976. Orchestra conductor Not all the increase has gone to the publisher. Arthur Fiedler will Retailers are responsible for part of the boost. In receive 1976 Morality 1971, the retail price of the average Dell paperback in M e d i a A ward was 46 cents higher than the price paid by the f r o m a n t i • bookstore. In 1976, the re- pornogr aphy group tail price is 78 cents ~~r~i3i~:.r in New (CONSUMER) higbgharles Williams, -----------vice president for Staff Sets Coffee Nov. 16 The school year's first Comm unity Co m · municatio ns Coffee, sponsored by the staff or Corona de l Ma r High School, will be held Nov. 16. The coffee will take place at the home of Mr. and Mrs . William R. Rowley , 3632 Blue Key, al 7:30p.m. The coffee provides parents and Interested members of the com- munity an opportunity to get acquaintt>d with the hi gh sc h ool's ad - ministrators, counselors and faculty. Those plan- ning lo attend are asked to c all Mrs . Rowley, &t4·7900. marketing of P ocket Books , Inc., says his comp_.ny's paperbacks range from 75 cents (for the old stock) to $2.95 (for two items), with an average book selling for $1.75 to $1.80. BUT WILLIAMS SAID THE cost spiral has stopped and added, "We're probably going to do more SI .25·Sl.50 books in the next six months than in the previous six months." He said •'the whys or the increase are obvious in any period of inflation." Labor cosb are up. So are paper prices. The publishers also are spendillg more to buy the rights to best-selling novels. "The enormous advances we pay are one reason for the increase," said a spokesman for Dell Publishing Co. "We just paid $200,000 for one book." THE SHEER SIZE OF SOME of the most popular volumes also has contributed to the cost. Shogun , by James Clavell, sells for $2.75 in the paperback edition published by Dell. "It's enormous," said the spokesman. "It's aJmost two inches thick." Williams said he did not think over·all sales or paperbacks had been hurt by higher prices. "The public unde~tands," he said. But he added that the company recognized that certain categories or books might sell better if the price were lower. !>erves bu1ldmgs andnthl'r ( J monuments or Bnlam·s P C'()P/ r hentagc. a lso inhc nts Lhc r, ,!CJ Bambndi?e home. C1m· Burn-out Problem Seen MILT OEHLER, SALES DIRECTOR of Dell, said that on an industrywide basis, "unit sales have gone down lo an extent, but obviously the dollars are higher." Oehler said the number of books people buy al a lime has decreased. In 1971, he said, a best seller cost about SI .25. A buyer would pick up the best seller , plus three or four cheaper book s - mysteries, Westerns, etc. Now, when the best seller costs from $2.25 to $2.75, the buyer thinks twice before selecting additional volumes and settles for ----------pole Hall. near Cam· bndgc. • aeae Kollo, who once sang rock in Ham· burg bistros. scales Wagnerian peaks superbly as the hero of "Lohengrin" in hts Melropohlan Opera debut, says Associated Press Arts writer William Glover. For the Record Marriage Lleet .. e• (klollerll ROBINSON lltCHAAO -L••ry °""91•"· 3' dnd Rtn•t•. '9, both ol San Cit""""'" SEB4STIAN WA LO!N -'"'°"" P•ut, 70 •ncl #M,.., 4M, H, boll\ ol S...Ctf'TW't1I• Library Talk Set Betty Evan, branch Jlbrarian al the Univcrsi· ty Park branch, will dls- c us s the l ibrary's facilities and pro~rams al a meeting of Irvine chapter 1489 of the American Association of Retired Persons on Nov. 18. The meeting wlU be held at 7:30 p .m. in the • multipurpose r oom of & t.he Rancho San Joaqui n Intermediate School, 4861 Michelson Dr .. Irvtnt. JOH4N$E .. ·PRAOO -Trto'T'·" G. 71 H\Hlt•nOIOll 6-.t<h, alttl W•rt{fy Clvl\lor-. l9, S..nla •n• PEl!ETT" CLINE -John JO~Dh "' ,. Wh .. ,,., •nd Pe~•· AM,"· ~woert B~•<h PlllT CHAPO T E AllEll 't•vmonct l •> Ov•r-ton Hev., and C>to"f'\ M.eft \1 S111n C.t .. tn(lnP. O<ltborU CllN06LARl4·008YNS C•\.1•10 O 4" Cr-•\H1nf' •Ad Lou1uann'h c;.1. .,. CIXI• Mn~ BOTT WOJT .. NOWSKI -!'•1n• Myrl S• """"'• n Vello ""'1 MMy J-le Sant• 4na WAl!O REEDER Tf\om~• Robot1. n, Mid Cyt1IN• L .• "· boll\ ot Foun· talf\Vtllev iOAUNE WELLS -Rt• 8 fl.Cf, )I lfld O••nn• 0&11, 10, bolll o l W.•tmlntttr A0AMS0fol HEATI': -Aotwt1 e.-11. 70, Founl••n vanev. And KetntM><I Marl• 1• S<1nlA llM oeto••~ 1• NllL'loON CYA4N Wtlll&fTI e . \S HllfttlnQlon ll••cn.•nd OP~lrltt 11.,41. ""•"•Im (;AISHAM PULll Oo•ld Mldia.11 •l'ICI P•Mtl• Olan•, lO. l>Olh ol t•wportllu<ll TIMMlll!MAN ROSS At1C WllOt. '1. Lo-. •nd l(e•..., M•rte. 15 W.'l'"'"''•• 0<10-.•n C4l11L4NO CATAt.ONO .....,,.., I .. S4 A,,.Mlm r~e,,IH £11Ut>elh J .. """"not°" ... ( .. 0<1•••11 MCATEE llRVC£ OontlOMM!ln • -~r...CO\ A .0 boll\ el C.t• Mne. -j By JOYCEL.KENNEDY Dear Joyce: I bave become totally disenchanted with teacblng .aft~r ZO years. Advic(•? -J .M.W .. St'3lll~. Wash. A change or careers is indicated if you can't take a Iµ~ llnd recharge your batteries, or'if you can't get re- assignment to a non-teaching job in the system . Considering how frequently battle· grounds masquerade as schools in some c ities . a l arge number of teachers undoubtedly suffer from •'burnout,'' an occupational hazard of which every young person who says "l want to work with people" should become aware. WlflLE ANYONE CAN get fed up, the burnout problem is accentuated in stressful people -helping work. a psychologist says, and, ln my book, education qualifies for this category in many instances. " Unive r sity o f Califo rnia psychologist Christina Maslach, however, concentrated her research on health and social ser vice person· nel. including poverty and social welfare wor ker s, prison guards, physicians, clinical psychologists. psychiatrists in a me.n~l hospital, childcare workers and psychiatric nurses. Iler flndings show that although these people devote their careers lo helping others through crisis periods, they themselves are hlehlY su~cepti­ ble to emotional burnout. CALLED By VARIOUS names, burnout Is what happens when pro· ( Career Corr,er J fewer books over-all. · In some stores, buyers find hard cover volumes left from earlier stock marked down lower than the paperbacks. The paperback companies say they are not worried about losing business. ressionals lose all emotional feeling for those they are supposed lo help. They treat their clients in a detached or dehumanized way and may say things like "the poor ," ''m y caseload," ''he's a coronary," or "1'11ERE ARE AN AWFUL LOT of readers "thcyarealljustanimals." who don't want a hard cover book," said a spokesman for one company, citing the conve- Emotional dry rot correlates with nience and portability of the paperbacks. other problems too, Dr. Maslach says, Another spokesman said the marked-down such as alcoholism, mental illness, volumes, known in the business as remainders, are marital conflict , suicide and physical usually books for which the demand has already illness. She notes that the suicide rate declined rather than current best sellers. ror police ~ffic.ers, for example, is The first paperbacks were published in the more than s1x limes that ef people in Depression era. Pocket Books issued its firs t in non-law enforcement work. ' 1939. Among the volumes at 25 cents each were an IS THE FAILURE TO cope in· herent in those who make up the people·helping professions? No. the psychologist says: "Any or us facing a continui n g s tressful set o f circumstances would probably burn out fairly quickly." A few remedies: reshaping work as· signmenls to get away from working with people for awhile, shorter work shifts, professional support groups to share problems, and improved pro· fessional training. READ!;R SERVICE: For a 28·page booklet describing the employment outlook for 275 occupations as seen by the U.S. 'Labor Department, send a self-addressed gummed label to Joyce Lain K@nnedy at thi s new,paper. Aak for "Occupational Outlook Handbook in Brief." Allow several weeks tor delivery. Agatha Christie mystery and "Lost Horfton." PENGUIN BOOKS INC., A BRITISH company, issued its first paperback in England on July 30, 1935. Each volume cost six pence -then equal to about 12 cents. The initial list included a Dorothy Sayers mystery, "The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club." Today, the same paperback, Issued here by a nother publis her, is $1.25. Penguin generally prints fewer books than the mass m arketers and sticks with classics and other tlUes that will have a steady, long-term sale. Marcia Burch, pubUcily director, said the com- pany used to print most of its books in England and was able to sell mysteries live years ago for 75 to 95 rents. Because of increased costs in England, It Is no longer so profitable to prt.nt the books there. And the average mystery is selling for about $1.95 . Miss Burch said there has been resl8tance to the hiicher prices and said the company recent!)' had lowered prices by 25 centA to $1 Oil about 200 book.s • Women Doctors: 'Wives' DETROIT (AP) - Three out of four women physicians surveyed in the Detroit area say they take care of their families' cooking and shopping in addition to their patients• health. The survey, reported in the J ournal of the American Medical As· sociation, also indicates that the women physi- cians earn l ess than male counterparts and rarely hold high-status positions in their pro- fession. • . .. DR. MARILYN Heins ' of the Wayne S tate University School of Medicine and Sue Smock or the school's Center for Urban Studies surveyed 87 Detroit-area women who had been trained as doctors. Three-fourths ot the women physicians r e· ported that they do all their families' cooking, shopping, child care and money management. BUT TWO-THIRDS of . the doctors said they had domestic help one or two days a week to assist with laundry a!'ld clean- ing chores. The r emain- ing third said they did au their own housework . The aver age family in- come among women doc- tors ~ most with work- ing husbands -still was lower than t he average family income of male doctors, few of whom had working wives, the study said. F orty-three percent of the women doctors arc married to doctors. "I DON 'T think there's any question that there is sex discrimination in medicin e," said Dr. Heins. She said the survey rin- dings contr adicted an as- sumption held by some medical educators that traJnlng women for the profession is a waste of time because they tend to leave to care for their families. THE STUDY indicated that 84 percent or the women were doing medical work and 90 per- cent were working full· tlmc at some Job. The researchers said only seven percent were not working for reasons r «;lated lo sex. The others not working were physically disabled or bad retired. -- . . ' ' l I J • i I I • I I I } ~ '9# BB DAIL. y PJL.OT Mond.!y Novomb1118, 1976 Houswa For Salw Housh ForS• \ ··················~···· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••.............•...... ·····•··•····•·······•· ••••.•.............•••• ....................... Thi Bl"••t Markttpl.ce on the Oranc• Coan t*nes For 5* HcMlsws FCH' Sde G....-ol I 002 GeMNI I 002 G'""'"" I 002 G"*"ol I 002 G .... rat I 002 Cotto M•10 I 024 ••.....•..............• •···•··············••··· ......•.•.......••....•.....•.•••.••...•....•..•.••.•................ ···•·•··•··•··•••··•··· ............................................. . DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You CQll St-II 11, Find ft. ltodt II W1rl1 o Wont f.d (642-5678] Ooe Coll S.rvoce fo~r C1edil Appro•ol ERRORS: Advertisers should check their ods doily and report er· rors Immediately. The DAILY PILOT an umes llabHlty for the first in· Con"ed inserlion only. General 1002 GWM'f'al 1002 ............•.•.••••••• HEW~ORT HEIGHTS 3 Uoo1·., tu t:IJrt 1>1 ivr l 'harmln~ :! bdrm l111U~\· 11lu ~ ~uc.,l <1u..it't l'ri>, lrplc: • room for hn.1l. l'a111per o r whale\1~1'. 1,.11'.:c 7.S It lot. $11!1,500 ! Bolboa Bay Prop. R~aUori • 675-7060. PANORAMIC VIEW lnC'l ucli ni: l:atnltna & Pulo'I Vt.-l'lil'S. Lite & i.p:.at lOUS ('lJST 0 .\1 hit home, l<1n shl.y dticora l· ed. master ba equl pped w1jacuzzi & convertible s hwr, s team l'm . 64ti-7711. ..........•...•.•....•• ~~~~~ --.;::::;;:;. ---. OOOH whut a rdwf...Nn mum tenanC\' condominiurrt do1>e to frccwnyi.. :rnd l n rn('li bc1>l, Dcerf1cld. :i tw clruom. dramalH' two-story, formal cltnin.: ruom, Cirepl;icc, pri vatt• patio. Close tu pool and 1·ecre::a tlon ceot er. SW,!JSQ, .'f./w ffl«tl &lat.~ Valley Realty EASTS I DE DUPLEX OH, IT'S IEAlmRJL! Absolutely perfect 3 Bedroom, 2 bath , Mes a Ve rde pride of' owner ship home! Large, private well manicured yard (complete with tree house) surrounds a sun- ny. s potless, well maintained re-· sidence. There is a massive double fireplace with a hearth in the Cami- • . ly room and one in the golden toned living room. The investment is $86,500 happy dollars! Publisher's Notice: -All real estate advertised in this newspape r is sul>· . . • JC('t to the .Feder a l Fuir Housin g Act of 1968 ----------• which m akes it illega l to ---------•! U,_.l()UI: ti()Ml:i REAL TORS': 546·5990 1525 Mesa Verde Drive, East. Costa Mesa also 1n Co ron.i del M..i r. at 675~6000 ad vertis e "any pr e · fercncc. lim1tat1o n. or discrimination based on race, rolor, religion, St.'-t. or natron11l origin, or an inlc nlton to m ake any such preferenee, lim it a. tion, or discrim ination.·· This newspa per will nol knowingly accept a ny udvcrtising Cor r e al estate which is in viola- tion of the law. · Houses for Sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• GMeral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT SHORES 2-Story A-frame; wood Gt"Mrot 10021G.....-ol 1002 beame d c eilings; 4 -~~~~~~~--!••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• b dr m s ., 2 eat h s : secluded p atio. W Jlk tu beach, pools & tennis. soo.ooo b'73·3663 642·2253 associated BROK EA S-REAL TORS l OlS W 8olboo 6 7 l 366 J LOOKING .... VA/FHA $48,500 Spacious 3 bdrm, 2 ha fam home w/fam rm. big dbl garage & btfl lndscp · int,:. Clo~l' to shopping. Seller will pay loan dis · count pornts. IHS.7711. ~ -. .for a home rn Newport Beach's B~stbluff -Bi~ Canyon Harbor View -----------1 LAST LARGE ESTATE MESA VERDE The Bluff:> · W e~tcllff . 4BR-fAMILY I r vine's T u rtlercH·k , etc.'! We baVC! lovely Corona del Mar's highest location with a wonderful, panoramic view of the bay & ocean as well as most of the city. The night lights are marvelous ! This home is won- derful for the large family. or the executive who likes to entertain . Huge living rm., formal dining rm .. 5 lge. bdrms., 7 baths & heat- ed pool. With its useful two thirds acre of space & loads of parking, this lovely home offers extreme privacy. $265,000 INCLUDING LAND! $84,500 homes to show you m all Immaculate Mesa Verde these are:is, and much 4 bedroom doll house! more ... please call u eautifut P aces ette r C. F. Colesworthz ' ':!~~~~~~I home. Slate entry wa y. i..: Gigantic forma l living REALTORS 640·00 ff~ £uof.uoliOM room-m assive wall of ------------------•I obeUjo!~ fireplace. Huge fa m ily 1----------i room. Spotless gourmet k it c h e n . Secluded mas t e r· wing-plus 3 m ore family sJZed b e droo m s . Own e r transferred. Mus t sec lo believe. Hurry -t·all 752-1700 now! L1PfN In q." stun '"l' "J' , • [ ~ ll~tl11W] TUSTIN GREENS 2 Hr Condo. Squ e aky l'll·:tn! Great for Starter llome or investmc•nl $-13.950 Century Frna11nal Hltrs (Tl! E HO:\! ESEl.l.1-:llS) 752-5353, Bill ~laclig.iri COSTA MESA SUPER CHARMER Cleanest home in Costa Mes a 's mo.;\ po 1,ul .. r a r e a. 3 K 111 g ~ 11t•11 bedrooms w1th mds~l\'l' mas ter sulll.'. \luvt• 111 cond it io n! (; 1g a nt11• fireplace. W1fr saH•r kitchen. Don't nu~s this super buy S67.~150 Full price. Call 646·7171. '1f"tfl tlf O• It S ,qr-; I H• /\' I' l~IHllM Ii" \'O ·v~: .\I.\\' \\'S W i\NT EO TO I.I\' t-: EASTSIDE COSTA MESA H0\1 E Plus a partment. $30.UOO T h<it's righ t SJU.000! Must have all c:ish. Call 546·5880 ~HERITAGE REALTORS Highly upgraded in cver- ywa~ -custom drps, i:rpb & wall coverings, tinted gb :.s. Lgc family rm w1lpk, kitche n has • • CORONA DEL MAR· 675-3000 pa ss thr u window to patio & lge lands caped General I 002 GeMral I 002 y a rd w /s pr1 n k t c r s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Maste r s uite ha1> sep. HEALTH FORCES Huntinqton Beach dressing area . Sep la un· SALE. S52 ,J50 SEABREEZE dry w ;storage area. 3 ---------•! Car garage. Sec lo ai>-Unusua l opportu nity to POOL + JACUZZI pr cc i a tc. $138,500 . own this large llllOO Sq. Prestigious Huntington 1>44.7270 Ft.) 3 bedroom. 3 bath Beach location. Spacious 1555 W. Baker. C.M. Ne~t to Market Basket 549 -8655 UJ>· l>a . Townhome with huge two·story condo with bonus room. ideal ror a huge master suit e first pool table or artis ts hide· noor plus two twin·~il.C a ·way. Gourmet kill·hen bedrooms upstairs. Twin overl ooks b eaut iful patios, separate laundry private patio. This pro· room. professionally up- perty is shown by ilP· graded thruout. Sti:J,900. poinlmcnt only. !'lease CALLnow962-7788 call 842·253.5. Of>fNrlt11•11• I ;Ntn1.(N·1 t• ['lllR ,Q.. KEY 'df' P.EA L TORS A BEST BUY INIRVINE 1o\art41r,.. C-... cooper• associates .s~~I~~~,~~~~~~ ... ~EALTY\,. ·---------I corner lot. l'ormal din· ....._ ~ ing, s tep down living rm. 206Rivem de.N.I , (pie in ramily room. step 646-4463 Assumable out the back slider into WANTS.. pnvate yard with pool & .. -;..i}C'!'.person. P ll'tlSl' VA loan jacuzzi. P11l'ecl lo sl'll. 1,1llnr <·omeby. Excrlll'nt value for 4 owncrmus l move t'ast. THIS IS WHAT No Money Down SPANISH VILLA 38EDROOM +POOL lle11u11ful lilt'<! t'ntry to hu"t' l1v 111 g 1oo m <.:r;H•klins fi r c pla cr, go urm l'l k1td1<'n w/brcakfa~l 111'ca. Setvt• thru wtndow to 1>ri v ute patio. Space Cor IL V. parking Locutcd near schools and 11hopµing. Barg.tin price ul $54,!lOO. Hurry! Call 963~6767 . Ol'(N flt 9 • II S ll'N ION Nl(I • [®:•I GOING SKIING THIS WINTIR? Get your very own deluxe studio con- dominium in Sun Valley, Idaho, with its own private sauna. Walk to tennis facility & ski lift. $25,500. Rent during the orf season. 67M400 DM1ion of tt.t.-lnHs._. Co. er. 2Dr. den, l l'\ba, cor. rncd yd. 2017 Maple. $49.500. (213)598·9004. POOL TIMI! Nttro. "xotlc Palma sur· round this lmmacuhaie 3 bdrm. & farnlly rm. home:, wltb a secluded Ant h ony pool. Only $00.950 MOVEUP 4 DR. 2 ~ B a, n ew, to btfl 5 bdrms, J b11lh GeMral 10021GeMrol IOOl s puclous s pllt·l e vel h · d · bl 1-'V w/frplc, !a m ·rm, & dbl ome tn esira c · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••""•••••••••• gar. Nr . So. Cousl Pl11111. Fam rm, wet bar, IFe ms tr s ult<.>s .. we will ~ ~ S77.000. Agt. Sam Crao~ guarantee i;ale of your -645-4170 or 540-0008 present home. 546·1754, 968·337i. INVESTMENT • ·.· SPECIAL!! Family home In reside~ 3BEOROOM 5 BLOCKS TO OCEAN llG CANYON TOWNHOUSE. LUSE Ual area on !urge lot. t Choice location with beaut. golf Bit, 2 BA. S51.000. cours e VI EW! Lovely I-story 2 645-3474 bdrm .. l ge forma l dining rm. a1~--... ,-_ HJ ghly upgraded. Plush cptng & ~' I , t 1 drapes . s hutters. microwave. ---=------ ceram;c t ile entry & kit. Air-cond & filtered air. ~SO month. 2 I I I San Joaquin HiMs Rood HE'NrORT CENTER, H.B. 644--4910 * EASTSIDE • 3 BR 2BA prlde·of· Walk to bcuch from l111s c harm ing 3 bt>d room house of ~lass with vault ed ceilings. Country kitchen with formal dini.'. Decorator wallpape r . Huge rear yard with two patios. Priced at $51,\150. Hurry call 963·6767. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ · 1:1w ners hi I> w I many x ttas on quie t s!. S72,9&$. YEAG ER REALTY, 556·6171 Ol·'t'.J Ill q d i ii fil"t I H 11J I' !®•I PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP ONLY $6 f ,90'0 Blfl y up g r ad e d & lndscpd 4 bd, 2 ba, FH home. Extl:.'nsivc use o brick '" pane ling. Truly a special home at a low price of $61,!lOO. Gre <1t General 1002 GeMrol 100 ..............................••.....•.....•• Attracti ve 4 bdrm. home on corner lot. Bay views from living room & up · stairs bedr-OQ.m~ $1&.5,000r BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bay\1de Drivt.-N 8 67S 6161 HB location. 545-9491. Gfferot 1002 G~ral 1002 .............•......... SPANISH TRI-LEVEL 4 BR 2 STY $77,560 ....................... I-' or m a I e 11 l r Y t 0 Thrct• t·ar ga1•;11:e and d r a m a ti c e I e A a n c c . fl 1 t MEREDITH GARDENS Formal entertainment IJ<ial g;tll.' gl\'t• \'"1 11 ily College Par k, 3 Br 2 Ba, new cpl, drps, roof & paint. Spac kit, w/blln~. i.cp din. encl yd & pa tio . S56 ,!J50 Ownr /Agt. 5.57·7&18 Real barg:.iin. Ownr sell· ing beaut 4 br Mesa Verde Hme. Red brick frplc .. spacious Ji v.rm., formal din.rm.. lge yd be autifully I ndscpd + <log run & garden. Bltps w/ncw dshwshr .. newl)- tpl'd & drp 'd. Shown D)' appl. $611,500. CaJI 549·!!!118 ------..,.-* • • JHR. 213/\. Westside. Only $49,500. Low down. "OH " * * * Brand new 4Brt. :IBA I ukefront, pri rntc bea ch, Only $11!J .OOO. $111.001.l down. Hurry ! OWN ERi AGENT to this t\~11 le\l•I, rour living roo m . lla nttUl'I IJ\'cll'oom , thrc'l' hat h Sit.Cd dining <·OnVt'Cll\'Jlll~ honw Wllh fo1111.tl flt1llll~ Double door e ntry lo !>cn·cJ from adjmn111 g n11.1tn and p.111C'lcd l.1rnlly elegan t r u1sc d li\1ng .:ardc n view kilC'lw 11 ruom. l.ol·att•fl 111 .1 \'t•ry room with gra 11 a ll..i Sl•paratr family room exC'IUSl\t' nt•1ghborhoud --------- rireplat·c. Form;il d1111ng w t-r;icklrng firepl<tl'C & on a cul dt' ~.•l' !>ll't•et Dana Point I 026 room . llu)!c Ilarrt'lon;a wet har overlooks ter· l';\LL: 5:,u.;ww ••••••••••••••••••••••• 540·0555 $46,750 2 Bedroom, 2 ha t.h. in· garden \'iew k1tc:he n ral'e. ldc:il for c·a~u:d t•fl * J,OT • Over 10.000 Sq. Fies ta p:irty room with ll'rt.iining ,\rlistil' st .1ir:. !p SELECT fl. <:uod l'om m e r d a I wall of glass \'lt'W of luo;h s we t' P l 0 ma " s i v e location for stores & o!- grou ncls. ~lag 111fic1·11t hide;iwav ma sll'I' suite & PROPERTIES riqe bldgs. $75,000. master swtc ancl sweep· guesl quarte rs. llurry -------J ay W. Yeats Hea lly ing stairs to seco11d story for this almosl ne w 31709 Coastttwy suit('s. Assume S 10,0m · mode I al a l> a r g " i 11 ---------•I So. Luguna 499·2237 7c1, VA loa11. No new loan 1J1ice! 9li:l·?8BI. DOVER SHORES ,,.,.,,,,., .... ,,.,, ,,.,.' Cu s t o m llo m e Near costs. ~:1!11!1 mo pa)i. ull. [ •! Call !)63·7881. ~ • , Great value for fomil)' Marina. 3 .Br , FIR. D/R, ·~~N '••'>"' ..... 'ii':• I · . t h a t wants close l frplc. Sec to a ppreo. [~ .• ! · • st'hools. library, ~hop· Sti6,500. Ry owner. U) .. ' · µmg. beal·h . etc'. Out or !J'J7·81157 or (I ) ll9!Hl64. ' . • ~ jlllllll __ ~ _ _ trafftt.: 111 j)\'atC'ful. view . '. ~ properly. E xeculive FountolnValley 1034 Newport Hei9hts ::.tudy. 5 berlrm~. 6 b:.iths. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TURTLEROCK On two ru11 size lots formal dining l'lll. lgc SCP(·--------- PRICE owner will ('on!>1dt·r lt•asc fami ly rm. gourme t opt io n 011 r o o m y 3 k1tchc·n. Owner h•:1ving REDUCTION ht•droom hom l' with huge an•:1. mtti.t sell '• fol' 400E.17:.a· FORa~M ~~d~:1~~~1~~;r;1i:~u:J~~ Elegant 3 bet . 2 ha. FH. family room. l'arti;ll appl. call frml d in ~1rC'a home . ocean \'rcw. room lo add V11ulted t•c•11i11gs, l<H'l·ly 011. garden al1'1um. 2 p<ilws w;lovtlv ground" & !I fanlas til· \'ll'W o f t lw mo un t.1111 .,,. S!f2 !100 . PETE BARRETT -REALTY- C.M. -.;~ o pe n er -hig h ly up - ;:=~.-!li!"!!'!~·!-~~!~:.I graded. carpetlni._:. wOOd .i paneling & m irrors. Kn- ---------• joy the communit y pool. jllcuzzi. tennis courts & !>15-}Jl!Jl 642-5200 UY Till". oc t-:,\, Spect ueu I a r lflO th• I! ocean vie w & m J i.:11111 t'ent sunst'ls. thrs .mu. office & 1B \ hunw w ,, ,,p,1rkhng pool <tt .i;, I~ Or n nJ.(ton /\ \t', 111 C'.u1wo Short•s 1s l1~kll al 0111~ Sl!IK.SOO CAN'T BE FOUND N,•,lf i\ewpo r \ ·., h <.tf'k bay '' a btl! ·I bc:rlmnm. f.1m1ly room, ft1'l'plat·1•. :1 h;1th .1t 1101' ::,h:l !100' Thai; l'tul 111ut iov.11ho 111t• 111· t·lu<lt·' \1'11111,,, J.11 uu.1 pool, ~a1111a , h11l1 .1nl-; & p 1 r ' ,, t l' p .1 r k C .1 l I ~w:m:c lwdrrp. t. I.lath homl' in I lu11t111gl11n 11L•ar h. <;real 11111xwtuni\y tu land~<'ape ;iml cl l'l'o ra te . Belter hurry lo sec this great huv Pnccd S-1000. undc•r ~1n11 l.1r pr o pl'r \r c~. Plc.i:.c call (or acld1t 1011a l mlormatton a nd ;ippt. Just c•los1ng cost moves vou in. Vet0rans. h1•re it ;s! • 3 Bcd r ms. 2 haths, g r c ul ne ig hhorhond . Qui ck oct'upancy 01\. Only Stl!:i.900. I lurry ! 3 nice bedrooms, co1.y fireplace in fomily room. slcp·!ia\'ing kitchen w1t.h pantry. even a dining room and carpeted lana i Custom dr:ipes. n iee wall·lo·wall c'arpeting. d\•corator w<illpaper and no a sso c iation d ues . Locat1.."l In one of I rvine~ top locations a nd priced to sell at SOii.()()(). Cu II no" for appo111tme11l lo st•t• and apprcd 1tll'. ti73·85SO I ij"IRl1l1IJ _lli1 ~ XTRA LGE LOT clubhoose. Who's first't OML y $65,500 ~2211 ~II. POOL ESTATE $59,500 Privul l.' c ul li c ~u1•' Secluded tile e ntr·y to l'X pans1ve living room '~1th l'alos Verde slom• hearth Doll housl:-3 bd . 2 bu. de 646".:.8'811 1•oratcd 111 fine ta~te. Ncur m •W l'l'ptS. Varn rlin ANYTIME .\S \NO&~E \ Hf: \LTV C.7.11111110 NEWPORT BEAC H LUXURY ll4•st buy 111 BaYl'I 1'~t • ;J.5()0 ~. ft of pur l' r l;ii;." • Foor m;ill'(tvr l>t•droorn~. with s cdudet.I rna.,lt·r wrn.i. ~unny country k1tchrn with .111 new a11 111t:.11Wl's. uw lud rnit t.u1 II 1n miC'rowavt• oven. 2 Lai AC w akr h<'••tl'r' + 1 + tlecor:i tor o; clt- h)lht. Don't mis" all \hito for only St:l!l,500 C.11 I li-16 717\. f'l'-'ff/fUQ •H~i f'~f1 fH .. , t• ['2 1fl&!tl ' •', . CALL HOW YOU'LL BE GLAD Wh1•11 )ou ..,1·1· th 1~ (llym fill' ~• 11· iwcl.. yd 1 ~ I.: fa m . I'm fr nil 11111 mi.: 2 :.l••r' I rvl Sp.1<' lll'W homP nr ~o C11asl l'l;11a 011ly S75.'l00 C..i ll !W>:.! iiSJ l:'>.T 'l. H. E NETWOltK BEACH GIANT ('ool o<'P:tl) hr<'1'7.<'S hathe lhis (ant:t~lH' 3 IJr. 2 l),1th spht lc•\f•I J:t.1nt llu~t· 1·orrH'r Int w 1ru-.tu.ui lat1n · l'U\1 '1'('11 patw t rnom for H V. CcHlW le\t" ly u1JJ.:r:utt-t.I. L<'s..; than one mile from ttw blue Pat•ifu· Prit·NI 11ndrr $75,000 C:a II for a ppoi nl mrnt. 1:!42 2535. '"'"• 1" •/•If I Nl ,,,. 111 ,, 546-4141 ~ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. EXECUTIVE RENT AL SERVICE llO~t£S. APTS. l'ON OOS frnm StoO./mo . i\itent. li73-7t;01. ___ _ SUPER 4 BD $54,500 Nll.'1' ii bcl, 2 ha homt• on h!l' tot Jiu~ acld0d Fn & hobhy rni. frt'sh p<iint . :\1any possibilities & pnced lCI i;ell at 5;;4.500. 545·9491. ----.,._ Walker Slee Real Estate Cameo H ICJhlOftds Ocean view, p ri vale beach ri.ihts, comb1nl' w/spacious 4lllt 2111\ in prime CdM nrc.1 fnr perfect family home. All new r rpts. Clrs . est m drps, kit appl's. 8128.500 Sh own by n ppt. h y owner. Open llousc S:.il & Sun 1-5. 644·0558 --------1 GeMrol I 002 Ge-neral I 002 ---------· 1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• Spanish Charmer Walk lhru the Spanish urches into this 4 b<'drm. 2 ba, with udck d ~.1mc rm on pool S7. lot. all for only . SSt .500. • SOONER REAL ESTATE 631-2026 1''or Clnssifi<'d /\d ACTION Coll u Dally Pllol /\O·VISO R 642·5678 fllc~t~~l~~~ LOOK TO THE SEA From both spacious units of unique Corona clc l Ma r cluplex. Vaulted wood heum <'eiltngs + 2 bdrms .. 2 bath:\ in each. Custom designed for entertaining, on ~ccludcd oversized lot. ~45,000 A CO&.DWILL IAHHI CO. 644-1766 ~f&t SANJOAOUINHllLSAO. IN NEWPORT CENTER • Roberts ,Realty i8!4i nurh Rlvn lh1nllnl(lon Su.ch PRICE SLASHED! 4BEDROOMS PLUS POOL Pri\•:-.\e rouclway k ads to tr i pl ~ car garag e . Seclu<lt>ll <'~N·utiv<' t•I C' entry' l>i111ng cnt1•rlai11 mcnl . l~p1 c urc :.in kll('hC'n. St·paratc morn 111.tnw quarters w /bath. S oaring s t :.iirc a Sl' lo hecl1·o•J1n l'(ltrcats. I .us h OH THE WATER 2 Story with View Sl 19.!"iOO Charming 4 Hdrm hom e \\ilh !urge li ving room , l\lexic<111 til<' C'lllry :ind many quality ap po int· mcnts. Your own private beach out front und only t l>lurk lo the community PfHll and tennis court. Ideal lo\·at1on Jor the fom1ly with children to \•njoy thr numerous com· munit y <ictivities. - WATf.RFRONT HOMl'.S REAL ESTATE 631-1400 FANTASTIC BAY VIEW Enjoy mo\hl•t' rial 11n• al work with a n ttn:-p<111l'd \llE!W or tlw Ba1·k !lay from this olll:-tantling '3 bedrm. H1111 rs home This µopular Tl'ina pl:Jn is an end unit \~1th 2 patios. to insure lti~urc l ivin~ a l it's b es t. S139.000. 640-6161 ~ trnpi ra l ha1·kyartf -------COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. w/s llimmering s ummer run pool. Skinny dl11per., dclii.:ht ! 0\.\ ner houl(ht new. ~l ust sell. T r y S!J .300 tot a l clown ' 1147 t;OIO. fJIYN 1119• If S (11•1 rOR( N"f I ['~- NEWPORT CONDO S65,000 Complctl'IY rcdeeorated w/hc:st of every thing. 2Rr . 2ha. fr p ie. bllns. xtra nice tpls, drps & wallpaper . Nr. m ajor shoppinit. lmmac-. JACOBS REAL TY 675-,670 ----------1--------- on huge irTt•g Jul. :'licwly • · ufleretl w,\',\ terms ori.·--------- as~unw. 545·~1-1!11. a ma ~ l l' r t> 11• l' l' ~ -----_ t:11 i1·u r 1•:rn k il l'h t>rl II ~I hi ghlighted hy formal . m: !'. <.hnc' Hi<:h wo{ltl ptrnct ,\~J( Smarl & Mode rn. 3 Br, Townhomc with view. P rime F . V. lo<·atlon . $.>l,!klO /\gt. 963·ti7G7. ing and :;parklini._: parnl ! _ _ • -·- S w re p 111 ~ m ,1 ~1 l' r llY OWNER-3 Br, 2 ba, bedroom rctr·ctil ! Child Balboa Pe ninsula I 007 ~~~~~~.rs~i. Xlntloc. safe rear yard frnccil IOI' ••••••••••••••••• ••••• safe ly with sparkling . . E C O ~ummcr run pool ' s elltr• 7 li.N l!S 5295.ooo SUP R LO ATI N anxious. Call for clctads • Beach C~1ttag~ · .St.~.WO ~ !Ir, Cirf'c•n Valley. Move 847-00IO 5 BH ... l ba. :.-lh 1 . .100 in t·ontl. 881.000.1)62·4272. OPHJflj ;. '" ,, l'J' ",, •• , 11BH,3 biJ. 5137,000 -----[ -! 21lH&dc nSl21J.5oO Huntincjtonleoch 1040 ·~t : ' ' '. ~larshall Hl~li:i·4GOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ , Corona del Mor I 022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $7900 DOWN AnENTION VA BUYERS 3 bdrm , fil m k1tchl'n, l )J!C bonus r m. wet bar. walk-In closd . irltul l<1t 11· lion SC'hnols, sh11pp111g & µar•ks. 541>·17:->I, !Jti!S-:1:171 . -----WalkerRlee Real Estate PRIVATE 2 bt.'<.lrm. Townhome with BEACH ACCESS new crpts. new dra11es, 4BRS115,000. new painl. T ok'e over Fiii\ loan & owner will hcl1> finance. S33l. per mo. includes all. $36,00Q Full prrce. Tht' p1·ic1• is right, llw lorul ion Is grea l. the mstr bdrm is gi;rnt . th1• yard ls pool s ized, till' I and i s r I' C'. t II (' huthrooms arc t"o 1111<1 the fireplaces arc too 644-7211 531·5800 lntttnatfonal Real Estate Network Getter al I 002 GeMral I 002 General 1002 /JD.NIGEL fil\ILlY & ASSUCIATES OWN ER REDUC ED: '1 hl.>tlrms or 3 + d e n. uni· q ue fire place. dream kitc he n, n e w price, Sll3.500. Tarbell, RLT!Ui, ca II S.\2 ·8854 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• macnab I Irvine realty MEARING COMPLETION Beautifully d esigned new home. on 70' bay front fee lot -features teak parquet entry, stained glass. cedar siding & 2 brick fireplaces. Formal dining, st e p-d own li ving room & master suite all on bay. Gourmet kitchen w /J e nnaire island cook center , solid oak cabinets & brkfst. room. $385,000. Beverly Morphy 642·823.'>. (N59) 642·12lS 644·6200 901 Oovu Drive H.1rb0r View Center .' lrvlne a t C1ml>\I' Valley Centec 752-1414 OWNl~H. Canyon Crest cae: Twnhrn. 3 Ur <11•11 & frml dine. 2100 sqlt or upgrd'd --------- Public: Notice <'l ego nr r . Fel' );ind. S1 17,00(1 B y appl. AuumeGo•'t Loan1 Anyone d in qualify. No new loan cost:i. low io• teres t, r e nl·llkc pay- m e n ts , 3 & 4, llDBDI ILllNS CD. I ~~;::HO 1024 OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE LIDO ISU fVIA OllVIETOJ Lovely & Roomy 1 Sty. Tile Roof. 4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. Huge Patio. Near Bayfront & Sandy Beach. $1~500 • Of'EN DAILY I ·S 210 VIA CORDOVA. LIDO ISLE Spacious Split-Level Contemporary 5 Bedrooms, Entertainment Lounge & Wet Bar. Separate Guest Quarters, 3 Baths, Patio with Most Unusual .Jat·uzzi. $2CYT,500 Ill DOVEi DllV! 631-1800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• M V d bedroo m s .Tarboll , 8$3 8f e HLTRS, call 842-11854. Rwduced Tltousands • Owne r i!! s lashinl[ theOW NK lt AN Y.IOUS : price on this e xecutive Close to sandy benches, 3 home on the golf rnurse ! bdrms. fa ~lly room Prole!lsionally l!roome<i nrtlo, c he f 3 draa.m yards. ha ndsome decor ~!tchen . Gardon patio, in Tich tone~ and tcx· Z • C11r ga rage. SG7,500. t un ·s. 4 hc drmii. full Ta.r bcll, RLTRS, cull sbcrl dining. Gou r mct1_002_·S566 _______ __ kitchen. Fa mily roo m OWNER'S PRIOE. Low with rolsedhearth.BK!t, down OT b uyer& 4 cull 540·1720. bedrms. nrcµlaco, du, TARBELL "#I In Callfornlo" planked fu>oTs, veranda, "Amerlcan n" decor, SQJ,900. submit! Tar~U. RLTHS. cull & r;ave. 842·256\ r u ....................•............•.•.......... Mond ,November8, 18'79 D~IL Y PILOT .. ~-~~-~~ ........ 1~~:.~~~-~~ ........ ~~!!!.~~-~.~ •.•.... 1~~:~:.~~-~ ....... . lnlN l 044 .,.,,.. I 044 ewport l•Kh I 0'9 Mewporl hKh I 069 Othtf' Real btotc Oth.r Real htoh lncCNM Property 2000 lnc.w Property 2000 ett.-Rffll Eltate ......._ U.._..a..d Ho.Mt URfun!lllMd ·······················t······················· ............................................. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• UNIVERSITY PARK OOLL HOUSE, in qUJt>l area 2 Bdrm. & convert. den. Sl45.000 S PACIOUS 2 hdrm. home. large brick patio w /fountain::, & outdoor garden room. $165,000 COZY brick frpk. for snuggle hmc, adds an intimate touch lo this 3 bdrm. home. $147 ,000 LIDO REALTY 3377 Via Lido, H .I. 673-7300 TAX SHllTa! ..ches, FanM. Coro..odfi Mer 3222 Co1ta Meto 3224 69 UNfTS Gro•e1 2700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SllS,400 Oil LfSS! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sp11c1ous2 Ult,+ f;im rm , ~-<Joo by l>(-<: l~t. 3 UH, 2 Tax shelter g!>IOr"'· Down pay w/ lge pnvatt." p111tio. ba hooM: w /i.:ar &. yard u " SAN wood burning iltl'l)lal'c by rt·~p. rumlly wJr.-r·, •• mentl> as low as ~! BUY ONE LUIS OBISPO + garage. SQ of llwy. Not ovt'1 $350 mo. Pn•r1·1· or BUY T H EM ALL -your :12IOl\eresw/4 yrold3BK ~mo.li73-6651 Ea:.~1dl.' Plt•a .. o phone (·hot(•n All h h d bl h -""' hid · ---t>157~7uCttiJ>m .... ::. ow cas :,pen a e. ouse. g.,.,... eaway s. or llwy, 1•hur m1t11? .;._ ___ - l'tc k one or all -MO. Presently rttntecl. Could newer, 3 br, :.?bu, lndry, MF:SA Ol::IJ Mi\H, 4 Hr, be used for lax shelter & refr111 No ~ti-Av111I t-'am ltm, blln!\, fpk. dbl UNITS INCOME PRICE future devc lop~enl. 12·1.$495.Aat.67~6000 i.:arwtopnr.!ncdbu~·kytl Duµl~x $270 $17,000 H.V. Purk or (;amv -------w/frwt trees. $4?5. bl + 4 Plcx $80 557 500 .:round. . Shorcrhrrs,. 2 UH, ~('n, $150 cln. dep. Nu do!:'· 6 Plcx 11.'Uun ~A,'500 PORTERVILLE s pacious hv-rm, .:tunl 544-5100 .;li7UV ..,._,.. buck yard. Pvt bch. $S75 ------• 4 PlcK Mui\ -".500 "'"' '>c<>3 .;i•f>'J ~ CITRUS RANCH <mo~ or 67:5·8824 or Eutsldt1, 2 Ult houi»e, On· 7 Plcx $ll80 S'77 ,500 675-6224 l.y '200. 3 HR, hout1u $3U:. 7 Plex Sll75 577,500 131 Acre ~.orking citrus HEAR OCEAN -Vacan t . Call Sue aL 7 Plex $12'',. S88 900 ranch with p ack i ng , SS6-m1. <>-> • plant.OO+Acresavaila· Lovely 3 bdr m. or 21----.---- IO P lex $1720 $125.000 blu for development. 2 bdrm. & den. hom1•. l· Oana ,o.rtt 322' 10 Plcx $1695 Sl27,500 H 3 1 k 1 • led Blk. from 81' Corona ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reduced S.S,000. to $82:500. EnJOY this large 2360 S Q . Ct. ra m ily h ome. Imagine the cozy warmth from its two fireplaces , (1 in the oversized m aster suite). Stunning Franciscan ceramic tile adorns step·down family room. Private patios for 2 of the 4 bedroom s. Just steps from your private community pool and tennis courts. A delightful investment. Call now 12 Plc"-$2035 $135,000 00 ous~Perlya ~I ::uii>· Beach. Area wlU\ :a lot or N~W 3 llr 2 Ou. xlnt :arc.i. LogunaBeach 1048 ~wportleach 1069 _ ownt goeswlth propcrty. c harm ! $~25 Month , $3'.IS mo. A~l. 4116-27!10 ........ ---:C;;-;A~L-;l~N~O~W~-::7;5;;2;-:_:::7;:3;;1";;5:-'J • •••• •• •• •• • • •• • •• ••• • • ••. ••. • •• • • •• • •• •• •• • •• 69 Units $11,750 $835.400 CA~ COAST ~~::,.a basis . Ask tor evs. 49'J-4349 ON Bl RD *EXCHANGE • HARBOR VIEW HOME Take advantag~ call our Invest· INVESTMENTS IAY & IEACH Et Toro 3232 D ALO M. Ir you hav"' rncolfll' pru Ori i:1tiJI l'o rtolino mcot Division Specialists today. 832-2823 REALTY 675-3000 •••••••:••••••••••••••• A s sociate s , Realtors pcrty jnywhcn.· Ill 'll!lld J Hr, 21. Ila -+ 752·1700 . 3 Br, l'a m ltm. 3 na, Orange County, '>'1· \\Ill honu" rm w lofl bdrm & View ot OCean & H.iy. w/vu. ~lbl'sh1> Sun/SJ1l 1044 u-.u.ll! a 3 Udrm . 2 balll Cull Ii .1th, J1r t·ond Red Estate New 3 br, 2 ba, unf. or Clbmc. $450 \163-1455 \\Olld gl.1:.~. 1WC'a11 \It.'\\ ~p.1ni'h tile. tJOOI lul'l ol b~ 2100 furn. Yrly or Wntr. Walk 1t.....~ .. :n Voll-y 3234 l .. 1j!u11<1 h11mc s12:;,ooo llnl·k 1Nork, new lnd:.tp ••••••••••••••••••••••• lO Big Corona Bench or ~:: ••••• : •••••••••• NORlt .. S REAL TY tni.; -+ much O\\ll l' W"'B ""11 E L ....................... .....................•. Vld . Ch \\'OOOHHIDG~;T,\11hnll' onan arm 3 Ur 3 Ha. I\ C Si9 !IOO Double door entry .leach Ev~ Wknds U3-43'J :!ti31 to lovely larsie ltv1ni.: -- room. Master bcdrm ho' UJ'\Ur} 3 Hr 3 H.1 T\\ nh-.l', bay window:. and J I llJ11cho San J uJqum parent's retreat. Largl' (;rl'enblt~. olvmp1 e '' pri\·ate rear } ard for thl' pool & 1:11·1. L'ntrl arr children. I>ownl•Jwn w,cfl'l'lru:.t.illt: ltlt«r & Park Section on qu1et pu rd 1 l'r 111 cld. 111 ,.:h tree lined lane. Price re l"'•am dg~. ma::;-.1\c l1Jl1· ducedtoS71.500 & in1rrort•d '"'l·lhar, 111 t>l'E.'.ll llOUSf-~ ""' uy~ · xcung Chin~ Cov~. Uuplex Edi nger/ B r ookhur::.t. * 494-8057 * S.\T~~U'1 ti S or ,ippl any real or personal gar, :;undeck, r.rpl, b!lns. super 3 br, 3 ba. f1>k, l>Q.I l'orl Shdtll'ltl property anywhere. ~tc. ~-mo. ti7a.~ or OW, lndrv rm, S42S/m11. LAGUNA HIDEAWAY :.! Bcclrms & dl'n 111 l J 11yon w /st•cludt!d r1·.11 ) anl Patio. ll•rrat•c l<. tree houst'. I l\lllc to town & bt-:n·h. All lh1~ lor onl> Stll.!!50. C..ill now lo "t'c C~ntury 21 Surf Really Liv Hm, form.ti •lrn ..ir c .1 6 45-6646 536-7542 53H·1'174 /\II w '~" el'Pllll.: \'ll'W ol htlb. lmmctltuh•IY ;itJJ w ~ golr couro.;t· & ,•xi-tu rac: PR€HIG€ _________ , \!Ul'l d ub vr In IOI! -I HOM€~ Glen Mar Beauty Lowl'r ll-vl'I bdrm:. & ~t11rly. '.\htr bdrm npl'n" J()(JN. Newport, NB Su per added •family onto C'nd walll•tl patio. 1 - room, 3 bedr m :., I;'• :\lunl;ina<t Suh SI 1:.1100 EMERALD BAY baths. Nt>al a:; a pin, l'nnc· Only. 517 5511 for OCEAN SIDE m atu re lond:.cur111i; 1 S6SO(). Down will handle. :ipp :J flr &. den (Or 1 llr l, 3 b.1 531-5800 WHITE GLOVE Wh1t1• IN:tl('I \ ll'\\ l~--ational R-ol •1 1 h Sl!l!I 000 IJy uwm•r 1•17 :.'72 1 .......... .. l (':Ill, Jilt }Oii Cl\\ll t t' Estate Network land . <.:,ill ui. t11 wl' th1. Loquna Hiquel I 052 ----------1 hcuut~· &. th,• 1~uol~. l t!n ••••••••••••••••••••••• IYOWNER "'' \ullnliJll & par!.-. JI\ ""ncr IHcl "Ila ,1ruuncl _11 :1 lltlrn1' , :! LJgun.a ;..;1~ud. 1 '.0,· ~wr. bJ ~l.,iOll r.1nt1:.. \·u, ~K:J,UUU 552-7000 ~ ~,~~L~ 111:.. IKl.IO \f11rwr.·h ll;i\ T .. 1 r.1l'1· I hr. a h.1 ~j ,., ··'"' l'nn onl~ Op1:11 hw :..un I I K:ll OS5 Iall1>11m S CaJ. Coast Investment 6.11·2333 , ... ., ,,u..,, 0·r 531.954c A••l. Fl't' l.JOd 15!1. ob' 714 ·832.2823 .,.,.,,.,.,.... ,, ., llvm1nt•r PU >~ll U28 M rleHomes I ,_.......... 2000 . r>'>< 2 b r I kid nofec. · --For Sale 1100 ncome •...,...... •r ~ r, rp • gar, s, -------- THE COVE ••••••••••••• ••••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ReWal ~atde ~~s ~KR. Fe~ I lledee 3 hr. 2 ba. uw. 1 Ur furn !Ox-to "/aw 1 ""'l'•e 2900 , .. wn enta s: 540 5370 K/O 1 d .,.,,.. Y our l0 h:incc fo1 u ' • ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .nucp s, r~"'··~JfJ. "Nl•ws hoy" Huyfrunt :ni.:. &slo~age.shl'd bus NewLldillCJ C·1sh buyers waiting for Ch a r m in g, secluded 96345W or 531·!1545 Agt. •1wanl 1Ntnn111g c·ondo ~~e.4~ ~ oppmg, S·ISOO Cor.ono del Mor i\xer Unitli/Sm .M-1 lot J asmine Creek, 2 B it, 2 No Fee - \\llh 15' hoal :.laµ <tl tloor --DUPLEX H·l lo R-4 beal'h lots ba. condo. Formal din., Bedroom prime lot•a· "2:..'0.0cl(l 0 .... 111.:r ti~U ll ltil li~i. self 1•unt 'd , lull hulh. Onl! or the bl'"t floor C-zone Victorian house den. w/wct ~ar, 2 beaut. Uun, tlosc' to all. t;lcjn, . . ••. , -.-Just n•f1111~hccl 111-;ldc. Set pluns and loc-alions in Fi.xer Commercial cor. pauos. Avail. now. S7SO movc·lll cund. Call llal, .\!At.:-. II· It l·.N r 3 Ur• IHO up w11h awning Sl850 to"' n. Each unit has 3 A Mobile Home Park Agt 675·5930 Agt di!gn '<' 1,t<·<'all \lt'W, llt'\\ 548·617:1 bcdrm, 2 bath, rumlly An occanvicwhome .TASMI NE CREEK'S • 8.12·!!37 1 humt• S p)gla:,.:; 11111 h.' -. -----rm, fircplill'CS, & hltn /d argcshoppingcenter ---ow Ill' I • H :12. ti!I HO & Business Property 1400 kikhcn. Separutc hun· w-... d ·w ·d B k most popular model -Huntt-Oft Beach 3240 "'11 7'1 ' _, 1 e ro ers Plan 2 with 2 bedrm~ & ''"JI' f,.., · " ••••••••••••••••••••••• -'rv room.•. W.·1lk t ~ • SPECTACULAR! 11 ' " lalboa 673 4545 den,· on greenbelt with • ••••••••••••••.••••••• Cherry Lake Area Tustin & 23rd St. 1.ml'ly 3 HH homl' w fl lpl c" U c tot Jlllr w..ill11.1Pl'r & m1rror't•d duvr., ~ldl• y J rd 111 fl'r, LM1at trh pJ1 l.111~ ()" lll'I nH1\ 1ni.: north \\'.tnh 11ua·k 'Jll' C.111 lur J fJ(Jl trl.l 7:!ll l'1•11tun :!l · W1•!-.ll'l1H BEACH DELIGHT sl·hool~ & i.hopp111j!. /\ • ocean view from patio./\ Br , 2 Ba, av111l 9/15. Nl''\ ofli1·l· building in mus t sec•~ $1.t !l,500. $1SO~OOO CASH for units. bargain al $725. per mlh Child r e n welcome. :'l.1•" 111.1rt &-arh <:hou:c 644·7t70. Industrial s hops, s trip on yearly lea:;c. Includes $485/mo.636-5070 l11\'1Al10n Anx111u,,.· I)\\ llur. stores orr CAS CAO 8300 I I . • \gl'nl fw6·4 lti3 ,. · 1 ' ·.,.. · 3 8 m e n 1 l i e 5 7 SBR vac:int ncnr bt•och. ----"4~ Sfltid Cla ssified ads sell big Club_house, pool JUeuzi1, 38A, 3 car gar. Bracl. Office Bwldm" ~-~,.-tenms courts. puuo "'•75 '"'" "'"'" Cood expo:.ur:. '?....,...,... rterns. smnll ltea'ns or COLE OF NEWPORT . .... . .,,,.., . ....,, ... SI ooo f.4ti-54!Jl .,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;R;CAmlmTOmRiiS;;;;;=.i-a-n_y_i_t_e_m_._J_u_s_t_c_a_111 REAL.TORS u Nt:Wlm 110~1E. 4 br, --- ---642-567S. 2S1S E. Csl Hwy. coal 3 bu. 3 car J.! • shake roor. ORANGE 6755511 Super br i g h t &. COUNTY 1.....,.,,,...._,,......,......,_,,,._-.1 Rentals • "spaciou.;" fam1ly rm & 9 0 1 I st OWNER ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR .. din. rm., fam. rm., garden kitche n._ Jmmar. to NHN DEPRECIATION HCMtlH filmish•d frpl., 3 Cull baths +sew· l'ond. 1\love rq!ht in. $220 ,000 Down :">f-:W FOUKP Ll::XES. Jn ••••••••••••••••••••••• i n~ center. Spacious ~nglcsok 5495.848·!1427 Sll4,000Shelter '77 llu ntini.:tun u ca~h lalboalslond 3106 custo'!'homc,adJ.locily 4 BR,2ba,2-slory,w1th Price S 1,705,000. Lt•\ cra,.:c ) our money ••••••••••••••••••••••• park, 2 blks. from beach, hus;c patio & back y:inl. Yearold ,31.IS!l -;q fl of \\1lh10'.clow11 3 BR., 2 ba.; including Beamed Ceil 's . & top Good nt?1,.:hborhood. 7 NEWPORT SHORES fic·l· bu1ldmg. fully ... ,,. KENT ROGERS ulil., winter, $400/Mo cond. lhruout. $650 per Yrs old. StlSO/mo. Atl. lhi.:hl) upgrcl 11 hcJt h home "1t11 mJnv "'tm fr,11un·~ a,..k mi.: ·~7 1 :lllO \h'\ l>JI 311011orIi111 i·ll-1 llighly upgratll'tl 2 nctrm Huntington Cont 1111•1H.1I Townhomc, end unit. frplc, no-wax flon1' '"' sumable 7'. l11.1n A' sume SlB.327. lor Sl !Ni a/mo. Full pri('I' s:~1.oou 963·8738 aft. 6pm. Prm1· only plca~c>. Nc·l·d quick REA LTOR, l.'SCrow. Tl'HTl.l·:11rn·1.: 1: I.I-.' i.11mJbll'. no·ft'l' fir:; REALTY848·8300 WILLIAMWIHTOH mo./\gt.544•4848 963-5678,i\skfor Dick. OCEAN VIEW WATERFRONT !:il'llt•r carries 11 Yt•ar R IE t t 675 3331 Co t M 3224 l. 1 ,. ,. in he au 11 I u I 11 i.:h1 1111 t hl· IH';1t h wt•ond. \VIII dt1se 111 one ....,,_,,.....,,.......,. ..... ._,.._ __ --.i ea ~a _e · ! a • Ha • Cll!an 3 hr, 2 ba, cpb, HURRY OH THIS ONE Sparkhn,g pool .~ J.1cut11 4 Bedroom. :t hath. Ufl graded carpct111i.:. l·~am1 ly room, t-ntry ~.tll' ltir pnvucy. POOi. 1:. I y1·..1r I f WES TSIOE REAL TY I INC 848·2J23 ONE OF A KIND Plan II. I Ht&. \11•111111 un IAl' lot ,\\ .111 I ll'~· '71, ~13.1.r1011 7~14:! ;1~1. \\ ktlu\' :llonan:h li;iy ~p.1nou l'\\11 :-l•H \ :i lwdr 1H111).:! \\l•ek Uanl' Wllhih• or Corona del Mer 3122 ••• ••• •••••••••••• •• cl r P .!. , c 11 c I Pa t 1 o · humc ~\\l'l'IJlll~ llt.'l'.lll h;ith,l11t.;11fpa1w&clc·c•k UonLake •••••••••••••••••••••••2272 Cornell, College S345/m o. !l63·45li!) 'I lld I • Sll5.ll041 ,.,,11 1'1{1·,Xn<:E O• uat UNITS ea . • . Eve r yt h i n g JIOW · l{,\ft~: l'~t\' l'\lll\ · rms, 1 .. 11 ~ g11o ... 1 11 \\L' '-· Pl , ... llwy, 2 br, l bu. house H.emod elcd' s4 oo4 Bedroom prime Iot a· ,1l'W lrurn O\Jll) n 111111, 111g ownc·r .111\11111" I IQ .1 ~ BREAD&BUTIER TllJS Cl ·n cule So of Park . 3~r. 2 Ba . 531·95"5Agt.NoFel'. Ch.1111•1'1IM 1111 , :.!':.:HJ. withhath S2t>O,tl<JO () r.S,lil!l·liti1t• ace ' :\l·.1lfourplcx rnpnmc Avl. H '15-lhru 3/30. If W/ ardener SSG0846 lion d11)>c 'tu :ill. Clea n f.im rm, 11111 rm. m.my lh 11\\lll'I' 511r :Jll., <1111 Prap~f-~!~• c.~~ta !llc~,a n·nt:il area. you need a short te rm g . . --mo~c-m condillon. C'ali upgr,.d1·'· on 1•ul ill· -at. 1111.: rll•11. .\l r;1, H \ ,_ 1400 ouA•l ST NIWl'ORT H t.Ct< 1-1 1 11~ '.1 r r~: 1,2.' 2 renta l, call: 675·6688 New Brookview Condo, 3 Hui. Agt \ I -.... •t ''' I Hedrm,gr<:al :;tarl<!l l!n Br 2'•· Ha rnt1·1· ... W/ WA'>.".371 Pill 1111 -' •;)-• "'" 496·7222 831·0836 luJl'111r 411.:l·:-,tH:!h;I\ . ----its for a bcginnl·r 1n CostoMesa 3124 d • '· • l "'.iJO "'''-"---11 kdu\~ 1----------1 FOi<-; \l.r; or hl' :i I tkll C='yal 1600 \l''lor Owm•r will help ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4~~Jioo oo pc s S . 38H l 'hba huge 1-'.R, S.150 New c'f>li:> & pJrnl W:tlk •••••• ':::.•••••••••••• carry lo;rn. No qualify COMM Ell.Cl AL 4BR 2ba Avail now $375 MAJOR GREEHB~LT 'l•IJlll L!l l'l'Obl'll l111·J llllll 111 Th.-'l\·rr ,1 l t' I'"' 1•1 mocl..t :1 hdr n1' :! hJth-. l-.n111\ l ht• ~c·n·111I' ol \11111 11\\11 1'·"" 1111.1111111 It ... llhl J '(ll.1-.h ;I\\·'' FANTASTIC tl('1•an \ ll'\\' lc-nnh. JHlOI ICfl. & <,Jtlll.1 hl•:rdl ·1 hi 1 m m ,, 1· J n H .! 11 \ 1'11" ""''' 1., -..·rlu11t·cl 111 th1• 111·1 , .111• c·omrn 111 ;...,._, T('11 .w1· f h\ nr " 1 .... 11111 1111 $:!\ICICI ... ~Ii~> 1110 tr11m 11w '"1mm1111 '"'"' .11111ttw1 d,1\llh: 1.1111111. ___..---..CURTIS BRAOt.EV 111 111 11. ll•un 1111111... BAYfRQai.•y 1og Offen·d ul S!JH,5011. Charming 2 br. Ideal for Spacious 3 Br 2 Ba in Both immaculalecptdrp 1;.1:.!:IK>11 l'rupi·l'l\'lltili..e 1"111 Princ1µals 011ly . Cull anuques, art studio or Mesa Verde, avail Nov. f/pbllns tl/wAgt893-13SJ I llr :i lb on \\al tr. ~wpl ~hr-.. ~·1; :;oo S32 0011 cl\1 n h;1I i • 110 pm11l '- L' ll>l1 ' 1• fl 111• h 1· r I 1.1i li211!1 OHic l' building. spc•1· !'>10 1151 whatever. McNash Heal· lS, children & pc~ OK. -• ---· • w cular vie". 1u .. urin11" ty,642-1334.642-7430 556-0125 Open Sat/Sun 1·5. Beaut exec-utivc off1c·1':0:. 1\n xlnt ----------•----------1 new 3 br townhml' 11\rnl. Jn\C''ilment at s.;:10,000 Newport leach 3169 SUPEH dplx, 2 Dr. fplc, Harbour area Te nn I' ... BILL GR D ••••••••••••••••••••••• lndry rm. 687 J onnn. pool, frpk. ~ar .. 46117 Realtor ~~5.! 161 ---------Udoh.le · 2 Br, 2 Ba. S475 546-4 141 , a sk for Carol Ranch Vrt•w. C.:ornl'r or m o. V ee thru July. Sims & r c.u·cc. Joan, I·: i\ ST s I I> E C . M 675-6727 436-3419 2Br , l ba, cpls. drps. dsh· 846·1371 orl$4G·2597 THIPLEX. SSIOO i.:rm,, ' wshr,stv.l'h11drt'n0Kno --WA TERFRO HT Oupfexesf --- ---_.. C.O .AEAlT011S ·""' \\ ·"" llh' '"'!,'"' •. to " ~ < 499-4584 ----------1 ... 