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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-11-09 - Orange Coast Pilot• • .. •. 64 Pereent View Over SJ Million 'Gone With Wind' TV Epie in LA · Paid tD · OCJ ·-Firms DAILY PILOT * * * 10< * * * VOL. ... HO. J14. 1 SECTIONS, ta "AGES -'-chicken Joke ~ . SI,000,000·pltu County Fiirms Paid Medicaid WASHINGTON CAP) -For the second straight year, the American physician listed as re-ceiving the most money from Medicaid is Dr. William A. Triebel of New York, who re· ceived $785, 114 in 1975. Triebel was one of 2.553 doc· tors, dentists, pharmacies and . laboratories that received more than $100,000 from Medicaid last year, according to a Department of Health , Education and Welfare report issued Monday. 0.11., ...... -.., "'~ ic.-i.r Intruders with designs on David Rohn 's chickens had better tpink twice. The big bird is a creation of Rahn at bis farm in Mod.Jeska Canyon. ."' Smokey ~one Retired Symbol Dies· • WASJDNGTON (AP) -The original Smokey Bear, for 25 tears a living symbol of forest ere prevention, died today at the National Zoo and presumably 1 went to what Congress once re- ferred to as .. that great hooey tree in tbe sky.•• Smokey retired in May 1975 .ad was replaced by another, 1oun1er Smokey. Both were bouled at the National Zoo. . Sll)okey 's death was an· N.M., for further treatment and was gradually nursed back to health. In June 19SO, Smokey was elected u the first living symbol , ol the forest fire prevenUon cam- paign which started in 19'2. Soon afterward, Smokey was flown here and in a brief ceremony wu ina\alled officially at the zoo. The new Smokey Bear bas a similar background, also found in the Uncoln N atlonal Forest. Triebel operates a group of methadone maintenance clinics for former heroin addicts. Firms in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach were among GW'lWTops TV Rating NEW YORK (AP) - Twice as many television sets in New York and Los Angeles w ere tuned to "Gone With the Wind," Sunday night than to all other programs combined, the A.C. Nielsen Company says . Nielsen said today NBC got 65 percent of Sunday night's TV audience in New York and 64 percent· in Los Angeles. National figures bad not been com· piled, the company said. Figures for the . second part shown Monday night were not available. NBC estimated its au- dience at 90 million vlewers Sunday, 110 million Monday niaht. those from Orange County listed as receiving more than SJ00,000. Altogether. the 2,533 providers received $445.3 million for 18.S percent of the more than $2. 7 billion spent providing health care for 23 million pf)or Americans last year. "The fact that these medical providers received the stated amount.a from the Medicaid pro- gram should not be construed as any evidence of wroogdoing, nor do the amounts listed necessarily represent 'earnings' or 'pro· fita'," HEW said. The information on what HEW called "high volume" Medicaid providers was released oo re- quest under the Freedom of ln· formation Act. The University Hospital Pharmacy in Huntington Beach received $136,773 and Goldstein and Kent of Newport Beach re· ceived $130,994. Also listed in the HEW report were Norman K . Bepls Jr., $102,038 and Pregnancy Control Medical Group, $225,2.81,,both of Santa Ana. County of Orange Pharmacy, Oran1e. received $198,858. Ref· fner Medical Group, Anaheim, received $164,4'4. Harbor P harmacy of ~llerton received $100,896. The biagest payment to a single pharmacy was Sl.4 million (See Ml:DICAJD, Page AZ) Fann Firm Rolling MOLINE, Ill. (AP) -Striking. Deere & Co. emploYtf ln IWnola and Iowa have returned to work ending a 39-.day United Auto Worken union walkout acalnat the natJon's lal'gest manllfac~ tureroffarm equip~t. Dounced by the A1riculture t l>epartment, which had band.led I ~ forest fire J.>revention pro- lf&m lhrou1h its U.S. Forest I Service agency. Officlals said the eld Smokey died "in his retire- ment cage" at the 100. Smog Fight Lost in LA . Con8ftSS in 8 Joint raolution two 1ears ago specified that the bear'• remains be shJpped to Capitan, N.M. Smokey will be "'1fted in several dua at the l=ey Bear Hiatorlcal Park ! TbeoriginalSmokeywaa/ound 1111 1850 aa a cub, blld1y burned 1tiom a forest fire that swept tbroath part of the Uncoln Na· tibial Forest. He wu found clinllnc to a 1= tree, wu treated for ~ _ Md wu now.'° Senta ~e. ., ,... AaeeiaCed .... Tbe national effort to control air POIJutlOb by 1985 is not IUCceeding' In New York and Loi Angeles, say, a White House adviser on air quality. John A. Busterud, actinJ cbalrman of the President's Council on Environmental Quall· ty, said "exceptional control standards may be necessary" to curb air pollution in the nation's two most populous are-.. He alao said the effort has 1ereat.ed more joba than it bu J destroyed. Buaterud, speaking 'in Anahei'fll at the filth ann~ In· tematiqnal Pollution Enitnee~ Ing Expoaitlon and Con•reas, predicted that by the early U.S. mo1t of tbe nation 'a 3'7 air quaU· ty control regions wUl meet primary federal hUlth-related standards for air quality. He said actual al.r pollution emiulon levels in the Los Anaetes basin fall below the federal maxirnum, but that the area's valleys and sunny ~Umate ' cause photochemical pollutant.a toexceedfedera\standarda. "Los An1eles bu no real pro- blem wlth lnduatrial poll~." said Buaterua: • ~ city ruUy needs to 1et ita act tOletber In· tenm ol mass traaatt and otber· kinds ol lma1hlaUv. tranaporta- Uon methods, lnclu::ti tar poo&a, taxes on parldq part. ins reltrtetlom. "I don't lbtnk it '1 r1pt for• in Wulliqton to HJ 10U'h ~ Yourself ln Loi Aftlel• and )'OU <llelMOG, .... Al) Vt. f'OWER MAINE SA Girl, B;Taken· In Night While family members slept In adjoining bedrooms, an 8-year· old girl was kidnaped from her home Monday night. taken to a nearby vacant house and sexual· ly aaaaulled, according to Santa Ana police. The youngster was released by her abductor after spending a terrifying hour in bis control. ~~liilll~~~~ · police said. 1 o .SO She was taken to Santa Ana· s Milu Tustin Community Hospital for treatment and released early w day. .. .... ,.... .. , f"leteer ,....,~ . 1 Plans for a $600 million hydroelectric project on the St. John Rlver in northern Maine may be thwarted by the discovery of a tare wild snapdragon, furbish lousewort, on the site where two dams are to be built. (Story Page A 7) utter Lists Sex Rules For Church W ASIDNGTON (AP) -The naUon '• Roman Catholic blahops have been asked to approve a pastoral letter setting strict rules on aexual behavior for CathoUcs. The 38-pace document, which it expected to stir an gry criticism amon1 some Catholics, wu pr.ftellted Monday to the 250 members of tbe National Con· terence ol Cathollc Blabops at their four-day annual meetlnc here. A final vote on amend· menta and the code itself ia tcbeduled TbW"&day. The pastoral lett«, two yeara ln the writing, toucbeaClll a vari•· ty ol subjects and ls mainly a restatement of views by the church wr\pped into a slnl)e packqe. It r.jeeta the view that •'mar ria,.. can deteriorJte to 1ucb an m..t tbat U.• matt.al uaJoa la deltfo1td and the~ are no loaler' obliled to k~ tbe1r pro- .... al JU•lon• flde!it)>. '"Dllil covenant between a man and WOIDaD joined ha Christian marrl.,a .11 u 1Ddlleohable and tnftoeabl• u God'a loY9 fot bil ~le Ud Chrltt'i love for Hla ~." tile propoMd dolwnent HYf. <let SU, P•AZ> Police are looking for a transient who they believe has been sleepin4 in empty houses in the 1100 block of South Shelly Street. People who might have knowledge of the whereabouts of such a person have been asked to corltact investigator Skip Lynn at the Santa Ana Police DeparJ,. ment at 834-4278. Police said the young victim described her assailant as a dark complexioned, dark haired man._ They said she could otter uwe _beyond that brief descripti~ and said she at first believed sh& was being removed from her be« by afamily member. ' .. ..--~-,-----~~~--..1 Co ast Weathe r Folf and low clouds alOftl the coast tonight and Wed· nesday. Beach highs in low 70., lows to mld SOs. INSIDt; T ODAY A '°°"'°" tolao lo.a 1wr job or o par niN Ncaue llwl I009t 't laow #Z "'"" Mr bots CGftftOt aw hfm ~ tM /cderol Chnl Right• Act. St"'fl,A.7. .. .. A! Ship Sinks • ID Style LON DON (AP) -At a tim~ when the British pound is sadly sinking from sight and the flag of empire is well below half.staff, Viscount Richard Thomas Orlando Newport has done what be thin.ks is the only sensible thing len for a chap to do. He has opened a caviar bar in Knigblsbridge so those aboard the alnklng ship can go down in style. "IT SOlJNDS LIKE A DANCE of the decadent belore they go, but actually it'a bloody good business. There's all kinds ot money around," said the 28-year-old son and heir to the Earl of Bradford, who once Pr ince Charles disappears up the nuptial aisle, could rank as Britain's O'IOSt eligible bachelor. The viscount-family motto: Nee temere, nee timide (Neither rash nor timid ) -figured that bis caviar bar close to Hyde Park, Harrod 's "and the better embassies" would attract touris ts from the de lue luxe hotels and a scattering of diplomats. BUT SINCE OPENING IN APRIL he finds the place frequented more and more by his British compatriots. "People with any cash left are very concerned a bout spending it on something worthwhile before it devalues altogether or the tax man grabs it," explained his lordship. "Holidays and cruises can•be checked, so you might as well treat yoursel! to a good tuok-in before it's too late. Where evading taxes are concerned, we're getting almos t as good as the Italians and the French, and of course they come here in droves on shopping sprees. Urban Session Carter Misses Big Mayors' Meeting CHlCAGO (AP > -If Jimmy ·c arter wanted to reassure the na- tion's big-city mayors he is in their corner, he passed up a pe rfect opportunity at the mayors' urban strategy session. "He sent a ligl)tweight, and some of us are mad, .. said one mayor. "But we don't know wher e Samuels stands with Carter so we don 't know what it means.·· Howard Sa m uels, an un- dersecretary of Commerce un- der President Johnson and an un· successful Democratic candidate for governor of New York, was Carter's choice to monitor the two-day U.S. Conference of Mayors meeting that concluded Monday. Samuels said he holds no formal position on the Carter transition team. but was asked to i;it as an observer at the mayor 's meeting by top Carter aide Hamilton Jordan. Front Page Al SEX ... On birth conlrol. the letter says "in contraceptive intercourse the procreative or life-giving mean- ing or intercourse is deliberately separated from its love-giving . meaning and is repudiated : the wrongness or such an act lies in the repudiation of this value.'· A section added Monday says, "We are aware that m a ny couples face agonizing decisions regarding artificial l'Ontracep- tum We urge them not to lose heart nor lo turn from lhe com· munity of faith. '·Rather. they should take ap· propriate pastoral counsel, seek helµ in prayer and sacraments, and Investigate means of birth limitation. Al the same time we 1nv1te those who d issent from this teachinJ< of the church to a prayerful a nd studied r c- cons1derallon of their position.'· On the question of homosex· uahty. the letter says "genital St'xun l behavior is oriented hNard mar riage and mu.c;t be heterosexual. .. Rut it adds: "Llke everyone el11e. homosexuals should not suf- fer from prejudice against their basic human r.4rhts. The Chris- t 1an community should provide .them with love and pastoral care." ' Stating thei r case against abor· lion, the letter states strongly ·that a fetus Is a human from the start, saying: "While lhe fetus may not be aware of itself and its rights, it is a human entity. a ·human being with potential, not a potential human being." ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ·''EJJIS ANALYSIS. "I'm not a spokes man for Carter, I 'm just free-lancing this for him," said Samuels, stress· ing at least twice, "I don't speak for the pre.sident-elect. '' • However, Samuels did speak. and often. Frequently he began his presentations by saying, "l think I can speak for the pre- sident-elect on this ... " Part of the negative reaction to Samuels was simply the hurt that Carter didn't send "an insider," one ofthe small group of advisers known to be close to him. That would have sent a strong signal of support to the mayors, who for years have complained that they are being ignoredJn Washington. Other criticism of Samuels stemmed.jrom the things he said CARTER FAMILY FINDS SECLUSION--A4 and the fact that he said so much. However , since it never was clear whether Samuels spoke for Carter, the mayors never were certain whether to take his state· ments as being significant. Samu e l s su pp o rted the mayors' request for federal help, hut repeated several qualifica· tions Carter himself has sounded -warning that Carter would not just throw money at their pro· blems and stressing the need for strict fiscal management. After m aking the latter point several times, he told a commit· tee of mayors that the federal government under Carter might be able lo help impose manage· mentdiscipllne. However willing the mayors may have been to bear that from Carter, and several mayors said they "w e lcom ed Ca rter 's challenge," it was clear they were not happy to hear it from Samuels. Cole man Young of Detroit was the most' outspoken mayor on Samuels· appeara nce. Young said the cities would be in trouble "if they have to depend on Mr. Samuels. I guess he's the man who recommended that President Ford l~l New York go down the drain.'' Samuels, in a m•gazine article last year, said default might be less painful for New York City than deeper and deeper budget cuts. 'Title' Suit Opens LOS ANGELES (AP) -The State Board of Dental E x- aminers has been sued by 33 foreign born and educated den· lists who want t-0 retain certain professional distinctions and titles earned at schools in other countries. "WE'VE MADE CA VIAR LESS frightening," said the viscount ln modest sell-appraisal of his contribution to the nation's morale in these trying times. "When you consider filet steak goes for three p0unds ($4.80) a l>CJUDd, caviar la damned &ood value. It's price bas increased v'ry little over the past 20 years compared with smoked salmon and lobster, which have cone quite mad. People come here for a lunch o( pressed caviar, tbe cheese board and a bottle of wine and can get out for7.50pounds ($12). "Why, 1 think the biggest hill we've had ip ~ere has been 61 pounds ($97.60 ) for four people, but that was for c,-iar, lobster and a bit of booze.·· DO THE CUSTOMERS EVER REAUZE that the beaming, bearded Maitre D taking their coats or squinting at the caviar scales. iJ a member of the nobility? "I( they don't, l tell them, "'-Said the viscount wllh becoming frankness. Even prouder than bis listing in Debrelt's, the viscount is de· ligbt'eci over the one St9.l' accorded bis restaurant in the latest Egon Ronay food. guide and the recommendation: "Management young, civil and eager." "That's me, you know." He beamed a smile as golden as his best caviar . No Blue Flu Laguna Beach Police Capt. Neil· Purcell, who sometimes a rrests people with byperdermic needles, meets the business end of Nurse Mary Anderson's weapon as city employes received their flu vaccinations Monday at the Laguna Beach Free Clinic. Flu s hots will be given at the clinic, 460 Ocean Ave., from I tQ.4 p.m . each Monday of this month. Huntington Woman Death Investigated Riverside County coroner's in· \testigators are probing the death of a Huntington Beach woman whose body was found bobbing in a poolside Jacuzzi bath at a Palm Springs hotel Monday night. No foul play is sus pected in the death of Mrs. Irene Dorothy Muon, 63, at this point in the in· vestigation, authorities say. An autops y on the.body of Mrs; Mason, who lived at 17171 Bolsa Chica St., was ordered to de- termine what kille<f the victim who had been spending a long weekend visit in Palm Springs. She was registered there with a friend , Mrs. Ruth Masters. who OrangeWom~ Dies of Burns A 59-year-old Orange woman died at the UCI Medical C<lnter burn unit Monday of injuries suf· fered in an accident Oct. 10, Orange County Coroner's de· putiessaidtoday. Esther Lee Gray, of 1931 E. Meats Ave., was injured at her home whi'J she dropped a match and her cfothing ignited, deputies said. She suffered burns over 70 percent of her body, the coroner reported. left the victim in the Dunes Hotel swimming pool area about mid- night. Investigators s aid Mrs. Mason wore a bathing suit. A hotel employe discovered the body in the Jacuzzi swirling bath about a half-hour after the visit· ing Mrs. Masters left her compa- nion and retired to their hotel room. The body was taken lo Wiefel & Son Mortuary in Palm Springs, where a spokesman said today it was under stood she would be transferred to Forest Lawn· Cypress for funeral services. A s pokes man for th a t mortuary said today funeral ar- rangements are pending. th"t)'""'~ (l"l1ttt 0.llV Pl..,t ""'''"'~ltfll1.,r~ n1""'('1 '""· N~w, p,,,,, •• ~&1·~ O'/ tN °"""~ '"•'' P\lbll\l\J~ Cnmotn'¥ S.sat'•'e tdll•""" A"' OUh!l\)Wi>d M~flffAy f PlrOVQ" Fr,d.-v f1'f' C.O\lit AN ... f\f('WOC)ft f\•jf(h ••u!"tlftQ'fQA tw ........ F01>!'\ tt1n Vt1tll•¥ ltw•"'I•, Stfftfl>bAt " "'"'""• i'l\d l 8qtJ"'I.\ A,.~~ ·~utfll Co-1\1, A\i"'1•rto1on11 .. 01 tton ll pubO•M>O $..tlWrll.\'i'\ 4lli"t ~.'W', fh#'I Agents mt? Being of Sco1t1sh descent I take gre'11 pleasure 1n making my dollars slretch. I try to pass this idea along to our customers by s1ocli1n9 many combination pieces of 1ewe1ry, that as, pieces that can serve multiple purposes of adoromanl P ln·pend;1ht comb1na11ons ar e the most usual. of course. but we extend that idea to clasp decorators and attachments for rings and bracelets ;;~~~':;~!1.~+'•-=~=.;:,:lO W.tl 8•• .... rtH -Ptoldent .,,d Puo.hhfr Uc•" C .. lov \Jo f' Prttl!llCHnt •!'Wt v.~ .. 1 Milln~r fftOfft•l ICttYU '"""' Tlloma. A, M•'l"'lfw -••Ql"9 l<llltf C1'•11H H l"' lllt......, "·Haft lo•l"Mll Ml""flllt '"""' Otflct• (O'\IU1ln•: >JO W. •I .. Y ~-· ~·QUOl8 .. (ll lft.1)1-yo•Slf ... t ........... &11 ••··~ 111111 ... h-•.,d s-r ...... V•ll•Y' t HOI u .... "••1 •t ~" Oiir<>e Fr ..... #'( ' Telephone (1t4)M2...,,1 Clt~tllltd Advertltlflt ~11 'Ndd .. bot~ Vell•y-OHl<o Slt .. S'IO ,,. ... ~ .. C.lt .... fllo 4t'"°'30 ~ ..... NotthOr•-c:.v.it, 0...-tt'" MO-la20 Cff•'""' 1•tl Or~ CNot ""*~ C--• ..,,.. ,,.wt ''°',.'-111wr1t odlt•ltl 11\oll,f tr fOt ltlOlflf"" M •t l ll'l tV lit r•etrodvced wlUMv• tHC.l•f 1Mrm4UIOfll et ..... ..,. .......... l"lstteM <l•O !lfllt_. N l4' •I CMt• IMH t;ttt11r,.I• Sutuulotleft ., cerr1 .. 1u.f6 ~fttlll'f,I ~· "'"' .......... 1111,, ''" ,, .. , ... tl ... lloftlt.J lOIMfttM•· FBI lndictmenu Hinted WASHINGTON (AP)-The New York Times re· ported today that the government may seek indict· men ts against 10 to 20 present or former FBI officials. · The Times said department lawyers concluded they could support charges that the persons under In· vesttcation knew of or approved illegal investigative techniques. · Justice Department sPokesmen refused comment on the report. I The Times quoted f edcraJ sources as saying pro- secutors in the department's civil rights division-.... found evidence of illegal wiretaps, bugs, burglaries, mail openings andotherpractle;es. The sources told the Times that a memorandum on the subject was ~cted to be submitted t-0 Atty. Gen . Edward ff. l.A?vl th.it> w~k. The newspaper said the lawyeta were upect~ to recommend that Levl permit th.em to soet.lndictm.mta against 1ome or an of those named . ..... -- We have a honey·bee ring-pin combinatfon that 1s very 1mag1nat1ve. There is a strikingly beaullful onyx and diamond heart that serves either as a rinq or pendant. This 1s truly a mechanlclt engineering masterpiece. We have nttel<lace·bracefet comb1nat1ons lhat give you different lengths ot necl<ware when combtnod 1n different ways. There are watct'les 100. with a wide variety or colored straps and even dlll erent colored bezels. One of the mosl classic and versatile combinations ls a blsic eatTfng wilh a variety of drops that cOml)letely change th!J 1001< -and tM colors. Thia idea is great tor tho tra11etor. ii . Hinshaw Jury Gets Vacation The Jury Jn the &rpertor Court tria l of Orange County Congressman Andrew Hinshaw has been sent home until W~· neaday so the judge can conduct a hearing demanded J>y the de· f ense out of the jury's presence. Judge Frank Domenicttlni is- sued the directive aft.er " hearina testimony by Hinshaw in which he admitted spending no more than five percent of hi.S work time in 1972 on his duties as the coun· ty's assessor. The judge is now being asked to rule before the jury returns that the county's abandonment of claims against assessor's employes who drew overtime in 1972 to wo rk on Hinabaw's Congressional c ampaign in- validates all related criminal charges against Hinshaw. De f e n s e attorney John· McNicbolas contends that if the claims against the employes are unjust, it is equally unjust lo pro· &eeute his client on chargea con· nectecJ to that overtime. Hinshaw's admission that he Speakers Spirited Off. A thier wbo apparent.ely shinnied his way ~P to the loot or else bad access to a hydraulic snorkel-tower device bu struck at Hun~ iqton Beacla mf b School. 'l'be blib·r se bellt directly acroaa the atftet horn police beadquartcs involved theft of a '1- loudapeaker and slJt outlets ' that d i r ec t sound throughout the football s~ruum. • School officials who re· - ported the grand theft Monday said the sound equipment was valued at -.$350 and had to b e meticulous ly unbolted from the top of a 25-foot telephone pole. Sea Wind Hol<b Smog Over Land - spent almost no time on his Job-OCEA~SIDE (AP) -Smog related duties came during tough blamed on sea brenes from Lew questioning by prosecutor Angeles ·is still besiegt:ng "the William Evans. coast as far south as San Dlqo Evans was pressing the con• and \I)> to eight miles inland. ~ gressman to explain why be had-Si9ce last week, outdow so little-knowled_ge-d nwnerous, phystcal education baa been CU· allegedly crlm1oal acta com· celled atseveraJ schools. milted by members .of his own· A health advisOl'Y, wu iaufo staff. l\~M 't.t the San Dlm ~ Hiasbaw ackaowled1Jd th-at · r o tu on ContrOltrict for th~equtrelthD slgnature--lhe secoifcJ strafllir Clay-wilb on overtime and vacation slips more smog expected today. prepared in his office during • The ozone or smog level in 1972, but told Evans that he had Oceanside reached .21 per d ecid_ed to delegate the million parts of air -.1.2 part. authon ty. above the federal maximum for Evans, in cross examination, clean air. • asked the former assessor if be Smog levels reached .12 · tn eyer t~k the trouble to keep Chula Vista and .11 in the Kearny himself. mformed. on the ~olume Mesa area of central San Diego. of o~ert1me compiled by his staff A girls' ten,nis match in 1t1l dunng 1972. Jolla was moved to the Claire· "Not specifically," Hinshaw mont section notth of Kearny told him. "I was only interested Mesa. in getting the job done. 11 Meteorologist Ral Brown safd HI ns b aw f aces multiple higher temperatures inland hea't· criminal charg~s including ed the land, warmingthetrapped grand theft, consp1~acy and en:i-cool air and causing pollutants to bezzlement stemming from bis rise and scatter. But along tJle alleged i~legal actions as county coast, smog remained trapped. • assessor tn 1972. A weak Santa Ana conditic:A'l It is alleged that the Newport also helped contain .smog p..,. Beach Republican utilized coun· pelled by northwest sea breezes ty . manpo~er and maleria~s from the Los Angeles area, while running for Congress m Brown said. • that year. He has been convicted * of bribery charges related to that * * >- same p~riod and Is free from his ,,.... Page Al ' state pnson sentence pending ap· peal. SMOG Hinshaw, 51, repeated Monday his frequent denial that assessor's • • • employes worked on his cam- paign by assignment from their county duties. Fro•Page Al :MEDICAID to Medical Health Pharmacy of Milwaukee, Wis. The largest to a chain pharmacy was $1.7 million to Peoples Drug in the Washington, D.C., area. Those receiving more than $100,000 in Medicaid payments inclllded 995 doctors and 312 den· tists in solo and group practice, lZ1 solo and chain laboratories and 1 ,099 solo and chain pharmacies. Officers On Take? BOSTON (AP) -Police in· veatigators say about 200 of- ficers assigned to Boston's enter- tainment and business districts were familiar with organized crime members and ignored ob· vious law violations. Mary Barr. cert1lled1Gemologi&t have to stop. But the Air Pollta· lion Control District is going'to have to prescribe some rathF stringent medicine if they are lb· ing to reach air quality standafds by 1985.11 ; Busterud said New York's air pollution problems stem from the mass bumi.ng of sulphur tuels for- heat and energy, and auto emissions. "Nuclear power would be one way of solving many of Ne\. York's power-pollution pro· blems," he said, "but we've bid a real problem in getting nucle4f power plants approved." Busterud also said that despite fears the fight against pollutl~ would cause employment pro· blems, the nationwide effort to clean up the environment h• created more jobs than it h• taken away. About one million jobs are.now coMected with Pollution control nationwide, he said. .. gives you a whole earrln wardrobe without having to carry so much around witl'i you. You will always have Just the right accent for eac costume and occasion. ,· One ot my most ambitious special order des19n$ for a customer was a nocl<lace con taining 25 carats of diamonds. It could be worn. with or withou t a pendant ettachment. but the big bonu• was the double c lasps thM m ade 1t usea b le as two diamond bracelets. • CHARLES H. BA RR I consider it a real challenge to see what I can design to-' stretch my customers' jewelry· dollars too. II you have a piecCJ of jewelry (or many) that you wish to make Into sometl'ling• new. bring them In and let's consider the possibilities. Do It s o o n t h o u g h . b o c a u a o. Christmas is coming and our. stlop work gets very heall'( at Christmas time and I don't "' want to clis31)POinl enyono with' s hOllday deadlfne. Our window featuring the "Diamonds in Orbit 7 7" t"-1 I wrote about In an earlier column, Is now o" display -so eol'l)e see! ' 17ttt&'""" w .......... Hewporl leach ~·. ' , r Tuesday. Novtmber 9. 197'6 DAILY PILOT A3 1P.lanners Adtnit Rubber -Stanip Votes ~ By KATH\' CLANCY .. Of-. D•llf Pl141l 5'41ft ~ ; Orange County plannin& com. ~ 1 missioners admitted Monday ,; • they have been stamping ap- : provals piecemeal on housing : t racts without learning their ' ·total impact on the county and its 'Mure. "l for one don't. have the s Ii g ht est idea what the ment monitoring program, she cumulative effect is of what we took exception to some of Mac· have been doing the past four .DougaU'sc<>mments. moot.ha," said Commissioner Mac Dougall, who was ap. Will.lam MacDougall. pointed to the comlDissioo last And while Co,mmlssioner summer by Fifth Distrlct Shirley Grindle joined fellow Sup er vi a or Tom Riley , commissioners in suggesting represents the southeast county supervisors hire a consultant to where most major bous1ng de· plan a comPrebeosive develop-, velopments are t~plcace. But Mrs. Grlndle, who fre- quently has cast the lone dissent- ing vote on housing plan ap. provals, said much of the inform a lion MacDouga ll claimed he hadn't received bas 'been available all along. She agreed a more complete monitoring program is needed to compare development plans with the load county iaciUties can aup· port. And she said it ls needed soon before every inch of un· developed county land is covered with houses. The monitoring program; which count y planners admitted d~ not now exist, would trace housing proposals, compared with their impact on road aysterns, sewer and w~tor facilities, parks, the envU'OD· ment and eventual populaUoo limits set by supervisors. As it is nQw, -M acDougaJl said, "I don't know bow near that. bot· tle ls to being full.