111111111111! .11111 .... h11111 ... .1 1111. :111,\, -.pJ1 f.amrin Onits sale 1800 ll p J! I •' d ~ ti l. I p l ' , • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • \\ .11111.qwr :-.: "" hll 11 Ocean View Duplex Hcmo dcled SH2.llOO . STEPS TO IEACH pets. S300/mu. l6til ________ _ 1147 2!15!lor <l )492 3710 Spal'IOUS 3 DR, 2 Ba , Magnolia. ~IS-1657. FOR LEASE. 3 bcdrm, 2 ba. brand ncw.1700sq fl. Landing home w /3 rar gar. $525/mu. i n cltl~ gardener. No pets . Racquet Club II ... 1 "' ,1111 .1111111\\ rwi ck \ppn" :llMHI 'tf II .1111! 1r"' .1 l.1,1 1· 1 111\\ t-:11 'Hr\ l 1 \IH l.1m1 rn • Jll~ th•· h11l11f.1\ 111 th" tlc·n 1.11\i•h lri.: \·111 lcrt 1, \\l•lllc1<.11t•tll1Jl\llhllU"I'. .\I'< llltl. ;\11•1• hltn 1-11 ('lo:o.1• 111 ~uotl 'd1f.. ~.111~1 Lill l!l!i 1107 CUM\tl'l;(;S Hl~A l.TY 111 i: h I y u p ~ r J cl t• cl ht'clrm ('uncln ~I 1•p, from tht• t 11111 t t olor l'Wnl1n.11t•1I. t•ll' l..1t1 h1·n plu'h c .11rwl l·.11 p<'l .11111 ffiJ'<lt'r 'Ulh' \\ 1lh '<llllk1•1I Hnm,1n tuh T r ul\ elt•~J11t ll11or 111.111 · _________ 1/\JEUJEL\.. (.\·ntur) .!l Suri ll••;rlt~ os· THE Fl\ll!Wl\Y red hill~:.:. 552-7500 5JG 117.ol :i:M: i~ll:! SUPER l.11x11r\' n i ... 111111 h11ll\1• \\ If h ,ii 1 l h ,. I'\ 11 •" BARGAIN ll1·1riiwr.1t11111 .11r 101111 I r• I' ·' 1 k 1 , a.. 1 l~•>I J.1n1111. p .11111 II\ 11,.1 ~hlrnrhoml ,.1 '"II •tol! 11H1111 "11 h m.1g111l1 ki·µl homt'' 1 Ill Ill \IS • •·111 1 '''" s :1 1!111 flh t ~·. h.11h~ l,11n 1111 .11111 l1,11h' ,'I.. •kll ,._,,, lhl\t' h.it. un\ ''.tr put1I lront.,a.,:, 1•11 ..:ull , nut ,,• Ht•hH'• .. t 111 "'II':-~ 1 '•Hi \n 11111,.., ,,11 ,. h1111h· ~I i•t IMlll mic-rm \,l\I' w ll c·IC';in'g Hr Dana Pt.Marina m••n h•rml dm 1 m " lmltll'll ll.11 . lrg fl' t ml>\1 lKlr m s111ll'. s undl•t·k Jll I h" JU'I "ll'f1' from pool lt•nnb t·•1 urt & llc:h S!li.fiOO Ai.:t. fi73 ·7t;Ot 2 Yea r~ nl'W <! ll~d rm-., ~ll'n . 1.1 , h :llhs. f1n•plare::.. i>P :JC IOUS. s112.soo World Wide Brokers Balboa 673-4545 "·l'lcv C11.•lJ ~1 .. ·a , comp.ru~n.lower duplex EASTSJOE Jbr 2• .. b;i u ~ " 1• • • on Penin su la. pat io. ' Sl79,000 5-10 ~28. Owner D/W, washer/dryer , 2 Condo. 1 yr. old: pa~lly i\genl Prin only car prking. 673.3397 fum. S475/mo. 541J CM.;96 Trir>lt>x, Orangl', $79,500 3 BORl\I, Fam. rm, fncd. Triplex, Co,,ta 1\tc:.a, Hou1esUftfumlshed yd . K id s O K . 2 103 tradl' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Federal.$365.547·6791 4·Plt>x, Tustl~. trmle General 3202 3 bedroom Brookview 2 LOWEST PRICE lncom ... P roperty 2000 H Units Anaheim 1n.1dc ••••••••••••••••••••••• t t h s4"" I " I' · .. ,I l .;.,3 708 ? s ory own ome .oa . HHEWPORT •••••••••••••••• .. •••••• nnr.on_r i!J:.ou.:_1 NEEDA R E~TAL. m o , Cent ra l a i r . HEIGHTS THIPl.EX. w/pool 2 Br l>F I UX'-' 1 1 't .. 1 We havelhem.1·4 Bdrm refril!erator w ash<'r & 1 Cd\[ S15 1 ·11n · · • •·• uc us riu Kids pets sin11leok I 1·d d p 1 FOR LEASE: 3 bedrm , i ba, hr and new 1000 sq.fl. Lundmg home w /formal din. r m .. ram r m. Wl'l bar.$575./mo. indd ~ i;ardcncr. No pets . Roberts Realty 848-1688 Exp11mlc•tl fa mil} room ~'!' s-, · · ·" Tri~lll'X. only •1 years old. NEW E'RA f. "' o . d ryer nc u c · oo a111I h1l/!l' rn11 ... kr "u1l<' 1.7.1 t7c.2owner l:'i:t_ 1,2n sq. ft. Many im· ·cc 638-0300 +spa. A must sec! Ask!~~~~~~~~~~~·-•_•_•_•_•_•_- m,1k1• 1h1, th1• mu,l hunw ti unib. 2 br. I lta. l1ll m. provcments. I ncome T UST I N . Laurel wood for Bob or SWrlcy Bcn·Springdale-Wcstminstl'I', lorth"l<':t'I prn·l•111tlw pat io~. encl g:1r.1 gc, St .024 mo. SIOO.OOO. patio home.Unrurnishcd t.on.Al{ents.7s2.i700. 3Br 2 ba plush cptng l11•11k. al only ~li't.!1.">0 SJ>1;1.000 Ow11 r 1 \gt Y~:Al.EH llE1\J.TY. 2story,38R,2BA.coun·M35.Mo.4BR.2Bn.lam· drp's. bll'n s. Cncd ye.I: h111 rv 1'.111 :l lti 2:11:1 5-11> !~l~10 5~dil71 try kitchen, fr r eplace, 2 rm, everyt hing sparklin~ f!U8·lti25 all 5pm. MAKE THOUSANDS car gara ge. pool. park. new. Vacant & ready.. - --- plus quest houH. paid. Lease S425 mo. + pets, sgls OK. ree. [ ~ -I SSSSSSS 2 OH A LOT tennts l'Ourts. Asso. dues i\gt. 546.8640 Affordahle Sl~S. l br, kid,, ' R Ftwr up1wr 11111h 111 111 1, J .illll. Only deposit:.. Frpl,2br,dup,childOK M~unllcntals,540·5370 KNOCK! KNOCK! -· L'c1:-.tJ .\le,J, < 'nrnn 101 ~">!1,Yl(Ml Lnw clown Call 544·5336 S2~. F'ee ---- \\ .111 1111 \ 1111 ~•·•· 'hi Son Cl•m•nt-I 076 11Jx:!!•111 lt-.Jl /onrni.:. ull ~ I'll.OT 1n;i\L t:;STATl.; .-.._ Isl d 3206 Main Rentals, 540·5370 Nr.t<kc,11n 2F'br 5285. K1di,, NEUJE'L'L as"oc inc bllr laguni. Beach 49• 6S94 l\no< I. 0111 • I """ ,.11 , " .... " fl1 ,l\ ,, ''" "unit~ tu it• f>4fl.O!'>SS -uva an pe '•SI!'· ·ce J IJ 11 , • t' 0 r n 1, r 1111 •• •••• •• •••• • •••••• • •• • built. '\t'lll•r '1111 •·arr~ all --• -----••••••••••••••••••••••• $275. 3 br dup. Kids, pl'W., !\lain lll'nlalo;, 540-S:-no lh·rnr.ilor IJrpil & MissionViejo 1067 ... 111 1.1.T<il'BEAl'TY fma1w1ng .11 !1 "lfh20', Industrial/ 2000 sq .fl Children&pel<; OK.Fee. drapt'' \ t•rv ,h.1q 1 .~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• lmm.11•11l.1h' :1 Hit.~ II\ clo\\ 11 A' k 1 n i.: on I" Property 2100 ok 3 br, fam rm, 2'"l ba, ~ Main Rentals. M0·5.'J70 S20 4K<! 2 •.• ~~· gar Kids, si:I~. dr.111 ,1.1rlrr h11m1 l \ 1 '\r;\ l::H 1.1\'fo.1> I'\ Ir pie ,h.1k1• roof, t11 0 ,21~ IKHl. <":•II WO,llL,U ·,··.•••••••••••.••. ••••••.• patios, bay views.----.- -r ~ .. WJri.1111,· 1.'.t1l 11111,·1·1 <'."11llr 1:1 1tt1w1 .• ·•" p.11111,, 1111 hc-.11111(1111\ l!f.,\L l'.:-..1 ;\f~.~l-.WRUI L()t;-.;(,JtO.l: Si.l:i01ofr AvallNov.Sth. ITSAHOME 1\lainllt>nt.il,,SilO·S:rrn !16/t ~:.n 1f~13C.otPOSDl·fRVIME i.:1111:«vt1' .! ''' I 111 frl,q xl <.,11111•1· lot Ju.,l f>ril1 iii7 A1rporli\UOOtnllOOO~<t.fl C1111Now!675-8771 3 Br. 2 ba, frplc. Many 3 Ur 2 llu, cov'd puhci, IUST MY IUTTOHS v. 1111i-lwd IHmu' 1 111 1a~11'(l ,11 uni\ 12.~.oo 1----------1ntlu,tr1.1l tondomimumi. xtr:is. i\11 Isl qunlity. l.ri: near m•w cpl'> & drt>" <;oiw With rhi• Winll t'f nl'I-'" ll \II,\ ll.1. '"'' 1 ph ,'(,, 1lrp' •111-~l'rtl\ 111-:NHY • 8 PLEX for only 10'. clown. Final 2 UR .• den. frpl. Single cov'd pal, ('ncl 1::7. can· blltls, riill'. nr ~chi:< ~· '4 \\I T(;t,f' \I thru1111t ;,11 . lt:d1·1111v tn'.1'1.'1'<>11~ 49241:.!I 11ha~e of Koll/In int· 11ur.$4JSJ\10/y_e,arly yd, 2 car !!Ur w /opener p.·irk.""'l~.·'13·596''"'7tl -(r~1. with w1tlc 'l<111 .. <1~•· u I & I l t 3 ul' b -I ""'" ... "" n11rr11r' ~'' 0111•ro\l•t :?t5 Ut•l\lar,Sunl'll'rn nrt•:11 •utcr un1 11111 t:l'nll•r <.:.111 .John ."" 1 a. Singe gar Set>ludecl rul-dc-suc. -- alto'nlr y ,'tt h.ilr un\ O\l'r Hamh S.tn .Jo.1<111111 1·1111 :..xo 1100. l'r1111· •11il1· Or,111 111' County ~h""" l\l!.trom(714 )!17!Jfl20S. fo'rpk .Winter,$425 Close m w /f:7. frwy Ul' TwostyJ llr21la,lsu:)'cl, l_noktni; ll\ini.: rnt1rll tl11 l.('11,1• 11pt1011 .11 !Mi:!x:.!>1 :!llllrtnl111w1l' llvOwm·r g11cxh1x•1111ahh'.>l.12<!K2:! WILLIAMWINTOM ccss.$425.556-8979. 2 car i:ar . S400. Nr. Sepnrnti• ma'<lc'~ i<lllll' 1111!.1 ) .. 111 .11 l.t•I 1 du1· 1'11m1• toe· Imm al· rnncl 12 PLEX Lots for Sale 2200 Real Estate 1175 .'tl31 ---Bushard. Mli OOHR Tri lt•q·I homr ~ ht'\'rful H1r 11·nt "' lur .... 1lro ,\El.I•: \;'II !ITS I'·" 1 Sli2.~J(l(I Lill 1:111 :t<K15 for ..F•iur 1 llB, i•iuht 2 Bl! ••••••••••••••••••••••• -• 2 Bil. <l·plcx, gar, kids. ---- li111•hc•nh. ~cpL· )) lj. w11h ~l.:lllll ;.\:_!.ft.HI h11nw ;11\lt 211 \, l<'n •'llrt, Will i.:o 1•';1~1 • apt. complt•x ;;'\;iii. 15,, LOTS, COSTA MESA Balboa Peninsula 3207 peti;, s~ls. $225. Fl'e $1S. FREE pass t ru r .lnll " rm, Ill:> 1>001 t.uw •In P\ 11ll ()own >!O<KI tax ~hclll•r. Two vacnnl, J.wlth olclcr ••••••••••••••••••••••• 63 1 ·2~11 , 54 7-2501 or RENT AL SERVICE T e r r al' I' I> u l I u. NEW l'nrv 1'1-l'dl'I' sw.~~KI ~iii! l).tphm· I·: BY OWNER 11:12 2l!ZJ hnusl', nc•xl cloor Ill rlCWl'r 3Br. 2 both. Arross f~om 879·1000 2. 3, 1, h<lrms -25 Hell· m ani c ured y.irch Twnhm :!llr, :!11.i. \H'I i>ll1 2Kll4 2 Brhmt'lt'.~ti2,it<IO Walk t l (; h Uuybeach Lovely view I /\II · !ltill-4156 hur fr11k ll1n rm h~t Im· ..., port 8 .. 1069 24 UNITS 1'1111" rue inn. an t• 90 I ·75 "'• · 3 Br 2 Ba bout & lrlr UC' la N. price ran1wi. • .., " tc1 "JC1v1n:i lll•a('h" !>ought as u puckaAc or St yry.1; .1:...,.. · Neu r· lll'IH'h , (;/\L I. lr•lnt 1044 Slill.7:;o 11"''' '"" 1r.:•1i •• ~": •••••• ~.~~•••••••• On•.m \'11 l'rimt• lrn'. C.cl E1~ht t Bit. Sixteen 2 Bit :>l•paratc. <.;all for more .--:--. . cess, wtr pd. 1st & lai.l, COlJ .l•:C'T: 7111 !)(',8 tl<t5fl ••••••••••••••••••••••• IO 8 BYOW...,ER ''· rn1·t1 \;irtl t'ovrtl w pool. rl'nts plcasontly information . Ai.:t . ~.11n~2B8r.1so00n~~1waler, $450.M6·SOSO ____ _ • ll1\ 'CllOSAN JO <\lll:-W L •• OCJUn •••• o •• B.~.a.c •• h••••••••4•• " µatio \f'I'\ i lt'.1n ini.1d1• low. i.h11ulcl IJc r a 1,ccl. (,73-7601 20.S !-.. u a v . S300. 3&4 Ur. S3SO&S370. P lu .. h ( ll:ivlrnn1 •H Cullms l'ilt• l1"'r"·.1l· 1·111111 ()JJ"ll 11"' Wo11lcl J:IV(' 1!0011 !>l)t•nda· 963·8377. IRr. new cpts, drps, pnl, 2 crpl rr,. .... p 1inl Stn"IC':o. 3 n r 21 i Ba, pupul::ir ~an · " " • '~ • e ncl porches st v/r efrg • ,,,., ' · • " · · Luii; Hcy M nnv u..p EXCEPTIONAL Tradl' nr 1111:1nn· S.1t ~1111 11•1 W. i\\'l' hit• (,c>O(( rrntJI .11'('J M°"'9toln,Deserl, Point 4 Br 3 ba blk to $250 675-5810,642-00011 , rhlldrcn. l'l'lsok. Ajlc11I . P k I k . S2•lis.uoo tii:I 77711 or ''orni•llri s· c ,1r l' •II 8.12 2112:.l Rt1ot't 2400 Lhh ~"""tm'o • · · · · no foe. 673 5744. 534Hi'l71J, )(rades. View .roll <'Ourw g r 1 e-!Cl' l t 1 n ~ " .. "" .,.,.,... & '3ke St 1s.ooo ~17 mu vnh.ince~ lhl" lovl·I~ :i ~·>17'!3 ----l!ll! !XIOS DUPLEX H.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · 675·S246 3 Br, lg. Cnl'd yd, pntlo, SM·.5193 ------ or8.13-32tS bdrn'. 2 hoth f;1m1hl•---------i Avutl:thlc fnr o nl y $7:-i.OOO. Renut1ru1 new gar, stv, ref. cplS. $300. ira RE T h<imr Ju,,1 rt•dut•1•d lo e-• .. u· Lan• /\rrhlll'l'l dl',IJ,!lll'<I. l'Oll· ~'!f.SOO. Su limit down hnme rurnishcd w /82 Newer unit, 2 Br, 2 Ba. 2 Avl.12/1. 644·9800 rftEE MO. N NEW Uni v Pk Peter-. ~OOO Cl:'I..... ... ll'm11orarv h11m1·onJ!olf 8.122!123 aer<''I 1,1vcrlook1ng curgar.nr Ferry.Ocn,& Clea~4 Rr2 Un.clhl gur, Twnhm 3 Br 2':a Ra • · B \LB01\ Just llste1I rour11I', "-llh m:t•an v1cw, GUEST HOMES hc•utirul Apple Vulley, Bay. Rcfrig. wshr /dc-yr , LOVELY 3 1Jr 2 1Ja mod. $425. 962·36AAor8!H·0485 popular c Pinn. Xlnt le><' m" A-. <'ustom4hualt homl' o Jllll, 2 B,\ $145.000. 5.700' high in thl' moun· yrly. S385 mo. 640-4424 bltns, cpts, drp!C , fncd -s98.500, 547 7011 or , .u~~~ Qwl'l .;troda Pl.'rll'rt fo1 lla ve SC \'.l'ro l guest loins. 1or; will c urry cvs, wk n~s. 838-4424 back yd, dbJ gar, wtr pd. 2 Br l \V Ba. r1>lc, Cl>l'. 833.3215 · IJJm&Il~W tht· tnn1le Sl'l :"'frarb) ~ · -, home~ av:ul. rn var1ou~ b:Jlanl'e.~31i 9l53duy! wkdys. $400.673-4838 d rps, $325 Nu Pt'tll, lenru!> dub. O\'l'Ull Jnd AHCHOUGE url'a!l Oran~e County, ---• . 84'7·71)94 evs. 4 IJlks ocn. '99·2eoo buy hN•l'hrs for \lorn IHYISTMEHTS L.A. Rh•cr.;idt>. Va1 ious anc~s. Fermi, CoroMI cM1 M• 3222 l BR Cottage, E-side, • No TRICKS 1----------:ind O~ul. :l Bedroom 11t•n ,7141 496-7711 sites from ll·IOO l>cdr; Gro•es 2700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cpts_. drps, bltns. $225. N~CE NC~EA~ 3 ~r, 2 ra· aml chn1ni: room LarJ.!<' ----------' Will !lhow 14ood return. •••••••••••••••••••h•• l.C quiet dplx on grnblt nr 642·6243 1 c. de cp 1 •1n1c9w po n.t. J lo loo r I t SI "7 U\I' Call Bob llJ2.2 ... "' ... Ah g. Y • ROOI · · tir( ·• $77,SOO 111 ui.t o trl'nt 1 • '( t o ·• •"""' Son J · · .,..,., "" . ced1tr & Rhas!I, ocn CONDO 3 br. 2 ba, enl'I. S3!JS mo. Agt. 840·131 1 The same model JUSbnl\l Cull 5"0·ll~t co;Wrano I 078 CAL COAST -vu, no pets. 644-612#; patio, gur. Adull~ only, -- for $79.000 & this 2200 ••••••• •••••••••••••••• INVESTMENTS (ml $400 1 od 3 n ~ no pets. 58l ·S851, eves 4 br. V1 h11, cpt.s .. bonus sq.fl. dream home hu!\ :a '.USTO.~I t HL'uuOOM. Call 832-2823 n .. dmo,. gfe m crn rl 556-7627 room, dbl ~ar • ft.>ncetl. few extras the other drd "' " I•---------•x• P x. pie, gar, pat o, $3.~.968·9t24, not. Scllrr hull 1)(1111tht f;imlly room with wet ----------Real Estate lndry. 642·!1918 3 Br, 2 8 0, fam rm , £rplc ----------- tinothcr homr & w11nt1110 DAZZLER! loiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii._ ___ , trnr. love ly oncloH!I 250/o Tax Shelter in liv rm, newly dororut 'llr. 3 Ba , 1900 sqrt, h uitc be in earrow now Call This home nHt•rs " fun j(rouncl11. /\pprnx. ·~ tnve11t 5100.000 and writo tif liAl3/A.Y KJNG St 2 Br 2 B~. pvt cd thruoul, immediate back yarq, nttw cpli:>. quil'k for Irvine'!! bl'St loi.til.' vu rramctl by * A..fRAME • H<'r(' Sld2.500 rr !i2S 000 f l!l7fl 3 puUo, yard, Rar , utrl.rm, occupa ncy, no pets. $4SO drps. paint. 871H Suvoy buy!! 8.l3-33il0 ~e.nt bcumlld cclllniui & hu~r 2 St~ :1 TIH. ~ bn. Wolk ,, BOND REALTY ,, ~rp;ru'ti• C~~di;m'i·n~i~~ HIY-HORSE LOVERS! ~. Opn Sut & Sun. 428 mo. 642·38$6 or 642·2180 Cr. Nr schools & fwy. ~~~~~~~~~I rock (pk.: :l 1lecki< & 3 to 0t.'\•an, tennis & 11001-. ll1·2212of" units. Will i1C"'(I "'d·'I If ~ou'te look lnit for Orchld.SSl-4447 afl6PM $450 mo. 842·0516 or -:-.ic .... d!i TLC but a "whul<' " .. " I 536-0086 WALNUT S"'UARE bdrm,. $102.500 ol e buy" al 172.000 831 °9411 tionol SS9.000. in um. qua Jt.y hor:s._c propc.ott)! n Exclwilve Irvine T err•ce, Mesa Verde, 3 br, 2 ba, 1--------- COND,..O CAYWOOD RE T 1 OIO $910,000 1'\111 price. /\II In Ornn~t Cou n t,r fo r btfl ex.-cuUvo 4 Br, 2~ boat acCHs, $42S!mo. ln· ~on AL Y aood rondll ion. F.x '54.000 -f6rgct It . BUT. lka , l_g, p\1. pool, ~alk t cldl aardener. Agent, no HW'bOur 3242 2 Story. aer, 2bo, rom MYSTIC HILLS * 548-1290 * ••••••••••••••••••••••• cellent location. F or we can •how Y°'' a ran· btach , a~ppln• & park. fee,$4.9-8655 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm Tile patio, oir roncl, 3BR. 3BA, saunJ. virw . arm 2 HR $3&,900 3 uppt, lo see. (Princlpels laslk 2 yc11r n ew " Sl!OO mo lt!ast 1 ardcn & 3 8 3 b t h end unil, l'ornt-r lol. Prln Vll'w.Vlcw! Crcot t"<t'C. Juvt' ~mdhln~ you want DR. COtll:'I MC!!u S4!UIOO on I y • ) C a 11 l' h 1 I BDRM on • t 11C!l'e just pool atirvice '1nc lu.ded , STVNNINC lee 2 Br 2 Bi., sp!rkltn; n~""wn co::~· clp$I! only $53,500 l'h homr. $159,000. gent. toaell'Cla\ tht>dtidsdo O"'n t oat ssa.1200 or .McN1mee, V11l oa\' Real liown t he road. ALL d'IUdttn&~lswelcomt. grdn apl Pool.recarco. 1470. Cull "J,ilu ·< ~IG 0205 673 i(i()t 11 wrll 642·~78 836 8910 F.i;ltit.e 963"'~. 1'EllMS A1cnt, 842·93'11 fm.3U2 12M. T10 w lRth ~ 1146-1371 or846.5'1!i(l t!Vl'!i • I aJO o"JLYPILOT Monda .November8,197'8 ApatlWllh....,..., IAportaeabU....... Aparltn .. tau.tw.. Apalu ... hu.tw.. 1.,.1acahu.tw.. Offlalleatal ••oo ......_u....,..-L....~ •• , ••••••••••••.••••.••••.••••.•.•••••••.••••......••..•.•.••••••••••.....•.••.•••••••••••••.•••••••.••.••••••••••• •·····••••·•••••·•·•·• ............ w.v HouwaU•flnf.a..d HOlnffU ....... .a..d ConMua ll14Cotf0Mn• 3114C::otfoMKG Jl74 ...... ntfonleaclt 384 S..Clement. 317 PRIMILOCATIO •• lf'YiM •••••••••• • ••••• ••" ••• •••-••••••• ••••••• •••• •••••• ...... ••••• •••• •••••••••-•• • ••••:••• ••••••••••• •••• •••••••••••• •••• •• • •• •• ••••• ••••••• ••• ••• •••• •••••••••••• •• •• •••••• Oood cxpo:1ure. l!:aay In· •••••••••• l2441n'lne 3244 Hewportleach 3269 BRANDNEW L&elBr.blt.ns.cpts.drpes . 411oc:k1tob.och WHITEWATER vu j;ret1'&e1re1ur.Plcntyor ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,\dull~ only. No l)Clll. Cnll 2 br. Plllntcd ' dropos, fi(UrUl!U ~elUng, lge 2 er: parking. On Drookburst • RENT A.LS • 'urtll! Rk Culvl!rdulc 8LUFl''S·3 Ur 21 ~Bu, f:im and al'\ 5 (lm. &15·3l~ crµt1, l l>a. ~a11 11love, udl~. $:.!liS mo. 2-&5 W k AUanta ln llunlinitton 2 UR. 2•v ba ........ ss25 ~~~11•rfo!ld W Univ. P<1rk rm, form d111c, yrly 111e. "I' _ _. It Brund new~ plex. S Br, 2 clh1~1~1dt-tl gar. No vets. o .M ~[.<llOOul tu, 492·396'1 / Uucb. Apfproximdu1tdy 1 BH. d1:n. 4! Im ••••. s.m; .. 1 ow<; ulnul Squ11rc 644-7897 Eves. LAJ~ . Ua, ownr:i unit. also l& 2 c rcn. $215 & 11t:pu:1il. '46·... • llOO aq. n. u groun loor l Hlt &P I .,75 TtwHun1·h Calif llornf'!I llie It Br apts, no nc•~. (7l") 425 12thSt&Pccan OC--.~A-Nt'..,ON1' I apace. Signing. $325/mo. · 00 ........ "'' t;rrtontrcc It 1NJ11rtt'lut> WESTCI.IFF, 3 Br 2 Bu, ... ..., ·• "' " uxury 2 Call A1r. Plumme r . 2 llll, Pl:in ,\ -· · · · · $SOO Culony (;ollc.ic r ark 1-·um rm, cu s t kit ch. 827·2479 Nt:W 3 Br 2 Ba. rec rm. hr, d~·n. fqilc, pvt st.cps ~'167. :nm.2 Ba ......... $450 RANCH RIA.LTV \Vulk to shops. schb. 3 llr 2 Bu rcfr1a nAnl etc. rm, BBQ, nr Cit lobch. S.SOO. 4!19-2807 !---= ....... ------~UH. & Den ..•..••• $'150 tibr· ry G dn I I $700 S 0 h I f f M d . , .,, ,.. .... ' Hall + HUHS $350 " 3 UK. flt. 2 l1;_1. •••• $4!1S 55 l-2000 ~. · r fr nc: · tro I c> 1)<')1 iways o a pine orest etin er pc1sl lndry. kids OK,. no pets. 968_5700 cvM. • <.:oiy quiet 2 Br, ocean WESTCLIFF BLDG. Sun Lws Hey ...... &125 mo . .,...6·84sg 8 t 6P 1\1 1un1blin<J Wdt.:rfalb dnd qu1<?t pools Listen to the $330. Aft 5, 548~ " view. patio. aar. $250. llBH,flt ........ $.550 UNIVERSITY PARK 2 Hr. l ba house. $360, sound ofbubblingstrearnsand•truwmgthln!}S u;t;2 Bl'intrlplx w/r,ar Vacant 3 br, 2 b•, fplr, fum.$23S.unfum.Adull.8 NI Wl'OH I Bf ACtl ·• • /It• •1 fl 1 ,.,. "' • ••• .,,. l\w• 4 UH. . .. . ...... S175 :!story huu:1c. :i txtrrn, 2 ~ Av a 11 l mm cd , open 'rbur adult ap<lrtmcnr hoinc <11 Plnecreek Villllge ls nr shop:s H~ n~ udlt:1' bakony, gar, pullo. 141l 011Jy. No pets. 493·3589 A11d we have 1•1hers for bath. \\ a~hcr & dryer in· ho us c Su l /Sun 3 · 5 a total rnlre«'lt. I Jere you c4n ~nJoy unusual prlvdm reCs.1>37·882s (7 H) ' Nubama. 841>·0088 2 Br tn sm"'ll compto~ 1mmcti1atcoct·upanc•y cl. Nl·W f.1001. Vacant. 5"6-3166 nd l ~:1 " A S445. mo. d ux.ury. ~ai.t Side 1 br pool incl l Br near beach, rptc, end near ~an. $225/monll>. RANCH REAL TY 8£ACH Living yrly. a br. A RECREATION PARADISE. Two tenniscourts. patio. gur .• $100 •• AM. gar I $205. 321 7th St. 332 Encmo Ln. 492·2800. ss1 woo $350 3 br $425 Agt !1!13·5S9'1. 842·3513 r-...t.L L-. a 381 ____ . 6G:J85o · ' Swimming pool plus unique \K>lle~ll pool. Jttcuzzi. _.. -.-· lHVfNE-Tllt: RANCH: Sand volleyball court. Mountain lodge clubhouse Eastsidc; 2BR. bath, lrg HunH~on ••••••••••••••••.••••••• ~~~~~~~~~~I Larg~ <.·M·<.·uuvo home In 3 br. 2 ba duplex. rtr \Mth ftreplace,conversallon pit, bllliards.~.sauna. liv. rm, bllns, benm. gar, HCll'bcMar 3842 Lge, quiet, ful{unous ex··-----------. . sded area. <I Bedroom, P;,ivilion & bi:h. $'100 mo sund~k. Like new. S2SO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ec. i br • 2 ba apt. •1 MO FREE RF.NT• Urttv. Pk. V11l:ige l, 2 family room "Casc:ide" yrly. 675·8567 Huny to the good life and then relaA.. /\du Its only, no pets. NEW 3 Sr, 2 Ba, Condo SO' Elevator to SC'enlc priv. 1·2·3 Hm. otClces from red hill~ .... 552-7500 \.1111 Mr lloward (>45 ·6HJ1 ~tory tnhome, 3br, 21.2 with gardener. $525/mo. FROM s265 TO SJSS Ml!·1716 aft 5pm to temtis, pool, jacuuJ. bch. J>urty & gume room, Sl 25 p er mo. Adj . ha, furn rm, frplc & 11un· Agt. 752·7315 Let our sN>c1'all•ed ren· & W R 2 BR '·'urn •-Unfurn. $450. !lf.ll:l-5700evs. lotul sec. Perfect living Airporter Hotel. No lease •leek. xtra dean. tmmcd r .. Including Heat ater. No Lease cqulred. .. "" or wknd retreat for thtl req. 833-322J Tilnoon uccpy. $425. incl. tennis. •llNIV PAHK. S harp tat service find you J).r'\P~ One~clrnom.One Bath Mature Adults. Gd. toe. Irvine 3844 adventurous adult. $515. 1iuoh. & JUl'UZZi. 552·07:% 2Ur, A/C, private yurd, qualified tenants. Also, r !1 ~\_.I,!~ Two l3ed1oom.Two Both 645-0032 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. yrly. lse499·28.~ COM 35() lo 1020 sq. rt. .......,. '-N month & yearly lea:se11 NEW 2 br, 2 bu, frpk, J "'"'""' ''"" " ~ ... _or 552!l-"1<t!!r:.:.E_~-~:,;O:P,!>,!'ls/tennis. s:11s. we have both month to ~ l~WAdamsAve .. ln CostaMesi). Ronc:hoSo" W-..._,,ns..__ 389 A/C, newly de"O•'-'led. }tancho San J oaqufo 2 Br. · avllil. Call Barbara or a1.ross from Orang~ Coast College d/w, jacuzzi, gur. Vic oaquin Apts ••••••••••••••••••••••• Masters, Brier, 673-41.20 tlcn. pvt r>atios on golf Univ. Pk 5 br hm. Prirric Carol between H4~r and Fairview. of OCt'an. Teen child ok. Renting from $200. l BR Condo, newly redec. courseS495.640·09!l7 Joe. Pvt comm ten & Btn1&hochR~alty (7l 4)540·l300. 00·7!m Adult apts. Leasing pre· Pool p~tio gar adults U \'~Need A Staffed & pool. $59'5. 552·8587, -, NOW RENTING view now Is a pre11tige n o pets.' Art: &pm: Furnlsbed, <;>me!! call 3br+denor4br,2bu, 752.113111 675-3000 , 2Br.2ba,prefmatureor Ir vine community 531-6814 THE EXECUTIVE F.IL, I> It., frplc. S"J85 Costa Mesa 3824 Costa Mesa 3824 rl'lired. No pels. nu Twenty Pergola, Culve; SUITE. Rent includes mo752·tl800. evc64-1·4663 LOCJUna Beoch 3248 . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••··~··•••••••••• childrenSl95.&12·5848 & Sandburg 2 blocks so f (Ume recept., phone & ----....................... Harbor View Hills, exec or San oi'ego l~rwy · Apcah.....tiFurnlshed mail service, utll & ~EJ\St.:SAV/\ILABLE 3ar, 2ba Hillside home. home. 3 Bft, 2 ba., view. GRAND OP&elHG 2BR. lBA w/crpls, drps. 559.1100 • or Urrfwftlshed J900 janitorial. ~ecy's & ofc Lave in lrv111c V1Uai,:e. Ocean & tf.Oastal views. Lse. /\gt. 644·7383 FOX HOLLOW VILLA.GE bltns. 5265/mo. OPEN •••••••••••••••••••••• equip avail. Newport Wehavchomesava11.for Washer/ dryer $480 . REFR"'~u ..... -.....S!.' SAT & SU N , 224 WOODRIDGE THEEXCITING Center.640.5470 teascm •• 4994648 ·New exceptional full ~· Avocado,C.M. PINESAPTS PALMMESAAPTS. WalnulSquarc security Condo. 2 blks to IOA.M to 7PM SAT & SUM 1. 2 & 3 bdr m units. Hanch C<ll.Homes 3 Br 2~;; Ba, ds hwshr Fashion Isl. 2 sty, 3 Br, SecwftyDepositWalnd Designed like early MINUTESTONPT 1501 WestcHff Dr. ~rfirld Univ Pk bltns. Oen Cyn Vu, lsc'. 210.! Ba. den, fplc's in For "'ualiffedTenCllth I &2 Bdrm Trlr1 California b ungalows. BCH. Culvenlalc Col.Park SSOO. 105!J Santa Ana Ave. mstr bdrm & sunken liv ""' $145 to $175. Gus & waler From S 2 7 o . 11 5 Bach, l &2 BR. 2 bdrm. your choice or 3 Call 644?·8007 rm. plush cplg & in. Live near the beach in a sparkling pd. No kids/pets, 133 E. Pinestone. Ore hrs 3·5:30 from S195. Newport Financial Ctr I.Hsing Office Space ~ Call on Site Manager ftom$3.:IO tu$.JOO. tercom thruout. Mir· new townhome of your own. Enjoy 16th St .. CM. 642·1265 wkduys, 9·5:30wknds. Adults, No Pets 3 bdrm. your choice of 14 Co::ist Royalc. whitewater rored wolls & many hu~e · db · · I l561 Mesa Or. from S:l:l.~. tn $475 view, 4Br, 2•1~ba, S595. in-closets. Deluxe k itch. Pfl V acy • WOO urn m g ft rep ace. 552·0400 (5Blks EustoCNewport (714 > 642-3111 ext246 1 bdrm your c:hoH:1;1 or 6 clds wtr/grdnr. 499.y · new ws hr/dry r . P v t swimming pool & jacuzzi. Attached LOVELY lg. 3 .br, newly Townhome 2 br. 2 ba. Blvd.> lrmdNew lldg. · from$ISOtus.iu5 url!J1.0120. • lndscpd courtyard. garage, 30' back yard. 2 bedrooms, l V2 redecorated, ideal loc. Pool.nicearea,$330.mo. 546-9860 Offices with private No i''ers Italian tile entry. Walled baths. Adults. EnJ'oy the luxU'"" of a No pets. S275. Mgr. a 552·0.130 aft 7. R .... baths. 4SCents a sq.It. in· lfouse tor ls0 2 Ur '' Ba, & 1 d pd ,. 2 •J "79 .,c.,1 "00c "·:tendoza OOfM ~ooo cludin° uu·uu·es. 300·600 RANCH REALTY .... ~ 11 s.c pa.io area. new home without having to own it. J • ......, • """"' " ' .... ram rm, ore an view. car gar,w/autodr opnr. apt.A COZY3Br2Ba,aircond,••••••••••••••••0 •••••sq.ft.units. 551-2000 close to bch. S550. Heated pool, tennis crt. Refits guarc.-steeclfor I Y"' bltns, lndry rm, nr fwy. ROOMS $25 wk up with RoyMcCcrdle UNIVEllSITY PAHK Vi 4944127Pv:_ jacuzzi. saunas, etc. This 621 W. WRsoa. Costa Mesa 2 BR2 _BA TOWNHOUSE Avail now. $365. 963·211:17 kil~hen. $40.00 wk up Rtaltor 1810 Newport Ill, 3 Hr 2''.I Ba + honus Clean 2 br, frplc, (1cean 2100 sqft home now rent-642-4991 S27~atto& Lndry ~~l~11 j.oguna hoch 3848 opts. 543 • 9755or645·3007 Costa Mesa 548·7729 r m,. Xlnt loc. Avuil Nov view, $ 3 5 o. soul h iog for S6SO per m o., wilh ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wrkg fem. Christian, kitjlm ________ _ ~~.,.~.!1:515. 5·17. 7044 or l#:iguna. (213) 284-5966 ~~-~~~,.::.i~~6 Ca 11 •.AparffMll•••••••••h••Funlbhed••••••••••• ~:."!:.~ .... EC/Sided2B~ Duplex, 5225. New 2 br, 2~ ba luxury Slpr50vl'g6 1 ,7steps l~ bc.h •. N.B. Busine•'" R-..£al ,.450 """.,, pts, rps, stove, yard. condo. Ocean view. Walk · 5·1706, 645·22.23 .. '"" ~ --LOCJUno Hills 3250 NEWPORT Cr st 4 B C t M 3724 Costo MHo 3824 ltespon. cpl. no pets. b h II . 1· -••••••••••••••••••••••• Sign bv 11 illl & gel SlOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• e. · r, os a eso ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-25W, 646-2612 to c · A app tances. HOTEL. ocean 1 block, IALBOA INN 1-'llE!-': I( !'::-IT' Ueilutifui I'~ Yr old 4 RR, fom·rm, Fam. Hm, 2'~ ~a. ~P.l.c, •••••••••••••••••••••••New a~ult walcrfro~t ayls S62S. mo or can be furn. $25 week. Call 960·2G2S or •I bdrm, 2' i ha l'Xe<.·utivc lgc yrd. trplc, cul dc·sac. ~b:I2.4~~~l 1 cc fact!. SUS CASIT AS :11 :\~~sa .vc.rde · ";:;"'.u~•!ul 3 Dlt, pool. ki<ls, pets, 544·6899· 645-0973 Hntg Bch. ~ :tl·1~'1i~~l.~i:~n ai;l~ homt.' in lrvint'. J'ets. immcd poss. llarga111 al · Minutes to NB. BaC'h & 1 a n s cap_ing._ xi c p sgls. S275. Fee $15. LogunoHiguel 3852 • 675-8740 kids, uk : 2 yrs new. 1 yr S350. Long lease possilJll' Son Juan Rll rurn. Adults. no pcb ~mna~a n chf t0tct·1.?""'· 631·2011, 5.17 ·2501 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• At lr u ct 1 v e Rm f ~ r1---------- let1i.c 551-WOO,Agent Submit pe t s. Agl. C • tr 3278 2110NewportBlvd.CM. •&2 Vrms r.om S27_:>~ M7!1-10fi0 1&28R 390<t1Alom· ff employed person. 5 mm *TOP * &14.7211 opts OftO ,.fosa erde Villas, 15aa • a,? to bch. 960·3531, HB. •EXCLUSIVE * •••••••••••••••••••••••TINY Buch. house tn trlr Mesa Verde Drive East, Little Beauty Sl45, stv., Crown Valley. l child ------'------• *LOCATION* University Park LOCJU"O Niguel 3252 NEW 3 Br 2\i'i Ba Twnhse, prk. SlH5. !-'urn. utils pll. <.: o ~I a l\t es a . < 714 ) ref rig. f et'. OK. 831-0857 Hotels, Motels 4100 Successful relail or Village 111 ••••••••• ••••••• ••• •••• encl dbl gar. dsh~hsr. 350 Avo1·ado St. art 4Pi\l S.10-8871. l\lain Rentals, 540·5370 Panoramic coast vu 2 Br ••••••••••••••••••••••• service location on E. 'St,. n r o r d mod c I ) ~ Br. 2 ha home w, 1~. yd. drps. !pk, pool & ~ac. 1 . condo + lanai rm. Pool & Hollday Gunts7 17th S l reel in Cost a 1 own home. Eud unit s.100. 2 br. 2 IJ:i. E!I S:l50, 3 nu Dana Hbr. Rer s sml Dona Point 3726 WHY NOT? Dona Point 3826 rec rm pacific I sl Laguna area residents Mesa. Beautiful l(re1•nhdt locu hr, 2 ba E9 S375. faus ta pets OK . $450. 493·'1260 :•••••••••••••••••••••• Sunken livin~ room •:••••••••••••••••••••• Village.' Adi ts. $385. expecting guests, re * l800Squarcfect 11011 J Hit, 3 A/\, sunken Vitull llcaltors 4!1!1 2241 2 BH l B· . l . S U p E ll V i I I u <.:athcdral ce1lin)!. Ex. If{~ 2 hr, 2 ha, frpk. 640·11>4"1 & 548·2873 gilsler tlit'm at Castle * 2 Auto bays ll\rng n1<Jm. 1·u1y famll~ ~-. . -• a , many x ras. w/Courtyard. 1 br. pvt. 2-tx'drooms,1'¥halhs dressing rm .Adults + 1 ----Laguna Oceun Vie w •On·siteparking mom with wuod·bur1111111 l anuram1c cuasl \, 11. 2 Br ~ mo. l sl & last mo. no pels. $185. 496·5293 111 i\Uached J:arai:c teenager. I· rom $285. Newport Beach 3869 Villa for a week or more *Excellent exposure lircµlaCl'. plus anotlwr condo + Lanai rm Pnol ' o wn · S I 0 0 n.o n · bi3·2332 Wai.her/doer hook.· up Gas & waler pd. 496·7379 ••••••••••••••••••••••• & receive IO% discount. •Large sign area 11repla1•c 111 the IJq:e & rt'l' rm. l'aci111· Isl rcf~n<l ahte. rep.u1r & --Pvl yard with patio PARK NEWPORT Nov/Dec only. For re-REALONOMICS. Corp. maste r .:-uitl'. all·t'lcctnc V111 aJ(e. Ail I b S:ll!~ clen g. dep. X30·0565 LOCJUna hoch 37 48 Adults. S350. mo. SUNNY s parkling clean, I servations call 494-29'-.)6 Brokers 675-6700 kit r hl'n A=--0 fn •s hl v t~IO-Hi44 &54M-21173 W t · t 3298 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOXHOLLOW Br. ocean vu, hltns, gar. APARTMENTS " ----es mins er n h N b h VILL \(' !-' $205. 4!13·7231 l or 2 Bedrooms and "-·-t H 4150 l·¥o. free rent; ideal of· µarntctl. t•m" U!>I.' Cil Mi . v· . 3267 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ac . 1 <'ar cat . Ulll ' • • ..._-s ~ rice ror alt t'<Jmmu111tv cluh house. u 1on 1e10 3 BR 1 RA -'ble "ar pd.$195·S225 mo:S65wk. 621W Wilson.C.'.\1. SP\RKllNGCI 2 n FTownhouses ••••••••••••••••••••••• h't orn ey, • . . . . . I . & •• ••• •• •• • • • •• • • • • • ••• • . • " ... • 1435 N C t 494 2508 M2 .. 1•><Jt or t.J42-4226 ' , l'un r' rom $329.50 arc I ect or accountant. 11:nr11~ cn111ls, poos 'IBHC cl . f t fenceilyd S375/mo lnl •. ~... --. -bllns. yard, gar, S2J~. Open9'-'Dily Loving care. 2,1 hrs. Goodex.PQsureplus pk" Jacuzzi iriclullt>d. ,\\'atla· · or ov;i, \'ll'W, run RF. N · k' · · . 4!)3.7231 ·v a . ba lanced diets. l'vt o N C H •· IJlc immediately at SSOQ ~1 court~ ard f.ri.; ft>ll <'C'd · " etwor 531 ~ Oceanfront. ba~h. stud to Spa·Pools-Tenms . room patios. 544.3833 l 00 · oast wy., month 47 i\l'a<.:iu Tree. ~·'.I, pa~ms. s:1:>0 J>l'I' mo. Condomi . S~95. Ut11. incl. Ne HuntiftC)ton Be ach 3840 A.rross. from Fashion : Laguna Beach. 494·1551 Irvine SS:tiSS2 1611·3'181. !'•ums kitche n . 497·3195: ••••••••••••••••••••••• bla nd at.Jaf!lboree <m VocahoaRentab 4250,_a_gt_. _______ _ ___ Unfwn1shed 3425 536·03:!1 N f San Joaqwn Hills Road. ••••••••••••••••• •••••• W k Sh r t Sunshr nl'Y S harJJ 1':nd t-lewpoc-tleoch 3269••••••••••••••••••••••• ew owner s 0 (714)644-1900 · · or op orren,$7S. ('ond 1 "Br 11 bit . ••••••••••••••••••••••• an Clemente. Brand new STUOlO, ulillcable pd. Beachwood Apls, 19132 Luxur1~us, furn. villa ~n Costa Mesa. Call art s. Com:n ~011j. Jl'lu!<e n~~OCEAIH'RONT VIEW luxurycundos,2 Br.2 ba. single person only. No Magnolia.ll.B .. orfcra 2 Sayuhla Beach n ear _63_1·_3897 __ . _____ _ t'rw v~ ~ .. IH SJ25 CONOO. 2 r Ocrl. 2 l'M easy walk to be<tch. Util pets · central. S180. br, 2 b:i , lOOO sq. ft. PENINSULA PT. Puerta .Vallarta. 4 br. 4 hiS·•i<Ull!. priv;1t1• p:irking, full l>d. $350·$-100. i\lu. WCP 494·87R2 PIMECREEK security apt w /pool. 2 JHl,lbaunfS500yrly ba.SSOO.wk.731·3777 LAGUNA.BEACH ---:...-rnntv hwlllrng Ll•ast'. i\!{l 4!1R·l522 jacuZ7.1 , A/C, (!shwhr. BIG BEAR House for COMMERCIAL STORE Tllf. ·ri-:HHAl'r:. lwaul 3 $5«1. P 'mo i\.:t l>.M i11l -_ __ __ __ S195 LIVES UP Adults only. Nu pets. OCEANFRONT or office rental. Separate 111 . <'.imhr1<l~·· l'O•I unit :-/pl Bch. 38H, 21,13/\, Utlls. pd. Oceanvu. Fl'c TO ITS NAME $25(). Call new Mgr a t :nrn.2 ha. S550 rent. 3Br, 2ba. S22 per bldg. & rest r m., al Oii i.:rnhlt, Wl'lhar, fpl~', nu;F f'S 1-ll•vcl :1 llll. 2 (;araj!e & carport, pwl, Mum Hentals, s.io.5:no Ovrr 500 lall lrces ancl 10 1162·1800 NEWPORT TERRA.CE day. Call att IL 400-4192 Picadilly Circus. Sl60 ('YI •I p,1li•i. l'll'l' 1-!at 11µ11r h.1 l.(l\'cly l!l'C'l·nbf'lt & rec area. S4SO. N _... 8 h stre;ims with wall'rfalls BY THE SEA. 3 BH . 2 ha condo SSOO Cabin fcx> rent by wknd, Mo. ELEC. & WATER l'uol J.H' ~123 ownr •Jl(t pool S..125 Agt 1;..i4 11:n Call 545-33.59 e w,,_.. • eoe 37 69 crcutl' a rclaxinl!. setting SEA WIND CONDO wk or mo. Twin Peaks, PAID. 1,1,i :.1.12 -••••••••••••••••••••••• tor your s pacious new I New 3 br dduxc tnhst.>. 2 BR.dcn2baS450 cusy accei;s for s now. MISSION REALTY TI'RTl .f<.IWCK l'l.111 Ill, I Kt d1n·ic .~ farn rrn. vvt \'11. v 11•\\ !\r.!t.> mo t.H 7i7'l 111' !>~..! 7•r.ll l'h1·n} ;: Br C111Hlo. 11 1 ha t • ,1 r '\I' 1.>0<11 S:llS mo •NOW AVAIL.• Townhouse 2 br. winter rC'ntaJ S:UIQ nr 2 bcdruom a part ~l~hSl.536·17111__ BAYFRONTHOME !lti2·102:Sformoreinfo 985S.Coast,Laguna 1 TllE fll.L'ffS. ssoo Unfurnished 3525 (213) •H5·5963 or 1213> Phone 494-0731 S795 h tl'••••••••••••••••••••••• ·117·~H-13 "!;'e nls. FH•rn •. S2 10 2 br,cpts,l)OOl.playyd., 3Bll,2ba.S2000Moyrly LARGE CA BIN-BIG .. J!4•rmont ~urnttur c ''':ull:i hh• n o pet s. 220M A . STEPSTOBEACH i---------- ttlG C\:"'l o:-i . SISO l 111~~-·llbni.ta't.onn•~wca~.~t2sBr&. Bnytrcmt luxur,v 2hr, 2 ha :->mall vets OK /\dulb Dl'lawan'. 531Hl9S!I. 2 BR. 2 baths. S400 51BEAR nr.1 s ki slopes. Industrial Rent°' 4500 S*t5 1wr month , ~ ,. only. Ot flCl' opcn !l oo to ps 12. Co TV, poolta· ••••••••••••••••••••••• HASTINGS & CO. drapc!>.1lr·yt'1' & tcfri~ in· pvl duh. Hl•ll•n•ui·i•s. li.00. 2:100 F •11rvil'" lltl, *BRAND NEW* bte. 548·344G/ 510-4314 or PRIME LOCATION l<1•altor' ... 111.;.<,• I( d ~rw p.11nt 52;:; C..:1111 Avail Nov. 1 fur l mo. Cost a Mc-s a J>h o n t• 494..a611 ,,,,. 040 51:.i;. art 5.311. ·l!l',HM7____ ___ 545.2300 t nr $225 mu. :; Br $275 1----------Good exposure. Easy in· I , k 1 • ,. l 1 1 ___ _ mo. dlx ;ipts. spacmus R--A..t t Sh 4300 gress & egren. Plenty of •al' •ay i·on•il\ rt 1'"1' · --BEACJll"HONT I hr lur' '""11;11S o ere k' 0 \\c~wJhr1dl!('Twnhme:lllr :1nr.':!b.1 .:1cur t:ar 1'001BH\;>.ONt.:W :1nr 21 ~11a. m;iturc arllts. S~2S mo. EIPuerio Meso rms, xlnl localion nr ••••••••••••••••••••••• par mg. n Brookhurst • l\oi \ C up"r·1c:11•. + xtru-. $.t~lll. 1~15 77il •" rn1 frnm Uohcm•y St. A vi t? I r·1c""''" 2 BEOROOM llu11110glon C.:nlr. lie:H·h AVOID INCOMPATIBLE & Atlanta in Huntington • · . "' • !> -----llch & Dano Wharf ~515 " · • ' ·• """" Bl vd Edin~er /\\·c. l'On· Beach. Approximately +;,-.f. t.l Jit l.•k•'<'(..f)OOl 1>n~· &W·~512 :1 + <lcu nr 1 lir $4!!~ per mo 63<l 8282 85Pl\I. N~Wl'OHT BFi\Cll 2 Also I 8armFurn venicnttn shpp'g &rwys. EastbluH 2 br, 21~ ba. ROOMMATES!! ~sq.ft.ofgroundfloor )t"lll' Walk 10 h i~h .... 2. IOl''f<'v · , ~oi'hildrC'n.nopN" fl46·4HOO encl. gar. Adults. S365. House·Motes832-4134 space.Signing. $325/mo. WOODRIDGE I hr ' li.1 .ii I u OH'r1111f'' t l\\ 111•r 111111hl1• Iii mnv1· '" l'ttrl•lller .111 I l'lll.ii or lt•ri. ;, 17 ll'I ti d .1 \" !.11 07(MI t•\'1'' • ' 1"' • "• • • s B<'llruom fu1·nish c tl &10·5296 ; 586·6600Ann . T k Th G k p1lol!e&ll'r1111~.li l5'1iUl or 0._, U-f 3600 Steps ,,.1101 hcach l'ool&Ht•C'rcat1011 Lge2 bedroom.2 bath, a es e uesswor Call Mr. P lummer, •'4:?·5!1Hl \Ir" J.1n I' _.e•es n urn ~.,.,,< \ •t -c• 7· '" . _r 959_ Ma.Je Ave, CM n''•"r beach. DELUX• Out Of Finding ~~67. _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'"" mn.1 g 1.12· J l;i ,.. •v • 111;• THATRJGllTPERSON 1---------- 1!1\HBOH lllGlil.A!'>lJ$, 3 'tlM l.g. 2 Br, 2 Ua, Clli\H~llN<; 1 llr ·ip-;-j Adult E·.,ide 1&2 hr, ('ni·I $21i5. 536·9981 Ea!'tbluff 3 br. 2 ba. Save SS by ShariftCJ NEW BUILDlNG at 0. C. llr fn1•d .• t111~·k ~:•r<I Iii: 111'1':111 vu, h(':imed ci•il blk 11; ocenn, wmti;r ~iw; gar . Pool, patw. Like Lease. Incl. sp11t'. mus I er Airporl4000 lo 8000 sq. Ct. I p.Jl111 11~1(, "i .Ilk to 1ni:~.fr1>k.2c~1ri;?ar .. pvl mo.Ulilnotincl t..i:HJMI new.S200·S235.t)tl4tlM?X Necr LakePark s uite. din r m & dbl GcroqesforRent4350 industrialeondomlniums \l,1nnN' S•·h•lfl , l1hr,1r) ht h fHI\ I S<t-1 5 mo ------Deluxe 3 hr. 21~ ba, all. garage. Auto d oor ••••••••••••••••••••••• foronly 10%down. Final ~· l~r :! Ba. Collt·~t' f\11 k ~ 11.1rk En~1~11 & lllir 111. 1;;~. :1203 Adult F:·sidr 2 br lnhou,,r. dbl gar .. pathl. rrplc. 171 opener ;i \•ail. Pool & :>torage garage for rent. p hase of Koll/Ir vine hm1· 1'.1 rk .. , ''"""· l w ·1511 n111 tl73lM2:> AP-artrnents P 1 ba.palio.(•nd 1wr /\laba mu, 536·3465 o recreation urea. Adults SeeMgr l959MapleAvc, Center. Call Joh n •hoot l'lt•an >rno tn<'I 1•\~ wkntls :-.ipt llto; 21lr, hcam ce1I · Unfurnished No pets. Like n(•w s:!X5 53'~·17 111 only. Nopels. Apl5, C. M. Alstrom (714) 979·9205 '"" m.11nt 1;1111-'.l:lli •If 1ni:!>, rww qit, patio. gur. ••••••••••••••••••••••• fiil·t tlll7R 8651\migosWay ·~lM 23:<.! 01·<'•HWH·w C'ondo Hir ~ipt·to; S2i5 1;.15 lt;iti. Balboa P~ninsufa 3807 2 Br . 1 '~ b ·•. Ne l\l an:.i~cd by Balboa Is land. 2 car Storoqe 4550 1 -tlmr m. 2• •Ba. JXHJI, ti•u ••••••••••••••••••••••• L<ar~c J br townhouse w/2 cpls/<lrps, dryi.:r & rcr~1 <:ranada Mgmt Co. garai;e+storage. $G5 mo, ••••••••••••••••••••••• :•Stell~'. tllr.:!1r hJ. Elte•1· ms, ~rrunty Ku1-; 01' r Et:K·A·VIEW, i; blk llJ halhs, frplc. p,11io & 1 ~11'1'.Nrw paint. S2 15. yrlylse.541H970 Storage garage E·side, l\J'I• lltny lnd'"J>ll, 11r si12;, Chrt!l.t>'ll-00• A..it Apartments Furnished . , guragl' ldcallnr.i\clults. Call646·5125 aft5:30. BEACH YEARLY C .M. 12xl2x28. $55. 1·v1·fyth1111! Chll<lr1•n. _.... -___ · ••••••••••••••••••••••• r>el'.'an, ·!roomy l~<lrnls, :I s:~oo. NII oets. 645·:!381 or ---Bal Isl,~ blk lo bay, for 10'xl2'door.642·62'13 ll"tl' 01' S....X51m1l 111rhh, -.. a .. n.a.9'~~ lalboo Island 3706 ha. Clll d & <lrt> d. l.~ I >137·'.1517 can C'lose 2 Br, quiet tri· Dix 3 Br 2 Ba upper cl pix, bout. storage shelves, & -----------L""'l . ''I' 1 blk ocean vu rr l'ncl sun· R--Aal W-' d 4600 ..:r tlur Nnw ~i \'a ll r~,•Jo~CIAl,1.Y LAltGE •••••••••••••••••••••••"'"pa 10, '•J to plcx, new pailll, shag drawers.$40mo.6'734668 .,., I .. , .. e •·10-0074 4 Bnrm & lh•n. Fr1Jnl 2 un i.:ar c•hl1" ~gls oce1rn. (;pts, drJJx. Yrly Adult 2 br w/rnrl. j!ar 1·pts. rh1ld OK. garage, lt.t~~1~';;s s475 + utiJ. ••••••••••••••••••••••• <:1eentrcc, beaut 3 hr, 2 ha, 1 mo. frt•r rrnt on yr li-c. S,'18.'>. 6'10·1Mti2 l'\'l''I yar di~$!n•cnpark with 11 sz75.'Fce'sis. i;:il2oll. 64~1:J~or 64274:30 200!.I ~uple Si2:.!'.. mo s:t<l5mo.<71'1 )491:1·165J OfflceRftltal 440 Female w /r ef. wants \ it•w o! lh<' water, ho1tt ~17 2501or 879_1060 • Oc l . Ml(r 1\pt D. tt:ll :J27i Bearh. Yearly ••••••••••••••••••••••• room & home privileges. a nd ~1>Y1;la ss Hill -------can un S!75. utlls pd, 'patious J Br, nil xtras, I b r I $100 mo. Near Jlarbor/ ~WO mo BotboaPenfnsula 3707 stv.~efrl,Ll. Fre 1 Hr. ~ar & l'lll'I puti11 /\\1111 now. Kids OK. Cl46·~1~r·~ a, rp c.$375. 60•PERSQFT Gisler.645·W20PM. W\TERFRONTllOl\IES •••••••••••••••••••••••~~am Hcntals,5.I0-5:l70 . 1\<lulls. ltl'fi.. :-0.o pl'lx $2115 Contact Terrv 1617WF.STCLIFr·NJl RENTALS __ 631-1400 Lge 2 br. 2 ba, pvt heh &c Corona def Mor 3822 $225. llttl pd ll_l_:'i-2210 X.tl! ~211 . DUPLEX 3 blks heh, 3 ~r. /\GT. S4l·5032 Ml1ceffC1Mou1 , 1'ownhomcs ~~~ washini:: r~ci l Winter ....................... 3BH duplt•x, t1 2 !Ju. cpts.1 l'll·x. 2 hr. 2 ba. cpts., 2a~a. bltns. fpk._ ~atio, DELUXE OFFICES .. !l_~.~~ ......... !~.~~ : BR, l ho .. · · • · · · •• ~'l:!~ :1 BR, 2 !Ja. on lhe <'.inal, s.175. '!'0· C.ill Ml r. pm. d rp". fr p I c. h l t n s . drps .. S225. l{efs. No g . Yrly S400. 645 lti82 .Com ml & indstl spaces. ~BR. 1 t>~ ......... S350 Npt. Shores. S550/Yrly. G75-44tiS. 552· 73.'l() or 1>15·2.130. pets. 96J.25:l2. 1 BLK I}Cll. lgc 4 Br. 2 Ba. 200 lo 2000 sq. fl. As low Contractors yard, l!(e lot • 2BR 2 na ~:ts 1 A ".,,,,, .... ----1 d d Y asJO<'sq.ft.LagNigucl&. w/storageshed.$75.mo. 2 BR:2b11 · .. ::::::::S..15'1 sc.,,gent54n·t,...., Lge 2 ur.2 bu,b.nyvic~. r6' v Ucaut.2 Br 1 Bu,(•nmpre Sl752br,2ba,gar,pool. new y ~rl .nopcts. r· Mi ssiun Viejo areas. 642·1334or642-7430 2 BR,2ba .......... ss2s2nr2naTwnhse nude· P".lbch.&washm~fat•11. 77 !~,.-~~-modeled & refinished kids OK .Fel' Jy lsc.S525.642·34<t3 Handy to S. D. Frwy. 2 BK. 2 ba .......... S525 cor pntlo pooi in els ~mt.e!'7~!'65 mo. (;all utt b. --. lhruoul. $225 rno. Ni: M;tin Rental~. 540·5370 SPOTLESS, roomy 3 Br 2 Call 831-1400 hslness/lnnst/ :1 8H,2•~1m .. , ...... $425 wshr dryr'&ref~ig dbl -~,6 ·· COHONAT>ELMAR childrenorprl~.li75·3136 --Ba.stepstooceun&buy. Elnanc:• 3 BR 21, l>a S450 ' / &12'c.,.,. --DELUXE 3 Hr 91Jl, fplc S375 I 645 11178 FOR LEASE " • :i BR'. 2 ht1 ... :::::::: S-ISO car gar w opnrs. -.,.,.,.1 Wl!"l'fE.R UI June l l, ~100 2 Dr Townhouse, frplc. 2 llr, crpts, drµs. bllni<, rlshwshr, palin. puol. S.'lsO yr y. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• :ior 4 nr.2'zba .... $495 nayshores,3Rr,lba,w/w ~~~~~~k1Br.673-5410or Pool, tennis, continental kids ok. No lll)l!S, S220 mo.842·55'1lor847·5948 Spectacular Lido Is le 30FFICES " hsiMSS 3 BR, 2 ba ........... ssoo 5 hag c p 1 • f r p I c , _ • break_fast. Some ocean & mo. 645-2978 bayfront a pts. :1 bdrms. 2 SI 55 MO EACH Opportunity 5005 ~ BR,2'~ ba .......... 5000 w11hr/drycr. pvt comm Barh npt, rurn. utll d Catalana views. Close to . . . SEE THE SEA baths, newly decorated. Fine COSTA Ml':SA Loe ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR, 2• 2 ba .••....•. $600 bch, gar, patio, fncd yd. mature q u I el n tn : shopping & fine beach. 2 Y!~i f<~~~· 0~r'No d~~!· 2 Br, <!shwr, frpl, e ncl. carpeted & draped. Call 752· 1700 •Furniture & Plywd Mfg. 3BR.2'2 ba .......... S62S S450/mo.552·96.'l5. smoker, 8175 . vrly 644·2611 $225 'cl<l'-·2;1711 · •· gar. View ba!cony. No forappt.540.8222 •LadlcsWear,lll-Cluss! ·IBR.2•,ba ....... ,$4i5 673-5S80 " · __ . _-:.._: pt•ls.20515thSt.5:J6·8729 I•*"' ·Y 1 •BOOKSTORE' Single family homes Dluffs 3 Br. 2 bu, near Newly dccoralcd. clean. or 536-1711! WESTCLIFF 2 hr. adults, t· ·11~~j11~·~ •DRAPERY WKHM 3 BR 2 ba • .,.,~ pool. sho1>s. $52.S per mo. NR. Beach 1 br $170 mo •••2 BR. l3~ Ba. J blk to lge upper 2 BK 111 I lne no pets. S2SO mo. lnq. ..· .. " '.k ! •RUG /UPJILClcnner 3 BR' 2 l>a' "" .. • ·": Newly rcdl'c. 644·63C'S Wntr. No' pets: Bkr n~ beach. No pets. Dave S. .. · t'a · 1.,AH<a; 2 Hr 2 nu, yard, 1700 Westcliff Dr. Apt. 18 ~ __ ~ _, FUR u E • · • · .... -· • · ~ fee 675_5800 • Agt. 644·7211 Famthcs only. !'lo pets g 3 r • Br 0 0 k h u r s t · ~ ... -. .. ;,..: • NIT R Rertn 3 8R,2ba ........... S425 BEAUT . new 3 br . · S22S. Mgr at n9·253t , &Hamilton $275.1146.0088 lmmaclbrw/xtrua. INVESTMENT DMSION ContactAgntSamCrone 3 BR. 2 ba ........... SllOO twnhse. Nice are11. Hi· Corona ct.I Mer 3722 2 Br, 1 ba apt. So. or llwy. 2885 Mendoza (/\) • Yrly l~e. $275. mo. Pla1a Executives Suites. (714)645~170 540·060E 4BR,2~ba ......... S475 cc11'~s. F'rpl, pool. $475.••••••••••••••••••••••• adlts. no ~els. $285 mo. newunits,1&2 Br.$215 673-0697. 256 sq rt view olc. All RESTAUR•...iy "BR.N2 r.i ba • ~-.. h. S850 b'75·1666 BACll All utils pd $175 Cnll 642·5953 wkdys. EASTSIDE to S285 7911 Slark, oft NE"WPORT BEACH·. 3 vi Al rt T "'" cwPorl ....,uc F · • · • 673·3983 or 64S·93W eves t Bedroom apt. ;Jvgil. Beach Blvd 894·5158 aer ces. · rpo. ower Fabulou.s mountain set• 2 Br, 2 bu, furn. Sll2S HVH Hms. !tare 5 Br, ee $15. 631-2011, 5<17·2.501 &wknds. now. Sl65, ineluc1init all --b w Bedroom. ramily room, Pl~&a, 2082 M1cbelllon, ling in area ot Beau· Somcrsl't mdl, pvt pool. or879·1060 utllltleii. !ltove & rcfni;. , bdrm. 2 , ath T n. ocean view, look-out. lrvine. 752·0234 mont, Cherry V'llley and i\JC, uvail now. 1969 Port COlto Mttsa 3724 2 Br, 1 b.ath, snal gar. No Call 548·6173. Ho~se. Very sh11rp. Child $600/mo. /\lfl. 752·7315 TOP LOC "'TIONS Yucnlp:i ~alley. eorreu uunlelgh. Agt. 6'12·0758. ••• •• •• •• ••• ••. ••• ••• •• pets/chtldren. 0 I\ . oo pets. 554·1332 A h dl 1 , t40 00 WEE.I# & UP &10·7235 2 Br. ulil furn. children -~ NEWPORT SHORES Jtorbor nrea's b<l11t. JOO s op. n n~ room anu BIG CANYON TWNHSE • •. """ welcome. No peL'I. Mgr. l & 3 br apti;. cpts, drps . n~ blks. to ocean. Super To 500 iiq. rt. From $50 coc:lctalls In 6300 8q. fl. Prime view lo<'allun on •Stucho & 1 DR ApUI ON BEGONIA· a pl 6 HJ60 w :i llu ce Family welcome. Mrs. 2 br. duplex. Ownr. (714) rtEALONOMICS. Corp. bldg. on 1.5 acres com· golf course. Sophlsttcat· •TV & ~1aid Serv Avail Chnrminiz 2 brm. cornrr 642•7364 · Matthews 840 3229 eve, 1170 9203 Brokers 675-<1700 plelel)' equipped with 1 cd mttlti level 2 br, 2 ha. •PhoneServ. Htd pool lot. No sxib or i:hildrcn S22 351<1 days furniture, flxluree and Cusl cpt. & drps. I.owes! 2376 Newport Blvd, CM $350. mnthly. 3 Br, 3 ba. study, 2 cnr Fa11hlon Isl, Mth floor lnvonCo ry. Ready tor price uvall In Newporlt1 MtMn~ or G45·300'1 COLE OF NEWPORT See what's under our Br. t bu apt. fncd ~m gar, pool, saunn & tennis. t'or. suite, spnclacula; tum·key operation. Sent moat prrt1tigiout1 new do· REALTORS DAILY PILOT y1,1rd & patio. 1 Sm rh1ld Npt Crest. $475/mo. oceantrntn view. ldtril ina lor 220 plua w/danc< • lfS23 CAMP05Dl.dRVltf£ J 2515 E ,.._ H <:HltlSTMJ\S TREE OK. 'Encl gar, Nl undlng 646·20SS day or eves. for 2 or 3 l'l'inn firm Law noor and 2 wood bumlnt ve opmenl. $650. 6'1Hl722 1&2 • ...__ T ... rs · 6·7"!t.55w1Y 1 · CdM c-vcry Thursday In the range 536-5006. t.i b .., 11 fireplace!!. Full p~ ol OPEN DAl1.V ... m n g Cl ·r· ... Ncwpo ... Crest. uparadcd aA ... n'..b. ljcrox D V n . I • ----------Occonfront, yrly. Dix. <1 $14~ to tl75. Oas & water 3!'!&1 1~-.. ricct1on. • • " -'""'......., on y .145,000 lncl\ldet ) UNIV PRK·Vlllage 111 BR, 2 ba. lower duplex; pd. No kids/pets. 133 e. Old CdM 2 RR + den, ~ 1 BLK to Bch., U\'l. now. 5 Plen, pool, Jucuul. above and liquor license. j Princeton, 38r, nu paint frpl., laundry room. 18th St., C.M. 642·1265 gar 1 no doas. $365. Dave For info call our 2•2 br '225. "''t)()OI. Ml(r. saunu, tennis. cholc~ CDM dlx suites from SlSO. Owner wl II fin a nee ~~~~m~o~.~$4~4~-1'17~0~:=:=J:=:~A~g~en~t~67~5~·7~060~::=:±~~~~~~~~~~S=.,~A~~~·~64~4~.;~2~u~=:=:J.:.::=C~b~n~·s~l~m~n~s~A~d~·V~l:s~~r;:::~5~36~·3~5~\~9,~20~8~2=2~0~H~u~n~t·~B~r~,~3~8~a~,~F~~~·m~R~m~,~ls:'tJU~t~ll~ln~c~ld~\~A~/~C~,~p~k~a~,l!A~g~·n:t~W7~0~·23::42~a~C~t•:r~E _ 642-~78 ington St. opt. S.~. 6'13·2332 janllnr 6'1$-6900 p. m. ... , ' OAfl V PILOT 8J J Mond1y, November 8 1976 I Add It... Build it... Diaper IL.Ham mer It ... Car pet IL-Cement lt~.~w;re-it...Hoe it ... Clean H ... Mov& ft ... Press it ... Paint it... Nail it ... Plaster it ... Flx it ... SERVICE-DIRECTORY Plumb 1t. .. Patch It ... P\pe n ... R emodel it... l Roof-it-... Lanctscape lt ... Tlle tt ... Trlm lt ... SeV1i t. .• f " Haul lt ... Add it... Plant it... Alter it...Learn it. .. ~~~~~!~ ...... :~!'!!:" ............. ':!."!!."!!.~~~~~~ ..... !:~~ ............. ~!~~!~~, ......... !'!~ ............... ~~.':!~~~!'-..... ~~.~.~!!'.~~!'!!'!'.. ~~!!!!1~~.~~:. ...... .. APPUANC£ REPAlR LOU'S HOME HEPJ\lltS <.:ontrtH·tor. Cu!j 1 utn ~xpr Jt1p•rnese Rtirdenor Jrnusecltanlna By ANN l<'tttplace.s·rlanltirs ralutlna. Intl Exl. Lie •OnGANTUNfNC• CANOPY TV SVC <.:O $10-5ervice C<lll ao Yr e11:p, Carpcinh') work: '-'<>IOr, ll)4Jjte~nle, Com pl ~aintrnnnt'e & Experienced w/refs. DricltConcrete P11tl~ f2S4931. Ref, a··r\'\t Vb1 Allen·Conn.Hod.:crli ht Rate Ser vlc:c , (7141 S49·2·t22 Cabnt, plumbing & d et· uli.o concrete cutlln)(. All de<1nup er ilSt reas Hire ·193-0680 arter 5pm Block Walls bBQ Pats Work aaur. Won't be un NllWPol'l Oriicms 045 1:130 ut Jo•uir Prices 900·1633 •....a. -u..&.: Ml·2054 wurk .:uur. Lie'd, 751 .1937' 1 · Ret,Ests6460464 derbld.A/t.6pml1611-0&!7 i... S I • -Y>ITI1"9 c s I bol\dl'<l 1nl'IUl'('<l 4l)2 3728 -HO\.tlil'CltaninR & Building .. t /R lr 11re. .... c~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• crpet erv c• ---· ----·--_ w1:-;ED1NG·C.:l..l::ANUPS Mamtenance. V1Jry f)'eeest. Sluml>f!tone, tile, Exprt P1&lnting & Poper· nat ff tpo ••••••••••••••••••••••• Care for After Schoolora ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.F.ONIT1': CQNCHE'l'i!: •CompleteMa1ntennnce rea.sonable.~9·1532 hlcx:kwulls. brick, plan• fng . Custom work + ••••••••••••••••••••••• n('mo,·11111, trimmln11. Mortell or Peterson Shampoo & steam cle11n ST A M P I N G . Co b ~'rec est 642·9907 XI t h 1 . b ters. Qu1thty work at re· muteriuls. 25 yr:s exl>('r . PATCH PLASTERING prunlna free c:sl 1,1c·d SH/wk 003'2l!07 ini.;. <.:olur brighlt:ncr~. ulcstouc, brick & tile 'd n 0 ousec eanini:tJ Y as prices. Bob 750-93~. references. Richard. *•ALL 'fYPt:Su f\illy ln;14rcd M2·i62-i · wh t carph 10 iTiln p11t1os,etl'640·4349 Jupanes c Gardenor. 3Y· wntranspol'\11 on. 9003953 960·3361 fteeEst $40~5 -· .__H Senlce bleach. Clean liv rm, din Complete ma int. free S25 day. 543·462S - -!Tree Pruning for 1''un1· ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm & hall $1:1. Av)( rn\c---t est.1139-6333after7 pm <>-f " I I . Mo'l'lftCJ •CUSTOMPAJNTJNG • VERYNF.AT PATCH lion & Beaut y. Muln. DOOKK ....... l'ING .,,. 50 h "10 • . I. SS ""'1lTGC or r:•v ess1ona carpel c ean· ••••••••••••••••••••••• H l Q UA L J Ty . L 0 JOBS & 'l'l!:XTURI!: t"' n a II ".. ha u 11 n " "'"' .,,, . couc • • c11u I ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1ng also floor <'are & • RATES Ft """ 39 ""' "· All ph88H bookkoepins Guar elim pet odor. Crpt • • , Ron's Lawn 'Ser•lce 1 ·d · MOVING? Lel2 Expr d · ee .. ~,t. 8!13·14 7!H·52~S. Lewis lltalemenls, payroll. t.!lc repalr JS yrs expr l)c ~f,El\l.JARVlti &VAROCLEANUP w now care. Dutch meomoveyou.Reasona· Call8ruce 54t>-0720eves .., -~ 4 yrs. oxpcr. w/ CPA's work· mys clr. Heh A~ditlons&H~mo<l1illng Cullforest.557-t.109 Mllintenan.:c Service ble,Refs.~ . l't..t&PetCant ,sutoring • Lg/ tmall accts. 962-a2oo S3l·OlOl 002·5573 l,il' 317856 53'1·1508 . GUARANTEED Paint· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ __;;.._ ______ _,, ____ . ------1 ----Gl"Clding r ats Junitorlal Servke FJ:iendly'Moving Co. Ertl· Ing. Tntr & Extr. Ftce SAINT 'S Prof. Pet & Tutor Servi co. St at • larr & Associates Cariit"l Man will Juy your~ ErteJineerfng ••••••••••••••••••••••• y Ii t l · cu.mt. friend!)' service. est, exP-Ort work. 642·0295 Plunt Care !i\'&·ln home 'l'escher 's certiflcah', Business Services or ~i nc. ~t4:pu1rs & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Skiploader, dum p tru<·k, ea':.rics~g~1!m, we c ean L owest poss rat ell INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Pel transp.+ pet bourd: btwn n oon & 4 P M. Monthly Statements clea.mng loo. Guar ~ork STRUCTUltAL ENt:. ~aulmg, trct>. ~k. grad· 847·0992 AccoostJcal cell'g6 25 yrs Ing :svs uvuil. From $2.!iO. ~l-4489 Jnoome Tax Payrol ~.t b1~ger Hvlngs. fr ~st For· plan checks, sign ing, demol1t1on,e t c. J 'torial Paintina/,apering exper.894'6308aftSPM Uc. M.ll.S.847·8658. 'wt--ndo--C-1-.,..---- •Tax Plannin•'• t>IS·J646 structures bldgs 842 9666 7Sl·39JO Clfll .• .,,, w • "9 ,. -----------1....:~::..:...:..:..:...:::..:..:...· =~.:.:::...·:::::::1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••lP~ . t1 I t/E t R Pl"1Ttbl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 124 Br~;.~~18 Y CM \\'.eCareCarl)\llCleunl'rs HciWng Compl ete janitorial l'a1nt·Repalr·35 yrs ~n d~e~~~b~. ;r~e :~::••••••!'-••••••••••••••Clear Vie w Window Slcum cleuu orshampoo Gardenir19 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ser.wice11 • Com m /Res area. workman s hip CaUJay6457965 . . . Washing & llouseclcan· c..,.nter Als0Upholstery·All wurk •••••••••••••••••••••••1ta11ling1mov1ng cleanup l..aguoa'F loor Cllr e. guar.Takeadvant.ofmy . Plumb111g & Heatini: In.:. Quullt y work . ••••••••••••••••••••••• guar.Rt>fs/MC.fre~l Exprd Hawii~n1gardener. S7/up. 'frccwor'k. Rea1, 497.3727 · expcr.S36·70S6. Pcn'l"9 l~ep~ir.Nojob toosmnll ! ~u arantced . 673·5130 Finish Carpehtry. Panel lleas Rates 645·:1716 Yd c1~11nups , trimm111g, fa11t, free est ~.4597... £ERS PAlNT tNG i....................... CalL Daven part 751-11671 eves & wknd5. I d.u.. b t" C"l prunt ng. Lt Jluul 'g L-...t I . Pl uuBER 1' ng, vur s, ca 5• e ~. .. llOU DA Y SPECIAL ti45·Wtl7 YOU HAVE J1' HEADY --"•"CJ E.xpr d real$. rates, free ASPHALT REP AIRS ' "' . ,~pui r · 1'e VinceLenhoff536·847S ~hampo11 or S t eom . J'LLHAUL lTAWAY ••••••••••••••••••••••• est.Cnt1 Gene552·0458 p i p e, In stal l ation Remodeling Our special Cleanoo. 2 ltm~. Jl;1ll 01 Shades of <;rcen·Yard TIM 51&t!.6306 Eitpr'd L a ndacapers. ~ suvice~. <t . Gidley, t)', rep air s r esid / hath SlS.95. S41·J5.J7 & Care. Hoyal se rvice, Sprinklers: Install & re· P.alftfYowCostt~ ~ 642-9315. 537·7396 down to "earth" prices.' Are you confused &: won· pair. Concrete & brick /\vrg Extr lSly S34S . •a 0 comm'I. All work guar d · h d·' I Rooflna Palumbo Const. 962·8314 640·9485 enng ow lo a vert se work. 64:1·7978 Malone 2-Sty $465/lnlr $45r m ··~ •CAHl'ETSAVl::HS• your Christmas !lift Prlce1lnclmtr'l/labor Call631-2440 ••••••••••••.••••••••••• 24hrs. Hydro s teum rlea11'g.Cabellcro & Sons. l!:xpr Items'! Fw un incx· ALLPHASES Guar,hwird,freeest. Rep ai r s & Compo 25'1~ suvings on all carvet gardener. Fr cs ts, rl'· pensive w11y to go, ju~t Sprinklers, tur£. plans, Ted 627·7900or 552·0134 Orange Co. Asphalt Co. Shingles. J nspcctiC~ns . Havo somelhlng lo sell? cleanin g . 1-·r es ts. asonabll'. 041Hlti54 ~rt ''nll uur Christmas Ad· elc.Stale lic283974 lnsrdllic'd. Lo prices, fr Claastried ads do it well. !163·"2V7 -~pm. V1se__r ~l ~2·~8. Call Milchell 54S· 15811 ~SJFIED will sell it. Want ad results 642·5678 est. 830·5020 & or 541-5930 ' HOW IS THE TIME for job seekers to check the Dally Pilot Heir> Wanted classification. 11 the job you want is not there you might consider offering your services with 11n ad ln the J ob Wanted category. Pbone 6'2·5678 ........ lusiMSt lutiMts Lost&Found 5300 HelpWoated 7100 tt.lpW..ted 7100 H.lpW•hd 7100 tt.lpW...ted 7100 HelpW..ted 7100 Opportunity 5005 Opportunity 5005 Opportunity 5005 ••••••••• •••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Grey Siber ian Husky BAB'VSITI'ER who can IOYS AND GIRLS Dl&NTAL/ASSIST Working pa11ner wanted Sweepln9 SH"vice 6 E /\UT Y SAL 0 N. w/litc blue eyes. Jkotw ASSEMBLERS l ove 9 m o nth o l d . Mission Viejo. El Toro CLERK TYPIST ClWRSIDt. Expr onl}'. for well established Nov· s1000. monthly Newport Ol!ach. l\lust (J\ St. & Warner) 1~2/76. Mat ur e, reliable. m y ar ea. E arn your own · 2 days, 1 eve per wk. e lty Sign Business. 25 Hrs p/wk hundh·s il. sell. Best reas. offer. Reword ~ Mess11ge lo 614 Min 6 mo's ex per . in uny home 2'h days a week, monq selling subscrip· Part·Time p /ti m e . Hunllngt on 548-8300 anytime. Establishrd account!' & (21~)367·2566 8th St. 11.8. of the following: PC As· Westm in ster I B ols a lions after school. For In· 1f you 're intereslcd in Harbor. 846-0617 t'quipment $!!000 ii own sembly. Harness, Con· Chica. 892·0560. formuUon, ca.It 830•0913 part.time work at our --------__ SEWING BUSINESS for UBI. 751.3741 · Business Wanted 50 I 0 Personals 5350 nertor or Solder. Color ---.-------•----------• wholesale nursery & cnn DENTAL sale, Mfg .. bedspread, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• code not req·d. Excellent Babys1tter·-i:eacher wantr IUSY· HOH SMOKING type 50 wpm., file, use Orthodontic chairside as pillows, t able skirts. sent COCKTAILS HEED ACTION! Drinking problem:' t·o. benefits 1n<'ludes 1 n:iature lovmg woman tu O ff I c e n e e d s 2 culculator & JO key by slst. Exper. pref'd. Costa cushions. etc. Ca II afl S00,000. monthly limted Businl'ss Invest· Call Aleohol Ht-l1>line wks v ;.icat ion a ft e r 6 sit w ! 1.0 mo old bu ~~ sale!!persons. D1·op by touch, P6le4a4s_c3c3a8 11 9 Mesa. 540·5170. 7PM. 644,..377 00,.o Cocktails. :.iskinl! mcnts, lnr. California's 21 hrs a day 835·JtlJO mo·s 1,1 Paid holidays, l\fo~ri lOt1~·2pm. f~di Kahle Rily, 870 W. 19th Manutacturing·Welcling $335,000 or submit. U Bl , l11rgest business !>ales --~roup 1ns'.'rance stnrls ruq'd. Lag Bch. 494·25JU St. C.M. 646·3997 IJum 'til noon DENTAL ASSISTANT . Machining.fabricallng 751·3741 team, 25 offices stat•· ABORTION day of har e & m1111y "BABYSITTING THEIRVINE CO Part time w/prevention N ..., .. 000 A t· wide·. Gin Orange Count} Counseling & Referr:.il more. Coll ega. stude n t o r CAI DRIVERS SbONewpart Ctr Dr exper, xray lie. for a hap els ._.,, · yr. c Ive •SA"' Cl E't"'NTE• A I I> I ~, PY ch~..r I f" ' 11 t shop. Agt. Sam Crane, •• "" " loser\' ice your nce'1s. we Preg. lesl·avail. wknds l>P Y ersonne mature lady to b ubysit Men or Women Newport Beach ~ .. u o " in un · 645.4170 Gift &Curds St5,000 are desperate for husi· 24 Hr Helpline 547.9495 OOCUMENTOR anemoons/eves., week· Musl be 25 or over E.J!ual Oppar Employer Bch. 962·1734 Burgers & ice 1·re1.1m nesses to sell, we have PH EGNANT? ly, may sleep over if de· Apply In Person -Dental Receptionist J rDeptOutlctStorc onDel Mar 522,000 people with $5000. C DIVISION sired.Calllrvlne559·1676 YellowCob E · Ideal for couple. Nels Burgers&hcer $200,000. who arc ready, ·arinM c onfid ential ll2SlSJater Avenue Collector Trainee. Must xpenencenec. SlOOO p/mo. Sll,000 full on beach $24,500 willing & able to buy ',·obunst'!llng &d ret~erra&I. Addressograph BANKJNG f ountain Valley have goodl telc voice & 581-5800 price. Some terms. Agl. Potters and sculp· nuw. ' <1r tOn, 11 op 1011 HEW ACCOUNTS ----------• type al east 50 wpm. DlS HW.ASHE ll • Im · Sam Crane, 645-4170 lure $25,000 CALL UBI keeping. Multi~raph CARPENTERS Small pleasant ofc. ~.M · mdiate opening. Apply 111 ---------• Crushedamlcubcd 1525 Mesa Verde Dr. APCAHE 547·2563 2921 S. Daimler CLERK IO"'TS are.a. Contuct. l\lr. Kane, person Muldoons Irish Piuo & SCMdwlch ice $3-t,!lSO SANT A AMA Bank ex per. req 'd. "' MS 2640 •BERTHA llENllY East, Suite 106, Cosla *SPIRITUAL READER Equal Oppar Employer Contact Bob Creighton Min I yr exper req'd. . Pub. 202 Newpart Center S2000.mthlynet HEALTORS 492.4121 Mesa f'ullyLicensed l:J'vine NationalBank Must hnve own tool!! &COM P AN ION, fem alc _D_r_._N_._8._· ____ _ Great South Orange 751-3741 :>12N.ElC"m1·nol{eal .,.,.,....,00 E .O.E T & I 60 N k County lol'alion seat11 48 215 Del Mar' San Clem. ., .. .,.....,,, transp. op wnges x nt over yri; mi-Rmo er. DISHW ASHIER I T ·' 0· Bl. Deal w, the profess1on:.1I San Clemente. For appl; benefits. Apply to Securi· Cooking, 110 houseclean· HeliefSh'aft. First c ass! erms. · -----'92·""34 492.91·•0 ASSIST"'HT atd W ·1 C . P l t ' I 751·3741 Money to Loan 5025 _~ "" "-"' tyGu , estsu1 orp, rng. ar 1me on y. --------1 AFFILIATE TO CpHTROLLER BANKING 275 McCorm ick Ave, tm·1586 HOUSEKEEPER/CHIEF ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tin.'<lof"BoobTubes?" IOO""EEPER Lid C 1 tClr C ff ..... Shop 51/ Doys SECO.._.D "'or small Oran"e Co. "" Collta Mesa. o onvu escen O .... 1 f"'ll I st, 2nd & 3rd T.D.'s 0.;te Purty·Ta ke Tn ps r " B k I COOK 1ccc S ' A <-r.'""I I electronic munuf. co. an exper. on y. ,...., uperaor ve ·~ M~" r~~~ m~~ac h . INCOME! LOANS AVAlLAULE Oiac'I'u~~du~~ls. Must be fa miliar w/sim· Contact Bob Creighton Carpet Cleaner De li c alesllell sly I c Newport Beach 646·771;·1 needs lender lovin,.•· care Pl or full time manas:c· Cred1t 11ot important pie consolidated stule· lrvine National Bank 640·2700 btwn 8:30·5:30 reslauront now t:.iking DONU t b C ''73 "'0., B ke EVE FOTO DATE 833 °'00 EOE ---------• ,,ppl1·catlo11~ 1·n J)"rsu11. T MAKE R,exper. Terma . UBI, 751·37'1 men us. 0 your OWll. v . ...,.,., ro r m0 nts· forecasl1'ng· S"'C .... . •. . . " " ' p I ' " ., ~ · • "' ·---------1Cashier. Ca feteria help. 2 for full t.1me cook & us·st art t me.Irvine. --No cx""r req, com1>let~· -T 83-1·0234.834-1552. reporl1·ng· corporat1·on · r Mort909es nist • positions. One tiam·""m "OOk pas'1t1'ons. Xltll PU". Call aft. 9pm. 552-1441 leerTavern-C .M. training + xlut income • 2pm-8pm. tax returns. lleply to a1:•UTY STYLIST · 9 ;r 11 ' J $.1500. + P/Mo. l nveslment (secured) Dffds 5035 ----------• Classified ud no. 768, c/o ~ & one noon·. pm . ._a Ca rn ab Y S t r c (' t DONUT MAK ER . AM & No nearby competition, Cull collet·t .l\I r . Ames •• ••••• ••• • • • •• •• •• • •• • *KA REN 'S * Daily Pilot. PO Box 1560, Must do lutest lrends in !WIHl671 ext495 beC. 9am I~ est a u r u n l • 2 5 3 I P M Shifts. full time, 18 or private orrict:'. k1lchen,-'2•t•3•) 64•' .s •. 4.1;.z.')----• LOANS 9% OUTCALL !llJASSAGE Costa Mesu, Callt. 9'.!626 natural styling. 837·4250; Cl.ASS 01'' 19~ E:.i:ilblutr Dr, N.U. over. Apply in person a vail. Good ter ms. UBI,1•·-----·-----6PM·2A?\1 R38·17ll0 Equal Oppor Employer s3Hl77!l. Needed for European as· COOK, experienced In Sachse's I_>onutShop. 7!11·3741 RESTAURANT Alto 2nd TD Loans BO• T BUILDER signments in the U.S. ~lexican Food. J4224 25571 J erorumo Rd. M'1 . \ F:urt•!ll Terms stn<'e 1lJ49 * SHARO..,..'S * "" Army, T r avel, eel urn Coast Hwy, Dana Pt. Noexper necessary. ~liss1011 Viejo nreu Sattt~r Mtn. C o. ....,. ASSISTANT Small .cstm yard needs t' 1 Po t ·u Up 4,.,, 4470 LAUNDROMAT EverunJ( onlv op1·rn1io11 642•2171 5745•0611 OUTCALLMASSAGE MANAGERS all t~ of expr'd boat 1 10n$2500a op hub;; ei1 .. d "". OONUTShopHelp,f/Umc· Gross$d000. mo Grosses St:l,11011 1110 _______ 4_9_9_·1_2i._1 ___ .1 Over 21. 5 day week. builders&loolers. 0 .cas n~s pal -• PM shift. No exper ner. Oullltandinit troublefree Owner rl'lurnrn~ l,,-W-I' ,2-1~r · 0 ,., S 1 SGOO Ad It P-SQUAREDBOATS t_!> qualified enlistees. CO~KS.E~PERD Female.age 25-4S.Apply loc. 32 Was hl•rs . 12 France aJHI mu,,t :-.l'll ~ >U~. 11' 1 ~~t ce:is EXOTIC GIRLS a ary + · u 541·2873 C :1 11. Y 0 u I' fl.rm Y In m0<hfied chets. Also, in person, Mr. Donut, JJ!"l drye rs. Xlnt porkin1;; 1'"t'-'t!Sl:im.lin~uwl<lt1t1:tt1 lash1mmccl .6-15·1260 comple:x.Nopets. Phone---------Hel'rutler: Dti.h washer n-eed ed. E l7thSt CoslaMesa Owner movln)l oul •>I l'l'lajor i;hoppini: c· .. nh•r _!~nt·~Rlty ·~~t. Co. i\la~~:.ige & Modeli111;; for a ppt. between 9am & Bont Manuta~urer 1525 Mesa Verde 1-:. na~vlew Conv. Hosp, · ' · _ ·,iril,, •. mti.·i .--·II ' <•"•"><I 1 d .. 1 11 Outt·a110uly542·3l6ir 5pm. Newport Village S"'ILIO"' M"'NUF CostaMesa 5401026 2oss Thutin Ave, C.M. DRIVER "~ "' ·' .,. " nsi t• " 11:.1 w •t' 111t.: NEWPORT BEACH .\pts. 035 Baker, Costa "' "' "' • -terms A_.:_t._11.17_ 121"1 _ \1tl >1:11 12lHl lniiw P acific Finundul p O BOXES ;\>lesa. Accepting Clerical --_6'l2·3..'i05. P art tim e for sc h! _________ ....._ ________ "" Co :.irrangcs l'ct·undary • • 557-0075 Appllcul1oms For : Production Clerk chldrn, must be ovr 25. rral est. financ1111t . For Rent •Cabinet Assemblers Good with math & de· COOKS Livenr HB urea.Nospec .. .. by pleclRt •ed ...... aw DAILY PILOT CHRISTMAS TREE •*******••••• • ~ ChrlttmH • « Gifts for • ! Everyone : • Whut a wonll~rfitl W:.t,\' lu '4t icl'l 1 ~ uu r .i:oo1l 111-. f11r • t:hri~trnus rti:hl 11ut « • rrum under our • ·• Clll!IST:\tAS Ttn:~; • ************* • *********** « • ~If YOUR tc • IUSINESS • « IS « « GWI'S TOYS « • S PORTING GOODS -tr -tr CLOTfllN<.i l'OTTt-.;1t y • « ,Jl'•:Wt::l,RY ·fl Allt • « ~IUSIC FUttNITU.ff « • A~TIQUES HOB tm:s • « BOOl\S Al'PLIANCI·:.o., • • HOATS Ima::-: «· AUTmJOHJl.ES • « St•ll the m lltl' ll1m11h· 41 ._ 111111 t•uic~· WH ~ l'r'om • undorour « • CllHIST:\IAS Ttrnt: • .............. ,, l'•t• '"'"' 1111 o4 ..,;, >lat fMU.00 ---......... fwSUO l'c1·haps we l'an help Associate llep •Flnlth Line tails. work in manutac· Ur reqd 541·3325· you.040·8292. 631-0727 180ROY'ER Cc:rpenter1 turingarea. The J o ll.Y Ho g.e roru g Sa l es l a d y : "T llF. EXPERIENCE" 1\1lu It motel. Closed l'ircuit TV. F'or Heser va· tton!I. S<tft.9755 HO EXPU.. NIEC •Engine Installers Stflt04Jl"apher Hest.aur~nt is accepll~R Cosmetician, m ature ex· BOA1' EXP ER. PREF'D Heavy typing for small applicaltous for Exp.er d per only need apply. USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY F'or Result Service Call If you're ne~ \a Orange BUT WILL TAKE AP· office. 1'.:xperience pre· Fry Cook:1. Xlnt fringe Downtown Hntg Bch. Co., ten1pornrft'y discon· J> J., IC AT I 0 NS F 0 R !erred. Apply mornings benefits & hours. Apply 536·2701 linuing your education. TRAINEES ALSO. at : 17352 Arms lrong. in person. 22873 Lake1--------------- •PALM Rl!ADER• l'a11t . pre~cnt & future. I .ic 2131694-13!)(16.?7·!1272 rerenlly d is chargl'd GOO D P AY. XLNT Irvine. <Nr Hedhill & Forest Dri ve,EIToro. ELECTRONIC from the ser vice or fur DENEFITS. MacArthur>. 540·8503. TECHNICIAN any reason seeking tern· APPLY COUNT ER HEL P , ut Back~round digital & porary or career employ· DICSON YACHTS Clerk. ffllme, m~tur e Kust.ers, Cleaners, t;\.'W a n a 1 o g circui t r y . Personal Services 5360 ment, consider this uni· 1931 DeereAve.S.A. male or f~malc. Liquor Newport Blvd . CM . Diversified work load in qut'<>P1x1r. Yuu can earn Store. 1525 .Mes i! Verde S.18-4243 design & testing of in 642-5678 ht.JU ....................•.• 01.;;co & Soul <lance classl's now forming Call Ii 12· 1551 all I: :lfl S 196 PER WEEK Ra !led oo your prod uc . ti vi ty, c omm . + ~oyment & lnl't'nlives & e:<t1·a prohl Announcements/ l'reparation ::.harin g bon us. The Pet"t0ttolt/ •• ••• •• •• •••• •• •• ••.... Women & Men we are Lott & Found Schools & looking for may be tired ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnstrud ion 7005 of typing, folding papers, 0001\S Sfudents Hc.IMwint & Moonllqhters Mllllon Doflnr corp. needs men & women of any age who enjny spe11ktng w /others & who are bored w/the ave~age runo(t;he mill jobs. ' DrivcEusl,C.M. ---------strum e ntalion . Ad · COUNTER HELi' v anced Kinelics, Inc. CLERK f'ull lime, min 1 yr ofc l'Xper, job req 'd, slaUsLicul typing & up· titucle of fi i.;. & knowledge or 10 kt•y. llam·5pm. Growing co w/xlnt co benefits. Ctill Full & P /tim·e. Apply Ocl 1231 Victoria St., C.l\I , Taco. 25252 La Pn Rd. 646-716.'i. E.O.E. &I H300, ext 270. Laguna Hills. -------- DEL TACO Needs Kitchen Help P /lime positions tt vall. Day hl'lp. S2 .50 h r . _ 631·1831 1720 Supcriur Ave. CM ENGINEER Fo~~~~~~!un~&op· Lost & Found 5300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wurehouse jobs & work· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·---------' mg for a limited lncnml'. Work w/young peoplL'. No actual selling in· LOST Hl.1\C.:K t Ofl.ttt-: IEABARTEMDIER Haptd udvanceml'nt volved & no ~ettlng up· MOWISTHETIME ~ ~,· ~"1',,11 • 1'~.· <~Vo ,.c'· k ·~; :i Full or Pnrt-timt> 1><1ss lble. If 1vou 're 111 01• polntmcnts. Work w /onE ment of small electro l>f:NT AL ASSISTAN'l-"ll-l mechanlc«l assemblic" Exper. in documenta least 1 yr ei<11er . E:.:· lion , pro<luctio n llnr panded rluties. X ruy. trou bleshooting & cost i>arl ·t1m u. Call D1'. redu l'tio n . De 1treed ' • • He ready to work os s o\.er & wouk be avuil to of the cpost populur & ,\I IX. ,\I ISSl:"llCi l'HO:\I professional burtcndcr in start wnrk 1mmed l'all ~uceess!ul product?! on Ii ARDEN <rnov1:-: O('T 1 week Frcl' job place· betwn !lam & 3pm the market today, An in· 30, WES T M I NS 1' F. H mcnt nssistanct•. l'xpensive product who's J\VF./TRASK AllE i\ fl.mem·unllorll'nder11 539-118) name ls a hou11ehold -~33. School 1----------1 word thruout the world. LOST: Kitten 3 010 old, l104F..t7lhSt,SA Automotive Work in a you thfu l, 834 l!l60 1 ·h d frlondly atmosphere & black ft•m. w/rrd ('Ollar, · New Detui S op nee s have fun while you enrn for job seekers to check t he Dally P ilot ll('lp Wanted clussiflcalion. tr the job you want i!I no~ Weiner, 847·8501_. ___ 1 l'n1timwr pref'd. there.you mif(hi cons~dcr DENTAL ASST , some offering you.r "crv1ccs front office duties. Ex· with an 11rt in the Job per. Sat morning & Mon· Wantc<l category. Phone day!!. pr. Sch um m . 842·fiG78 . 847 8501 STACOSWITCH INC I 139 Buker Costa Mesa 549-3041 Equal Oppor Employer S11ntiaf110 Ave, San t..:lcm. _ _ help. y 1 4!1lS 18117 arl5 Job w t d 7075 TOJ\ wages p11id. Engine ~ouparpaonyle.eclost1~lareryce+veex~ Help Wanted 7100 H ..... Weftfed 7100 ...... w .. ted 7100 __ · -· · • cm • • Steamers, en~ "ainters, " ,, ...,. ••• • FOUND Newlund al In· •••••:••••••••••··~··•• huffers & Polisher,;, UP· trem ely liberal com· •••••••••••••••••••••••,••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••• dianupahs 10·4 i · blk rem MJ\U· NURSE. av1.111. for holstery shampooers, mission & bonuses. Con· short hllir pup-I.AR? Whl pnv11to duty. Litt> cook· check out, piek·UP & de· tests & other incentives. SPotmkn~:1.!168·HS8I. 41~7"~" hskpi.t. R efs, livery.Applyat Xlnt udvancem ent "" .,,.,,, ""'~n H bo Bl CM possihilltics for both men l··ouND hei"e & llrn kit· ~"" ar r • &womun, ... U...Jp Want-...t 7100 645-1030 ~ t l' n /\ v o c ado ,\ v ,. , n.. cv Corona del Mat 673 41122 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Auto Parts. Toyota, Volvo No ex,x:r. ucc. You re· YOUNDSmoll D~ ACCOUNTING CLERK nealer in Ml1111fon Viejo, eeiveCull pny whilcbcin~ MesaVcrcle Arcur11tc w/figurc11&dc· needs qualified pnrtl\ truin1.od. You can wor 540.4788 t:ill. 10 Key by touch. w unter man. Call ferry morning or eve. hrs. On· t;ood typist. Attractive 831·2880 1)' 1() min. by Fwy. from ~ 0 UN D S . N.6. loc. 640·4850 i..::.;.._....:.:..:.._------1 all s urrounding com · F : Pr 1 n g l' r muniUes. You owe it to Spaniel, choke chain, ACCOUNTS AVON ... yourself to at least In· Beach & Slat er JUL RECEIVAILE vcsUgale lhis -unusui l tw7-630-'l tf)ident_1f_y ___ , Pvt Yacht club needs oppor. Contact Jenelle LOST: White Ar~han 11·5, AIR Ch•rk full time Wed· Nffd !xtra SS T1tulbee, 833-8098 • vie 56th ~ lkuch N.n. Sun Must be uble to ToMake 645-5458 REWARDI wor'k w/dub members. Chri1tma1Merri.,.7 Scllidleltems 642·S6'78 ----Computer h c k grn d Ear n about ..... Oo11 "very ••••••******* LOST : Fem. Bl11ck Cnt, helpful but not mirn· ..., ~ • gold ey e s, s payed, dutory. ('all Wed Sun SlOOyou aell 1111onAVON •I ! Bluffs. Nwpt Bch. An!!. lo 673·3.~5 Rep resenlntivu . St•ll • 00 YOU MAK!., "Cranberry",644-27!19 --------benutiful "lfts. Jewelry, .,. CHRISTMAS • ---ACC'rs Payable Bkkpr, cosmeliCl!, more. I 'II • GIPTS? • LOST: Rcwurd. mlllc exper neee~•11ry, Four to s how you h ow. Call • 41 German Shep. Olack & 5 d11ys wk. fur nit ure 540-704lor 1.cnith'M..359. ~ ~~h,;· ~~! \'~,~e~~~~,:.~~; • t an, Nov. 2, Hnlg Och. i;tore. Call Detty. 642·2053 ; Ult' « 960-3486 btwn 9·10AM OAJt..Y t>IWT « 1----------1-----;__ ____ BABYSITTE R . Nd•. ClttUS'fllASTREf! « FOUND: Cat, Blk, whte APT HOUSE-mature woman, 5 day11, • • • r•ws, some brwn. t;ushy NEWPOlT 7:30to4 pm. El(s;>nt, recs. : Our t:hrlAlm .. 8 Tru will • all. Orch id. Cd M , My home,HB.8'6·277' 1ppo1tr t'1Hth Th11r1d11\' tr 1\73 6881 AU t. 'M I r ·M I\ I N T • • from NO\' 11th thru Ot>~ • ENANCE. Couple, Cull 8Ab)'liUer noeded 5 day • Ulth Coll 812-&"'lll It 118k ti f'OUNO Cockapoo, time. Salary open. Exp, wtc, 2:3C).5:30prn, N.8. 2 • fM >'our <'t1r•~tmu M·• female dog, W. Side C.M onl)'. No chlldrtn/ pets. Boys 1 & 9. Salary open • "'"'r for more lnfor1n11· • S4IJ,3343 644·26U or "494-1268 642·9989 : ~ • • ,. • * * • _..,: I FREE REAL ESTATE CAREER SEMINAR "No Obligation or Cost" TUESDAY. MOY. t• .ti P.M • 16241 IHch 11¥d.. HmalilMjt• a.ach llCOME I' ART OF ONE OF THE TOP PA YING CAims IM SALES • Advanced M1rketlng Techniques SEE ROBERTS: • Audlo-Vlsual Sales Training Program • Amulng ERA Electronlo Property Pretent1iton system • SueC8Ss Formula HEAR ROBERTS: • 1976 Career Op,,orturllties • Unique Profeas•onal Training Program OfllM TO,.._ PUILIC COMPUM9ff AIY R.IRHHMIMTS lwtettstl4 , ....... lcwed ...... f'MH .. lnHM to C.-t.r hllhd ........ ec~a ··~ 841-1688 RDberts • Realty 8 Locations s.Mno The 8oUttl Bay a Qftnge County ·' ' 8J% DAILY PILO T Mond•y. Novembef 8.1976 H.tp Wcwit.d 11 OOj~p Wanted 7 100 .Wp Wanl•d 7 100 Bicycle ' 8020 MiscellaMOUt. 8080 MiscfllClft•o&is ........_ W . . • •••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• •••••• ••••• •• ••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••• ••• • ••• WClfttecl 1011 ;::'!,_.~te4 7 100 W.-ttd 7100 .... W.ted 7100 PIXAMwer.Sffv. SALES .>crvtc<" St11. Mtendant USED. R F.ltU ll.T & W ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• P /tlme ahltb w/aom e HOMEM Al\.t;KS ... 7 p/tlrnc. Av111l t ve1 ft Ou1ranteed. All t yvei.. ANTED SSS CASH FOR HOSTESS Lau.tdry Penon w1tnd• Paid wbUe train· wk s le (t ... to rrualc r wk nds. t:xp,•r 'ct. Neat p.arll&, n·palr~. Trud\:·IJ)S Tor CAS 11 UO Ll.A ll Good u."cd rurn/refrigll ESCROW i u t be 21 Apply betwn Ma ture. Buyvacw Conv. lnJ. l!:OE.1133 3333. Ctuistmu n.oncy doing "ppear . & h;indwr1lma; acccptl'd li3l-Zl01 fl A I ~) .. ',O It Y 0 U, H frn"S/rtovcs M8-0'Tll8 2 & :'>. Bob B ur.n :. Hosp. 2055 Thur m /\v . u p11rlumc rhari.:c uc Applv m o rni. 2 ~9U -J EWELJn . WATCllF-<;, SECRETARY Hr:.taurant, 37 Fashion C.M. 642-lSOS Pax Ans wt'r. Sc.<rv \'Ounl p romotion 1n a N''"Port llhd c ~t. N1~h1k1 '76 mdl i.llver 10 AltT lH\H :L'"'ni. UOLU b land. NO ----Or tel co. <"'ICl'K'r prt"f'a 111.1pcr rctJil Stott.' In your --· ---. :o.,>d. Cost ne w $217 2.5. S l L V ER SF. ll VI C F. l mml'<ilat.· opc111ns: for LEGAL SECRET ARY P:uct Whlll' lnuntn~ All urea ... lllllk\' SJ()() lu ~ntct< St .1. 1\tt~·ndan.t WUl sc:ll St~. fH4 0411 F l N t: vlf It N & AN M.Jtll\o llldl\lduul \\ 11110 sh1fl11 rncl wlmd$ t:;OE ~ oo hr romnll!\!jio n ~ time d.iy ..... to, ptr d TIQUES. u.i~ Z.'00 WAMTED ORll-:NTAL RUGS Pt•r:.rnn & Chlncs t' .1l~o TJ~try. l'vl 1'ty'11 on ly. 640 7011 HOSTESS t:;xpenenred Corporate C11ll betwn 9~rn & 4pnt, .•"""' (2t•). <u c. • ......,1 o 11 I y. L 1 t e m cc h 'I IUY-SELL·TRADE -----5 )f !I l'l\l>l'rtt'ncc in field ':f h L' 5 A I Nw"' Ctr "•O "'"'" ,,.,.., " ""'""JU .• ont ru.-rl ll PPY ... • ""·uouu Mon-l-)'1,640·1110 ---kno\\l('dgl• prd'rl N1·ut NEW &USI::D LUGG"'GET"'GS ri•IJICll tn \''(•row or loun L~I 'faco. 252.52 La r :u • ---PAl'TS •. I' L'P I u" "" "" 1•r•1<'e!>~lllll Acc ur a t l' lld, Luuunu lhlls :\W DS-Apl type t>e,rY1t c S,\t,t-;SLA UY. l'XJ)l•r 'ct , UPl'l'ar. & h.1 r1d\\ ritui.: ' "' H • A n.;) from your bu~l11t>J1> ~u1'd . Mutlc:ol l~'"lnJ.:rt.'11u1n•d.C:.illor -., Sa l r1ed . Fr1n ne l'EOPLEPEHSON m..iturc . f ,ltm1'. A\-111 Applv morn' 4!$~0 Cw.tom built Crulset'S, Sendo1 rd C h '' " Exec need!! P/Utnl' al> day:i, eves & \lokntls. ALI!' Nt>wl)Orl Blvd. <.:M MX & 10 Spct:o1, 241111 Nwpl 1 e ca or "uc ln1~h 8083 M·nd 'c-.ume to HOUSEKEEPERS bem•f1lll. tc cgulur hrs. soc. in wh!>le supply. Pul 81 d C •t "•2 7910 ltt>; plus one SllW'C. We ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644' 3389 Park Newf)Orl no 1 P rk ly Ill J)l'1~011, Uu.:>:~ In . . v • " .,.. · r eturn p e rmra n1•nllY . • & WAITRESSES O • a ly cap1laht ed. 613 222:1. h ·rnatwnal Gift Shop S,•rv1r o ~tut io n All{'n • M'uleod nu rucuvo toa & Conn M1n-0 -!11 a t1c . elt><'. '••\'°IT 'til Noon l\1 a lure p eo ple. Good Newport r • N.8. ~3 We stctiff Dr, N B. ' da111, 1•xper'd . Duy & luildlncJ Mattriol1 8025 Rtr:ip . mt'l'lrn•• uirhne Ot gan •. excellent t.onih· THE IRVIHE CO. benefits. Adult r esident Maintenance m un want<·d Eves. t"Ull & p1llm1." Ap ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.0. n•qulr(lml~ltS, l'rc· tmn, $000, P .P. $32·1259 !'>SO N1•w1H1rt Ctr Ur 1•ure cC'nler. 6.11·3SSS. part t im e MrOonaldi.. SAL ES MNGMT, ply, Shell SlJUOn, 17th & AP PllOX 250 bhl'cts of I h n v Newport l.\(IUC'h SJ.00 hr. 556-9943. PHONE SALES tJnhmited income poten· lrvmc, NII. 3/11" exte1 ior plywood. veul O!lic & 1 c• ! •'or 11 Office Fvmlture It fa1uul Oppor Jo:mployer llous ekel'pe r . m a t ure liJ I in prtmu.ry wholel>all' ---. . ui.cd. Ask for Dave. 177 fl('rsonaht l'd IOU e~iclose EqwlPnteftt 8085 lady live.in, o wn lra ns p. Ma uagem ent-Wom e n 's Pho ne S ales people. 1Jus111css. Profit sharing Serv. St a. Aulu Mechanic. I::. 22nd St. CM bl wn wall pa per • fa uri c or ••••••••••••••••••••••• 847 7252 Conteml)Orar y Clothing. m;ile or fo mule, lt.i to 65 & o w n e 1• :; h l p Do Y.'~u nee•<! ~.o:!"kl yr'' 8am-5pm, 644·0878 "Duy (ilo" p:i~•r & we Portoblc eke 1'ypwrilt•r EXEC. S ECHF.Tl\HY for We are looking Cor un ug· years of age. Guarunlocd poss 1b1lities. Ncl'd nol U-ls I r ud(•, b73·:1320 will burk & I rim your SR Medalist Powor. SU S. 1 n ve s t m l' n t <' o • 1 n llousckceprng, Ille. After-gresslvc person w/ba ck wugcll or com missions. leave present position. Cots 8035 lugs. Or try two curds b73-461)7 l•'a bh1on hland. Mu ~t noons. To p puy. N.B. g r o und In wom l'n ·~ 250 Eust 17th S treet , 836·9100 SKIPPER ••••••••••••••••••••••• bucklo bt1C'k. ---------- have 4 yr:. cicper . tYP<' area .644 tl5ll6. clothm~ & uecess. us Ai; Suite o. Col:it a Me sa . P e r s i a n Kitt l'ns. re-P RICES: Pets 8087 tJ570 wpin .~hl!O!JOwprn. -----------'st. Manager o f o ur bctwet.<n S:00 &8:JO p.m .SALES /M GMT , new Want e d Cnr d ies el g1s tercd , most colors S2cu orJ /$S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apply, TM! J(;!J S an llousekecper & Varn~us wo m e n 's d e pt al <ivr 6464m. stor e. m e ns/ womeM 1>owcrt•d yudll Ple ase available , worm od & 4/5tar:s$l.li0ea. SAINT'S Prof Pct& Pl:rnt l\l 1guel Dr. Su 1Lc 200. Dutil's. Anernoon ~h.iit. Westminster Mall store . Equal Opportunity c o n t e m p o r a r y give a ll dl'lu1l:.. 111cluding shots. 638·9308 6/V lugs Sl 50 cu. <.:arc svs Ill hom e. l 11•l N U Abo, kitchen & dining Call Cor mlervw a pJ>l. t:mploycr s por ts wea r. l'os ltio nl:i CXf'., quahf1l·ations & 10or mor t!$1.40ea . tr~11up & bo11rdin¥ av.JI! · ~~~-6~~~ m guest home. S4IMSOO. ~:llo~y ~~~ddet~~~i/~~ ~~~i~.~~~ ~~~;:e~o1i ~.~ ............. !?.~~ S<ile~6c"AW~~ed ~~~so. Lie. Mils. FACTORY lloust!k<."l'J>('r for 2 adults MANICURIST person. Kenneth Lloyd of ly Pilot. P.O. box 1500. /\KC Dachsh11nds• Draw your uwn or s end -------- RLUJo;J t:A "I JOBS Good plain l'OOk Needed wjth d icntt'le for Photocrapher. some ex-Newport, 2700 w. Coast Costa Mes a. <.:a 92626 S td s c h . s l k. !!hots• nu me , address. phone SportirtCJ Goodt 8094 '\lf:N4t,WO~lf:N &l6 0973 s c ul p tu re d n .i al s. per in i.hootrng e hldrn, Hwy.N B ~~ wormd• PSY t.std• Sl we'll mnkcunecard per ..................... .. f\S!>cnihlen., 1'.1t•k,1gcrs ----------• ~. tam, etc. Reply to P.O. ---=---------up l 7'.!8 4485 tag. Add25•cach. Rick Jomes 0'8" Sw31low l11spectors llous ew1ves o r sh ut-ins,•----------• Box 746, CM, Ca. 92t>27. e e e e e e e ~/CMBo~ l.o/C~n Ofer ~~ -· · • Send check or money or· T 111I S vrf Bo an'!. $60. c:cn'I Lite male or frmale, phone Merine Electronic pr uns lr """"' YOllKSHIRE TERRIER der lo: 498-1218. n!>k1lll.Y Workt•rs from your home. S3 hr Service Technician PM LVH Charcje SALESPERSONS He<'cpt/Sccret:ir y l oS800 PUPS \:ha m p b lood PILOT PRIHTIHG ------~ U:.iy & S\\ 111..: Shifts t.'75·7100or K:ll-31'56. MURSE Triple A rated company ~ec'y/Fullerton lo S800 lines. tiny 3 lbs stud P.O. Box tSOO TY, Rodi~. OnThe Joh1'rJ111111g ~~~111t!c~P·n':7dn~: ~1ac". F /time. Li do Con v . has Ch ristmas Scallon lrvme_PersonnelA~ent·y St>rv1ce530-6455 Costa Me:.a Ca.92620 HiFi,Stereo 8098 Temp Assignments HOUSEWIVES Center. 1555 Superior sales person:. poi.1tmni. ~ f, l7th Co~la I\k :.a ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• •'J>PI> Ua1 ly P/llme Jobs. neic1ble hrs ~oBd64~~& benefits. Ave, N.B. 64!>-7764. ,l\a!lablc rn Los t\ngell's &12·1470 A!~s:fg~f1~ e~u/~hlbl&k Befer drafter, holds L• Kci;: CTORCR~,dio, Rt::AldLISTIC Kell S • I while k1db are in school. · · · area nal1unal r c l ;.111 . • L o beer, new l'<>nd. S200. ,,,5, l m oo · $195. V ervac:es. nc: \ I D I T 25252 '"ASSE c-1----------1 stores.Ladics dl'nt. -TA-XCONSULTANT-a pr1 ~0,.t .. ~·~"a.bl e b'73-5276.C:illaftllAM. AF'TSl'M,648-8813 Nl•Wport Bch l!JJ 14•1 I I pp Y. c aco, ... u .. E ( 18 28) legit •. J>('rsona 1t1es . .roo-0523. o r.ins:!.' 517.~1535 L..1 Pattld,Lag.lhlls. full tim e po!>1l1on 10 PRESSMEN CallTollFTee needs p a rtner. Heply -'----------• CUSTOM Must sell Sansui QR 1500 J.\Jllerton !17!:1·!:1762 ~1assage. No e xp . nee. l-BOQ 325•8409 Box 17214, Irvine, CA Free to You 804'5 Equal Oppor F,mployer , _________ _. We train. Call 540·2053 112713 ••••••••••••••••••••••• anytim e Immediate openings for qua d receiver. l:lS ll WOVEN WOODS turnt a ble . <4 > 3 · FACTORY Work m an a11• c<>nd & 1·.1rpdcd arl'•• W/F;\1 mui<it. Mu!>t havt.' pa· l1L'rll'e to work w/m•cr<> m1111atur~ 1)arl1> undt•r a 1n 1 c r o !> 1· o p l' • J • 1' r m work. llr:. 7-ion :i :io11m. Top pay + 1·0 lwnd1ts. (:a1~t.'r Tool <:o .. 1701 I::. C.1rnt>>lll' Avl'. S;inla Ann. 5-IO .. U)I!(). FIELD SERVICE INSPECTORS ----------•pressmen w /reccnt e x. Ho Charge * ReceMng/ Mee h 'I 2 Yrs rl'cent tiXpt>r In ~hCl'l ml'lal, p lastic & machine parts. Some PC expcr. des1rl'd . • f,..Proc e ss :\I a t 11 r e r e s po n s i b I e woman for houi.ckl.'l'PlllJ: & c are nr 2 youn g children. 40 hrs. week . exceJle11l pay. !\lust have references. li7:1·2Sl!.17 after 5 PM & weekends. I\1111 I ~r t.''<l)er. in in-MATURE LAD Y F on J•rucc:.s of ;ill electronic SANDWICH BAH. lOAI\1 1nspcct1on. Must know 4Pl\I. NO E)U>. N)';(.'. c•llur <·odes, blucprrnls & CALL, 64-1-0050 1''0H !>chernut1cs I N T E R V I E W . 11Proto-Source NE WPOHT kEACll •I Yr'> c\pcr rn source of 1:,1':1:'1N IS C_LyB. 2~01 :ill <'lcc·truruc inspection E.\ST BL U F F • N W l T :\lu:o.l know color code,1_B_C_~_1. _______ _ Mech1 Assembler p crie n ce o pe r al1ni: h1W\'Y sll'am system con· lrOlll'Cl rubber presses in· clurlini.: transfer. lx>ok & slug loaded presses. In· rentivc paid systrm & ' exccllcn~ co. paid fringe benefits. Apply 9am-noon daily to Caller Ask for Mr. Phillip or Miss Susan Htll. These are s alaried positions. -······· ~F Sales VOIT, INC. 380 I S. H arbor Santo Ana, Calif. Wont M«e lncome7 Stay on your prt>~cnl Joh. learn lht• real cst;1tc f1t'lcl w/pr11f he lp Quahrll'd l)t'rsons ha\'l' a n unhm 1t 1.-d futur~. no t'O!>t ll>_l',tll Gro. Frev :it l>J5 28l!ti Gufa p'ropt•rllcs. Inc TELEPHONE SECRET ARIES Part time or fllll lime work. Xlnt uJ)l)Ol'luniLy. For interview, <'till : 494.3474 TEST TECHNICIAN FREEFIREWOOD •50'.t.'l'080'/u 0 1''1-'• s pe3ke rs. $250 o r ofr. __ 9_A_I\_~ _to_4_P_M_64_6_-J23 __ 1_1 Over 40 hM tOt•k patterns 1_67_5-_9_1_1_5_. ------ Aba ndoned black La b/ D obe rm a n puppy , fe ma le 3' ,_ mos. Sweet d isposition . love ahle . N ccds a home. 64ti-7535. lla nrlso m e Pup pies . :J wks, 3 , German Shep + L a b & W ei m e r ane r 5.57·189'l KITTENS 5J5.2084 ( 710 Abo MlNl-ULINDS 645-8950 83J-V770 CARPET FINAL CLOSEOUT SALE! 25" Color Console TV's. 2 yr picture tube w arm. 4.00sq. yd. Sl6:Mi225. All Service & PLUSH S HAG Hepa1r Co. 807 W. 19th St, Lowrsl prtCl'S on ony Costa Mes a. maJor braotl. Cull ror zcruth Color TV. 25.'. tree quote· lO-~pm. w /remolc control. $170. (714) 497-1345 645·\l'.!05 Lazy boy, ~old lwc<.-d $!15, Furniture wrouithl 1run le a cart loah & Morin• 8 0 5 0 sos. 640·0Cli t. Equipment ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• **I BUY** CARl'i':T Contractor ha s loats. Marin• iO yd3 red Ny lur1 Plush E....:_. 9030 REPRESENTATIVE Wl'!>li.atl Cvrtl has 1m nwd. \ oll'Jfll'll'" for a ' t' 1 ... J t 1 It· '.1 I I h n :.t t l'r.1fhmJ 11 w1Jl ll·J.,t a )r' l'\pt·r "' .•II ph,•'l':> nf hoJl l',1rta·11tr), pl11mb1n~ & t.'lcl'lrll'JI 'I hcrl' will h<' n111.,1der .1 Ioli• tr,1\\·hnl! 111•111 11111 pl.int 11: 1111r \\ .11t•r-;1clc• ·hnwroom \\ t11•r1• v1111 '"II clu \;,Jrr.int,· \;,1:1 I.. & J11,,1l !>h•'w lll'l'll:.Oral1011 <'.di \I:-, ~l e l>on.olcl , ,11'1 '171 I. I'\( 17 Jul' 111111"' 111f11r m.11111n blueprmts. Sl'hcmatics. Will ill'rfnrm in;;pectton Jl subC'ontraclors & as- !>lsl \\tlh rn hou:.e ins pcc· lion when rl'llUtrl'<i. Rl'<1 'd to perform var1nu'> An F:qual Oppor tunity fac tory functions fur --•"•:m_p.lo•y•l'•r•:\•l•/•F--~ample makr r \\<rnll'd small marine electronu.::i 'l ~l huve factory C'<Pt>r 2 4 Yr!> exix•r . 111 rC'l:itcd f1<>ltl. Te!>l & troubJc..,hool d11:1tJ I Pen·,, Must be l.Jmthur \\/both analog & d1g1t-il r1n ·1111rv. 1-:xn •llenl ro Lil•nef1t s m c ludt.' l \\ h ~ va l'<1 l111n aftl•r 6 mo .... 11 pa id h ol i da y~. i.:ruup 111 · !>Urant'l' ~ta rl ~ day uf hire & many mort•. Good used Furniture & '.\I u!>l sell! ti75 5!106 & .. ~,... ......... Apphunces-OR I "'ill 6-t2·2210 ••••••••••••••••••••••• :.l'll or S ELL for You. 40 Lb Danforth, 3S lb CQR, c·o. Good l>cnef1ts A11ply, P1T1me Oplomclric ufc on_ qua It Ly . garmc nl' F.xcdll'nl t•o. benefits in -~ e w PO r l :\I a r 1 r~ '' Neal, outgorn~ & w1lhng Abo md~st~t~I !11~1l·hinr <•lude I wks \";tcalion i;:ng!ne~~in~. ~~7 W 16th lo learn ll f\.11--17-~927 _rn hme C:.ill .l6IH6i7 MASTERS AUCTION PLUSH 8' Sofa & 6' I AW· wa lker log, a ssorted ~eat. Inlaid wood g :imt.' blocks, windvane, IU>t-', 646-8686 & 833·9625 scl w/match111g t his & y ac ht "Lissa", Blox- .ifll•r fi mos. 11 l'aid Sl.'.\i U.li-IS·JG;J2 p,t:c;al~. S40-S70 wk up. SCllO(.>I. 1.1 13.ll/\H Y ho lidays. g r o up 111 ;\1 f:DI C t\I. BOOK -M<'n. l.idwi.. ,Ludl'nls. C~.ERK. 10 mos. A hr surance !'.t.Jrts dJY of KEE PER. Frnnt off1c1-. 1-:ve..,/Sal 554-785 1 d<t y. Apply perso nnel h1re &mJ11y mol't'. famih:.ir wilh peg bourd 839·76.'lf ' ofc . L ;11::una Be a1•h Apply l'er!lnt\11('1 DOCUMENTOR SAVE! New & used furn, wall unit , ~lass to p h ums, 21s t St. N.ll . a ppl s. m isc. Wibon·~ dmette i-l'l, lg lamp~. <tll ~·-·_l.S4_9_e_v_e_s. ____ _ wood king st. bdrm Sl"I ll;1rs:ain NoQk. Now 2 w/armoirl'. 1\ll Ill Xlrll Boats, Power 904'0 Stores -545 & Rl4 W. <'<Ind. ~.4700 ••• •••• •• •• •• •• •• • ••••• Apply P crsonnd ~ystcm. exp 011ly. Con· '· Unified St hool JJ1:.tn1·1 l<tct)lr Hurley,1126-:1600 l'UHC.:llAS l NGCLEllK before ll/30/76. Ac~~~~}~~Jh l!Jlh, C.l\I. 642·7930 & 1975 BAY l.l:'(EH 2250, 280 5411-3262. -WE BUY Misc~laneous Volvo. VI IF'. flybrid,.;c, FOOD SERVICE /\II <1rou111l twlpl•r , n 11111 n •.,tJ11r.111l .11 lll'W hll'.11 •'\I'(' .11ltll'11c duh '1011 Vri. ,1ppr11 x II) :Jo 2 30 (',111 f111 Jl>!Jl "tf17 tt:!:I:! OOCUMENTOR DIVISION Addrcssoj?raph ~tult1s:raph 2921 S . Daimler Santa Ana l·:qual Oppor Employrr ;\lt'd ical Front & B.tt·k ()fc. Exp & rl'f" :.t m u!>l Over 30. Newport area. 12 Mo'!>. 8 hr d:1y. Apply at ix•rsonnel ore, LaJ.(una Dc·<1ch Un1fir d School D1stn l'l. heforc l l tl3'76. PO Box 81 22. l-'oun1<1m 1 __________ 1 Vulley. Ca 927_08 ___ _ Heal Es tate MEN for L,A Times home• delJvcry 111 Costa l\t c!>a & BROKER Nwpt Bch. S275 SJ OO per FRY COOK --------• mo :>il\·17-10 -----r SERVICES 1\ttt1h 1>11 k ( h11rd1 '" ln.,ur.incc . Mgmt T rne, J)t.'rm Earn II• 1.1111 int . .!11''" File SJ75·S200 wk. 1-'ullcr Necdaprofess1onal who '•'\\ p1111 llh ti l \l Clerk Brus h Sules. 5'>-t-7851. has O\\ nt'd or man aged i-;,p.indml! ms. al!enryi----------i largt rt.':.rdenlrnl res:ile G~neraf Offic e I'• r111.1111·111 p.11t llm1• \1111! 1 \I 11111111 llnll.1'1' •"II' \,1111111. Ill'\\ 1111' Ir) Ir 1 111.. '1 , I 1 n ""'" "'" I'" lll\l' 111111d1·d 111 11ttl1· ltt Ill 11••1•11 1• lllt''fll'll'I\\' 11,1 l•11n.Jll1· l.1Jo1~n 1111111111 l' I 1111111111 ol• 1"111· p.111.. 1 ..: ~ .. th•·r It. n..t1l, l•I• 1',111t •\II lllUlloJlllO.:' i(. 11 '"'l) 1tr1111· llhl'I•' 'II 1 'I" 1 u,~, "\ fl•• ·•'Jluu: ll\\t11\1•d \1111 "1'1•11 1111 o•h .111 1· .. m1•111 ('.111 ~. I l II U •1 .>. T 1 111 I I 1 I 1• I ;l1r.1n•'' Im• l•.q11.1l \Jp. I•" I mpl11\1·1 \I F G EN'l FACTORY WORK :-1•11 lln~ ~1 .. i<t..1 um1>.1111 , ~1 I .. 111 1'1 I 1 GLAZER \II 1r11uml for !!t'nrral ..r \ 11·1· 'ho1• 1n Or uu:t· I "lllll\ Jl.1111 \01.111'10 \l1·•f11 ol l'IJn. 'll JU) 1 rn11l1" rnt•nt ~'.lti li~ol GUARDS '<'t•J..1111: IJ c;t a1·cur;ilt.'-uEED offlre with a :o;ucrt'ssful Ml'Pl'lld,1hk Pt·r~un " background ol rccru1t- Good Pay MONEY? 1ni:. tramrng and ma nag. \II 1·11mpJ11\' twrwfits. 2 in>: ~Pl<'. Must be able ""''k' \.i<'J\111n , 1);ittJ We h.l\t' OJH'nll1J.(S for In communicate w1lh h u It ti,,) "'. cu 1111' .1 n > <-100) J)t'ople Io work a 11 broker owners 'pm:-.l·r.:d hl'.lllh p l.on prox JO tlay:. dl'h\t•rtnl! E'\ccllcnt s<1la r )', e x· . \L L I>,\ 11.' "'() n tdephonc d1rrrt<orl ''" II\ pcnses. car allow:inre. \l'l"I'. the Oran~c Co .1r('a m ~·d 1ral/d c n t al i n - 5498161 Work .'·nur :t\"IJ.ibl .. !l ur an <'C. Dyn ami c • ·' • u -' growth potential \\1th u daylh!ht hours. ~l i•11 or JANITOR wom1•n over Ill with l'<•r'. solid b3~l'd firm , na· ~t:.itwn w<1i:t<1r1:1 or 1111. 11onal in sc·opc. I ull l1ml', night 1ohi(l. Fo r cnnfidn11l1!'I 1·n-tru r k s arc n c \'d c d • a \\ knd.,, •1\'l'r $1 IKI hr l'lt>uii:.tnt mildoor work J1•r vicw send rt•suml' In \l'l'I.' AF'n ;I{ 7l'M. V.ilt1l <lrivl•rs Ill' & Cahf. I' 0 llox 10!175, S.1ot1.1 So. Coast Plcrta Ana. !li702 hl'<'llM' plates n ·r1'1l. G;i:.. _________ _ :: l Theater #J ,olJuwam·l· 11a11I Daily 685 ~nflower C .M. ctrawi. o\'a1I 1-·11r 1mrned1---------- .101-.. :\OW, t:o 1.1\'l'Jo:ll. H1'"'' ~l' l1 a 1111ng nf \our 1 hn1u· <m11 .,l flU J ltf v) .11111 I:;u111111.• .1s1>11.~nmt·n1 1111\\, 1·n1t•r .•t'll\ l' duly l.1l1•r 11~ 1hpl11m.1 prl' I 1· 1 r ('<I . • .1 I l \rm \ lkHUlll'r' . l:o.lJ ,\ksJ \'r rdc I-.: C'o '<l.I "e\J :'°'40 102G KEYPUNCH OPERATOR :1s:..1~11mrnts le1llow1nj.! :o;hort t1 .1111111i !>C'os11m Ap11ly Ill the IO('Jt111n nl'UfC'>l )'UU ,Jl. W :10A :\I or 1 :10 I' \l 1>:.11ly lk >(lnlllll).! Tuesclav Nnv !llh 21~111 w c'.11 ld o11 A\·e Or.mge 1 Off (ii usscll .\oovl' l\otell<1 > :!till Woocllnncl Ort \'c Anaheim ( Nr ,\l J>(llflllu/ I.a l'alm a) :lJ2ll W. lf>l Str~l'l S anta Ana HESalc'I SUCCESSFUL Costa Mesa Office h-is oJ)l·ninJts for 2 1\s- !'>Ol'IUlt.'S. l·:'l(Jl('l'le nced only. J,lccn!l e <I r l•al 1•.,l<tlt' ~alcs11eople. Ca II for 1ntcrv1ew. Ask ror li1ll l.achen myer , owner. 1860 NewJ)Ort Ulvd CM Willi1'fl C o sio Mesa l'1•rm.mr111 ~·uu ~ J)atl 11m,• l'hn111• & tr.1n~11 r,. '1 II ll l•l1rt•1l wl'11·ornl' I .111 ~h Olil, of<' hr., 111·2, At l1°a$I I y r e11per . "' 111'1 129 rrqu1rt-d -----1 :\tu~I ~ utile to tlevclop1• l'l•"•"I W1•rl ( Bt.'tW('l'n Harbor Fain 1cw) !Ill Fu1r Ur. Bhl~ t.i Oranl(1• <.:o. Jo'a1r.:round:1 <.'os lll l\tcsa (Enter From Newport Respiratory Therapy Tech Cl'r llfied 01• Hcllist ry eligible w /cxper Mu'.'lt be :.tble to du ur t('ria l blood ga<1e,;, 11-7 ~hilt 11,\ll(CUTTINti pr<t)!:ram 1·ard11 & punch l'AltLO H ;1\.metyo(:ipph1·at10ns. :! \~-11~\,rnl ~ N1•r1h•tJ ()\hl·r clerical functions . Mu,l l'c L11·cnl:.1'd l)'IH' liO wpm. 1;7;, OMS l \111 for appQintmcnt llAN DYM1\N for n•p.iir:, & rnnint Pn.1111'1' Cull 1'141 MM lnd11stn<1I Helnt1ons TELONIC/ ALTAIR LAGUNA HACH Bl vd ) Co11lal'l ll<'Uy Amoroso, NURSES AIDES &12.:173.1 , <:ui1ta Mcm111'ia1 Ncc ch'd a l llunt in).(lon1•11•0.~.r>.•t•n•l.-----­ Vallcy Con v. Hosp. APP· Jy i 11 prrs1>n . 1138 2 It F.S P1R AT 0 ll Y Ne wmun Av e . JI B. TIIE H/\PISTI\tus l work between 4 PM &5 P~l. all sh1fls. /\pply .1t Sun HOMEMAKERS 1714 I 494'-940 I NURSES AIDES Now th,1t the kids ore Equol Oppor l-:mploycr 7.3, Exµer. pref'd , Mesa huck 1n iw hnol, why not Verde Conv. Hosp, 661 C I e m e n t c (; t' 11 c r n I l111s p1tul. llr-;pi r :ilory Therapy Dept. 4!HH 122 itn to work, Trmnee As·t---------•, __ ee_n_t_e_r_S_t._C_._M_.____ RESTAURANT M·mbly & Pu ~·k agln g •Keypunch* Nunes Aides ASSIST. MGR Jo~ now :1vo1I. Lon~ & 3 Nights & Sun, nrrd food ~hurt frrm 1111s1,11nmcnts. & Orderlies ser v1rc l'Xl)Cr. c;row111.1: Tt>P SSSSSSS.~ *D~rator* Exper . prcf'd. Bayview co w/oppor for ndvt1nce· Ncv._.r A F'cr At Tt>mllO ... IT Conv. Hosp, 2055 Thulin ment. <.:a l I for a ppl n hie to d e m o ns trate 1----------·1-==--==------- l\lulliruph tr sofa & 5 • lo •e s t Wanted 8081 m a, ny xtr a s, low hrs. ' ea · • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~1t,..008!> w /m atrhing cor n e r & •• ----------•Secretaries to$1500 •Secretaries/Legal F in Anal /\st Cntrlr 14K Employers Pay All Fee:. 2921 S . Daimler S ANTAANA F.qual Oppnr F.mp lo.v<'r corrc~ this. in modl'rn SSS CASH FOR l 971l Bayline r. 20• Fis h- colors. Sl!l5. V111yl recl111-Good used furn/rr fri gs crman , must sell. S67oo. 111s: r hr & olloman $60. frzrs/stoves 5il6·Q768 Call 495-4328 552·1~18 . Li:i: Heinders i\lo(enl'Y 4020 Birch St, Ste IM Newport Beach 1133 11190 Call for ApplJ F.st ah '65 EXAS REf'IN .. ::RY CORP Waterbed. hUJ?<', c.:ustom offers l'LE NTY (Jf' mad(' /\ll~CCl~5s.S250.or MONEY plu s c a s h b.:..,t offC'r~il-1438. ----------1 bonu:-.l'S. fnnJ(e benefits L.A'nnox china. serv for 12, cmpll Monarch pallrn, w/xtra piecl's in pr rr rond . neH •r usl'fl S850, :\laple cabinet rolor tv. 21 .. ron:;ole 5250. Am e r 0;1k s ul c bo:ird w / bevelcll mirror & claw fl•t>l S.175. walnut buHct Sl75. Ph . 548·7800. SECRETARY Immediate opcmnl! for secrel<tl') w/mm :1) r<; of f1ce {'XJX•nence & abthl> lo "''Ork tndl·pendcntlv Must be plca:.ant. Wt.'11 f(roomt'd. Type 70, sh 8(1 &dklaphonl' CaU 644-3389 !11,M 'Iii NOON THE IRVIHE CO. 550 NewPort Ctr Or NewJ>Orl Beat•h Equal Oppor Emplovc•r SECRETARY M u~t b e t•xpcr .. or ~<tnized, fast Jct•uratc typist. ~I 11lt1 pie dutit·~. i:ood b<>ncf1ls. SliOO. S1.•nd resume to UCP. :w20 W lla r v.ird, Santu Anll !127().1 --------1 SECRETARIES TYPISTS CLERKS KEYPUNCH OPRS lllM 129. 37 12. lnfore.'<, key tn d1o;c HO FEES TO .. I'" y ~ ! ' ' I I ! HELPMATES In maturii mrliv11tu.1J in hc<tt•h area. lle1ttardle's <1f e:<t>t•r1encl'. w11lc A I". I' ;1 t ,. , P n· ' . T (' x a s lh-h nt•I' ('111 p • 8<1x i i 1. Fort Wurth, Texas 71i101 Ty pis t. 60 wpm l'arl ltml' Hrs flci..1blc. K34 lllG6 --- UP llOLST EHEH Full lime, piirmanc:nt, cuslom furniture ~hop. :\lus t be cxpcr'd only. IHS·ti-1:;7. --- Beaut. Solid Walnut Drn- m~ Rm st•l. w 1G' table & 2 INIVCS. I! hi back folly uphols r hair, & 7' buffet. SlWO. Also; dark wood f ull s i zed d esk & V 1 S I T I W O H K 1 n matching credenza Sl25. .EU HOP I·~ this Winter. t>l2·2589 After B<14'1c Trai11111i.: & ------.----.- Advanrcd lnd iv ulu al KC/\A!\<l /F M Slereo r ud10 1'nii111ni; JOln your unit 111 & phonograph , space for 1-:uropl' :\lu;1 qualify, ~'fl; ll~ck .. btrt wood cab, F(or dl'lai b ntll .~0111. S22:i· Gir ls prnk twn bed 1\rm\' I( c•rr uih•r . ~ 6 dwr dresser & other 1525 :\lr sa Verde F.. Item s, &t0·5Wl C0!>h1 \1l'"u __ Mtl-10~ Horses 8060 W,11lrc!>S, 1-'rl(l(l lCO<'kla ils •;•••••••••··~··••••••• ,\pply aft <l pm. Blue I _nrade , t ra il ho~s e . Heel 107 21:-t l'lat·c• N.B Spinll'd. fl:.ishy ta ck tncl. • s.l()(J. t>ltH>S 111 e \'es Want ads Call 642 st:7 -----Pa lJmmo m are. must see ""'~h--.... ·s I o ;q> pre. Eng or ...,,... ... -• e Wc<-lern S550. 548·9527 .•..•.•••.••.••....•... --. Antiques 8005 /\rab1an/~l orJ?an Colts. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Su 11c1 I> l'Onfor mat1on Wonderland xlnt blood hne. reg. Musl ~II ~Ill 3 l&i -------J•welry 8070 Of Antiques! If l' <t Jo: w :1 r c h o u ~ ••••••••• • ••• •• • •• • • • •• c1 amrnt-.1 with ov,·r ~ WANTED 83S-8876 mus1(.' bOXt>s. nicke lo 1505 E.17th Strrl'l lll'<lrl pianos, cirl'us or TOP CASH DO LLAR Su1lcl02.Sant.1Anu i?an ~. wa ll c luc k ~. P A ID F O R YO U R ----------1 ._:randf11 th1•r 1•lock ~. H :wfo;J.HY. WATCHES. f.1!1rinaltn1! :1111iqul'.'s /\HT OflJ ECTS, GOLD, S..-nt>lary & <:1•11rral Oft•, <lvl•r Sl ,000.UUO Wnrlh S ll.VJo:H S F.R V IC l':, lll'q ':o. ;1rcurat1• t~ fl"l. /\mt•rirun J n1 r rnnt1on11I FI N J<; F U KN & AN· hr~. 10.30-7::111. Salary c:allc•iws; 11102·'1' Kl'lll•r Tll~lJl;:.o;;. &15-2200 S.S75·Sl:i00. 97~ Oi!i 1 I 1~ I! ~"i l • Ir\' In<' T <'I. Must sr ll 0 1amo_n_d-. _M_a_r_· SECRETARY ~·;1 1,o77. Open, Wt•tl . ~h~u quise Cut, 3v, et. G .1.A. Pl . f I S.11 . .ti\M to ot I M V1'i1t ·ipprnis-' ., .. , 0 6 .. 36 time or e mp 11y 1•c· ..:... _._..,_u._."_"'--"---- ht.'nefits firm in Irv Life A~Uq Hathlu~ for sale. Uveitock 8075 or group ins. exJ>l'r. rt q Cl.1w fet•L Good cond. •••••••••••• ••••••••••• Mcxiblc hrs. >:ti rmv & 1110 1~1:; 21116. ._,., .. • ------Reg. Morgan murr, brokc •>1:llu1h a\'ail. 51~1-HOK7 &....J' 80 I 0 to r ide ~-d r1' ve. hi k C <.tll M o n or T ue ~.....r•GnCH "" 7 .JO 11 30/\M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• par ade l\lorj.!an geld mg, ---------Sl.'ot:.man l <.'c Make r t-;ng , We s ter n (714 ) New IJSl'(I I rno11Lh. $250 3311_._10_1_1 ______ _ SECRET ARY ·EXEC 11L,talll'<I IJ73 1232 Mi efl 8080 To Pres & V P Top pos1 ---SC an.ova l ion r~r p-e~sonab.lc Be<tul i''ri.1:1du1r c clec. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pero;on w /typin.: & sh ran~e w t lr1t oven below. Cuatom Pool Tbf. ........... ~ Long or Short! Tno~ \lunnlnii dress i~ de .