·• Retarded A dults But Mrs. Grindle asked Mae- Dougail if he bad been listening for the past several months. She said staff reports detailed tbe 1 population impact of develop· mentplans. • .. State Abandons Guardian Block By GAR Y GRANVILLE 04 th• O~llf Plloi Sl•ff A state move to block an at· ~mpt by parents and relatives Of 14 mentally retarded adults to be appointed their guardians was abandoned lodav. Aide Hit In Taxing Of Yacht • LOS ANGELES CAP) -Two employei: of the county as· • aessor's ofCice have accused As· ~lieSsor Philip Watson's chief field '4eputy of trying to block their al· Jempt to list the yacht of a Watson campaign conlrib\ltor on )he county tax roll. , ·The employes said Gene Eley, the deputy and a poUtical ap· )l>Ointee, h ad done so with Watson's knowledge. , Their testimony was the first major development as a county ,Board of Supervisors hearing opened Monday into marine as· .sessment practices. • The hearing follows charges by • Supervisor Baxter Ward that yacht owners were being allowed to pay lower asstissments or 'escape taxes altogether by list ,ing false home ports. ·. Monday's hearing dealt with 'the case of the yacht Sapphire Sea JI owned by Arthur H Kaplan of Beverly Hills. who con- tributed $1,000 to Watson's re- election campaign in 1970 and S2,000 in 1974. according to coun· ty records. The contributions were made .bY Kap I an personally and 'through his business firms. : Eley was named by Les Lak· 'ness. director or the assessor's m arine assessment section. and Peter Finie. t h e assessor responsible for vessels berthed at Marina del Rey, where Kaplan rents a slip for his boat. • Lakness testified that the Sap· phire Sea II was not taxed in 1973, '1974 or 1975 and that when he tried to tax the vessel, Eley told ,him it was for charter and could , not be taxed. The boat ·s owner was listed as a dummy corporation . White :cloud Boat Charter Co. of P ortland . O re . Lakness testified. The boat was never .chartered b y anyone except ...Kaplan. he said. Lakness said he ttfus«t to go .along witb Eley in 1974 and sub- .aequently was tr,ansferred out of lht> marine assessOMml division for two years. returning only re- cently to head it. • Finie, whom Watson has .termed a discredit to the office. testified that he believed the failure lo assess Kaplan's yacht was illegal. He said Eley ques- tioned what he was trying to do to "our friend" and preventA!d the Jailing until this year when .Pinle"s superior determined that _{'he boat was unknown to Oregon i watus . ~ jllrown Nam es According to Or. Knute Martin, director or the Regional Center of Orange County Serv· ing the Developmentally Dis· abled, lawyers hired to combat the guardianship petitions will be discharged today. The lawyers were scheduled to appear in court Wednesday to argue tbat the 14 young retarded adults do not require legal guar- dians. But Dr. Martin said today he did not want to place the center in an adversary position to the parents' guardian petitions. "l believe these young people, while developmentally disabled. are capable to a large degree or caring for themselves and of ex- ercising their own judgment.•• said Dr. Martin . "However," he added, "I don't want to be in oppe>sition to what the parents see as their rights ... EarlJer, a committee calling itself Parents and Relatives for Safeguarding Our 14 Mentally Retarded Adults had charged the center with attempting to ob· tain "complete control over the life and future of our mentally handicapped family member." The committee charged the state with fighting what it termed the natural right to have legal guardianship. It said the state by beginning legaJ action to stop the guardian pet!t ions was following "the totalit<trian principle that the state 1s a better guardian of our sons and daught~rs than we parents.'' ""I It was also charged by the committee that 'the center was wasting public money by 1m· properly hiring attorneys to fight the guardian petitions. The committee also said the center was opening the door lo exploitation of the 14 young adults by erroneously declaring them competent. But now that the center is withdrawing its legal opposition to the guardian petitions those arguments won "t be heard in court Wednesday. Still, the parents and relatives will have to convince a Superior Court judge tbat their loved ones are incompetent and that they should be declared legal guar- dians. Cyclist, 13, Killed b y Car A 13-year-old Anaheim boy was killed Mondav ni!lht when his bicycle was struck by a car, Police reported today. Ben Harold Stock, 13, of 872 S. Dune St .. was pronounced dead at Anaheim Memorial Hospital 40 minutes alter the 6 p.m . acci· dent. police said. Officers reported the youngster pulled from Verde Street onto Rio Vista Street and was struck by a car driven by Randy Steven Hunt, 17, of2810 E . South St .• Anaheim. Hunt was not held. The acci- dent is still under investigation, police said. Harry Ross Jr. .............. ,0 TH.REE MEMBERS OF RELIGIOUS HOUSEHOLD CHARGED IN DEATH OF 3-YEAR-OLD From Left, Velma Cunnlngh•m, Lor•lne Edw•rds end C•rolyn Cunnlnghem Slaying an Exorcism? Tot'$ Parents Thought Son Possessed YAKIMA. Wash. CAP) -A Matthew 17:18 -"And J esus mother and three other people rebuked the devil and he depart· charged with fatally beating her ed out of him." _ 3-year-old son -in what the pro-Exodus 22: 18 -"Thou shall secutor says may have been an not suffer a witch to live." attempted exorcism -are ask-Sullivan also said during the ing prospective jurors whether pretrial b earing that Cun- they believe in reincarnation. ningham and other members of Yakima County Superior Court the household indicated they Judge Howard Hettinger ruled thought the child was possessed Monday that the four and a fifth by the devil and beatings were defendant. all members of a re-· the way to deal with it. ligious household, were mentally Police said the C\mninghams competent to stand trial. lived in the Yakima area for Before he did so, four of them seven or eight years. and complained that psychfatrists neighbors said they Jjved in the who examined them were devils house for four years. No one performing witchcraft. seemed to know where they lived All are charged with beforecominghere. manslaughter and assault in the The women worked at a fruit from the house to get money, authorities said. Until about six months ago, weekly religious services were held in the house, sometimes at- tended by outsiders, a neighbor said. Other neighbors said household members were seen washing and, at least once. spray-painting their car in the rain. At the time of their arrest, another young boy. the son of Miss Edwards, was livmg in the house. He is being held by of. ficials. Authorities became aware of the dead child wben Mrs. Cun- ningham confided to a minister that there was a corpse ln her house. She called police at the minister's suggestion , She suggested he read an en· vironmental repo rt on a Southeast Orange County road study completed this summer to learn the answers to some of his questions. Mrs. Grindle claimed ber fellow commissioners tlave been unwilling so far to listen to such information because of the pre- ssure developers put OD tbem to speed approvals. "Are you going to listen now?" she asked. MacDougall, who said be had been listenin g but perhaps didn't understand, then asked, "Based on the wise or less-than-wise de- cisions we have made in the past where do we stand cumulatively ?" A1 Bell of the county E.nviron- mental Management Agency <EMA) said planners could supp- ly some rough statistics to com- missioners but emohasized thev would only be tentative figures. He said developing a monitor- ing system had not been a higb priority in the past and process. ing development applications had come first. Bell did say planners could not devise ''the grand system" for monitoring with existing person- nel and without spending a lot of time doing so. But he did propose a less sophisticated system which could be devel<>ped ovet the next several months. · "I don't think that is enough," MacDougall said, adding that in the meantime the commission would be left "blindly going on." Gil Ferguson of the Council o" Environment, Economy • Employment and DevelopmeQ.t <CEEED) said it was almost criminal that the commission had been acting all along without a comprehensive monitoring pro- gram and said traffic congestion and overtaxed sewer systems are the result. "You declared yourself in the game," he said, criticizing what he said was government plai\· ners' interfering with private en- terprise. "We all felt we were do- ing all right,'' Ferguson said. death of David Weilbacher, packing plant, but no one in the whose body was found wrapped household was employed when in a sheet on a cot in the sealed arrested. Apparently. Cun- back bedroom of a home just out-ningham had been selling items side the Yakima city limits Sept. ,---------------------------------------, 19. The coroner said he died of a authorities said. series of beatings about two months earlier . The defendants are Edward Leon Cunningham, 51. a self-proclaimed pastor and ''prophet of God;" his wife, Velma , 45 ; her daughter, Carolyn. 27; Lorraine Edwards, 20; and Debra Marie Weilbacher, 20, David's mother. Oavid"s father is a Marine, divorced from Mrs. Weilbacher. Only Mrs . Cunningham is represented by an attorney. The others said they preferred to act as their own attorneys, putting their fate in the hands of God. On Monday. the four asked pro- spective Jurors, "Do you believe in reincarnation?" They also queried them as to their feelings about spanking children. whether they ever had a religious experience and whether they felt God intervenes directly. in people's lives. D~ring a pretrial hearing last month . Yakima County Prosecutor J effrey SulUvan said Cunningham answered questions with bibli cal quotations , speclfkally: Proverbs 13:23 -"Do not withhold discipline from a child: if you beat him with a rod he will notdie." Wells Fargo's Golden Guar antee-guaranteed interest rate and a checking account free of month ly charges-a unique approach to individual retirement accounts for people with no employer retirement plan. No other bank offers all this-~dMLawyer ~o Judgeship ... ~ Corona del Mar attorney ~ Alicemarie Huber Stotler was ~ aopointed to the Harbor ... Municipal Court beach late Mon-· ~day by Gov. Edmund G. Brown ~Jr. Memorial Services Scheduled Thursday 1. The highest legal bank interest rate paid on current dePosits. Your monry (up lo 15% of your salary to a maximum of $1,500 a year- tax deductible) is invested in a special Golde n Guarantee account that, committed for 6 year~ or more. currently pays you 7 ~3 compounded daily to ;m annirnl yield of 7.79°i •. 2. A guaranteed interest rnte. Only Wells Fargo Bank guarantees the interest rate bein~ paid on current deposits until you re ach age 60. est rate to that of regular passbook savings on any money withdrawn at any time other than specified in the withdrawal provision of the ac- count. There could be a substantial JRS and California state penalty on ;my fund s with drawn before age S91 1. Golden Guarantee. Only Well s Fargo has il. For details. just send in the coupon below or ~top by your local Weill' Fargo offi ce. ~ Mrs. Stotler. 34, will take over ·:the post vaca~ when Judge Bet- ; ty Lou 'Lamoreaux was appe>int· ~ ed to the Superior Court last ~month. Mrs. Stotler said she will ~take up her new duties in about J twoweeks. ~ A Republican, sbe currenUy is t ln partnership in Santa Ana wt th ~her husband, James Stotler. Both ~were members of the Orange ~County District Attorney's pro- :1eeuting staff when they met and ~married. l~ USC Law School gr•duale in ,.-,. Mra. Stotler recalled Mon- ~ay that she was the fim woman jde'Puty district attorney to be f•med to that office by District. ttoftley Cecil Hicks. She la a mem~r of the Onnic ly Bar Asaoclat.ion Board ~ Directors ·and 111 actlv,e in the ce Count y Trial Lawyers latfon. Memorial services are sched.aled Thursday for onetime Seal Beach Mayor Harry C. Ross Jr., whose remains were found Oct. 30, nearly 1• years after his plane vanished on a Oi&ht from \1Ub to Hun tin st on Beach. Rites for Mr. KOSS wi.u be at 7~30 p.m. lo tlie Uolted 11.uaodist <l>urch of Seal Beach. Ilia aahea 'fere to arrive OD the Orange Coast today. Private family disposition or t1'oH remains, found oo a moun- tain peat ln \1tab'• Dbde Na· &Jonal Forest, is planned. A 11-year resident or Seal Beach before he acq1'ired the Meadowlark Airport operallon and moved to Huntln8too Beach, Mi'. Rosa was well known on the Oran&• Coast. InvesUsato.re ror the Federal Avlatloll AdmlnlatratJon have ' concluded N r. ROii and ~· passenger, Ur. Wallace Carey Halsey, of Smithfield, Utah, died instantly in the air crash. The Piper Tri-Pacer flown by Mr. Ross was owned by Christ Brotherhood Inc., an orcaruza· tion founded by Dr. Halsey and used in spreading CbriatJan doc· trine through evangelism. Mr. Rou was 48 and Dr. Jfalsey "3 when the airport operator and petrol~ pf'9duc· \ion ens.lneer perished oo March 27, 1913J A bunter stumbled onto lhelr remains. still in t h e wreckage or t he plane, last month. Survivors ol Mr. Roi.a ~Jude· hia aince·remarrled widow, litra. Elaine Ross W1rd ol HuntJuctoo Beach; dau1hters, Mn. N•ncy Blackm1n of SHI 8e1ch ~d Mn. Lind• Aabee of Lake~. plus a 1teP10D, John ShJ~ 3. A checking account free of monthly service charges and minimum balance requirements. another Wells Fargo exclusive. 4. A tax shelter for your earnings. You pay no federal or California taxes on your deposit!\ or the interest they earn until you begin to with· draw funds from your Golden Guarantee account. After an initial minimum deposit of $200 or·more. additional deposits m\ist be at least $50. Federal Jaw requires the forfeiture of three months interest and the reduction of the. inter· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • : \\'('II.; Fargo lfank N./\ .. Cuc;tnnwr Sl'rvic(•q, : • Rm. ~00. :n.t Brannan St . ~:in f r;.111chc11. • : CA 94107 a • rd like to take charge of my own retirement • : plane;. Please send me your Golden Guarantee : : broch ure. ; • • : NAP.IF. : : . • ADC'RE~S = : I r:1rv ~r11rr ;-rp ! •• • : rr~QNI'.' f =····································' ll't'-'M"f 0 t ,.\ ' wetlS flrgci Bank Golden Gilaraitee . . , A4 DAILYPILOT Tuesday. Nov&mber 9, 1976 In Classrooms Pledge, Silent I Minute Okayed · 1 Ex-chief Kills Self On Phone PITTSBURGH (AP) -"The next thing you'll bear ls the bang," Gus Zanos told his niece over the telephone. DO I HEAR $290? -Abruptly, it seems like everybody wants to buy the ranch. The spread of acreage in ques· tion is the lrvine Ranch. For a long time, the ranch seemed to be steeped in a permanent battle between the Irvine Company and Irvine Foundation on the one side and ranch heirnss Joan Irvine Smith on the other. The foundation, known for its good works in passing out cash to youth, civic and charitable or· ganizations in our region, holds controlling stock in the ranch company. Mrs. Smith is the largest single stockholder . Fina Uy, along came the 1969 tax reform act which will require the foundation to divest itself of ranch stock by the year 1983. So now a sale seems to be under way, PHILADELPHIA (AP)-Tbe Philadelphia Board of Education has voted to require the city's public schoola to provide pupils an op- portunity lo begin the day with the Pledge of Allegiance and a minute of silent meditation. Pupils can abstain from participating for religious or other personal reasons. In adQpting the plan on a S-1 vote'.!J1'lday. the school board said {h silent minute was not an atte to circumvent the 11163 U.S . Supreme Court decision banning school prayer. The Orleans Parish School Board in Louisiana also voted Monday to a llow pupils · and faculty a maximum of 60 seconds of silent meditation at the begin· ning of each school day. SCHOOLS SUPT. GENE Geisert said the meditation period was not meant to be a re- ligious exercise. He said those pupils not wishing to talte part in the meditation must not interfere with those who do. meat to r~ite the pledge. Tobyann Boooio, lone dis· seoter among the board mem· bers, aald the pledge could make children uncomfortable and the meditation might invite them to be disruptive.· "I don't want to go against anybody's reUg100," she said. "I have discovered that several re· liJions . . . are not allowed to take the Pledge of Allegiance." The plan may run into dif. ficulty. said Spencer Coxe, ex· ecutive direc tor of t h e Philadelphia chapter of tbe American Civil Liberties Union. He aaid the "purpose of the re· solution is to institute a religlous ceremony in tbe public schools." Millionaire Adopted Michael Papadopoulos, ll, who lost his family in an auto accident f<>ur years ago, has been adopted by his aunt and uncle, Katina and Dimitrios Papadopoulos, of Chicago. As a result of the accident, Michael was awarded $750,000 that was placed in trust until he reaches 18, when it is expected to total $1.4 million. And Teddie KUoxylos listenecS al the other end of the line Monday a.s her SS·year·old wicle, a former small·lown police chief, shot himself to death rather than begin serving a six-year jail sentence for embezzlement. ZANOS PLACED THE call from his attorney's office minutes before be was to teport to jail, the coroner's office said. Tiie sen· tence was imposed after he pleaded guilty in a $418,000 bank embezzlement conspiracy. ''He told me he wanted lo say goodbye.'' Mrs. Kiloxylos, 4.1, told authorities later. "He tells me he was sold out by bis attorney, that he was bearing the brunt of the whole thi.ng. ''Then he says, 'The next thing you'll hear is the bang.• I beard the blast and I heard him fall." MOBIL OIL Corporation jumped into t he thing and offered 200. Mrs. Smith alleged this wasn't enough and promptly laid a lawsuit on the whole deal. As her legal action got under way before 'Orange County Superior Court Judge James F. . Judge, in jumped an outfit known as Cadillac Fairview of Toronto, : Canada. These people offered 160 ' cash for the ranch spread, plus some 10-year notes worth 120 for "If a student wants to begin his day by getting in touch with God, or simply putting his day in order in bis own mind, that's his pers onal c ho ice ," said Philadelphia school board member Felict! Slark, who in· troduced the plan. Carters Find Privacy FEDERAL PROSECUTORS claimed Zanos, ex·police chief of Apollo in nearby Armstrong County, embezzled the money along with two bankemployesina check kiting scheme. Zanos al· legedly used most or the money to buy pornographic movies that be hoped to sell al a profit. Reciting the pledge had not been a citywide requirement since the late 1960s. At that time the board responded to protests from some parents by leaving a decision on use of the pledge up to administrators at each of Philadelphia's 2,080 schools. Presidem-elect Rests, Studies Papers : an asserted total face value of 280. All of these bids were rolling in before Judge Judge. No longer does he seem to be just a judge. He's an auctioneer. "I WAS SHOCKED to find that this wasn't done," said Mrs. Stark about the lack of a require· ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. (AP) -After months in the in· te.nse glare of the campaign trail, Presidenl·elect Jimmy Carter and his family a re successfully secluding themselves am.id the marshes and sea islands off the coast of Georgia. "What am I bid now ?" he mjght have chanted. Well , all of the figures I've re· cited above have actually been simplified. To make them come out, you have to {Stil the word million behind them. I didn't because I can •t really ~out much above a $2.84 lunch eek. Guerrillas Cited THUS IN REALITY, Mo bid $200 million for the Irvine Ranch and Cadillac Fairview came back with S280 million which might get discounted to $269 Angola Pillaging Told· by Refugees • million when they get it sorted out The Mobil countered with a ' bid of $273 m illion in cold cash bucks. OSHAKATI. South-West Africa (AP) -Refug ees fleeing southern Angola claim Angolan and Cuban troops and South-West African guer· rillas are destroying villages, slaughtering livestock and raping and killing tribespe'ople in their drive to wipe out a pro· Western guerrilla "Come on. folks. you're not go· ~g to let this gel away for a ,1Paltry $273 million are you? ~ "Looka those rollin ' hills. Look a a II those gullies, sage brush, cows, cow chips, ocean \'lews ... who'll gimme 274'? Humor now ha<; 1t that another • t'onsort1um, headed hy two men ·n am <'d Alfred Taubman of • P 1•tr111t and \harles Allen of New !'"York, JUSt made it $275 million. • Or the bid tfiay actually by ; \tot1rlh $284 mtlhon. ~ WllO'LI. '1AKE IT 28..'i '' Who kno v.s" :";orm;11l y. I '>l <•Y Near of auc- • tion~ J 'm tlw ~uy who goes to the • pohct· auction. catrhes th<.' bid· : din~ f1•v1•r, and ends up buymg a '• ru··l~ h1h worth $6for$45.25. Or I outbid everybody for an • 1.1nopt•nNI 1·ardboard box and find t out 1t <'ontains somebody's col· • 4'<'t inn or p<1p botUe caps. ;, Thi> In tnt' Ranch, however , js :, onr duct1on r won't have to worry ~ ahc)ut g...ttang suckered into. The ;,;bids may now be $273 million ~cash. or $280 million in cash and ~DOH'!! or $284 m illion in cash, •:n otes and whatever. ::-Thank goodness 1 don't have Lo :}sort it out. Let Judge Judge be ;r.the judge. :: l'm still punting over Mon· (.day's lunch check. f •• group. Burning villages in Angola could be. seen and artillery and shooting heard from this villa'ge on South-West Africa's border wtth the former Portuguese ter- ritory. An estimated 8,000 refugees have arrived m the Ovambo and Kavango tribal reserves along the border in the past 10 days, ac- cording to Jannie de Wet, South Africa's commissioner general for South· West Africa. S,,ria11• ltlo1'e In BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Three Syrian infantry brigades with 600 tanks occupied vantage points overlooking the Moslem and Christian sectors of Beirut today in preparation for their new role as enforcers of the civil war truce. A spokes man for the Arab League's peacekeeping com· mand said the Syrians advanced to get into positions from which they could s weep into both sec- tors simultaneously and dis· engage combatants. There was no indication when the Syrians would move into the capital. /tll625 to Be Retu,.,.ed TOKYO (AP> -Japan and the Soviet Union reached agreement today on the return of a ( JN SHORT J supersonic MIG25 fi ght.er flown to northern J apan Sept. 6 by a Soviet air force officer defecting to the United States. The Soviet freighter Taigonos is to enter Hitachi port, 60 miles northeast or Tokyo, Friday to pick up the dismantled Soviet jet, the most advanced in the Soviet air force and a closely guarded secret until its appearance in Japan. FPC Cuts Co•t WASHINGTON (AP) -A con· sumer group estimates that the typical American family will save $42 a year as the result of a Federal Power Commission rul· ing. The FPC refused Monday to make electric and gas customers pay the construction costs of new power pla nts and pipelines before those facilities start de· livering service. The FPC action does not re- duce utility rates. Instead, it blocks an increase that would have resulted if the FPC bad followed the industry's urging tO let power companies include in their rates the cost of power plants still under construction. .. f'' .. •' .. t• ~ Air Mass Chills South l ~ Temperatures Hit the 20s Through Florida ~ Tf9111perat 11re•· J Nl•ll I.ow Pr, .. 1f)MV 18 1\ All>l"IU~r!)vr bA 3) ~· All<l'lll••l1" • 1 1~ .en lo All..-1• • 1 '1 ~· 6'tktr\lltld 81 58 ~ 6 •r""f11111Uft \1 7S ,,; Bo•ton •l 11 E!~ &tr•I<> JO 11 .01 C:llarlt~l°" J• 10 blarlottt • •S ?A 't • Otlcaqo 36 )1 ;. Clo>e•nn•tl H 21 ·!• O owlan<f n 1' ~ g:nvn 11 ,. :J ev::::~' ~ ~ .01 t. ~rM'/18~'1' 11 2 ~ Jlc>M1u1u t\ n ii": "°""'°" &J u ~ IJIKh()fWlllt {>! JS ~, ken~• Cllv · ,o 17 1:' L•• veq,u · ao A8 ~ l 1111" 11°'11 H 01 '· e•ml ll 61 ~ llwllu~tt 3J '1 ~ 11\~ol)OllS SI Pful •0 "' ' .. __________ _ D.ii, f'llot D4''"'Y ...... "'''~ ~11Y·frld11v u ..,,.,., n.:, nciC ~•vft "°'" °''"'" n.,. " 10 p m t.tU bnfN1t r nm and Yf)Ut coov writ tilllt ~1Vtl"ecl Sllfurd'f tlld ~n<joy ti l'Oll clo not ~~,,.. you~ o<mv nv A • m ~.it ~mr .. •o • m "'""' ~" Cl(W'l\t win bf! ~V...,ftid NewOrl~..,, '1 3J Ne•YO<ll 41 '1 Olcl3"°"" City 6t 4A Onwl"" SI )1 P91mS1"1'1"0' ~· ~ Pllll•Oolpllt• •t 7l Plloltnl• '' 'O Plttsbtl"O!I ?~ IS l'orllend, ~ 41 'I? PortltnO Ort . 6f 4A FllcM'10'ld AS 17 SM: ra,,,.nlo " '3 SI. Louis .. 41 S.11 lAkt Gltv " ll S.n l'rtncl-7J ft S...tttt &O 11 Tll•rrnal ti ~t W•llllnqton A1 1!il fl.S. s ........ ll'Om Ille P-clflc wl II comblM 10 l>t111Q ~ 1119111 COOllllQ eflKI lo Soutlltm C..lllorn11, &<Cording 10 Illa "'"''-1 W.•l,,., S.rvtu. Oesoite 11\e 111011 cirrus cto.m, tM """ will slll"<t In mo\I ,,..., -dfvtlrnt l•mp•raturt• ••• oc_,.., to tit l>fllV a few 0•11••H bel-""°"' Oay '"dlnQ• wMcll rtacMO" 111 Lo' l\n9tl0l •nO Into .,,. 'Os In lnlond v•llty t•HS, ForocHh Pll1 bt•cll .,.." lllOM In Ille IO'# IOS. Wllll v•ll•v• In Ille Ul)Otf ~lo mid.,,, end 0.Mth In the low 90sto1owt0\. NIQl\ltlme lo.ft Art OPKIM I<> dlo Into, ... :io, •nd ~In lllt mount•IM, Tiit Natle<1•I w .. 111er Se"'lct at· lrlbutH Ille unstHO<lably llol WfftW tllll llu prevelltd In Soutlltrn C.llfornl11 for i-wetlls to 11 Dtfilt- lt11t 111011 prusurt a re• o,..r tt.r -ltrll sltlH. For~••ltfl ••Y 1111• ""~ -'«llt<I out cool w.,.tlltr front~ '"°"' ,.,. Pacific •nd ~nerattcl hot dry S...18 .tln.t wind• llltl Mf'll -Pffjlluret tCM1rl11t, Carter. according to aides, was dividing his time between r eading volumes of policy and aM>oint· ment documents prepared. tly his staff and relaxing with his family. CARTER'S PRESS secretary, Jody Powell, canceled a news briefing on Monday because he said that as far as he could tell, nothing worth reporting was hap· pening. Powell ad milled that he could not e ven reach the President- elect by telephone at his vacation retreat by the Atlantic Ocean. While Carter rested and studied, Jack H. Watson Jr., the head of bis transition team, flew to Washington to make arrange- ments for his staff to take over of. fices in the New Executive Office Building a few doors from the White House. An aide said the transition staff will leave Atlanta and move into the new quarters next week. ONE DOCUMENT THAT Carter is studying is a memoran- dum from Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller. outlining bis views on the role of the vice presi- dent and his rel ationship with the President. The eight· to IO-page document describes Rockefeller's ex· periences in the office and says t he vice pres ident's main responsibility is to be ready to as· sume the Presidency at a mo· ment 's notice . a n aide to Rockefeller said. The memo tells how Rockefeller organized his staff for that purpose, he said. Rockefeller said he attended meetings of the National Security Council and met weekly with the President in order to keep abreast of national security and in· telligence matters. THE MEMO SAID nothing negative about the office, which on occasion, has been disparaged by Rockefeller and others who have held it. lo Washington, the State Department said it had had no contact to date with any of Carter's representatives. But a department official in· dicated there would be no foreign policy initiatives during the 10 weeks prior to the transfer of power from President Ford to Carter. Zanos considered his sentence too harsh and had tried to raise· money for a lie detect.or test that he hoped would at least part}y ex· onerate him. his brother Jim said. "He asked me for some money ••. l justdidn'tbaveit,"hesaid. AFTER THREE postpone· ments, Zanos was ordered to re· port to jail at noon Monday. About tbat time, he went to see his attorney and asked for the private ~e or an office to make some phone calls, police said. He carried a concealed gun and let· ters addressed to three local newspapers and the federal judge who had sentenced him. "So to all my friends I want you all t.o know that I am know (sic)· crook," said one letter addressed to the Pittsburgh Posl·Gazette, which published it today. " .. I do notfeelthall was treat- ed justly in my sentence of six years . . • There are so many other things lo say. butl guess my time is running out." . t Kitchen Help for the Holidays J Look to the food pages of the Daily Pilot for timely tips on menu planning, especially during the holidays. Food Editor· Barbara Gius offers a host of ideas and recipes to h elp you add s parkle to your holiday menus for family or friends. Along with guidance to the best food values of the season·, you '11 find holiday bargains among the advertisements placed by the Orange Coast's leading grocery markets. For extra kitchen help during the holidays, turn to the food pages in the People section of the Wednesday DAILY PILOT 642-4321 ANIMAlo ic¥., ••lilt-,,., ''LOST ANOTHE.R HOT 0£BATE. , E14 ?" . Police Use Fed Funds For 'Taps' BALDWI N PARK (AP) Funds fro m a million-dollar federal gra nt to gather 1n telligcnce on criminal activities were used in part by police here to illegally ta p telephones of c1tv employes and hug a clo:.1..-d·do<Jr City Council inepli n~ for ap parently political motives, lht.' Los Angeles Times said today The newspaper also quoted in formed sources that conversa lions in the offices of the Baldwin Park mayor and a newspaper publisher were monitored dunng 'the alleged JO months of elet· tronic snooping that ended last March. THE SURVEILLANCE in th1• suburban community "apparent ly was politically motivated." the Times said. James :::iexton , tne acting c1tv manager, and newly appoint<'<! Police Chief Leonard Chell.mo n · portedly launched an invcstir:u tion into the allcgt•d snooping ancl discovered several tape recoro ings at the home of former Poli c•t• Chief Dale Adams, who ,~ed of cancer las t month, lhc ac,·uunt said. WIRETAPS arc illegal under California law, whether conduct eel by police or civilians. The ta .... does not arrect federal law en forcement oersonnel operating in the state Police 10 Cahforma. h<>Wt>ver are permitted to use t.'lectront• eavesdropping devices but onh durin~ a criminal 10vest1~at1on 25 F r eed In Heist At tem pt LOS ANGELES <AP> -PQlice freed 25 persons locked in the vault of a diseount jewelry store du.nng an alleged robbery al· tempt and arreste<J two rntn try- lflg to escape by posing as hos tages, officers said. Police said a third person was believed involved in the incident Monday at th e Columbia Me rch andise Co. s tore in Tana na. But no further arrests had been made • Rain h a No rth B y The Associated Press An approaching cold front could scatter s howers across Northern California tonight or Wednesd ay morning, the Na tional Weather Service says Scattered s howers \\<ere likely [..__ __ s_1_a _1e _ ___,J today along the coast north of Caoe Mendocino, spreadin~ in· land and south to Monterey and Sacramento by tonight or Wed - nesday morning lie Play" Golf PAL~ SPRl:-.:GS I Af'l President Ford will not decide on rus future plans dunng hJS cur renl vacation , according to an aide. Robert Barrett. "There certainly will be fto de cisions m ade," Barrett said as the President spent a second con secutive day Monday altendin~ to paperwork and playmg golf al Lh1o:; desert re~orl. Pa<"t ,tppr ot•ed LOS ANGELES 1/\P l A s ~cond u n i o n which had t hr eatene d to s tr1 kt· :;upermar1<e b in South er n Cahforrua and Nevada has over whc1:n in;.;ly ratifi ed a new con tract Official word of the rat1f1cat1on Monday by the i\mal~am atPd Mealculters and Butchers Workm en came a day a fter a ~1m1lar pact was adopted by lh<' Teamsters l.inion. Pair 11 rre•t e d LONG flEACH <AP > Two men have been arrested in con 'll'C't10n .,.. ilh an alleged a ttempt l1• l?'tu rt S 50,000 from ;1 l akc wood foundr} owner • TESTIFIES AT HEARING Charles Kidd P UC D enies Added Charge To 'Life line' • • SAN FRANC ISCO-(AP) -The s tate Public Utilities Com - m1ss1on ha!. turned down a re· quest by Pacific Telephone to de· lay an order ending an added ti me charge !or residential customers paying "li°re line' · rates, The telephone company has until Nov. 22 lo appeal, lhe PUC said Monday About 500,000 customers in the San Diego and east San Fran· cisco Bay a reas and Orange County !Are affected by the de· c1sion. The PUC ruled ~lasl week that Pacific Telephone could not charge lifeline customers extra for phone calls lasting more than f1ve minutes . The basic service charge for li feline customers is $2.50 a month for 30 calls. The telephone company says it will lose S6.5 m1lhon in revenue annually If unable to charge ex· , tra for longer calls \ f SP £ c 1td '.HOWJN<. < >1 U)c r NJ H n 11111 1~ 1 1N1 11Wf1 Ii, Du11'1 1 1 • •111. I ltl'' d,ry ; 1·11,11 • , 11 I I 1111 11 11, \ • 1 l•· I i 1 1 • 11tl, 1 l(l 1hrou11h I rid r:, ~. 1 "111!1"1 I . l 111llrn I·~ S 11111 I 11 r t• .i 1 I,, , 1 o:J1ow111q ol I 11.11111~11 .Jl11 1 : • ., 1t111q 11111• I•••' 11, " ' t I I II I ' •l • II I < ollrrtmn o l frrw 1.d1 ti 1ri,1111cf;. '"'111i fl'' 11ll1. <1 11 1i> 111.J 11 "' , , o1111111 1111111i11•. onc·o f a-~tllf l d1 .qn .,111d lrl•>llll ltn•," Ill l n~ lf11l1I In,, I "''·I'"' I. ~.I 1111 CO<JS I Pl<1l ;J Hl f 1111• I, ,,c•lry M1ddl11 l.PVPf 3 days only I Wednesday, November 10 through Friday. November 12 - Bullock's South Coas Plaza, San Diego Freeway at !:f1stol, Costa Mesa, 556-0611 ~ DAILY PILOT ,4 ~ Hospital Inquests Deaths of Mental Patients Probed VENTURA <APl A Ventura County grand Jury has heard te:.timony that a Cumarillo Slate Hospital m ental patient died or pneumonia after doctors failed to check her thoroughly And prosecutors say that death and 12 others at the ho~pital could warrant charges ranging from murder to criminal negligence. Meanwhile, a Los Angeles county coroner's JUTY decided Monday thut the death of a patient at another m ental hospital Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk was "al the hands of another, other than by accident." A SPOKESMAN for the Los Angeles 1.hstnct al torney's office who had monitored the inquest 1n to the death of John Edward M uh ck s aid · "From this point, we'll be working closely w1th sheriff's deputies in the homicide division to answer the question of who administered the drug specifically, who was responsible for the overdos e ingestion ... A pathologist from the county coroner·med1cal examiner's office testified that Mullc~. 32, bad died from a massive overdose of an antipsychotic dr ug. Thorazine IN WHAT PROVED to be u s tormy day on the state mental hospital scene Monday, a newly hirt!d troubleshooter called Metropolitan "a mess " However . Raymond Procunicr , c h1ef dcputv director in the state Health Department. blamed oroblems in the 11-hospital system on a "few bad apples" and vowed to get rid of them even if they arc hospital directors. · Procunier made the t·omments al Cam an Ito where ho.spilal employes Ul an angry press con ference complained bitterly about understaffing. ASKED ABOUT alleged 1nllm1dation of some employes ·by other workers. Procunier said. "We are going to find out who they are and boot them out." The grand Jury probing patient deaths at Cam arillo held its first session Monday. Deoutv Dist. Atty William Maxwell said a year-long investigation of death& over the last four years had turned up 13 individual deaths tbat coulel warrant serious charges and 42 other questionable deaths he said wouJd be presented ''in summary form " MAXWELL CALLED four witnesses who testified about the death of Alice Smith, 60, who was admitted to Camari llo on May 1, 1973, for psychiatric problems and died early the next day Although she arnvcd in a wheelchair and ap· oarentlv was havinA trouble breathina. the ohvsi· cian who admitted her merely prescribed tran· quilizers and s leepin(( drugs and sent her to an acute psychotic wa rd, witnei.ses said. Dr. J\I J . Lilly, a r C'lired p:.ychialrist at"· Camarillo, said he didn't give her a physical exam. because "l knew she had been cleared by the L.A. County medical staff." She had beem transferred from the Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center TWO PSYCHIATRIC lccho1c1ans , Ruth Morgan and Victorina Belote, both testified that . Mrs. Smith complained of dll!iculty breathing and was placed in a chair on lhe ward because she collld breathe easier sittrn" up. Dr. Harold Kade. a-former Ve ntura Coun~y Corone r 's official, said he performed an autopsy 00 Mrs. Smith und attributed her death to "terminal hronchopneumoni a 1' and conaestive heart failure. Kade said a person suffering from those condi t1ons would probably be short or breath. weak and "visibly ill." MAXWELL INDICATED after the session that he felt the testimony showed negligence In the death "She was not examined physically and the testimony that she had trnuble breathing. There was testimony as to a number of things that shouJd have been noticeable I think it meets all the tests," Maxwell said. Other deaths to be presented rnvolve slranguJa lion, drug overdoses and drowmngs. The hearings are expected to last 10 days and involve m ore than lOO witnesses THE P UBLIC and press were admitted to the hearings -normally secret -al the request of the district attorney und the grand jury foreman. As the session was beginning, the California State Employes Association attempted to get a court order closing the hearings. The CSEA r epresents a majority of the 2,000 employes al Camarillo, and the group's attorney argued that the publicity could hurl employes' re pulations and might affect tt ... grand jury's judg. TTIPnt ' The request was denied without comment by Superior Court Judge Robert Willard. It was not im mediately known ir the CSEA would appeal the rut ing. Swine Flu Slwts Turnout 'Slow' SACRAMENTO CAP) -State heaJlh or- ficials say the turnout for s wine nu shots in California has been "way below" expeda· lions. Bob Nan·ce . a spokesman for the state Department of Health, said Monday that only about a million persons had received either swine· nu immunizations or a bivalent vac· cination against both swine and A· Victoria flu. "BY THIS T IME we hoped lo have sever al million" persons vaccinated, said Nance. who blamed the low turnout on the fact that a few elderly persons died in Pen· nsylvania after r eceiving swine nu shots. No link was established between the shots and the deaths. Nance said that 2,000 Californjans were kJUed bv A-Victoria flu last year. Most of the deaths occurred among the elderly and chronically Ill. WARNING TO ORANGE COUNTY SMOKERS Do not be misled by any persons who may claim that they offer a stop-smoking program which is the "Same as Schick Center." No one other th an your Schick Center for the Control of Smok- ing and Weight can provide this world famou s service ... either in terms or scientific expertise or in dedicated and professional person to person involvement. ' Schick Laboratories invested 6 million dollars in research studying addictive habits and how to control them. The original program was developed and tested by doctors in a fully accred- iled hospital. When Schick guarantees that you will be a non- smoker in five days or your money back, you know who you are dealing with. It is a name you can depend upon. Attempting to confuse the public by imitating Schick Center may be flattering to us but it could be disastrous for you. If you want to know how over 50,000 people have found the easy way to quit smoking, call your Schick Center in Orange at the Town & Country Shop- ping Center and ask for a free no obligation interview to get all# the facts. Call 658-8404. For The Control of Smoking and Weight Sebiek Center Jn Orange, call .SS8·8404 for a Free, no .. obllgatlon lnterulem ' . • - -6 4J PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE :!New Era Looming? It's been a dazzling performance Cor us here in Orange County. Llke spect ators in a tennis match, we w:itch multi-million· dollar balls batted to and fro as some really big-money outfits go after the county-based Irvine Co. Irvine stock, -no longer lighting ll;le new blds, it seems apparent the sale will be con· summated sometime soon. Now this may mean little change in how the Irvine Co. operation affects us in Orange County. Perhaps the new owner will like the present profit pattern just fine and it may determine that the entire manage· ment team and operational plan should re· main intact. First it was Mobil with a $200 million of. fer. Cadillac Fairview or Ccµlada raised it to $265 million. Mobil met the Canadian figure <\lld topped it by offering straight cash. Cadillac Fairview went to $269 million. But that's no guarantee. Property rights are property rights. With or without the Coastal Planning Commission, the Orange County Planning Commission, the Orange County Board ot Supervisors and other agencies, the Irvine style or growth and community responsibility could be altered drastically. So did Mobil, again with cash. A Detroit firm with the unlikely name of SMBH&Z Inc. sent everyone back to the drawing boards with a $285.6 million bid. By yesterday, insiders were talking about two more bidders and a potential final price of l)erhaps $300 million to take control of 80,000 acres of Orange County develop- ment land and all its shopping centers, of· fice buildings, construction projects and re· ~idential property. As fascinating as we find this aJmost frenetic round or bidding, it has some sober· ing aspects. We've all had our criticisms and our fun-Poking at the mighty Irvine Co. After all, it's been Orange County's biggest act for a long time and because of this very size find influence, il couldn't help but draw needles. sneers, brickbats and outright at· tacks. Certainly we would hope not. Whoever turns out to be our new owner, they would do well to understand and take ad· vantage of many of the seeds sown by the Irvine Co. in the past two decades. Out o f Step No thanks arc due to Orange County for passage of Prop. 2, the $260 million park bond issue approveq last week with a statewide margin or 200,000 votes. Yet, the Irvine Co. has largely been responsiv e to the many, often contradic· ~ory, voices it has heard. For many years, 1t didn't have heavy pressure from above to produce high profits and as a result a kind of slow-g rowth paternalis m took over. County voters, who stand to benefit from the beach and park scquisitions as much as any residents in the state, rejected Ute measure by a 30,000-vote margin. Principal use of the bond money will be purchase of coastal property as provided in the coastal conservation plan. And 13 Orange County s ites are on the recommended purchase list, including 1,050 acres along the prize Irvine coast. And maybe we got too used to that paternalism . With c ha ng ing federal statutes, the pro· fit incentive took a turn. The non-profit, oharit.v-supporting James Irvine Founda· lion-which owns 54.5 percent of the Irvine €0. stock-was told it has to receive more dn its investment. Other provisions of the law prodded the foundation into a position :Where it must divest itself of its Irvine Co. ~ock by 1979. But don't hold your breath waiting for all the new beaches and parks. It's estimal· ed most or next year will be spent narrowing doWn the list ol suggested purchases and ac· tual negotiations could go on for years. • That's what all the rounds or bidding Grc about. With dissident stockholder Joan Irvine Smith, largest individual owner of The only sure res ult of the passage of Prop. 2 is that future generations of Calif or· nians may be able to appreciate the foresight of 1976 voters-Orange County ex· eluded. ~ Reagan Comeback Seen New Base f or Conservative Republicam WASHINGTON -Ronal<~ Reagan's great moment. as he came close to displacing an in· cumbent president before a wid· ).Y cheering Republican conven· 6on last August won't be his last hurrah. The darling of the con· servnttves is quietly planning a political comeback. The plans took focus as Reagan dutifully campaigned for the man who had de feated him for the presiden· tial nomina· lion N. first. be flirted with \he idea of formin g a Wrd party 1( Pre s ident Ford lost the election. But he ~Jected this idea as 1mprac· Uc al. Instead, he persuaded himself that he could use the GOP rramewnrk to restructure the party into a ('Onservative bas· tlon He h as decided to lry. tbe re fore. to Reuganize the ltepublican Party. Reagan has confided his plans \oa few intimates·. who are rarin' \o be1ln the new cn,i.,ade. "We come out or Kansas City with ~000 trained workers." one as · aoc1ate told us. "Our lists are in· tact. We've got tentative meet· lngs in mind for December and January." One meeting would be held in the West. perhaps Phoenix, the other in the South. "Count on It. Ronald Reagan will be an ac· Uvist," promised the associate. ANOTHER top aide from lbe Reagan campaign pointed out that the charismatic former California governor unques· tlonably is lhe s piritual leader or the conservatives. Two other na· Uonal conservative leaders, Sen. Barry Goldwater, D-Arii .• and Sen. John Tower, R.·Tex., lost a lot of their credibility with con· servatives by supporting Presi· Dear Gloomy· Gu Since it is quite the ~le to wear patcbea on one's Levi 's pants ud ~ucb, won't 1omeone start the style o( at.ockln1s ..tth nma in them? We aenlor cltlteos on limited Well.ti would welcome aueh 1 (ad. f'.H.B. (JACK ANDERSON ) dent Ford at the R.1epublican con· venUon. the aide said. A third Reagan lieutenant. whiJe not ruling out a final shot at the White House by the 65-year· old Reagan, suggested that they mi~ht merely build a base for a younger candidate to pick up the conservative banner. Indeed. our source indicated that a search h~ already begun for a bright, tough. young conservative whom Reagan might ~room for the GOP nomination m 118>. REAGAN'S FlllENDS told us that his dedsion lo forego a placid private lire and return lo the political turmoil was reached 10 the middle of the Ford-Carter campaign. Reagan made more than 25 campaign appearances OS· tensibly \o help Ford but more pointedly to push conservative RepubUcans who had risked their political necks to support him aga.lmt an incumbent. Reagan sensed lbal the hysteria of past conservative re· vivals bad been replaced by a more stable affection and trust for their spiritual leader. At the time, he felt that the president was blurring some of the issues in an appeal lo the amorphous middle-of ·the-road voters. So Reagan decided to try \ogive the electorate a cold, clean choice in 1980 .. PLAGUED P IPELINE -The Alaskan pipeline, the gnat oll artery now being grafted into the Alaskan wilderness, has been plagued by scandals. We exposed the worst one: we reported that an estimated 1,800 possible welding defects were buried under tbe permafrost north or the Yukqn. ll is costing Alyeska. the pipeline builders, millions o{ dollars to re-inspect the work. We sent our roving reporter, Hal Bernton, to Alaska to in· vestigate the story on the spot. Posing as a laborer, he got a job on the pipeline. For two weeks, he watched the costly, painful work or uncovering segments of the pipeline to check the quality of the welds. Now we've learned that the welders may not have been ade· qualely certified before they were sent to Alaska to work on the pipeline. More than 80 per· cent of them were funneled through lhe National Pipeline Welding School in Tulsa, Okla. A quality control inspector who vis· ited the school in July, 1975, re· ported to his superiors that the poor quality of the welds on the pipeline could be traced directly to the attitude at the school. OTHER PIPELINE welding inspectors a lso complained to Alyeska that the school was send· ing welders to Alaska wbo hadn't met the tough American Petroleum Institute standards. One inspector called it ''the worst welder quality control job I have ever seen on a pipeline." Yet some officials, who wanted to lighten the standards, were fired from their jobs. Significantly, the National Pipeline Welding School is run by the Pipeline Welding Union, Local 798. This single local bas a near-monopoly on pipeline weld· ingjobs in the United States. The welders are a namboyant breed who wear· colorful caps and thick-heeled cowboy boots. They maintain a Ught. clannish membership. In Alaska, they clashed with the Teamsters who control most of the jobs on the pipelines. In some or lbe isolated construction camps, fierce, violent rivalries broke out between the two unions. Nimitz Set H igh Standarth From a inter t~ i1a 19'8 to. all U.S. Now odmiroU by Adm. CMdn-W. Nmiiu, thin chk/ o/ nawZ operoti.OM The Amerie1n people rtehtJy expect that publlc funds be expended 1n 1 manner and fol' such pW"pol\es u will permlt the closest scruttny olthe ethics employed and returns received. In discharging this responslblllty, it ls essenUal that all officers set tor themselves the highest standards of personal conduct in their contacts with firms and individuals havlne business dealings with the government to lnlure tbat these relations are above repto1ch ln every respect. Ontcers must realize that the acceptance of the most ln· slgnlfi~ant gift O?' ca.,ull entertainment, h~wever tnnocenUy tendered or received, from one seeking or enJoyinJ profitable business dealings with the navy. may compromlle and embarrHs tbe navy and tM of· fleer hlauelf. lt ls not to be Inferred lhataociaJ cont.ads 1'itb buatnas firms or their representatives are \o be wholly avoided. It Is 1ui1esied, however, as a general IUide in such matters that no officer should 1c· cept aocill amenlUes Ol this n1ture whlch he is not ln a position to re· pay, and further. that such rkiprocal rel1tiona at 111 times be in tbOd taste. 'What tonsUtutes "good taste'' 1' left to delerminaUoa by tM ln- ~al n-ial omcer, who must be .,.An\ of lh• hJ&h standards of ccioduct exgted ol him. . Will Carter Remember t h e Margin? A Time · for Humility WASIDNGTON -This was the most frequently asked question here once it became clear that Jimmy Carter had won the Elec· tor al College : would this dangerously narrow victory, the product not so much ol popularity as of organized labor's muscle and awesome s upport from Southern blacks, chasten the President-elect? The degree to which influential figures in both parties devoutly wish, for the country 's ~e. that the answer to this question is yes is clear from the follow · ing evidence: Item : As Carter's elec· toral vote totat' re · mained stalled JUSt short of the necessary 270 around 3 o'clock Wednesday morning, one of his most enthusiastic supporters among old-line Democratic polili· ciaos prayed that he wowd Wi n - but not by much. "He'll be• lot better off that way," the poUtician said. ITEM : On elect.ion day, a liberal Republican who had broken with President Ford to provide prLvate s upport and counsel to Carter contacted one of Carter 's most intimate advisers with this advice: since the result is going to be close. name a broad· based cabinet that includes all shades of opinion -including Republicans. Hem : William Simon. Mr. Ford's conservative $e('retary of the Treasury, would like to meet Carter to urge this: name a · "Republican --a con3ervotive Republican at that -as my suc- cessor at the Treasury if you want to give confidence to the money ( EVANS.NOVAK ) markets and avoid a freeze in capital investment. Hopes that Carter will heed such advice are fanned not only hy his tight squeeze. through the Electoral College but by the chastening experience of the campaign's last two weeks. When panic gripped Carter general headquarters in Atlanta as the Ford surge began in mid-October. Democratic pri0 f ession a Is perceived a new awareness C and perhaps even a new humility> within the Carter inner circle of its desperate dependence on the regular m.achinery of the party across the countrv. Nevertheless. those who know the Cart er operation best are dubious -skept icism but· teressed by a seemingly trivial in· cident election night. Ever since Carter 's nomination-clinching primary victory in Pennsylvania April 27, Democratic national chairman Robert Strauss has t,irelessly sold Carter to tloubl(ul party prOl!. Yet, when Strauss in Wuhington tried to contact Carter in Atlanta the call went un- answered. That might have been one of the meaningless 'oversights which abound in all political campaigns. Or it might have reflected the sen· timent voic~d by Carter's more ardent liberal s upporters the past week: that campaign manager Hamilton Jordan erred seriously in persuading Carter to keep Strauss as national chairman and to play· ball with Richard Daley. • George Meany and the rest of the old guard. MOREOVER, the Cart.er inner circle is unusually tightly knit and impervious to Outside in· fluence. That raises the possibili· ty that the President-elect and his insiders may soon forget how narrowly he escaped defeat. The nature of Carter's victory is shown by the indespensableroleof the recently voteless Southern blacks in insuring that the Old Confederacy would stand by the first citizen of the Deep South nominated for President in 128 years. The unprecedented black vote in the South compensated for the substantial rural white defec· Lions and gave Carter a Southern electoral vote total which made futile Mr. Ford's impressive performance in Northern in· dustrial states. Mississippi, which put Mr. Carter over the top early Wednes· dny with about SO. 7 percent of the state vote, is a dramatic il· lustration. White rural Misslssip· pians had come to perceive Carter as a liberal, so much so that about 60 percent or them are estimated to have voted for Mr. Ford. The slate was saved for Carter by a massive black vote that runs close to 35 percent of the total. THE VITAL 26 electoral votes o( Texas, biggest of the Southern &tales. were guaranteed less by Carter's hold on the country towns than by the Democratic party's registration oC minori~ voters and labor's help in gelling them lo the polls. To an even larger extent. the party and labor enabled Carter lo carry New Yor)c and Ohio despite heavy Catholi<: defections to Mr. Ford. Although humility Is rare and sometimes inappropriate for vie- torious presidential candidates, il might softe n two frequent criticisms of the next t>resldent: arrogance and insularity. Jimmy Carter's performance in the critical weeks o( transition offers the first opportunity to put it op display. The Bard By the Yard · A while back the color magazine of the London Sunday Timu asked a number of children from St. Mark's School in Halewood, LiverpOOl, what they knew about a man named William Shakes-Reare. The answers were lllumtflating. A few of them: Alan Coughlan.11: "He opened a few theaters. He wrote a lot of plays, some funny. They were about jesters . He wouldn 'l al· low women to act. I think he went to col· l ege and traveled to America. The plays we r e written in a very complicated language. I think It was Latin." Peter Weston, 10: "He made films. He was in lots or films. 1 think he wrote Swem l.oke, about swans dying. It was a1ways on TV. Most of his plays were about dancing. He had a lot of patience, if something went wrong he would scribble it out and start again." Maxine Vlasman, 10 : "Nut· tin ... The other answers were pretty much the same. There was a general notion that WHiie the Shake, as we called him ln Ascension Parish School, wu somebody pretty blJ, and that h• bad something to do with either writing or acting or both. AT AGE 11. my classmates and I knew (luite a lot about Wm. Shakespeare. We had not actual· ly ~•d any or his plays. That came in hl1h school, when we were exposed to A• You UM It, Mocbdh, Hamid. 81.f we sure did kbow be was the ~p, bS.ter e~ than Blll CHAR LES McCABE · Tilden in tennis, or the Babe in baseball. or Cromwell in perfidy. We knew, as one cril.ic put it, that be was "a dramatist of note who· lived by writing things to quote." We also knew that people sat through whole plays or Shakespeare's so they eould re· cogniie some of these s nappy quotations. We learned yards oflhe Bard's 11el pieces in our English and elocution classes. I could get through •·o. what a rogue and peasant slave am I" quite handi· ly ln my fourth grade, under the ministrations or Miss Cont.on. Likewise, some of the stronger stuff from M,acbetb. BUT WE never got the two greatest treasures of the English ianguage really straight, mean· Ing undiluted, in those early days •• For Shakespeare we got Charles and Mary Lamb's Tal.u from ShaU~an. For the Bible we could not or course be permitted to read the full St. James verslon, because it bad been trans lated by heathens. We were not even trusted with the Catholic Dou3y version, in Its full form, beoause It contained tome pretty tandy tluU about Sodctln and Ot>rnqrrab atid the pesslmtslic pieties ol Ecc~m.te1. What "'•' ~"\11~~ ofttred was IOfJ•'"hf ~d·~ Apin, T.al•• rrom. the Bfbl~ wh1cb cont.toed no'susplclon or the grandeur or language of the En1llsh version of the Bible. We were not brought up on "cb&lncd" Bibles, as some peo- ple lhouaht, but ours were not ex· 1ctly unlettered. ; The men who taught me, the l . good Christian Brothers, never really cottoned to either Shakespeare or the Bible. Both were thought a little "free." When finally I got around to stii- dying the lexls of Shakespeare, in high school, the teaching was so harsh. and loveless that I took a scunner against the Bard which bas not really disappeared \o t.bi& day. Men of my age who sit down to read . King Lear for pleasure arouse nothing but enVy in me. And the only book of the Bible that consistently gives me pleasure Is the aforementioned Ecclenaat11, because it is so UD· like t.he rest ol The Good Book. J I recently read H~t aeatn, and its reach almott excee& belief. And to think that the man who wrot.e that and his othel- Pl•ys was an actor who wrote ln order to give himself and hlJ reuow actors employment! ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 1<ntw7t N. Wted. Publ1~ Thnma1 Kt11ul. Editor Barbaro Krtiblch. Edllonal Pagt Editor , The edlloriol page or the Dajly .; Piiot !leeks to inrorm nnd sllmulate rcodcrs by prescntlng · on thl~ poizc divt'rse <'Ommentary (lll topics or inh~rcsl by i;yndlcat. • ed rolumnisli. and cartoonists. by : rrovldlnx a forum for readers' : vit•wi1 onrl hy presenting this .. new!l1'ilJX't'~ opinion~ and ideas on ('Urrcnt 1op1r~ 'T'hto editorial / C'lpinlon~ nf t h1• 0 111 ly Pilot appear onl) In tht! t-tlltor1ul rolumn at lho J.. "' top of thr Pttl<' Opinions ex• .. pr~M'fi hv lh1• <'Olurnrust.a and 1·a1 t1)0111'lb and 11.'ltcr writtrs ll'e thcl r U\\ n and no cndorstmrni t:A thr1r v1rw" b:v lhe D•lly Pilol shoulrl he inferred. .