$•rne<t lo \hm ~very tnch ot you .1~ 11 11tnks ~wn lhe body. 111;\ on ta~y urd•P..tn fflr smart c11ve1a11e ~horl or lllllr, Jumbo Joy 7426 fntAea'B~ AJ warm as It Is colorful! Oundle onto a snugRIY 1ackel. JUMBO KNI f in 4 colors-P,o vlvoll or muted In your harmony ol tones' Inches rly-wor~ with 2 s'r~nd~ synthetic woritcd. Pattern 7426• Misses' Si1c' 8 11! inrluded $1.00 for each pa\tern. Add 351' each paltern for flrit<IU5 tlrtN•I and hondflna. Se11d lei Alice Brook!! Needlecr•fl Dept. 105 Da••v Pilot Box t6J, Old Chelsea Ste. Now York. NY 100 11. Print Namo. Ad dres s . Zip, Pallern Number. 6 1emp. im e . Must be Ave.CM 642-3505. ~7.&32 te m nQ s peed and accuracy.11-________ IRETAIL SAl,F.S F/Ume _ ~-Somecodang &transcrib · Nursing retail salesfK'rson want· i'E~I PORAltY 111-:1.r ing expr. desired. Call RH SUPERVISOR l'<I for rapidly growing CaU 54'0·445S 557-0966 for appt. 7-J:JO Shil'l. Mu11l have i.peclalty irame ston •s. skills. Savings & l.oun small ov~n up. Near n~w. SJOO 642·5931. rxpcr.pn•C'd lrvmcS-iv· H J r v~sl ~o ld . SJ.IQ . --·-------- mgs. 752-6456. t.'73 2545 art;,. i··oron:.11!0 lnwn va c. $75. • --------· f1u:T l>A~ti\C:1':u 11o·r. P;ur tase<I side pipes s10. POINT Sal\•. 330K W. 18"24 II. D. ~utter for PronlNI Palltrn ~10~ M1~\es' S1w, R. 10. 12 14 16 18 Sit~ 12 lbu\t Jdl lnnJl version ?18 ydrds 60 inch fabnc. Send S 1.00 for ~ach p;11lem Add 3SI' for e~ch p;illun for lirst ·CIAU 11rma1I, hsndhng Send to: MORE t11an ever befOfi ! 200 dnlll!IS plus 3 fret printed ;,. . side NEW 1976 N££DlfCRArr CATAlOG1 Hn every1h1M 7!Jc. Crtcliet •Ith S11aaru $1 ,00 F.qunl ()ppor l'~mployrr 1----------a c u t e h o s p I t a I Must be senn11~ mmded. s upervh1ory expcr. Xlnt srlf mClllvulini: & n cx1 LAMIHATORS benefits. Contul'l Mrs. ble. Apply 111 P<'rlw n. HOST ESS b1•tw1•1•n 21·30 Wcstsail Corp. irnllbont Jen s en. Costa M es:.i t1\c~s & G11 mr s Unllmit· dcs1rcd1oworkononrof m :rnur. h us lmm ed Memo r i al llospH a l , l.'i'I. 2700 W. C<1a11t Hwy, the WOHi.D'S MOST vara nc i e s fo r h n nrl i.642-··ZT-).t•.------•I Newport Rench_. ___ _ 0 F. A ll T I ... U I, AN 0 Jamlnators w/ot !cost 1 1---------- 1.UXUlllOUS YA('llT~. yr l'X.pcr. We hnve open· Chn rtc r ot ore ln lhf• ln1ots on the regulur Mon Jo'rent'h ltivlcrn. (;r<'ek thru Thurs ahlrt or 7AM tsla11ds and the C1.1rth· to 5:30PM + a part-time tx-nn area11. Must hnv(' shift Fri thru sun :rnmc SUPER APP EARANCJo: houri . Apply t o the and love t rovel. waler sc r urlt y auard. 27S and adventure!. Nn <"lC· McCormick Avt, CO.'llll See whnl '3 under our DAILY PILOT CllHIST MI\.'\ THJ::E RH 3-11 r /II mt'. M es:i Conv. lfMp, 661 St. C.M. 548·55115 Verde Center ---- every Thun ctn y in the S/\l.ES -111 -Fi <.:om po- Clusltled 11ectlon. ~nt3 Co<it:i Mella loc Solnry. xlnl ruture. For lnl er vl<'w , <'nil b twn SECURITY AT EASE of Hewpori Beach Now Arreptmi,: /\ppllc:.it10ns F'or : STORE SECURITY We pres ently haYe an opcnm ~ for n mature gen tle man In s tore 8 e (' u r i t y r ti r l h r C h n s tm u)I sc oson . Please contarl Sl.'cur lly Munager. 644·5070 for op Pointment to lntt'rvl.-w. pt•n1•nc1• nor . wtll trarn. Mtisii _259 0779 for upp\, i----------f''or Info o il our Chris tmas Ad·V11u1r 642-5678 n oon & 2 PM o nly .--------- (213 )68S-IJ543 Se.II idle items ' w urn\·r nr fir hr, Sim ta 1·11rctoo11rd or hght met al. /\nu !179 ~21 lhp 3-pha"e motor $25. F'nt axil' & whls for 11>24 M111111n Mmton Pa1te1n Dept 442 Oa11v Pilot 232 WMI l(llh SI . Ne York, NV 1001 I Prtn NAME. ADD RESS, ZIP S I ZE a nd S TVL NUMBER. Kt•mnore Washt•r & Gas Cht•vrolrt S7S . .Emblem s Dry l'r St75, Krnmure & t aill ig ht for '5t> Woshc·r $7!';, l"r•it Gus P u c ks1rd. 30" :oocrN·n Ory er StJ5. Kl'nmorc door, ,,;d qual, $10. 333 1-;. w 3i.h c r S35 . Gu ur . lsth St,CM.642-3379 ~16-11672 1----------Do you know how to 111 1 King i1be bdrm 11ct fpr p1tttrn frtt? Send ntw for lin<Jlt Jells!! sale. Console TV.. Pie· our 111w '•II-Winter '•tt1111 turcll, coffee tbl., mug Catalot-cOp coupon Inside tor whl11 .• dre sse r , m uny lrtt pattern t f your chelct. i:oodlcs 336 Colt on s .. 115f lltw! ~pBrh • • 'f:: .. ;; :~.:o~~•lt• • POOi. TA Bl.t: • lnst1nt '-"'!'" ... k $1J5 $t.o0 $1.00 suo Croellet • Wardrobe S1.00 Nifty fifty Qullta $ 1 00 llfpple Crochet _ -$1.l>O Sew J. Knit loolt \l.25 Nudlepolnl llooll '1.00 Flower Crochet looll .. SI 00 H1lrpln Crochet l ook __ SI .00 lnsunt Crochet look _ S 1.00 I Rstant Mtcr1111t look _ S 1.00 lutll!t Mt111y look _s1.oo Complete Cltt loo~ _ $1.00 Ce11plote Af1h r1s ~a _, 1.00 12 ,fltt Althans J 12 ~ 50t look ol ti lullts • T •• soc MllSHll Gwilt latk U 50c 15 GlllltJ for Tod1y.,!I SDc l otll of t 6 !iffy Au11 50• Ar<' you contu11ed & won· ci(•nng h<1w to adverl1~e y our Ch rl s lm u~ Jt ift ilt•m11? For u n ln ex- Pt?O!<IH• wa y to ito. ju11t c11Jl our Chrltilmali Ad Viser al 642 56711 DeauUlul w111.n1.1l4x8 IHtaftt S1w1nr lo~ ~75 M~~52 ..................................... .. ( .. -... • toat., Power 9040 fran~~~n A.trfot for Sal• Auto1, l-.porl.d A.lot, l•potfM ..._, l•port.d Monday, November 8, 1979 DAILY PILOT • f.J ;;.··z;;:;~·;;;;;r:·k~~·1:· ;~;j ........ ~;;;T ............ c;;;:i; .......... 97oi ~·:.::,:. ............ ;;;·~ ~~·;;;;· .. ·;;~·~ AMfo•. ""'°r+.d •uto1. u1.d .... uMd board. Bcuut . bay R.wt 9120 Class.I.cs 9 520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·cruiser or ocean f1~hrr ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 J ensen Healey. Ver'¥ DRIVE ,.. 2 73 3SOSL ~oho 9772 C adlUoc 99 15 Ford tt4o • A. -••••••••••••••••••••••• very sound. $3500 t2• t;L Dorado, scH· •OVER 70CARS• t'lean. Low mileage, AM· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . • S40&!l08 cont'd. W/Ahowcr 1N INVENTORY 1-'M stereo, rJd1als LITTLE... MERCE>ES_IEHZ '71 Cud 4 Or. 1tnm.1C' 6, ~ord ~HI w . .:.n. M:?°° Loaded w/exuas. J974 l ~.soo. Tel. 835-4!>41 evei. HAHDTO 1-INU! '77 "(.'r\ium Puff''. l.1)('o.1l n· 0"" nult~. Hr} l.'ll'iln, Boat & lraaler ror s.ile Ion 1-'ord Ran~cr XLT, lo ANTIQlIFS&CLASSICS &wknds SAVE A LOT allor s h'l'a~ure' /\ lllU'!>l topeond,liJ_l_04_!16 __ _ ;::,:~g~~~:.1so. !Xl21 ~:1:S~~· ~~·3847 or ~~~~c/of~u1om to$5:1~u1:~ ~a Romeo 9 705 .~~~tcC~)~~;::M ~a~g~-?[ VOLVO ~~r :.~~Po~~11~::.l'' ~~?!~ ........... !!.~~ SSO.OOOrurs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SanJuanC:ap1strano 213"""1 -•sae l 9 7S MARKIV Boatfor sale.'N Wnedl Motonudliket 9140 "UYSELLTR or-Rare 't.3 1300 Spld<'r ,., -v "\l•I \'lthut v.1• htl\'l' ·121-i1•1•tv.uodllro11"h:im, 17 • fib 1 •<s .., · · A ... 83 1-1375 493-3375 11'"i.23.72•o 1 L' erg us'I .... c .1. ••••••••••••••••••• •••• ElZ FARGO & CO VclO<'<' ~uix•rlJ /\II ori.:,. •i o1 " m.uw i•n thi• \\JV. 'l'" ov. n,·r •.• '\'l' l'.J 1 Olds Cru$udcr rn~ "Turu<'h .yellow.932m1, S $1!150. ii41 ·1Hl:i0 or TOPBUYER l'ohu,,11cwoi>t1oni;.lll• S3cJOOC'.illGIOt3t.01Jl•tw11 l.1'.1thc·r, !.pllt l)oWl.'1• M'Jt>1. 11tcrl'I.• r.11'11.1 & lull JIOWcr 1~171.VYJ . w /Berkley J ct l>rivc •Int cc>nd. 3 'Io's· old 83QS.Mam· antaAna 0000~1. '74450SE !lt;&l!H52."ib1•\1·1. Sealed bids accepted un· S37A 5. 631 ..... .,.., ur't. 6 10to6: Mon.·Sul. See us first. & last! Top n1o1inin.: 'it.is'"' UiHnOs 111 $9495 Ul Nov. 17th ul tOuoi __ _...,.,_, -----CIO!lc..od Sundays Audi 9707 dollar paid ror imports. Executive own('(!. 34.oOO funtai-tic 1-:H 111~" Camero 9917 M inl mum ti id $2,250. Don't drop lho bull! Get a • 547-9709 * ••••••••••••••••••••••• COST .4. MESA. ml. new MicheHI\ tlr\·~ M~I Rl.S~IUt~~.s ~~~bO •••••••••••••• ••••••••• Boal may be seen at l.lfo jolJ walh a low-cost Oualy . • . TWO TO CHOOSE DATSU.._. Tan w/loburro brwn 111 " 100!! C:imaro. \'l•ry 1'11•:111, 1974 MARK IV Guard lldqlrs next lo Piiot Classified Ad.l940fordWOOdyWugon. 1972Audl100LS' 1""111 tr . AM /FM, Powl•r 8 31 -2880495-12 10 xlnt co11d, tmto, l'Udhl, F\!llf)('"<'l',llh'rcorall111, Newport Pier. Cal l Phonc642·5678. ~ea.u t. o ri g. c~nrl . 2845 HarborBlvd. cruise, fully c<1uipl)('d mr pwr !>h't'rin,.:. $lli7!i. teulhcr & i-11llL power 640-2156 8am.5pm. I oss1bly IJcsl in Stale. Automatic with air cond Costa Mesa 540.6410 $12,500. Ph 833·0888, \I tu!\ ORANGE COUNTY t.:all 1:13:1 0070 scats. (:!!Y.!l,/\M ). Moton:y~l~s/ tW0-8208 rn1ll''VN >. t.:hc..:k th1!. &6-a4·0084 an 5. VOL VO Boats. Sail 9060 Scooters 91 5 0 ,46 De Sot . II .. pricconboth 75 D.4.TSUN 8210 1976 Mil 280 F.Xl'l.USIVt:LV \'OJ.VO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• o, parua Y as· ONLY$ 1995 '1 Bl){'rd, radio & hvater. . . ~ K k' 00 J\f ' 1 sembled. reblt en.:. good S AutomaLJ..:, ~unrnof & ~iir l.,u'i:(•i-t \'111\'o D1•alcr 74 Camaro, Ii 1·~·1. :J i.pd. --~.;..7_5;;;...;.9.-5-.. __ 26,000 m1. /\'\l/F!\l cuss, "4-n· c-...liloc pcrf. eond. $4000. 5'10·5WU ~ vu -Hob1e16.trlr,new trans& 7a uwasa 1 4 ·.in body.$550.orbcstoffer. MAR9UISTOYOTA uper gas econo m y! <'ond. Ltko N~W' mOr:ulf.(t><'ountv! more. $1,425. 646·&.255 or shape. $750. After :!pm, 836-6441 MISSION VIEJO U>llMFW). llU\' or J.1':1\S !:: -----%600 ..... 11'1& Slll-7505. ll3t-Oll:l5 831-2880 495-1210 SADDLEIACK <S93NHMl. llll<l':CT LONDON TAX( V AUEY IMPORTS 2 5 0 0 • ••• •• •••• •• •• • • • •• •• • • '---::----====--!' C....Me. MOWMt Ch~vrolet 992 • 7 4 ERICSON 3 S & '72 Honda 750. 1-·antast1c Newport Mooring. condJtion. Complete sad· $32,900. (710 !lG:l·3538; die bags. Windshacld 536·5767. Low m1l~age. You must :is:. :i~~~~~~~o~~f~;r~ 7r~a~'~·r. A/\r.~~~;ox~t::1!~ 831·2040 495.4949 N~r!£._ocll...lklc ~"·(4· ~.'.,rJJ.•Q D:".ut1'tfiY:eCMle ~ssDto~;n:'~t!·;· ~~~ •••••••••• !!.~~ SSOOO or best offer. l\lust tape, lo mi. lake new. '74 260Z. Auto. immac. ._ ,,___ ~ ~ ~ • J ~ ~ ~ .J sell.673·3397 A~k in it S..11100. 9.4: 30 S4995. Forced to :>ell. '74 Mere Comet. 2dl'. 6 cyl, ----------• see to believe. $1500. Call 962·2422 tii5~orfW..4l08 C.... MeS8 540 9IOO 2025 S. Manchester luy From like 1ww Only 10,000 ma. ----Anaheim 750-2011 CO .... auELL S2700. 673-AA2~1_. --- '73. Datsun 610 Sta wag. PorscL.-9750 -"" ' nc' y , p · '72 Mere Montl'go. V8, AT. "74 Coumbia 23. Trall('rll· V4Q·5!l67 afl<'r !l:JOpm '58 MGA COUPE ble, like new. S4995., . .74 A d lOO LS A .. /f'M 997·2E98aft 7PM wkdays. 65 llonda 150, 5700 ong Rare, all original. Good u 1 • "' rn1lcs. run-; great, lSt mechaml'al cond. Must sten·o, clean, S<IOOO . VENTURE 23 MacGregor $175 lakcs. ~·3011 sell this week to sat1!.fy _t.7_s._t.m_s _____ _ Air cond, Jug rack. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• '63 Voh ·o I 22S. Sun CM1 r~ ay1n9 1-'at·t AC, I'S. A;\l t l-'~l 4!1..1·93!IO 1973PORSCHE Y~llow • .:clt·ontlthruoul Too Much!" sten.'O,\anrf.,xlnlroull. Yach t s own d e· -'----------1 estate. Make offer or BMW 9712 monstrator . Outstanding Yamaha '71. 360 Enduro. trade for boats, guns or ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. $3300. MacGregor LowMalcage.Xtras. Jewelry.etc. Ferrari 9723 911ETARGA ~~~~'13·!.li21afllipmor CONNELL S2·199.640-8'189 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5spc<:d, air tonll., sll'n•o. ~tCll'M) 9952 Yacht Corp. 642·68:IO. 556-8399, 675·2642 645-2200 Pvt dock avail, up to 55· 1974 250 Enduro. pwr boat, Dover Shores. S350 No live aboards or party C:ill 495432!t Recreational Vehicles 9530 ••••••••••••••••••••••• or work on boals, please. Motcw HCNMs 1976 CHl ..... OOK Limit .your electrolysis & Sal /R-" • 9 I 60 "" security. S3.7S per It. e ..... MOTORHOME (213)924·4495 •••••••••••••••.•••••••• Self-contained, dual -'----------•Beaut. 28' Diplomat t a n ks & air cond. HOBIE 3.$1141ke n•w. Motor Home Cor rent . (365RDK>. cau 675-8546 Dally, wkly, mthly. Sips $I 2,000 ----------• 10. Has stereo, air cond, loots, Slips/ cruise control. 641Viti19 _.-....;:;..-...:.---- Ooclcs 9070 art. 5pm. Naberi Cadilac ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---'-------2600 ............. WANTED: Roa t dock. Trailers, Travel 9170 boat slip or buoy for 35' ••:••••••••••••••··~··· C.... Mes.a 540 "°° Tri. 675-5725 ;1rt SPM or 21 OOShasla S/C. Awning,~=======-=~~! 1213) 626·1515. !Vi.aft hitch. Xlnl cond. 4WheefDrins 9550 SPM. Heasonable. 5'U>·S02tl ••••••••••••••••••• •• •• Senice & '72 Toyota Landcruiscr. SUPS AV/\IL-SJ. rt. per P--"-9400 Hone overdrive. extras. mo. JACOBS HEALTY. __... MustsellS-lOOO. 768-4628 Ph: 675·6670 • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • ---------•'63 Ply. Barracuda Tn1eks 9560 loots, StarCMJ~ 9090 transmission, b rand ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• new 40 mi. •:: Price . 67 Chevy =4• ton, re bit en~. 20'x 70'x 22' covered area 846--0027 new trans, 4 whl dr, &tor for your boat construe· cm pr 830-4254 lion. Telephone poles Don't give up the srup! . w/roof & chain hoist to "List" al in classified. '74 Courier. GT She ll shelter any type of era fl. Ship lo shore results! w/cpt. 38,000 mi. $2300. ~l. 642·5678. bis.-0394 eves. -------------------'72 Ford ~ T. Custom. /\skmg S2700. Call 548·5344 1973 Ford Bu~. 51 pas<1, Blue Bird body. P /S, P/B, ,54,000 mi. Asking $6,500. n Ad ; 1974 Dodge Mini bus, 15 pass, PIS. P/B & /\/C, SJSOO. Cull 631·3010 -------1 SADDLEBACK BMW BUY OR LEASE NOW Free 5 year, 50.000 mil warranty available on al our r e maininl{ 1!)7 models. BEAT THE PRICE INCREASE SADDLEIACK VALLEY IMPORTS 831-2040 495-4949 (tJ;Jfjl§ &I sr 'HOAOWAY SANTA AHA 835-3171 THI! UlTIMATll! OllMfj() MAClllH& •USED BMW"s* '73 B:ivaria-t906LVY) '75 2002 • (629N BK) '76 2002A -< 0499 > Closed On Sundays ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST '6tl 330 GTC. Mint, f.irl mu,::i.. Buy or :\l.7'01' 1•170\'0l,\'O CHEVRQLIT ••••••••••••••••••••••• a ir. drk blullan 1111. lc:c.cplan. (t;()IJlll't'), lit-;.'\1'01-'FElt 74 Mustang Ill radials, Sl4,000. 644-08501642 0054 SADDLEBACK IJ.11·71H7 282A Harbor 81vJ. air. 4 s11J, vin roof, Rat 9725 VALLEYIMPORTS <.:OSTA MESA sharp.S2900.673·0053 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8 3 I ·2040 495.4949 Autos. Used 546·1200 '68 V ,11, auto trans. '73 Fl at 850 Spider, , • G•••••••al•••••••••••9••9•0•1• 1974 Monte Carlo, l ownr, P/S, new brak<'s, gd AM1FM r ad .• radials, Porsche 61 roadster. (,d eftft' fully <.-quip'd xlnl cond. <·ond SlO'J5 545·2611 40m pg, xlnt cond. cond. Some X t r us. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sunroof. $3300. 546-6700 --· ----- 496·5079 S4300/bst orr. 646-2094 8·5wkdys Oldsmobile 99 5 S Roll R yce 9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Moving lo Pills, Pa. Have 5 0 '76 Monza Spyder, Ltd. •71 Olll.s ('utlJ ... s t•onv. Jm· dean '75 Fiat 124 Spider ··;;1••0•E•A••l•E•R••1N•U•S•A••• Ed. Plush red int, c·slm ma..: .. loadl·tl w/ull xlras. w/AM /F M, l u g rk, · · · wht ext. Xtras. SJ:>OO. S!tl:.!5/hstofr.ti45·(j(j25. burgundy, 12,000 m.i. ROY Farm. 00·0107. 49<1·6263 IRR CARVER --------Pinto 9957 1973CHEVY ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Fial Spyder 12.000 mi, ROllS·ROYCE HOV.A-3 DOOR '72 Hunabout, auto. air, xlnt cond. S5300. 548·3988 IS.OOJ~mbo•H AMC 990-5 Automatic, r adio. pwr. /\M r.id1u, new lire!>, an 2:30 PM ~Buell ••••••••••••••••••••••• slef.>ring & low mill•.1gc. \i:r) dC'Jn, low mi. runs '74 FIAT 124 ClOSIOSUNOAYS '7-1 Gremlin 2!1.000 mi. Suj)('r clean! <S07028). i:trl•at. Mu:.l sell. $.1,450. SPIDER Sacrifice! SIG!l5 hst ofr. ONLY $2695 ~2855 _____ _ :'\lint. A'.\l/FM Stereo. 5 Toyoto 9765 Pvt. ply. A-.k lor Don. MAR9UIS VOLVO '74 Pinto Runabo ut. i;pd l owner. Lo pay· ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'Ves t.i75-l lllt>. llays ;>.11SSIONVIEJO StC'rl'O tape deck, center men ts. 7!!66 No. '7 7 6J.1 _1114• 831-2880 49 5-121 O rons<>lc $1850. 751·8342 or BRITISHCARCO. '76 PA<.:t-:n. ,\:\Iff;>.I .----.--~.S.933l.ext435,afl2 :30. 213/990 2525 :-.ll•reo, A1<.:, auto lran:., '73 Bel Aire. 39,000 m1, 6 '74 p· t Uk N. ' 714/69'" 0 2854 TOYOTAS ~pt'cial interior "'hit cyl, gd ;-.1 PG, $1895. ti an o. : n:~· 0 ti"' .,... walls. Ruy or t:.ike ove 894-2374 ~~I "~ii'c:. ~u~i. s~1f. '71 FJAT 850 SPIDEH, corweruble. 46.000 miles· Runs good. l\lusl :.ell. Private party. S995 full , price. Call anytime, 645-6646 HERE NOW lse.5561>-I00,9am ·iµ1~ Continentell 9930 S2100_.545_·4_664 ___ _ '72 AMC Sprtabt V-8 wgn •••••••••••••••·~•••••• 9960 •MEW COLORS l'S/PDH air/auto. Orig. 1970 4 dr, bc.1ul ung cond. ••••••••• •• •••••• •••••• •NEW MODELS owner, 30m. Lo.:al miles. xlnl mcl'huml·ally, CV<.'ry Huge Savm,::s on /\Lt, rr 1>14-659-1after4 aC<'l'Ssory. Slti!.15. Call ATLAS . ---1:133·0070 ma1n111g new 76 ~ I!.. Buick 9910 ----~ Honda 9727 Demos. •••••••••••••• •••• ••••• 71 ;\lark IV, nl'w n1d1;1ls, Chrysler /Plymouth ••••••••••••••••••••••• The lwltcr Dargain ·75 mvlera loaded xlnt show room to11d. Mu ... t Open Oa1ly & Sun. 'Ill Ill MARQUISTOYOTA cond. Bs t ofr 'over sell St.i500 or oflcr . 1'~1 MISSION VIEJO w h Is a I e. p vt ply. S<lG·!l:iSG ___ 2!12!1 ll;irbor Blvd., 831·2880495-1210 7!ilil:l47. __ Corvette 9932 Co!>tal\lc:.::.i Brand New '7 6 HONDA Cars OVER 100 Sales-Service-Leasing To Choose From! 1973TOYOTA Cadilloc 9915 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ___ 54_6_-1_9_3_4 __ _ Roy c .. er,lnc. '75 D0tlgc 0 -300. grren Holls ft oyce BM UNIVERSITY C'i1l11n, I' s. t·ust shelving. 1540 J ambort•e Oldsmobile MARK 11 COUPE ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 CorvPttl'. Wt111c 'l'·top. lmm:H'. ;\I any cxtra"I, l'h 1974PLYMOUTH Custom Suburban twu seal Station Wa11on st.rn· ' '75 '1'" Top, oran.:,c. air, dard ('qwpment include~ Low mileage 11 :lfl<:'l'd, air cond & pwr '-ll'l'r 1 n g . I m m a l' u I .1 t r thruoul. (38611 l'Q J. Nuw reduced to '7ti Sl'v1lll•. Slll,\!00. ~I u:.l Sl'll. !163· 7608 aft 5. , I . \ Got ten lords a leaping you want to move by Christmas? Mov e them under our tree. On each Thurs day from Novembe r 11th throu g h Dece mbe r 16th, the Da ily Pilot will publis h spe cial pages to ma ke it easier for you to convert your saleable Items to Christmas cash. Buy a box under our tree & s ell y our to ys , s ports equipment, lug g a g e, appliance s, furnitur e , antiques, handmade & unique gUts and no matter what your business -we have a box for you! Putting a box under our tree is easy 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 Information and to place your ad jus t call 642·5678 and ask for your Christmas Ad-Viser for more Information. Your credit ls good with us. We'll bill you or you can charge your ad to your Master Charge or BankAmerlcard. DAILY PILOT 642-5678 - f'I u I I fl n w n d o o r · Newport Beach 640·644 l!'x 111 'xl:lti". St.i500 --.:...-------'Honda Ccrs • GMC ~--0797. '74 3.0 CS. Snrf., Velou Trucks 7 M d R l I h II int., :ur, slerco & tape, 2850 Harbor Blvd. 4 az a 0 ary w 5 l' • auto. $18 000. 750·9415 Costa Mesa 540-9640 many xtra-;. 25,500 m1, ----· ------• xlnt t ond t.i75·2033 '70 BMW 2002. Xlnl cond '71 HONDA 600 Sedan, Vans 9570 WE BUY •US ED<.'./\ HS & TRUCKS• Come in or <.:all FREE Appraisal Grotft Chevrolet 18211 Beach Rlvrl. Huntington Beach 847·6087 • 549.3331 TOPDOLLArt PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS CALLORCOME IN TOSEEUS NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100W.CslHwy,NB new paint & radials. P runs f?ood. $600. or best (714)!n9-8483 offer.836-6441 260Z·1974. lmmuc c•oncl. very lo mileage. ask1nii $5400. /\Ct 5 pm or wkends. 640-5136. '73 240Z. /\Ir. ster eo. mags, $4600. Ca II 549-0734. ___ 6_4_2_·9_4_0_5 ___ 173 Datsun 240Z, air . Top stereo, mags, xlnt cond. Ml% 'lSO·Sl $3950. 581-8476 New cond. $11,000. Daya, DOLLAR For sale or lease, 75 280Z, e.o.5317, Eves, 4!>4·7021 PAID 18,000 ml, xlnt cond. Fact '72 280.SE 4.5 M.8 . Beige FOR CLEAN air, AM /FM. mags. metallic w/brn leather IMPORT CARS brown,$6.JOO orMOO&.a.s· Int., AM /FM alereo, PS, aume lse. 548-6346 PB. PW. w/8 trk tape, ONLY $2595 MAR9UIS TOY OT .4. MISSION VIEJO 831-2880 495-1210 1972 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE Low mileage car in arctic white. llas rud10, heater & full hardtop. (953MPQJ. OMLYS2495 MAR9UIS TOYOTA ·-: MISSION VIEJO 831-2880 495-1210 'l>R vw f'aslbOt'k. Vl.ll'Y good cond. New tires. Call 494·9300 iO VW Bug. 1835 rnl(. Ri.:, clulch. llolly carb, mags. $14!15. 642-3379 V\V, very clean. runs good. Be11t orrer. 4!13 l!l:SO (714) VolYo ALLMODELS ,73 DATSUN P ickup, xtrani~oclcan car.(714) camper s hell, alcp -63-1'-127-6-· ------• bumper, cust. Interior. T3 208 Sedan, xlnt cond, $2400. P h a rt 5 :30, take c ar or truc k + 552·3170 is.soo payorr. 536·9153 •SAUS •SHVICE •LEASING O•erua1 ~-~:1 I '1~1 I' I t ft I •f •• t V ••l JN i , ,..,, , r r ,., f~ J t~ t t H·l.' • '·1 1 11 ll., J BUY JUNK CARS lJSED AUTO PARTS 540-5125 847 ·9637 GA.RAGE SALE atla tn the Dally P ilot brin1 hap· PY rtsult3. To place your drawing card. phone 642-5678 loday '72 510 Sl'dan. 4 Spd, 101-da-'y_a ______ _ m 11 e a a o , c I c 11 n , i5 2400 &\&C.O tTana, 11lr Mechanlcally pertect. ~ efec. ~unroof, new SlMO. Pll: 548.wlO tires, AM/FM, recording 7, D •tsu..., 210,. cauetle ateroo1 xtra foe.I ~ " • tank U200 m r•nae>. • apeed, alr cond., att>reo Maple yellow. 58.000 mt ~~ • apeclsl m•as l.lc. T H EY uo,aoo + Ur .. _(.PAU) &44-'7S12 SADOt.llACK 1-~~~~~~1 V .4.Ll,IY IMPORTS •MB '74 4SOSL Blue/blue lmmoc Sl4.500. 131°2040 4tS.4949 Wlaco2 (114)"6·6591. Dell••ry Service & parts now open on Sat's 8 to 4 for your CC?l\Vfnience. VOLVO 1966 Hllfbot CI.\ M l> 'ilOl ----Call lii5· i82!1 xtra-;. $11195. or offer. Pvt c lcctron1c 1,::n ilion, '71i Se\'lllc, Sll,000. J\11 pty.552-0143afl.G power disc front brakes, xtras. 15,000 Males. Musl ....;...;.._ ________ 1 pow e r s leer in g . ' sell! 673·7900 days. Dodge 9935 automatic trans mission, ••••••••••••••••••••••• rubber bumper guards. i3 EL DORADO, black. '63 Dodge Convert. Top AM radio, light packaRe. wlute lop, loaded, PP. shape, lo mi'g., potent.Jal s t a n d a r d s 1 z c S4600 846·0706cves. classic. S675. 540·633 · whitewalls, deluxe wheel •••••••1111_._ evesor1J334669days. covers. lert remote m ir-ror, electric clock. lui:-'76 Dodge Charger. ti Mos. gage r ack. tailgate auto old. 5,000 J\lilt'l>. 60/4 lock, 360cld, 4 bbl, VR Bench seat. Full power. engine, heavy duty SU!>· Maroon. S5500. 8 A.M. l pension package, :iir 5 P.!\t. wkdays, :>58·28'11 conditioning, t 1nlcd Nabers Cadillac Quality and Price Guaranteed Lt'ol\ing Spcc1Jl 9'1\ P1 clcri t·u RJtt·~ I .H\!<'\I Selection ol N.:w & U\Cd C.1t.l1ll,1C\ in 01.111i:c Counlv Op<'ll SundJY Cadil/.tc Mastl'I" Ocaler ".!600 H.!11.ior llh 11 (.m y M~a 5·10.I) I !JO Nabers Cadillac windshield. <DP-44 > $1995 '68 Doclcje $375. 751-9900 See In garage area Ford 9940 Ask tor nick .•••••••••••••••••••••• 0 c t '75 LTD E xec. car, Im· range oas mac, lo mileage, air Daily Pilot cond, l ovely green. 330WestBaySl. 54300/bcst offer. Pvt pty. Costa Mesu 813LQB. ·540·7800 8·5 onffac 9965 weekd ays. 524·2157 weekends. Ask for Bud. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------1•74 Grand Prix, air. '73 Ford LTD Brougham, AM /FM stereo + many 4 dr, AM/FM , air, pwr xtras. XJnl cond. P\'t brakes & strg, split frt h1 Pty. $3995. 673·3599. back seat, new lires,. . . $2500. 673·4396, Res. Bus. 74 Flreb1rd -E,,pnt 400. 1>42.5200_ A/C, AM /FM sll'reo 4 -------1 new radials. pwr "10 •'70 Glxy, 351. radio, air, dows/door locks. 48,000 a u l o m a l i c . p w r mi. Xlnl cond. $.1800. l'h steer/brks. S650. Call t.75-0JSI G45-0954. Veqa _____ 9_9_7_4 '75 Granada. P /S, P / B, •••••• ••• •• •• •• •• • • • ••• air, radio, heater. w/w.1972 Vega llatchback, V 8. brown. S3850 . clean, xlnt cond lo mi. 008 1865. $120(). 833 0617 • AMtoa, Mew 9800 .4.utos, M•w 9100Autos,H•w 9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Turk Sil Mycket is(lur w11y (l( thank· kt U'I l!how you what~ mt"JJ\ wlwn '"' lrut you f11r mnkinl{ JlOS.~ihlo n mil~tonu !tft1 Tbck SA M,yckct. thanks a mill.ion. inS.aal~ hl-.tory: the snle of with thr h<•i1t year enrl th(t one millionth S;.u1b thi• J va!u('Swc\tecvcrofleredon y<-.1r. StUlb. lhc rood rnr. Amt to 'lhow you. our And. a." un c•xlnl thank 1li>c·r>11pprcc·int1onofyo\Jrln· you. when you vi:;it our ll'1'\':"t In Snub. we'ro offer-'lh<°lwroom 1l11rmg 0111· 'llwh I~ tht' RTt't1t1~l cl('Jll~ on ~-... .... ,-1 thloBIAmlft !:iA MyC"kl•t 1ll\Y~Yn11r:mwin 1•wry Jff/G S:l.'lh model we ei..11arw.:t...-l'lldl... 1 Blln<'roft Bjom Bot~ ant••· havo in &tMk. RNlnn~. ni. __ ,._,._....,_ $tJ11ph tM1nl. ruckct. 11imply W1\Jl\>n1Wks. and even tho ~-Am!!S byfflll~outnncnlry hlank. !lflOrlY E."MR ~ Come In nnd l<'t 11~ So C't'lmC'. Cnm~ MW 1H£ Bft.&ft l'AD tlmnkyo11 likt•Y1111'"('1\!'\1·r nncl tc!!lt drlv<' a Snab. Thun ll\llUI \.All ~n lhanlu .. od befol'\•. BIACH IMPORTS :=~~:~~ * 752•MOO ( I 814DAILVPILOT Monday. November 8 1976 i;>Volkswogen of Amef1co.1nc A whOle generation grew up With it. And now .. ~ • e enera -1on ens e enera ion e · ' er1cans. 27 years and 33 million cors later. lhere·s a whole new generation of Volkswagens. The 1977 Rabbit. Dosher. and Scirocco. Three of the most remarkable cars ever built. these Volkswagens feature highly advanced engi- neering. such as fuel-tnjection. front-wheel drive. front-disc brakes. and precise rock· and-pinion steering And in economy all three gel 2.a MPG 1n the city. Rabbit and Sc1rocco get 37 MPG on the highway, Dosher gets 36 (EPA estimates with standard transmission. Actual mileage de· pend s on how and where you drive. optional equipment. and the car's condition.) Rabbit. Hailed by automotive ex- perts as the kind of car Detroit will . be building 1n the 1980's. Six ·"~ years in the making, that car ~~~~;;=.,~iii is ready now. when Amer--;: ico needs it. Small outside. Big inside. With the rear seat folded down. it hos --~more trunk space than some American cars twice its size And from 0 to 60. 1t will out- occelerole o Jaguar XJ6-L • Room. Performance Economy II s more Volkswagen than you've ever had before Dosher. It's the first elegant automobile to come along with all the virtues · or a Volkswagen . Con· servohve on the ex1erior Visit your local authorized Volkswagen dealer. Ex1rovagont on the interior. With plush uphol- stery. Fully reclining seats. Rich carpeting. And even a quartz-crystal clock. In performance it can travel from 0 to SO in only 8.0 seconds. In safety. Dosher hos dual-diagonal broking cir- cuits and negative steering roll radius-which helps maintain direcl1onol stability in the event of o front tire blowout. We coll it "the sensible luxury car." Scirocco. It's the Volkswagen that people can't believe is a Volkswagen. It looks like an Italian spcr1scar because Giugiorb designed it. And it performs like a German·sportscar be- cause it hos o powerful fuel-injected over- head com engine. standard radial tires and a unique suspension system for incredible handling. If ever there was any question about Volks- wagen's quol1ficotions on the race track. let it be known that Scirocco just won the 1976 Trans Am Championship for under two liters. The 1977 Rabbit. Dosher. and Scirocco. Times hove changed. America. And so hove Volkswagens ( 7 , r-. 11-ucnting on Beach Fountain Valley ED ITI ON VOL. 69, NO. 313, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA M ONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1976 I( rnoon N.Y. Stoek~ l 118 ~ . ) R~eyelopDlent LackS Housing Plmi A Huntington Beach official said today several additions have been completed in the city's pro- posed redevelopment plan to comply with s tate laws that take effect Jan. 1. Acting Planning Director F.dward Selich said the city re- development plan now contains all ;>rovis1ons required by future legislation except for one. The one exception, be said, bas to do with the amount of money from rede velopment funds earmarked for low COfit housing. Selich said legislation authored by Assemblyman J oseph B. Mon- toya calls for spending 20 percent of tax incre01ent revenues for low or moderate housing in or near the redevelopment area. He said the city didn't want to commit that much money at this time and that it would be too limiting of a factor. Selich said there will be a general statement written into the plan spelling out goals for low or moderate cost kousing. Under tax increment financ- ing, the assessed valuation of the area is frozen when the plan is adopted, according toSelich. He said that all taxing agencies will continue to receive the cur- rent amount of taxes during the time the redevelopment plan ls in effed. Any increases in valuation would go to the redevelopment agency •(the city C()(D'ICil) and would be used for publiC' im- provements and public 'expen- ditures. Sellcb said that a number of Sellcb said the redevelopment provisions have been iniUaud to agency should adopt the plan comply with 'the future state prior to Jan. l in order to receive legislation. finucin1 ba1ed on the tm tax. They included a time limit on base rat.her thlln walling for a eminent domain (the manner in year to receive funds based on which the city can acquire pro-the 1977 lax base. · perty at a fair market value), Selicb said the city st.ands to and limits on indebtedness and receive $126,000 ii tbe plan ia ap- how much the city can spend of proved before the lint of the tax incrementfunds. year. • 1 :Another Oil Price Hike Feared I • I Huntington Slayings Husband Faces 2 Murder Raps Court a rraignment on two murder charges is scheduled Tuesday for William Gene Ca01pbell, just !lours before separate funeral services for his wile and her ex-husband whom police allege he killed Thursday in Huntington Beach. Campbell is accused or slaying Mrs. Beverly Campbell, 39, of 17847 Beard Lane, and Verne E . Howell, 42, who were riddled with bullets in an upstairs bedroom of the condominium apartment. Campbell. 48, is held without bail at Huntington Beach City Jail on the dual murder charges * * * 2 Victims' iRites Set On Tuesday Funeral services are scheduled Tuesday fo r the two victims of Thursday night ·s double slaying in Huntington Beach but sur- 1 vivors of both slain people have expressed wishes for privacy. Rites f o r Mr ~ Beverly Campbell will be at 11 a.m. in Waverley Church. on the grounds , o1 Fairhaven Memonal Park 1n I Santa Ana Her parents. who survive the slay11.g v1ct1m. s uggested , memonal contr1bullons to a fund for Mrs. Ca mpbell"s fivechildren. Se"rvu:e~ fo1 Verne E Howell , Mrs. Campoell "s ex-hu.sband, wtll be at 1 p m in Mac Dougall Fam1 , ly Mortuary in Santa Ana. He leaves hi s son. William, plus daughters Charlene and Melanie. Coontian Injured In HB Pier Fall A 20-year-old Orange man fell 30 feet from the Huntington Beach Pier to the sand early this morning, lifeguards swd. Royal Mcconahy was taken to Pacifica Hospital at 2.45 a.m. He suffered a broken arm, facial quts and internal injuries, of- ficials said 1 '1Jea4a Cha•Hr I dscar Hook, owner - preside nt of Industrial As- sociates of Fountain Valley. i's the n e w president of Fountain Valley's Cha mber dt Commerce. Hook , 10086 Ellis Ave .. has served as chamber vice president for pie past two years. and faces further counts includ· ing assault with intent to commit murder. The s uspect allegedly fired a shot at his wife's 10-year-old daughter by a previous mar- riage, who apparently witnessed the shooting, police said. The yo ungs te r fled to a neighbor's home in hysteria and called police to report the shoot- ings. "Somebody just shot my mother ... " t he police dis· patcher was told in the 10:14 p.m. call. as a car's tires were heard squealing at high speed in the background. An all-points bulletin was im- mediately issued for Campbell, who had reportedly been sharing the residence near Newland Street and Talbert Avenue with Mrs. Campbell .and her ex- husband. Howell reeently returned from Saudi Arabia, where he was re- portedly a pipefitter for the F1uor Corporation industrial and scien- tific conglomerate . The Campbells were separated and the suspect had reportedly been staying with friends, but was captured Saturday night at the Mediterra n ean Village Apartments in Cost.a Mesa by a 32-man squ~d of Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa detec- tives, patrolmen and SWAT team members. The s us pect surrendered peacefull y after poli ce telephoned his apartment and or- dered him to come out. Mediterranean Village tenants in surrounding apartments had p r e viou s ly b een quietly evacuated The suspect is currently on parole for armed robbery and escape and had recently been named in an arrest warrant charging him with burglanzing an outlet of El Don Llquon., hi!> former employer Coroner's deputies said six bullets were fired from a .38 ca Ii ber r evo lver allegedly wielded by Campbell, four of the slugs hit his wife and two struck Howell. Police said Campbell had been fired from his job as a liquor store clerk and separated from Mrs. Campbell within the past month. <Stt JtlURDERS, Page A2) Cable Group Needs People Vol unteers are sought lo serve on the Huntington Beach Public Cable Television Authority. Applications may be obtained by calling 536·5201. Completed forms may be sent to City Ad- ministrator Bud Belsito, P.O. Box 190, Huntington Beach. 92648. Duties will be to oversee the letting of contracts and construc- tion and operation d a cable television system for Huntington Beach, according to a city 1 spokesman. Church in Garage ROUEN, France (AP)-Dissi- dent Archbishop Marx Marcel Lefebvre consecrated a Roman Catholic traditionalist "church" in a garage here Sunday with a Latin mass marted by scutnes between photographers and the a rcbblabop's bodyguard. The garage was purchased by a group of local Roman Catholic traditionalists for u se b y worshipen who p.reler the Latin mast to the modem version im· posed by the Second Vatican Council. :J11tv :>11e1 ..,,... ;,y Rlcllard KM~ler SALVAGE FIRM'S ROBERT "NESTL;.i<E STR~·-.:10&.;:s TO GET 'GAMBOL" OFF BEACH 32-footer "lf•ij .iu•i One ui t-=ogoouno Boe\s That Weni "ground Along Or•nge Coeat Boat Hits tlte Slwre ·Along Bolsa Chica A fast-moving afternoon Cog played havoc with local manners Sund ay a s one vessel ran aground and two others required 38sistance in Huntington Beach. offi cials reported. A 20·foot cabin cruiser, owned by Richard Bothwell of Hunt- ington Beach, run aground at Bolsa Chica State Beach at 5 p.m. Sunday, state lifeguards said. Bothwell told officials the dense fog moved in so quickly that he lost his bearings while on his way to Huntington Harbour. Lifeguards had to warn the crew of an unidentified vessel from coming to close to the beach just a quarter mile from where Bothwell 's boat ran aground. A state ranger heard a fog horn at about 5 p.m . Sunday and responded with a horn blast from his vehicle, guards said. Llfeguard! used a bullhorn to warn the unseen vessel from coming any closer to shor-e. Later in the evening, tbe Coast Guard relayed a request to Hunt- ington Beach lifeguards to assist the skipper of a 44-foot cruiser who said be was having problems anchoring hb vessel while wait- Chamber Party Set The Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce wUl hold a mixer 6 to 8 p.m . Nov. 17 at Travel Af- faln, 1651S BrookhurstSl., Foun· lain Valley. A $2 admission price includes drinks, hors d'oeuvres and,prb;cs. ing for the fog to lift near the Huntington Beacn Pier. The owner of the boat, called "My Mistress," was not iden- tified, lifeguards said. The vessel waited for the fog to lift later that evening and then continued toward Newport Beach, officials said. Council Eyes Central Park Bridge Plans Huntington Beach• City Coun- cil members will consider ac-· tion tonight on a proposal to build an overhead bridge across Golden West Street into Central Park. The meeting will begin at 7 o'clock in council d\a.mbera. The matter of the overhead pedestrian crossing south of Talbert Avenue initially came up for action last week. A decis ion was delayed, however. until a councll liaiaon com~ittee could meet with members of the recreation and parka depart.ment. City Administrator Bud Belaito said that the city bas a fed ral srant of $143,109 avail•· ble for the project. 1f the money la not used for the ovel'head c:roulq, It still may be spent on other Cen&tal Park development, BelJlto Nid today. Fog Blankets Coast; 2 Boats Stuck in NB Thick fog that blanketed the Orange Coast overrugbt made navigation impossible for the crews of two boats that went aground in Newport Beach. Capt. Bud Belshe of the Newport Deach lifeguards said none of the people from the two vessels repotLed any injuries In the mishaps, although one boat wu listed as a total loss. The first boat went on the beach at I Street at about 7:30 p.m. white trying to find the harbor entrance on a return trip from Catalina. (Related story Page AS) ., According to Belshe, the 27- foot Santana sailboat began breaking up early today after at- tempts to tow her out of the sur- fllne failed. The boat is owned by Laa Angeles resident Bruce Malasky. Her homeport ls Marina del Rey. Aecording to Ufeguardl, abf • ., carrying a charter group from Newport Beach and so w11 headed for Newport Harbor when the mftbapoccurred. The second ground occWTOd at about 5 a .m . •l>en a 32-foot Newport went aground at 10th Street, The h<>at, the Gambol, wu operated .by Robert Meyer who had bla three children aboard. Lifeguards said lbe Meyer family escaped unbanned and attempts were under wa~ today to set the boat oa the beach before abe ~ould be severely damaged by tb• surf. Meeting In Qatar Dec. 15 By the Aaaociated Presa The oil cartel seems sure to raise oil prices in the new year, a move that probably will mean higher prices at the gas pump, ln heating and electricity bills, at airline ticket counters and man~ other places. Ministers of the 13-natioo Organization of Petroleum £x .. porting Countries meet Dec. 15 in the Per.tan Gulf sheikdom of Qatar to discuss oil prices, but the most influential members have already said they want in- creases ranging from 10 percent to 25 percent. Even Saudi Arabia. the larg~st oil exporter and the most reluc- tant in recent years to raise prices, bas said it wants a "01oderate" increase. That bas been interpreted as about 10 per- cent. Iran. the second largest oil ex- porter, is thought to favor an in· erease in the area of 25 percent, while Venezuela, another in- ftuential OPEC member, wants at least 15 percent. The spokesman at OPEC head- quarters in Vienna, Ahmed Zaberi. s aid last month he beli.eved the price would be "ad- justed,•· which in oil talk means increased. The present OPEC price of $11.51 for a 42-gallon barrel of standard grade crude hits been in effect since Oct. 1, 1975. Oil ministers considered raisin& prices at their meeting in Bali in May, but took no action, largely because of Saudi opposition. Each 10 percent increase in the price of OPt:C oil, if passed along entirely to consumers, would add about a penny a gallon to the price of gas in the United Slates. 'This takes into consideration the fact that the United States im· ports 40 percent of its oil. In coun- tries importing all their oil the impact would be much greater. A price increase would also be felt wherever else oil figures in the economf. Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, the Saudi oil minister. said in August that some OPEC members want- ed a "'very drastic"' increase - "'.somewhat shnilar to what hap- pened in 1973." Arab oil nations put an embargo on exports dur- ing the October 1973 Mideast war, and OPEC followed witb the quadrupUng or oil prices. Yamani said his government (See OIL, Page A%) Coa"c . Weather Areas of denae fog along the coui are forecast for Tueaday morning . Otherwise sunny .Skies with a cooling trend Tuesday. A low tonJght near60with the high Tuei:da.y in mld-805. INSIDE TODA\' ~ath bl.no th~ w~ on Bob Martin of Pierre and Siouz FalU, S.D. ~ Ma . death Oof. 1', it 1w been lfarnm that he had a uAfe. and /om1111 1n .ach cit~. s. ~ I A4. Index •• II "' ,.,, ,.. •• lt•I 14. "' " "" ,.. ,.. .42 DAILY PILOT ' H /F Monday. November 8. 1976 Peanuttiest Tell All, Visit Plaim LONDON CAP> -The tabloid Sun iavtted its re· aders today to enter a peanut contest. "There are millions of protein-packed peanuts to be won. and a rabulous chance to see where they come from," said the paper, which bas a circulation of {our million. The first prize is a 14-day trip for two to the Deep South, including st.o~ in Atlanta and Plains, Ga .. Ten runners-up will each get a giant pot of peanut butter, a gallon or peanut oil and a pound of peanuts a week for a year . "To enter, just tell us the nuttiest thing you ever did," said the Sun. · I Survey Study Childless Couples Said 'Self-satisfied' WASHINGTON (AP) -Mar- ried couples who choose not to have children are JUSl as happy, self-satisfied and interested in their community as couples who choose to have children, a new s tudy says. I The study. written by two social psychologists from the -University of Kansas, is based on a survey of 61 m arried couples in the area of Lawrence, Kan. It says that inlenlionalJy childless couples are no more selfish than couples who intend to have children. Census Bureau reports show that in 1974, almost one·lhird of all married women under 30 had •not had children, up from one- filth in 1967. I These census rePorts show also that 27 percent of those ctuldJess women aged 25·29 expected to re· main childless. In the study by Linda Silka, a University of Kansas graduate student, and Sara Kiesler, who is domg research in Washington. 21 couples said they never intended to have children. 21 couples said they wanted children and 19 were . unsure. I Among findings in the report: Intentionally childless coup l es are not mor e materialistic than other couples. Westminster Man Indicted lnLoanC<Ue LOS ANGELES <AP> Six persons were 1nd1cted 1-'riday on charges of dcfraud1n~ the ft'dcral j(Ovemmcnt on fetlcraJly 1nsurc<l home loans · Named as an urundJctt'd co- <'onspirator 1n the C':lS<' \\as Albt'rt A MaJ?ce .• 1 Lnng ~ach real es t ate broka Magee"• broth('r, Raymond. was one of the six persons charged. The 1nd1C'tmcnts wcrl' an- nounced by Asst U S Ally \'in cent Marelta They ~lcmmed lrom an alleged plan by lhe six to :o.uomit false s tatements to lh(' lcdcrill government bNwt•en No\' 30. 1971 and Aug. 30, 1972 to win ilppro\'a l ol lcd cralh ua.sured home loan applications· Also indicted were Norris Perez, 37. of Westm1n,tcr, J ohn f'agot. 37. of Lon.R Reach; llcnr> J(ylei. Jr . 46. of Loni.: Beach , J oseph llood. 40, of lngfl-y.ond a nd SonJa Bone. ;Js, of Loni: Jk:.ich Huntin~on Pier Work Bids Sou~bt A call for bids lo repair damages to the municipal pier has been approved by the llunl· lngton Beach City Council. A cost or about $10,000 1s expect· ed for the replacement of four wooden pilings as well as the r e· pair of a boat ramp, st&rs, land· ings, and catwalks and water Unes alt he end of the pier. The pier was damaged in a storm last April. OR A.OE COASl H • DAILY PILOT 11111•0-•~(---~tOAllYPltot -""'-#f\'f"n·'"""• bi!"MM 1..-N .. f'\ ,.._,.,~ •\ W'bf1"'-d In ttiw Of'•"'~ (.JMt\I P\.!Nf\"tftrt (t,..-'i¥ W,.•f'AWI '°"' t~• ,.,.. Wbll\~.-f ~~-" ,,_,Wot\ '•llM''I tor (ft"ol• ..,..., .... woon A••,,." ... ""'''~°"' n-w" """"' 1~1,. YtUlfl'• I'"''~• ,_. ... ,.f\olt.-. Vflfh• ff'llO ~..._,.~tt\(.,.,f A •l"q'ter.., . .,.,..,.,. tt,,._ t\ ....,...,_,. S.111••••• Ml.1 ~..,, 1,_ r,:.:"ci,~~~~.·,~~~::~ .uo ¥1rt'tt n..-.......... _ Pf~, ... ,.,-~ P\M1 ~ JM•• CVf'tf'• v .. ~."""'"'' .""'c,.'"' .... M..~· 1'~•""•' 1Ct•w1I Ld•'., ,,..,....,.,..~ M.t"' 19'""1 l Mor 0.t"••M \.Ht •1cM,..f' .... II •n•\14t"t A;•"'•O "'Ol.O tcir\ ..... '1 .... ., Wfo'I 01 ,.,_~ (floUl\IY (f'f•tN' .. unllnoton 8e1e11 °"lee 11'1Jfllt•<ft 8<H•.,.~•ta M-'lfl"'O AHrt u flli 0 ~'11'!0 •1,.,.. Orne .. lA~1~t::." j~~~~7:~~~;~-I \.-oolttMr ~ ~"l .. w 1'JIOf' a PAr •~..a •r ,.,. O~•oo ,._,,...,.,.. Telephone (714)14.2-4321 Cl .. elflff AdHrtlelng <M2<M71 ,, .... -~ °' ·-""'"'• c.oi-.."''~ '40-1120 °'9¥' .... ""Or-c .... -......... '-' ~f ._ .._9' Ul'ftft 1t1"'" .. '°"' Hlhtttll Meit•f' •• e4••,.thtmfl'lh fllillt,•,., f'l"l~V ff t•,.;-HvCt • •UfleVi t .. Ul l t•'"'•U•4Hi' tt ~--""4-hc• ... , .... ""-.. , ••• C.11• .... UH••'"'• '"''i''•''" '" , .. ,_, .. , u .. =;.!!'t?e..:~ :~:· -·~·· ,,.,,,...,, -Intentio n a lly childless couples are equally interested in mankind and their communities and enjoyed community ac- tivities to the same extent. -Intentionally childless C'>uples and those who were un- sure or wanting childN!n showed less interest in interaction with people, a preference for being alone and were less gregarious than couples intending to have children. -Wives intending no children expressed a greater value for personal freedom than did others, including men. -Hus bands intending no children were likely to have a highly prestigious job and an- ticipated higher incomes than the others. -Wi ves who did not intend to have children bad jobs that were higher than usual in prestige. .. ll looks as though intentions not to have children are not relat- ed to employment aspirations but instead lo employment sue· cess," the authors write. ''As a group, those who had made a de· cision not to have children, in contrast to those who ha d postponed c hildren or were un- sure if they wanted children, were experiencing greater re· wards from employment and could expect greater rewards in lbe future." The authors aliO found that ''men were significantly less likely than women lo embrace feminist goals, had more tradi- tional views about women, were less positive about s haring domestic chores and were also more uncomforatble w ith the idea of having a more successful or well educated spouse than were their wives." YouthSlwt In Anaheim &uglary Try An Anaheim s hopkeeper shot and wounded a burglary suspect he allegedly found rummaging through his store early Saturday, according to police. It wasn·t until the suspect sought medical help at use. County Medical Center in Los Angeles late Saturday night that he was arrested, Police said. They identified the wounded man as Ronald Ronistal. 