~ ......... ,A ..... •ador~ I J acqueline Kennedy On assis may become ·u.s. ambassador to I Greece, according to 1a n Athen s l newspape r. Mrs. f Onassis supported l Jimmy Carter dur-I ing his campaign. \ Sex Not Suit Basis -Judge NEWARK, N.J . <AP) -A woman who loses a , job or pay raise for ref us· in~ to have sex with her DAILY PILOT _.t 7 Hydroelectric Plani 1-MAJV,1.vOTE? Farmers Nervous• RIVERSIDE <AP) -, Tuesday. Novembef 9, 1978 Th d lt wasn't a verx suc· GRAND RAPIDS, Micb. (AP> -A d their playing hands, long-Utne Warte ' by Flower?. cessful cam p11 i en for new:oto1tst investigating PBB con· rarmera who con 't plow a straight "1r· seventh ward Riverside t~cnm~tion says doctors are fmding a row, and drivers with Cormerly slfgt- Cily Council cundldate high incidence or central nervous less records wbo suddenly began get DI CKEY, Maine CAP) -The dis- covery of a rare wild snapdragon ln a remote area of northern Maine could thwart construction of a $600 millloa hydroelectric project. Some 30 to 35 specimens of the furbish lousewort, a flower that wu believed to be extinct, were found this summer by botanls(.s surveying the Upper St. John Rivet . They were do- ing the work for a report oo the en- vironmental impact of U\e ·proposed Dickey-Lincoln hydroelectric proj~t. one or the largest fdderally funded pr ojects ever planned for New England. AN A.RMY CORPS OF Engineers botanist, Richard Oya-, revealed the discovery or the fem-like flower in a speech in Auburn, Maine. He said it could sidetrack the controversial pro. ject, which bas been in the planning stage more than a decade. Dyer noted that federal projects are barred by statute from destroying rare and endangered species of plants and animals. The furbish lousewort is includect on an endangered species list scheduled for adoption early next year. "THER E WILL BE a definite con- frontation with the Endangered Species Act if plans for the dams con· tinue," Dyer told the Maine chapter of the Appalacruan Mountain Club. Both Dyer and University of Maihe botanis t Charles Richards, who teamed µp on a twe>week survey of the Dickey area, agreed -that the furbish lousewort had little intrinsic worth. Ray Leroy Smith. Snuth, system disorders among Michigan ting tickets, and havlne minor accl ( J who formally filed as a farmers. dents. PCQ1T nr-y write·in during the clos· Diamond, whose team has been CJ' &J'-"' ing weeks of the cam· Dr. Sidney Diamond, a neurologist examinlng far mers and theJr familiu _ _ paign, didn't get a single with a 35-member team from New at Kent Community Hospital hen, ------------vote in the election. York, said be has encountered card • made clear that he ls not certain "'" "It has no commercial value. It's n ot pretty or be autiful," said Richards. ''It's scientific, entirely. It's .a rare plant that might become extinct ." CONG&ESS HAS appr opriated funds only for environmental impact and feasibility atudi• e<>Mected with the proj,ct, w}lich calls !or construe· tion ol two dams on the Upper St. John in northernmost Maine. One dam would be at Dickey, t he other downriver at Lincoln. In a telephone interview from Corps of Engineers regional offices in Waltham, Mass., Dyer said ''it would be somewhat ludicrous that 30 little plants could stop a mulUmillion dollar project. "Personally, I think it would be ridiculous if there were no other negative factors involved," he said. BUT HE EXPRESSED reserva· tions about the need for the power to be provided by the proposed dams. and echoed concern about the loss of 88,000 acres of forest land which would be flooded by reservoirs creat· ed by the dams. For m ore than a decade. the Dickey-Lincoln project has been a pet project of congressmen from New · England. It is designed to geneute 1.2 billion killowatt hours or electricity per year. players who can no longer keep track disturbances are related to PBB. 11 , l MANUFACTURED HOUSING·~ & RECREATION VEHICLE SHOW The Biggesl Snow of Its Kind: 60 Mobile a nd Modular Homes 1.400 Recreation Vehicles 200 accessory exhibits ~ DODGER STADIUM Adutts $2.50 Juniors 6 -16 $1.50 Children under 6 free · NOV.6-14 SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. ·WEEKDAYS NOON TO 9 P.M. DISCOUNT TICKETS AVAILABLE AT ALPHA BETA MARKETS AND THRIFTY DRUG STORES 1,boss cannot sue him for --------------------------------------------------------==-...,.,..--------,damages under the U.S. ,Civil Rights Act, a federal judge has ruled. ·· The woman should file ,'a civil suit charging ex· tortion or s wear out a rape com plaint. the j udge said Monday. U.S. DISTRICT Court Judge Herbert J . Stem made the ruling here in dismissing part of a suit brought by Adrienne ·Tompkins, 31, a Bayonne 'Stenog rapher who a l· '1eged she was fired from "Public Service Electric ·•& Gas Co. aft er refusing 1her supervisor 's sexual advances. · She asserted the Civil 'Rights Act of 1964. which lprohibits discrimination based on race or sex, ap. plies to cases in which ·women a r e as ked to crperform sexual favors at •work. BUT STERN said sex· ·~al attraction is a .natural part of life and 'hat federal courts can- ,not become involved. lie ~aid 1a man who makes 'Sexual activity a condi· lion of emp loyment should be sued for extor· tion. as if he had asked S exual at• tra .. ·tiora ;. a .:natural part of Ut~. 11ay11 judge. ~ the woman to kick back part of her salary. or charged with rape or as· sault 1f the advances were forceful. H e asserted the federal bench would be deluged with complaints if the C1v1l R1ghL~ Act •ere applied ,. "IF A SUP ERVISOR makes •sexual advance to a subordinate and this inggers a federal law - •~ith 400 fede ral trial judges jn this countq I don't know where we re •going," Stem s aid. He sai d ortice Christmas partieR alone would create a flood of .Jaw suits. l· • STERN DISMl~,ED t he s uit against the .auperviaor, but said "PSE&G must stand trial ro n c har ges by Miss -<rompkins that she was ffired for c:9mplalning -about the s'ilpervisor's conduct. Under the Civil Rlghts Act, minority workers and women who ~ake a11egations about scriminatory conduct re protected from re- 1taliatory firing. Mis!' Tompkins' lawyer1 Nadine Taub, said Stem's ru ling "is a huge disappointment to t he huge number or women laced with these problems.'' Miss Tompkins said her supervisor , Herbert Reppin, took her out ror lunch on Oct. 30, 1973, and asked her to slceo with him. E Sbe said that when she efused he kissed her , ealnsl her wishes. She as later fired. ~ Reppin has denied the ncident look place. The ompany said Miss [!Jf!'PklN was fired ln \1!"~ for poor attendance. - Got nine ladies dancing you hope to unload by Christmas? Move them under our tree. • O n eac h Thurs da y f r om Nove mb e r 11t h throu g h December 16th, the Daily Pilot will publis h s pe cial pages to make it easier for you to convert yo ur saleable items to Christmas cash. Buy a box under our tree & sell your toys, sports' 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 ~mailer box to $22.50 for the "largest b()x. BIG, BIG SAVINGS if you run more than one time. For more infor mation and to place your ad just call 642·5678 and ask for your Chris tmas Ad· Viser for more infor mation. Yelir credit is good with us. we·u bill you or you can charge your ad to your Master Charge o r' BankAmerlcard DAILY PILOT I . 642-5678 .. • 'f <"t<r•l!Tl.IA .. ,,.,~ .I .. For Christmas, Give Another Chance To Live aD.d Breathe in Orange County The breath of life does not come easily to everyone: Newborns with hyaline membrane disease, children with asthma ~nd adults suffering from emphysema and chronic bronchitis must fight fo r this critical breath of life. programs continue the Association's efforts to determine the causes, the treatment and the cure :. of respiratory afflictions. Christmas eats give the Association funds needed • to continue his work. When you receive your Seals The Lung Association of Orange County works ·-In the mail, give generously to the Luns Association. throughout the year to. aid this continuing struggle. You'll breathe easier, and more-importantly, you may Medical research, better breathing clinics, educational help others to breathe easier as well. • t I ~ LUNG ASSOCIATION Of ORANGE COUNTY Carol Kawanaml. President Volunteer Board of Directors 1717 North Broadway Santa Ana. California 92706 Telephone: (714) 835 LUNG I I ' Number 33 in a series of public service advertisements sponsored by Avco Financial Services, Newport Beach, Californi~ ~ ,' • l .. . ;,. • - AB OAILYPILOT Tue~day November 9 1976 , QUEENIE By Phil lnterlondi .... , ....... ,,~ .. ...... ,... .. , ... _.. "With most people, l deal. With you, I'm willing to haggle." .,-- Death Noticetr Career Day Set At Irvine Graduate and pro- fessional school op- portunities for minority ORANGE COUNTY and o th e r u n de r • E ll nl represented s tudents llTO 111.e will be the focus or G r a d u a t e a n d ,_..LWP~llWaes Professional Career Day • u....• ~...a al UC Irvine Thursday. ror UCI Information on ap-L' j plication and admission procedures, fellowships Fall enrollment at UC and other sources of Irvine totals 9,581 stu- Cinancial aid will be dis· dents, an increase of 220 cussed by represen· students over the figure tatives from the nine UC from a year ago, uni- c a mpuses. St an ford versityofficialssaid. University. the Universi-The total includes 7,419 t y o f S o u t h e r n undergraduate and 1,264 California, University of graduate students on the Washington and other in-general campus and 898 stitutions. medical students and re. Sessions will be held sidents In the college of from 10 a.m . to 3 p.m. in medicine. llERNSTEIN RAHOOLPH the third fl oor o r Inaddition.ll students DE-TRICE DCRN~TEIN •tw ioon1 l.ILLl .. N MAAGAAET RAN-c are enrolled as part-t!me o•L•~un••H•ll• r .• p,,,, •. J-w•vNo• OOLPH AQ• ,, A•\•d•nt ot L~u"" Gateway ommons un-d h b b Ex M i.11> \1•;11"1 ti; lwo O""""" 8'"''"· Ca 1,, ~ i•M' P•"\e<I aw.>v" der s ponsorship Of the Stu ents t roug l e - H>rry !l.,n. ..... All)Mt 8• rn\t••n NO• ~ t•l• Sn• " •u• .. Yed l)y UC c d" t ' c tended University pro-.odon· ',to• (!l1o·I H.1nn •1101 UQuM ddUQntor ~•t•v ''II• R L llludt I OOr Ina Ing Om· H•tl\ c ........ .,,., w1•.-h•ld ti '10 AM Jonn\•"1 ''""~'on Anthony M.""" ot mittee on Graduate and gram. r ... ,i.y No;o·mbM ~ t~I& llt "•c•llc BtOQmltl<j!On Ill no•\ Sn•wO\blOy•or Professional Advance· V•eN c hAr•'' Ol••r1 1t1n•i R~\htl• ""''"°" rnembt-r o• Ord,., nt TM· Et>\ttJrn ~'"" UCI Posl C.1ootffn••"' lf\tflllrtn••fH J't'IClf iC VI,..,,, rnembtr Of L '\fl•.Jn~ R"~Ch 'N?men \ ment. /!Jtp.rno,1,,1 ou1r f', <NIW1t1 l\lt,.,-1'1 c.-. Ch.ib Tht-MtJnf1,lv Mn"n'"'9 (hJf} 6nd 01rr11 .. rJby P 111f1 l/•wMortu 1rf M rf Jrn Ct'"t•• ,,, Commun•t• SMITH Pr~~tJVf•f'•an Chvr(t\ M~mor1al <.nC OrN 0 ~Ml tH '"\lff•nf n f ~rVICl''\) t)() PM Wc-dnesdA'( Nov 10 N•.,NW•'' f1,.,n, <-• P" ,,. t<iwdyN'>Y 1'11b .\t Cornt'lt.1,,1\y p,esbvtf'tHtr'I """"br' 1 19 -~ •. ,, , . ..,,.,, DV f1tt"1nh•r Cnun." in Ld')una 8e"'""' Ca Contr11>v PA" o •A •11"11 t t'4 wO••f I , ...... ,ti !"..A ti~l m•v t>f' "1.tdf" t•l Th~ ( -lnc:•r$N:1 .. ~ i.-r L •Ii f1 .i,t t 1f1t'j lt 'd' r1 Ot~• t1 Ar ran'l~m.-nl' ov Trw N i"()tuiv '"""r.: ot (h)t-. .. ?rtn , f'>U' Soc-..tv oYrt.>tat\.f!'• ~r.lfl•J-h 1r•l'l \-'r111t•\ wlll t)lll Yfftf VtSSE~ l'V"\'1 l'i N 1.,nnt1 r 1 • di ) i;)) PM •t A.OOL~ ( VtS~f R re\10-nt ~ S<1n r.-4 t, "'I "" '"''~·I • .,, ''"" N ·" ,...,.."' c~·, '"' t 0d'• o• tlt"alt\ ''° .. r -t ' V ,.w M· ~n.,,, ti Por"-P •• 1lu •IT'tbM / 1~16 Oflo-.1•1'1 '\On ot Mr & V·r#Mr.trt1J!'\• vd'"''""'"''~ M r\ ~'>n-11d ••ar-•m .... n ~oi. of San J~ E LLtS md Mr 1(16\\ V"\•r talh .. ,. ot OXta More information on Graduate and Proressional Career Day may be obtained by con- t ac t i ng Edward Escobedo, UCI director of the Graduate Affir- mative Action Program, at 833· 7295. Donald M . Pattison of Huntington Beach has been appointed publica: tions manager at UC Irvine. He s ucceeds Kathlee n Jones or Laguna Beacb who re- signed to establish a graphic design firm. WVf)MA MAY ( lltS ,....,,~"' of ,.,,,_ • tl)v n') Drotn,,.,. ot "i•f•n Vt\\er -----------------------(.~.ti) Mt,.'" ( ·' P•l''-'"0 4 w ty Nllv ct""1 Ft.lt\(1')1\ V·\"».-r DOI,, ot Sd:rt J~ Hnbtr I. 1'11> S~rv1vtd by t¥111D son\. end Aleaarw:Mr V1'\\.er of Co\t• h'eM . 0t(lit Cook of ~n A"IOnto l tui Oon tpv1N) Qr•ndson of Mr & Mr~ A...C Vl\-Coo~ of O\ceot.t N"b'•'kA two .. ,. of T,. Ntt"-,.l.1nd\ •no tM fa1e Ml .,.uQnttr\. Sr,•rrv TOdd 01 f=ull~,.tnn. &Mt-'l JC., Df!Ta•llt Hrwa\iNitive V•clltl S 8•rt1t or Fulttrton mot,..,.,., ot The N•tPMrl•ncu ana "''~was 21 Carr~ M~,. 811bt-f! ot Phof"n1 c FritttHS\ •tf" lnv•t•d to attf'nd '"-' •riron.. ,,..,,., broth"''· Forr•\l fun.rat \f'r'l1(f'' Thur\CI•., No¥!'Mbrr-9+\bf-~ ot P~n••. Aruon•. ~''"" ti 191• at 1 Ol'J PM. from Thoe Luna 81\~f' of M t•u•. Ar11on.ii (1,.,,., F•mdy Sant• C••r• '¥\0,.lu.,·y '66 W Mttrtln nf ~cott\d•I• Ant~ ,,,,,., W 1nchf\tl'lr 8tv1 S.anla C:l•ra CA Wal'\tJI M,>., '>f P"(W'l'\l.C Arttona ~Vf'f' PM nit •l'l ttt> 1977 lnt~rmt'nt, Crdu- gr an ctr h 1 t d r •I'\ 1wo Qti"'•t L•""'n ~rnor1alPar11t.~r1montC4' oraf\dff''llldr•I'\ Mflmorlll\I \l'fVl(f'\ Wiii lllA y I>" n••O 1100 ""°n <.ioo No .. me.r JOSEPH WILSON RAY aqelt O.t• 11 ton. al PlC1f1r y .,..,,,,, ChbPfl ...,,,,, '""' ~ OIMlh NO\l~mbfr b "''at Ne'WPor1 q,..,. B"#'" t<:urrtr o'''' ·~1lnQ, Int,., lM..Ch C.htorn'• Su~vtv•d by ht\'#tff'I" ment ttt Pl)(1t1r \/1f'w Mtmor1('tt P~r~. M.troJtr•t <MUQnt,., ttnd '°"+',..'•• New oo,-t 8t .. fh (.14 PitrtftC V1f'W Mr & Mr\ l\tan M 4l•id,ll"y of Saf\ Monu&ry d1rf<CIOr' 9,.rn•rdlnO 9r•f'ldr. h•ldrt-n. Aldn~. HALTER EIH•bettt !. JO\t'Oh M~ud\lev, JOSEF "iAl.TER, r•\ldMt ot !.'al lllp/>eW'\, 11\om .. & Monto of P•C!ll~ O.a<h. C• Pa\\td •w•y No• b 1q1•. PallHd~• Mr "av qr~dual"d trom t~ Born No• \ 1901 tn Vu<10\t•vo• Unl~r\lty of Color•do. Color..io So<· Surv!vf'CI bv f'tl\ w1f• Ro\" ttu" \iOf'f'\ tr.QI, w•s • ~MtM'f o' P"J Oe•t~ l"~ta AIMrt Halt,., nf RQtll"O Hill\ Er~'' ~ "'"'' w lfh c;.nprat Motor\ tor lS H•lt"r "' S.tnt4 An• •nc1 Jo"4"t H4'1t,.r v~.t" a1'1d hAt1 a draltr\hlP tn S.n ,.., Oru b•n"' Avqf,.I,• \PVf"ll a,.,.,."l.are11n.,,q401011tt.0 HPWIJ\lta1\0f'\ w qr and" hHnr "" t INO or,.Jt off1t,.r t>-t~tn Army & Navy for In· qrA,,<IChtfOf"'"I PO\•fY I )t') PM ~ '~'\ld•f' A1ru~ff e,,qlru Pr1rtq, In-: ol '1f''\day Nf>W",.f'tlCJI',. 10 1He, •It \• W\l\f't1nqlt'lo 0 ( ciuri"'l 'WW H He \lt'Ohitn\ (f'\urr.-. tn l" A""l"'lfll\ {' ,. ... ~ ,..,,.tnb"'' nt 4 tot,., Tf'MQlfll Md\\ w II ,,... ,,,,,, ~on 4M lhtJf 1 ''f Hnl'lt)I 1tu t<ddu" I(°"'" snru'f' Club, No'tt'mn.Pr lt .lt ~t ~ff"Ohil"n' (.nu"Pl Ito\ l·w K•)t\3 L•o-n\ Club •+'of H•w~; ,,,,4rm•ft1 w dl n~ •' ... ,,,~ (f'l'I" fl 9~.,d·IO ~"'I,. Ctub Of SAnta •n.a (t'"'W-tPry ~" lll'\ 4n ~~ifll' t ' cm•lf'l 'l tl\11 t'Y' BPOE 'll S1~ 9,.,.l"IJ,.d "'° -"'"'' #llorh.1•' '1 d '"' '"'' .,. •c. ''•'' C;omm.,,.,,,,.,. ft'fM' 01 S.r\.lr' •llt•GHT •~no t ( ,,.H Clvf'l ,-.,~"'"'""' "f!'''li'I •< CAT~EQtN f-.loft "14'4 f r.t ••f ._. "'"ti"'" 11 1t ·~ in &M "it .,..,,,....,... O·t\\•(f ~-' f N">v• Orr #it It f!li Sur.;•.,,,,, Of ",. '°'"' ff• '' J ,t • (j•uq""''\ W.rt, W I·'" r i. ·A1r '" '-"'' Mt\"" \<,,ti •a•rb\r t *' q,.,, mtpf't RAttrnO t\,1\.•n M r' ~ •• ..,...... Coo'\•v «("'"•' nr' •""' M•' P" ~tnttP\ .... ., A• r '""'l"""'•"l:1\ n-.. I"'-,.._ct J,...,.. •'• "" ,,,n ,, • _.. "" p,.•\b't'f1tr ,\'\ ,.-""' f\., ~JC •,1 A·'li1r...-w\ fl1 'tf"cit.f'I"•• R• 1th R ,,, ( • [.tfY'-1 ,,.. ,., ,""' p,. ........ "' .. tt ,,...., "'" '" .. ,., .. 0''..1'°'* s.,,. .. '• 'llCGOWHO IAN~ M ·.owNO ot l.Afl•)!'\lt t.4111\ r ,' N' "'""'"N"••fT10--rA. J~'1'-1t ,.... .. , .. ,,.,..." p '"•""" '"' '''"' vtlofj bt ~,. ,., v 't)f" t "" , < f\ .,. nt \..dQU~l -----------._, A,, ''" ' PM fU"\d~" '~ IALTZ·IUGEllOH FUHEll.U HOME Cr "1 l"t ',1 I h' 1 14 f • ,r J '/II' I 1)41) 4 <I Hll lltOAOWAY "401tTUAU 11') Or,.,1 1w , ( \,Iii 1\11' I t t ~ r~, .. ,f, McCORMICK MOltTUAlllfS L 1'l ,,.., I ll I ' 4 l4 14 1 ... ~ l'l 1n.l H 7n8 'l'L'I 1 .in J.nn ( ,,.,, ••• ;irn 4 ~'> I 7/f. P'ACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL P'ARIC Ct'mPll'rv Mr rl 1 1 / (.I ID• I J~oo Pv· • v w n• " NI' <NO ·vi C..tl1lorn11 1,44.;>700 rHK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME lR01 Oolq Avr• WP'llmtn'ltPr 893-352~ SMITHS' MORTUARY 627 Main <;t 1 f1Jnt1nq1nn B<>ach 536·6S39 SMITH TUTHILL L.A ... M'llU V.•1n""''Y fl. !')o A,M t-lt" tf St ~ ~n• I\ ,,..,,,,, ' (hur " l4qun.-. .,. II\ I••~,.,.,.. "It •c;< .. "•.J?n C,.,.....,,.,,, ' .. rwtP•r L 1·J1Jf'\-' O•.-~ ~,.,,,,_,, ,,., O•r,., I OWEN Gf')QC';f HA OWEN '""'"""' "' ~uo-. L~ounot (i1llforn11t P1\\-dt11way ~• t'l1' , .. ,1,.,..nr1111 f')n M()ndilV ,.,..,..nlnq Ni')vto",..,,,.0-,. 8 1'1• ~IJ,VIV~d bV hi\ d-tUqP,•~.-\l•n• (OW tfl> o• Sou'" L•Q\m•. ) Mr o ... " W8\ barn Jn E.nqlAM. ~r'" tf) t~>t\ "nd •• , •t ,,.,... ti,,... of f\•\ '1/111,l:ff\ lflfll•Jf• no I Qr c;.n~ \ Mr:\rtilf't in \"IQ ma 9t14ch r:,. 1-i,. nad t+wo m t 11, i'9-t t\'"a(tt f·Jf ''°'" C>iS'it )l Yftltl .. ¥VI "'• • \i,l .,. J' '" .. .,.,b'", ot the Mfxoan ~ ••n ln•1'1"" , •• ,, \;tn Fr~f'C•Vo '-h 1' , ,., ,,.,, . ..,. 1 Di tu\ qrdnd ,1.-nnt•" .,_ 1,. "" (ow ,,. ot Huntinqt°" Alo1 II'\ f•"l .,, Jttu.. bo1i.. Ir\ ~nql1nd f .,_,' _,.,.. • ' W•dn•\.~..J'f N'°'1t .. """""' 1n t•'lt 1~ 1 "'Wl PM SNftt>r l •ti'\,'"""'" M t1rt.1lt''" (f't.1()1'1'1 tlirl1'' 1"' n • ., PofVrt l """'""' 0H1"1•Hnq V \1' •• ,_,,...,_ ..,,~n"I OOPM f•.Jft\d•vHo,.. • ,,.f .,~, 1 , .. t. ,.,. • "" .. w . ...,..,_..,,, ,., \....,.u.,. l •1u".t B•• l't #IAt)rlUft' t d·t•' • w< ~·.THE ~~:s ~ HE4TIHG .All COHO. " .. ..,..., .. , ... .._, ,rArtflit-&II ·~ '''~ Vlf 1' •\I } '-•""' , fr, .... -· 495-040 I '=>"' .. v~ ~· 1 •9\tUt'fltOOft 8.,. J 642-1753 IC ITC HEN Ir IA TH REMODELIMG FREE ESTIMATES St• Owt Oft (llilaf• •• ,~,, .... l"' " • lo, l')f £:_ ••• , @~~~~iiiiii~ 0¥eRwelGHI? Learn What Makes The Lindora Method So Effec tive A complete program to Instruct patients how to lose weight easily. then how to ma1nta1n their lean weight. Doily therapy. with audio and sub-lim1nal visual aids to promote motivation and encouragement. H CG. a fol mobilizing substance. makes it easier for patients to lose weight without fatigue or excessive hunger. L1ndoro's very special diet. designed for rqxj weiglt K:e;. crd rrpoved eatng ~ Behavior mod1f1cation leehniques to learn weight control L•r.doro s easy to follow m aintenance pogrom ro prevent regaining The entire program 1s under the strrct -:L:perv1S1on of rr.ed1ccl doctors. specialists 1n boriotric medicine Coll 101 1nlo1mo11on Monday lhru Fncloy 9 A M 101PM -2 PM 106PM NEWPORT BEACH 640-6831 I. l'IYnl"bYl COSTA MESA 557·1893 //. rn .. ' fl\l1 I I' Son Bernardino -E. long Beach· Mission Hills Hawthorne • Orange • Newport Beach Gorden Grove • tong Beach • Posodeno lo Hobro • Woodland Hills • Sherman Oaks West Covino · Fullerton • fl1vers1de • Sonia Monico Cosio Mesa · Pomona • Cemtos. Hollvv)ood Arcadia • Torrance llindora MEDK:AL QJNIC 11()( t :lfO Medlc'.ol Cfln<s ore owned •r•l fldm™teiPd bv Moooeol Doctor\ 111111es1r1c1 1"8•r orocioee 10 Boriotrtes Ai I .... 1tn.c Per~I Doclon and Nurses om -c::ensed by ttlO Stole or CoMornio. Seminar Set For Women Orange County working women and those thinkin1 of starting careers are invited lo a free employment semlnar Nov. 20 sponsored by the county Commission on the Statua of Women. The 8:30 a .rd. to4:30 p.m. session will be held in the cafeteria complex at Santa Ana College. 17th and Bristol Streeb, county officials said. EDUCATORS, PERSONNEL SPECIALISTS and business operators will cover topics ranging from planning career goals to opening a business to preparlnl a resume. Special sessions wlll deal with minority employment and child care problems. Other topics will cover re-entering the job market and turning volunteer experience lnto a marketable s kill. CIDLD CARE SERVICE, at 30 cents an hour, will be available throughout the day, officials said. Reservations can be made until Nov. 15 by calling Margaret Parmelee at 842·3659. Reservations for attending the seminar itseU are not required. Information about car pools aqd other details may be obtained by dialing 834·6880. Those attending are asked to bring a sack lunch. H3 THE HUNTINGTON BEACH FAMILY MEDICAL CENTER < ORD/A L.J. \ /NI 'ffl:S YOU '/ 0 A rt /£1\' I J Oll R OPEN I lOUSE CELEBRATING THE RECENT EXPANSION OF OUR llEALTll CARE FACILITIES AND SERVICES SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1976 J8Q81 BEACH BOULEVARD, HUNTINGTON BEACH 2:00-5:30 P.M REFRESHMENTS ''Pssst! OCTDjust doubled bus service. Pass it on.'' Sometimes good news comes unexpectedly. Everyone is talking about Orange County Transit District's new improved service. We've nearly doubled bus service county-wide. We've added more buses to almost every route and streamlined the whole system. Many areas now have 15, 20, or 30 minute service. It's the biggest improvement we've ever made. No wonder everyone's talking about it. Call OCTD Information for the whole story. Then pass it on to your friends and watch the good news travel. And remember, nobody ever got a ticket on the bus. 547 3311 Call 547-3311, Or toll-free • ZENITH 7-3311, 6AM to 10PM weekdays, or BAM to 5PM weekends. ~ Good news· travels fast. '~ fnirhoven Memorial Pnrk OUll WISTCllFF CHArR Mortuary • • 646·4888 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 772-3470 PROUDLY ANNOUNCES Kelly W. Fuuell Ralph W. Gordon and Kelly W. Fussell have j oined the staff of the newly opened Fairhaven · Mortuary. Mr. Gordon and Mr. Fussell are both long time residents of Orange County and combine 51 years of mortuary experience in serving area families. They both extend a warm invitation to their many friends to stop by for a personal tour of the new facilities. fQirhove~ nemoriol pork MORTUARY CEMETERY 714-633-1442 1702 E. Falrheven Ave. • Between Tustin Ave. & Grand Ave. · Santa Ana Ralph W. Gordon Mortuary Manager T I • &~ W@(ill[? I ~-~@[(WO@@ I I ' ! t BJ, 82, 88, Be Careftd I DEAR PAT : I have started to study up on 1 vitamins. One thing confuses me. What is the d if- ference between fat-soluble amd water-soluble vitamins, and which are which? Clear this up for me and maybe I '11 be able to decide what dosage of l various vitamins I should be taking. A.V., Mission Viejo '! Fat-soluble vitamins are c:Ussolvable In fats or ollJ but not In water. Because tbeae vitamins can be I scored lD the body. dally dosages are not necessary. I A warning thoug h -vltamlD toxicity can result • from too much of any one of these vUamins, : particularly vitamins A, D and K . Toxicity . symptoms are headache, nausea, weakness and i fatigue. Water-soluble vUamlns (except vitamln C> : are part of the B complex wbJch contains at least 11 I vttaml.na. Eight or the mMt essential are Bl, BZ, 86, 1 BU, blotln, follc acid, niacin and pantothenlc acid. I Water-soluble vitamins cannot be stored In the body because excess amounts are excreted. They are not 1 toxic lo large amounts, just expensive. Cheek with I your own physician before you begin taking large doses of any vitamin. -.Jou.-.~li•• Won't l'eflote DE.AR PAT: Can you tell us the best way to pre- serve newspaper articles and, perhaps, a n entire· newspaper? We arc interested in the preservation process that will keep the newsprint in the best possible condition for the longest period of lime. J .E.A., Huntington Beach Lamination Is your best choice. When a paper ls laminated, all air is forced out and preservation is virtually permanent, as long as the plastic remains intact. Lamco, 13552 Illlnols, Westminster, pre- serves paper Items of all kinds for a minimum cost of S3. Price is based on the size of the material laminated. Lamco's spokesman says this firm bas laminated documents and olher papers dating back to Abraham Lincoln's time. No deterioration of these items bas been reported following lamination. An alternate s uggestion offered by Lamco is to spray the paper to be preserved with resin spray products used by artists. This method, however, may not pe rmanenUy eUmlDate air from touching the paper, and e ventual deterioration may take place. . DEAR PAT: I've decided to buy an air condi· tioner even though I live in San Clement-e. an area only recently affected by smog. I have lung pro- blems and when I get up an the morning and see that the horizon over the ocean looks like the "Big Bomb'' has already been dropped, l know I'm going to have a ba d day. In shopping for room air condi· Aid D~y .... Changed The Veterans Me<lical Ass istance Center <VMAC>. which provides assistance to veterans and their families in s~t h Orange County. has changed its business day to Monday. . The oHice, located in Suite 24 at the Sad- dleback Comm unity Hospital Medical Center, 23561 Paseo de Valencia tn Laguna Hills. is open rrom 9 a .m.. to noon on Mondays. T~lb Re'gr.-t Additional information rs available by calling the VMAC headquarters in Santa Ana. 834·2035. Sen . Mike Gravel ( D-Al<t ska ) has ex· prcssC'd hrs regret to ll1roshima Mayor Takesh1 Araki over a n·l'ent s how in Texas s 1mulat1n g the .1tomlc attack on the Jap a n ese r ity tn 1945 Injured Jewelry? Fin!' .lt•wPI r\' lw.i Irr! h' I! l' n l I l' I I' w (' I l' r <; Jewclrv ar>pr:iic;al<, IJy cr.11luat;o l!<'rl1<1lol(1,t - ('u,tum d~·,.1;-nc rf l''"t'ln Five M Gems 270 E. I 7tll SI. C.-. ... Nn•"-N .... $"41 ......... •45-1909 ~Schock Boats,. ~Sa ils& C a nnery Village Fashions cordially invites you to an ®IIDJEN Illl®U JE .a J U 1lithv \"I n t~ • .,n1'1 lht \hop1 ti! l.. ''''l'IY V•ll ".)• Thursday, November I I b 00UN•I 7 001>m. 7')()()l~IMll' All t/>Opl 01>9" & d•••l•v•'"I '(1"1:•111 Xm» Qih s.'4-. Wont a mo au• orion r A•frtV>menls ,...,.,, ( or oth«r rnwlcal fnatnunent ) Eur Cluslfitd Ad ACTION Call A Dolly ,Uot A.ct-wl1et 142·5'71 Tuesday November 9 1976 DAIL y PILOT A9 Cot a problem? Then wnle lo Pat Durm. Pat •J.>ill cut red tape, gtttmg t~ ar1swn:t urld <tctron 11ou need to solve mequrt1es m 901,er11me111 arid bus1 ness. Mall your quest1011s to J>ol Dum1 At Your Serv1ce. Orange Coast Dally J'tlot. P 0 Box 15611, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 lnt'/11.ck your telPpluml! number. The co/11m11 appears daily t.'I<:cpt Saturdays. tioners, I 've been confused by the EER ratings on the labels. What does EER mean? R.F., San Clemente EEll 11 an "energy label." It expresses energy conaamptlon to term.a of an "Energy Emcieocy Ratio," and it helps you to compare the energy effl· clency for different models and brands of air coodl· tiooen. The EER la obtained by dividing the beat· Ing or cooling output of an appliance by the amount ol electrtcity required for operation. For e xample, a 1,000-watt air condltloaer that cools at the rate of 6,000 BTUs (British Thermal Units -a standard Ullit of beat) per boar, would have an EER of 6.0. Tbe big her the E ER, the lower the energy cons um P· tloo and operation ros&s. The typical energy label also lnclDdes the r~e of EERs for a particular she model. Look for low E ER ratlogs to save money. Bang-up Job Pet Plugs Soldier LUNEVILLE. France <AP> -A French soldier was slightly wounded in the shoulder by a rifle shot triggered by a dog, police said. The dog belonged to a 17-year-old hunter who was fi ring from an upstairs window of his home at pr actice target.s he had set up in the garden. The dog, apparently excited by the shoot- ing, jumped up and touched the trigger as his master prepared to fire again. The slu>t struck a member of a passing army platoon. The police s aid Monday they were satisfied the shooting was an accident and no charges were riled. The names of the young man and the injured soldier were not dis· closed. Couple To Aid Cops. WINNIPEG, Canada <AP) -An elderly Win· nipeg couple. concerned ahout increai.imz cnme tn Winrupeg. have decided to !eave $'l50,uuu or t.ne1r estate to the city's polJce department. Art Vander Brink. who 1s 72. and bis wife, Win· nifred. arranged to have lhe money given lo the Winnipeg Foundation after they die, and tbe foun- dation will pass it on to the police. "No one is stand.mg behmd the police any more, even though they still are our best friends," Vander Brink said. l\on.c;top service to St1n Fri:lncisco. 0 ... 1kland and San J0-.l! from rwa1 by Orctnge Countv Arrpon. Conv:ent~nt s<1n11?·day round trip-. l11~ low h\rcs. too If there's an ecb1er wav to get you 11t~·1e. we'll be th~ fi1-.t to tell you. r 111 I"'~ /11/<1r111rlfl<Hl '" ()11H1•w < mintv. !'ii llii.' 11100. Pr111·•1r·1 t:!J.lt'l;>.1.nn I ""; •;I 11 •/'lti til!UO / 11) 1\11qt•.'t·~. ; ''" 1 • .:1 > 1111 ::-.,w ( ·:. Oit'I IL'. I :111 I 11,1.1111n il'•··"·il·1.'"111Be111wtl1111i. 1 .. /: ""..!,j 1 11Uu,, l'"'' In ;/ tr1wt1f ·~··, ' ., . JUST PUBLISHED s12.so +tax ORANGE COUM'ITS .. GOLDEN 500 .. Top 500 corPorate torms Act:ounllng for ma1or County employment Litts chief execu11ve officer. J)el'SO'lnel director. marketing or sales manager & purchasing agent ORANGE couNTY OtAMBER OF coMMERa I 40 I IHll of Aarica Toww, TIM City O~. CA '2661 17141 6J4-lt00 '. A.IR CA.LIFO RN IA. We're easy to take. _If you've got $1,000 we've got three good reasons you shOuld change banks. 