18. or 623 N. Chippewa St.. Apt. 206, Anaheim Police said they followed a trail of blood leading from the Apache Wells Trading Post, 613 N . Euclid Ave .. Anaheim to Romstars nearby apartment. The suspect reportedly was wounded shortly after 3 a.m. b:; trading post owner Wayne Walz. The shopkeeper went lo the lradmg post after a burglar alarm sil;(n al at his hom e sounded. police said. Once inside the darkened shop, he fired one s hot from a piStol that struck the suspect in bis left arm. When Walz went to call police. the wounded man re- portedly sprinted from the store. But, police said. the telllale t rail of blood led them to Ronistal 's apartment and to the arrest of three persom who were later charged with aiding a felon. When Ronistal went to the medical cente r in neighboring Los Angeles County for treat· ment of his wound. he was arrest- ed by officials there. police said. OIL ... would resist a large increase this time because of concern for the' economic recovery of the West. "We are not going to slaughter the hen that lays the golden eggs,'· he said. "There is a limit to what we can do. And I think we see that limit a litUe bit clearer than others." U.S. President-elect Jimmy Carter said at his news con· fcrence on Thursday that an oil price increase would be "a very serious blow'' to consumina na- Uons but that all be could do before his inauguration was to express concern th.rou&h public st.atements. Challenge To Church ~rSI~~~~~~ CAP) ~ Jimmy Carter will at- tend a meeting of the Plains Bap· list Church nut Sunday and hopes his fellow parishioners wiJ.1 agree t.o abandon their whites· only policy, spokesman Jody Powell says. AB the president-elect rested among the marshes, woods and fishing streams of this Southern Georgia resort island Sunday, word reached him that the Rev. Clennon King, a black activist minister, had been barted from the church for the second week in a row. Powell $aid Carter and other church membe rs with whom the President-elect had been in con- tact "hope at the conference to r each an amicable conclusion and auarantee the right of all to worship without r egard to race." Powell said that if next !:iun· day's vote continues the whites· only policy. Carter would have to make "a difficult personal de· cision" about what course lQ take. He did not outline what op· lions Carter might have. Quakes Rock Globe '•cific o, ..... '"Wl ....... , ..... p A series of apparently unrelated earthquakes hit several parts of the world during the weekend and today and a volcano erupted in Indonesia. See story Page A4. Cand}r Bar Prices To Go to 20 Cents • Hinshaw Rebuffed By Court I WASHING TON CAP> -'!be Supreme Court refwied today to interfere in a Political corruption trial of Rep. Andrew J . Hinabaw (ft.Newport Beach). The justices turned down a petition filed by Hirushaw seekiU a delay in the Orange Co~y Superior Court trial now in p~· gress until the Supreme Court disposes of an appeal filed by the congressman earlier this year. Hirulhaw, a Republican rint elected to Congress in 1972, was convicted earlier this year of ac- cepting bribes from the Tandy Corp. in 1072 while the company had matters pending before him as tax assessor for Orange Cowl • ty. He was sentenced to ptison for one to 14 years but bas re· mained free pending appeal: In the current case. he is on trial on charges of fraud, em- bezzlement and theft while in of· rice as the tax assessor. Hinshaw's appeal to the Supreme Court, however, was filed before his trial and was based o n a c hall eng~ t o California's grand jury system. Carter voted against a 1965 church rule excluding "Negroes and civil rights activists," and has said many times he hoped the rule could be changed. NEW YORK CAP) -Candy for 20 cents and, presumably, The church pastor, the Rev. lovers who watched prices rise could go up to 25 cents aftet the Hins haw sought re-election th.is year but was defeated in his district 's Republican primary by Assemblyman Robert Badham (R·NewpGrt Beach) who went on to win the seat in the general e lection. Bruce Edwards, also favors inle-during the sugar shortage are new increases take effect. gration of the church and his job groaning at the prospect of more The Nestle move was not unex· is in jeopardy as a result. He bad news next year: the 20-cenl pected since the Hershey Corp., 'David and Lisa ' asked for next Sunday's meeting chocolate bar. M&M and Peter Paul announced so the congregation could vote on similar price boosts late last Operii Wednesday the deacons• recommendation This time, the culprit is the month. that he be fired. cocoa bean. . Figuring out the percentage of The Fountain Valley High Meanwhile, the President-elect The Nestle Company Inc. of increase gets complicated School Drama Department will · d' 'd' h. 1· h White Plains, N.Y. announced to-because the companies tried to present the play "David anct is IVI mg as ame ere among day that it was raising wholesat0 h ' '~ " · th th fishing, swimming, ping-pong -. sweeten t e impact of the higher .....,a an e campus eater at 8 and the study of recommenda-prices on a variety of chocolate prices by increasing the size of p.m. Wednesday through Friday . lions from his staff and others products. At the retail level, a their candy bars. The production features stu- about ways to complete the typical chocolate bar will go A Nestle milk chocolate bar, dents David Brook and Sµsie transition between a Carter ad-from 15 to 20 cents, the company for example. will grow from 1•1s Curtis in the title roles. Ticket ministration and that of outgoing said. to l'• ounces: a Hershey milk prices for each of the four President Ford. In some places, candy bars in chocolate bar is going from 1.2 to performances are $1.SO for adults ~rin~ance, Ca~ris•udy-.--v_e~--·~g~m~a_ch_1_·n_e_s~~~u~d~y~~-'-'~_1_.~~o_un~c_e~s-·~~~~~~~~~~an~d~S_l_fo~r_s_t~u~d~e~n~~~·~~~~~ ing a memo from Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller recounting Rockefeller 's experiences in the vice presidency and bis thoughts on how that office can be made more useful. Carter drove from his rented vacation home at Musgrove Plantation Sunday morning lo· take communion at historic, s mall and unh e ate d Christ Church. the parish in which Charles and John Wesley pre- ached in thelate 1730s. John Wes ley late r founded' t he Methodist church. Carter has been campaigning virtually nonstop for almost two years, and said he needs the rest his vacation is providing. His vacation cottage is near a s wift· flowing creek overlooking a marsh at the end of a winding road nearly two miles from the nearest highway. The estate is owned by Smith Bagley, a Was hington, D.C .. businessman. who was an early supporter of Carter's presiden- tial hopes. Powell said Bagley will be paid up to $2,000 by Carter for five or six days' use of the cot· tage, surrounding buildings, and the 1,483 acres of woods, water and marshland. Recycle Plan To Aid House Huntington Beach residents wishing to help in restoration ef- forts of the Newland House can make contributions oy saving aluminum cans ana foal and other aluminum products. Fran Wagoner, chairman of the fund·raising project for the Historical Society. suggests br- inging the items lo the Newland Hou.se on Beach Boulevard north of Adams Avenue. People with la rge collections mny call ner at 536-0872 for de- livery of the items. The products will be sold for recycling with proceeds going to the restoration of the old house. Slayer Gets Death Stay ATLANTA CAP) -A county judge has issued a sUfy of execu- tion for Timothy McCorquodale. who was scheduled t.odle Wednes· day for the murder of a 17-y ear- old Virginia girl. F\alton Countv Superior Court Judge Osgood Williams' ruling did nOl limit the stay, saying only that he needed more time to rule oo McCorquodale's petition for a writ of habeas corpus . MURDERS • • Thesuspect was alsorepartcdly jailed In Westminster the day before the double 1layin"s and bailed out by Howell, who co- signed for a bond pendlna a cou.rt appearance. Howell was M"'. Campbell's second buaband, detect.1 ves sald. • ~ ~ . ~ Delicious money-saving secrets of slow crock pot cooking! :\l:thh' lloffnwn's f:1 111111 1~ ( 0/'r/l'k1 111 ( '1)11k1 ·r!1 <·uold111nk mal<1·s t lt1• Ill,\ :-l t'l'il':-. of ~Jn\\' 1·1111ki11g CT\':-.lal rlv:1r. · And it won't t·osl ·' 1111 :t 1w1111~· to disro\'t'l' its dPli ci011...; "'l'l'l'<'l '· ~11\\" I his ~n·rtl liuok i:--~ 11111·-..- frl'<.'-•it Cdifornia Ft·dl'ral. Eat better and save money. I:, t•n h:alin~ lhrnu~h lhc pagl·s nr Cror/.-r n1 < '110/1r1 ,, i:--a m11ut hwall't · int( c•xJWl'll'lH'l'. l )j ..,i·m·l'I' mun• I h:11i :.!liO n·ripc·" fur lw:1 r l.' 111:ii11 di-.11<• .... S<>\lp~. !'>:tlld\Vi<'lll':-, appt•I il.t'l '.lit•\· <.'nl\.!l'S-tt\'<'ll I wt·ncl"' and ""I,( . ..,_ to lll'lp yo u ft·t>cl you r famih· "c•ll and kt•C'p .rnur hucl,l.{<'l trim. Tht •rt• 's a til -pn).{t' enn:-.u mt•r .l.\'llid1 1 (1) <'onk\'t·:-:. too. 1\nd a handy nwn11 pli11111i11µ; g11idl'. 1:11L don't \\:til togPl \'011r ft'('l' C'OP.''· 'J'h1 • -.;up pl y's linlill•d. 01w p<·r f:tmil,v "hill· thl'y l:i-.t. ll!'lll'r l111r1·_v in . tS111'1'~'. hooks a1·1· llot · :t\·:1ilahlt> IJ,v 111;iil.) Other money-saving ideas. \\'lwn '1111 c·umc in. lakt" a minute 111· l \\'O lo fi0 1ld 1111( ai>oul Otll' high· inl<'l'l'!'l "':t\ in~s a<·<·ounts: !) 1 1 % pass· lmnks. l \·rtifiC'al1..•s up lo 7 ~ s %~ And lit• !'>\irt' to a~k :thoul our frl'C lrav- <•Jprs C'IH•1·b. llH>lll'\' orders and nlhcr ll'l't! :-t•n·ic·Ps. Th<.·,;·n· vours wht-n • \'11\1 ll'il\'f' SJ.II()() \~·ith llS. . Stop in llOW. \'ou'rn heller orr in Californi~1 Vi.•dvr:tl. C CALIFORNIA FEDERAL Nation's Largest f.ederal ('11l1lornl;i F"tlcral l'u,•inir' 11ni1 L<•~n h~or1n11nn Ht;NTl~GTO;'>. UEACll . l~U:. C.:oth:ml St near Edin!l\!r. "' ll11n11n,.1on Pliu:i 171 111'lli ;ljj:i. . .. ------- r - Irvine EDI TION VOL. 69, NO. 31 3, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Totlay's Clo~intr, N.Y.Stoeks MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1976 TEN CEN rBidding . for Irvine Delays Hearing By TOM BARLEY Of tlte 0•11 ~ PllOI SU ff Heavy behind-the-scenes bid- ding for control or the Irvine Company led Judge James F. Judge to order a two-day delay in his Orange County Superior Court bearing today. Lawyers for Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith, the Irvine · Company, the s tate and the· James Irvine Foundation were ordered to return Wednesday with a resume of the latest ocrers received. Topping the list today was a $284 million ;rer s ubmitted to the rounda~ ... by a consortium organized by Wall Street finan- cier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taubman. Lawyer s said the Allen· Taubman offer was made im· mediately acter Cadillac Fairview of Toronto increased its earlier offer of ~ million to $269 million in respome to re- newed interest by the Mobil Oil Company. Mobil's original $200 million of. fer s parked µte le"al act.ion taken . by Mrs. Smith to halt a sale that, she argued, was unfair to minori- ty stockholders. Mrs. Smith, the granddaughter oC Irvine Company founder James Irvine, bolds 22 percent of the Irvine Company'utock. She claims in her lawsuit t.liat the $24 a share represented by tbe fi.nt Mobil offer is much too low fortheatock. She asked for and got a C!OUrt order halting disposal. of lbe foundation's 54.S percent con- trolling interest in lbe Irvine Company pending a bearing mto the issue. The Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969 compels the foundation to divest it.self of its Irvine Com· pany holdings no later than 1983. Representatives for Mobil said tod~ that the oil company is now willln.g to pay $273 million ln cash for the Irvine Company-$11 million less than the offer sub-. milted by tbe Allen-Taubman combine. FoundaUon attorney Howard Privett would only comment to- day that his board of d.1.rectors bas reached no declslon on wbidl offer might be acceptable to them . Mrs. Smith, who withdrew b~ objections to lbe sale of founda· lion s tock at a time when Cadillac Fairview appeared to be the successful bidders, wodld ol· fer no comment on the new bids (See DELA YEO, Page AZ> Another Oil Price Hike Fea.red I~ r ! Too Clo se for Comfo rt J A single-engine plane rests against the • fe nce of St. Casimir 's Lithuanian ~ Cemeter y in Chicago where it crashed shortly afler takeoff from the city's Midway Aiport. Pilot Henry Szmanowski and passenger Robert Orlando escaped with minor cuts and bruises. Childless Folks Happy Stmistics Say Kids Don't Cause Changes WASHl'lGTO:'-J 1,\Pl Mar I ned couples "ho choose not to have ch1lclrl.'n art' JUSl as happ). self satisfied and interested in their community as couplt>s who i choosl' to hav<' children. a new • study ~ays. The study, written by two 'social psycholoj.l1sts from th{' I Uruvers1ty or Kansas. is based on a surn•y of Iii marned couple!> in the art>a of Lawrence, Kan It says that 1nll'ntionally ch.ildless couples are no more !>elfish than couples who intend to haH' children Census Run a u nport'I !>how that in 1971. almost one-third or all marrif'd v.nmf'n un<lrr 30 h~1d not hari chlldn'n , up from one fifth'" 1007 Thest• rt•nsu~ reports show also that 27 percent or those childless women at::t>d 25 29 expected to re main childless • In the study by Linda Sitka, a University of Kansas graduate student, anct Sara Kiesler, who 1s doing research in Washington, 21 "ealher Areas of dense fog along the coast are forecast for Tuesda y morning . Otherwise sunny skies with a cooling trend Tuesday. A low tonight n~r 60 with the high Tuesday in mid-~. I NSI DE TODA l' Death blew the whist~ on Bob Martin of P ierre and Siou.r Falu, S.D. Since his cUath Ocl. 16. it bas bee"n learned that he had a wife. and family in each city. See Poge A4. Index AIY-S.nlce ..,.,,~ l .M. .. ,. C.lllorftle CMwtC.,Mr au'lll" Ct<nl<t AH AllllU-" AIO MoMyTrM Al MoYIH 8t At All en .. _,. 0H111"941<n a•Wlel"• .. ._ .......... , "'-· --- Al N4110ftel lltW\ 117 0!'•"99 Co11•ty ., u ,....... ., $pert• ., S..C• Ml•'•h At Tele¥1t- A• TllNl.n Alt._ .. _ At W..WNtW\ ., A4 Al II 1 ••• •• •t 1111 AA •• couples said they never intended to have children . 21 couples said they wanted children and 19 were unsure Among findings in the report: l ntent1onally childless couples are no t mor e materialistic than other couples. Intent ionally ch ildless couples are equally interested in mankind and their communities and enjoyed community ac- tav1ties to the same extent Intentionally childless couples and those who were un sure of wanting children showed le!>s interest in interaction with people, a preference for being alone and were less gregarious than couples intending to have children. -Wives intending no children expressed a greater value for personal freedom than d id others, including men. -Hus bands intending n o children were likely to have a highly prestigious job and an- ticipated higher incomes than the others. -Wives who did not intend to have children had jobs that were higher than usual in prestige. (See COUPLES, Page l\%) Granddaughter Sues Get ty Oil Company Corona del Ma r resident Anne Catherine Getty. granddaughter or J . Paul Getty is suing a Getty Oil Company attorney and the Getty Museum's director, char2- ing them with coercing the late oil bilhonaire to alter his will .• In the suit filed FTiday in Los Angeles County Superior Court, Miss Getty names C. Lansing Hearing Set On Irvine Fund R e quest The Irvine City Council will open a public hearing Tuesday night on Irv ine's lhird-year ap- plication for a federal housing and community development grant. The application. which would net approximately $100,000, is de· signed to'slimulate production or low and moderate income re· sldential housing in Irvine. The funds would be used to ac· quire 'land for private develop· menl. At present. the city council has not s pecified an area for low and middle income housing, but staff reports are focusing on University Town Center. The public meeting begins at 7:30 p.m . in city council cham- bers. Hays or Getty Oil and Norris Bramlett. director of the Getty Museum in Malibu. Getty died in June at age 83, leaving an estate of S2 billion to $4 billion. His will was admitted to probate July 7. Mi!s Getty's suit claims that if a series of changes to the will bad not been filed as they were in March, the Gelly fa mily would have retained control or the museum and oil company. Instead, the suit claims, Hays now bas effective control of Getty Oil and Bramlett bas taken con- trol or the museum. The two men persuaded Getty to switch the bulk of his estate from his family to the museum for their• own benefit, the suit claims. Wat er Agreem ent Pondered Tonight Directors of the Irvine Ranch Water Disttict wiU consider an a1reement tonight between IRWD, Orange County SanitaUon District Five and the lrvtne Com· pany. The agreement calls for water and sewer facilities to be constructed by cities who annex Wldeveloped coastal land. The regular board meeting belins at 6 p.m . at JRWD offices, 4201 Campus Drive. The meeting is open to the public. ' Meeting . In Qatar Dec. 15 By tbe Associated Press The oil cartel seems sure to taise oil prices in the new year, a move that probably will mean higher prices at the gas pump, in heating and electricity bills, at airline ticket counters and many other places. Ministers or the 13-oation Organization of Petroleum Ex- porting Countries meet Dec. 15 in the P ersian Gulf sheikdom of Qatar to discuss oil prices, but · tbe most influential members have already said they want in· creases ranging from 10 percent to 25 percent. Even Saudi Arabia, th~ largest oil exporter and the most reluc- tant in recent years to raise prices, has said it want.a a "moderate" increase. That bas been interpreted as about 10 per- cent. Iran, the second largest oil ex- porter, is thought lo !avoc an in- creue in t.he area of 25 percent, while Venezuela, another in· fluenlial OPEC member, wants at least 15 percent. The spokesman at OPEC head- quarters in Vienna, Ahmed Zaberi, said last month be believed the price would be "ad- justed," which in oil talk means increased. The present OPEC price of Sll.51 for a 42-gallon barrel or standard grade crude bas been in effect s ince Oct. 1, 1975. Oil ministers cons idered raising prices at their meeting in Bali in May, but took no action, largely because or Saudi opposition. Each 10 percent increase in the price or 0 PEC oil, if passed along entirely to cons umers, would add about a penny a gallon to the price of gas in the United States. This takes into consideration the fact that the United States im- ports 40 percent or its oil. In COUD· tries importing all their oil the impact would be much greater. A price increase would also be felt wherever else oll figures in the economy. Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, the Saudi oil minister, said in August that some OPEC members want- ed .a "very drastic" increase - "somewhat similar to what hap- pened in 1973.'' Arab oil nations put an embargo on exports dur- ing the October 1973 Mideast war, a nd @PEC followed with the quadrupling or oil p'rices. Yamani said hls government would resist a lirge increase this lime because-bf concern for the economic recovery orthe West. U.S. President-elect Jimmy Carter said at his news con- ference on Thursday that an oil price increase would be "a very serious blow·' to cOMu.ming na- tions but that all he could do before bis inauguration was to express concern through public statements. He Was Down But Not Out RIVERSIDE CAP) -A hitchhiker stabbed James Davis four time• but that didn 'l stop the 83-year-old Perris resident. After allegedly at.ebbing Davis and commandeering bis car, Riverside County sheriff's de- puties recounted, the hitchhiker started to drive away. Although badly hurt, Davis picked up a rock, hurled lt through the car window, and bit the man on tbe head. The car crashed ind the bltcbblker wu 1rrested OD root a hall mlle away. Investtaatot"a identified the hitchhiker u Em- mett McAlUa~r, 33, of San Dieco. { Bonaeeowaing Queen Beverly Sham, a 17-year-old senior, is University High School's Homecoming Queen for 1976-77. Beverly ·was crowned Saturday at football game between University High and San Clemente. She is interested in sailing. photography and writing and hopes to attend Cal State Fullerton next year. Hinshaw Halt Nixed By Supreme Court WASHINGTON (AP> -The Supreme Court refused today to interfere in a political corruption trial of Rep. Andrew J . Hinshaw (R-Newport Beach). The justices turned down a petition filed by Hinshaw seeking a delay in the Orange County Superior Court trial now in pro- gress until the Supreme Co~rt disposes of an appeal filed by the congressman earlier this year. Hlnshaw, a Republican fi rst elected lo Congress in 1972, was convicted earlier this year or ac· cepting bribes from the Tandy Corp. In 1972 whlle the company bad matters pending before him as tax assessor for Orange Coun- ty. Hew as sentenced to prison for one to 14 years but bas remained free pending appeal. In the current case, be is on trial on charges or fraud, em- bezzlement and theft while in of· fice as the tax assessor. Hins haw 's a ppeal to lhe Supreme Court, however, was filed before his trial and was based o n a challe nge to California 's grand jury system. Hinshaw sought re-electi9n this year but was defeated in bis district's Republican primary by Assemblyman Robert Badham CR·Newport.Beach) who went on to win the seat in the general election. Arso n S uspected WS ANGELES (AP> -Fire department officials are in- vestigating the possibility or arson in a fire which caused an estimated $85,000 damage to a Boyle Heights area recreation center gymnasium. Firemen from 11 units fought tbe blue at the Evergreen Playground Recreation Center for nearly a half hour before bringing It under control. PeaDuttiest Tell All, Visit Plains LONDON (AP> -The tabloid Sun invited its readers today to enter a peanut contest . "There are millions of protein-packed peanuts to be won, at)d a fabulous chance t.o see where they come from," said the paper, which has a circulation of four million. lbe first prize is a 1'-day trip for two to the Deep South, including atops tn AUanta and Plains, Ga .. Ten runpers·up will each get a giant pot of peanut butter, a gaDon of peanut all and a pound of peanuts a week for a year. "To enter, just tell us the nuttiest thing you ever did," said the Sun. ' I A 2 DAIL y PILOT Burglary 1 Suspect 'Wounded An Anaheim shopkeeper shot and wounded a burglary suspect he allegedly found rummaging through hi.s store early Salu.rday, according to pohce. I It wasn't until the suspect sought medical help at use. County Medical Center ln Los I Angeles late Saturday night that be was arrested, police said. They identified the wounded" man as Ronald Ronistal, 18, of 623 N. Chippewa St., Apt. 206, Anaheim. Police said they rollowed a trail or blood leading from the Apache Wells Trading Post, 613 N . Euclid Ave., Anaheim to Ronistal's nearby apartment. The suspect reportedly was wounded s hortly aft.er 3 a.m. by trading post owner Wayne Walz. I The shopkeeper went to the trading post arter a burglar I alarm si~nal at his home sounded, police said. I Once inside the darkened shop, be fired one shot from a pistol tbat slruck the s uspect in his left arm. When Wa lz went to call police, the wounded man r e· , portedJy sprinted from the store. But, police said, the telltale trail o f blood led them to Ronistal's apartment and to the arrest or three persons wbo were ·later charged with aiding a felon. .' When Ronistal went to the medical center in neighboring Los Angeles County for treat· ment of his wound, he was arrest- ed by officials there, police said. Seitz Asks Recount; 65 Votes Short Republican Phil Seitz, who lost by 65 voles to Democrat Chet Wray In last Tuesday's election m the 7ls t Assembly District, has asked for a recount. The 3l·year-o ld Republican paid $532 to cover the anticipated cost of one day's recount. Seitz' near victory in the heavi· ly Democratic district was re· garded as a s urprise by Orange I County political observers. Wray, 53, a United Auto Workers union officiaJ, was ex- pected to win the election by as , many as 30,000 votes. But by the lime the county counting was finished, his margin was a scant 65 votes out or 84,027 cast in the 7lst Registrar of Voters Al Olson said today the recount will take from five to six days and cost Seib an estimated $5.12 daily. Should the election·s outcome be reversed by the vote recount. Seitz would not have to pay for the hand count or tht' ballots North Coast Shoioors Due By The Associated Press Showt·rs art> likely along the northern coastline. wsth partly c:louel y and s li.s;(h lly cooler I w~ather cxtt'ndang <'lsewhere 'lue~da.> ovt?r Northern and Central California I Tht· "'lat1onal \V(.'athcr Service sa1a shower~ an· hkel.> north of Cai>t. Mendo<'ano There·s also a ~hance of ram southv.·ard to l:kiah and ext(.'ndmg inland to tht: Mt Sha<.ta r<'gaon 0\t'rm~ht lows are expecte<l in the 40s or low 50s, warming to the mid 60s or mid 70s dunng the afternoon Missile Launched VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (APl -A Strategic Afr Command crew suc cessfully I la\lftched a Minuteman m in· l erconlinental ballistic missile down the Pacific Missile Range today. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT lhe (),&"'Qt(Ott,t0•HVP1~ -ff'wt'l~1\t0f'n .,..,,.,."""""'_, Pr11t~'\ 1\l'lftll"""db¥1M()r~ =ll\~:·::::,~:rr:::::Q~~::.~::--~'a:~: _,. 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C..tUtrflli• $WltHrteU8ft ... <•"''" " to hftth•v. et• m•H U M ""°""''• m1111.,., ....... , ...... u ,. ....... , .... Mond1y. Novttmber 8. 1978 On Whites-only Carter Plans Church Fight ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. <AP) -Jimmy Carter will at· tend a meeting of the Plains Bap· list Church next Sunday and hopes his fellow parishioners will agree to abandon their whites· only policy, spokesman J ody Powell says. As the president-elect rested among the marshes, woods and fishing streams of this Southern Georgia resort island Sunday. word reached him that the Rev. Clennon King, a black activist • minister, had been barred from the church for the second week in a row. Powell said Carter and other church members with whOm the ·President-elect had been in con· tact "hope at the conference lo reach an amicable conclusion and 2uarantee the right of all to worship without regard to race." Powell said that if next Sun· day's vote continues the whiles. only policy. Carter would have to make ··a difficult personal de- c-1sion.. about what course to take. He did not outline what op· lions Carter might have. Carter voted against a 1965 church rule excluding "Negroes and civil rights activists," and has s aid many times he hoped the rule could be changed . The church pastor, the Rev. Bruce Edwards, also favors inte· gration of the church and his job is in jeopardy as a result. He asked for next Sunday's meeting so the congregation could vote on the deacons' r ecommendation that he be fired. Church, the parish in wblch Charles and John Wesley pre- ached in the late 1730s. John Wesley later found~d the Methodist church. Carter bas been campal,-oing virtually nonstop for almost two years, • said he needs the rest his vacation ls providing. HJs vacation cottage is near a swift- flowing creek overlooking a marsh at the end of a winding road nearly two miles Crom the neareslhiilhwav. SUCCUMBS AT 59 Sam Gurley Jr. 0•11' ll'llot ""°'• lly lll<M"' 1(-ltr SALVAGE FIRM'S ROBERT WESTLAKE STRUGGLES TO GET 'GAMBOL' OFF BEACH Meanwhile, the President-elect is dividing his time here among fishing, swimming, ping-pong and the study of recommenda· lions from his s taff and others about ways to complete the transition between a Carter ad· ministration and that of outgoing President Ford. Businessman Sam Gurley Deadat59 32-footer Was Just One of Fogbound Boat• That Went Aground Along Orange Coast KWloa Leadil In Mazatlan Yacht Race Jim Kilroy's 79-foot ketch JGaloa built up a substantial lead in the Los Angeles to Mazatlan race today as fresh winds filled in from the west along the Baja California coast. (See earlier story, PageAlO.) JGaloa 's position placed her 292 miles from the start, about 37 miles ahead of the second place boat Aorangi. In third place on elapsed lime was Wh.ssUe Wing about 12 miles astern of Aorangi. Ragtime, wh ich had been challenging Kialoa for the lead was farther south than Aorangi and Whistle Wing. but con· s iderabiv west or the rhumbline. Leader on handicap time was Guido Mortarolti 's Ranger 37 Broom Hilda. winner of the race two years ago. Tu:o Clwt ists 'Emangled,' Die in Jump FT. STEWART. Ga. (AP) Two Army parachutists. return· ing from a training mission in the Panama Canal Zone. died here when their chutes became en· t angled as they were "jumping in" to the Ft. Stew art Army base, a spokesman said. The two, described as highly trained paratroopers, were iden· tified as Sgt. Major Henry Caro, 39. of Chino, Calif., and James Edward Quick, 22, of Cairo, Mo. The entanglement of the two parachutes caused each man's main parachute and later their reserve chutes to "partially deflat.e," said Capt. Harold Har- rison. a base public affairs of· ficer. Harrison said the men, mem· biers of the Army Rangers. were not "raw recruits.·' "They do this all the time. These men make many, many jumps," be said. But, he added, "Two people can't share the same space at the same time." F rom Page Al COUPLES • • "It looks as though intentions not to have children are not relal· ed to employm ent aspirations but instead to employment suc- cess," the authors write. ''As a group, those who had made a de- cision not to have chlldren.-ill , contrast to those who had postponed children or were un- s ure if they wanted children, were experiencing greater re· wards from employment and could expect greater rewards in the future." The authors also found that "men were significantly less lilcely than women to embrace feminist goals. had more tradi· tional views about women, were less pos itive about s haring domestic chores and were also more uncomforatble with the idea of having a more successful or well educated s pouse than were their wives." F ront Page A J DELAYED. • until they are discussed in the hearing lM!fore Judge Judge. ll was learned today that at least two other business interests have entered the bidding picture s ince the counter bidding de· veloped between Mobil, Cadillac Fairview and the Allen-Taubman consortium. Lawyers participating in the hearing refused to identify the new bidders. But they agreed t hat heavy interest in the future of the Irvine Company could end with the organization being sold for as much as $300 million. Driver Killed KERNVILLE CAP) -A Kemville-area man was killed when he bec am e trapped between two large trees while driving a tractor , Kern County s heriff's police said. Harold Lemuel Barnes Jr., 28, was work· ing on the tractor in the Payute Mountain area Sunday when it went through the trees and he got trapped. Saddleback Slates Microwave Class The first of two special Sad· dleback College classes in microwave cookery will take place Friday and the second session, on Nov. 19, will include preparatio n of a n entire Thanksgiving dinner for the stu· dents. Both classes will nm rrom 11 a.m , to 1 p.m., in the college home economics center at •cost of $2 to cover food cost.a. Atten- dance is limited to 4S people and pre-re,Utration ii required, Thia week's session will cover the basic techniques of this space-qe method of cookin",. ) selection or the right cooking con- tainers, timing and other factors. The practice "menu" for Fri· day wlll consist of a spinach souf. ne. scrambled eggs, spiced apple punch and baked chicken. The microwave Thanksgiving dinner on the following Friday will be complete with a 10.pound roast turkey, casserole dressing, cranberries, potatoes and but· tered broccoli. Community residents interest· ed in ta.king the classes can make advance reservations by calling &n-'700, extension asa. Fog Blankets Coast; 2 Boats Stuck in NB Thick fog that blanketed the Orange Coast overnight made navigation impossible for the crews of two boats that went aground in Newport Beach. Capt. Bud Bels he of the Newport Beach lifeguards said none of the people from the two vessels reported any injuries in the mishaps, although one boat was listed as a total loss. The firs t boat went on the beach at 1 Street at about 7. 30 p.m. while trying to find the harbor entrance on a return tnp trom Catalina. C Related s tory Page AS> According to Belshe, the 27· fool Santa na sailboat began breaking up early today after a t· tempts to tow her out of the sur· rune failed. The boat is owned by Los Angeles resident Bruce Malasky. Her homeport is Marina del Rey. According to lifeguards, she was carrying a charter group from Newport Beac h and so was headed for Newport Harbor when the mishap occurred. The second ground occurred at about 5 a .m . when a 32-foot Newport went aground at 10th Street. The boat, the Gambol, was operated by Robert Meyer who had his three children aboard. For instance, Carter is study· ing a memo from Vice Pres ident Nelson A. Rockefeller recounting Rockefeller's experiences in the vice presidency and bis thoughts on how that o!fice can be made more useful. Carter drove from his rented vacation home at Musgrove Plantation Sunday morning to· take communion at historic, small and unheated Christ Korea Gift Sem Back SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Rep. Phillip Burton ( D· Ca lif.) says a South Korean congressman once sent a large topaz brooch to tus wife. but she returned il 1 to the Korean Embassy. The San Francisco Chronicle reported that Burtor and his wife, Sala, said they we re surprised and outraged by the gift which was delivered to his Capitol Hill office in July 1975. Burton told the Chronicle that the gift was accom· panied by a card signed by Admiral and Mrs. Myong Soo Hahm. but neither he nor Mrs. Burton could re· call meeting the Hahms. The South Korean Em· bassy bas identified Hahm as a member of that na· tion 's Congress. Birds of a Pre tty Feather Memorial Services will be held Thursday in Corona del Mar for prominent Newport Beach busi· nessman Sam Gurley Jr. who died Friday. Mr. Gurley, who had lived in the Harbor Area since 1964, was president of Tubesales, a Los Angeles business. He was59. A native of llUnois, Mr. Gurley was graduated fro m the University of Missouri and was a veteran of World War II, serving as a commander in the U.S. Navy. Prior to moving to the Harbor Area, Mr. Gurley and his family lived in the New York City area. Mr. Gurley's local affiliations include d Hoa g Memorial Hospital's 552 Club and the board of governors of the Balboa Bay Club. He was also a member of Big Canyon Country Club and the ·Jonathan Club. Jn addition, Mr. Gurley was a 32nd degree Mason for 30 years. Services will be held al 2 p.m. at Pacific Vie w Mortuary Chapel. Mr. Gurley leaves his widow, Norma. of Newport Beach; a son, Phillip Gurley, of New York ; a daughter, Susan Cook of Newport Beach; a sister, Freda f'reeman, of Washington, and three grandchildren. Art Lecture Set Fren.artist Bemar Venet will lecture at Concert Hall, Fine Arts Village, UC Irvine, Tuesday at 8 p.m. Admission is free to the public. These birds, Wendy Potter, 16, (left ) and Pam Maple, 24, probably wouldn't have dif· ficuJly finding sanctuary anywhere, but they've settled in Laguna Beach. Laguna's beaches have drawn large collections of beachgoers with the unseasonably warm weather. With residents like thes e, no wonder they call it the Art Colony. ' ... 1 Monday~s Closing P rices NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS .. Monday November 8 1976 l /N D"1L V PILOT .... Babies Grow· So Gerber Triea It, Too By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Gerber Product.a ls sWJ at it, tryinJ to niura out bow to ~ape from the one-product atra.lghtjacket it tailored lor itself. We all know Gerber for at! baby roods -aod Indeed we should. The Fnmont, Mich , company command$ more than 60 percent of the US baby lood market. Campbell bas 80 percent oC the soup business but r can't think or any other food processor that owns 60 percent or a market. Kellogg's slice ol the cold c er e al market is 42 percent. The trouble Is, U1e birthrate bus bee n declining, wh1ch mean.5 Money Tree that Gerber's customer base is being eroded. Gerber packs a product you graduate from -and you don't return to 1t en·· less you're wailing for yo1.u· dentures. With American families bav10g fewer children, Gerber has been in the lrlghtenmg position of watching Its market recede. WHAT TO DO! WELL. ONE thing you can do is think about the rest of the world The mulU·national revoluUoo swept nght by Gerber It never patd much attention to o.ver4 seas markets1 Now 1t has buJlt up mternauonal operations. to the point where they account ror 20 percent or the com- pany's $400 million sales volume Gerber licenses other comparues to make and sell its products abroad. However, that's stHI the baby food bus10esa, and there's a worldwide crusade to keep the birthrate down, which can only be bad news lo Gerber Products. So the obvious move is to diversify That's easier s&d than done Big companies do 1l all the time, acqwnng other companies and dispatching a steady stream of new products lo the marketplace. But Gerber as not a b1g company It moves at a slower pace. • 1'1J~ LOGICAL WAV TO EXPAND IS to build on your past successes Gerber presumably knows babies, and so at. has gone into the busmess of day care centers (catcbtng them after they ha ve grown up on Gerber foods) It has also become a small producer of nursery items and mfantwear. And 1t has launched a life insurance company under th~ Gerber name (to make sure that children will be able to get their Gerber foods 1f Daddy passes away) All o! that is still puny s tuff, compar ed to the baby foo4 volume. It's the food busmess that should have the greatesl potential for Gerber, but the company has struck out con: s1stently when it sought to establish a product that would be consumed by adults FOR A LONG WIULE IT tested a bne of meat entrees under the odd brand name, Singles Many people made the mistake of thinkmg that this was a produc~ for the "singles market "SLDgles bas now been scrapped. . Gerber 1s currently testing a ketchup in Wisconsm. The rationale for this product 1s not clear, except that kids ar~ great consumers of ketchup. Al so, the No 1 producer of ketchup 1s Hemz, whi ch Gerber trounces d slly ln the baby food busmess The latest Gerber food entry 1s a peanut spread It bu been tested 1n W1scons1n and 1s now being moved 1nt0 markets m Illinois, Minnesota and North Dakota Gerber i~ trying here to capitalize on children's affeclton for peanut butter without gomg to the trouble or makmg a peanut but: ter PEANUT BUTTER HAS TO BE at least 92 percen~ peanuts. Gerber 's spread 1s only 80 percent peanuts, and so 1t can't be called peanut butter. Gerber hopes to convert peanut butter users to its product, whic h bas a generous helpmg of honey (5 percent of the content) Whether Gerber can succeed m this effort. we don't know. Bigger companies than it have tned and Called with peanut spreads But we do know that Gerber 1s desperate to develop some products that 1t can feed to children once they're out of d iapers It wants very much to be able to live down its old battle cry.· Babies are our only business " Stock Market Takes Another Broad Loss NEW YORK CAP)-The stock market dropped sharply agam today, still acting uneasy over its outlook under President·elect Carter Trading was fairly quiet Brokers reported pers1stmg concern over the sluggish picture presented recently by lhe economy. as renected m reports last week of a faster than·cxpectcJ rise in wholesale pnces last month and an mcrease m the unemployment rate Wall Streeters m addition, seemed unsure of the chances for an improved economy under a president with whom they d1dn 'l yet feel very well acquainted In that atmos phere, a number of portfolio managers ap- peared to be selling off some stocks and moving into more conservative mteresl beanng investments The Dow J ones average of 30 stocks lost 9 39 pomls to 933 68 DowJ011esA "eragP• ~~~:r-(AP) Fl•MI Dow J°""4vor"9'S ~n H•Oh l.ow CloY' Cho lO Ind 918113 •41 41 'I'll•• m .. -•>f 10 Tr11 71l n 1n '16 no ~ 111 1& 2 '' U Ull 97 97 '9 JS 97 ti 91 ie fl 47 u !>1' m 61 300 se m o ?'17 ., -, *4 1...iu\ 1 411 m Tr"" 411600 IJ111\ 11• UlO M St• 1 l•l 000 A naeric.-nn L e adt•r • NEW YORK IAPI <ialtK, A JI m pt!(~ and ~I (~4flQ'! Of IM ••n '"°'' "' ll•n llm•rlt Ari Slo< ~ E., l\•n~ o\Wh lt:~~Bn~f.~m.M~! 1• ooo 10\\o ~ GIAllt Voll 64 \l()O 9 1 I'~ USNlt Ru AO 000 A 1 , GIBo "8t 37 000 •loo ~ I moerOll ... JI 000 1(1 •• Mou•tOll M l9 100 M , 1 Syrit•x (0<11 17 l'OO ?t.., loo Coe<Mln 7• IOO 13'• 1 Au11ral 0 11 10 100 I•"-'• All•o Alrl 18 .co l •-•t. What Stocll11 Did NEW YORK IAPI Ad>t•n .. 1 Ootcll""' VllC~~ l ,t.t l\\U~\ ~"° tt lt lllol>J Noow IU. lo.n "'"" fO(Sly CIAY JI\ "' 1171 .,,. >&• .,.., 18&7 ,,,, II H •l ,. WHl\f A1'11E ll 010 .. f W VOlllC IAPI Pt•• Too.tv o~v 111'1 711 .,. .).ti l it J06 . ,. '" • 11 >1 ,, S yntbol• ' .'tio~k1 In T h e S potllghi th 1\7 n s 100 n •o 11 1 1 0 •• ~I &O s• I~ s J •• ... • 8 • 'I • ••• u O•lly Pllol ""°'°' lly Al"'"" Loc:~IJIO LAST MINUTE PREPARATIONS FOR 1,000-MILE YACHT RACE Los Angeles Yacht Club Dock• Beehive of Activity Two Boats Pace Field SEEKS NEW RECORD IN LA TO MAZATLAN RACE Ragtime In Duet Whh Klatoe for Line Honors Ragtime and.Kialoa were still leading the 39 boat Mazatlan yacht race Oeet late Sunday after a slow first day's run. The escort vessel Aquarius anchored off San Martin Island on the Baja California coast said a 10 knot westerly had the fleet on lbe move and was expected to hold during the night. San Martin is about 200 miles from the start off the Los Angeles Breakwater. RAGTIME, COSKJPPERED by Bill Wh ite and Bill P<isquiru. Long Beach Yacht Club. holds the elapsed time rt-cord of five days and seven hours set 10 the 1972 race when she \\as sailed un- der a dirrercnt ownership and crew. The 1974 race was the slowest on record with the first boat not crossing the line until after nine days and several others aban-. doning the race altogether. Class standings after the first 20 hours of sailing · CLASS A -1, Whistle Wing, Hastings Harcourt, SBYC; 2, K.ialoa, Jim Kilroy, LA YC: 3, Shamrock, Roy Disney, LAYC. CLASS B l , Ragdoll John Hall. NHYC . 2, Invader. Malin Burnham, SDYC . 3, Shillelagh, Paul Pearson. SOYC CLASS C 1, Vector, Herb Johnson. SDYC, 2, Cottontail, John Arens. BY"C : 3, Bingo. Den· ms Choate, LBYC. CLASS D -1. Capt. Marvel, Larry Folsom , L BYC; 2. America Jane III, GoorgcTooby, NHYC : 3. Tahuna , Ruel Cameron. NvyYCot LonJ( Beach .. Beach. Wildcat Top Class A Boat Harbor Yacht Club In Dana Race Wildcat. a Morgan 27 skip pert>d by Pt'\e Schoonmaker. Bahia Connth1an Yacht Club was the Clal's A winner in Dana Point Yacht Clubs rinal race or the seven·race PH RF' Sencs ~nday W1nnl'r 1n Cla ss R wa !> Sun!lhtne. a Ca\ahna-Z7 sailt'fi by Ron Malanosky, OPYC. and the Class C winner was Torre~. A Cal·25 sailed by Dave Cooper. Capistrano Bay Yacht Club Trophy winners CLASS A 1, Wildcat, 2. Anes (Columbia-36), Bob Burkhardt, DPYC: 3, Big Kahuna ll, (lslan der-36). Mark Townsend, OPYC. CLASS B l , Sunshine ; 2, Windfriend (Cal-29), Tim Kahn, <':mo RYC : 3. Vivace. (Catalina· 27) Bill Clore, DPYC. CLASS C -1. Torrey: 2-, Peggy Lynne (Klttiwake-23), Chuck Pierce. D PYC; 3, What A Turkey (Columbia Challenger). Keith Minette, OPYC. Wins SChenck Cup Newport Harbor Yacht Club won the Jean Schenck Trophy symbolic of the dinghy team rac- mg championship in one of the closest regattas in the history of the Lehman-12 event. Eight yacht clubs participated m the regatta. Going into the final races on Sunday there was a four way tie for first place. THE NHYC TEAM which broke Balboa Yacht Club's three year stranglehold on the trophy was composed or Henry Sprague, Tim Hogan. Bill Symes and Tom Gloegge. There w~s a four-way tie for second on wins and 108ses. but in compiling the point scores San Diego Yacht Club emerged as the runner-up with the team of Mark Reynolds. John Driscoll, Chuck Driscoll and John Buchanon. Derending Balboa Yacht Club was third on points with team members Dave Ullman, Jack Jakosky, Jim Tyler and Mark Hughes. LONG BEACH Yacht Club and Mission Bay Yacht Club were a lso mvolved in the tie and finis hed in that order on points. Other clubs competing in the event were Alamitos Bay Yacht Club, Lido Isle Yach\ Club and St. Francis Yacht Club. South Shore Top Winners Get Trophies Troohies to the overall winners in South Shore Yacht Club's High -Point Se ries for Performance Handicap Racing Fleet Yachts were presented Saturday night at a dinner meet- ing at the clubhouse. Hobie Crown Won The series consist& or eight races from which skippers can discard their worst two races. Overall winner was Cats Pa· jamas, skippered by Carl Last, Voyagers Yacht Club; Class A winner was M atangi, Ed Carpenter, Balboa Yacht Club; Class B was won by Lwnaran, BiJJ Rohrs, Voyagers Yacht Club, and Cats Pajamas was the win· ner in Class C. Hawaiian Ho bie-16 sailors ap- parently thrived on the strong Kona wlnds thal bla_,ted the first world championship regatta for the claas at Waikiki, laking six or the fl.rat 10 places in the final championship ruiht. The winner and first world champion in the class is Dean Froome who w ith crewman J erry Driscoll s urvived the heavy weather to will wtlb 12'Ai points. Runner-up with lJ~ polnta was a malnland duo, Jeff Canepa of Sant.a Cruz wtt.b Richard LoUfek of Newport Beach a1crew. Jerry Kmg of Newport Beach, with Pat Love of Hawaii as crew, finished in fourth place. Top 10 trophy wtnnen: 1, Dean Froome-Jerry Driscoll; 2, Jelf Canepa-Richard Lou!ek; 3, Harold Hutcblnga-Howard Lind, Hawaii; 4, Jerry Kini-Pat Love: 5, Rick Naish -Jeff Folkner, Hawaii; 6, Keith Baxter-Malle, Hawaii; 7, Danny Hale-Doug Posly, Hawaii: 8, Herb An- derson-Al Linquist. Hawaii; 9. Geoff Hors tey·l:Sob l''Or bes, Australia: 10, Bill Sykes-Lynn Krelblg, Australia. • Trophy winners: CLASS A -1, Mat.agi; 2, Se· quoya.h, Jim Moore. SSYC; 3, Tigress, GU Knudsen. SSYC. CLASS B -1, Lu.maran; 2, Debra. Richard Rautf, SSVC; 3, Sunjammer, Koll-Reinhart, NHYC. CLASS C l , CaL'I Pajamas, 2, Peeasus, J erry Montgomery, CBYC ; 3. Zivela. Jan Fluegge, SSYC PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NQTICE »If No...,mo"' t 1'1• l'lc;TITIOU$ eUSIHIU NOTICE !>lle<•h0,.•11 INltHOliO NAM• STATIMINT """ wn m•ui. "" .... nnd <My of Ot TIW tollowlftO OtrMIM •II CIOlllO -· ,.,. lly tll<o W•tlt lll UNOll T ... M IM" •• Ot•otl COl'lloeny to ,... ,,..,... •• (oft>- A Al N80W COFFEE ~. ins ....... <atlOn\ Comm"'""' 10 ..-.t• INI ~'" Euc:llcl. AM"-lm. CA '*'" 04 w .... ,n U111on .. rv1ct •I llWlr ,.. c "" J Co<oor•llon a Cilllloml• _ .... Oflott 111 Co•ll Mo ... c.lllOfN• .... ort>Ortllon. UU No ri" Cutllcl, tromtNle>rtMntllOuo .....,..,,,., C• Mollel•v·Frlclay: IA M lo • )0 Th" -~· 0 conchKl.O OY. (Of' p M Portl10fl S.lwdav t 4 M lo 4 P M C M J Coroorat•an !>uncNv Ct-o Aouti.n O.r Hacool.,, tolNlhoun "''"°""' -·· l'rioo • 4 M 10 ~ P M TM\ \lfl•mtnl ... , l•ltd ''""' .... Saturday •• M 10 1 p M Cou11ty C••rk ot Ora110-Co<inl• an S..,,.,.y Clo...i No• I, lt7' tllhe APllll<tllon It Qrtnl.., _u•t~ l'UJIJ Wt)\lflUlt •tr.let Wtll .,.. <IYall.olt ~llMAIC SI LOMAN, A MIMllll throuOh Ille Wol•rn UnlOll Centrtllt.cl GAllCIA ON SI L.OAIUl.N. INC. Ttleonon. 8uruu •I Aeno. Ne•-~ I IW :a.. St •• Swtlt 1f1 t ... Wl\ltrn UniOfl oll•Ct •n S...I• ANI, -•·CA t0141 c.111orn1t ti !'9 td<llllonol <,....9" h> '011) ...... IS lh<IDUOllC. • PubH'1ttd Orano-Cout Dally P<tot, Anv ,...mi..rol lh<I PUbllc detlr•no to v •• IS. n . n ... ,. orot••• or \UODOrl .... r4'dv<\10fl In 01116 hour• •I lhll outce may comm\ln1C•I• 1-----------...;;:;;..;.;:.11n wrlllno with lh• Fed eral Com· PUBLIC NOTICE """'1Cellon5 Comml\<lon, WeshlrtQIOft. O.C. ~))of Of\ O< IMfOrt Novemoer 11. --------------! ''"' l"ICTITIOUS IUSINISS NAMI STATIMINT TM tollotNlno perton •Si dou"I) bus• nel\tU' Publl\Pled Or41nQt Co.t\I Olllly POol. No• I I, ltl~ ""°'16 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOU$ IUSINEU NAMI \TAJl"M&NT T ... IOllO#lnQ Oii""" " 00.llQ """ "'" .'\ HAR&Oll l'AINT Cl!NTEll flt TindSlreel, Ntwoort 8Utft CAtlWO Orl•n C Aoqtll •~d •oa """' A-n ... Amit .. w ••• Apl A Ne-1 BaKll. CA tlMO T"I\ bl6fMSt I\ (Oft0Utltd by ... ,,.. dlv•-1 ()<ltftC ROQ1n , .... \lalt-1\l ...... •••tel """' , ... ~tV Glo•k of 0.-County Oii HOV l "" --.o...-& ....... ,.,o ... n., Nt._t .. Kii, CA tlMl ,61111 Publl\hld 0r&"941 Co•>I Dally PilOt, No¥ •• "· 21, ,., .. ,. PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI INVITING e10S PUBLIC NOTICE C,.•JIM NOTICI TOClllOITOltS SU,.llllOltCOUllTO, THI 5T &Tl 01' CAL.1 l'OllNIA "Oii TNICOUNTYOl'OllANG« Na A·tMlt lh tolt ot ELSIE M . O&ISL.l!lt. O.cea-. NOTICE IS HERE&Y GIVEIC ,. lht c .. dllort of lfte ••o•• --"CM<-111 llltl tll--lla••"CI ClllM\-ln\l lll<o •all cltC ..... tr• •t· qulrtcl 10 lllt 1 ........ with lhe -~ _ ... (\ lnthtolllC•OllllaClenolllle' -"" Oftlllltil cou•I ~to or•-......,, wttll lhe "n•n••Y vou<llaf'-IO Ille"" -\IQMd at 11'1 l•w otnce of ""'llTIN OOL.Oal! llG, lhll lrvh• eo.i4eva•d. T11>ll11. Cohlor11lo tt.ao ""'le" Is -tlfec• o4I tu•lnM• of tll<o uftCltniQMd In •II mtlltr\ Mtttl01l11g to 1he ftlllt of "'4d ~....,t, within I°"' ll'IOl\t"" .i1 ... , .... ""' l>ltbllc•llOll of ..... nolk•· Oel9d No11tmt..r 1, 1'7' RUTH ELVIN I •tcutrt. of I ht WI II of t1te•110ve,,.rntdotc-1 '°""llTINOOLOalttO , 1''711tVIM el~, T11ttlft.. CA f2.ao Tel: 1114\ISNSU Attor11tylO"l1tutrl"r Publl\ll<od 0t•n9f (OHi Qetly Pil04, Nov I. 1s. n. t•. ,,,. Notlcl' l\ r.ertbY given Iha! lhe 8otrcl of Tru1leM of the Coa>I Comm.tflllv Coll•Qt> Ol•lrlcl of Orange County, Colltomla, will rectl•• 1ea1eo l)jO• uo IO 11·00 . m .• TU<!<d~y NOVtmb&r JO, 1'176. •I lhe PUr<ll~•·no ~OI of Hid «'-1 dl\lri<I lou ted at ll10 Ad.'"" A .. n .... Co•ta fNH. C11i•01nla, "' whlcn t•mt •aid !lid• wlll i.. PUbllctv 1--------------LA FEMME UNIOUE. UOOH<ortior lllvtl . Cost• Me-.>. C• Arlene M. C•O•t'll IS9l Cor'S•« ~ CO$••~ ... c" '1626 CP·tflJ OC*lt'd<11ldr•adlor PUBUC NOTICE Tl1I• b.i\lnHSS I\ conducted DY.,, on Olv10l.l•I Ar fen. M Crowe fl Tht\ \tat111,,,.nt Wd'\ 0 100 w1fl\ trw Count1 Cltrk of Orange County on No .. _,,,,.,. ... ,.. l'Ubll"""' Orano-Coa\t O.••v P1'ot Nowmbe• I I~ 11. 2' lt7' 0 2116 P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS9USINUS PRINTING ANO 91NOING ICAME ST ATEMIENT c 0 .. 5 T LI N E c 0 M M u N I T v 1-,,-T-A-T'"t"'M=1'"'N"'T"'o=.,,.,.w=1T"'N"'o=11""A""W"'A'"'L-- T,,. lollow.n9 oer.011 "dotrtQ l>u\I· CO L.LEGE SPRING. 1911 CL.ASS l'llOM .. AllTHlllSNIP ne\U \ SCHEDULE. OPlllATINOUNOlll "' & J AUTO eoov. '1)7 """''' 11111 411 bid\ .... 10 be"' t CCOf"d-• wllh l'lc;TITIOUS euSINISSMAMll ~Mt C'l\lt M•s.> CA •1611 • Iha lnstruchons tlld Cono11oons tl\O lht 1ooowl11Q ..-r-. ,,., w1~- J•mh R G•~IVt\ 1020 No. SoKthUllO~ wlllCh .,,, -""fl ... , • o•,,···· 1>•rlfttr ''°"' the '"4arbof S.nlft An• C• •1101 ...a mav be wcured 111 the ottt<t of,.,. -1-\llfo -•11"9 u-the •~ Thi\ ll•J\l,..u 01 ce>11•uc1td ov..., ,,.. PurctwSi"Q "9e<1I ol Mild KllOOI ells· tit~ IKKlnen name of Ol••OU•I Incl. PERSONAL FINANCIAL Jam~\R G•••ve• Eachb4dclt<musl w bmltwtlhhl\bod MANl\GE M E NT , 1101 lrvl11w Thi\ ''·"t<Mnl wa< 111~ wllh ttte • ,_,.,., CllK k cerllf•td c-1<. Of" &ollleverd, Tustin. CA '10IO Cou .. tv CIN~ of Or~ County on CkL -r·s bond m-CNYIDll lo ,....... TM lktlllou• bv\tllH.1-..... -------------~ 10 1916 ~ ol '"" Coast Comrnunllv Coll-..,.,,. IOf" tM pertMnl\fo •• ltl«I on ., l"ICTITIOUS eUSINl[SS -1 011trict8oa..VotTru'llff'"tll•nomounl "° ... -11. ,.,, In IM""""" of NAMI $T4TIMENT OllOVEll ESCllOW COlll'OllATIOH t>OI IHS llltn five percent 0 '>>of IM Or- Ttw follow1no P•tr.on is dol"9 bllSJ. Ill 5tvlll llll,..ls wm bid as• 11wrdnlee '"•',.,.bi-Full Name end Add1"9SS of uw ne-.a, Malltlm.CA.'1I05 """ (;flltf" lt>O Into the P-,.,,. PitnanWllllOt'awl,,q: E VEllS ANO ASSOCIATES ?10 IKNw•t2U .. 11tG tra<lllttwMl""'lsawardedlohtm.ln WILLIAM R EST IVO, JSH '· ~tory Or E . Nt woort lle.och. Publl\l>f>d Oran11t C:o~·1 O••ly Pilot '""•vent ot lallurf' to fnler lrtlO such Nut""" lrv•M .Calltomla•Ut4 CA91660 Oct 1S •no No• I I u 1•16 4'17-16 (Ofllract. lheorot-Sol ln•<flKkwOI Wllll•rn P. ltullvo H•r~rt JOUPh Ev.,, Jr 110 l>"lor1e•ted.orlnll'teu"'ol•bond.lhe Pro"'°'1tory Or E Nt woort e .. c.. 'PUBLIC N011CE •ullsumttwroolw11ioetorle1toolost4d ..,,.,. . , Puoll\htd Oronoe Co .. t Delly PllOI CA '2660 • S<.hool doslrlct No11trnberl u.n. n . 1t1• •m ·16 Tn•S busine\S ,, condUC l..O ••"" ;,.. --------------No bidder mtov withdraw ht\l»d lor a drvldual PICTITIOUS llUSllCESS Ptrood ol IOr1Y·lll1t l•SI da'i$ ll\tr lhe fiprO..rt J E••rs. Jr NAMI! STATE ME NT date sot torlhe ooentnq lllf'rtol T"•S \late.,...,., Wd\ 1,1.,., with 1.,. Thelo11ow11>Qperwnsu~CIOi...gbu:S1· Ttte Botrd of Trust~el ,0,,_r.,.. "'11 1-------------- P UBLIC NOTICE !. Covnly Clerk ot Qr8ng<> C:ounlvon NO• MU~•: orl••lf9<!0f re1ect1ng any and •II bods or CP·l061 2 1916. PAC1r1c L E AS ING. 16'1 to wal•e MY lrr•gularlllH ~ ,,,. NOTICITOCllEDITOllSOI" ,,.,.., We\fMIMter A•l' Sulle J, CNr~n l«melit•Hlnenvb•dorlnlheblddlng, llUL.ICTllANS,lllANOOI' PubllShf'dO c 10 II~. Gro•~.CA. Sloned · N OR MAN E. INT.NTION TOTllANS .. •• ranoe oas 4 V ~ ot, Vlncettt Sroll Farrn,•r 1246? W4TSON ALCOHbLIC et:VlllAO• L.ICI HH'. Nov.9• n.n,n . i976 '"'' 16 RoMld Ra v Moon. 11111 O..le SI . Secty. soardot Tru•tees (~0.6101-41llU.C.C.lllcl 1------------;.........;.1Gard<!ttGrove.C:4 .91641 OpM· No•.J0.1976-11.00a.m. 2:401>·74 et PC.tit) Tho• bu''"°'' I• conducltod by a &rd 11-IS.16 NOiiet 15 11e,-eoy QIVtft \NI • tl\lllt Qentral1>••tner'llllP Publl\hed Or•"91' Co.t\t O.tllv l!flol trl1n5fer. Including an elcohollc --------------1 Vtncent F.,mer NOvemoerl, 15, 1911• 45691• beveraQt 11cense. l•aoou1 IObetnllOeof PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS llUSINES~ Tn" \I.ti.men! ..... llled Wtlh the·--------------,,,., certain llouor store ~lnhS NAMIESTATEMENT Counlv Clerk of Orano-Count~onOcL P UBLIC NOTICE --~•SOUTHWOOD LIQUOR NO. The tollow•n11"'""'n'1t•OO•n<JDU'' 10 1'16 11 a ftd loc•l•d al 2230 Hubor """ •• "4J030 &oult'llfd. Cltv ot ~t• Mtu , C:-ly 6 AN 0 w E NG IN t E R I NI". Pub .. ,,,.., O.-ano• coa•t o.ily Pi!Ol, FICTITIOUS llUSINISS ol Or••· Sl•tt of Calilorlll1"6Zl' SERVICES 1881 P6•kv•~W c ,,,,. O<t 1\ No• l.t, IS, 1'76 4'Sl-16 NAMl!STATEMINT Narnu of Transteron•ndLk~ C<KI• IN••. CA 9'1611 The tollowlno penon• ore dolllQ -••I wcu,.ly number ..,.. bt»·~ J.t<k M Brown ~347 C:olgJI· O• v PUBLJC N011CE bu\ln@\\ol'\ eddrHstr• CO\la AMSit C4 9'1616 8EICINS.LINIC SELF STORAGE ANGELO C APRARO. '61t Hu09•' L Wh•lf UBI P•" • "' -PAS.AO ENA. 190 New-1 Cent< c.ot<lcflf'\lf• Orlve Aftahfoim, CA9111M Ctrcle C<Kla fN\.t C4 ~;,11 l'ICTITIOUS llUSINIESS Oroo Newoorl 8eec". C.lllornl• SS No 165 76-37'1 and FERNAOA Tru1 buslne\· " cnnoJu "'1 hv • NAME STATEMENT 92660 CAPRARO 4"2 (oldCl>ellet' Drive. -ralpart""""'" Tnt lollowlrtQperson•aredotnQIM\J· LINICLETTER MANAGEMENT ~~m,CAt1tCM.S S No.S.ZS.JIJ2 HU°"'' L Wn•t~ """·" CORP • C.tm om•• coroor.iton. 190 N•rne•. -1•1 W<Url1V .. ..--Thi\ Sl•l•m-nt Wd\ lolMI ... 1.. .... EL. TORO ANIMAL HOSPITAL. New-1C.nt11<0rl¥e,Ntwoort&Ndl. buslneu addrtu o f lnleftded Covttl• Clerk 01 O•dnQ<' Couni. on Nov 1"•1 E• Toro Front.tot R~ El TOf"O. C.hlornla-fr"'"t'"""'· •ncludl119 rlocodt,are: e-J 1916 C..htorA!u'7630 Thl•bu\l,,.U ISC-UCl..ObYallrnlt• ANGELO CAP RARO, •4tl l"Uts2 v P,•t Coroor1tlon. a C..hfomla edP¥1M•ll>oo. Cold<.,.sler Or .• AMtlelm. CA '2904. Publl\ltl'd 0 «>"'1" Co.i\t O<t•I• Po1ot <01PG•at1on 1)161 Et Toro F<CMll.oQ" 8ek1n,·Unk ~II Slor--S S No. SU·a.J7'1; FEANAOA Nowmbfr ! tt 11 1' 1t1• onl• Rol<I Elloro Calllo•n•a~1~ Pa~na CA'"llARO, '612 Coldthesl@r Or., fh,.l>U\ln•\\l'COndutl•dOY<l <Dr• 8Y Lln1<1ct1erManaoernerrt 4nall•lm , (4 •1104, S.S. No , -•t•on Co<o.. s• .. 2S·Jl37; PIERltE BERTOLINO. PUBLIC NOTICF. LEPETCORPORAllON G@n••a1 Par1nl'r l)IO W Ocedntront, N•woor1 11 .. c,., Pol>on P•lt '"' "· J&c I< O Jonk•n~ C:A m.3 S !> NO. OSS· 1'·46:11 and "'N· Pr••ld•nl T~•S \l<llCrnfnl wn toll'd with the N~ BERTOLINO 1310 W Oce.,,lront. n .. , '"''""" nt wd• t1HI with tho COunty Cle rt ot Orange Count,°" HO•· mwt>Ofl a.-ech, CA '1 .. l, !>.S. No. FICTITIQ.US IU~IN ESS NAME ST1'rEMEICT Countv (IN< OI Or•n<1t' C:ountvon Oct. eml)er 1.1916 Ol4-11·1ltt ' Thilo> tl)llQW!flQ DPr,on ' (I01nq OU I ~\\d\ 1 1'1• ,.5'7:1 Tofal conllclerall"" 10 '* oald tor '"" l"~l1 Publl•hf>O OranC)" Coll\! 0.•IY ~lot. propertv de1<nbed, In oenerM. as SO COAST llUTO ... rlWCK r I re "tRtC 1t6 W ,,,,, Sln•rt Ct>\IJ Ml\~ CA '7611 Put>l"n<·d Or•noc Coast D.t1ly Pllo1. No...,mbfr 8. IS. n, 7'1. 1916 •181-16 -c•nl ol lhlt sto<k In lraCle, llortuNt. <X• 7S NO• I . IS 1916 USP•, ______________ l'<IUle>menl •nd QOOd wlll l00ttnerw4tn ThOfT'h)\. w r-othf'"')lll ""41 Vfr(Jtft M.u Or Hu,,tlnQt'>n B''·"h CAQ?~-'1 Tn1\ bu'l1n~\' '' rondu( lnc1 b't' .:.n ,., d1v1d1,111I f f\0""11' W FotnPrq1ll Thi\ "iJH·m~nl w .l(, ftlPd Wllh 1'1fl> Counlv C.lf r• of OrilnQt C.ounly Ot'I ,_,,ov J 1'1A ,..,... PUBLIC NOTICE OE"ICOE COUNTY HAAllOA JUDICIAL OISTAlc;T MUNICIPAL COURT 001 Jamllort• llud, ICtWllO<I 9Utft. CA •2'4J SUMMOICS C.ou IC um bu H •U PuOl•\tlffd Ord.,C>f' Co~nt 0191ly Pt101 No• 9 IS 11 ,. •O• PIAon111t ROBE AT COLE!>. 1»1pnoa~1 LI OE8 INVESTMENT w.&. I& co AL SCHUM4NN and OOES I II. -------------'"'"'--"-I 111 IV&ndV PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE I Yow llov• btttl ,...., Tl!~ l---F-l_C_T_l_T_I O_U_S_ll_U_S_l_H_E_S_S ___ I ~::~ ::::<I"::;~ ~!~;~:I yy:: :.:: NAME 5T4TE"'IEICT Wtll•l11 JO on. Rtad lht lnlor .... llOft T .... f~llowo119 ~r\IJn\ ••• OO•nQbv •· -:v~so• Uslfd h• \1tl0d•m•-El NH.c..:,O'CO ,00 p,.,,,,. ion ()f' C'Ktd Trtbii~I PW«lot dtt1dtr contr1 Ud ''" ,AA, I CA,,,. ... ,. ~Ud .. n<•41 .) m9t'O\ CIUt' Vd f'HOOf"d• t:,. f')rQ £ ~n ;It •00 Pril\f•I~ C>6' dtfttro 0. lO diil\ Lt• fl 1ntorm1<.10tt c~'' '"'' • r•~1,:• Q~~;6""rHE DEF"ENO"~' • <•v•I lJ L..J u ~ "' · rtull •OO Pt•"<• •on Ot (. 1.M,. ,, C1'0:'fh ')mn 11'\f"-''°'t·nt ht11lvt.,,,.pla1flhtf VJi·r'I I 'iOU fy, • ">ln11f1 • ,,,,, ,, II d bY ·"" un 0 •rh" r ,.,,~ < •' J F """'' rn ,, , .,-01 w' t1••"<1 ""th 1-,, ('lJ"•, C.• t • 01 Ot 1nq" Counf't Ol"l 1'40ii l ·w~ FU•lt Pu~1\.,• d 0"""<1"' (OrHt Oa•IV Pilot NOV 8 I~ 11 2' 1916 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME ST4TEMENT T"°" fOllow1n9 ~r'o" I\ dottio bu,,, l'Vl\\ .)\0 AN O llfW ') PlllNll N Ci CON!>VL 1 1\Nf ~ 7 II•"'' Court NPt11tOOf' Bi·,vh (A Mar.ivn ~'j 'd"' .. H"'l'l"m 7)HOftt Mdt LanP L·'t PaltTl.'t CA •Ot.11 Tn~-. bu,me\\ h. conr1ucttt'ft t>v Jn 1n dJYIOuat M.,r1l'fn S H,.qq,.m Tl'U\ "'-ldlf m-nt WJ"ri "'"d w "' '"' Counh ,, .. ,.._ o• Or•nt1'· Co""'" Of\ Oct 20.1'16 • II 1"4' .,, "to d•frn'f lh•' ftlW\Vit \l'OUm:u.1 Wtl,,1"l~d1lV' ''••rtt\1\\utn "'°n' •' '', "' o on vnu • 11r W'lfti ,.,, .. f'Oi)rt l ~f'1ftfn n•t· ldil'\fl ''°' ""q)OnV 10 '"' tl)f"r'IOl-'"''l C tt d Ju\• t Com1 you rnut.t "'' w +tl"I '""' tt>urt • wr •ttr;n ofe:>0 11\Q or"< ,}U\f' tln or•I plt"MflnQ to Mt'~· 'trtiJ 1n '"'" OOC iil,f'>f 1n ,,.,p0n~ to I~ comolAlm w1th1n JO d.!IV\ dfttor ttu~ \Vm mtWl\ l\ \• rvpd on vou) 0 Ut\ffll~\ VOU \0 f A\OQnd VOUf' ~4 '·'ult w ilt bl" •-nt,.rlld uoon a opl1cationot ttovl Qil~•nt1tt .-nd "'" <oun ma.f'f!nt9r'..J 1u<JQm P"!f dQi11tn\t you tor thf!' r•t1P1f de· marH1•11 In thfo comof~•l"ll W'11Cf'I COUIO ,,.,ult 1,, or.rnhhm,.nt or w "lO"\ tdku\q of mf')f'l"'f' or orOO{.lr'v nr OfhN rf'>hflf ,,. 1Uf"\l"f1•n1ne complil•nt r II you Wl\h to t••lt t,... lldvtce ot •" attorney 1,, OU\ m•H•r. YGU s.hould dO '0 prometlt v \O t fl.it your wrHttn '''oon\f' If •nv, m.iy be fited on tmw Oal•d l\uQu\I 11 1•16 <SEAi I M H4MLI N Cl,,> 8 v Jove~ l Plllmdn Di·outv '"" W'),-d "como•.11·.,, .. •rYI~ ... (r0'\\-C.01'\0l•1nt • Offlfrtlllf" tn(f"°"'" FU011 <ro\\ <omnl••nilr.t drh·nd~nt " n- Put>h .. hfl(t Or~n~ Co,\t Oot•IY Pilot clu~\ cro" rt~f,ndAl"tl "•"O'U'·l' .n Ott lS Nov t 8 '5 IQM -4411 '"' thJOr\ •h• niurdl ~n" mttvu1.,.... ,, PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE ICOTICE INVITIH() lllOS Not1c .. Is hr rt-h'f o 1vrn l~at ,.,_ 8o•rd of Tru ... h •P\ o f '"'" co~,. CommUfllly C~ll•'J" 0 1\trlct ol 0r3"'!4' Couf'ltf, C1t1forn1~ wilt ttCf'IYf ,_414'0 bids UP lo 11 on ' m W•dM\(fltV HOvemtier 17 ttl& Al th~ Pur(""''"" 0.Dt. of ~Id \cl\onl dl\IOICI IO<olf'd •I IJIO Ad•m) Av•nu• Cost• AM .. C.llfo<ttlt ti -·en u mn \&Id 1110. ... 11 bP pubt1c•v oe»en,.d l nd r~•d •or MICROSCOPES, BIOLOGY AU t>tcts .,,. to bllt 1n •c.<orct.l't(~ W'lth t,,. l"ltr\KftOn\ dl'lO ConOlf1""'' dnd Sll"(illullon\ wl11Ch ••t M W O<I fit• ....0 flW'V I» \>ill(Ur..,O U"I IP\f Ofht .. Of thfio Pur (hA\fnQ AQf'nl Of \fltl d \(hOOI dt\trlr-1 E~" "'~' m11'' '\ur")m ;t ""'" h • t>td a t•\h!H \ ct'l,..t.lt tf'rt•ht'd crwic't tc,. btO,,,.,t, ~" nqo• o•vAtw,., tn ,,,. '°""'" C)I lhf (0.4\t (~mmun1tv Cl'lllttO" O ·\lrtcl 804111rlJ ot Tru'\\f'tt\ 1t11 An ~mou"' "Ot h•\· tnftn tlVt Of''f"'"' O t ~ n. sum bid A\ " o ••r1tr\I"' IMI thfo ~c:tot; "''" t'l"'ltt'r •nto '"'• oiro~ lcontrect 11 lhe '&""' I• •-•ood to lhOrn. 1n tht •vtnt ot follurt 10 •nltr ~nlo wch tOf>lrtc t '"" p roc:flf(I\ ol tht lr.tltck wlll tie forftlled, or In ttlt c•sa lot ~ bond, 1¥ full sum thtrtol Wiii !If ~orl .. ted 10 H id SCl>OOI dl\trlcl No bldcHr may w1llldraw Ill\ t>ld ror II period 04 forlY·llve (•SI o.!Y' lttttr ""dale HI tor tM o~nlng ttltrf'Of Tht Ba.rd Of Tru\IH \ rt"°rv.' IM P,lvlleo-of r•locllnQ •ny •"" •II bid\ lor to w•1vt .-ny lrr1tQulnrll1t'\ 01 lnform1tlltl0\ In env blO nr In th• ~c:ldlno '••Qn •o N O RM .. N ' w" TSON ~r11 lloMa Of Truu .. , Pvbf"~d Ot.-~ ("n"" 0~11• ~'"' ,....., ... ' • "'" 0 0\ ,, c IU"tf'~ fl""\"ttl"t1n.t11> •nd nf"ulf"r A wr11t~n PUBLIC NOTICE ICOTICI TOCREOITOR~ ~UPERIOll COURT Ol'THE sun 0 , C4LIFORNIA 1"011 THI! COUICTY 0~ ORANGE No A·Hllt E""• ol LOUISE GENEVIEVE TUfTLE O.c.a<-d NOrlC( •'> '4E REBV G1VEN 11> '"" ctMJ•ton of Ow abov• namf"d Ot'<~t lh'4t Alt °""'""'"' r-1v,n9 Cldtf'T't'\ ~imt '"to u 11<1 d•<•<Mnt Arf"' r•q1.11rM to flte t,.._rn with I~ ftf"Cfl'\•rv vo~n. fn the off<• ol '"" cl•r• ol ll"of -en-lltltdtOU•I orro or•~nl l""m wllhlht ~it-\\ try wiouc"~'~ to fhf' u,.,,,~ ., '"" olllc• of GEORC.E c WOODS ANO (HAllLl!S c H0WAl'l0 "'' tOf"tY 1t Law '''" Hot•vwooo 8twict W.tt \14 M011v\l¥00'1 ("11fOf"" l 40011, Wlh ct>t f'\ ttwo olttt* of bu,,nto,,c.it tf"lllo un '1tf'~i~ 1n ~" ma""' c:wrM·n•fYJ to thillo -.\t .. h Of \t\td Of rt o~nl Wttn.,. fl"tl.tr MOnlt"I\ ••t•r ltl• ttr\t oubt•c ""°" ot .,,.,., ,.,, t• 0.lfd0<1 s 1•1~ "'i'RYM WITT ENBURG E•~tutrl•of 1,,..w1llOI t~ •bOve n1m.-d d .. (ttOf"nt 01:01101 C. WOODS ANO CHAllLIS I'. NOWAllO Att.rtMn fl L•w 6111 Holly-lltvd .• Siii\• 514 Holly-, C..llttrnle toOH Ttl; (JU) 46Hllt; U l ·Jll6 All<1,....n lor l ucutr•• Pv\111\f'<HI Or•nQe C:oa\I O..lly Pllof, N<:>• 1. 9. tS, n, to~ 46Jll-16 Dt•n l NI\'~ up lh<' shtp' . l.1•1 It 111 1•ltl''-lllf'tl Ship to •h11r1• rc•sulh • t~l2 56711 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CA E OITORS SUPt;RIOlt COU RTOl'THt: STATE Ol"CALll'OllNIA ~II THE COUNTY 01' OllANGE No. A·nG71 E<l .. tP of GEORGE F LINTON aka GEORGE LINTON, ak~ GEORGE f t'IANIC LI Ill LINTON. Oecto\4.'d NOTICE IS HERESY GI VEN lo IN crf'CMor' of ,,.._ at>ovei nam•d cte<.ed(lnt th.at all ~"on\ nav1n9 claim\ ~Mt 1rw; '-Ard Of'<f'dent •r~ reQU•'"' to fit~ them w•tt't Intl MCe\W f Y yOU(flief\ • th< oll1c~ ol lllf' clor ~ ot '"" 4b0Ye 'J" 1tll~cou'1 ortopreHnl t,._.m w.th .. twX:MWry vouc l'W'r\ to tf\~ l.iftdfr't~ at tl>f> olloce 01 TH0 M4S C ICING ESO 901 Oovrr Or•vf! 'S1.11ff! 200 Nf:.wDO,.-t 8t«h ~ltlO""'"' •?MIO wt\1(f'I ,. t"" o•tKr ot C>U\•nP~\ ot 1"8: ..,,, ~19nl'd 1n: dll matt'"'' O'lft ~•"'"41 to tnc P'tl•t• of \.4t•CI ~<t>Ofl'nt .-tUhln •CMJr mono,, .lfttr t""-"' llf'St oubttc it•ort 04 '"-" MllC~ Dated OctolM!r 1•16 ' >lARRtETT 0REN4 LINTON. E•Kutrh of thfo WtH ~ t~ •bOvf' nem--cs d+•cedent. THOMASC. KING. !ESQ. 901 Oo"9r Orlvt. Swltt 200 NeWllO'"I aucfl, Calltorn11 •2MO Ttl: 010 MS.7000 AllorMY ..... EH<wlri• Publl~.....O Oranoe Coast 0•1ly Polot Nnv I, 8. IS.12. 1916 •61916 PUBLIC NOTICE ttlo llten\111\ Sii ,114.~. Otrsc;,,otoon and amount 1 ~,...,,,.,1 '""'" n .soo.oo I dol'Mnd note 10 be repl&eed In c•llh throuQhe.crow \11,SOO 00 1 ln\tall....,nl note and ..cllt11y~ mcnt 1n lavorol seller \16,8!4.llt IC11>d ot llctM• lo be transle~ and ~r ere· Oll·Salt Genef'al LI-'• Lltf!fl'W' No 2'·4691'1. file S<tte and trAMter wlll oe conwm m41tddl 10 & m on or afler tr.. Ull\day:.• ol Nov.,.,,oer 1'16. t l '"• t\Crow de-par1me111 ol ProlO\lonel Escrow 1 S.r••<I' •I 1'71 N Tusllft A-.~ ta Ana. Cahtornla '1?101 All 011\t< bu\oll&S\ M""'1 -ad dfeUt \ u~ bv the Tr•1nf~on wntun ... ""' N\t lhr ... YNri \0 "" es 1$ lenowr\.: lot"" fr•n•ten!" are· SAME Tiw a.rtoe\ a.or~ that '"" comtoo< ... h fM\ tor ttw tr.t,,\ft r of IM bln•nHS~nd '"t hCf"t\\,_ 1\ 10 bf' P•td altlf' thlt Ofo•rtmf"nt ot e\tcof\ohc BeYPr•qe Control ""' opproveO II•• ~~ trttn\ffr 0.llld Octoi.r ''· ••76. Pierre B•rlollr.o ."\. l\nne &ertolir.o "I. 4nQ<>loC.prMO :~ F~rMd.o C:.oraro .r Tra"s tort-e\ ~: Anqitfo Caorttro • •• Fernac:t. Caoraro ..... ,.. ~rofKli!;,:~~=-~~ Servi«• ~ 19')1 N. T111t111 A¥tftff ~ SMta Atoe. CA tt101 ::""~ ~KrowHo.16-1'5'·M~ - Publo-.Or<1noe Coll\ Daily Plkll~ No• 8 191b 4S66-I ~ __ S_U_P_E_ll_IO_R_C_O_U_R_T_O_F_T_H_E __ , PUBLIC NOTICE _,_,~,.· STATE 01" CALIFORNIA COUNTY 01" OR ANOE ::,;, No 20800 ORANC.I! COU NTY SUPERIOll'°" SUMMONS COURT. 100 CIVIC CINTEll oruve~ N T~~~:;s~·x.·~~~~u~~AU:,~! ::o~T SANTA ANA, CALll"ORNl4~ lhdl Oe<larAloO'I o f Tru•I t'l.CUIO<I PLAINTIFF TRUMAN 8. STIVER~ D-<fmbetlO, !0•9 Plalnloll\ •rld JAMl:S N STIVERS. JR . ~ V' Trt.1\l,.t'!t undor that O.tlM•tlOI\ ot •. Tnt hfl"' ttf\O d~"h"'e" 0r H L Tru1tfl•f'<ute-<1Dfocemt>erlO,1"9. ~ PEARSON end IAENE PEAR'SON .tt>d OEFENOANT• The "9•" -a.vi _ _,. 011 01her "'"°"' unl\nown Cldif'"'l'\>O ll"IY r19hf title •\tatf', ll~ft or 1nler~t '" 1~ rt1t• or~rtv dttur•""'° '" th" comol••nt •dvf!r\~ to olctu\t1tt·, tMn-~\tuo. Ot' •"v c ll'JUO uoon Dl•1ntttf' tit!• '"'"' ... to, OPt,..noanl\ AVt50' Ust•dh•"tdocMm..tndado Et Trtbuna• pu('Ot' Ot'< •dir <Of'ltrtJ UO ill'\ tfUdl@Mta r1 mf'"O' 'lllft Ud f'*"\C)(llf'1d ~ OM"ilro Of! )() d •a-\ l,11-~ IA 1nlormatt0f\ Q" \tQUll TO THE PEOPLE or Hte \TATt; OF CALIFORNIA 10 Th< l>'lfflO<lnt< ~no Jll 04 .... r ()t'r\On\ un"-.nown tl,tunmQ ~nYt•9h1 '1 u~ 11t•to, he-n ,,, 1nt~rru1 In lhf r-eo1tl or-opertv o.sc t•btO 1n lh1 romol~nt ao v.trM.' to t)falnt1ft" ownf""l'llp or ""Y c1~0 u t>Of'\ 04lltf\t1H 't, l•tlt• thereto. (:,R£ETINC.S VOU ARE f"'FREBY NOTIFI ED to .i'f)l)ear ttnd t•I• ,, wr1tu~n ptft90tnq 4)fYt r~\OOt"I'\,.. to lhe comnla1nt ot 01~nuft ftlt"CJW•lh l~CIH'-.ot OV' •t>ov~''"f!Urd tnurt i1nd counr't' w1 ,.,,n '"'".,. f)l)1 d11v' aJIPr-1h1--•ummon• '' '"'""" uoon yov uno to ""t torth What mtort\f Of' l1(':n, 1t Jny vou h.1vft 1n or UOOfl thf follow1nQ de~< r10.•o (_...,, Of'OOf'rtV 10('1\I f!id 1n tht< C041nty ot Or an~ !.tno • ttf Co1t•or-n1.1 ,;rut mor~ p~rt1c1.1t11rly Of'o .. cr1bt'o a\ tallow\ All ol Loi •J th1 E.a\I :J8 '1 h"'1 of Lot 16 ""d llv· Et" J8 '1 fe•I OI LOI IS In Tr.tel "' • .,, Ottt mao thf!reof rt"Q')f(lt}d In 800ll 13 P~<lt' 17 ol ml\uO-...... """P\ rMord\Ot \aid Coonh Vou "'' ""'~by noltt•~d lhaf unff'\\ you so Moe•r And~~-•' ''-01.ii,.,11u wlll IPl>IY lo the court lor th~ r•h"1 0.-,.......d lnlhtcomo1a1nt to•lt 011111 oe .od1udlled tnat the p1~'"''" 1, ,,,,. OM"ltt of 'o•1d PrCJCNr1Y '" fff '''"" .. ~ute tha• lh 11t1• 10 \•'ti proo.Jf'l'f bf .... 1.1>11\llecl and QUI~!"° lhal I"" <.ttur1 4t\CertA1 1'1 ""d del'lrm1ne dfl r\t•tf'l1J riqrus ttlfpt~ Int .. ,..,,, Anti <••~ tn .fnd to ••td orol)llttty eftd f'Wf'Y 0111 ttw-rf'Ot Wf"'flt"M •"" ... ,m~ bf>~~· 0' ,.qu1• .. bl• °'"""nt or tutu,.. ..,.. ,~ 01 cont•nt)fltnl Ant1 wh>I~~ tfW ''""" (Of'l\l\.t l)f mMIO•\ll"'' M hMt, of 4rw Clfl"\triOC1~ tf\ tl Ol·.t•rthft ,f"(Ovrr th <-0\ti. Mrlftn nnfj hAY• '"'" ,,......, M'ld lurt-re1,.1 •• l'n•Y I><-..... 11n""' Prt· m lM\ It ¥OU w•~ lo se•k lhfo ad••t• °'""Al tO'ft"y In lh1\ maner. you Sh0\110 oo ~ _11., so that vour 01u d1"9-II NIY, ~ lil@40fttlmt WITNESSrny h<lftd•M l~Mtlloltllt court OATEO· June II, !OS. WILLIAM E SI JOHN, Clttk BY. 6~1tfT•o11art. 0.DUIY LAWOPl'ICIS LONlll()AN JOllOAN, OllUHAM,VAllNlll UAVAOI 1'1W. ,.uttllSlr"I ~ ............. ca111 ,. ...... ,1 ...... 1111 Aft-y• ... ,lllnllllt of H L PEASON &nd IRE':': ... !' PE.ARSON and ail otM • IM'f'SOn5 _ .. ~ •nown t lalmlno ony "Clhl. 1111•. ttt.11tt1~ tltn or •nttrP\t 1n U•e r1M oropet'C'( L. dft(rlbed In lh• '"'""'•'"' -.. IG!:1 ololnUll s -""""oDor any cloud~ 0<1pla1nt11f'5Ut1t lh<lreto SUMMONS C.seN11mlltr·J4*6 NOTICE I You lllvt WH ·-· Tiit ·~ co"'1 "'"' -.Cid• a"'lnsl '"' ~~~ •-bet1'1t tleard ""len you r.._... wll'ltln JO dars. llud the lllftnNUOft below. .. .. AYISO' Usttd Ila 1ld0 dem-..i.. E Tr1-al _ .. Clt<ldlr COftlr• Ud. '"' _...,eta 1 mtnot ,..,. Ucl ,.,.._., clt..tro da JO dfH. Lal II lllftrrnKlott q .. 11qut 1 TO T HE DE FENDANT· A d vilcom lll&lnt "~' been 111ec1 by tllt Plllnll aq•IMt vou 1s.e tootno1 .. 1 ~ 11 vou w1V110 dett nd 111,, •-wn vou mu•t wl lhln 10 dan afltlr this w mon\ ., 'erv~d on you Ill•• "'4111 lhl tourt ,. w rlttun ptfl1dlno ln re~ t lhe comol•inl •II• Ju,tlce Co\61, you ""'''hit wllh lhe courl 1 wrlttenPIHt> • 1no or caU'W' M or111 p1udlr10 to be,.,.. ll'ff'CI In I~ (IOrk~t In '"'oo"se to lh• comolA•nt w1th1n JO di'l'fi etter thlS \Utntnon\1\Hrwitoon vov>. • b Unl•\\Y~u•ornpond vourclef.ull '~ wlll l>f tnl••l'd uoon aoollu Uon ol IM~ "'''""'' nnd lhl\ COU'' may ....... ';~ lu<IQrnenl IQlllMI you tor lhe Nik i.,,. • ., man<ltd in 1~ rom1>10in1 "''"'" cO\llcl ~ rnull In 04''"''""""' ol w"'9M, IM.inq • of money.,, pr-r'lv or 01.., re11e1 re. Q .. ~,.., In 1t1ecomol•1nl c If yw wltll It Mfll 1'1e M\llttof M ~b ~Y I~ 11111 matter. y.,. .-.. • &o ,romplly •• 111•1 Ytwr ""1ttt" ·~ re-•.ll•"•·maylltlllffMtl,,... ., Oet.0 Jll"• 11 .. ,. WIL.L.I AME !>T JOHN ISl!.ALI Cl••~ lly 8otly T .tOQ>rl Ool>u•v •r,.... wont· tomo'•'"' •f'td~cto-u. (Ol'nC>lAint pl•1nt1ff • 1nt-fuckrt. O'O\\.- tompla1Nnl O.t•1t0 tt\t •nck.tOH cron ·d•l•nd•nt ""Oul•r tnchldn ll>t' p1Ufal 1no mH culln• 111< 1uoe1 temlnlM •nd .....,,.r A wrl1t•n OltK l"O lnct...S •ftiQ jlft •n,wer t ctemurr~r etc .• m"'t Ort If! Ille IOtm rtQu!rtel by tile Ca1llorftte. • Aul•1 of Court VOAJr or191na1 PINdl"! "' Mull Ill flied lft this court wllh pr-.' INl<IQ 19@1 lftd proof tllat I COl>V l,_,..llf wo\ ..,,,.., °" '"'" olalnllfl'\ Mtornev 11\d °" .. er ')l•lntllt not r@l>r-..tecl 171 .,.•llorn.,y. TM llmtwlll!nas""'"'°"' '' o.emeo ,.,..,." °" • o•r1• mey ""r' dePlndlno Oft ti. rnt tllod Of WYl<t 'Or tltmf)lt, '141• C:CP "1.10 tllro\11111 o S '°' L.ONlllOAN. JOllOAN, OlllS..AM. llAllNl.11 ANO $AVAGIE MW.ti''"'"' S1r .. 1 ~ .. ,,..,.,,..,CA '140• ., .. , 17141-1111 Att.,-110 ttr P1;t111flH1 l'IA>l•\hfod Or•n')• Co•\I rl'>llV 1'110! l'Ublu\""CI Or M ii" Cu \I 0..llv Piiot Or• •• h •no Nov 1 ~ "" 4110.14 Oct ,. u ~""No• t e ,,1, •M-1• ,_ . ,. -• • • • • Lag 1•na/South £oast J\f'4 rnoon .Y. Stoek.S' EDITION I ~ ; VOL. 69, NO. 313, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1976 TEN CEN~ ,· . •/ jAnother Oil Price H~~··:Feared Da•aQuena O.lly Pilot S~lf """'• Teresa Perez has been selected Dana Hills High School Homecoming queen reigning over Friday 's school festivities. Miss Perez was selected from 15 contes· tan ts. ot Complete A Camp Pendleton marine who Id police he didn't know how to perate the motorcycle he'd just ented in San Clemente Saturday as reported resting com· ortably t oday at the base ospltal. Police said Steven Grant M~z. 9, had not long left the rental gency when he realized he 'dn't know quite how to stop the achine once he got it started. Musz rear-ended a car on El. Camino Real at Avenida Dom- inguez, police said. Ile was not seriously injured. although he ~~~ the trip back to the base in a !mllilary ambulance. I The driver of the car was un· ~urt. police said. I lroine's He arings De layed By TOM BARLEY Ol llM 0.lly ~llll Slat! Heavy behind-the-scenes bid- ding for control d the Irvine Company led Judge James F. Judge to order a two-day delay in bis Orange County Superior Court hearing today. Lawyers for Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith, the Irvine Company. the state and the J ames Irvine Foundation .were ordered to return Wednesday with a resume of the latest offers received. Topping the list today was a S284 million offer submitted to the foundation by a consortium organized by Wall Street fman- cier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taubman. Lawyers said the Allen. Taubman offer was made im· mediately after Cad i ll ac Fairview of Toronto increased its earlier offer of $265 million to S269 million in response lo re- newed inter est by the Mobil Oil Company. Mobil's original $200 million of- . fer sparked the legal action taken by Mrs . Smith lo halt a sale that, she argued , was unfair to minori- ty stockholders. Mrs. Smith, the granddaughter of Irvine Company founder James Irvine. bolds 22 percent of the Irvine Company's stock. She claims in her lawsuit that the $24 a share represented by the first Mobil offer is much too low for the stock. She asked for and got a court order halting dispos al of the foundation's 5'.5 percent con- trolline interest in the Irvine Company pending a hearing into the issue. The Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969 compels the foundation to divest itself of its Irvine Com- pany holdings no later than 1983. Representatives for Mobil said today that the oil company is now <See DELAYED, Page AZ> rrot Hit by Rocks 1Reported 'Stahle' I A 2-year -old boy cntically hurt hen large rocks sloughed off ~rescent Bay chrts tn Laguna 1Beach and crashed ooto the baby \playing with his mother at the fhase of the bluffs was reported m !&table condition today at South ~tCommunlty Hospital. 1 The child. Christopher llulit or jAnabflm. had suffered a frac- 'tured skull Friday. Police report- .ed six rocks varying from the ~e of basketballs to baM!balls .tell from the cliffs about 15 reel over the child and his mother. Police termed the incident "an •ct of God·' noting there ap- -peared to be no pedestrian walk or access to the area from which the rocks fell. Some of the rocks struck Or~~:jj _~o-ast Weather Areas of dense fog along the coast are forecast for T u esday m o rning. Otherwise sunny skies with a cooling trend Tuesday. A low t.onlght near 60 with the hi&h Tuesday in mid.fl>s. I NSIDE TODA" Dtolh blew the whilt~ on Bob Mortin of Pierr• and Siouz FolLt, S.D. Since hia .Math Oct. 16, it h08 ~ lcorrW tbat h• hod. a wi/t. ond JomilJI in each CitJI. S« Pogt Af. Index ., •• .. , •• •• aM .... ••• h AU •• •• ' another beachgoer . but he was not seriously injured. The child's mother Teresa Hu.lit was not hurt. She had been about two feet from the child at the time of the accident. The child's skull was fractulled in two places. He underwent Sur· ~ery shortly arter arrival at the hospital. Big Beach Weekend on Sowh Coast Lifeguards r e ported record November weekend crowds on South Coast beaches t his weekend. About 21,000 people turned out to bask in the unseasonable sun Sunday from San Clemente to South Laguna. Some 8,000 of them were on San Clemente city beaches. San Clemente Marine Safety Supervisor Steve Lashbrook said the crowd was ••atmost 8,000 above normal. I've been here elgbt years. I've never seela anything like it." Saturday crowds were about 13,000. Bathers were attracted by 79-degree air temperatures and by some of the warmest water. at 69 d egrees, to wash up on Southern California shores dur- ing November in many years. Lashbrook s~id water tem- peratures were above those averaged even in summer. No major rescues were re- ported. Short School Day Laguna Beach High School students will be on a short-day schedule Tuesd•Y u teachers and staff attend a ~bop on prejudice and ways to handle ll. Clua will start at 8:15 a.m. and end •l 12;15 p.m. ' I ~ Birds of a Pretty Feather 0.11, Pilot SUll ...... Meeting In Qatar Dec. 15 By the Aaaoc:l•W Pnl9 The oil cartel seems aure to raise oil prices in the new year, a move that probably will me411 higher pricea at. the I• pum,p. ID heating and electricity bills, pt airline ticket counters and maQ.V other places. Minis ters of the 13-nat.ion Organization of Petroleum ~­ porting Countries meet Dec. 15 in the. Persian Gulf sheikdom of Qatar to discuss oil prices, bat the most influential members' have already s aid they want in- creases ranging from 10 perceDt lo 25 percent. Even Saudi Arabia, the largest oil exporter and the most reluc- tant in recent years to raise prices, bas said it wanta a "moderate" increase. That bas been interpreted •s about 10 per- cent. These birds, Wendy Potter, 16, (left) and Pam Maple, 24, probably wouldn't have dif· ficulty finding sanctuary anywhere, but they've settled in Laguna Beach. Laguna's beaches have drawn large collections of beachgoers with the unseasonably warm weather. With residents like these, no wonder they call it the Art Colony. Iran, the second largest oil ex: porter, is thought lo favor an ~­ crease in the are. d 25 percent, while Venezuela, another iii- fluential OPEC member. wanfs at least 15 percent. The spokesman at OPEC head- quarters in Vien1\a, Ah med Zaheri, said last month be believed the price would be "ad- justed," which in qi1 talk means intreased. City Bus Run Halted' The present OPEC price ot $11.51 for a 42-galloo barrel of standard grade crude has been in effect since Oct. 1, 1975. OU ministers considered raisin& prtcea at their meet.ing-ln Ball in May~ but took no actioo, largely becauae of Saudi opposltioo. Arch 8eack Heighh Children Lose Ride By PmUP llOSMAIUN OltlleOallyPiiotSUH Ff r the p ast year, Laguna Beach school children who Jive in the hilltop Arch Beach Heights tracts have taken a city bus down the hill to a bus stop at Bluebird Park. Today they either hiked down or found some other arrangement. The city bus run has been scrapped because of state legisla- tion that went into effect two months ago that has only now been brought to the attention of ci· ty officials . The new law forbids any bus thaldoesn'tmeet exactschoolbus specifications, down to the yellow color, from hauling school-age children on a special run. Laguna Beach Unified School District buses don't make the trip loaded with children downhill because the California Highway Patrol . the district's liability in- s urers and even the bus manufac- turers have told the district it's too dangerous. The buses do take the students, who attend Aliso Elementary, Thurston Inte rmediate a nd Laguna Beach High schools, back up the hill, then re tum empty. According to district Business Manager Clyde Lovelady, thedis· trict is under no obligation to transport the 45 to SO students who live in Arch Beach Heights. Lovelady said the state educa- tion codes permit the district in- stead to pay parents a 12-cent mileage allowance lo pay for other transport. The nearest bus stop, at Auto Victim Still Unknown Orange County Coroner's de· puties are etill trying to identify a young man who apparently was struck and killed by a car early Saturday on Pacific Coast Highway in Capistrano Beach, Catifbrnia Highway Patrolmen reported. The young man, about 17 years old, apparently was lying in the roadway sout h of Palisades Drive. officers said, when he was struck by a car which left the scene. Officers said they are seeking t he driver of a n orange or brown Volkswagen for question- ing. Missile Launch ed VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (AP) -A Strategic Air Command crew successfully launched a Minuteman III in· tercontinental ballistic missile down the Pacific Missile Range today. Crossroads Class: Friendly Business ' ' By ANNE COOPEa Ol tlM O•lly Pii.t Slaff John P orter. directo r of Crossroada at Dana Hills High School, characterizes the alternative school program as a friendly business in which stu- dents are the ellents. "Our purpose is to make sure kids in the program get a solid secondary education and do some public service wort,'' be said. Housed in portables behind Dana Hills H igh School. Crossroads bas 175 students enrolled in its second year. and a waiting Ustof30. About two-lhlrda of the Crotsro•cb student body come from Dua HU111 one-third from San Clemente Hi&b School. ~udents spend hall their day in tbe port•bles, atudytq, and U. other bait out In tbe,com· m"nlty, in•olved In publlc ~ee work, ...tat.cl to educ•· tian, ~elne, l••Cll'ecoloiJ. "We flip-flop our student <8"STVOIES, Pace At> I Bluebird Park, is 1 'h to two miles down the hlll. Some parents drive their childre n to school. Some youngsters have bttn taking the city bus. for 15 cents a ride, to the stop. Some probably walk. The city bus route was started to alleviate the transportation problem. In part, it was started to calm the protest by the parents who complained a bout the district policy. The two city bus nms. at 7:15 a.m. and 8, also carried rl!gular passengers. But city trans)JOrt of. fici als aren't worried abotit com- plaints from that seclot. Only about fi ve persons a week who rode the buses weren 'tstudents. Thjs morning, city officials re- ported only a couple of angry telephone calls. Friday, pupils were handed notices alerting parents to the end of the run. School district officials report· ed no response. Each 10 percent increase in the price of OPEC oll, if passed along entirely lo consumers, woWd add about a penny a gallon to the price of gas In the United States. Th.is takes into conaideration the fact that the United States im- ports 40 percent of its oil. In coun- tries importing all their oil the impact would be much greater. CSee OIL, Page AZ) Sewage Overflow Closes Beach Area About 2,500 gallOM or treated sewage spilled from a blocked pipe at the SERRA treatment plant next to San Juan creek Sun- day afternoon. prompting county health officials to close a small section of beach. Health officials said the sludCe fouled the lagoon. which will be posted for no swimming for the next several days. MoDltoring of brain waves on special equipment was one ol 40 health-related test.a and booths available to senior citizens Sunday at. the Health Fair in Laguna Beach. Joan Emerson performs the teebnical procedure here . More than 1 .ooo senior citizens attended the free health screening. the first of its kind. t, I , ~ tt DAILY PILOT L/SC Hinshaw Rebuffed By Court WASHINGTON CAP> Tbe Sllpreme.. Court refused today to tnterlere in a political corruption trial of Rep. Andrew J . Hinshaw <~.Newport Beach). T• Ju•ticea .:turned down a petitlon tued.. by Himha• seekine a delay in lhe Oranp County ~perior Court trial now in pro- gress until the Supreme Court <tfsposes or an appeal filed by the congressman earlier this year. Claerkup Li11e11p Hinshaw, a .Republican flnt eiected to Congress in 197!, was <.~victed earlier th.is year of ac. cepting bribes from the Tandy Corp. 1n 1972 while the company h4ld matten pending before him at t!x assessor for Orange Coun ty. He was sentenced to prison ror one to 14 years but has re· nla.ined free pending appeal. In the current ca!e, he is on 1 ti.11 on charges of fraud, em· bezzlement and theft while in of· f1ce as the tax assessor. Anm? Stueckmann cbeck.s the blood pre- ssure of one Laguna Beach senior citi1en as others lineup to wait their tum during the Health Fair Sunday at the Festival of Arts grounds. More th.an 1,000 senior citizens took advantage of tbe h ealth screening cos- ponsored by Laguna Senior Citizens groups and South ,Coast and Saddleback Communi· ty Hospit.a'fs. Childless Folks Happy Hinshaw 's a ppeal to the Supreme Court, however, was filed before his trial and was b~ae d on a challenge to ~alifornia 's grand jury system. ,Jlinshaw sought re-election tl)il year but was defeated In his dltlrict 's Republican primary by "-'emblyman Robert Badham ( R-Newport Beech) who went on to win the seat in the general eledion. Statistics Say Kids Don't Came Changes . Last Baby Dies NAPLES. Italy (AP) -The la1t surviving baby -a boy -of the sextuplets born to Pasqualina C'lUanese died early today, her doctors reported. The 28-year-old ha\&sewire gave birth Friday to I wo boys and four girls. The babies were three months pre- mature and w~ighed between 19 ounces and three poun~. Three of· tbe babies lived only a few hours. Two others died early Sun- day. WASHINGTON (AP) -Mar- ried couples who choose not to have children are just as happy, seU·saliafied and inter'ested in their community as ~les wbo choose to have children. a new study says. The study, written by two social psychologists from the University of Kaaus, is based oo a survey of 61 married couples in the area or Lawrence, Kan. It says tbat intentionally childless couples are no more selfish than couples who intend to have children. Census Bureau reports show that in 1974. almost one-third of all married women under 30 had not had children, up from one- fifth ID 1967. Peanuttiest Tell All, Visit Plains LONDON <APl -The tabloid Sun invited its readers today to enter a peanut contest . "There are millions of protein·packed peanuts to be won, and a fabulous ch ance to see where they come from ," s aid the paper, whjch has a circulation of four million. The first priie &6 a 14-day trip for two to the Deep South, including st.ops in Atlanta and Plains. Ga. Ten runners-up will each get a g1anl pot of peanut butter. a gallon of peanut oiJ a nd a pound of peanuts a week for a year. "'To enter. Just tell us the nuttiest thing you ever rhd, •• sajd the Sun These census reports show also that Z7 percent of tboee c.bikUess women aged 25-29 expeded to re- main childless. In the study by Linda Silka, a University of Kansas eraduate student, and Sara Kiealer, who is doing research in Wasb.i.ogton, 21 couples said tbey never intended to have children, 21 couples said they wanted children and 19 were unsure. Amoog findings in the report: -Intentionally childless couples are nort more materialistic than other couples. -Intentionally childless couples are equally interested in mankind and their communities and enjoyed community ac· tiviUes to lbe same extent. -Intentionally childless couples and those who were un- sure of wanting children showed less interest in interaction with people, a preference for being alone and were leas gregarious than couples intending to have children. -Wives intending no children n::J>ressed a greater value for personal freedom than did others, including men. -Husbands intending no chjldren were likely to have a highly prestigious job and an- llci pated higher incomes than the others. FroraP~AJ OIL ... -Wives who did not intend to have children bad jobs that were higher than usual tn prestige. "It looks as though intentions not to have children are not relat· ed lo employment uplratioas but instead to employment suc- cess," the authors write. "A#. a group, tbose who had made a de- cision not to have children, in contrast lo those who had postpon~ chjldren or were un- sure if they wanted children, were experiencing greater re· wards from employment and could expect greater rewarm in the future." Tbe authors also found that "men were significantly less likely than women to embrace feminist goals. had more tradi- tional views about women, were less positive about sharing domestic chores and were also more uncomforatble with the idea of having a more successful or well educated spouse than were their wives." Capistrano Center Tells Fund Raising Tbe non-profit Community Counseling Center in San Juan Capistrano, which serves all or South Ora.oge County, has an· nounced its first fund.raising drive Saturday and Sunday. Saddleback Slates t A price increase would also be felt wherever else oil pgures in I he economy. Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, the Saudi oil minister . said in August that some OPEC members want· ed a "very drastic" increase - "'somewhat similar lo what hap· pened in 1973." Arab oiJ nations put an embargo on exports dur- ing the October 1973 Mideast war. and OPEC followed with the quadrupling of oil prices. The fund raiser is scheduled from 8 a.m. to 5 p .m . both days at the center om ces, 32141 Alipaz Street. Planned events include a flea Market, swine flu inoclllatlons, hourly drawings for prizes, bicy· cle registr ation and s afety checks and health information and food booths .. Microwave Class I , Tht> first of two special Sad· dlr back (·ollcRe classes 10 1 a1rrowav~ eook('ry will t ake pJact• f'·rad:t)' ahd tbe second :-.h sion, on Nov 19, wUJ lDClude 11rr1arnt1o n n f an entir~ Thanksi1vrn~ dlooer for~ stu· 1h•n1 ~ will be compld~ with a 10-pounrl roast turkey, casse~ dre8sLng, tranbemefi. potatoes and but- tered broccoli. Community reslCients inter~· ~in taking tM cl8!8eS can make advance reservations by calling 831·9700. extension 2163. Both <'lasses will run from I I .. .1 m to 1 p.m .. tn lbe colle1e h<lme ttonom1n center Ill a omt F,..,..r9fleAJ ,of S2 to rover food C'09ta. Atta· D d. nee •~ hmited to '5 peaple and ELA YE D • P~ttSlnUon la ,....ared.. • WeH •s teUke .UJ COftr th~ basic lecltntq1aes ol this ~~·ace method ol coottq. sek"c:hoo ol lhe rtgtrt ccdtma con- t3fners. tiauoa a•dotberfactors. 1'br pr ad I« "menu" for f"'1· d<~ wilt consist of a spinach soaf. ne .erarnbled eces. sPic:od apple pll!kh and bakect chlcten 1)e mkrowa.-e T'Unbgivtng d1a.er on the followtne Friday l \C DAILY PILOT wil1:inc to pay 1273 milhon in cub for tbt lrTlne Company-in million las than the otter 1-ub- mlt~ by lbe AUen-Taubman combtne. FoundatJon attorney Howard PrivetL would onl)' comment to- day lbat bis board of directors bas reached no decisicn on which olfer might be acceptable lo them. • Kn. -Smith. w"o withdrew her ~to tbe ~• ol fOUlllCbl · Uon •~ at a lime wbco CMiJJac f'alnlew a-ppea:red to be u.e 1Gttt91Lul bidders, would ol· ... -COIDJIM'Dt Oft the DeW btds mW o.e, are ~ ta Ute ....... .,_e J_,..Judce. ~ W9I leaned ~ tbet at .... t1" otber ba•' bUrestl -..~lbe~ .-:. .-. counter~ cte- u d $ I!~ .... Mobil. C.dillae ......._ _. tM AUee·Taubmu r V I Wlhtftl. 1A1rTen parti~ m u.e bNlini related to identify the new b6cNen. Bwt they altMd tbel hta'f7 ~ in the Mure of 'tbe lrvtne Oona~ could end wttb tbe or1aab.ation beir\c sold fw a m9dl as $300 mlllion. Iran Movie Set TM Rotary Club will sl>O'\Sor a ,_,ore .._ .. m<>MD ptcture, "Iran: The Persia of Old" at 8 o'clock lonitbt at the San Cl•JMnte Coaam""QJt)' Outer. Aveald.a n.J Mar an(! Calle S8ville. Proceed$ ao to llotar)' Ctub community 1enice pro- jeds. Yamani said his government would resist a large increase this lime because of concern for the" ~conomic recovery of the West. "We are not going to slaughter the nen lhat lays the golden eggs." he said. "There is a limit to what we can do. And I lhink we see that limit a little bit clearer than others." "' U.S. Presidenl·elect Jimmy Carter said at his news con- ference on Thursday that an oil pnce increase would be "a very serious blow" to consuming na· lions but that all he could do before his inauguration was lo express concern through public statements The center has been located in San Juan about iollr years, said Larry F1ores, Director. It offers a multi-facteci program, includ- ing drug divers ion ; alcohol, life and family counseling and classes in everything from sew- ing to aicoholism. Addjtional information on the center or the weekend fund raiser is availabl~ by calling 493· 7333 or 831 ·0616. Bank Purchased LOS A?\GELES <AP ) -A group of Philippine Investors has purchased the commercial banking unit or Ah.manson Bank & Trust Co. of Beverly Hills and renamed it the Ca lifornia Overseas Bank Unified Boundary Changes Approved Robert fl' eriuson. director of plan.nlos and development for the Saddlet..ct dlltrict, said lbe state's Board of EquallutiOD is the next agenc7 which will have to .,..rove tbe cbu~. Tbe tram.fer involves portions of the Nellie Gail Ranch and Alicia Gardelll developments in southwest Laguna Hills. The land now ls split betw~n the two dist nets. Officials of both districts beUeve the change will assure a comm unity oriented program. Tbe total aMe11ed valuation of the t• developments is esUmat· cd.at $24 mllllon with diltrtct pro- perty taxes annually totallnf almost $1.5 mUUon. Sadd .. buk administrator!! hsve eatlnuted the coat of cducaUng children living ln thee tuwre dn-elopmtat.s at almost '1.4 millloft. Tb\a1, u.y apect to realim abo9t •-* nrplm In-come. A transfer of 88S acres ol un- d eve loped land from t he Capistrano Unified to Sad- dleback Valley Ullilled School Diltrict la expected lo rec.rive final approval by. tbe first ot tbe year. 'Ibe Orange County Board bt Education approved the boun· dary change this week. ~ in both districts as well as the Orange County Committee oo School Dl1t.rict Organlutloe pre- viously approved tbe cban~. Missile Launched VANDENBERG A.LR roRCE BASE (AP) -A Stratecsc AJr Command crew 1uccesll&tlly launched a 11.lnuteman m ln· ter(Ofttlnental baUlst!c mls1Ue down the Pacific M.luUe Rance t.oda7. I Ora Wlaites-oal11 Carter Plans .... Church Fight ST. SlM-ONS ISLAND. Ga. <AP) -J immy Carter will at- tend a meeting of the Plains Bap- tilt Cburch next Sunday and bopes bis fellow parishiaoerl wall q:ree to abandon their wbltel- only poltcy, spokesman Jody Powell says. • As the president-elect rested among the marshes, woods and flshlng streams of this Southern Georgia resort island Sunday. word reached him that the Rev. Clennon King, a bladt actlvlat minister. had been barred from the church for the secood weel in a row. .. Powell said Carles-and other church members with whom tbe President-elect had been in con- tact "hope at lbe conference to reach an amicable conclusion and ~uarantee tlle right of all to worship without regard to race." Powell said lbat if next Sun· day·s vote continues t.be whites- only policy, Carter would have to make "a dlfficult penonal de· cision'' ebout what course to take. He did noL outli.oe what op- tions Carter might have. Carter voted against a 1965 church rule excludiag "Negroes and civil rights activists." and has said many times be hoped the rule could be changed. The church past.«, 'the R8v. Bruce Ed wards, also favors inte- gration of the church and his job is in jeopardy as a result. He asked for next Sunday's meeting sp tbe congregation could vote on the deacons' recommendation that he be fired. Meanwhile. the President-elect is dividing his time bere among fi shing, swimming, ping-pong and the study of recommeoda· lions from his staff and others about ways to complete the transition between a Carter ad- ministration and that of outgoing President Ford. For instance, Carter is study- ing a memo from Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller recounUng Rockefeller's experiences in tbe vice presidency and his thoughts Mr. Murray Service Held oo how that office can. be made more useful Carter drove from his rented vacation home at Musgrove Plud.&Uoo Sunday morniq to' take communion at biatodc. amall and u nheated Cbrist Church, the pariah in which Charles and John Wesl4'y pre- ached in the late 1730s. John Wesley later founded the Metbodiat cbureh. Carter .... been ca ..... pmc virtuallJ nomt.op for al.molt two years, aad hid be oeedl tbe,. bis nut.Ian la psvwidial. Bia vacaUoD cottage la new a swift. flowing creek overl~.J.: manb at the eod ol a rolld nearly two miles from tbe nearest hlabway. The est.ate is owned by Smith Bagley, a Washington, D.C., b1.11lnesaman, who was ao urty s UJ>POfter or Carter's presiden- tial hopes. Powell said Balley will be paid up to $2,000 by Carter for five or six days• useoftbecot- ta1e, surrounding buildings, and the 1,483 acres of woods. water and manbland. STUDIES ••• body," said Porter, "so we never have more lban 80 or 90 students on campus at once, except for midday seminar, when ever- ybody's here." Each teacher has 21 students for seminar, and each student stays with the same teacher throughout his enrollment ln Crossroads. Together they study such real-life subjects as mar- riage, buying a car, managing a bank account and arranging a funeral. They alao share one physical educaUon event each week - sailing, volJeyball and softball are popular at Crossroads. Each term seminar groups do a spedal project. nus tenn tbey are traveling to Yosemite, con- ducting a community art project. touring local colleges and study· ing the natural history of Southern California. Porter said the Croesroads pro- gram is not suited to every stu- dent, but he said it meets the In I I d needs of m any when a more re an traditional program does not. . One girl who had missed 30 Laguna Beach re.al ya of school year before tut Mun-ay has been d a perfect attendance record home town of Leek. Ireland, last year at Crossroads, even following bis de alb at 43 of though sbe set herself long hours cancer in England. from 8:30 a .m . to IOp.m . • Mr. Murray, a lS-year resident Jn addition to classes io of Laguna Beach, died Oct. 6. He medicine and special education. had served as a board member of she was involved in working with the Laguna ~acb boarrf of re-,Younger students who had leam- altors and a director al Jarge of mg difficulties. She also suc- the. C~lifornia Real Estate As-cessrully completed two Sad· soc1ation. dleback College courses. During his residence in Laguna Since her graduation in June. Beach he was affiliated with she has worked in a doctor's of. Stuart Realty, Vision Realty and flee and ts attending college, with Sand Castle Realty. Porter said. Prior to coming to the United Another student, who had never States, Mr .. Murray had been a done weJJ in school, developed a program director for mentally fascination with forestry last.year retarded children in Redhill, through his crossroads ex- England. . . perience and did straight "A" . The deceased. 