0 ltlt 6'•t "'""• r•ot 1 You'll gl'l a checking • account free of service L:harges when you open a Grand Account. 2 You'll get paid our maxi- • mum saving~ interest rate allowed by law. 3 You11 ha,·c your s;wings • and your checking accounts in one secure and convenient place. ccurity Pacific Bank. I( yo u ha"c $1,000 or more sitting in <mother Rani ... Pr ~.I\ illL:" .tnd Ll),lll. hring it toll" .111d k·t u:-l"'lll ir ll' \\'nrk. \Vc 'll ~i\'L' )llll :1 cl1L·ck.1ng nccuunc :md p.1~ you up to 71 !'\, annu.il incerc-.r nn )'Pllr -., '111!_!-... dcpenlling upon the m.11u- nc y ) l lU :-dee t. 111 one o( our :-pcci;1I PrcfcrrcJ Pa~-.htxlk S.l\'ing-. Accounrs. Th.u'... more than you can c;i r~ in ;iny rcgul.1r s:1vings :KClHlnt /''"'you get your checking account L I frl'l' of :-crvicc ch:1 r~c~. Th.it'::; \\'hllt \\'l' 11W:111 h· ":-.l'Cu nty in numhcl":· .n Security Paci l°ic'Bank SECURITY PACIFIC BANK Thm.~·s Security in Numb..>r:i , Al0DA1LYP1LOT Tuesday November9 ·1976 Tonight's TV Highlights ABC fJ 8:00 -Happy Days. Richie tnoves temporarily into Fonzie's apart· rnent to entertain a new girl, but com· plications set in when her father shows up. KCET @ 8:00 -"Valley Forge.,. Richard Bas e hart portrays George Washington in Maxwell Anderson's play, set in the winter of 1777-1778 on Bicenten· nial Hall of Fame. NBC EJ 10:00 -Police Story. Edward Asner stars as a veteran cop with only days to go to retir~ment who volunteers for the most dangerous as· signment of his career. Bettye Ackerman is featured a s his wife. (TV DAILY LOG) I TUESDAY I 'I EV8NING 6:00 u u (8) 1101117 (3) tD """ 0 1})1 I 6) ( 291 a l m NtwJ O Likers Bu ketb1ll laktrs vs Buttalo (a 1 Gomer Pyle O Gull$m0le m ,.,1rid&e f1mlly O)Ad1m·IZ !2e1 Star Trek fD Eltdrtc Comp1ny lltl 01n1h! ID llttle Rnuls -6:30-0 Dln1h! Guest include Pennv lolarshall. C.ndv W1lhams and the ertire ca11 ol I il•Hne & Shnle, ( 6 AndJ Gnffrth 110 Mm Grrffrn Sftow m hmrly Aff111 en 3 Gun""°'e m Zoom! 7:00 D 0 ~3'1 6) Ill) Ne.-s l6 My Th1tt Sons (j To Ttll tfle Trvth 0 CO!ltt11lratron m I love Lucy a;) The FBI m Amenc1/lsuel lewrsh Hou1 ~ An4J Gritt1th €D MKNttl/lehm Report ( 29 e ) Bon1nu €D Oum11tc Strits m Add1111s hmlly -7:30- 0 Andy Wilh1mt Show Rf!n~aP11• P~ler~ 1•ut\IS "U l The Odd Couple D 10 n r 1; Hollywood Siums <• The Golie Show 0 The Johr's Wrld m Bcldy Bunch • 17 3 Nashtrlle on the ROid ~26 Hoc•"'s Heroes ED Channel 21 TOft1tht 3t Ctltbrrty Sweep5tl~tt m fl1sh Gordon 8 :00 0 17 3 8 To"J Orl1ndo ' Oil"" Don ild 0 C nnm ·• d "" ~I• ,u• I 0 2l 6 10 (I) Bu Bu 811ek Shttp \I• 11~ ;I C f Jpr, fl » 1njl')f1 1 o•d,,,~ h> I •d ~ B·• • SJ>t'1) •n lhPll (,1 If\ M wt1IUJll1 ) suic .. ial m"~1on d~J1n\I 1 IJP•"' ,, Cd'''" 1Jnhl hP Yil h1\ upN•cll o 1 ll t•"I 1n .ttao in CdDlu•e~ r '"" , [PM 6 llllovtf· (2•1) "On lht Wiler llOftt" (drAI SI Marlon Br•ndo h a Mjr·• S..1nt "'"' MaldM. l •• l (Qhb 0 ( 2f 'e ) '>t Hippy 0111 . A f'~d" Oi HI\ Q.,n f/l(hlt ~rtuldf\ fdn11e lo> lel t11m "'' hr\ ipartm•nl "htn 1 "'" 1 I w .. ., '" rc .. n b• I cnmpi11 H••l"' ti '"""'" h.r l•ln 1 1 ""', lool.1n11 '"' h(• O MoYlt C (2~r) "Gtron11110" ,,... 1 •.' (hu,~ t.onnl)I, ~•'"·' 1 De" .AD•m fir,, m Min & Sea Spe<1u .. COO!Mrale for A lftw Colllm11n1uhons Source e Use If Hit Wrlcl Ql ""ry .._ fl) llew11Pwbk All11n 12' lflfnon 1.Hl11Nll W111 1 "' °"""" fD l r<HltAlllll Hiii t i hlllt • \ 1 •1 f ~·k R1 llud B• '""' s'•• ~ 1 11,,.111,d bolt cov•~r·~•\ C..nfl1I Cf'OI•• W;i/11n5tClft 1n loll • ,..,,, AM"\"" pla1 .•t rn t~• WIAl'1 oll 1 II I~ T11,. is lhP hr\! 1n • 11 o ·1 ol d•~md1 ll••••nr •11lh lh• d• hnt •M '' 1<!•1>h10 ol p,, Hfrnl \ VI 1 -h•nl!IOn l••• nln 1nd I 1um1n m tlln9fnto m hy<hrc ,,.._,., -8:30- ., Mo,11: c (90> "ne 0111dnll" (1dv1 11-Georu Montcom,rv. hrrv MOOfP . II ( ~ 1 •1) tit lner111 & ;SMrley "Buda! Sllo•Pr The 1ir1S 11t •JIWlled to allend • ~ltower 101 OM of ~"old h1th school l11ends anftnd •lit ltthn& lr~e "old m11ds'' btuust •t11e1 .tt• lhe only Dllt\ not mimed ,9 tr..Wits • • CllMM 'roa11111 =-SctuatlOll c-dy • • CONlfOllS & THE OHIO PLAYERS JOIN MERY! m MtlY Glrtfrn Sllow 0) Tiit Yw11man fB Ylriety Sllow '5 c,_,.,_,.,, Wl1Stlrnt -9:30- 0 (U') (31 (ll One 01y 1t A Time When 01v1d rs offered the oppor tun1ty ol a llfelrme an uncertain Ann must decide 11 ~he will share rn his good fortune-tor !he res! ot her Ille. m Chinese Or1m1 m Movie: "D1ums" Q) [$pe<~ul11 '76 10:00 0 117; ffl (BJ Swrlcll [ rleen llecka11 guesls as a vele1an con art1s1 whO ltas to ull on Pete and Mat to gM her oul ol a srtuallon ;oh1ch could prove deadly D lJ) .,, IQI m Police Story I hree Dais lo fh11t/ [d•urd A>nt• \lai. as 1 30 ,ur vel•rdn ~I the l0tce .. ho wolunlttts lo ld~e on lhe las!. and possibly the mo,t dangerous ass•en1r.ent of his clrEer t .. o da~ p110r to his rehremt~I 8'-llye Ac~., man co surs as hli .. 11e. OOl!f'llS 6 loNna 0 FAMILY-NANCY'S • ROMANCE EXPLODES 0 ( 2t e ) 39 f1m1l1 'Coming ol Age Ulr and Doug La .. rence '" d1s.ippo1nt•d 1n daughler Nanc{s behavror becaust \h's become rude and thoughtle~ and lhey are partrc ularly unhappy Hhen she dettde~ lo m~rty a~a1n David Hed1,oo and Tummy l PC lonr·. guest 2t Glinsmole ED Bar1t1 de Pnmner1 -10:30-m mm NeW$ 11:00 OD o m >t News O e 10 21 6 Ntlf$ O 26 Lowe Arnenc1n Style 6 Su Hunt O Ccltl>r•ty Revue W Tom Tries To Rein • And Mary Gtts A Bii Su1prise! lMite at Mi ry ltlnm1n. Mi ry Hutnun (E) bles ol tllt lkZMre 17 3 Stu111p tht Stus fD MH 1t "ltrftd Hurts 1nd C«enets" -11 :30- 0 IT' 3 • CBS lilt Motit : Kotl•: C "Scrt1111 Prtlty 'tUY" 1M1) I l Btt•~ Dat1> S1an Barbara Ail•" I td Be .stll o 21 & 10 m *"' ea11111n 6 I Tiit rn Club U ( 2t e ) 31 T11tsdaJ Movie of lk Weta lm0< on tne 40111 floor ' m 11ews 2' flle 700 Club 12:00 O Best ol G1ou<ho O i.to.ie c "Don't Just Sund Tlttre" I(""'• b~ knb.,1 Waintr M4'1 lv•11 M "' ""''I ~orman m MHrr "Httel 811lrn" td•d) l 1 Uelmur Dint·~· f die lmuwn, R.,mond Ma1 •• -12:30- 0 All 1111111 Sito. "Clr111by M.D." • Mttl Mr. Call11h1n." "Under ,,tsSUfe" m Moww ·• "I(' utt1t ea .. nm Shoul4 It Robbed" Crom) ·~s ­ IA ~ty Roontt loll' [well 1:00 0 ~I r"f) flO' l-OW m Tiit rn Chm 2 :00 0 Ooullltfulurt lllt •1u : c "Pl11ns ti ~ltlt," "All My Sons" m All·Nitlll Sllor. "Tiie lttrnal Sta." '1t111, Die• l Hlrry" 3:00 U Mot11: •Cl ''Tht hll Men" (du) ·~S-Clark Cable, Jane Russell, Robert Ryan. DAmME ltOVIES 'Black Sheep' Drop 'Misfits' Status-'Pappy' WHOLESALE TREES • SHRUIS • HOUSE PLAMTS SJ00.00 MINIMUM . EACH PURCHASE ...... ~t· .... ;; ;.,· ... »H-~~ 24 . BOX TREES 15 GAL. TR EES & SHRUBS 5 GAL TREES & SHRUBS WHOLESALE BOOK PRICES .... ~· :..V,~ . t~~.t{~· FRUIT -SHADE · AVOCADO -CITRUS -ETC .. 2'.:~~~~ l I._ __ _ -,~ 11r S.D. Wholesale Growers 11622 WARNER AVE FOUNTAIN VALLEY PHONE 546·3429 DAILY 9 AM·S PM I b I lilnt t. ,.,",,. ut \m1 """"'" I,.,\ ou Nut ,\,Ihm Bit ii '"'"'"" 21 Selected On Latin Unit LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Immigration and Naturalazat1on Service has selected 21 persons to form an lhspamc ad· visory commitlee m an effort to improve" rela· tions with Mexican· Americans and other Latin minorities. ' More money for your future: pay no taxes until years !aler on income set aside now in an Individual Retire· ment Account, Keogh Plan or Investment Annuity througlfl American Guaran ty Life Insurance. New FedP.ral regulations le t you earn even more on retire.-. mem dCcounts at Los Angeles Federa l Savings. Plus: higher interest th an paid by any commercial bank. Plus interest day in to day out. Plus th e security of savings insured by a Federal Agency. Plus extra r·ours plus free services wi th a minimum deposit: safe deposit box. checking account at a commercial bank, income tax serv ice. document duplication, Travelers Checks and more . It takes only one minute and one signature to start your savings account. It all adds up for Los Angeles Federal Savers .• All Interest Compounded Daily Annual Yield Annual Rate 806% 51000 for 6 to 10 years 672% S1000 for 1 to 2 years 5.39% Paid day-in to day-out 1. •• • 11 • 1' 1 • ,... r tJrly w11M1aw"I l•~m '''m "CG~unl~ c.ubject to 1u1>111an\lal Inter· 111 Ju·• n ~ 4 LOS ANGELES FEDERAL SAVINGS Newport Beach 320 1 Newport Bl vd. -across from City Hall • 675-4500 OPEN 9•5 MON.· THURS.• 9-6 FRI. H• ic1 Ofl ~" · L -Annt?le-; Fric!N'\I S:iv1n'ls anc! Loan Association ()n: \JI. I n1rt', Lv Ang •c~ 900 l 7 • Othll1 offrcci; throughout tho a1ea STORE HOURS: . Weekdeya, 9 e.m. to 0 p.m. Seturdey1 9 e.m. to 5:30 p.m. SUNDAY, 12 to 5 p.m. • ROBERT'S originally designed and mag- ntticenlly crafted sofas and loveseats captl.Ke 1 the tone and style of today's living. • located In Orange County, ROBERT'S has 40,000 sq. ft. of quality contemporary furniture and accessories pr0Vid1ng you with . quality al affordable prices. • ROBERT'S offers profeaalonal decor.tor • services lo help you select the furniture and accessories best suited to your llfesty1e. -1 One of the Southfancf'a Urgfft end Flnetlt (E (ft~~•§) ~-.,_....,:::1:111~.· Collections of Modem Furniture, Lighting ~ Ir~ i and Acca11oriea. . 225 NORTH HARBOR BLVD., FUu.EATON, contemporary furniture ' -_-_-+r~---4P. CALIFORNIA 92632. Phone (71•) 871-5720 Tuesdey. Novemb« 9, 1976 'Cyrano' on OCC Stage "Cyrano de Bergerac"' arnves at Orange Coast Collece Wednesday rught, but chances are author Edmund Rostand would have a hard time recognu- 11'& it. The version which will be staged at the OCC Intermission Tom Titus ENTERTAIN MOO .Student Center through Saturday at 8 p.m . is called an "alternative theater production" bttause it is not beinc performed In a theater witfi scenery and costumes. Director William Purkiss explains, "Good theater can be done anywhere with good act- ing, creativity and imagination." John Pezenas plays the title role with Peggy Stamper as Roxane and Jack Grubish as Christ~an de Neuvllletc. Others In the ctlst are Craig McNair Willon and Nick Furticella. Admission is free. -''Saturday, Su.nday, llonday" at South Coast Repertory, 1827 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa (to bo reviewed Thursday). Performances toniaht through Sunday at 8 o'clock and Sunday afternoon ..-----------. aU . .ReservaUons 646-1363. . ':Fre~Trio CLOSING OUT THEIR respective two· weekend runs are two other college productions, "Guys and Dolls" at UC Irvine and "She Stoops to Conquer" al Go lden West College. ~Van Devre, Joseph Bottoms and David ;Janssen are featured in "Running Free," an !NBC Movie of the Week airing Wednesday "'at 8:30 on Channel 4. "Guys and Dolls " resumes Wednesday and runs through Saturday al 8 o'clock in the UCl Village Theater under the direction of Robert Cohen (reservations 833·6617 ). The Golden West comedy will be presented Thursday through Saturday at 8:30 and Sunday at 5:30 in the college's main theater (reservations 89'2·7711 , extension 545). CONTINUING TIUS WEEK on stages along the Orange Coast are: '.TV: With or. Without Violence? . By JAY SffARBl.nT with "The Rookies." ment shows :ii red early axed by ABC last spring, al night. and "Hawaii Five-0." still on CBS and not up THE POLICY tries lo for local rerun uotil its · reduce TV s<'x a nd network use ends. violence in l'Orly evening -"l Do, I Do" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse, HO Ave'nida Pico, San Clemente. Performances tonight through Sunday al varying curtain times, preceded by a buffet dinfter. Reservations 492·9950. -"Come Blow Your Hom" at the Intimate Dinner Theater of the Holiday lnn, 3131 Bristol St. at the San Di'ego Freeway, Costa Mesa. Performances Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through Nov. 20, preceded~ dinner at 7 o'clock. Reservations 557·3000. · . -''The Mousetrap" at the Westminster Com · munity Theater, 72'12 Maple St., Westminster (to be reviewed Friday). Performances at 8:30 Fridays and Saturdays th.rough Nov. 27. Reservatiou 893-8626. -"Norman, Is That You?'' at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 606 Lquna Canyon Road Laguna Beacb. Performances tonight lhrouch Saturday at 8: 30. Reservations 4M-0743 • .. CASTING HAS BEEN announced for the Udo Isle Players' production ol Nell Simon's comedy "Last of the Red Hot Lovers," which opens next Tuesday for a five·night engagement. Martin Fuchs portrays the mlddle·aged restaurant owner who allempta separate "flings" with three dive rse ladies, portrayed by Beth Titus, Laura Black and Denne Soderling. Ron Filian la directing. ForCl:i~siht>cJ Ad ACTION Call a l )111ly Pilot. AD·VISOlt ~2·5678 : LOS ANGELES CAP) .-Say you have two :hard·hitting cop shows you're trying to sell in ,syndication to local sta· lions. But you have lo cul :their violence Lo sanitize :them for the early- .evening "family hour." ''Rookies'' aired after shows w h c n 1 m · the "family hour," and pressionable young "Hawaii" still does, all viewers are still up. ll because of the National <.-overs programs shown Association of Broad· in the first network hour casters' "family view-at night and the preced- ing" policy for entertain· ing hour. So where does this leave Viacom in ready- ing "Rookies" and "Hawaii" for syndica· lion? WilJ it leave in the rough stuff or continue tidying up the shows for the ''famil y hour '" trade? "Lovers" will be presented Tuesday through Saturday. Nov. 16·20, at 8:30 at' the Lido Isle ••>f . Imposs ible? Maybe, . but Viacom Enterprises ;is trying to do just that ~ • 1 LA MIRADA' • LAl<EWOQO CEKTER 4 • WAl l:·lll UllOAlll "'a II • llO•OAY ... N SA.,UllOU (h<~ -"•"I Q M to IM tU.O.a.'t a MOU OA YI 'U:# ,. la h•1•• ., ........ , 994-241)() lf•f .... ., ..... , ... 994·2~00 lt tt.l•Mlt ....... , .. , "42400 ...... 11 r ........ .,. 531 9580 11Ulr "''"" "UO llfnYAl• SAMII tot f>tUI ISCAPf TO WITCH •OUlfTAIM IOI ·•--Of NAU" ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13111 'LUI <Al'OHl111 . ...., .... ti AU 110"" • WOOOSTOClt 111 •WI GIMMl SH Uni f•I ..rr-llX WfTH A IMILI"' Pl\11 WMln DOii " *"" 1111 NO M/t'llMJ fO•<LT -0-.NUOO"'- WOQ0Sf0(1(111 'Liii G~l SHllTll111 "°""'_'°" ... ' OOOtt °"" .. , •• M. STAY HUNGIT ,.l f>tlll TlACK OOWN t11 -------~ ...... ·--m .9510 ~--IOUJllMl 1111 ------..,,..,. __ , _ __. ... ,......_...,,.,_ ___ ... -... --.. oooesOIWOAflOM. •"-ASSAULT ON ,.lCINCT 1311t SJ 1 ·95IO •1111 CAflOHl1t1 fWUl- 1.(,U WUll 1"1 2-IAMll Y PlOf 1001 ).rtllMC & Tltl NAN 1~1 "'""' A<TtOool 1 .. su w1r14 a SMllf 111 J 4UUS WMAT wt lUINI0..,11 ) .(O'lllGlll MOO«LS f•t ______ __. ... --1 • StlfNT MOV11 !I t 2 ·TUI DlllVD i-i -----:---r:.~-::::-:-.J-.· .. rtlflll I M llAN-. ~tt tf AU elOA,.1' WOOOSTOOc11 ,un GIMM( SHILTlhl JnY 1-11 e IMU flllOJ STAT HUNGIY ftl Hiil TUCK DOWM11t • "" 1-U e )MU Jlf ... STAY HUNOIY 111 'llll TUCK DOWN111 .. ,~--"° "'°"' MO ......... ,,,,, Nit __ l,... __ _ --....-.. J s~ _, ll1Nn',... '""'"' ,. ~:e V' IAllll roi ,, ,---a..:i::::::;.:~::...s;~lliii "-'... "" TO Wltal lllOllllTMM101 I •a -"'°"' • 11Af'r :.--~ ASSAUU ON l'llCIMCT H 111 -.~"4.mi1Uol4:11r"J,; SWITCH I~ SISrW c11 "9CIO•A ... AC ... ACO\.~ '"'"'*""' .. ~ ... wan ......, "'* "'"'au ........ ".,. DC#( JO nOI .... COi Bu t .last week, a federal judge said the NAB 's particular "fam· ly" policy viol ates the First Amendment. He didn't abolish it. He just said if the networks and stations want lo conLmue it, the decision must be theirs alone and the NAB can't'have any say in 1t. .. MARATHON MAH .. ,,.. •• 1\.10•10 JAf,.__f,JO.J 4 .. a tO.t lloll:lO CINEMALAND toH• •111• ... ,,~t•tl) IWll ,,., ,. .... , .. MARATHON · MAH11 14' .... UT WM-I ... I''"' 1 .. 1 ... , ... CINEMALAND , ....... ~ ......... u, '"' LHMAIYTH aowER MOOH "SHOUT .AT THE DEVIL .. THE ANSWER: Yes . on both counts, says Viacom President Henry Gillespie. He said even before the ruling, he planned to orrer two versions of the shows - a •·family" version and Clubhouse, 701 Via Udo Soud, Newport Beach . Studios Co01pete ' For Rescue Films an u n ex Pu r gal ed LOS ANGELES (AP) -The race to Entebbe version. grows hotter. He s:Ud the original Warner Brothers, which recently abandoned ita versions give s tations own project on the rescue of hijacked passengers in the choice or editing Uganda. announces it will release overseas lbe them lo fit their own David Wolper production for ABC·TV, "Ordeal at "family'' standards, or Entebbe." Kirk Douglas and Rurt Lancaster have sch eduling them al been signed to star in the drama, which will be whatever hour they feel taped next month. is appropriate· Meanwhile filming has begun on "Enlebbe," "A slalton has to make which Edgar J . Scherick and 20th Century.Fox are its own assessment of producing for NBC·TV. It stars Charles Bronson, what lo put on the air, re· Peter Finch, Horst Buchholz, Martin Balsam and gardless of what some Yaphet Kolto . g u Y in Ne w York · Paramount and Universal also have announced Was hin gton or L os Entebbefilms. Angeles says," be ob---------------------- served. lH1 W SUNFLOWER W OJ llRISTOl C M 6~ 059• A "lET'S T AUi .UOUT MEN'' I V ·:sex WITH A SMILE" (R)I "MOOH TIL THHr "Oa.IYE IM" ll"GI I 'JOOI 5'ACI OD'YSSEY" I ll'GI 'Tffl MAH WHO HU TO I I.UT.Hu THE CITY SH()PPING CENTRE oaAHGf U4-ltl' ~ CITY ClMTH C IHfMAS S A FRWV !MANCHESTER EX I G C FAWV ICITY OR. EX.I .t.:.'faOM HOON 'TILL nMH' V "GATOR" (l"GI 2 "WOODSTOCK" CR ~ -1masWIET LOVf" "FllHll AHD THE IUM"' l•I "SEX Wlll4 ;. SMILE' 0 .. SHAMl"OO" lal Spec••' Pric. 17 JO to 7 00 p.m. Cnc.,. S-& HoU ISl.15 ()pen Daily 12:30 p.nf. MARA11Dt MAN a .::C.*: llOJ.,.. ....,,... lllWoe MAl'TMI mu. ."MllllATMONMAK ................ -..(!) SOUTH COAST f'Uli C.t. MeM S4t·i>ll CIMEMALAHD THIATU .......... 6J~7601 STADMIM DtHHtM o,_,. ut .. no Want ad results 0°HORMAM IS THAT Your t "H.UlY & WAI.Ta 60 TO HEW YOU'' CNI "LET'S T ALKAIOUT MEN" "llllf Y ACATIOH" .. MIDWAr ...... T scour. CAntOUSI TtfUISDA.,.. 0'MUID•IYDIA1M" "ILACllllD"'CNt "SHOOT"" -sOLD•aur111 "MARATHON MAN" "FROM NOON Tll THAEE" DAIL y PILOT A J I Everett In Role LOS ANGELES (AP) -Chad Everett is play· in& bis firs\\ dramatic role stnce the end of his seven.year run 1n the ser1es ".Medical Center." Everett ts starring for Columbia Pict\lres Television ln a two.hour movie for NBC. "ln the Glitter Palace." He plays a lawyer de- fending a young lesbian accused of murder. Robert Butler will direct the drama aat the Burbank Studios and on locations In Los Anieles llmrCAT. llUIU 1MC ..... IM, ...... 1111 .. ... 1 ..... , i . .. : Al: DAIL y PILOT Tuesday, November9. 1976 r' Consumers' Opinions Sought Commems on Electronic FWtd Transfers Dr.re by Nov. 18 8y LOUISE COOK At\OC ••••Op,~, Wruer The experts have testified. , Now it"s your turn to tell the gov· 'emment what you trunk about the idea o r e lectronic fund transfer systems designed to computerize billing and banJdng services in the ll nilcd States. . handling and decide what role government should play in en- couraging and regulating the program. A final report is due next year. THE. COMMISSION HELD hearings in Washington Oct. 26 and 27, listening to represen- tatives of banks -who were for the plan -and of consumers' groups -who were generally against it. Now, the commission is seek· ing public comment. Nov. 18 is the deadline, and anyone who wants to express an opinion should write lo National Com- mission on Electrontc Fund Transfers, Suite 900, 100 Connec· lieut Ave. NW, Washington, D.C., 20036. The National Committee on Electronic Fund Transfers was created in 1974 to study the im- pact of computerized monl'y The banking industry has been arguing for several years that electronic transfer of funds is necessary to deal with the flood ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When he has to rely on solid managing of his father's investments to go to college, Sutro comes through. LS'll 5UT.Ro & CO ... 1 • i ........ : ... "','""'.': ~11 ... Coming through for people. For 117 years. 11"1 IJ,.\r 'I "''"" lt~I. ''"ilf•rt lx'.1d1 !1'.!fll"iO K\:l!l/01 Two· Argue On Le a ses SACRAMENTO CAP) -State and federal of· fi cials are disagreeing about who gets the better deal for geothftmal leases. State Controller Ken Cory says the federal government is dragging its feet on geothermal leases and is offering them too cheaply. But John Moon of the federal Bureau of Land Managem ent says the federal government is moving slowly because of its concern for the en· vironment. And he says he doubts the .st ate ~II get more money Crom its leases than the federal government. Plant Re adies Clock Construction Company, lrvine, is in the final phase of con· s truction on a n ew manufacturing facility in Costa M easa for Panel-Air Corp. The 31,000-square·foot plant will soon be ready for move-in. Divide nd Set Directors of American Pacesetter declared a regular quarterly cash dividend of 15 cents on preferred stock, series A and series B, payable Oct. 21 to shareholders of record Sept. 30. .I I .· Republic Federal will help you keep your head above water. \\hen \Oll.I\' b.l!lhn·· hi \I.IV • C" • .11h"11 1n 1 he 11d.ll \\a' c nf 1111l.1t 11,11, d11n·1 !!1'•' llP lhc pcrLcnt Or \'\en h.111 th.: pl'n,·nt. S.1,.: .11 lh•puhlic r c1.k r:1l S:" 111c' .ind t hn·~ to th.: hil!.h 111t1.·rl'~t 1 lw l.m :illo" '· «'" :1 "iLlc '.1r1.:1" ''' 11hllfl'd :icc1,un1-.. Y11ur 1111crc~1 "ill be p.11d d.1~ -tn to d.1y- 011t nnd C•'rllf'l•1111J.:d d.uh \\ h;il s mor,·. '''II II rl'l l'I'.: 1111crl·,1 I rnm 1hc J ,t· ol thc 11111nth <In 'a' 111)!.; dcp<NtcJ "' lh.: 10th. \\hen held to quarter' \'IHI. 73/% Rea lize Now eorn I• 08 06% an annuat yield of • o by compounding dolly. S HICO minimum be!~-• fi year minimum r ,.t?f•r ac f~uf81rOn-t l)('rmll w1•hdr1w•l1 •tom rrr1,~hrltt" aceounrs, bclOt~ m1turttJ. DUI 't'tt<G ,._a ~b~t•••~ ~''°" k\ 1ntt'Jl'll f'af,,tnQL ****** RFS We can al~o help with more than '.?O free ~crvicc~. such as travelers chcc.:J..5. safe deposit hoxc~. • note collcct;on. $ and chcdin~ :.iccounts. •• Our high interest und free services make wonderful life pre.- !.erver.; on the stormy seas of linancc. Perhaps th<.1l's why a ramous American nav<.11 ofliccr \1ncc said: "If you don·t save at Republic, you have not yet begun to save." REPUBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS 111d '°'"' 1uoc11tlort • SANTA ANA 17th St. West ol Newport Freeway (714l 541-5286 ANAHEIM 202 Anaheim Plaza, 500 N. Euclid SI. (714) 956-8290 LAGUNA NIGUEL 30232 Crown Valley Park.way (714) 495·0850 WESTMINSTER 134 Westminster Mall/Boise & Sen Diego Fwy. (714) 894·5347 Head Olllc•: Al TAOEN ... n46 N l11'• Ave 1213) 791·17011681 8611 Twel•e loutlona: AlTAOENA • ANAH[IM • AF4CAOIA • 8UR0ANK CLAREMONT• HACIENDA HCIGtiTS •LAGUNA NIGUEL • LOS ANGELES P ... SAOENA • PICO AIVEAA •SANTA ANA • WESTMINSTER 1n,u1ed. ch•rttttd '"d super111s9d by •11•"cies of lht Uniltd S11tn Oo"'"''"&llt SAVINGS .ACCOUNTS /~Ea TO $40.000 1?1151 -. of paperwork involved every time someone pays a bill. cashes a paycheck or charges a pure base. AT PRESENT, THE banks have to process some 27 billion checks each year at a cost of 32 cents per c heck. Millions of credit card transactions, costing SS cents each , add to the paperwork burden. Even cash is costly at 15 cents o transaction. The way to solve the problem, says the industry, is to eliminate the paper. Substitute an elec· tronic system that would provide the automatic transfer of money from one account to another even if the two accounts were in di!· !erent banks and cities. To pay for a purchase. a con· s umer would simply hand the clerk a plastic idcnttficallon card instead of money, a check or a store charge card. When the ID card Is put in a special terminal, the customer's account is debited and the s tore's account is credit- ed, all within seconds/ A SIMILAR ELECTRONIC system could be used to deposit paychecks in employes' accounts automatically. Millions or Social Security c hecks and other f~eral paym ents already are handled electronically each month. and 24 -hour banking machines in some areas provide a clue to what may lie ahead. Critics of electronic banking warn that the drawbacks are numerous. Even supporters of the plan concede that controls are needed to prevent invasion of privacy. counterfeit identifica· lion cards and sophisticated computer crime. The Council of State Govern- ments reports that as of this spring, 25 states had passed laws specifically allowing the opera· lion of electronic funds transfer systems <EFTS) in one Corm or another. ClrtlP F C1t1nUt 4 CollnVt A Cl••ll Ml Clow Co Co•u Vtnl Com Cit Com• SI\ Comw Pit A lfas Visit Turin Bertone-designed Alfa Romeos climb the walls and draw attention on the floor at the auto show in Turin, Italy. Oil Distribution Mulle d LOS ANGELES CAP> -An air pollution official saysne ·1s studying a request to build a distribution facility in the Long Beach I area for Alaskan crude oil. J .A. Stuart, chief control officer for the Southern California Air Pollution Control District, said the proposal by Standard Oi.l of Ohio I may not meet a recently adopted rule limiting the amount or con·' taminants a facility can produce. f But Stuart noted that an applicant could qualify a project by re-I ducing emissions from other facilities in the same area. THE SOHlO PROJ ECT PROPOSES a new marine unloadins facility and storage tank farm in north Long Beach. 1 Without trade-offs from other Sohio facilities, Stuart said , -th&. project "will exceed the limits set forth in the newly.adopted newl source review r egulation.'' I Ovt'r 1'h e Counte r NASO Ustinqs Ad"a.nc~d ••••••••••••••••••• Ol?cll,...d ................... . Ufl( ... nQed ................ . rot•f 1\\Uiit·~ ••••••••••••••••••• Ne .. lllqh• .................... . flMw IOW'S ...................... . TOlll WIK ........ , .......... . I 1 ) ' s • I 8 • 10 " ,, I) " IS ,. ::· ~ " II 7S4 " 511 10 1.141 )I U'6 n 11 1J SI 14 6,:161.100 IS llp • and Do"'n• DOWNS Ptl.1 Uo AO Vo " Vo lO. Vo n. ~ rJ uo 11.s 0o 1U uo 12.t tl: l~:j' Vo II. Vo II. Up II, Vo "· Up 10. Uo 111.0 Vo IU Uo 10., VP t . tl: ::t Vo •. Up t. Uo I. Nome lHI °" Pct. i lh<t,.llon Oyn JV> -I Off tt. P1ll1'0tn Inc •~ -flt OH IS. C..n1r><1alQ Wine •VJ -\If OH 14. Ballek Co<o S'"' -'!lo Off It. Morttsonlnc II~ -1'"' O!f 11 Conceottnc • -~ 0 0 It, NOl>llllY Ho-net 1 -'4 Off 11.t PllPlll Mqmt 1 -V. Off 1111 Pt1" ""°"' 2 -v. Off "· Aml'lnt oro 6 ls-16 -1~14 Oft 10. Am Tele<omm 4..,, -II> Oii I~ Bo••lr•Co 1V. -"" Off to Of!l"'llon Sv•lm 711, -"' Off I Mt<tow•v• S.ml 114 -•A Off SIHandllnq S1\ 4'11 -YI Off 10. ~· .. wr~:::,, ~~ = ~ g:: ;;:t N~ ln<I 3'/J -~ Olf t.J No"l9CAP tl't -I O!f ':·1 (Atdlo<Pa<M~ I ,., ... -1~ Off H1ml•ton8•0 Pit 11'4 -1¥. ()If ~~:T/,~dlnc I..., = ~ g:: :: SCM.-EIKI"' 2\lt -V. Off t. W1s11Qtn Ho-• 2V. -\lo Olf t. MUTUAL FUN DS NEW VOllK IAP'I 100 Fd 'u NL EOIE Sp n 31 NL lncom l .S1 3 95 Man 10.47 11.U Plone., Furld: 58 E«llY •.11 ,.t_ -The lollowlno QUO-101 Fd I ll NL Egret F 10 19 11.17 Trst \h 10." 11.18 Mii•• Flrian<I: Fund 13.16 IC.JI SB !&()( 11 '1 N[ ltllon\, \UPOlled by Ber-CIP 11' I 41 &:fl..n Tr 14 38 . , Tf\I \J'I 2.11..... Ml T 10 60 11 0 II 11.JJ ll." SoGl11 111 10.S. 11,0t 1o.e NltlOfl•I ··-· Bolld•t-4 ~· s 07 F1lrlld • ., to,. 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" ' 4 •• NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Ouol•lle>mlftCllAetr-SOfltMlolewYt..._<IOI..,_~ "•<111<.~IW, _,..,, QrVOil•"CI C•l'Clft.,.ll>t•O t ·~· ""° ,_,,.., l>y 1"-H•IOOll•I AtMIC••llOfl et ~.,,Iii.\ 0.•i.r> •..0 ln>l• ... I 'MeaDl.n1ful' P act Asked DETROIT <AP) -'l'be United Auto Wonera bH a1ked General Mocon tor a "m eanlnJfuJ" tallraC!l propotal lo avert a naUonwide walkout. by •.ooo houri.)' worken -t mklnlCbt Nov. JI. "Ablolutely nothJ.nc ol any ~ quen~ hat been •'tcompUabed here since bar•alnln1 be1an July 19," tJA W Vice President lrvlnl 8luestone said u be Ht the dudline. ''We have to at.art from acnt.dl. lbat '• WlMr-e we are.'' Tuesday. NoV9mbor 9 1978 DAil y PILOT A J 3 Wicked Caala Flotc Poor ·m M . M ulls Glut of Money By MILTON MOSKOWITZ International Business Machines <IBM> has tbls devll of a problem, one that you and l mighl lusl aner. ll'a sluck with Uus wicked cash now. As a rosull, il has more money lh11n U knows wbat to do M~. . . The now is speeding up this yu.r at such o npld pace ~at people may soon be asklng: ·'Is I BM a computer maker or a bank?" Such a question is logical in llght of IRM 's third quarter report. ln the three months ended Sept. 30, IBM took In $132 million from in· teresl earned on Hs Money Tree spare cash, which ls lodged ln m'arkelable securities such as municlp~I bonds, U.S. Treasury notes and time deposits. IN OTBE., WOADS, IBM ill really making more money O(C its money than most companies are making off their operations. As a matter of fact, IBM is making more money renting out its money than most big banks are making on their le.su~ing acti viUes. The $132 million cash lnnux from interest on invest· ments was up 80 pereent over what IBM reallzed from lbis source in the comparable 1975 period. The reason for the big jump ls ~at IBM is selling more of Its equipment rather than renting or leasing it. Oulright saJes-produce an i mmedlate pr-0fil, instead of spreading it over a number of years. That is what's happen- ing to IBM this year. The money is arriving in great tor· rents. And it's not easy to find a proper use for it. not. when you have so much already EVEN BEFORE 1976 STARTED, lBM bad on-hand cash and marketable securities totaling $4.S blllion. The company earned $.180 million on its portfolio in 1975. The in· come thla year will obviously exceed $400 million. And IBM's liquid assets will be well above $5 billion. You have to h ave some sympathy for IBM. 1t general.es so much profil from its Polilion as U}e world's largeal sup- plier of dala processing equipment t.tial lt has little dlfficul· ty funding its huge capilal expenditure budget. ll 's doing so well this year lbal iL raised the annual dividend rate to $9 <il paid $6.50 last year). And it's still left with all lbis mobey that it doesn't know whal lo do wi~. If IBM were another company, lt might just use this cash to acquire other companies. IBM has so much in the Wl that it could soon become the biggest corporation in the world. ll even has enough money to buy an oil company (a small one anyway). Bpt IBM is being sued In courts all over the lapd. The Justice Department and numerous competitors are de· manding that IBM be declared an illegal monopoly and brok~n up into Sl!laller pieces. With this threat hanging over it , lBM Is not about to ape the conglomerates. Jt 's not going to throw its money around. ll's just going to sit.on it-and take money ort its money. So meet IBM. the banker. Trike to Edge Car For City. Travel? SACRAMENTO <AP> -In the future state employes may shuttle· between offices on three-wheeled vehicles that run with a quiet hum, generate 3ome or their own energy and recharge with a cassette. Swedish engineer Bjron Ortenheim _$howed off the vebi· cle, called a SilenUa EJectrotrike, on sidewalks outside the slate Capitol recently as reporters went on lest rides. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. bas taken the bright orange three wheeler for a ride J and aaid he liked It fine. ( according to Sim Van IN HlGH Gro ~ D der Ryn, state architect ~ and head of the Orrice Of Appropriate Tech· nology. THE OFFICE IS LOOKING AT THE trike as a possible shutlle-cralt for state employes on short trips between stale buildings. Io the meant.I me, Van der Ryn, who pednled to the news conference on a bicycle, says the state is buying so to 100 bicycles al about $30 each at police auctions for employe use in Sacramento. Ortenheim, who is selling his machines on a small scale in Sweden and India, wanls to open a plant in California to manufacture the lrikes, an electric molorcycle and an elec· lric car. HE SAYS THE 111REE·WHEELER sells for $750 and costs about a penny a mile to run. Jt operates on batterie,s ~al go about 40 miles between charges. bul also can run on replaceable cassettes. Top speed of the model displayed here is 25 miles an hour, but Ortenheim said it can easily be modified to hit •C). He sald the eleclrlc car cruises al SS m.p.h. The vehicles' unique feature. the engineer said, is an energy-saving system ~at recycles 30 to 35 percent of the energy lhe batteries use. AS ORTENllEIM EXPLAINED it, when the car L'J slowing down1 lhe batteries don't operate, and a generator converts the 1orward motion o( ~e vehicle back into elec· trlclty. "I don't think these can take over from a petrol car, because you'll never get the performance," he said. "But they're very useful in the city, with less pollution and easier parking." NLRB Speed-up Urged in Report WASlllNGTON (AP) -A labor-manacement task rorce bu recommended that the Natlonal Labor RelaUom Board CNt.RB> streamline and speed up its decision· making and election procedures, a step that could help un- ion orsanwn• campaips. The recomrnendaUons, repraentlnr a compromlse or labor and mana1ement potltlons, are expected to be adopt· ed by the board alter a llO-day period rorpubUc comment. \JNIONS HA VE LONG canIC'IZED the slowne1s 4tf NLRB proces"9, compla1n1ng they are ao Impediment to or1anlsln1. Wblle ~be delays also WOl"e coetly lo buslneH, m&nac~ meol metnben ol tho task force backed lht chan1ea ln the apparenl beUet lbat abuses by a rnlnorlty .of employers could lead to pro-labClr chances in exlltlnl labor l aws. The panel Wll appolnted a year aco by NLRB chairman Betty Southard Murphy, who has bffo tr)'lnc to c:ut 'hi board'• ca1e-p~e11fnl Ume to slx monlhl. IT NOW TAKES ABOUT A. YEAa from lhe fillna 0( an unf alr labor practice complaint to a final ordtt from ~ fiv•membn boardincont.MtAldcuu. A 14 DAIL v PILOT Tuesday. Novembo19. 1976 Championships K eep Hula Hoop Alive SD to Stud y Massage Law SAN GABRIEL (AP) -For a few dizzy years in the late 1B50S, Americans went wild over Hula Hoops, buying 20 mlWon of them and gyrating their hips, necks and other movable body parts to keep the toysspinntng .. The craze ended abruptly. But unlike most novelty items, the Hula Hoop has survived as a fix· lure in the toy s tore -largely because of s hrewd promotion by its marketers . "WIDLE IT LASTED, the Hoop was a new synonym for the word fad," sa ys lrv Lander, who directs the National Hula Hoop Cbamp ion&hips for Wham-0 Manulacturtng Corp. Lander said the championships have had a lo~ to do with keeping the Hoop alive. They are co- sponsored by park and recreation departments in 725 U.S. cities aod drew 2.S million youngsters into competition this year, he said. "The contest bas made the Hula Hoop respectable, part of the performing arts,'' Lander said. Top prize is a $1,000 savings bond. TIOS YEAR'S WINNER, Jo Ano .Barnes, of Inglewood. somehow manages lo keep 32 hoops spinning at one lime at several dlfferent speeds "with no hands." Lander said. She'll dis- play her latents next month before a national audience on Di.ttah Shore's television show. The championship -like the Hoop itself -was the brainchild of Spud Melin and Rich Knerr, two Californians who founded Wham-0 . They got the idea for the toy from watching an Australian aborigine spin a wooden hoop around his waist, Lander said. Back in California, they started making eight-ounce hoops of plastic. selline them for 98 cents each in sizes r anging from 32 lo 40 inches around. "WHEN THE BUBBLE butst in 1959, they were stuck with huge inventories, like everyone else who was making hoops," Lander said. The stockplles gathered dust until 1967, Lander said, when Wham·O put ball bearings inside the hoops "lo give them a 'shoop, shoop' sound that went along with the current rock beat and gave them a dance signillcance." The naUonal contest was st~ the same year. LANDE& SAID WHAM·O would rather not reveal bow many .Hula Hoops It sells these days. But Melin and Knerr don't have to worry about where their next nickel is coming from-they also make slingshots, crossbows and Frisbees, which Lander calla the "bellwether" of the operation. The hoops originally were marketed in several briJthl col- ors. But this year. in a b1centen· Dial gesture, they're while with red and blue s tripes. SAN DIEGO (AP) -The rulet comCDltlee of the Cily Council wlll olftr the full eouocil a new ordinance re1uJaUng muuc~ parlors. The draft ordinance, :vtd Monday, would require ~lq of massage parlor owner•. operators and mass~ teehal• clans, set limits on boura ol operation and require competea- cy standat'ds for technicians. The action Is the result of a new state law allowing local 1ovem· ments lo draw their own masaa1e parlor restrtctlona. Previously, the state controlled the massage industry. THE FAMILY CIRCUS' By Bil Keane ............................................................................................ . ., "I'm glod I don't have to use my tongue os a \ wash cloth." L B .Bod Fishing Just For Halibut In Annapolis. Md .. an 18-year-old girl originally identified as Toni Zimmerman has received court approval lo change her name officially to Toni Zimmerwoman, correspon- dents report. They say she had considered "Zimmerperson," but decided no. SHOCK Remarkable trick or nature, that thing called shock. Wh en a wounded person suffers same, said party's blood vessels close down. If the wound is minor. shock slows the blood now lo allow for clotting If the wound is grievous, shock permit!. a pa1nlel>s dc'ath. That was good. once. Now it's not always good. Sophisticated med1caJ treatment can save.,vi· 1ured people whose wounds once would have been mortal But that remarkable trick of nature h asn 'l made th4! adjustment. Shock conlinuel> to kill. Q. "As r recall. you used to go fishing a lot, Louis, but did you catch many fish'>" A Yes . unfortunately Because that seemed to be the point then, to catch fish, wtuch is the wrong reason, isn't it'! Next lime. if ever, I 'II know better. Fis h- erm e n who go fishing solely to catch fish, as it were, themselves wind up hooked. They become tight lipped and squinty eyed and intensely deliberate of hand and foot. But the whole notion in going fish· ing is to get uncaught. Loose Jointed. bland lD thought. as casual as a cloud Professionals excepted, i.ure enough. Next week expect an ess ay here on how the proper approach to muskrat trapping can set you free Don 'l m 1ss 1t' Chenl asks the dafrerence between first. sttond and third degree bums of the skm Swiftest dcfanat1ons maybe: Red is first , blistered is second, and charred 1s thjrd. Numerous police detectives rely on the belief that no crime 1s on gmaJ, that each bas been committed before somewhere by so- meone. and that all belong to one or another recognizable "modus operandi." However. said detectives are having trouble categoriz- ing a recent report filed with the lawmen of Mountain View, Calif., where a local fellow was accused of trying to drown his wife in a waterbed. Police record rooms are not bogged down with case histories of waterbed murder attempts. On the contrary. It h as been widely reported that various types of coins tend to collect in tertain cities. A client asks, "Where do most of the nickels wind up?" In Baltimore, Louisville and Nashville, it's said. Addreu moal to L M. Boyd, P.O Boz 1560. Coita Mt1a, 92626. ·~P's (Junk Food) Return to Sclwol . CANTON, Conrr. (AP)-The three P 's are back in the blgb school cafeteria here, after their abrupt "withdrawalprompt.edastudentprotest. ' That 'speanuta,potatoch.lps and pies. Teacher Joseph Ricci said the Canton Education Jteaearcb Committee "'lrted to improve the "'Jquality of food in the '1tchool by removing lbose .and other examples of '•"junkfood. •· ' "On Monday lbe junk 'was there, Tuesday It wu 1one, ·' aald Wee\. ··~·'They 11ld, 'Where'• my junk food ?' J 1ueH lt was a aort ol a traumatic \ . .. event for kl<U that have grownup on it." Bul students organlzed a petltlon drive and threatened to walk out, prompting Principal Nicholas Salvatore to 1ckt10wledge that of- ftdala were "premature about taking t.beae t.biop off" t.bosbdves. I • I Your Trustee l'ee is l'REE at Fidelity Federal on ever! l.R.I. or Keogh you open in love1~ber • ------------------------~----------1------~------~-----7-~---~-~~------A ~ ~ · A ~ NO 1976Tru stee Fee . ~ ~ ~ Keogh Retirement Accounts For Any Self-Employed Person Open your Keogh account this month and Fidelity Federal will waive the usual annual Trustee Fee for 1976 charged by most savings and loans and banks. Set aside up to $7,500 of earned Income each year exempt from current federal in· come taxes and $2,500 of California state income tax. In· teresi earned also exempt from income taxes until withdrawn In retirement years. l.R.A. 's (Individual Retirement Accounts) For Any Employed Person Open your IRA this month and Fidelity Federal will waive the usual annual Trustee Fee for 1976 charged by most sav· ings and loans and banks. If not already covered by a qualified retirement plan, set aside up to S 1,500 earned income each year exempt from current federal and Callfor· nia current income taxes. No current tax on Interest earned, either. Extra Bonus: Fidelity Federal pays 7>.4 % (equal to 1.06'"/a compounded dally) on •ny bal•nc• 1.R.A. .. SAVE EVEN MORE BY USING THE VALUABLE COUPONS BROW Send funds safely lhrough the mail using these FREE Money Orders in payment of bills or for merchandise ordered. FREE NOTE COLLECTIONS For trust deed and other notes and leases. Includes all monthly paperwork in· volved in collecling money due you. ., . I ---~----~-----~----------------------,----------------------------------- INCOME TAX SERVICE • I I I • Travele rs Checks • Notarizing • Document Copying • TrclnSmatlc Automatic Savings Deposit Service • Opera· tlon Safeguard for Identification of Valuables • Savings Bond Redemption • Save·By·Mall -Postage Paid Both Ways WITH SPECIFIED MINIMUM BALANCE ACCOUNTS .. -~----------------------------------~------------------------------------- FSLIC ..._...._. __ ..... _...,_ __ .... _ FIDELITY c:7~sAV111Gs A N O LOAN ASSOC IATION Bring In your coupons together with your passbook from any other savings institution. We'll transfer funds, simply and easily. No bother to you .•• no em- barrassment. We 'll handle all the details. 21 offices to ser~e you statewide COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH 1855 Harbor Blvd. 645-4420 : -.--. ,. Optimism: Kid Stuff By JUDITH OLSON Oltllt Oally Pll<MStall Wheth e r they live 1n California, M ich1gan, Florida, Texas or Ncva<Y.l , and whether their skins are white, black, red or yellow, children are ..all the •same. 1 , Jan Parson, an Orange Coast I photographer who specializes in portraits of youths, is thoroughly I convincf¥1 of this after coll ecting pictures of children over seven i y ear s for his third book. I "Children of Amcnc:i." Like h is othc-r hooks, the newest volume has photographs j of children in natural st.'lti ngs ~ and accomp;rnying poems. ~ The poems are by Cyndi Cfawn ( Sarnoff, the LO-year old daughter J of Thomas Sarnoff, a vice pres1 dent of N-B C -TV , and J an I Sarnoff. pre s ident o f the California Special Olympics They arc reproduccod 1n Miss Sarnoff's own handwriting, ~ which adds to the <'harm of the book. The partm•rsh1p bcl\\een Miss 1Jest: ;Laugh !It Up ... • By DENNIS McLIELLA~ Ot -D•lly Pt ... Slatf A batt ery of bab y spotlights illuminates lhe small stage tucke<1 into a corner of the 1 dimlylitroom. The lively chatter and clmking of glasses dies down as the back. ground piano muAic stops and a bearded manslepsonstage. "Welcome to The Lalf Stop," says manager Bob Fisher, going into a series of audience warmup jokes ("By now you've tasted the food -~e food here is fit for a king ... Here King, here boy") and finally : "Here's a talented guy you may or may not have seen on television ... ~l's put our bands together , for ... ~-The introduction may be stan· dard, but the comedians who step into the spotlight are some of the brightest and most inventive of the new breed or comics. l I t Take Murray Langston's im· pression of a tube of toothpaste or Denny Johnston impersonating Jimmy Stewart making an ob- scene phone call or Gallagher's hard sell version o f tbe Vegemati c commercial ("Sledgematic" ). ALL-COMEDY That's just a sampling ol the twice nigblly bill of fare at Orange County's first all-comedy nightclub. Similar in form at and spirit to the popular Comedy Store in Los. Angeles and San Diego, it is de- dicated to serving as an ouUet for young comedians who dish out t.he laughs to an eager audience look.Ing for com ic r elief. And the~·s apparently a stronc need for that kind or relief. One psychologist, who studied dozens of successful comedians, says humor nourishes in times of stress. In the PQSt VieU)am· Waterga era, It seeN comics are coming out of the woodwork. Samoff and Parson was formed when he was looking for someone to write a text for the pictures. "I knew her mother did some "riling," P arson srud, explain· mg that he had met M rs. Sarnoff while photographing the Special Olympics. J Ile met with Mrs. Sarnoff in her Beve rly Hills home and learned about Cyndi's work, which be found appealing. OWN HANDWRITING "We decided to use Cyndi's poems in her own writing," Parson said. I le went through his collcct1on or photographs to find shots where the children had "pos1t1vc expressions. because part or the purpose of the book 1s to convey a positjve attitude about life. Parson. who alw<1ys photo· graphs children in natural set- tings doing what they wish. said "most kids have a pretty positive attitude ifleft to themselves." He hopes, through the book, to change attitudes about dis cnmmation and promote "unit y among nations ... "People need to loosen up and get laughing again.'' says Fis- her, adding "there literally are hundreds of good comics who need a place to play. We offer them another room where they can showcase thelr talent." TALK SHOWS While most of the comics ap- pe.aring at t.he Newport Beach club are not household names, they au a re professionals. Many list TV variety and talk shows among their ctedils. Most also perform at the Comedy Store in Hollywood where Larr Stop owner Mike· Callie (and bis three partners) had been long-time audience re- gulars. . But the 33-year-old Callle doesn't have just a nodding (or- Jaughing)' acquaintance with the world or humor. He was a com.' edy writer for Jan Murray and Jack Carter. He also wrote and produced the R-rated "li You Don't ~ It· You'll Go Blind." The burmque- like comedy w~~ such a bit (it bas Parson and his publisher. Todd Cuffaro, beli eve the book is being released at an advantageous lime because "people are looking for positive things now." Society has gone through an era where material things w~e important, P arson said, but "people now are searching for quality products." Parson and Cuffaro hope parent~ will buy the book to share with their children, which they believe will be a successful ex· perience because of the youthful !\Crawl or the text. llEAVY POEMS "ll also will help parents to know their c hildren's thoughts," Cuffaro added. The poems. they agreed. are "heavier th~n you would expect a child to write." The last one, for exam pl~. was written by Miss Sarnoft to · · rtrtieft the pain or her grandmother 's death." Miss Sarnoff said she put he rself in the place of the children she was writing about for the book . "I tried to think what that person was saying." gros~ed $10 mill.loo in 18 months> that a sequel was made: "Can I Doll 'tillINeedGlasses?" Fisher feels the club ofrers an alternative to Orange County's predomi'nantly disco and movie- oriented entertainment scene. "People love lo laugh," he says. And you never know who may drop in. Joey Bishop was in the au· diehce one night and wound up doing 10 minutes describing his early days fighting for laughs in places Uke the El Dumpo Club in Cleveland. Roger Behr and Denny . Johnston, recent performers at the club, took time oul to discuss what it's like to be in the business of making people laugh. What is breaking up today's audiences? "1 think people are laughing at clever ideas,'' says Behr, 28. ''All t.he IUYS have a couple of old jokes they twist around, but it's ainuiq bow many new ideas are t&tnbtf tbroqb. E•er"J guy coming up_ bas a fresh appro!lc.b::._ She likes to read poems but does not hav<.' a favorite poet. The fi fth g rader ~tarted writ· ing poetry at the age or s. and now wntes stories too She pre- fers to write poems. however. "Some of my poems are like stories." she added. "Children of America" is part of a series which Parson and Cuf· faro hope to continue m various countries of the world. ll 1i; a new vc•nture for Cuffaro. who formerly was a loan manager for a bank. lie and Parson m et in Mexico and dis· cussed the possibility of combin- ing their efforts durin" a five· mile walk on the beach "It seemed like the ri~ht thing to do," Cuffaro expla1nt.'<i. adding that he was ready for a change of pace in bis career. The book is available at local bookstores or through Children of the World Publishing Co .• Balboa Island. It wdl be discussed by Parson and Cuffaro on the TV show .. Let's Rap," Thursday, Nov. 11. atll:JOa.m .onChannel 11 "People laugh ·at things they can relate to. 'All In the Family' was the forerunner because it's real. Everyone knows an Archie or an Edith." Behr; is half of the comedy leam of Roger and Roger. described as the only two-man impreasionilt team in the world. He met bis partner Roger Peltz while atlendlng the University of Tennessee. - Pelu was a psychology major and an All-American basketball player with a penchant for break· ing into his Gomer Pyle Im· pression in the middle of a game. Behr, a speech pathology ma- jor, sang and also had a k.nack for impressions. They teamed up in their junior year, playing local clubs and doing MC work on campus. After graduation the pair re· alized show business was in their blood and cast tfietr degrees to the wind. Bes ides, says Behr, ''l couldn't flnd a place to open a speech pathology st.ore." After workint ,the EL'it Coas~ BEA ANDERSON, Editor Tuesday. November 9, 1976 81 >;},L_~~.R~ c1-~ Jk ~ .fiuJ:.. .; .J..o.J. ..:th-~ ~Ao'~~ _,b,.. de-~ 4 o.m.cl. .4c-~ ~ ~~ ;.!! _AJ....A ~ ;:t,-~ ~ ~ ~ ~ zfoi. 0.. ..A#l ~ J ~~ ~o..~.-....;A..~ ~~~A.t..~~~ Orange Coast photographer Jan Parson with poetess, Cyndi Sarnoff, 10. ...... ·- Comedy flourishes in times of stress, says one psychologist. James Aleck, left, is one of the new breed of stand-up comics plying the nightclub circuit. club circuit and doing TV and radio commercials for five years, they moved to Hollywood six months ago (' 'lt. 's where the media is"). WW KEY Denny Johnston, who also does impressions and sings, is in bis late 20s. His low key, laid back demeanor is the same on stage as it is off. In fact, he's so laid back t.hat the first time he played the Merv Griffin show several months ago, be asked the crew if be bad ap- peared nervous. They said he looked so calm he looked like be w as going to go to sleep . Johnston started his show bu&l· _ ness career a decade ago as a singer and song writer. He turned to comedy about three years ago. "l was Ured of paint- ing houses and wallpapering for a living, 0 he said, joking, "I sUU have to paint them once in 1 while." In some respect. he's an unlike- ly candidate for an entertainer. Although a se~:<fescrlbed class ,. , clown, he nevertneless would * for an F rather than face a IJ'Oup of people when it came time to give~oralrepo~. ltJSIDOL J obnaton, who does about 10 impressions, was lnfiuenc.a by Rieb Llllle. He used to tell hlmaelf that be 'd give anythlns to be able to do a JObn Wayne Im· preutoa like Lillie's. Johnston met the lmpressionllt while appearinc in a club~Jn Puerto Rlco. But be never bad. the nerve to do an lmp= front or his idol. ''That's like • ine up to Hank Aaron and aa. 'l can hit a homerun. "' Johnston, who hopes soinedl.r to be a rnmmaker, doesn't hne an agent. He makes b1a own din· tacts and, in fact, cot on the Grit· flnabo" by caWn1 up. He admit.I the comedy bml- ness la touJ.h to b~ak lnto. ~ once ln, lt a bard work to ltA1 there. "E•tt1 d'f you wake ap and HY. 'Wbat'1 f\mny, Wbat~f Solnc. ~makeJH!Oplelau.ch?' •• . -r- J .- TueSday Novambu 9 1976 t /RISH CRYSTAL It Shines Glowing molten glaM with lhe consl£tency of heavy syrup is transformed tnto sparkling goblets at the Waterford crystal factory in southern Ireland. No two glasses are ever quite the same since the material is gathered by wejeht and by sight, and because they are all Individually made. Tour guides from the firm, explaining the process, said: "The bas1t• ingredients for our crystal are lead oxide, silica sand and potash, which are put into a furnace with a temperature of 1400 degrees centigrade for 40 hours. "It fuses together to become molte n glass. The pieces ha\'e a maximum lead content of 33 percent." First. a small amount about the size of a de· canter stopper 1s blown by an apprentice. Then a qualified man collects more glass. "It ta~es rive lo seven years to become qualified. Most start at the age of 15, since Waterford won't accept them alter age 17. •· The glass is then blown for only two minutes because it sets r apidly. However, it requires a long lime to cool complelely, the guide indicated. ··11 takes 10 years to become a master craftsman. He is lhe one who does the base on a goblet or the handle on a pitcher.·· All glass must be cut twice. "The mas ter cuts the pattern for the first lime on a Carborun- dum wheel, then the apprentice cuts the entire piece again on smoother sandstone." The patterns are done from memory, but there arc score Imes to follow on each piece. Cutters and Dlowers arc trained to do hun· dreds of patter~ "Engravers must have urtislic ability and a sensitive touch . Training includes two afternoons a week at a local a rt school, where they .specialize in ~natomy and lettering.·· • A typical piece of crystal. such as the ,popular Lismore goblet, is completed after at least eight hours of work and is handled by up to 4-0 people. The guides were at Bullock's, South Coast 'Plaza. Rough cylmders of glass go through nine steps to become crystal goblets. Gemini Be Secure :.• WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER lt 8y SYDNEY OMA.a& ARIES (March 2l·Aprll 19): Accent on security, cooking, saving money, consolidating assets. You are able now lo see beyond the im· mediate, to finish aaaiirunent, to contact those • who can aid your spec:lfic cause. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Good moon aspect coincides now with short trips, accelerat· ed activity connected with neighbors and re· latives. One close lo you wants a "new deal." • GEMINI <May 21.June 20): ~ccenl on your money and how It got that way. You are urged to protect valuables by one who cares for you. CANCER (June 21-JuJy 22): !.unar cycle is such that your Intuition is honed to razor sharp· ness. Personality. the way you look, liming in general all could work in your favor. LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): Be discreet. Your ideas are considered at closed·door meeting. You may be asked lo keep certain matters confiden· tiaJ. This is not easy. but probably necessary. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Accent on friends, desires, fantasies. Member oC QPposite sex expreases feelings. Your powers of percep- t.Jon surge to forefront. You're able to analyze. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): You might be pro- moted, position elevated. Community project ap- pears to be in picture. Family member wants you to exert effort, influence lo put across a pro-gram. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Commuruca· lion, publishing, writing may be featured. Travel, visits, unique messages are part of your personal scenario. Spiritual insights are gained. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Occult, taxes, leases, money of partner or mate seem to dominate. You're asked to judge capabilities of potential executive. Fiscal policies are of major concern. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Unfinished b~iness tops agenda. Legal maneuver could ex- tricate you from untenable position. Accent on partnership, special relation.ship, marriage. AQUARIUS (Jan.'-00.Feb. 18): New employ. ment opportunity is highlighted. Work, service and health are high on agenda. Get together with those who share your interests. P ISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You are able to express, to deal with childre n. to sustain a rela· tionship. Change, variety, travel are featured. u rHOLSTf RY ~Y~W_. . lllt&:eat 1tUH~ll•4. c .... -..-........ , TIRED of FAILURE? Start winninr. POUND$ AND 1'1CHIS DlMAWAY. NO OAUQS • NO EXERCISE Low C()SI, high rosulls or money bacl< w,·,.. ci-. ... ,, ... , ... .._ tM -"• ,,...,,._ er .,_ ..... ,. ,..,,,, .... ~ .... _,.. tffectl••· TW• le .._ ........ •"tti• '"' ,.....,_ 4-..ct ... "'' T_., ..... ASK A~OUT OUR FREE TRIP FOR TWO TO HAWAII OR ACAPULCO S LIMWAY 646-7933 645-2051 "-tin t.._y dey 641 Cttttw St. Cott• Mtt•flU7 ··coST nus 1 o" FURNITURE etc Jiii DICOUYotl WVICI HILL'S IMT'lflJORS 2 I l /211·4100 714/Ul·OOH NOW ... YOU CAN REALIZE YOUR FULL POTENTIAL! oE~A~~~ns . ,~! ... ~~v!.~.~.~!.Y.,!0,.,,~"·"" (Ann Landers ~ . with a serious problem. I am 16 and Bill ls 17. andoflongerduration. Cor.ie to tile proft.s~·Cn 1!~ to dt •elGp \~Ur lull oeisonat potent13l lor l<'dJV ar.rt inc 'Llu1e ll' • J;y d d en;0'/1' le. Learo 1he 131'S1 tect.niques 1n •W)''h11otroon 1.1 ,,,t~ 10 t.'~" ·rJ Si LC al Weaotit C(l111tol & Dance \',~r~snc,:is. ltac.htr :11,1• rg t re Mo~el PJacemeri1 Agrncy Jlt 1us1 some of the i;xtra ro.'