1s suJ"Vlved by work. He is currenUy training to his father, Patnck Stanley Mur· beaforestranger .. ray; mother, Eva Murray aod Porter said Crossroads stu- nine brothers and sisters aJI in dents receive mor e in· Jreland. dividualiied instruction than atu- Memorial dQnatioos may be de nts in more traditional made to the American Cancer Society. Baby Sitting Classes Set The South County Red Cross ser vice center in San Juan Capistr ano has announced a :i;eries of classes for upper elementar y and junior high school students on baby sitting. Concepts taught in the course include keeping the child amused, safety precautions,• diapering ahd handling a baby and disciplin ing children. Certificates will be awarded to s tudents who complete the course satisfactorily. Additional information is available by calling the center, 496-$S11 • pro"rams. "Students are continually re- ' assessed," he said . "Every teacher is well acquainted wit.b the achievement level or every student. Even a math teacher knows bow well each of hit stu- dents reads and la wo1'ting with those who have reading dU- ficulties. "There•s no way a s tudent could get through our program without learning to read." Paul Ryan, Crossroads public service coordinator and social studies teacher, said students are working In Capistrano schools in professional ·offices, landscaping school and community grol1ndit and recycling newspaper and aluminum. Studenta work aa volunteers, without pay, he said, In any public service job which provides them wilb a meaoingf ul learning experience. Three in Laguna Hurt ID Accidents ~ people have been in- jured in weekend Laguna Beach mishaps. Motorcyclist David L. Knapp of 236 Viejo St., Laguna BNcb was hurt Sunday When he lost control of his vehicle in the ln- te rs e c t ion of South Coast Highway and Ocean Avenue. Knapp and the bike skidded alone the pavement. He received abruions and uu~ bll wrist Ho wu released alter lteatment at Soutb Coast Community Hospital. Paul A. Adelmund, 21. ot 1.31 Woodland Drive, J..acuna Beach wat Injured Sunday when hJt by a car while walldnt In the IOO block of Laguna Canyon no.cl. Police identified the driver of the car as Bart A. Koenl1, 24, of 2e45 Laguna Canyon Road. Adelmund was admitted to South Coast Community Hospital for treatment ol a fractured lq. Douglas Meister, 39, ot Fullerton was LQjured at Main Beach Park Sunday. He 1urfered a broken shoulder bone . Detaill ol tM accident were not im- mediately naUable. Meister. was released after treatment at South Coast Community .Holpit.al. ' ., ~ . -. VOL. 69, NO. 313, 2 SE CTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1976 'C TEN CENTS I Irvine Co. Bi-dding Delays Hearing· By TOM BARLEY Of Ille O•llr 1'11..t Stall Heavy behind·lhe·scenes bid· ding for control of the Irvine Company led Judge James F. J udge to order a two-day delay in bis Orange County Superior Court bearing today. Lawyers for Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith, the Irvine Company. the stale and the James Irvine Foundation we re ordered to return Wednesday with a resume of the latest offers received. Topping the list today was a $284 million offer submitted to the foundation by a consortium organized by Wall Street fman- c,ier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taubman. Lawye rs s aid tbe Allen- Taubman offer was made im- media t e l y a fte r Cadillac Fairview of Toronto increased its James lrvine, bolds 22 percent of earlier offer of $265 milUWllP""l _ _.~e Irvine Company's stock. $269 million in response to re· claims in her lawsuit that newed interest by the Mobil Oil the a share represented by Company. the first Mobil offer is much too Mobil's original $200milliooof-lowforlhestock. fer sparked the legal action taken . She asked for and got a court by Mrs. Smith to ball a sale that, order halting disposal of the she argued, was unfair to minori-foundation's 54.S percent con- ty stockholders. trolling interest in the Irvine Mrs. Smith, the granddaughter Company pending a bearing into of Irvine Company founde r the issue. The Federal Tax Reform Act of 1969 compels the foundation lo divest itself of its Irvine Com- pany holdings no later than 1983. Representatives for Mobil said today that the oil company is now willing to pay $273 million in cash for the Irvine Company-$11 miJlion less than the offer sub-. milted by the Allen·Taubman combine. Foundation attorney Howard Privett would only comment to- day that his board of direc:tors has reached no decl.aioo oo which offer might be acceptable to them. Mrs. Smith, who withdrew her objections to the sale ol founda- tion stock at a lime when Cadillac Fairview appeared to be the successful bidders, would of- fer no comment on the new bids <See DELAYE D. Page AZ) ~nother Oil Price Hike Feared I • I·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- INo lnte rf e r ence I Hinshaw Court Bid Rejected WASHINGTON tAPJ The Supreme Court refused today to interfere in a polihcal'corrupllon trial of Rep. Andrew J . llmshaw <R·Newport Beach). The justices turned down a petition filed by Hanshaw seeking a delay in the Orange County Superior Court trial now in pro· gress until the Supreme Court disposes of an appeal filed by the congressman earlier ttus year. Hinshaw. a Republi<.'an first elected to Congress in 1972, was convicted earlier thjs year of ac· cepting bribes from the Tandy 1Corp. in 1972 while the company lbad matters pending before him as tax assessor for Orange Coun· . ty. He was sentenced lo prison for one to 14 years but has remained free pending appeal. In the current case, he is on tn al on charges of fraud, em- bezzlement and theft wbiJe in of- fice as the tax assessor. Hins haw 's appeal t o the Supreme Court, however. was filed before his trial and was based o n a challe ng e t o California's grand jury system. Hinshaw sought re-election this year but was defeated in his district's Republican primary by Assemblyman Robert Badham <R·Newport Be ach) who went on to win the seat in the general election. Meetiiig In Qatar Dec. 15 By the Aaaoclated Press The oil cartel seems sure lo raise oil prices in the new year, a move lbal probably will mean higher prices at the gas pump, in beating and electricity bills, at airline ticket counters and many other places. Ministers of the 13-nalion Organization of Petroleum Ex- porting Countries meet Dec. 15 in the Persian Gulf sheikdom or Qatar to discuss oil prices, but t.he most influential members have already said they want in- creases ranging from 10 percent lo 25 per cent. 7 I * * * * * * Even Saudi Arabia, the largest oU exporter and the most reluc- tant in recent years to raise prices, b as said it wants a ''moderate" increase. That has been interpreted as about 10 per- cent. . ~udge T estifies In H inshaw Trial Co n g r e ss man And re w Hinsbaw's lawyer called a JUd$(e to the witness stand m Orange County Superior Court today to support his argument that count:. manpower and matenals are often used for private purposes Superior Court Judge William L. Murray confi rmed for d<.'fense I attorney John M cN1cholas that ,he bas made private local and long distance calls on his county telephone without re1mbursin~ Sitters Set Up For Gorilla I CINC fNNATI IA P l The Ctn cmnalJ Zoo 1s C"Ullan~ on a !.mall army of volunteers to take tums sitlulg around th<' clock with d pregnant gori Ila Megera. a lowl3nd J?onlla, 1<; expected to become a mother bv early next year Zoo Director Ed Maru&ka said 1t 's 1mposs1ble to tw- more precise with pnmates. so the baby watch hus already begun. "There 1s no way that we <.'Ould perform a 11 the everyday tasks wt: have lo do and still have someone in front or that gori lla's cage every minute.'· he srud the <.'Ounly for the costs. "I have never been told not lo do 1t," J udge Murray explained. .. And I wouldn't know how to re- 1 mburse the county even if l wanted to ... Judge Murray confirmed for McNicholas that he once sum moned a county employe from the county court.house to help tum on a personal matter. lie explained that bis car broke down that day and be asked the cmploye to drive him to the courthouse. "I was due in court and that seemed like a good way of getting there," he said. Hinshaw went back lo the wit· ness stand t o res ume his testimony after Judge Murray left the courtroom and was im- mediately accused by prosecutor William Evans of "dancing around my questions." Judge Frank Domeoic bini restored order after a shouting match between opposing lawyers halted Hlns haw's accOWlt of the method used by the county as- sessor's office while he was in charge of the division to collect payments for documents pro- vided to the public. Hinshaw. 51, is being tried on allegations that he misused his office in 1972 by allowing county <.'mployes lo work on his con· <See JUDGE, Page AZ> I • Twins at t h e T op oaltr Mlel Staff'"""°' Costa Mesa twins John and Tassy Kennedy. 17, are the 1976 homecoming king and queen at Costa Mesa High School. The pair, children of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ken- nedy, presided over homecoming events this past weekend. Events incJuded a ZT-0 Mustang football vie· tory over El Toro Hifh Chargers . Oally l'lio. -· •Y ltlcll4trd 1(-1•• SALVAGE FIRM'S ROBERT WESTLAKE STRUGGLES TO GET 'GAMBOL' OFF BEACH 32-footer Was Just One of Fogbound Boats That Went Aground Along Orange Coast Mesa Verde Still Reports Storm Loss By STEVE M rroHEU 01neo•llY 1'11-4Slllf The Southern California Edison Company is still feeling the effects of a windstorm two weeks ago lo Costa Mesa, in the form of a flurry of complaints from Mesa Verde homeowners. Jim K e nnedy, district manager for the utility, said tbe company bas received about a dozen claim letters from resi- dents of Mesa Verde along with some repair bills for fN!e:Zers and refrigerators homeowners claim were knocked out by a power failur&a week ago Tuesday. Kennedy s aid company of- ficials are investigating the com- plaints to ascertain Edison's responaibllily. The Edison Company spokesman asked that residents who believe their appliances were burned out because of the recent wind storm write to the utility. He also asked that a copy of the repair blll or an itemised estimate of dam•ce to the ap- nllcance be Included in the letl~r for the claims adjuster .. Send consumer complaints to Jim Kennedy, 390 E. 17th St .• Costa Meaa. "If a tree llm b comes down and brines two wires together, It's possible that hlabel' volt.age is re- layed into the resideuce, putting too m\IC.b pc>wer into somo ao- pUances," Kennedy expta.l:Md. "Normally, most motors have high voltage protertive equlp· ' menl.on them, kind of Uke a circuit breaker,'' be said. Kennedy said that lf the utility is at fault. Edison will pay for the damage. "But if it looks like it was an act of God, thtln the homoowners will have to file claims with their home insurance companies,'' he said. (See STORM, Page A2> Kialoa Leath In Mazatlan Yacht Race Jim Kilroy's 7t-foot ketch Kialoa built up a substantial lead in the Los Angeles to MaiaUan race today as fresh winds filled in from the west along the Baja California coast. <See earlier story, Pa1e AlO.) Kialoa 's position placed her 292 miles from the start, about :n miles ahead of the second place boat Aoranal. ln third plaee on elapsed time was Whistle Wlng about U mlles aatem of Aorangi. Ragtim e, which bad been cballen1ing Kialoa tor t~ l'!a~ was farther south than Aorat\gl and Whistle Wln1, but con· ~ably west ol t.be rbumbUne. Leader on handicap time was Guido Mortarolti's Ranier 11 Broom Hilda, wl~oer ot the race twoyunaao. Fog Blankets Coast; 2 Boats Stuck in NB Thick fog that blanketed the Orange Coast overnight made navigation impossible for the crews of two boats that went aground in Newport Beach. Capt. Bud Bels he of the Newport Beach lifeguards said none of the people from the two vessels reported any injuries In the mishaps, although one boat was listed as a total loss. The first boat went on the beach at 1 Street at about -'1:31> p.m . while trying to find the harbor entrance on a return trip from Catalina. <Related story PageA5) According to Belshe, the 27 · foot Santana sailboat began breaking up early today after at- tempts to tow her out"dt the sur- fline failed. The boat is owned by Los Angeles resident Bruce Malasky. Her homeport ls Marina del Rey. According to lifeguards, she was carryin1 a charter group from Newport Beach and so was beaded for Newport liarbpr when the nils hap occurred. The second ground occurred at about 5 a.m . when a SS.foot Newport went aground at 10th Street. The boat. the Gambol, was operated by Robert Meyer wbo bad his three children aboard. l ran, the second largest oil ex- porter ,'is thought to favor an in- crease in the area of 25 pe.rcent, while Venezuela, another in- fluential OPEC member, wants al least 15 percent. The spokesm an at OPEC bead- q u arters in Vienna, Ahmed Zaheri, said last month be believed the price would be "ad- justed," which in oil talk means increased. The present OPEC price of ~$11.51 for a 42·gallon barrel of standard grade crude bas been in effect since Oct. 1, 1975. Oil ministers con sidered raising prices at their meeting in Bali in May, but took no action, largely because of Saudi opposition. Each 10 percent increase in the price of OPEC oil, if passed along entirely to consumers, would add about a penny a gallon to the price of gas in the United States. This takes into consideration the fact that the United Stat.es im- ports 40 percent of its oil. ln coun- tries importing all their oil the impact would be much greater. A price increase would also be fell wherever else oil figures in the economy. Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, the Saudi oil minister. said in August that some OPEC members want- ed a "very drastic" increase - "somewhat similar to what hap- pened lo 1973." Arab oil na\ions put an embargo on exports dur· ing the October 1973 Mideast war, and OPEC followed with the quadrupling of oil prices. Coas t Weather Areas or dense fog along lb~ cout are forecut for Tu~•d ly inor n l n c . Otherwise sunny ski• with a cooline trend Tuesday. A low tonight near 60 with the blgh Tuesday in mid-b. I NSIDE TODAY Dtoth ~ the wlddle cm Bob Martin of PltrTe .and S6ota FoJU, S.D. 8*a 1U 'death Oct. JI, u hat bun leaf'Md thot he had a wit-and /arrril11 fft ca.ch citJI. S.. l!'ogc A4. ., A,. All A4 Al .,.. ..... ... .. All :1 ,~ O•llY "'IOI \1 .. 1 ,,_o ANTES UP FOR RECOUNT Republican Seftz Seitz Asks Vote Count, 65 Short Republican Phil Sei tz. who lost by 65 votes to Democrat Chet Wray in las t Tuesday's elel·tion in the 7lst Assembly D1stnct, has asked for a r ecount. The 31-year ·old Republican paid $532 to cover the anticipated cost of one day's rt!counl. , Seitz' near victory in the hcavt· :1y Democratic distnct was re· 'garded as a surprise by Orange County political observers Wr..i y, 53, a Unitecl Auto Workers union off1c1al, was ex pected to win the election by as manv as 30,000 votes Bu0t by the time the countv counting was fin ished. ha:-. margin was a scant 6S \Otes out of 84,027 c as t in the 7lst Registrar of Voters Al Olson s aid today the recount will take from fi\'e to six days and cost Seitz an estimated S532 da1ly Should the election's outcome be r eversed by the vote recount. Seitz would not have to pay for the hand count of the ballots TONIGlrT COST t\ MESA PLANNIN(i COMMISSION Rei;:ular meet· mg. Caty llJll, fi 30 J).m OCC LECTUR E "Son ey of rarJp~\ I hnlo~~ .. Fine 1\rh fildg 119. j JOp m Tl' ESDA \ . ~0\'. 9 :'-iEWPORT M ES.\ SCHOOL BOJ\RO HcJtular meetin~. ('o!'>I J \h•s..i c:1t) council cham bcr.. i 30 p m S F.NIOH CITIZENS CLl'B C'mnmuntty Recreataon Ccnl(:r. Tue" Wert . Thurs 12 3 p m O<'C Ml:--11 CO~CERT Whit lier College Strin~ Tno, 1-·1nc \rt-; Hall 119, :".'.oon. fo'rcc OCT ART FILM '·M C Escher · and "J esse Al len," F11w Art<. llall 116, Noon Fre(' R E HIN O THE JI E,\DLI~ F:S" Or Cales 1' n ro"'n lectu1t•r OCC' Forum. i 30p m · ~AT l RI> \Y. Sl'N D.\\', ~1 0\"D ,\Y ~out h Cn<Js l Ttt!perton Thrtiltr. Tues day '\u.nd<1\ throu~h I>t•c· t9, 8 f'l m ·~t:.nors T~ll Plan CHICAGO <1\P l M<Jyors of the n.11 1on·~ l aq~clll C1l1es toda)· form ulatf'd t1 new urban battle pla n calli ng ro r immediate eme rgency aid for JOb6 and crea· t.«>n oC an Uruan Dcv~lopment B ank The mayor 11' urhiln s trategy wall be presented to Congrrss and President-elect ~Jam m y \<irtrr with a stem warn in~ that federal urban programs 1 ··are almost a nightmare oC con· fusion.·· OAANCE COAST .DAILY PILOT ,.. .. .... ".,. (04',, 0"''' t't1tot 4lt '"'•fl· " ,..,. "' "lt-d 1f'WI flit•• ,.,,_ • t\ OUIM·""""' JW ftw n.--.,_. t .... 1 -11N1\ft•f"IO caoto '"~ ~'••· "" ,,.~, ,. r ""'•'"'-•'1 M""' t•._. ,,.,, ... .,,.,. r 1 u . •·w (1'1 t4 ,.,. A to.f.,WM•I k•A·I\ H 1ftf .. .,.O'W\ ..... ft (~1' ••·" v .. 11,.., , , ~".. \ • • .,,_,..,~ v~ ~ ... ,."'t l t1~•R-.t<PI \OWt'\(.&ttl\I A ·~"'""...,...l•J t '°"' ~ ... ~t1 ,_ .. I C",•t ,,,. •ti """"'' \.o"-lt9' I• .. r-• "''·6•• ovh••\f'li·"., "•t11 .... ~ tie» Yttlt\t n .. 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"'Oflfhl'I b .. ,.,, ...... ,. ~"''" '"""h••• Mt·~•~u -.om~'"'- ~ I Monda Novomb•r 8 1976 Candy Bar Cost To Rise NEW YORK (AP) -Cundy lo\•ers who watl'hed prices rise dunng the s ugar shortage arc groaning al the pr<npect or more bad news next year : the 20-cent chocolate bar. This time, the culprit is the cocou bean. The Nestle Company Inc of White Plains, N. Y .• announced to- day that at was raising wholesale pnces on a variety of chocolate products. Al the r etail level. a typical chocolate bar will go Crom 15 to20 cents, the company said. In some places, candy bars m vending machines already sell Cor 20 cents and, presumably, could go up to 25 cents ;d'ter the new increases take e!Ccct. The Nestle mo\'e was not unex· peeled s ince the Hershey Corp .. M&M and Pet er Pa ul announced similar price boosts late last month. Figuring out lhe percentage or inc re ase gets complicated because the companies tned to s weeten the impact of the hi~her prices by inc reasing the si2c of their candy ha rs. A Nestle m ilk chocolate bar, for example, will grow from l' .. to 11 .. 1 ounces; a Hershey milk chocolate bar is going from 1.2 to 1.35 ounces. The Nestle bar is smaller -I 11~ is equal to 1.25. The s maller, cheal)t!r Nestle bar costs 13 3 cents per ounce: the la rger, higher-price vanely Y.ill cost 16 cents per ounce: the inc r ease as 20 percent. F or Hershey, the per-ounce price 10 crease works out lo 19 percent Nestle said the wholesale pnce increases will go into effect early in 1977. after stocks of the 15-cenl chocolate bars are used up. The increase is expected al the retail level next spring. All the companies blamed ht~her costs for the increases. noting that cocoa beans which sold for 75 cents a pound a year ugo now are going for close to $1.50. The firm s s aid the chocolate increases would have come sooner if 1t had not been for the drop in the price of sugar which has declined about 90 per· ('ent from 1974 levels . Most of the w orld'!) cocoa beans ure grown in Africa and the crop has been tight for two years At the same ume. the de- mand has been strong, causing tile pnce increase. Stephen Korsen of Nestle said there is no actual shortage of cocoa beans. He said. however, tha t the producing countries "are regulating the now" of beans. Political uphea vals 111 some cocoa-growing areas also have interrupted the supply. Korsen said. No 'Pardon.' For Ford? ATLANTIC CITY, N .J 11\P I Hu mor columrul>l Art Buchwald says Prest rlcnl Ford Jost to Jimms C a r t 1• r h c t• a u :-, r h c· pordoned form c r President N1xnn "Pre'<1dent Fore! did for lht• JU'illce s}stem in this country what Evcl Kruevel dad for the s par e pro- i:ram . ·· Ruc hwald told th1• ~ew Jersey Education As -;oclation convention here Nevl.'rlhcless. Buchwald added, ·'I worshiped the very quicks and he walked on '' Turning to· President· elect Jimmy Carter's con. t roversial Playboy in· terview. he said there is now a new bumper stacker in Wa shington which re· a ds : "In his heart , he knows your wife." From Page A J STORM ... Jack Webster, service man· ager for Davis Brown ap- pliance repair in Costa Mesa, sald his s hop was swamped wilh phone calls following the wind storm late last month. "We got about 20 or 30 phone calls, all from the Mci;a Verde area,'' Webster said. He said he has six appliances from Mesa Verde in his shop now. and had to ''turn more than a dozen over to other service comp anies." "We received so many calls that I even asked one lad,y if she was from Mesa Verde. She want· ed to know bow l knew lhat," Webeter laughed . Ho said it costs about SZO to re- pair a freuer or refrigerator lf tbc compresaor goes. l Theater Benefits Mesa OKs $250,000 Allocation Dollr ,...., Stoll,..,... (lueet• Uonor~d Daryl P!ischne r is Newport Harbor High School's 1976 ho mecoming queen . T he 17 -ye ar-old s enior is the dau g hte r of M r. and Mrs. J S t a nley Pfi sc hn e r of Newport Be a c h. 2 Victims' Rites Set South Coast Repertory Theater has been guaranteed a quartt'r milUop dollar gilt with the sign· lnr ot an agreement wilh the City ot Costa Mesa for the completion or a 600-seat theater. The city's allotment of federal revenue sharing funds will go toward cons t r uction of the theater near South Coast Plaza, expected to be completed in late 1977. Councilmen unanimously 1&P· proved the $250,000 donation toward the $1.8 million SCR theater building. The federal revenue-sharing runds allocated to lhe theater group, was the subject or con- troversy last June when several residents complained about the amount of money contributed to SCR. Several sneakers said the funds would be better used by local community theater groups, and others said they were con· cemed at the size or the donalion. nearly one fourth of revem.te· sharing funds saved up by the ci· ty over a four year period. The 14 -pagc agreement ap· proved by the council outlines . Fro• Page A l On T.uesday JUDGE •.. Funeral services are scheduled Tuesday for the two victims of Thursday night's double slaying in Huntington Beach but sur· vavors or both slain peopl~ have expressed wishes for privacy. Rites f o r Mr s. Beverly Campbell will be at 11 a .m. in Wa verley Church . on the grounds of Fairhaven Memorial Park in Santa Ana . Her parents. who survi\•e the s lay ing vi c tim , s uggest ed me morial contributions lo a fund for Mrs. Ca mp be I I's five children. Services for Verne E . Howell, Mrs. Campbell'sft·husband, will be at 1 p.m . in MacDougall Fami- ly Mortuary in Santa Ana. He leaves his son, Wllliam, plus daughters Charlene and Melanie. From Pagr Al DELAYED. • until they are discussed in the hearing before Judge Judge It was learned today that al least two other business interests have entered the bidding picture since the counter bidding de· veloped between Mobil, Cadillac Fairview and the Allen-Taubman consortium. Lawyers participating in the hearing refused to identily the new bidders. But they agreed that heavy interest in the future of the Irvine Company could end with the organization being sold for as much as $300 million. Six Hospitalized SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Two gallons of a toxic roach killer spilled at a drayage firm. send· ing six employes lo a nearby hospital for treatmeni. The bot- tles of cockroach concentrate, Du rovap, were broken when Creight handler11 at C.N. Drayage accidentally knocked them over whale loading another shipment. gressional campaign and be re· imbursed by the county for time actually spent on the Newport Beach Republican's election ef-fort. Hinshaw and his lawyer learned today in the courtroom piat the United States Supreme Court has rejected a move to de· lay the trial until McNicholas can get a ruling on an appeal filed with a local court. McNicholas commented that be was not surprised by the high court decision. He said he plans no further appeals during the course or the trial. McNicholas is currently ap. pealing the outcome of an earlier trial in which Hinshaw was con· vicled or bribery charges also stemming from his term or office as county assessor. tte nas been sentenced to one to 14 years in stale prison. He is free pending lhe outcome of the a p· peal with the Fourth District C ourt of Ap peals i n San Bernardino. Hostage Freed With Aid Vow SAN BRUNO <AP) -A San FtJLncisco County J aj) inmate heTcl" a cadet guard hostage at knifepoint for 3-0 mirfutes until authorities persuaded him to sur· render by promising medical treatment. Sheriff Richard Hongisto said prisoner Clare nce Jones, 28, jumped Deputy Sheriff Cadet Richard Robles, 36, Sunday morning and held a sharpened piece or metal at Robles' throat. Jones, serving a five-month sentence for robbery, "com- plained that parasites were eat· ing away hi s body," said Hongisto. Authorities promised medical treatment and Jones finally threw down his weapon. Robles was uninjured. Getty Heiress Sues Officials Over Will Corona del Mar resident Anne Calh<'nne Getty. granddaughter of J . Paul Getty is suing a Getty Oil Company attorney and the Getty Museum's director, charg. ing them with coercing the late oil billionaire to alter hls will. In the suit filed Friday in Los Angeles County Superior Court, Miss Getty names C. Lansing Hays of Getty Oil and Norris Bramlett, director of the G<!tty Museum in Malibu. Getty died in June at age 83, leaving an estate of $2 billion to $-$ billion. His will was admitted to probate July 7. Miss Getty's suit claims that if a series of c hanges lo the will had not been filed as they were in March, the Getty !amlly would have retained control of the museum and oil company. Instead, the suit claims, Hays now has effect! ve control of Getty Oil and Bramlett has taken con· trol orthe museum. The two men persuaded Getty t.o switch the bulk of his estate from his family to the museum for their own benefit, the suit claims. Record for Write-ins many services lo be performed by South Coast Repertory ov.er the fl ve-year period otthe contract. Alt a consequence of the d<>na· Uon, the agreement calls for the theater to provide m any rccrea· tionaJ programs in the arcu of theater, and also augment the cit y's program s for s ocial services for the poor and aged . The theater company Is re· quired to select three services to perform for the city each year from the following list: -Provide a workshop for school·aged youngsters to pro- vide education in the aspects or the theater. -Provide performances at the city's option for "City of Costa Mesa Command Performances" to promote Costa 'Mesa's park a nd recreation seasonal pro· grams. -Create a scholarship fund for local theater students. -Maintain a community playhouse libr ar y and make availitblc to the city's depart· ment of leis ure services cos· tumes, set pieces and lighting equipment on terms as available to, other theater groups. The Survey St11dy agreeme nt olso cull:s for the theater to matntain a library of thealncal scripts, with lhe city picking up the costs for any roy<1lties on the works. Make SCR faciUues avail•· blc t.o the city for annual dance classes, recitals, music lesUvals and other performing groups. -Undertake a progum or pis y c hodrama (or the han di capped residents otthecity. Initiate a program or "the ater o n th~ green," sc heduled for city parks throughout the year. The agreement also stipulates the theater continue its Actor 's Mime Theater a nd Magic Theater lo present programs in city parks and programs. Those programs have been successfuJ in t.he past. The d ocum ent emphasizes pa r11cipation by seruor ciU~ens and welfare rec ipients in Costa Mesa In acting classes and amateur productions. It a lso calls for special presen· tations for seniors and the poor al reduced theater ticket rates dur· ing the year Childless Couples Said 'Self-satisfied· WASHINGTON <AP) Mar- ried couples who choose not to have children are just as happy, self-satisfied and interested in their community as couples who choose to have children, a new study says. The study, wr-itlcn by two socia l psychologists from the University of Kansas, is based on a survey of 61 married couples in the a rea of Lawrence, Kan. It says that intentionally childless couples are no more selfish than couples who intend to h ave children. Census Bureau reports show that in 1974, almost one-third of all m arried women under 30 had not had children, up from one· fifth in 1967. These cens us r eports s how also that 27 percent of those chHdless women aged 25-29 expected to re· main childless. In the study by Linda Silka, a University of Kansas graduate student, and Sara Kiesler, who 1s doing research in Washington. 21 couples said they never intended Lo have children, 21 couples said they wanted children and 19 were unsure. Among findings in the report: -Intentionally childless co upl es are not mo r e materialistic lhan other couples. -Intentionally childless couples are equally interested in mankind and their communities ' Speculation Sends Gold Prices Up $5 LONDON CAP) -The price of gold shot up nearly $.5 an ounce today o n s peculation that President-elect Jimmy Carter will increase government spend· iog to try to cut unemployment and thereby set off new inflation. Dealers on the London bullion market said more inflation would send investor s scurrying Cor shelter -out of stocks and into gold. Al the close oC trading, the price of an ounce or gold went to $131.625. The rising price was the best since Ma rch 25. The gold price fell during the summer ns ·anxiety deepened ove r t he p o li c y of the Washington-based lnternational Monetary !''Un<t in semng targe quantities of its gold stocks to build a fund to help developing countries. Early In October. gold was down to ju~t over $114 an ounce. a nd enJoyed community ac· uvities to the s ame extent. -Intention ally childless couples and those who were un- sure of wanting children showed less interest in interaction with people, a preference for being alone and were less gregarious than couples intending to have children. -Wives intending no children expressed a greater value for per so nal freedom than d id others. including men. -llus bands inte nding no children w~re likely to have a highly prestigious job and an· ticipated higher incomes than the others. -Wives who did not inte nd lo have children had jobs that were higher than us ual in prestige. "It looks as though intentions not lo have children are not relat- ed to e m ployment aspirations but instead to e mployment suc- cess." the authors write. "As a group, those who had made a de· cision not to have children, in contrast Lo those who had postponed children or were un- sure if they wanted children, were experiencing greater r e· wards from employment and could expect greater rewards in the future." The authors also round that "men were significantly Jess likely than women to embrace feminist goals, had more tradi- tional views about women, were less positive about sharing domestic c hores and were also · more uncomforatble with the idea of having a more successful or well educated spouse than were their wives." Mesa Visitors Robbed in2 Sunday Heists Two Cosln Mesa visitors were r obbed of thei r purses in separate Inc idents Sunday, with two juvcn1le5 arrested In one case. and a high-speed chase in· volved in the other. Manon P. Lococo or Anaheim wa!4 walking back to he,r ear with a friend at South Coast Plaza Sunday afternoon, when a man grabbed her purse, police said. T he woman held onto the handbag for several seconds before being dragged lo lhe pave· m ent In the tug-of-war. The rob· ber ned in a blue 1970Chevrolet. He was followed by wUness John P. CantUn, of Costa Mesa. who told p o lice the pursesnatcher drove up Sunflower A venue ~l high speed. Bergeson Total 34,330 Santa Ana oolice later found the purse, empty or ita reported $380 In cash. Police are looking for th~ Chevrolet, with llcense plate number 3S3 AGJ, provided by the witness. Hours later, Costa Mesa police again r esponded to a purse snatching incident. UU. time in front or an Orange County Transit District bus st.op near Harbor Boulevard and Gisler Street. By GARV GRANVILLE 04 IM O•ll'f ...... SI.ii Final vote figures show that Republican M arlan Bergeson r e- ceived 2,SSO write-in votes In the San Diego County portion of the 74th Assembly District. The late San Diego County · writA'.l·m vote count did nothinf to change the outcome of the 74\h Dhtrlct e lec tion won by Democrat Ron Cordova. Rut it continued a pattern begun in Orange County ·of a strona lO·day write-In camraign by Mrs. Ber1eson. Overal , t.bc 49-year-old Newport Beach Re publican r eceived 34,330· wrl te-ln votes, That vote count is. by rar, the most ever captured by a write-in candidate running ror office in a predomina tely Orange County elfction. With the counting of San Diego's write-in vote, lhe two· county unorru:ial 74th Aaaembly District showed election winner CoT<lova received S8,8S4 votes • The Republican Party's of· ficial nominee, Jlm Slemons. tallied 51,677 votes while Mn1. Berireson received 34,330. Those flguru me•n that Cordova, the nrat Democrat ever elected to represent the strongly Republican dlstrtct. mac!G it into , omce with 40 percent o( the popUlar votP. Combine d . Republican s Slemons and Mrs. Bergeson at· tracted 60 percent of the vote. Those tallies indicate, when voter turnout and unaffiliated voters are considered, that there was, Jillie crossing over of party lines by 74th voters. Republlun dlssatisficatton with Slemons' cand~dacy and scandal-plagued campnign al~ng v.i th Mn. Bergeson'fl populanty apparently turned into a heavy Ber1cson writ~in vote rather. than a swing to a ~mocrat by traditionally st.aunch Republican voters. J ean Mary McCallem, 51, a1JO ot Anaheim, told police two teen· aged boys rode up betide her and took her purse containing $5. The two youths were followed· by Irvine resident Douglas S. Wright, who chased the boya eaat on Gisler. The two bicycle riders dropped lhe puree, which wu retrieved by WriJChl. Both boys were lat.r arrest.cd by police •nd turned over lo . their parenll. Or ange Coast EDITION ' Today's Closing N.Y. Stocks lvoL. 69, NO. 313, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1976 N TEN CENT 1Irvine C.o. Bid • ID Delityed Hearing I By TOM BARLEY Of IM O.lly l'llol Staff Heavy behind-the-scenes bid· 1 ding for control of the Irvine Company led Judge J ames F. Judge to order a two-day delay in l bis Orange County Superior Court hearing today. Lawyers for Irvine heiress 1 Joan Irvine Smith, the Irvine Company, the state and the James Irvine Foundation were ordered lo return \Yednesday with a resume of the la~ers received. Topping the list today was a $28' million offer submitted to the foundation by a COIUOrtium oreanized by Wall Street ftnan- cier Charles Allen and DetrOit developer Alfred Taubman. Lawyers said the Allen- Taubman offer was made im· m ediately after Cadillac Fairview of Toronto increased Its earlier offer of $265 million to $269 million in response to re- newed interest by the Mobil Oil Company. Mobil·s original $200 million of- fer sparked the legal action taken . by Mrs. Smith to bait a sale that, she argued, was unfair to minori- ty s tockholders. Mrs. Smith, the granddaughter of Irvine Company founder James Irvine, holds 22 percent of the Irvine Company's stock. She claims in her lawsuit that the S24 a share represented by the fint Mobil offer is much too lowforthestock. She asked for and got a court order halting disposal of the foundation's 54 .5 percent con- trolling interest in the Irvine Company pending a bearing into the issue. The Federal Tax Reform Act or 1969 compels tbe foundation to divest itself of ils Irvine Com· pany holdings no later than 1983. Representatives for Mobil said today that the oil company is now willing to pay $273 million in cash for the Irvine Company--$11 million less than the ·offer sub-. l'Ditttd by the Allen-Taubman combine. Foundation attorney Howard Privett would only comment to- day tbat his board ol directors has reached no decision on which offer migbl be acceptable to them. Mrs. Smith, who withdrew her objections to the sale of fouoda- t ion stock at a time when Cadillac Fairview appeared to be the successful bidders, would of. fer no comment on the new bids <See DELAYED. Page AZ) ' iAnother Oil 'Price Hike Feared I INii;';h;w Court 1 Bid ·Rejected WASHINGTON CAP> -The Supreme Court refused today lo interfere in a politicaJ corruption trial of Rep. Andrew J. IUnshaw CR-Newport Beach ). The justices turned down a petition filed by Hinshaw seeking a delay in the Orange County perior Court trial now in pro- gress until the Supreme Court disposes or an appeaJ filed by the congressman earlier this year. Hinsha w, a Republican fi rst elected to Congress in 1972, was convicted earlier this year or ac- cepting bribes from the Tandy Corp. in 1972 while the company had matters pending before him as tax assessor for Orange Coun-- * * * ty. He was sentenced to prison for one to 14 years but has remained free pending appeal. In the current case, he is on trial on chai:,ges or fraud, em- bezzlement a nd theft while in of· fice as the tax assessor. Hinsh a w 's a ppeal to the Supreme Court, however, was filed before his lriat a.nd was b ase d o n a challe nge t o California 's grand jury system. Hinsha w sought r e-election this year but was defeated in his district 's Republican primary by Assemblyman Robert Bad.ham < R-Newport Beach) who went on to win the seat in the general -~ection * * * udge Testifie s IJn H insh aw T rial Co n g r e ss m an An drew Hinshaw's lawyer called a judge to the witness stand in Orange County Superior Court today lo •support his a rgument that county I ' ·aloa Leads nMazatlan aclu Race manpower a nd materials are often used for private purposes. Superior Court Judge William L. Murray confirmed for defense attorney John McNicholas that he has made private local and long distance calls oo his county telephone without reimbursing the county for tbe costs. ''I have never been told not to ·do it," Judge Murray explained. •·And I wouldn't know bow lo re- imburse the county even if I wanted to.'' Judge Murray confirmed for McNicholas that he once sum· mooed a county employe ,rrom the county courthouse to help him on a personal matter. O•ilY Piiot l'lleto fly ltic,,.nl Koefl~ J im K1lr oy·s 79 foot ketch Krnlo;; built up & substanllal lead Jn the Los An~eles to Mazatlan race today d :. fresh winds filled ,m from the west along lhe B~Ja tCahfo rn1a coast <See earher latory. Page·A10 l KJaloa 's pos1t1on placed her 292 miles from the start. about 37 miles ahead of the second place 1boat Aorang1 In thJtd place on elapsed time was Whistle Wing 'about 12 mi les astern of Aorang1. •Ragtime , wh ich had been challenging Kialoa for the lead :was farther south than Aorangi f8nd Whistle Wing , but con- siderably west of the rhumbline. He explained that his car broke down that day and he asked the employe to dri ve him to the courthouse. "I was due in court and that seemed like a good way of getting there," he said. SALVAGE FIRM'S ROBERT WESTLAKE STRUGGLES TO GET 'GAMBOL' OFF BEACH 32-footer Was Just One of Fogbound Boat• That Went Aground Along Or•nge Coast Leader on handicap time was Guido Mortarotli 's Ranger 37 Broom lhlda. wmner of the race two years ago. ' Oran!!jj CoaNI "" 4~ ~--. \\'eatber Areas of dense fog along the coast are forecast for Tuesday mornin g . • Otherwise sunny slties with a cooling trend Tuesday. A low tonight near 60 with the high Tuesday in m id-3>5. I NSIDE TODA\' Death blew the whistle on Bob Marlin of Pierre .and Siou.r Fall!, S.D. Since hi! .death Oct. 16, U hal bten ~ that he had a Wife. and family in each city. Stt Page M . ., A .. AH A4 At •M ..... ... ., All A4 •• Hinshaw went back to the wit- n ess s tand to res ume his testimony after Judge Murray left the courtroom and was im- mediately accused by prosecutor William Evans of "dancing around my questions." Judge Frank Domenichini restored order alter a shouting match between opposing lawyers halted Hins haw's account or the method used by the county as- sessor's office while he was in charge or the division to coUect payments for documents pro· vided to the public. Hinshaw. 51, is being tried on allegations that he misused his office in 1972 by allowing county employes to work on his con- gressional campaign and be re- imbursed by the county for lime (SH JUDGE, Pa,eAz) Prot ests on Beach Access Exp~ted Residents o f Buena Vista fro area residents. Boulevard a nd Edgewa t er e problem is based on the Avenue are expected to attend fact that the beach aJong Buena Tuesday's meeting or the Vista and Edgewater IS er de- Newport Be ach Parks, Beaches dicated street right-of-way. and Recreation Commission to There is a public sidewalk that protest city plan5 to insure pubUc uses six feet of the right-of.way access to the beach in front of that varies in width from 30 to 35 their property. feet. City councilmen decided two Over the years since the right- months ago to consider the pro-of-way was dedicated in 1906, blem of frivate use or the public various beacbfront homeowners rigbt-o -way in the Balboa have built patios and done ex- PeniMuJa neighborhood after re-tensive landscaping on tbe beach ceiving a 200·signature petition <See PROTEST, Page A%) Re«!ord tor Write-las Bergeson Total 34,330 By GARY GRANVILLE OtllleOllllJ'°'letSIMt Final vote figures show that RepubUcan Marian Bergeson re- ceived 2,SSO write-in votes in the San Diego County port.ion of the 74th Anembly District. write-in votes . That vote count is, by far. the most ever captured by a write-in candidate running for office in a predominately Orange County election. The late San Diego County With the countlnt of San write-in vote count did notbing to Diego's write-in vote, the two. change the outcome ol the 74th""" county unofricial 14th Assembly Diatrlct election won by District showed election wiMer Democrat Ron Cordova. Cordova received 58,854 votes. But it continued a pattern The Republican Party'• of· be'un in Orange CoW>ty of a ficial nominee, Jim Slemons, stron1 10-day write-in camp-1p ta1Ji~ 51,m votes while Mn. by Mrs. Berreson. Overall, the Bergeson received 3U30. 48-yea.,.old NeJrport Beach Those Utures mean that RepubUcan received 34,330 Cordova,therirstDemocratever elected to represent the strongly Republican dJstrict. made It jnto office with 40 percent of the popular vote. Combine d . Republicans $lemons and Mrs. Bergeson at- tracted 60 percent ol the vote. Those tallies indicate, when voter turnout and unaffiliated voters are considered, that there was little crosalng over of party lines by 74tb voters. Republican dissatls tlcaUon with $lemons' candidacy and scandal.pla1ued camp..tgn along with Mn. Bergetoh's popularity ! (See W&ITE-IN. Pase AZ> , Fog Blanke ts Coast ; 2 Boats Stuck in NB ' Thick fog that blanketed the Orange Coast overnight made navigation impossible for the crews or two boats that went aground in Newport Beach. Capt. Bud Belshe of the Newport Beach lifeguards said none or the people from the two vessels reported any injuries in the mishaps , although one boat was listed as a total loss. The flrsl boat went on the beach at 1 Street at about 7: 30 p.m . whlle trying to find the harbor entrance on a return trip from Catalina. (Related story Page AS) According to Belshe, the 27· foot Santana sailboat began breaking up early today after at· tempts to tow her out of the sur· rune failed. The boat Is owned by Los Angeles resident Bruce Malasky. Her homeport ls Marina del Rey. According to lifeguards, she was carrying a charter group from Newport Beach and so was headed tor Newport Harbor when the mishap occu.m!d. The second ground occurred at about 5 a .m. when a :12-root Newport went arround at lotb Street. The boat, the Gambol, was oper~ted by Robert Meyer who had bl1 three chlldren aboard. I Meeting In Qatar Dec. 15 By tile Associated Press The oil cartel seems sure to raise oil ptices in the new year, a ~ove that probably will mean higher prices at the gas pump, in heating and electricity bills, at ~rline ticket counters and many other places. Ministers of the 13-nation Organization of Petroleum Ex· porting Countries meet Dec. lS in the Persian Gulf sheikdom or Qatar lo discuss oil prices, but the most influential members have already said they want in· creases ranging from 10 percent 'to 25 percent. Even Saudi Arabia, the largest oil exporter and the most reluc- tant in recent years to raise prices, bas said it wants a "moderate" increase. Thal has been interpreted as about 10 per· cenL . Iran. the second largest oil ex- port.er, it thought to favor an in· crease in the area of 25 percent, while Venezuela, another in· fluential OPEC member, wants at least 15 percent. The spokesman at OPEC head- quarters in Vienna, Ahmed Zaberi, s aid last month be believed the price would be "ad- justed," which in oil talk means increased. The present OPEC price of $11.51 for a 42-gallon barrel of standard grade crude bas been in effect since Oct. 1, 19'15. OU ministers considered raising prices at their meeting in Bali in May, but look no action, largely because of Saudi opposition. Each 10 percent increase in the price of OPEC oil, if passed along entirely to consumers, would add about a penny a gallon to the price of gas in the United States. This takes into consideration the fact that the United States im· ports 40 percent of its oil. In coun- tries importing all their oil the impact would be much greater. A price increase would also be fell wherever else oil figures In the economy. Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, the Saudi oil minister. said in August that some OPEC members want· ed a "very drastic" increase - "somewhat similar to what hap- pened in 1973." Arab oil nalions put an embargo on exports dur- ing the October 1973 Mideast war. and OPEC followed with the quadrupling or oil prices. O..IJ ~let Slffl l>llM• Qlleftl Bo .. red Daryl Pfischner is Newport Harbor High School's 1~6 homecoming queen. The 17-year-old senior is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J . Stanley Pfischner or Newport Beach. ~ " , r A2 0A1L v Pllor N Candy Bar Cost To Rise NEW YORK (AP > Candy lovers who watched pnccs rise during the sugar shortage aire groaning at tbe PCOSJ>e<'l or more bad news next year the 20 cent I chocolate bar. 1 This time, the culprit is the I cocoa bean. • The Nestle Company Inc. of I While Plains. N. Y ., announced to- day lhat it was rais10g whole~ale prices on a variety of chocolate products. At the retail level, a typical chocolate bar will go from 15to20 cents, the company said. 1 In some places, candy bars in vending machines already sell for 20 cents and, presumably, could go up to 25 cents after the new increases take effect. The Nestle move was not unex- pected since the Hershey Corp .. M&M and Peter Paul announced similar price boosts late last month. Figuring out the percentage of I increase gets complicated because the companies tried lo sweeten the impact of the higher prices by increasing the size of lheircandy bars. A Nes tle milk chocolate bar, for example, will grow from H 11 to 111~ ounces; a Hershey m ilk chocolate bar is going from 1.2 to J .35 ounces. The Nestle bar is smaller -1114 1s equal to 1.25. The smaller, cheaper Nestle bar costs 13.3 cents per ounce; lhe larger, higher-price variety will cost 16 cents per ounce; the . increase is 20 percent. For Hershey, the per-ounce price in· crease works out to 19 percent. Nestle said the wholesale price increases will go into effect early m 1977, after stocks of the tS-ccnt chocolate bars a re used up. Speculation Sends Gold Prices Up $5 LONDON (A P ) The price of gold shol up nearly $5 an ounce toda y on speculation that President-elccl Jimmy Carter will increase government spend· ing to try to cut unemployment and thereby set orr new inflation. Dealers on the London bullion market said m ore inflation would ~ send investors scurrying for ' shelter out of stocks and into gold. At the close of trading, the price of an ounce of gold "'ent to $131.625. The rising pnce w:is the best since March 25. The gold price fell during the· summer as anxiety deepent>d o ver the p o li cy o r the Washington-based International Monetary t' uno in se111nf! rarge quantities of its gold stocks to bwld a rund to help developing countnes E3rly in October. gold was down to just over $114 an ounce The enthusiasm was rcnected in the pnce of gold mining shares on the London Stock Exchange Gains amountea to a pouno I about $1.62 l or more a 'ihareov('r .J wide range of lht• 00 or so South •\fncan gold mines quott'\J on tlll' ~xchange Seniors Show Art Projects Some or Newport Reach's s e nior <'lll 7f'O'I have thei r artwork on d1s plC1y at city hall this month as part or thl' city ~ Arts Comm1ss1on d1Splay of loc..il arttSts A commis,.lon s pokesman said tbe exhibit which features photo graphs and oil painting wu<; prirnarily a rra nged through the IUtired Senior Vol\Jnlcer Pro ~ram . although some md1vidual senior citizens have nlso con ) tributed works. The artwork will be on c.l1l\p lay 1 until Dec. 1. ORANGE COAST "' DAILY PILOT .... P1 ..... .. Pre,•Wt'll •M ....... ,y.., JH-" ,.., .. , YliC'•Pttt""""' •ndc;..,,_.,.,Mt~t TA9Mt\W'°"tt CO•''>' T~M.h • M ....... M M.f,,..Q•ft.Q E0t•~ <A.f, .. ," Le.•\ ••m..,.,, ...,,. A\\nl'1U'\I MAft .. 01"'1["htl)I" Ofllcu (Mt•AM't J)ftWr I ""y\l,_t \."Ow"• «M•<f'I 1 •4fll <·•·~¥'" \11,.., "unt1noton .-.tr" t tf t\ tt.~"' "°4•••w•'l'I \.tMleft.At " V••te• J\)f)t \A,,,., Mlo ... t •I \titn 01• .. ,..,,_.,......, Telephon• (114)642-4321 Clu•lfled AdvertlMno 142-5e711 :;::~ !."! o::O'~•,c~~,,':t':!.~'':,fe~:. m•Utr or edwt•tt"Mt~h f\•rJttft ""•• b• ,,.,. .. VC•tt •U~twt •MU•I Oil'r"'''"Oft t i (..., . ...,.,,_ .. • ._...., <••» "°''' .. pold ., °''"" ~o "lffor"I• $t;•h t1•t1ef\ OY C.l tfltf U t6 -::.1:\f."...~ ~:~,:• -..w~. 11111111.1, Monnav. November e 1979 ~lty flllot ""'°"'MO MAP INDICATES NEW COASTAL COMMISSION BOUNDARY FOR NEWPORT BEACH Old 1,000-yard Standard Out, But New Law Apparently Won't Apply to Fully Developed Land Front Page Al DELAYED. • until they are discussed in the hearing before Judge Judge. It was learned today that at least two other business interests have entered the bidding picture since the counter bidding de· veloped betw.een Mobil, Cadillac Fairview and the Allen-Taubman consortium. Lawyers participating in the hearing refused to identify the new bidders. But lhey agreed that heavy interest in lhe future of the Irvine Company could end with the organization being sold for as much as $300 million. 'Book Week' For Children Starts Today Children's Book Week got un· d<>r way today in Newport Beach with a wide range of programs Libr a r y ~pokesma n Ryn a Roth~rg 1'.11ct lhC'rc will be a ~eries of onl!-time pajama s tory t1m <·s at three d1ffc-rcnt hranC'hcs. a travel ing showcase tf th1• vear's best in children's hooks and three progra ms The pajama s tory hours for 1•h1lrlren ages rour to seven will begin at 7 tonight at the Corona del Mar branch, 420 Marigold Ave. Tuesday it will be at Mariners. 2005 Do~er Drive, and Wednesday at Balboa, 100 E. Balboa Blvd. Tht' l'hlldrcn's Book Showe<•')<· \\Ill he on d1spla~ <it 11,dboa ;incl Mariners through Wednesday . ind at West Newport Children's L.ibrary and Corona del Mar from Thursdav toSaturdav. Tut>sday, Delore:. ·Bowles from :\•''-' p111 l t-:l('mt•nlan· School will tdl Thi' T .11<' of Pdf'r Rabbit" lo d11l1lr 1•n Jj!<'" lhrt'C' t•1,1x 111 a pr11i:r.11n lwginn1ni:: al 4 11 111 m tlw mull1purpo:ot! room next lo '.\l.1r1 nC'r<. Ii br:i ry \l I lj pm sh1• \\il l 1!1\f• ii lt•c turl· and .,how s h d('s of her \:1S1I to HC'.1tr1x l'olt1·r's home 1n ~.nJ?IJnri 011 Wrdn1.•o;d .1~ a t 1.:m p.m., Turnlt•v Walk1·r will J(1ve a bOJ>k 1ntrodur t1on f11r 'Plllll! rc..id1·r<; in the Mannt•rs multipurpose room. Walker will rend from some of his favonte books. In :.itld1t1on . thr· ind1vitlu;i l hra11rh1·s urc ha vinJ! a my~tf'ry honk rontc·.;t for rhilclrcn. Wm Ol'l ll 'W 111 rt'l'l'l \'C Ol'W books PROTEST .. • lolhewatersideoflhesidewalk. Some aJso have erected fences and posted private properly signs . City officials have recom- mended that the city council en- force a policy of removing the signs, patios and fences. but let s ome homeowne rs maintain their landscaping, depending on location. Councilmen r eferred lhe re- commendation to the PB and R Commission. which will discuss the problem at its 7:30 p.m. meeting Tuesday. WRITE-IN .. apparenu,rturned inw a he1vy Bergeson write-in vote ralbtr. than a swing to a Democrat by traditionally alaunctrRepubllcan voten. Newport ~reparing For New Coast Law By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of llM 01llf Piiot Sutt Newport Beactl officials are preparing for the new coastal re· gulations that go inw effect Jan. 1. Dick Hogan, director of the city's Department of Community Development, bas been meeting , with representatives of the county and the existing state coastal commission to iron out some of the fine points of the new coastal law passed by the Legislature this summer. Hogan says the new law is aimed al creating a coastal com- mission that eventuall)' will exist only to approve general coastal plans submitted by local govern- ments and to hear appeals. One of the major changes from the old commission, formed rour years ago by the passage of Prop. 20, is the boundary of the area in which any construction requires a coastal permit. The boundary area under the old law ran 1,000 yards inland from the wate r line. The new line has been altered lo include all large parcels of un· developed land in the city -such as Irvine Company holdings and the Banning tract in West Newport -as well as important wildlife areas such as the Upper Bay. The new permit zone ex- tends inland to lake in the UC I Rvine mars h as well Basically, the new law says that the c oastal commission must establish a set of temporary procedures by Jan 30, and permanent procedures by May 1. These procedures probably will include decisions on whelher lo maintain the regional com- missions as well as on melhods of granting permits to be used by the cities According to Hogan's pre - li minary analysis of lhe new law. coastal cities may issue so-called coastal development permits, on· ce the tempo rary procedures have been adopted by lhe com· mission. In order to do so. Hogan says cities will be required lo pass a resolution stating they will comply with thosP proredures. The only exception to city con- t ro) of these development permits is property on the waterfront extending inland 300 feet or to the nearest street, whichever is further. The state commission will retain control of that land. Local governments will have until July 1. 1977, to make a de· cision about the continued ad- ministration of permits. The option, according to Hogan, is to let the coastal com- mission take over and prepare a "local coastal program" or to have the local agency prepare its own program. Preparation of a local pro- gram by an individual gov- ernmental entity has to await the coastal commission's adoption of policies and procedures ror these programs. That deadline is April 1. Once the commission has set its policies, the local agencies that are preparing their own local coastal programs have un- til Jan. 1. 1980, to complete those programs. Generally, Hogan said, local coastal programs are to include the land use elements of that agency's general plan, zoning or· dinances and other regulations affecting the coastal zone. Hogan s aid the intent of the new law seems lo be to exempt certain kinds of work, such as improvements to existing single· family homes, that require permits under the existing law. There is also a provision of the new law which would allow the coastal commission to grant ex· clusions of specifi c areas from the permit process. Generally. he said, the ex· clusions seem ed to.be aimed at low density residential area - where houses are four to an acre -or areas that already arc fully developed. City manager Robert Wynn said city officials probably will recommend that the city take on permit granting powers and lhat it prepare its own plan. OellY ...... S-tlf "'"'- l.APO PALI EXCHANGE BATON lN SO.MILE RE.AV Newport Eftf'ft s.tvrdlly Drawe 1IO Aunnw1 • Hwatington Slayings Husband Faces 2 M11rder Raps Court arraignment on two murder charges is scheduled Tuesday for William Gene Campbell, jus t hours before separate funeral services for hjs wife and her ex·husband whom police allege he killed Thursday in Huntington Beach. Campbell is accused of slaying Mrs. Beverly Campbell, 39, of 17847 Beard Lane, and Verne E . Howell, 42, who were riddled with bullets in an upstair~ bedroom ot the condominium apartment. Campbell, 48, is held without bail at Huntington Beach City . J~l on the dual murder charges and faces further counts includ- ing assault with intent to commit murder. The suspect allegedly fired a shot at his wife's lO·year-old daughte r by a previous mar- riage, who apparently witnessed the shooting, poll ce said. The youngs ter fled to a neighbor's home in hysteria and called police to report the shoot· in gs. "Somebody just s hot m y mother ... " the police dis - patcher was told in the 10: 14 p. m. call , as a car's tires were heard squealing at high speed in the background. An all·points bulletin was im- medlateJy issued for Campbell, who had reportedly been sharing the residence near Newland Street and· Talbert Avenue with Mrs . Campbell and her ex· husband. Howell recently returned from Saudi Arabia, where he was re- portedly a pipefitter for the F1uor Corporation industrial and scien- ti!ic conglomerate. The Campbells were separated and the suspect had reportedly been staying with friends, but was captured on Saturday at the Mediterranean Village Apartments in Costa Mesa by a 32·man squad of Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa detec· lives, patrolmen and SWAT team members. The s uspect surrendered peacefully after police telephoned bis apartment and or- dered him to come out. Mediterranean Village tenants in surrounding apartments had previously bee n quietly evacuated. The suspect is currently on parole for armed robbery and escape and had recently been named in an arrest warrant charging him with burglarizing <in outl~t of El Don Liquors, his former employer. Coroner 's de puties said aix bullets were fired from a .88 c aliber revolver alle1edly wielded by Campbell. rour ot the slugs hit his wtro and two atruck Howell. Police said Campbell had been fired from his Job as a liquor swre clerk and separated from Mrs. Campbell within tbepaat mooth. The suspect was alaoreportedly jailed in Westminster the day before the double sl~s and bailed out by Howell; who co- signed for a bond peodina a court appearance. Howell was Mrs. Campbell's second husband. detectives said. Busim!ssman Sam Gurley Deadat59 Memorial Services will be held Thursday in Corona del Mar for prominent Newport Beach busi- nessman Sam Gurley Jr. who died Friday. Mr. Gurley, who had livecnn the Harbor Area s ince 196t, was president or Tubesales, a Los Angeles business. He was 59. A native of Illinois, Mr. Gurley was graduated from the University of Missouri and was a veteran of World War II, serving as a commander in the U.S. Navy. Prior to moving lo the Harbor Area, Mr. Gurley and his family lived in lhe New York City area. Mr. Gurley's local affiliations included Hoag Memorial Hospital's 552 Club and the board of governors of the BaJboa Bay Club. He was also a member of Big Canyon Country Club and the Jonathan Club. In addition, Mr. Gurley was a 32nd degree Mason for 30 years. Services will be held at 2 p .m. a t Pacific Vie w Mortuary Chapel. Mr. Gurley leaves his widow, Norma, of Newport Beach; a son, Phillip Gurley, of New York: a da ughter, Susan Cook of Newport Beach; a sister. Freda Freeman, of Washington, and three grandchildren. -Peanuttiest Tell All, Visit Plains LONDON (AP) -The tabloid Sun invited its readers today to enter a peanut contest. "There are millions of protein-packed peanuts to be won. and a fabulous chance to see where they come from," said the paper, which has a circulation of four million. The first prize is a 14-day trip for two to the Deep South, including stops in Atlanta and Plains, Ga .. Ten runners-up will each get a giant pot of peanut butter, a gallon of peanut oil and a pound of peanuts a week for a year . "To enter, just tell us the nuttiest thing you ever did." said the Sun. First One SU«!ressf td More Relay Races Seen for Newport The organizer or a 50-rnile re- lay race in Newport Beach says •this weekend's event was so suc· ressful. there will be more or them. Bob Hogue, a Newport Beach resident and amateur distance runner, said 16 teams competed in Saturday's event. The race started at Corona del Mar High School and followed a rive-mile course. Each runner on the 10-member teams ran five miles. The overaJl winning lime or lhree hours and 19 minutes was turned in by a team or teenagers from the San Fernando Valley who called themselves the LAPD· Pals. By division, the winners were: 15 to 19-year -olds, the LAPD Pals : 19 to 39-year-olds. the Newport Beach Barracudas; 40 to 49-year -olds. the LAPD Over lhe mu Gang ; 50 to 59-year-olds, the Newport Beach Seniors, and Women's Div i sion, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office women deputies. Hogue said the race In Newport was organized because the Bar· racudas bad been Invited lo com· pete against a cross country team from the Los Angeles Police Department siJC monUul ago. "We bad such a good time, we decided to have a return match," llogue explained. Just to make It rntcresting, he and his team- mates began issuing invitations at other running events and by Saturday. they had 16 teams. f'ro"' Page Al JUDGE .•. actually spent on the Newport Beach Republican's election ef- fort. Hinshaw and bis lawyer learned today in the courtroom that the United Slat.es Supreme Court has rejected a move w de· lay the trial until McNicholas can gel a ruling on an appeal filed wilh a local court. McNicholas commented that he was not s urprised by the high court decision. He saJd be plans no further appeals during the course of the trial. McNlcholu is currently ap- pealing the outcome of an earlier trial in which Hinshaw was con· victed of bribery charges ala() stemrnlng from his terrn of office as county a11es1or. He has been senl~ced to one to 14 years In state prison. He ls fl'ee pending the outcome of the ap- peal with the Fourth District Court or A ppc1ls In San Bernardino ,• Saddlebaek EDITI ON VOL. 69, NO. 313,.2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANG E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1976 Afieruoon N.Y.Stoeks I ""' TEN CENT Bidding . for. Irvine Delays ··Bearing. By TOM BARLEY Of tlM 0.11., l'tleUutt Heavy behind-the-scenes bid· ding for control of the Irvine Company led Judge James F. Judge to order a two-day delay ln his Ora nge County Superior 1 Court hearing today. Lawyers for Irvine heiress 1 Joan Irvine Smith, the Jrvtne Company. the state and the James lrvine Foundation were ordered to r eturn Wednesday with a resume of the latest offers received. Topping the list today was a $284 million offer submitted to the foundation by a consortium organized by Wall Street fin an· cier Charles Allen.,. and Detroit developer Alf fed Tabbman.- Lawyer s said the Allen · Taubman offer was made im· med i ate ly afte r Cad illac Fairview or Toronto increased it.a earlier offer or $265 million lo $269 million in response lo r e- newed interest by the Mobil Oil Company. Mobil's original $200 million of· fer sparked the leiaJ action taken . by Mrs. Smith to halt a sale that, she argued, was unfair lo minori· ly stockholders. Mrs. Smith, the granddaughter of I r vi n e Company fo under James Irvine, hold$ 22 percent of the Irvine Company's stock. She claims in her lawsuit that the $24 a share represented by the first Mobil offer is much too lowfortbestock. She asked for and 'ot a court order halting d isposal. of the foundatiop's 54.S percent coo· trolling interest in the Irvine Company pending a hearing lnto the.issue. The Federal Tax Reform ~~ ot l969 compels the f°'*2aUoo to divest itself of its Jrvlne Com. pany hold.iDga no later than 1983. Represent'4llies !• Mobil •d today that the oil COIJlJ>llllY is DOW willine to pay $273 mlllico in cash for the Irvine Company-UJ. million less than the ofter sub-. mltted by tbe Allen· Taubman combine. Foundation attorney Boward Privett would only comment tq.. day that his board ol diredo~ has reached no decialon on wbiell offer might be acceptable to them. Mrs. Smith, who withdrew her objections to the sale ol founda- tion . stock at a time when Cadillac Fairview appeared to be the successful bidders, would ot- ter no comment on the new blds <See DELAYED, Paie AZ) Another Oil Price Hike Feared No Interf e r ence Hinshaw Court Bid Rejected WASIUNGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court ref~ today to interfere in a political corruption trial of Rep. Andrew J. Hinshaw CR-Newport Beach). The justices turned down a petition filed by Hinshaw seeking a delay in the Orange County Superior Court trial now in pro· gress until the Supreme Court disposes of an a ppeal filed by the congressman earlier this year. Hinshaw, a Republican first elected lo Congress in 1972, was convicted earlie r this year of ac- cepting bribes from the Tandy Corp. lo 1972 while the company had matters pending before him as tQ assessor for Orange Coun- ty. He was sentenced to prison for one to 14 years but has remained free pending appeal. In the current case. he is on ~trial on charges or fraud, em- t beulemenl and theft while in or· • fice as the tax assessor. Viejo MAC To D iscuss I Housmg Plan I The Mission Viejo Municipal J Advisory Cou ncil convenes , tonight at 7:30 p.m. in what.could be a marathon-length session on I low e<>st housing, a shelter care l home proposal and appointment of a new coun~il member to a va-l cantseat. ' The meeting will include pre· I sentations by Reed F lory . manager of the hoU5111ft division o f the O r a nie Count y En· vironme n tal Manage m e nt Agency , and Carole Neustadt. representing the county Depart· meot or Mental Health IO the shelter home debate The latter issue is expected to raise considerable discussion at tonight's meeting as a large number of community residents have voiced opposiUon to the pro- ject, which is aimed to divert troubled teenagers from deten· tion. The meeting wlll take place m the MAC offices. Hi n s h a w's appeal t o t he Supreme Court, however, was filed before his trial and was based o n a c h a lle n ge l o California's gra nd jury system. Hinshaw ·sought r e-election this year but was defeated in his district's Republican primary by Assemblym an Robert Badham (R-Newport Be ach) who went on to win the seat in the general election. Mediator To View Contract Representatives of Saddleback VaUey Unified School District teache rs and tr usl«s today began meeting with a mediator in an attempt to iron out their dif. rerences over an ,employment contract. The mediator h~ been as- signed by the state's Educational Employment Relations Board . He wilJ have 15-calendar days to try lo bring about an agreement between the t eacher s a n d trustees. If mediation is unsuccessful, then the EERB would initiate a fact-r10ding process which may take 30 days or longer. Howeve r, John Cooper, the trustees' chief negotiator. s aid mediation "has every possibility of succeeding." The trustees declared a n im- passe in negotiations after the teachers reject ed their "last. best <SHer." Teachers, however, attempted lo m ake a counter· offer and continue negotiations. R e prese n t atives of the teachers were unavailable for com{llent this morning. Teachers have contended that trustees are not being fair or re · asonable with them in negolla· lions. They say the district's last contract proposal lncluded less than a proposal made by the dis· trict on J une 2. Too Close for Cmnfort AP Wlr•,tlo•• A single-engine plane resJ.s against the f ence o( St. Casimir's Lithuanian Ce~tery-in Chicago where it c ras hed shortly a fte r takeoff from the city's Midway Aiport. PilQt Henry Szmanowski and passenge r Robert Orlando escaped with minor cuts and bruises. Childless Folks Happy Stati.stics Say Kids Don't Cause Changes WAS HJNGTON (AP) -Mar· ried couples who choose not to have children are JUSt as happy. self-satisfied and interested in their community as couples who choose lo have children, a new study says. The s tudy, written by two social psychologists from the University of Kansas, is based on a survey of 61 married couples in the area or Lawrence, Kan. It cays that intentionally childless couples are no more selfish than couples w ho intend to have Donkey Game Set Wednesday El Toro High School's fourth annual donkey basketball game will begin at 7:30 p.m. Wednes· day. children. Census Bureau reports show that in 1974, almost one-third of all married women under 30 had not had children, up from one- fifth in 1967. These census reports show also that 27 percent of those childiess H e Was Down But Not Out RIVER SIDE CAP) -A hitchhiker stabbed James Davis four times but that did.n 't stop the 63-year-old Perris resident. After allegedly stabbing Davis and commandeering his car, Riverside County sheriff's de· puties recounted, the hitchhiker started to drive away. Altho\lih badi y hurt, Davis picked up a rock. hurled it through the car• window. and bit the man on the head. , I · women aged 25-29 expected to re- main childless. lo the study by Linda Silka, a University of Kansas graduate student, and Sara Kiesler, who is doing research in Washington, 21 couples said they never intended to have children, 21 couples said they wanted children and 19 were unsure. Among findings in the report: -Inte ntionally childless couples are not more materialistic than other couples. -Intentionally childless couples are equally interested ln mankind and their communities and enjoyed community ac· tivitles lo the same extent. -Intentionally childless couples and those who wer-e un- sure of wanting children showed less interest in interaction with people, a preference for being alone and were less gregarious than couples intending to have children. <See COUPLES, Page AZ) Meet ing In Qatar Dec. 15 By Ute Aaaoclated Presa \' The oU cartel seems sure to raise oil prices in the new year, a move that probably will mean higher prices at the gas pump, in beating and electricity bills, at airline ticket counters and many other places. Ministers of the 13-nation Organization of Petroleum Ex- porting Countries meet Dec. lS in the Persian Gulf sheikdom of Qatar to discuss oil prices, b\lt. the most influential members' have already said they want iJl. creases ranging from 10 percent to 25 percent. Even Saudi Arabia, the largest oil exporter and the most reluc- tant in recent years to rais~ prices, bas said it wants a "moderate" increase. That bu been interpreted as about 10 per- cent. lran, the aecond largest oil ex· porter, is thought to favor an in· crease in the area of 25 percent, while Venezuela, another in- fluential OPEC member, wants al least 15 percent. The spokesman at OPEC head· quarters in Vienna, Ahmed 'Zaheri, s aid last month he believed the price would be "ad- j usted," which in oil talk means increased. The present OPEC price or $11.51 for a 42-galloo barrel ol standard grade crude bas been in effect since Oct. 1, 1975. Oil ministers considered raising prices at their meeting in Bali in May, but took no action, largely because of Saudi opposition. Each 10 percent increase in Uie, price ~f OPEC oil, ii passed along entirely lo consumers, would add about a penny a gallon to ~ <See OIL, Page AZ) lo. Saddleback Stamp Club Sets Meeting, . The Saddleback St.amp Club will hold a stamp auction Wed- nesday at 7 p.m. in lbe library at Los Allsos Intermediate School, 25171 Moor Ave.nue, Mij. sion Viejo. Addltional information on ~~ club or tbe meeting is avaliab ~ by calllne Jim or Becky Roac , 493-0309. fl• \f\• I Coasl Trustees, however , contend they are doing all they can under the s tat e 's new collective bargaining law without giving up their authority and decision. making powers. Students and faculty members riding 10 donkeys and following the rules of regular basketball will compete in the game. The faculty won the game last year. ·The public is Invited to attend the annual aiame. Tickets are S2 for adults and $1.50 for children. The c ar c rashed a nd the hitchhiker was arrested on foot a half mile away. Investigators identified the hitchhllcer as Em- mett McAllister , 33. otSan Diego. Crossroads Class: J .. Weather Areas of dense fog along the coast are forecast for Tue s da y m o rnin g . Otherwise sunny skies with a cooling trend Tuesday. A low tonight near 60 with the high Tuesday in mid-805. I NSID E TODA~ Death ~ the whUt~ on Bob Mortin of Pi~ and Saour F'olLt, S.D. s~ his death Oct. 15. it boa bem ~that he had. o wife and /omil11 in toeh cU11. ~ Page A4. It "' Alt •• •• •••• .... "'· H 411 •• •• S addleback l' alleg Growth Pollution Soars By WILUAll SCB&EIBEa Of .... CMllly ...... M.it Though it's too small for the St.ate Air Resources Board to consfder a "critical area," the Saddleback Valley is getting al· tention by that agency and others as ll continued lo grow and become more polluted. . The valley is actually a small part of a critical area encom· pass ing the entire Los Ang~les "air basin." There are several such ..egional entities now cov· ered by the ARB's Air Quality Maintenance Program. Under the proiram, each air b.uin is slated to develop a plan lnvolvtng state and local eovem· ment.a and private cltUens, de· aiped to maintain or reduce serlOUt air pollution levels. "Tbere'I reaUJ nothl.n1 the ARB can do directly to attack the polluUon problem 1n local 1ub- regional areas Ute the Sad· dleback Valley ," said ·Dale Secord, onetime Orange Cotmty conservationist and now a n employe of tbe ARB in Los • Angeles. "It can be frustrating at times because we know tbe problem is gettine worse there as things build up but there la not much we can do about it,·· be 1dded. But an ARB official in Sacramento, who uked that bis name be withheld, said bis agen- cy has been fightinl "behind tbe scenes" to influence decisions that ml1bt. have a bearing on urban rrowth ln areas such as . the S.ddleback Valley. The official said the ARB has 'been nerottaUnc with regional water quality control boards ln the "critlcal areu•• In an effort to lnduce approval ol sucb t.b1np u 1ewac• treatment fldlitles wUb leu tb an maximum capacity. "We are pushing for them to use the Joweat population forecut.a J n determ.lnina what kind ol service facilities will be buUt in tbeae areas most heavily affected by air pollution.'' the ol· ficial said. Acc:prding lo Secord. the S.d- dlebac k Valley, while not a critical area in itself, la "re· cognlzed by the ARB as a growth area wlth a potential for In· creased pollution levels." Edward Camarena, chief of Or~e County's office of the Southern Callfornla Air Pollution Control Dt1trlct, said the paten. tial for HriOUI pollUlloo In the valley has alreaely been realised. "Jt 11 already an area where the air quality 1tandardl an a• ~ many days of t.M year aDd by a eootlderabW marsla, '' c&ee oaowTB, Pase Al>· ~ -Friendly Business BJ ANNE COOPER ou ... oa11y l't ... Maff Jobn Porter, director of Crouroada at Dana Hilt. High School. characterises the altemaUve school program u a friendly bu1iaea1 in which stu- dent.a are tbe client.a. "Our purpose is to make sure tidl ln the prorram get a solid 1econdary education and do aome public aervlce wort," be amd. • Houaed lo portables behind Dana Hllll High School. CroJ1road1 baa lTS students enrolled tn it.a aecond year, an4\ a . waJUn1ll1toUO. About ·two-thirds of t)le Cro11road1 1tudent body com' from Dana HJU1, one-third from San Clemente Hieb School. L :. Sludm\I spend ba1f their llllW' la UM portables, lt'UdJtnl, ud the otMr half out ln tbe ClQlll• munlty, involved ID pubUc Ml'Yice work, rell&ed. to educa- t.lon mddne, law or eeoloO. "We fHD·flO$» our 1t\lclut (8ee 1'11JDH~S, .... AZ) ~ . - .... Mn •• Monday, Nowmbef 8, 1976 ; , A z DAIL V-PILOT SB Boundary · '"itO<i';ft..lo" Ola Whites·oal9 ., Carter Plans 'Changes .'Approved Robert Ferguson, director of l>Janning and development for the Saddleback district, said the atate's Board of Equalization is the next agency which will bave to approve the change. Tbe transfer involves portions of the Nellie CaU Ranch and · Alicia Gardens developments in southwest Laguna Hills. The land now is split between tbe two dlstricts. Officials ot both districts believe the change will Msure a comm unity oriented ~ogram. I Tbe total as$essed valuation of the two developments is esUmat· ed at $24 million with district pro- perty taxes annually totaling almost $1.5 million. Saddleback administrators have es'limated the cost of educating children living in these future developments at almost $1.4 million. Thus, they expect to I cealize about $82,260 surplus in· ~me. A transfer of 885 acres of un- developed land from the \Capistrano Unified to Sad- dleback Valley Unified School District is expected to receive fmal approval by the first of the year. . The Orange County Board of ~ducation: approved the boun- ttary change this week. Trustees in both districts as well as the Orange County Committee on School District Organization pre· 1 viously approved the chan~e. COUPLES • • -Wives intending no children expressed a greater value for 'personal freedom than did others, including men. -Husbands intending no, children were likely to ha.ve a highly prestigious job and an- ticipated higher incomes than 'tbe others. -Wives who did not intend to• have children had jobs that were higher than usual in prestige. ''It looks as though intentions not to have c.hildren are not relat- ed to employment aspirations but instead to employment suc· cess," the authors write. ''As a group, those who had made a de- cision not to have children. in contrast to those who bad postponed children or were un· sure if they wanted children, wen experiencing greater re- wards from employment and · could expect greater rewards in the future." . The authors also found that "men were significantly less likely than women to embrace feminist goals, had more tradi· tional views a bout women, were less positive about sharing domestic chores and were also 10ore uncomforatble with the tdea of having a more successful CJT well educated spouse than were their wives." Saddle back Optimists Set Youth Honors The Mi ssion Viejo Optimist C.:lub will honor she intermediate school students as part or the na· tional organization's Youth AP. predation Week Tuesday. The students, Jana Black and Darren Parada from Serrano, Steve Babic and Michele Gibbs from Los Alisos and Meg Potock aed Mickey Parada from La Paz, w;n be recognized during the club's regular meeting at 7:1S a .m. The appreciation week has been organized to recognize the youths in the area who willingly participate in school and com· mmtity activities. Jack Wilcox . the club '~ chairman or youth activities, Is coordinating the event, O~ANGE COASr sa l•1!1irJQI 111 ~r.::.~~~:;:r. ::;::i;:.::;~~:;. "'" """''''""ee-.... ,..... ....... u ..... '9 •llO"•--.. , .......... ""*' '"' C..•• Mn.I, ... .,_, IH.o< .. , Hw•t ........ IH<h/-~ Vell••· ,,.1.,,, ~dd••C>atllt VelltY ~ l..,... 11te<111So<11" coon."".,........,..., 1<11· j ,.... '' -·~• \ll•ml<IY' --.... Tllo! t='."~':~~!'.'1.~.~o~~;~,:'.._m "'"' IH• ·-... -,.,..,.0.ftt ...... Pvtlti ... Jeoa.coooy v~ "'"'*•• •"4 G.-.i--T-•• •-Eclllt< .......... _._ Nl•n<09t119 £0.1 ... 0..rlttN,l-••tMf't• IMO A\\l\f•M M.91'119•"9 EdllCW\ Sectdltbtck Valley Office mo• l • ""' "° .. •• s... 00090 F ,_, Ofllc11 I ' H...if;:t~ 't~~ ~ :fi'.;.'.!i. =·••8 L•Q~ .. 8tt<h: llMG~•M•MI • TelepllOne (71•)~tl Cf1talflff Ad111n1111111 "t·M1I s.dO!tM<•V•llty-Oflfto . H1..Q10 ,,,..., St• a. ....... ••s.ot'° =:.·r: :.::.o;::.~:~: .. ~ ""•Ut -, Or t 4!h t ttlUfftfAt\ ftff'tlf\ t'NV k ,..,..,,. ... •111\ov\ t'4tl•I 11Hmluloft •• c.y11e111-. •t-Cll<l M•I-i.altt at Cott• Mou, (11111••••· luh(•lfll•• "' a:···· 0 If =~·:, :=:!..::,~ _,,. ; mllllor1 ' . ... Ch11rch Fight Birds of a Pretty Feather o.oy Piiot si.11 ""'• 'fbese birds, Wendy Potter, 16, (left) and Pam Maple. 24, probably wouldn't have dif· ficuJty finding s anctuary anywhere, but they've settled in Laguna Beach. Laguna's beaches have drawn large collections of beachgoers with th«> unseasonably warm weather. With residents Jike these, no wonder they call it the Art Colony. ChoeOiate Price Diked l Candy Bars May Soon Sell for 20 Cents NEW YORK (AP> -Candy similar price boosts late last lovers who watched prices rise • mon,h. during the sugar shortage are Figuring out the percentage of groaning at the prospect of more increase gets complicated bad news next year: the 20-cent because the companies \ried to chocolate bar. sweeten the impact of the higher This time, the culprit is the prices by increasing the size of cocoa bean. their candy bars. The Nestle Cqznpany Inc. of A Nestle milk choeolate bar, White Plains, N.Y., announced to· for example, will grow from 11/ii day thai it was raising wholesale to 11/.a ounces; a Hershey milk prices on a variety of chocolate chocolate bar is going from 1.2 to products. At the retail level, a 1.35 ounces. The Nestle bar is typical chocolate bar will go from smaller -1114 is equal to 1.25. 15 to 20 cents. the company said. level next spring. All the companies blamed higher costs for the increases, noting that cocoa beans which sold for 75 cents a pound a year ago now are going for close to $1.50. The firms said the chocolate increasee would have come sooner if it had not been for the drop in the price or sugar which has declined about 00 per- cent from 1974 levels. ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. (AP) -Jimmy Carter will at· tend a meeting of the Plains Oap· list Church next Sundaf and hopes his fellow paris~ will agree to abandon their. whites· only policy. spokesman .Jody Powell S"fS. As the president-elect rested among the marshes, woods aDd fishing streams of this Sodtbem Georgia resort island SU.nday. word reached him that the Rev. CleMon King, a black actMat rn.in1ster, had been barred from the church for the second week in a row. . Powen said Carter and other church members with whom the President-elect bad been in con· tact "hope at the conference to reach an amicable conclusion and guarantee the right of all to worship without regard to race.'' Powell said that if next SUD· day's vote continues the wbila· only policy, Carter would have to make "a difficult personal de-- r.ision '' about what course to take. He did not outline what op- tions Carter might have. Carter voted against a 1965 church rule excluding "Negroes and civil rights activists," and has said many~imes be hoped the rule could be chariged. The church pastor, the Rev. Bruce Edwards, also favors irite· gration of the church and his job is in jeopardy as a result. He asked for next Sunday's meeting so the congregation could vote OD' the deacons• recommendation that he be fired. Meanwhile. the President~lect is dividing his time here among fishing, swimming, ping-pong and the study of recomtnenda· lions from bis staff and others about ways to complete the transition between a Carter ad· ministration and that of outgoing President Ford. For· instance, Carter is study.' ing a memo from Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller recounting Rockefeller's experiences in the Wesley latet founded the Methodist cb~roh. C,.Ur bu befm campalping vlrt\lalb' noM~p for almo.t two years, ud Hid~ Deeda the rest bis vacatloq. la J>l'OVSdlu. His vacation cotta1e la near .-1wifl- nowln1 creek .overlooking a marsh at the ead al a winding road nearb two mllea fl"Om the neareat bishwa,y .. 1be estate it owned by Smith Batley, a Waalalalton, D.C .• ~inesaman, wbo was an ear&.Y ~porter of Caner's presiden- Ual hopes. Powell said Baeley will be paid up to .$2,000 by CJ,mr for five oc als days' me'OI ttie cot-1 tqe, aunounclio1 buildiqa, and the 1,413 •etes of woods. water and marstiland. 1 Korea Gift Sent Back -' . SAN PR:A)JCISCO (AP) -Rep. PblUlp Burton (D- Call f . > HJ• a South Korean congressman once sent a large topaa brooch to bia wUe, bu.t abe returned it I to the KoreUJ Bmbaay. Tbe S•a Francisco Chronicle reported that 8'&rtGr UMl a.ta wile 'Sala, said ey were surprised and outraJed !>Y tbe OA whlcb -was delivered to his Capitol Hill omce id July ms. . BurWn told tile Chronicle that the lift wu accom- panied by a card slcned by Admiral ·and lin. Myong Soo Hahm...a.._ tn.at neither he nor Mrt. nnon could re- call m~ Uie Halum. 'the Soutb Korean Em-' busy haa kSenWied Hahm a a rne'aahr of that na· · tion's Congress. The smaller, cheaper Nestle ln some places, candy bars in bar costs 13.3 cents per ounce ; vending machines already sell the larger, higher-price variety for 20 cents and, presumably, will cost 16 cents per ounce; the could go up to 25 cents after the increase is 20 percent. For new increases take effect. Hershey, the per-ounce price in- Most of the world's cocoa beans are grown in Africa and the crop has been tight for two years. Al the same time, the de- mand has been strong, caosing the price increase. vice presidency_ and his thoughts i"r. ,,.... p .... AJ on how that office can be made , "': . -.- The Nestle move was not unex-crease works out to 19 percent. pected since the Hershey Corp.. Nestle said the wholesale pric~ M&M and Peter Paul announced increases will go into effect early i in 1977, after stocks of the 15-cent 'f f'ro• Page A I chocolate bars are used up. The increase is expected at the retail OIL. . . price of gas in the United States . This takes into consideration the fact that the United States im- ports 40 percent of its oil. In COUn· tries importing all their oil the tmpact would be much greater A price increase would also be felt wherever else oil figures in the economy. Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani, the Saudi oil minister, said in August that some OPEC members want· ed a ''very drastic'' increase "somewhat similar to what hap· pened in 1973." Arab oil nations put an embargo on exports dur· ing the October 1973 Mideast war. and OPEC followed with the quadrupling of oil prices. Yamani said his government would resist a large increase th.is time because of concern for the economic recovery of the West. "We are not going to slaughter the hen that lays the golden eggs," he said. "There is a limit to what we can do. And l th.ink we see that limit a little bit clearer than others." U.S. President-elect Jimmy Carter said at his news COi\' ference on Thursday that an oil price increase would be "a very serious blow·· to consuming na- tions but that all he could do before bis inauguration was to express concern through public statements. From Page Al DELAYED. • until they are discussed in the bearing before Judge Judge. It was learned today that at least two olher business interests have entered the bidding picture since the counter bidding de· veloped between Mobil, Cadutac Falrview and the AUen·Taubman comort.ium. Lawyers participating in the hearine refused to identlf y the new bidders. But they qreed that beavy interest in the future of tbe Irvine Company could end with the organiaation being sold for u much aa $300 million. Auxiliary Sells Christmas Cards Christmas cards are on sale through Friday from 1to4 p.m·. in tbe main lobby of the 5'ddleback Hoepital Medic.I Center, 23.561 Pueo do Valencia in Laguna Hllll ... Tbe Odda and Ends Awtlliary • •ellln1 the cards, with all pro-· ceeda to benefit Saddleback H01Pital. f'ro• Page A f GROWTH • Camarena said. ''And r believe it is gettmg worse." Camarena said it is impossible to establish a trend in the valley because active smog monitoring has only been· going on since 1973. He said it takes five to 10 years to compile enough data to make a determination of how the aar quality has deteriorated. Camarena 's office presently maintains its primary monito1 - ing station for the valley in "El Toro. The pollution control district official predicted that the statistics compiled over the next few years will probably establish a clear relationship between rapid development and chronic air pollution in the valley. He said the ingredients arc all present-a basin-like land area that can trap the pollutants and a considerable number of pollution so urces , automobile s in particular. The APCD, Camarena said, is required to act on all environ- mental Impact reports for pro- posed developments with a potential to seriously erode the quality of the air. Two such projects -both re- gional shopping centers - planned for the next few years will require his office's approval because they would be major in- direct sources of pollution. Photo Class At Toro High A nine·week adult educaUon class in basic photography Will begin at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Room 603 at El Toro High School. Cameras, light meters, de- veloping film, making contact proof sheets and enlargements will be covered in the course. There Is no registration fee but students should furnish their own camera and film. Further in. formation may be obtained by calling the adult education office at837-6270. Thieves Get Tools Tools value-d at $1,400 have been stolen from a Laguna Hills construction site. Orange County sherifr's officers said the loss was rePOrted by officials of RFD Construction, 2S981 Adelanto, Mission Viejo. They satd in· trudere apparently had a key to the shack where the tools were stored on Canada Road. • Stephen Korsen of Nestle said there is no actual shortage of cocoa beans. He said, however, that the producing countries "are regulating the flow" of beans. Political upheavals in some cocoa-growing areas also have interrupted the supply, Korsen said. more useful. Carter drove from his redted vacation home at Musgrove Plantation Sunday morning to. take communion at historic, s mall and unheated Christ Church, the parish in which Charles and John Wesley pre· ached in the late 1730s. John Saddleback Slates Microwave Class The first of two special Sad· dlebat·k College classe!> in microwave cookery will take place Friday and the second session, on Nov . 1!1, will include preparatio n of an entire Thanksgiving dinner for the stu· dents. Both classes will run from 11 a.m. to I p.m ., in the college home economics center at a cost of $2 to cover food costs. Atten- dance is limited to 45 people and pre-registration is required. This week's session will cover the basic techniques of this spacc ·a~e method of cookin~. selection of the right cooking con- tainers, timing and other factors. The practice "menu" for Fri· day will con!li8t oC a spinach souf- fle, scrambled eggs, spiced apple punch and baked chicken. . . . The microwave Thanksgiving dinner on . the followin~i Briday will be compl4te with a .ij>,J)ound roast turkey, casserole dressing, cranberries, potatoes arid but· tered broccoli. Community residents interest· edin taking the classes can make advance reservations by calling 831·9700, extension 263. Health Che~kup .,. .. , .................. MOl\itoring of brain waves on special equipment ·was one of 40 health·r elated tests and booths available to senior citir<1os Sunday at the Health Fair in Laauna Beach. Joan Emerson performs the technical procedure here. More th.an l,000 senior citizens attended the free health screening, the firsto!itskin.d. .. • STlJDIES ••• y. .. body, 0 said Po'fter, "so we De'Ver have more th~ IO or 90\Studeftts on campus at. an.ce, except few midday seminar, when ever- ybody's here.". Each teadier has 21 students for seminar, and ·each' student stays wlth the same teacher throughout bis enrollment in Crossroads. To&et.her they ~tudy su~ real·llfe subjecta as mar- riage, buying • car, managing a bank account and arranging a funeral. They al.so share one physical ecSucation e¥ent each. week - sailing, voUeybaJJ. and softball are popular'al <;robroads. .I Each. tA!rm' fegninar groups do 'a ·~c,l~l P.roJect. n& ~ they ~4! ~elin1,iq,Yqsemtte. ~­d~g a co1QlftUnity art proJect. toutjng local 'colleges and stud.y- i ng the nahi,ral bisfory of ~them Calj_(g(llia. . · Porte!! said ~e Crossroads pro- gram is not suited to every atu- dent, but be aald it meets the needs of many when a more traditional ;ro«&am does not. One girl who had missed 30 days of sctiOo• year before Jut had a perfed attendance record last year at Cross.roads, even though she set benelf long hours, from8:30a.m. tolOp.m. Jn addition to classes in medicine and special education, she was involved in workin1 with younser students wh9 bad learn-mc dlfficulti9'. She also SUC· cessfully complefed two Sad· dleback College c'ourses. Since her 1raduation in June, she bas worked in a doctor's of. ~~~~<!iJ~ ~t~nding college, Another stude,nt, who had never done well in ic:!bool, developed a f ascinatlon watb ~oresll)t last year through bis crosaroa~s ex· perience and did atraiebt "A" work. He is currently training to be a forest ranter. Porter said Crosaroads stu· dents receive mon in· dividualized ln1truc:tJon than atu· dents ln more traditional prol(rams. . "Students are eciaUnually rt· assessed," he said. "Every teacher is· well a~ualnted wtth the acblevement level of every student. Even a math teacher knows bow well each ol h1s atu· dents readl and la workln1 with those wbo b.ave reading dif· ficultJes. "There.. no ., •• a student cquld set throia1h our "°"am . wkhout i.aniina to read. ~ Paul Ryan, C~ public aertrtce coordini\qr and IOclal studies te.ch11. said atudenb are wo-rkln1 In Caplftrano 1e"°°11 in proleuional oU1~, lancbc9ptg school and tommmlty croUnai and t'ffycliDt nnsl)\per and alumJnum. t Studenta wort u wlunteen, wit.bout pay, be aa!d, ia atl1 public ..ntce tod wblcb provSdet # them wt th a meanlftlful learn.lq •• aperteaee. • I .... "