.ers i ·~ ,1.1ni b .chts \'.ome~ or Jll ~Q~ tan oaan ne11 P~•>C. teauty, toot.o. we 1n lL 111r•s ra1rcr er llorm ma~109 ~ur&'J1',, •' We've gone together for t"·o years. A friend or We cannot lead our own lives when s he is here. mine says I'm depriving Bill of a very important She expects to be inrluckd in everything we do. factor which he needs in order to mature. Often it creaks a problem. Motht·r does 'not wait She says I s hould go to bed with him because for an invitation She selects her own arrival and hemust havesomesexualexperienceifhe'sgoing departure dalt•s My wife has been a good sport to. "grow.up." She also says.Ir I deny him this he about this and ncvcrcomplams. w1ll scek1t elsewhe reandlwilllosehim. What's the solution, 1\1111'! Please don't advise My problem is one that concerns many young me to tell her how we reel. I just couldn't. - girls these days. Could you please print this letter LOVING BUTOVERRUHOENEDSON and your ans wer? SEARCHING FOR THE DEAR L . BUT 0 .: Your last sentence rules out RIGHT ANSWERS the onJy logical solulion.11 you don't tell her bow DEAR SEA RCIONG: ApparenUy your friend you feel, she'll never know. bu the notion that sexual experience "grows peo· Printing this letter will not do the job. Jf she pleup."Sbelsmistakeo.Someoftbemostsexual· saw it sht>'d probably say to hersell, "How nice lyactlvepeoplearetheLEASTgrownup. that I don't have that problem. My son and wlfe The ability to pocrtl)OM gratlncatlon and be in just love to have m e -anytim«-." control of one's pas11lon.'l is a sign of maturity. If F.Uher you screw up your courage and level your hoy friend drops you because) ou refuse to go with Mam a or r('Si~ yourself to the fact that as to bed with him, yon haven "tlost much, honey. long as she Ii\. es. she will call the tune while you and )·our" ife dance toil. DEAR J\NN I can't belll•ve that I. a Jirown man \I.1th a wire and two children, ;im a('tually writing lo Ann Landers For years I've read your column for entertain rnl.'nt DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a 14·year-old ~1rl '4 Jlh a mother who is ruining my social life. She 1s alwa\s humiliatinl? me in front of my friends. 1'\1r example, last week she wore my ll_rothcr·-. pants to thl' procery store. They are ~OT Jeans they are boy's pants which was plain to see I ran into her on the street and was so em. The problem 1!' m) mother T"u ) t•ars ago the company I work for transferred me from my home town to another Cll). Moth<'r 1s a fine person and I wouldn 't hurt her rcehngc; for the world t>ut barrasscd I wanted lod1c Leftovers . 'Tackled' By E RMA BOMBECX l have found that whcnC'vcr a man wants to strike back at a o,1.oman for her boredom with football . he will say, "You don't under!iland tht> fi!ame " I under!>tand the game I al50 undPrstand that footba ll ~ames last lonj?er th.in ~ome marnages I understand that 1r I havr tos1l UirouJ:h four more mnnlhs of an- nounclllj? nt.•ws bullt.>tm~ rlunn1• the commt'tc1al <"PAPf;R TRAINING DOG 10 MOM O," "KIDS BEST SHOF.S RAINED OUT," "M OT ll ER IN I.AW I.AST DRAfl CHOICE SIGNS ON FOR WEEKEND") I'll go ('ra1y There's only one way J know to fi~ht back and that's on m y turf. After watching four games in a row last Sunday, my husband groped his way out to the dinner table. Calendar ~IERMAID RALi,: Sl1mcthin~ Special is the lhl'rnC of tht• unnual l>enefit, spon~ored by the L1tt11~ Mermaid Guild or Huntington !}each. The ball. a benefit of Children's Hospital of Orange County, will be held at 8:30 p.m. Saturdoy. Nov.13. in the Registry Hotel. • Entertainment will be pro· vided by the Howard L. Reynolds Band and a special performance wtll be given by the Golden West College Dance Company "Where's di nne r ?" he grumbled. "Hi there. fans in the stands.·· r said speaking into a spatula. "We've got an exciting evening planned for you tonight, but rirst let '11 hear from our man in the freezer. "This Is Frank Sirloin here, and this is the b11? one we've been looking for. Erma Microwave Is looking for her first winning steak in S.356 tries and tonight 1t'fi Frozen Hamburger vs. Lef- tovers." "Will you just put the food on the table?" he sighed. "When we talked to Erma earlier, the game plan was t.o go out.side. but since ~he moves pre- tty well ins ide. s he's decided lo go for a man·on-man situation. We'll ask her about how she ex· pects to pick up a ny more yardage with the leftovers. but first we'll go to the bench where s he'll fill us in on some of the in- juries.·· ·'That ·s cute," said my husband. "Now can we eat?" "You may remember the str· ing beans that received lwo in· complete passes al the last meal. and a package of bW\S that was lateraled and picked up by the n , ,. . . AT WIT'S END dog in yesterday's luncheon scrimmage. Starting today will be the Geor ge Blanda or the team, Cottage Cheese, which may retire after today·s en· counter. There·11 be more on in· 1!.lJies. but now we're getting a signal to go out on the field where 1~8 cheerleaders are spelling re- hef -lhat 's R-O·L·A·I·D·S." "I gel the drift,'' he grumbled. "The meal is gelling cold.'' ''Don 'l be ridiculous," I sa.ld, grabbing lhe plate out of bis hand. "You've only had it passed under your nose once. Next time 1 around Is In slow motion, then in· stant replay, then stop action, now camera three so you can see it from the bottom ... then later on the six o'clock news. and two hours from now, it will be shown again on Leftover Greats of the Century. but now ... ooops, the casserol~ Cell to the floor. Sorry, gang, the fumble was sloppy, but it'i; only the flrslin four ... " It could cost me the marriage, but It was worth it. COSMETIC SURGERY MEN-WOMEN ' LOOK YOUMGEI! IMPROVE YOUR Al'PEARAMC E! • Eyes • Nose • Ears • Facelift • Breasts • Stomach • Hair Transplants • Dermabraston •Skin Peel I OOTS•HAn•l'UlllS•JIWlllY DHHH•IWIA11H•,AMn JU ... '5UIT$ .. AUCHOS Call For Free Brochure · Free Consulting Easy l1nanc1ng arranged AMERICAN COSWTIC SURGERY CENTH INC. HU a.tte A,...,........,._ lk«ll ltM701 M ember American Medic.al Assn When I told Mom I wish ~he would look decent in public for my sakeshesaidthetroublewilh kids today is that they are too darned mouthy and J wasn't going to tell her how to dress. Whatcanl do about my problem ?-RED FACE DEAR RED: If your Mom bad a nice palr of comfortable slacks maybe she wouldn't wear your brother's pants. Ask your Dad to surprise her witli a gilt as soon as be can afford it. U you get an allowance maybe you can help. <P.S. If this Is the worst thing klds can say about you, your reputa· ti on should b~ very good, dear.) • ID ~ can time lose for HOW? To b•9ln with you win tte~n a cornplirr.entcry Yisit .ct thoroucJh fl CJU" andpis and shoWft what IMGSWflMt,.S _.. for yo. body stntctw.. CaU or come in today for a free pmonal analysl.ull4,.,rogram discuu1oa. John Robert Pc7Ners TM_ Schools for Your Pusonal Dtwlopme~t ORANGE COUNTY . #3 Town & Country 547-8228 SUCCESSFUll Y SERVllJG AM( RICAN WOMfN SINCE 192S one the dress size holidays • 1MEH YCMI will be showtt ftow our ..thod CCIII h•lp you acqul,... your loYefy proportiOflS wffttout shots, plls Olt' w.ICJht llfti~ MofflNtcJ .... COlllp•H to ~ fofolly attradin. Oltd .._NCI. H y•'N Ilk• most ' ..._..., y• 1tffd ._ help to ecM.n If. It can hGptMft the day you beCJ1n with LilliClll laffcrd. What coulr bt nicer to look forward to? • 2 for t~e price of 1 ~~~ '/B SAVE $ 50% ~ ... .,.. a:Y . afrftftd....n ~ UMITED ~e TIME OFFER ./ No Strenuous Exercise ./ No Shots or Pills I Nutritional Guidance ./ No Disrobing ./Improved Posture ./ 10 years experience SALON HOURS: Mon.-Frl. 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. CALL NOW FOR Your Cof11>1imentary Figure Analysis 631-2444 ~iU«ue f8~ FIGURE CONTOURING SALON 36 9 E. 17th• Westport Square Acro11 from Ralph• Market Costa Mesa • 631 -2444 .... 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'r' . , TODAY'S CRDSSWDBD PUZZLE UNITED Feature Syndicate ACRCSS 1 Emo 0 1 5 f Jc1ng a g1ac1e1 10Eatsa1!1181 1.i .. Beoe . (l>Ol 'IOYOI 151mpart •~n..-1"<!110 16P•oet'ed r•o•d'V 17 Giver ol 4 7 Aoora•se 50 G1ee~ lt•1tei !i I ·Ha N J un1vpr s11v 52 H~•e a len dercy tow"d 56 WutHnq1<1l s 1191gn1>or 60 Fonct1ess Alt A S I~ A c £kl J .I .Q~ 8 1All A 0 A!; £ l 0 00 E ' ~ [ £ M 0 c R A T I C LE A 0 p t p E. . " l,., 0 N 0 (', 0 At -HIE l p S T ll ( E T• R EIO L I N [ S If' M f n il AL• NJ E R 0 .t.ll-RIA V flN•C LOW IN L If 11-L Nil ~ 'V 0 E r A '4 p E II.If o -r AS R II E: ns-w R I T ~ A I I N S I v 1 0 l A IT 6 l 0911r aded person 0~·11•' ls 64 Addict 19 M11ar 1 6SG1rlo1uon:i r • E S c. ' ' 5 u 11 II N ~ 11; IO ~ L A N IC E IR •I le-ti'• 66 Adf!\11 20 Sut>O•d .,ate 6 7 •• room ~ .... ... ,... II [ ( 'I t [A ' '"'"' Resteu111nt 21 Of, oe< On wl'leat no re It' New Yori.. 4 4 $prv1ce for a t1110 \JI' ve·s • ., 23 Fem1n~e "''"" 26 Actress Sand•a • 27 He!msm., 30 01 the teeth 34 F11ssy Old women S1111g 35 lnQUlled 37 Lomb s perent 38Can Prov 39 Gives back 4 l Put into words <12 Tiny 43 Inside of Prell• 44 Move about nimbly 4SH11 area 88 Inner Ana •S'l!'HJ dead oer· 11 Coa• son 89 Or egs t HI-OW con· 4 6 Down on lor·UOUSI)' one s •••••• 13 Army gun 48 Having no I A Free of 1>11s k~ Music DOWN 2 2 Future crOQ 4 9 Kno,,,,leoqe 1 Mon1rea1 so.irces 52 Slot hocUy 24 Kind ot machine team tntor horse symbol m11 :>S Pledges 53 Flower 'Conception 27 Public p!lf· 54 Stove cnam· J Oectalm tormancu ber YIOlenlly 28 009m1 55 Srlger -·- 4 Ritts up 29 Come Into Martin 6 Kind or 3 1 N1kota ·····: s 7 Bestowed fastener AC 58 S1ouan 6 CI O. mem· developer language ber 32 Be ready fOf 59 Bnnkley·s 7 Cereal 33 Pt island forte grus 36 Card 62 Alimentary 8 Cargo 39 Nouveau canal vessel 63 Turning 9 •••••••• 40 Cause lo 1g· poon I • " by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds by &nie Bushniller SORRY··-OUQ CLOTHES DRYER BROKE DOWN TOO PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS DV~ING WORLD WM 1! I SHE WO~KEO ~5 A RIVETER, ANO ~OTE LETTERS 10 5EVENTE~ SE~KE.W:N! • ~Ro&&LF X llo"&t.t ~ll'Ot.£ !KM!>Ot.F A.t. " ~ MISS PEACH ~ ftd~c.l~S APUllE Senv ice • ____...._..._. A0~1(£ Fot 'PEOPLE Wl/o . HA~ '-ETTIN' A 0 VllE . { l .~-,,4" j l• ! " , .. ' - THE VIRTUE OF VERA VALIANT (7AVll7. ~ CAN'r eE FIWM ANO'THE~ PLJiNETI HOW CC\Jt.'7 'IOtJ GIT HEflE r DOOLEY'S WORLD OxYGEN WAS DlSCOVCREO BY Tl-I( f NGLIS~ SC1£Nnsr, J05£PH ffil(~llf.Y, IN 177Ll DR. SMOCK YOU SAY NO O i.Jf: HAS eve~ S1"A.YEl7 A1" 'fHIS HOSPITAL.. LONGER 1"HAN ME:? GORDO WE ~Dl!f wAr-!s• WHY I L IKE ~IAIG ATH/S~ TA/!>LE. HE OINES av ~ WIT# SJ LI/ER CA!JOELA.81().S ANO MOON MULLINS ® by Charies M. SdUz LET'S HEAR IT FO,~'t' 6RANDM01HER !! by Herold Le Doux Tueeday, Novemt>.r 9 1979 by Rodger Bradfield WllAT DID t" fH~Y BREATH£ 6£FoRe THAT ? by George Lemont · by Gus Arriola ------· ~s.A CHATJ:.AIJ Al~UF OE MOO nlAT1.S UOCJeRLY 0£Ll6JffFUL/ by Ferd Jo1'nson Now 1 kNoW WHY I NEVER WANTED ONE OF THEM .. . ~~i ~. THE GIRLS }fJ 1f'll ··r.:.i . l : , I "The treasurer rcpons she·s sure 11<e h.ivc enough money (or our Christmas rany a~ her old suede purse I~ filled and lhc red shirrtd one 5hc never hkcd. i~ almost." · by Tom K. Rye11 DENNIS THE MENACE .. . J by Mel \ . .MAf2C.JA'S tiDVllf le. . HD ADVitE Fo "i ffo ,,F UJAO HA rE' (;.C1T1N' AWt<.F. . w -{lo3~ "'""l'\.. u ~ .w..r. ,,., • 1s TAAT bJR KIO OJER T~.E~ ~· I 84 DAIL v PILOT Tuesday, November 9. 1976 :We Were Superior, . ays Bengals' Clark I . ClNNATI (AP)-Tbt Cin· marched the Bengals 4T yardl, teammate Coy 81cm, who led ti BenealJ, Paul Brown'• blttin1 Clark with a 17-yard the BeQlala' defensive charge. pet projed, have com.Of age touchdown pass. "It w•s a penonal thing with 1 NaUonal Football Leque. "The bett thing about this ball hJm," Hid Los Angeles running ' , ,.. We're at tbe pln poiat of dub la that tbe defense aiv~ ua back John Cappelletti, who ' tlilfturlty where we cao play with ways to win," said Trumpy, one topped all ru.hert with 86 yards 1 ...,,body. In fact, Dl&D-fOr·man I or two original Bengals left. It was the defeme which got ~ht we were the better team "This is the type of thing that thinis goine quickly in the second «ht," Hid fullback Boobie. give$ a club a great deal of hall. It sacked Rams quarterback , k, who helped the Bengal& character." James Harri.I and forced a fum. rcome a poor •tart as Cincin· The Rama, who outcai.ned Cin· ble. On the next play, Clark burst ' beat the Los Angeles Rams clnnati 173-57 yards in the first nine yard• for the go-ahead 1 20-12 in a nationally televised half, were frustrated by former touchdown. game. McKay Hot; Rips Coach Of Broncos DENVER CAP) -Denver Broncos offentlYe coordinator ·Max Coley respontt.dtoa blister- ing post-game verbel attack by ·Tampa Bay coacb Jobo ~cKay with sarcasm and q\lolltioning Monday. After Sunday's 48·13 loss to the Brooe09 McKay stomped oft the field, refused to shake hands with Broncos coach John Ralston and offered to give a portion of Coley's anatomy a sound kick- ing. McKay was appattnUy upset not only about the loss but the way it was administered to his winless National Football r Trojans Griilder Fighting for LUe LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mllce Carey played football lot tbe University of Sout.beru Callf~a la~t Saturday. Today, be is figbUna for his life a.,un.t Hocl1Juns Diae•ae. The 21-year-old j\lnior delenaive back underwent IOflWY Monday for removal o( his spleen and several l)tmpb DOdel in &M battle against the cancer. In addition, su{geoos took samples ot bone marrow ud Uytr to tee ho,.. far the disease had spread. . Although result.a of the tests were not expected unUl Wtdn• day team physician Dr. Chester Semel said he was encouraaed •. and 1 Carey was listed in fair condition Monday nllbt at Brotman Memorial Hospital in suburban Culver City. It waa only 24 days ago that Carey, of San Francisco, wu tokl he had Hodeklne DlleaH, which kills a~ut 1,000 persona each year ln the United St.at.es. He wanted to continue as a backup defensive back fOl' the Trojans, and only four days alter leamln1 he had the cllleue. played 1n a victory over Oregon State. Coach John RobiMOn save him the eame ball. I Tbe Bengals, now 7·2 and Jeeden in the American Con· 1 ference Central Division, over. League expansion team. · "Max Coley? The guy who calls the plays?" McKay asked in resJ)OIUe to a question about his end-of-came tantrum. "I hope be got. his offensive stats up ~ and I hope he get.a fired tomorrow. He knew we were hurt in '. But it always turns around .•. " Then began the endless tests. stomach X-rays, bone scans, blood samples. But Carey continued as a football player and coaches let him see action the last two weeks aaatmt California and Stanford. came their worst flnt ball in • 1eua to knock off the powerful · a.ma in a batUe between teams I "8fboring Super Bowl upira. , *"-·The Rams dropped to 6-2-1, • --still lead tho National Coft. ~ceWest. the victory kept Cincinnati on course for its cruclal showdown Nov. 28 a1ain1t rejuvenated Pit· tsburgh, which still b clinging to hopes of a tblrd straJght Super Bowl title. "Pittsburgh is not the only team wlth momentum gotng," said Clark, who clebrated bis 26th birthday with two touchdowns in triggering a 20- point third-quarter that sank the Rams. "We 're lookinJforwardto meeting them. " The Bengals, wbo tuppreued •IJ)olion under P•rf•cUoalst Brown, who built tbe frlDCbJ.M· ll"QID scratch eight yean a10, are 1'11oopin1 lt up under new coach Bill Johnson. Looking offensively inept in the llrst half, the Bengals regrouped. "Buically, we were stopping ourselves," said Johmon. "We had an emotional meeting lt'balfUme," said veteran center Job John•on. "BilJ is more spark Ulan we've had btte. I th1nJc we f&lt fortunate we were only· behind 6-0. ','We went in at hal!Ume and tried to pull thinp together," said Cincinnati running back Bc>obie Clark. "We just bad to ex- ~nte. Our offense couldn't get untracked." "Basically, we were stopping ourselves," coach Bill Johnson said of that unproductive finl half, when the Rams aot two field goal.a while the Bengals were get. tine penalties and droppiJla An· derson 's passes. I ''The first half was kind of em· , barras sinf, '' Anderson ad- mitted. Aroused by tbe 50-year-old rookie coach wttb the nickname of "TI&er," the Bengals struck swiftly. with the defense pa vine the way. Leu than~ minute. into the second hair. Rams qiarterbaclt James Harris lost a fumble at the Los Aneeles nine-- yard line. Clark bolled into tbe end woe untouched on Cincinlultl's IM!Xt play and rookie Chris Bahr's con· version kic k put the Bengals ahead 7 ·6. overcoming field goals of 19 and 23 yards by the Rams' Tom Dempsey. Six minutes later, after takinc over near mid field, quarterback Ken Anderson dashed 25 yards to set up the second touchdown. An dtrson. shakine off a 2-tor-12 first half passinc ~rfonnance, coo- nened on a 30-yard seortna pus to vetera n tight end Bob Trumpy On the nut aeries, Anderson Hayes Admits Players Sell Free Tickets ~COLU MBUS, Ohio CAP) oody Hayes, Ohio 8Ute's foot· all coach, conceded Monday at it's almost impossible to etP college players f1'0lll selling lljradlng their tickets. • "'We do everythlnC we can to · our age it," Haya ,.ponded ' ·comments from lwo of hi.a 1 er player$ now in the Na· I al Football League. l~ety Tim Fox of the New ~and Patriots has been quot· as saying players swap their 1 ¥On books for the use ol cars automobile dealers. ck Middletoo. a San Diero argers linebacker and fonner Clbio State eo-captain like FCMt, la said he sold Udtets tor Ills Cllege spendlDI money. 'It's impoplble lo comoletety Cour.ce it," Hayt!8 Mid of tM fraeUee. "J'~fl «MV« in any wa1 laid we're perfect. 8u&.,. eure 4s bell wotk ln thatd.ind.Jon. .. ()bio State home tickets are as>eeiWJy ulaabl.e since tM Bif en school bft bad • 9trai8ht outs lo Ohio a.dium. The •u.ckeyes aJway1 h11ve more re· IRsts for season boob than they "'fail. "''Counting faculty and alumni. • had to turn down 13,000 re· lliMC.I this year ," said Bob B.le.s, otUo State Ueket director. .._ ••Id Ohio SUte players re itvea two, three or tour --boob, dependin& •their ambet' of 1ean oo tM aquad. 1 cu aJlo '"" two to nve di PW tam•· A~WI.._,..~ CINCINNATI'& KEN ANDERSON (14) BREAKS LOOSE. Coley said "I don't know who he wanted ua to run our offense agaimt, if not bls defensive line. His coaching staff?" Coley said he had no problems with McKay before, and they play aolf together every year, and occasionally have a few drink•. "l think he must have lost bis wise," Coley said. "If he was t alk ing about whipping somebody after the game, as I read, he knew where I was dreaa- ing. I was only 60 feet away and would have been more than will. ing to meet him either verbally or physically." Coley said he knew 1t has been a hard transition for McKay to make, from a successful college program at Southern CaUforrua to an expans ion franchise at Tampa Bay. "Evidently he doesn't know the difference between offense and defense, who was doing the scor· ing." Coley pointed out the last three of Denve r 's f o ur touchdowns were led by the de- fense following interceptions and a fumble recovery off the Tampa offense. "However, he must be an eic· pert because he's beaten a lot of college teams." Coley said, em- phasizing college. Coley also noted that Denver played a conservative, no-pass game in the closine minutes. "That's the first time I 've ever seen a coach blame the other coaching staff for a Joss," he said. LA'S JOHN CAPPELLETI'1 (22) IS TftAPPIO BY .JIM McCLAJR, MARVIN coaa (24). Coach Blasts Poll NEW YORK CAP) -"I've been holding back and I haven't mentioned it all season, but we're wort.by of the Top Twenty wttbout doubt," Rutgers coach FTW Bum1 said Monday. However, Burna and bis Scarlet Knight., holders of the Mt.loo 'a lonieet winning streak and one of the few teams with a perfect record, will have to watt a' while lonaer. They're not io the Top Twenty this week, either. "The poll is a popularity eon. test and isn't valid," BurM U*f the New York Football Writ.era' wfftly luncheon Monday, before lbil week'• autgers-less rank· iDp were released. "It doesn't bother· me aa a coacb or a penon; ltbot.b«s mefor!IU'klds because they deserve to be ranted.., Burns has a pretty good selling point In the wake of Saturday's 3'-0 rout ol LouiavUJe. Pitt, now the natloo'a No. l·ranked team. defeated LoUlavtUe 27-41 while loth·ranked Alabama was a 24.3 vlctorl over the Cardinals . Louisville also lost ao.10 to Tulia, the only team to beat 13th-ranked Arllama1, ud 30-21 to Miu.Wip· pl State, wbkb has been in the Top Twenty twi~e this year. •·we handled Louts~e better than anyone has lb1I season," Bums Uld. "It was tM best de· ftnsive ,.,.. we played all year. I don~t aee bow a defensive team ~J>liyAAJbeUar.'' ··. Rams Stats lMAflOllH Olld-tl I.A -11'0 o.,.... .. , .. 1.4-FG OempW,tJ J , " ~t 0 • '° 0-20 On -Clark t run Ul•hr ltlc•l t in -Trumpy 30 P•n lro<n Al'dar.on CIClc• ,.,...,, On-Oar1117 NH fr_.,.,_ Ce.Mll4<111 lA-J••tl• o ,.n from Htrris Cttlek 1.i1e111 ,_$Ult Flr\t OOwn. Ru,t'MH~vArO\ P~5Sl/l0 ,.,,., ~~lurn v•rd• Plinu Pun It Fumb4tH011 ... n<llll_,1 yerCh "-.. flt••• JI II 4"111 '"'" 160 UJ • to , .. ,.., 1111·1 ... ,,,., '1 1 1 •II & S\ INOIVIOUALl.IAOW1t• RU&HINO -loo. Al'flllff, C«jlOoll'*ttl 10-tt, ~CUIC'MOll 20-76, Harri• MO Qft(l!ltWll, Cl•rk f6.10, Elliott 7~1, "*''°" J.1' RECl lVINO -'-°' Anqtlft, J<k .. M '7', Jenle S·M, Ca_l .. tll ''"· McOllC'-1 1', Kitlll 2.f. On(l""-11• 8roou ~ o.t'll J.10. l!I· Hott t.J. T"'"'" l·lO, Cot .. I Ml. '"ASSING -\At A~'-Hotm, 1 .... ,, 1'3 ~ OllClnMtl, A~ 11-2M, 1)1. I And the testa 1tarted takiftl their toll. "I felt slow and aluggisb," he said before Monday's •W"Cet'7 • "I tried not to think about i$, but 1 knew it." The 6-1, 200-pounder suffered a mtUcle pull lift.inl weighta In August. When swelling in bi5 lower neck persuted, Dr. Semd or· . dered tests. . One lump was discovered -it was benign. But beneath. 1t another, only the size or a dime, was discovered. It waa malia· nant;,I didn't want to tell anybody," Carey said. "But then I re. allied I'm somebody's child and somebody cares about. mo. The Impact dldn 't hit me until I told my family." With Carey, when he came out of the operatlon, were h1s father, Chuck. a retired Navy commander, his motber, Margaret, plus three of his four brother• and alaters ~d hJa llrl friend. d .. aid .... "When he called to tell me, at tint I broke own, s ,..., mother. "Then I said we have God on our side and we're &olnl t.o beatthis." . Doctors say Carey's chances of survival are about 85 pe.reent if the malignancy is confined lo the area where surgery wes performed. He will need an estimated four to six weeks of radia- tion treatment, beglnnlAg immediately. . . . "All studies so far indicate that the HodiklDI Diseaae IS limited to the original area in the neck and around the col- larbone," Dr. Semel said after the surgery. "This can be treated with radiation." · He said doctors who performed the sur1ery found no evidence of tumors elsewhere. If all goes well, the doctor said, Carey may resume bis ho~by of mountain climbing soon and perhaps even think about playmg football next fall. Although Carey will not play any more this sea.son, the Tro- jana named him capt~ for their ea.me a1ain1t Stanford SatW'· day and for their cruc1al meeting with UCLA Nov. 20, with the Rose Bowl probably at stake. Befor e the Stanford game, members or Stanford team in· eluded Carey ln a pregame prayer. ... "Many of us knew him and we'd been praylnii for him," sald Stanford co-captain Jeff Barton. "We just made aure we prayed for him again.·' . Players A.re Down &hemb--echler Puts Team in seclusiori · ANN ARBOR, Mich. <AP) - Michigan's Wolverines have been usher ed back Into their lair, smartini from defeat and skep- tical of outt1idert1. "I have not lost faith in them," coach Bo Schembecbler safd Monday. However, his players won 't be available for interviews in the wake of their 16-14 Big Ten foot- ball loss Saturday at Purdue. The setback tumbled Michlean from first to fourth in this week's Associated Press poll of sport.a writers and broadcasters. Pit· tsburgh, as expected, climbed from aecond to Cirst. "We've bad about all we can take," Schembechler told re- porters. "You gun almoet had me convinced we were good," There were more reporters than usual at his weekly news con· ference, a s well as photo- graphers. "Everybody loves a loser," Schem bechler said. He said his players "are really down," and, "it's a matter of me pJacine emphas is oo our coming back. We just want to concentrate on football. We've IOl a t.o111h aamecomtna up, reallytough." Mlch11an, 8-1 overall and 5-1 in the conference. hosts IWnois this Saturday before wind.Ina up the reiutar seuon the followfng week at Columbus against attbrlval OhJoState. That game la expected to, as usual, determine the Big Ten championship -if tbe Wolverines can get byllllnols. Ohio State. fint in the Bil Ten, is ranked eighth. . "I don't think there are any super powers," Schembechler said. "J don't think there's a team· in the nation we can't beat~.'. He added, "I'm not.aftertbena- Uonal championship ... I'm after the Bia Ten championship and the Rose Bowl." Schembechler called Purdue coach Alex Agase ''a great coach" and "a great friend of mine." However, "J didn't think he cowld do lt (upset Mtcbiaan). That's probably why be did it - because I dldn 't think be could. Nobody needed that vit'tory more than him. "Last week our coachlna stair was worried, really worried," Schembecbler added. "lt was nothine you could put your rmger on. It's a bard.lesson to learn. When you win a lot, you roreetbow you gotthere ... you hope maybe you'll learn It witb a close call vic-tory." Michigan s uffered more than the embarrassment ol defeat. Four of its top players were ln· jured and one, defensive end and punter John Andel'IOn, Prob•bly won't be able to play the la.et two sames. Anderson suffered strained lieaments ill bll .rlabt. knee. Fullbacks Rob Lytle (blp) and Russell Davts (tblth), plus tallback Harlan Huckleby Ctblab) were also hurt. Cards, Expos Swap llorg's Fiance Seek.I A.ylum ST. LOUIS -The St. LoW. Cardbaals completed a six-player baseball deal with the Montreal Expoa Monday, acqairi.oe riihl· banded pitcher Steve Dunning, ouUietder Tony Scott and in· fielder Pat Suntan. Montreal obtaloed rl1ht· .handed pitcher Bill Greif, left· handed pitcher Atlgel Torra and outllelder Sam Mejiaa. The three players coming to St. Louis, all or wborn will be plac-1 on the major league team r0$ter, played last year for Denvw in the Trtpl~A American M&ociatJon. A .. 1 ... s ..... t NEW YOKK -RomanJa's 19-year-old Marina Slrnionescu ~ impatienUy awaiting polttical uylum papers from WJ'hinctoo so 1he can join ber fianct, Sweden's Bjorn Bors. on &be world tennis clrculL It's the blg,eat IO'f'e mateb °" the courts since the J immy Co!1· non..chrfs Evert entaCftnent ln the summer of 1974 which endec1 In a breakup. "BJom and I swapped rlap lasi P'r.ldtr,' • SJml-Ooacu .. 1c1. ,,_....u 11n1 ... SYDNEY, Autltalla -hlm- rnJq star J enny Turrall baa a. nounced ber retlremalt at tbe a1e of lf because the •'old dri.-e" which helped ber break word re- cord.a "ia nol there 111.)'IDOre." The AustraUan t.en-a1er'1 de- cl1ion follow1 dlsappoinUng performances at ~ Montreal Olympics, where tbere was wtdespread criticism that abe wu overwe1tbt. Jeuy first lowered the worad rec«d for the 1,$00 meters '#bin abe wu 13 yean old. Sile bu . brou_1hl the mark down four timeutne.thn. lllaTurrallMt the current world record tiine of 1 . 18 mbfutes 33.M leeandl 8l the . U.S. ChmplonlhJ~ In 19"14. • ! I \ •t I • TuoSda November 9. 1976 DAILVPfl OT Prep Offensive Players of Week Mes ans lnCIF JC Grid Aees KIRK LANGDALE Estancia Coaches at Each At•• School Select Players of the Week. WILLIE GITTENS ·Fountain Valley 0 kEITH HORGAN Dana Hiiis STEVE LASLEY HuntJngton Beach JEFF SMITH Edison BILL GOMPF Laguna Beach MARK DONOHOO El Toro RON ROY Marina Ratings Costa Mes a High's Mustangs have earned a spot in the ClF 2·A Top 10 football polJ-tbe first time a Mesa High foot· ball t e am bas earned that recognition in 17 years. The Mesans are 6·1·1 and meet Corona del Mar Friday night at Newport Harbor High in a bid to coJJect their fll'St· - ever league cham - pionship. Costa Mes a is ninth in the poll behind leader Antelope V•lley, which is led by former Est.an· cia (Costa Mesa) High coach John Lowry. Still io the Top 10 fOI 4·A classification is Fountain Valley, which suffered its first loss of the season after several weeks at the top. Foun- tain Valley dropped to filth after its 13·3 loss to Huntington Beach 's Edison. Edison, a big loser to West Torrance in non· · lea~ue play. edged into the poll at 10th. Coaches~ Pl•Y•r• of WHk ERIC BERG GWCOffense " RICH CLEMENS GWCDefenae Edison, Barons With Fountain Valley·s loss, among others. the list or perfect teams in the ClF 4-A has dwindled to none. Only Coachella Vnlley is 8-0 in 2·A play. Reflections On Big Game Cll' TOP 10 •·A l'oolball I Sl P1111 " 'I ,., 1 South Hiii\ (1 0 I, l&o l Wttt Cov•n• 11·11 tli> 4 ~ •• ,.(I " 1)2 s ,o .... u it1 V1t10 <1·11 101 o Wnt Torr•n<~ Cl 1l ,. I SI Frantll 11·0.I I 61 I Loo.Alto. ( .. I 11 '1 ' S..,1• Monoc• (7.( I ~ \0 E"'I"°" 1 .. 11 JO By ROGER CARLSON OltlleO.ily~"4St1ll There was a s ign bum· ing celebration al Edison .High 's (Huntington Beach) practice field Monday -but it wasn't • one of the draft card or . tax bill burning variety. In tribute to the Edison Chargers· 13·3 S unset " League football victory before 16,928 at Anaheim Stadium the Edison squad took down and burned a sign that has been haunting them on the practice field since the season started. It re• ad: "The no-names prac- tice here.'' Names like Mike Wit.herby. Ray Sheeks, Mike Malais, Je ff Hyder. Eric Huth and Bob Wilson s udde nly have taken o n new significance in the wake or Edison's triumph over FV's Barons Friday night, ranked No. l in the Cl F 4 -A fo r several weeks. "It's our second big· gest win in our history." says Edis on coach Bill Workman. ·•only the CIF 3·A championship win over Lompoc would rate higher. "We beat No. l and Fountain Valley , all rolled into one ." The game was a de· fensive classic, but both coaches agree it was an o ffe n s i ve burs t b y Edison in the fourth quarter that f1n1shed oil the Barons of coach Bruce Pickford "l fell we were sttll in 1t m the fourth quarter when Edison hid the ball inside its five-yard line." says Pickford. "But Rey Cano got away for the 34-yard run to get Edison out or danger. We ended up with the ball eventually on our seven-yard line. Cano 's run r eally amounted to about 80 yards lOU$. •• Workman says he was considering quick kick- ing on that down, but opt- ed instead to use Cano's running. And on that play, switched his line's blocking -giving it a 1 Calendar sweep look, but going in· side the tac kle with Cano. "Our thoughts with the quick kick was that maybe we could get the ball past the 50," says Workman . Edison als o burned Fountairt Valley with the quarterback draw and k ee p e r a s S teve Rakhs hani piled up valuable y ardage. It didn't come a s a surprise to Pickford, however. "We anticipated that," s ays Pickford "We worked on it during prac- tice ... but we still didn't stop it ... STEVE BEEUWSAERT Mater Del CARY BROCKMAN Mission Viejo OEEWARD Newport Harbor Pickeroo Winners Other\ Pt II\ IC 16·11. San Morc:o\ 11 II, B•inoo Am11 <• n. Cror~s 0·11. 1-A 1'001tt.tl I So P•\.-ff'nl 18 0 1 1'19 7 ,,.,onto V•ll~y 11.01 11s ! ~~~c~ 1~101 :~ TOM MILLER JEFF HOPP ' Mont•t>t"o 1e o> 110 Saddfeback Offense Saddle back Defense ~ S•nta An• Valley 11 ti 01 ---------------------; Vllt1 Park (1.11 84 4 lt•wr~•df' Pnfv '1 n .atf OLO-lltt '' 10 I nql•Wf>od f 7 0 t ~· Olhtr.. An.t1te1rn lb J , > GJr1•v tit 0 I\ Monro..,.1a lb 1t l .. rnott Cuv 1ei ,, oam1"" f& 1' 1·A Foo111111 I Afltf'IOC>f' VAll,.y ti 0 I' Htc) 1 Av• ,1ion 0 O ll '18 l ......,~,. 11 11 • 11 • (Ol<,,..11• VAllfV 18 0 1)1 Leeds Leads GWC To Polo Success Chet Malek of Irvine is ., """0·m•, 0 '1 '00 By CRAIG SHEFF • L~ Habra 11 ti 103 the winner of the latest ; C~oon 11 11 'It 0t ,,,. 01111 Piiot St•tt Da'ly P "l t p · k• 81(•nnNfvf8ar\l fl')11 1 •S 1 i o 1gs in •.Ce\u"'"u <M 11 11 Todd Leeds doesn 't Pickeroo football guess-10 F\""r•n,,, ,6' 11 • is score very many goals. ing contest as the Irvine 0""''' R•o M~u lb t• .,.ort~ Vi•1a but w i' thout h 1 rn 't ' s · d ''"' U O\A,,MI t•,f•nd' H l L l.eftnok 1 rest ent s urvived the 11" w••"u11u• possible Golden West heavy upsets to re<:ord College's wate r polo only five wrong on the team wouldn't be ranked 30-gamecard. Ar Lo f th b J C Malek wins a year's ea 0p8 :'a~~e; the esta~!\1us Among the pre-game bu i ldup w as a Los Angeles ne ws paper's story calling Fountain Valley the best prep foot· ball team in California. MARK De FAZIO TONY FULLER A big gamble in the San Clemente University m e mbers hip at th e season. N autilu s Newport D • l Leeds. a 5·11 17 5- physical fitness center in ormna e pounder who prepped at Ed is on d e fe nse was ------------------=--- switch 1ng cornerback Confer Sparkles Newport Beach for his Fountam Valley High, prognosticati n g pro· The Sunset League and has helped the R usUers Jeff ~m1th with safety wess. South Coas t League to a 23·1 seaso n record J e re Hyder a nd Workman s ays defensive back coach Barry As ffo-....T d F h Waters was the key here. U..&. T ~ ros He only missed one dominate the top ten in and a 7.0 Southern game on the professional CJF 4·A and 3·A cross California Confe rence menu but fell victim to country rankings this mark. TODD LEEDS some of the college sur-week white Newport "Leeds, without a prises, including the two Harbor, victor of 40 doubt 1·s f th t to De Anza in the state Jn retrospect. Pickford says: "Edison gave us a real lesson in field posi· tion. We took the ball 11 times and only twice was it outs ide our 30·yard line." "Our 1ineba c ker blocked our two de· rensive backs out of the play on the Edison touchdown pass. 'Then we got caught in a n interception and we're down 13·3. Nobody was panicking, but it's always hard to play catchups.'' The Barons lost WilUe Gittens to an ankle in· j ury in th e fourth quarter , but neither coach thought it critical, with FY s hying a way from t'1e ground game due to the time element. So Edison awaits Friday's league fin<ile at Huntington Beach with the crown near reality after a lackluster start in losses to West Torrance and Mater Dei. ''Mater Dei was the turning point o r the season for us." says Workman. "After that loss our kids suddenly were giving us 100 per- cent attention · · CAMBRIDGE. Ma. _ Th t . ht • one o e mos h . e sure-handed wide biggies: Purdue over s ra1g , remains in the head l I ' c amp1ons hip game! CostaMes a 's Ga r y · h I d ' toCIF4A t ' s-uppayers ve Andh I ed r eceiver au e in a Michigan and Georgia P • spo m water ever co h d .. e on Y scor 14 Confer caught six pnsses short three yard over-Tech over Notre Dame. polo. Gold wact e ' h sTays goals . for 88 yards to spearhead th 'ddl F ' s en es coac om H ' c·m1 e touchdown There was a 17-way tie ive unset League Hermstad. es scoring more this the Harvard University bullet in the first hall to for second place with six squads-headed by No. 5 "He does the right season (19 goals), but freshman football team give Harvard the lead. In misses and t h e tie · Marina of Huntington thing 90 percent of the Hermstad s ays he'll· offense in a 14·8 victory ·the fourth quarter, Con-breaker rule was in· Beach-are among the time. Defensively he always come up with the over Ivy League foe fer's leaping grab or a voked to determine the top ten in the CIF 4-A ank · b big play. Brown. Confer leads 14-yard s piral in the winners. rankings while four r . s ng t up therewith ''He'll always scot"e' coac h Loyal P a rk 's endzoneicedthe contest. Al Banks or Hunt· South Coas t League the best I've coached at one or two goals in the squad in pass receptions Gary also played a ma-ington Beach came out schools-topped by No. 1 Golden West." big ga me. And it was the with 18 ca tches for 231 jor role in Harvard's runnerup and earns din· Costa Mesa -are among Tie Golde n Wes t sameway lastyear.He'.s yards thro u g h fi ve 27-13 conquest or 1\d'ts ner for two al the the 3·Atopten. coac can't pinpoint why just a leader and a verv games. U n 1 v e r si t y · s J unior Moonraker Restaurant WATU Po~o Leeds has so muc h sav. mature and intelligeJt "Gary is one of the ma va rs1ty The compact in Irvine or either of the .,. vy, but he does think in· player ." sa ys Hermstad. • t "~"°'' H••t>or , sunnv Hiii\ l. tell1' gence has a lot to d JOr reasons for our un speeds ter c aught four Re uben ·s r estaurants M•••Co•t•4 uni •• ,,;," LBPotv6 ° And he figures to be a defeated season,'' says passes for 66 yards and a (Costa Mesa or Newport ~~:~~~o 9;,:~~~~·11\ 8 Ola11•• wit!> it. . big part of the RusUert coach Park. "He makes touchdown. Beach ). °'"""""'n110M11 co,.,,, • .,.,,,,.,,_ · ou Just c nn't ex-drive l o the state o u r off e n s e m o r c ·'Gary runs his routes Don Beck or Fountain '0 "" M~•• Hunlln9 to,, aoac,., plain some of the things tourney. which they host dynamic and has shown with authority and can Valley is placed third Oowtw>y,P110,v•;.c;:• he does. dHe hi als ar lot or Dec. 3.4, me a consistency second improvise well due to his and he will receive free 1 Lo• """ll011 UPl•r>c11. Foo111111 savvy an a o o game -----------•o G · truJ • e1 OorAOo s. Al•ft•\•<I• Pot• b Bfe• sense He J·ust seems to •---------• " none. ary 1s a y ability lo make quick car washes from Metro 1 cmc:•n1a va11•v a Mont.,' VI"••. · clutch performer , and I cuts and fakes ... says Car Wash Systems of v maP••k 10 1nc110 be in the right place at think he has a ver y Park. "I'm als o im-Costa Mes a and Hunt· c11oss~~uNnv the right lime. He's bright future in the Ivy pressed by his versatility ington Beach. 1 ermenl• v.11..,. 1 v111a P""' J. without question one of League." -he really mows down Pickeroo action con· ~"'~:~h'~·, ~'.m~0~~'11!in \.'ti'.~":. ththe finest JC players in Confer is tied for the outside defenders and tinues this week with en· ec11son • ~•un11 .. 9tol\ eoo<ti 10. estate this year," s ays team leadership in scor· opens up holes when we try forms appearing ln w-.1m1Mw •·• Ht~~tad. i n g w i t h f o u r go with the sweep." to d a y • s a n d w ed . 1 Co••• Me"''· Haw111orne J. M••· 1 ee 5 was a s tarter touchdowns, one of A $C h o lar-athlete nesday'ssports pages. ~';.~"t°8~:.,-;~":::t-L~~1;:,;:::: ~s\seasod 3s ;olden which proved lo be a award winner in his 111Q1tt111 10.~onue1 Mar artdL-es recor e a 1-4 re- game·winner in a 22·11 senior year at Estancia, GWC Defeated ~POt _________ c_o_rd_an_d_f_ln_i_s_he_d_secon~-d=- triumph over Boston Confer is a prospective College. The form er natural sciences major l'1EL0Hocuv Estancia High School at Harvard. c.atll'o•Y~•-"1121 cooo~Y•HI GWC~iorol\9' David (Costa Mesa) gridiron -----------...:.......::...: _______ _ captain is gearing up for the h ighlight of lhe Harvard-Freshman foot- ball campaign. Friday's battle with. the Yale IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY SIVIN ADYANTAOU OUI PAGll OfflltS that youn may notf 1 COMrUTI OaANCH COUNTY COflUH l.-ch14109: ....... .... Donkey Cage freshmen. It will be the ,,0 " ~.!~~:.;.:•!, """' 94tb meeting in the '"'ttlf\ eN<1t, w"""''"~.,.,,,,.,... Gam SJ d series, the longest. in 48,072 SQ. FT. OF INDUSTRIAL SPACE s-.c ....... M,......¥1ef-, 0-, ..... •" .. ....... ............ LA. ... ' t1ln Vallo, N••oort HerbOr •t e ate freshman interCO)leetate ~:~·Colle Me .. 11 El Toro 1ac1a1 play. ~occ~r-sou111,,,. C1111or1111 A fa c ulty-student Confer accqunted for cou-a1uc 111wr"d9 o JOI donkey basketball. game both •cores in • "arv-....1·s Walt• Poto-Nt .. oort Hartm •• j bedul d " " CU'1 """''"'11"" ouc1t, w"''"''""'"' ., 5 sc e tomght at recent 14-6 triumph over M•''"• 11 Gold•n wu1 C•H•~. Newport Harbor High N aJ A d Pr E•t1'1ttt~ ~' v111a Par-'•" ,.1 1.m, . . av cac emy ep Eal\on ..,, F...,..18,,. V$tltut ~-• wtlh acbon set for 7: 30, • Hitrlltlt m. Oo•<IM wo11 a1 F111i.r10l'I following a 6: 15 exhibi· u:,~~vot1..,b8ll-tor01t•a.IM.""' Hon girls volleyball Prep Polo , M'"'°" v1e10 111, o~n.1 '""' "' ei match. Toro. Unl••••llv ., Lat)uM 8'>.telt. Profits will go to the P•MIMOl'H ~~~\A ot S3n CltrMllte l<Jll It SChOOl SCbOlarship f\md. Or.,. ke"ltVOtllrt:"'lo ·1 2-41 otrh 'Ttl\l\lt-Co•""" ctt• """' .. 'nckets are priced at trv1,... t , • o--. Mlt\IOOI V•ttn o ...... Hllll ., Et Toro, .., •ach. Irv!"" 'ltOtl~· Pttl••'IOI\ •. e-1 tl.llt4V1tnlty •I L•Ounf l!•t<lt Coo.IA ""'"' Mal'\l\afl, Pr\Mll, lb,.n. ~II Sd1t Cl•-nlt 1•11 &t l Ill, .....; ____________ _.:.._.:..:....::...:..:,:.::.:..J __ _ Qtllurv L~olt)U" """'' ~• Tuttln IJI. Girl• Cro\\ C&untry-Ul\l't'f,.,lh \I s. .. c1....,.ni.. S.111a An•,~­ al Co<ona att Mac. Co\11 ~'" l!I ~";'.';,~ Htllsat "°''""" ._.., IMI LOOK! YOftlll&.E 100« STORf ~ PLUS BAIL SERVICE, DOCK·BICR LOADING, DOCK LEVELERS, PROTECTED ENVIRONMENT, EASY FREEWAY ACCESS& MORE. For informahon on this or other building alternatives. call your broker or Craig Lyon, Manager of Sales & Leasing, at (213) 628·4204. (714) 833·1010. AVAILABLE 2 l MONTH TO MONTH UNTAL IASIS NO DIPOSIT 11qu11n Olt ArrltOYID CHDn 4 ONlY t17 10 PU MONTH fOTAL COST lnll111tto.f,....) 5 NIW COMPACT UNIT SIU 11 If. w 4 1 1/1 I 6 YOICI MISSAGI PA•m ALSO AH AYAILAILI , 7 FUU PHI MAINTINANCI OHANGI l'OUN'TY RAOIOll 1 l PHONC Sl !lVICl ·~r •1141 IJl-3101 .. IO, IA#TA Pl. IHU MA' """""°' I ... ,,. 111 \ • W•ttr ~ato-Mlt•IOOI Viejo It C"'ona •1 IMt Unl .. rtlty at S... Cl•"''"'-• 0111• Hltll 11 l.toY"" ..... 1\ Cblla Mll~.t II T-1111 •t SlcM Trtasn ltnse 112Ll ... St. NOW AT IRVINE INDUSTRIAL COl\t1PLEX =~ .... ~~ C.,itlr-11 T-, ........ ... 64Mll6 4tMUJ ) "'· • } I I .. .• ·. DAILY PILOT Tuesday, November9. 1978 • Defensive Players of Week Pheasant Outlook EARL CALLISON Corona del Mar BOBOXOLD Fountain Valley KENT EWING Mater Del . ' 1" -~ ALLEN STREETER San Clemente Coaches at Each Area School Select Players of the Week. With production down ln most areas following the second driest spring on record in California 'a great Central Valley, prospects for h.unter suc- cess in the statewide pheasant season ope"P.I' Saturday are rated orily fair. STEVE PEREZ Costa Mesa RANDY ROTH Huntington Beach MIKE BRAWLEY Mission Viejo DON SCHROEDER University .... , ~· PAUL BETHKE Dana Hiiia DAVE STROMBOTNE Laguna Beach RANDY SCHWARTZ' Edi eon · KEN GABRIELSON Marina Pairings Released MIKE HENTHORN El Toro FV Mll.E sou•"• oc Low Net Tourl\olm•nl A Ftlqlll -I 1ti.1 v • .,,.,,. Halo. &ol)l)lt W.bll. 11. J C¥o1Lott n e F110111 -1 n,.1 lo••tta P•~"· Cnarloll• Smilll, ••; 1 8••1>41•• St~w1r1, 61 • Row Mitter "'; S. EIHnor Smith. 10 6. Vlrqlnla .. ye. n. C Fllqllt-1 8arb41re Melvin. n 1. (!le i June H1mor. 801>01e M1lcolm\OI\. 7]; '· (tit) MaSH N"'shl OalOro\Wt\Hler.16 O Fll(lh\-t Norm• Smltt\, 6': 1 RllH Bowd•n ~•. J Ctltl S.rl>or~ Oucommun. Marie Kurbalotf, AM Olloy 71 Player ot the mo11tt\-8•rtNra S1tw1rt. 6' 1 lrwtm t.ave your montv l••~-. '11 MOB 8uy/Le1ttt Call for fl~• ..,.; II YOU buy vour MGB 1nyoc-.,.,. vou11 oey too mucn The Dej)artment of Fish and Game, assess- ing conditions for the s tate's 200,000·plus pheasant hunters. also forecasts that there would be Jess area to hunt this year than normally. Dry weather. the DFG said, bu accelerated the rice harvest and given growers the chance to burn and plow up the stubble in the fields. With less cover, there will be fewer areas to bunt. Pheasant production wu equaJ to or slightly higher than last year's in the Sacramento Valley and down significantly in the Sacramento-San Joa· quin Della and the wes tern San Joaquin Valley. 1000,.. 11.m, 11t 1.,.1 W11n our 240 I • 300 o...... C•ll IOOIY for -• tn1om-a1-. ._._.J>-¥l l"IU'l,_VOUhowlO'Jf'ICM!t Huntington Beach's 14uOVTKm.oo11tn~u HDuee Of-•IPOl'tS • Liberty Christian High IRIA • mm ... mo · .......!.~~:::::;;::_ has drawn No. 2 seed j;;i1j';1;'':94:·1:•':':===~~·=--==·=======~ Ambassador Christian in the first round of the Cl F 8-man football playoffs. CHIP BUTERA Newport Harbor JC Girls The Minutemen of Liberty Christian High coach Ron Meyers, un. beaten champions of the Christian League, will be playing al 7:30 p.m. Fri· day on the campus of Am· bas sador Christian, located at 7547 Quill Dr. in Downey. A common opponent· for the two teams is 'Newport Beach's Hunt· Basketball ington Valley Christian. HV C los t to Liberty Or•n9t Co.,l IU I 1411 P1~ Christian in the season Most admin1s1ra11ve, p1ofess1onal and eJCccutive posi· t1ons 1n Cal1lorn1a MP not advertised or l1s1ed. II you qualify 101 a S 15.000 tu $6~ 000 JOb, send us your resume now and let us help <1111•cl you 10 lhc mlsscng majorily. Belter shll, c11ll nc"" tor ,m .1ppo1ntmcn1 There's no cosl or obls!J311on ua1(1a'iie auocla1e5 £s11bli•lied I 9• 7 1Jlftclt In most major citln Nol a placement agency San Diego (7141231-1111 GOO B !>11to1. Suue 2010 Or•-C°""IY ('1U )"°'4t74 ~67 San Nlcolas Dr. Nawpoll OtGOI>, Call!. 92660 Loe •no•••• (213) n1.u11 3807 Wllatiue Blvd., Suite 1200 S•n '••••deco (415} 111·1150 Hearst Bldg •• Tltlrd and Mukai 19 It pf Ip F,.,.,,._.,11 ~ 3 ~ JS ope ner , 4 8 .. 8 . Am -J.liiclii""'iio"ii•'•' ..................... ~.··-· ........... ,.i .......... __________ ..,, bassador Christian de· feated HVC. 45·0, in Academy League play. An\,.IJl'l 0 0 t 0 f rl~I! 01\ 'I 0 1 .. f.ill1 0 1 ? l '>fnan• 1 o l 1 -"· \ ' l I? C..H¥W.J 0 , \ , M 1· • 'n(lfl>r ' l J The pairings: CIF8-man Playoffs B rn• n '1 1 ,.,1i.o I) n r n Mar a nalha at Tor,J fl U 7t H•lt11rn4!' Pa\"°,_n• i-. 10 o Montclair Prep * * * L-&ut " CU I IO J<iocd ... W...1 '• It Pl .. 7 0 • • ~ 0 1 II (I 0 (I Big Pine at Rio Hondo Flintridge al Cuyama Valley Liberty Christian at Ambassador "row,, 8'><• ~ U.-ry I P..nnt•W911 n Mc;L~att I Total• 70 Women's Sports 1 ' 0 • •7 ~ (I 7 I I 1 . " ,, .,, Grid Poll GlllLS TENNIS lr41UIT'I' ~411hm@ LB, 19·7• WIN PRIZES WORTH $3,600 IN'76 Sponsored by * </Tl? R e ube n·s CYJU:l\·10()~ ll.·\l(ER * Weekly Pigskin Pickeroo' •7s winners will share prizes worth more than $330 by selecting their choices of the win- ners of 30 weekend football contHta. The· Dally Pilot reader best predicting the outcomes of Pigskin Pickeroo '76 games will win a on~year membership at the Nautilus Newport physical fitness center. 4220 Von Karman Avenue, Newport Beach. Second place winners will enjoy a din· ner for two at the Moon raker Restaurant In Irvine, Reuben's Newport Beach or Reuben's Costa Mesa. Third place winners will be awarded free car washes by Metro Car WHh Systems at Harbor near Baker Street ln . Costa Mesa and Beach at Ellis Avenue In Huntington Beach. Pl-'t!" Plchroo Is a re••••r ltllurt oft,,. 0..lly Ptlet $ports $e<llOftU0MotldO, TUH<l•Y-W-.... y. RULES 1 S-il \II• •ntry bC1nk M low or .t ,......,., .... 1.tnlmlle ef ft te ""''•"" '"' <ont•\t .. R•awn.tbf•t,a.c:,1rNte·• it. dtftMd .,, ... ··•••<• dtlltt•c.•t• .. E.ntrtf'\ mu\t IN wftilfor;m '" 'h• aftd , .. ,,. '-t.Citti.•e tUdit•lt4~ T~ow wtu<h don't conform •ill bit 01t.q\Nhti-e4S. • 2. S....11 , •. PIGSKIN PICl(EllOO, ·u. Sport\ O.~rlmtllt, P.O. 901 t~. Co\UI M t .. , Clo UU6 l. ~!r:.~:~:.~::-~~:.~ .'!'r."'..::;oi.:c.:,;-;.~· ~~=·=.~~ from • ''IHt'• •ddr•'' M '•'Ut"' ... _,.,oPt tlttd m•v dk.4iu•titt •nv \~t !'fttr1t\ 1hU\ d t\COYf'rf!d C»chto,. 04 t~' Oft tlttl ,...n·t must w iKCtpttd •~lftll by •IC contt\llfth 4. EntrlM mu\I w CHl\tn"r~tcl not llttr thin Frld1y or"''"'~ ... hw•••H• , ... O••IY Pilot Co•U.Mo .. o!ll<• by',. M. s. Daily Pllol •mployu aM thtir ltnnwdl•te l•milltt 1ra"9tetl•Me tuni.r. 6. TIE lllEloKER 11..ANK MUST IE FILLED IN 011 5 NT1t'Y' IS VOID, \ •• Uf1Uf'l41 ··~(ft . H t 119' J t Cd~ \1ft41t1\ ""'""'"" .. ',. ,,. , Jrpi .,, ~ ' lttf •..•••.•.................••...........•..•. , f) C).t,,,1,..,.n "'I 1 (11'1 u.,.,, f" ,, "'I 1 '""'' 1 fr 'jlltt1f'\ ~ l & rt ,,. q ')QI \. W'ln '\ 1 ~ ~ ' f'v f l#J M flf1•., I rt11tf f'A\Jl~1u ;. , ... , • J 1•' r'°l 1' •f ,_.., H tl'IW'IQt1 .. °"t M.,.• •• ,,.., N,, • .. • P ,,,, .. , ,_ f I' r•t•r " • ,,, It ' Ji l I''' t C, • J t>,.,.,~ 'IA-' •• • " I • • 1,.,.,, l *' te\t~ M•u '" r 111) ti'•"" 'tftqi•\ .,.,. 1 .. 1 , ••• t .. ' 1•1 ~·· fli ~ "' I f • • C' j.t!"I #\1'1 t. I ~ l '1 -, , t I •".YJ' • \ ' O.vet•, , ..... r,,.. ,,.,.. 11 r ,,,., l ,,_\A''"' ~,,,_ •• , • 1 'lfot A ... , r'°"'"''''"" l ~ 9 .. ,,,.,,, A••' ••• ~' (>""""' "' 1r ....,"" • 1 .. 1 , \, ~,..,~ ., t undi(I• .J• f( -.. ~' ~ .... ~(Jr,,,.1tt~ "'''' U I Mt•••lf!" V1t ,, ........ \ ~· .... ">"' \I\ '»\f fft 0 Ai, •• Oft'\ l 1- df# l ,_,. ~ :') .., •• t1.,HJ...,.!\ .. f \,: ,,,.,. " I '\A IA ,I 4 • -A ~ lo t \ 1 I l .. Ut•I 1.A •0t.t t ~ ' .. 1#\lf'I"' t O.uttlf \ Roth flow,.,, fM t 10· 1 tQ l llf'Yt M Si\C .. ) • l<>"t I? CAii._ •t'I\ (., \i\' , J "' •0~1 ,., 9,," u~·fl'I-1' ,,,,..o"o" G,.1"a'""<M lt1Ut t& 1.., '"' GtruJcf'\,.,'1 W+nt~'' (M ; IO\t \ 1 14t \-1. JUNIO" VlollSIT'I' Mlu C ... Vlt J61101\) ltll\•11 Clemente Sl'"ll•• Posl C~I d•I l•o•v 6 1 10'\t lo C••~ 4-4.,,.. Ho.r 6, Ve•111 (\I 10'\t 7 '· AIRPORT OFFICE SPACE. 53¢ A SQUARE FOOT. Skypark Business Center In Irvine Industrial Complex. Dynamic location out of congestion. Immediate access to freeways and Orange County Airport. Free adjacent parking. Flexible lease arrangements. Free space planning. Agent on premises. ·SKYPARK BUSINESS CENTER bu 1HE IRVIN€ a::HtPNo/'f Contoct your broker or Coldwell Banker Commerclal Brokerage Company (n4) 75~·11H I r I . . . -. • . • • • • • • , .. . " • •uauc N011CE PUBLIC NOTICE U40 HOTIC• TOP! ltSOHS llHEltltST'EO llolTHE ESTATEOI" HAl\ll't c . PAULSON. O.cuwd ~lollC~it MffbV QIYM'. l o .an--• lnlt•t\l•d. """''~a\ <redltor\. f\e'•t\_ ••Q3tte\ or de--.ii~S In I ..... ,.,. o• HAllRV c P .. ULSON dt<N•td. w!tOse la.I addrt\I w" \.M C11embtrf•ln. Gllt\t>urq, llltMI! 61401. 111•1 lellers IOl4mf'n1try or 01 edrnl"l\trfflOfl II••• bten lnuo1 lo .,..,,. $1ol<tt try: Ill• Circuit Court of IN Nif\111 Judlclel Clrc1111. • covrl of Cll"'P'lltll! jurl'O"llon of Ille SI~~ Ol If· llnol•. l ~t Ille 1011-1no ptr,... 1, lnO-ti<td lo or lloldltWJ ot•IO'WI pro-ly ol I"* Mid dt<tdem and 11\~I ••IO OtDI or -~·I .,._,. (""'"" ........ ~ .c:co.mt or ac<OUf!f• · Silnfa 9e•l>Ar• SJ••no~ •nO Lwn •s -·•l•Ofl tlO E•ll Cllaom4'> Aw.,.. c11vo1 Or••~Countyor nr.•~ Tl\01 Ille und~"f9ntd <H~lrn lo r'" ftiW 11\it \•'<I bt"tJOn,.I n, f'HMl'1¥ Or r.ot tt<.t ,.,,. c1 .. 1m •"d to remove th4't ro~ ltcttll '" rt<•l•td lrom fne Si.ti~ of C:tMOfr\IA tot~ ,.10 ,,'8tC ~c ,,, t+r\ ft\t•rntt-f'lf 1rv or of a~m,.,t\tr,,ttQ,, rw .. t1ttn1u....i All ottto"' "'°vino Clf lm\ 'IQ<'·"'t "'° dtc.••,,,t or .If\ '"'''''l '"" S..J'td nt"''~ •""f w•tfi'rlf'tq to Obt•<• It WOt r'f"'""""'' mu\J t •¥t wrnt~ fti&h<• of \UCh aef+c:. ,.,,,.. to Vw .,.,,!)I'! or °'"~ tft4ittlt.fid' to or "O•d•no o•tr~I .,.._,.., ol llw 0«-nl. SllCf\ nollce "'"" ti. o•,,..,, to t ... C.r\$fl llOIClll>Q llW -\Of\dl ,,,_r. ,.,Of ..,.ln\t wt\oM t"4> Cf•tm •\~ dt flW ..,,.u ., 11\l•d •bo..,. •"I"'" JI} 0 .. YS <lfl~r lltsl ~bllOl•on OI ln.s N>'•C• OA r £0· Orlftff 1t. UIL HAA•YST01([$ A•E•,v•~CM~l!w .. Of .... ,,, c "•11•-. tO.t u_..il l'Wll'l\Md Or•-~'1 Oell'f '°'""· ............. ,. ,.,. ''"·•• PUBUC NOTICE ,tCTITIOUS eU,INH.1 NAMISTATIM .. IT l"' IOll-f>O .,.,">" " OOll'IO bu\1- l'llft-.•1 CO,,_£ llNO GO T•AVEL. II•\ S Co~·· HIOf\•a.. u, ..... Buell, CA. ""I ''••"•" C•f !Ion Oolt, JH O ,,_,.,.._Ito, ear-0.1,,..., • CA,.,.1$ Tl\o \ ~lltU h C._.,llClfO l1'f ..i ~ OIY!dlHI Steof\eft C o.11 lllh ......... nt ••• llllld .. "' , ... Cltuflty Cit•' of 0r..,.. co..nty °" ...,,.. -•.IW .. ,.,.. _,11\H o. ..... °'"' Deity ....... ...... _ t ••. u. JO. lt7l. •111·'• rvauc NOTICE Jl1l MOTICa0"'4'-•0" naMHIAL ""O"I alY AT PlttVATa taLa ....... MJ .. "'"''•' COUft ol lllt Sl•t• of CMlf .. 114• lor tM CcHl"IY of Or- l1t llW Matt~ GI IM E•Ull ol..00\'ll! HOii Ne a 80 AUI, Ot< .. t~ H&tlco k lltrtb' ol .. n IMI uw -.. .....,, wm "'" 11 .,.,,.,,,vie . .,. or .atttrllw l!tlld•' ot No .. mlloot', ,.,., ot tlwofll<tolC\.EMENTH J .. O)MIHI. •'1 S. Hill St , l.O\ AnO"I••, (;allion,I• _,ll, S\lltt 13', Gotillt f of I.CK MOfl9'. Sl•t• of (.tlllotf\IA, to '"' 11.~,, "'4 etll biddfr, and •ublttt 10 C>OMlrtN1° Clon Dy ... ,., SuotrlOI' Court. •II "" tloM, tltlt •IMI lftlll .. I Of Mid di'~ el""""" ... dtatll ~ 1ll t1w l1Ql\t, II· tlf -lttf•Asl lft•I Int ISl•t~ (JI wld ~•wd II" au1ulr•C1 .,,, ._llflert ot 1.-. or otflt<wlM, ...... , ""'" 91 lft _.,, tlOft lo !Mt of wld "°' • ...,,at.,.''- ot d .. "'· In end Co 111 JM <ttUlft ""•n•I orooerty, 61rllcu"''' dlKfl_., ~ fo!IOW), l~Wlll ff \llldlYICltd _ ... _"" (tff7) ... ....... lft 9114 to • _1,_, ~MY• 11'Q#lowlt1•lldllltbal•rt<tttol~ tr, lf76.e'-nllllO lo UO,f lU6 • .... " '"'-·' .. '", ... ot "'w -•1111 IJ -wrtCI b., • ~ot lrvl1 <tWrf l\Q Cftf •f ft '~ MOll'ff1Y .. "*«' 111 IM -•"-" ov•r1 ... ot Sodlon~. Ta-lltlo I Hot111, A .. 1,., • ., •. MaM llllMClt.,ol'--Vt,..,., ltrt'MolM .. Cell\ In l""'Ul-yol 9'e U..1..., St1ttt Oii C~ll.-lon OI Ult. ltft Off<tnl Of •mounl 1)1d IO lie de- "°'lt.4 Wllll bid • 11th Or olltP\ to l)O! 111..,,lllllQ-wlll tit '91'•1".0 11 tllt Afore••lcl ottl<.o 91 tny """' •lier Int 11"1 ~lion llt-t Ind bol-dtlt ot ..... Ooltflektne• u . ,.,. MIU. Jl!TTV •tOIM 20M 1 "°" Cl" .. Hlll'tll\Ot#I le.ell CAm46 ...,,,.,,,,.,,, ... "" &iUlol Mid 0.CI~ MNO.C-nt Q.l~T M, JllCOMUH .., ..... MPM4 ...... ,,. •· t.M ........ U ..... l ........................ . • • ,_.,...., Oftfltlt CM\t OlffY lllllt, • ,.._..., ..... !, "'' .... ,. PUBLIC N011CE PUBLIC NOTICE • Tuesday, November 9 1916 D"ll Y PILOT. •7 PUBLIC NO'nCE Jagger Gua rds Letters Asks Court to Muzzle Former Girlfriend PUBLIC NOTICE From AP Dlspatcbea Mick J aggu, millionaire pop star And leader of the RoWna Stones group, went lO court lt\ London lO st.op his former girlfri~lld, Chrtstiae SbrtSQton, from revealing detail:s or lctt~rs be wrote d\Uing theu romance. Jagge r, 33, already had a temporary lnjunc:Uon barring Miss Shrlmpton. younger sister of model Jeu Sbrimp&oa, from making the tellers public. Jagger's latest move seeks lO make that inJunc· llon into a permanent ban lo prevent Miss Shrlinpton from selling the letLers for publication without bJs permis.sioo. • Tammy Wynette, 32-year-old American coun· try.and-western singer, was admitted to the Wettminster Hospital in London after being taken ill at her Lon· • don hotel. A hospital spokesman said she had bronchitis and would be in the hospital for several days. The spokesman described ber condition as fine. Mias Wynette had been scheduled to appear in a concert tontaht at the Hammersmith Odeon, a West London theater. • WYNUTI F1CT1T1ouseus fHHs Houston millionaire Dick Mians sald he would 14AMUTATIMENT fight a great white shark to the death sometime in ~~'~01'-1"9 ~'>On " clOlng e.w May and probably off the coast of Samoa. R. F. MAINT'~N .. HCE. m '"' Minns, who bas a reputation for the bizarre, ~:;1• """'1"9t0" auc1o, c.l\f"'"'• aaid most of the details had been settled for the bat- Rodetlct How1rd ,.,,..,,..,., ·-• Ue with the 2,00()-3,000 pound shark. Minns. a ::;.~ :;;;:~~j,:~: .. t~".:~;:-1• Hunt· Houston businessman, Ups the scales at 150 pounds. Tiiis b~lntt$ h condutl'ecr by an,,,. Jn years past , Minns d1v1dual h d h thin Ro-i~"" Frttman • ( J as one sue gs as '"" 11 .. i.m~nt .. ~, "'"" '"'"' ·~ PEOPLE swim the length of ~r:,c~~~~ 01 Or•n<J• Coun1von...,.. -Acapulco Bay -six miles "..01• ... _________ ___,_ -in eight hours; water "lo':"~·:~ ~a~~ CN•t 0.1fv P1101. s ki nonstop for eight hours and 16 minutes: perform 2,000 consecutive __ P_U_B_L_t_C_N_O_T-IC_E __ , situps in 4 1,-2 hours; and twice dive off the Clll'1S01 Acapulco. FICTITIOUS 8USIHl!SS HAMeSTATEMUIT The to11owlno !Mr\Onl are dol119 ~. M U a \ H.I( TOOL #.CUTTER GRINDI NG SERVICE, IS1S Ma<Arll\ur. 8"HdCt19 No 3 Co\I• Mo e, C .. lllornla'9?U. J .. _, L Hill. 2~11 Arno40, o.si. Mtw CA•un Oo""~ IClnnr H 64 Fordh•m, ~l'I M~\.t. CA 91616 Thi• bu\'""'\'' ~011dut1tCI t>y a 11m11. .a C>i'''"""'"ff'» lam•" L Hiii This \loltt,.,..nl Wd\ 111.0 wllll ""' Ct>ullly Clt•k ol Oran91 County on Nov. • .....,.,' 1t7' F66e111 Pvl>hV>fll Or.•"9* co.u1 Oa11y Piiot, Nov •. 16 n lO. 1916 •103-l• PliBLIC NOTICE FI CTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME ST ATEME NT l tv tft• 1 ,w, nu In' ~,,n, "'" d01nq bm.1- two\·. h STRUM RIZ10 .\ ASSOCIATES, 11q Nowp0rl (.,\IN Orlv<' Su It 700 ~oort~-t<.,_. (lllto,n1aQ1&J.ll ();·n11h P Pu to 7, u AIO'\d Sir~\, Sdnttt Ana Cat1ff\tn1 t r,>J~ Oft"f""r W Sttvm Jr 111 PrOtn?nfM'( Orive N"\I, Nt,.l>Orl 8 .. tll. C..lotornl• '1"° Thi• bu•l,,.s\ ,, {OlldUtled l>Y • 90nertl1>·1' lner\nlD Otnnls P ll1$UO This it.,l•mtnt was fltod wlln ""' County Cltrll ti oon90 county°" Oct. 1S. 1974, 1'4~ Pu!>MMd Or•n<1<1 Coast 0.oly P,tot, Nov 1. •. 16. i1 1~1~ PUBLIC NOTICE * Muhammad All gave one of bis better performances, but instead of a championship fight or his customary prefighl boast- ing and rhyme-t_eciting, he de- monstrated his acting skills -at the Houston jail. When the round of stagger- ing and yelling was all over. the heavyweight boxing champion signed autographs for policemen and asked "Aren't 1 a gOod actor?" lt started about dawn when officers W.T. Calloway and S. •1.1 <)rlaado, investigating a report of a shooting, s aw a man running down a street. It turned out to be Ali, doing his early m orning jogging. He is in llouslon acting in a motion picture. • Ring Lardner Jr., a victim or lhe 1950s hunt for Communists in the movie industry, says the kind of blacklist tha t cost him work could happen again. "I think there certainly is that danger, though it won't hap- pen in exactly the same way," says the 61 ·yeu r -o ld • screenwriter. "Look et tne danger in the last few years, when Spiro Agnew talked about the media and Nixcm bad his enemies list. LUOHU "CeneraJly si>eakinJI. the media and the arts-are the early victims of any kind PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS BUSI NIESS HOTICEOl'ltOlll·lllSl'OHSllllLITY H .. MESTATEMENT Nollte" M!rAt>Y 9l•tn , ... It,.,,., .... T hi to!ION n9 O('r\~n\ art" 004~ bvil f)oo"J?ft-fO w1U rtOt O(tf~.IOf')t't\tbfetOf't'tnv nt-1\•S t1~t)1\ or t1r\httt1lt\ conlratlt-d bv PAINT P .. PEll ~ TttlNCS ISlort ""~""@other fMn mylt•I. on 0t aflcr rt\ 1"1' ~an MtQufl'l Ot•v• NAWOMt lhl\ct•te 81-M n "'"° 0oteo1n1s 7~•n d 'V 01 O• lobl!r, 191~. JoM C. C~c Jr, 130~ OU!rl~' RlchdtdW M•V" O•I ... Coro11a 0 .. 1 Mar CA 9?•,7~ l6lt0Cornu"' Av".1101101 Of•nn IC C~v 1101> Ou1r199-'• 8•11tlowtt Cl\<>11101> Orlv• Co•OM<l"M•r.Cl\'>7•11 ' Pullll>ll.., Or~n~ Coa•I 0di1Y Piiot, ,,,:.~:::"\Ir'°'' I~ (<ln(l</(lftCI b• .,, In No• 7.3 •. 191' -14 lkllyO WorO ManaCJ"r TP\i\ ''•'•mfl'nf wt1\ fit...., wth '""' Coun1v ''''" ot O<Ano~ Covn•• ~ 0c1 ! 197' PUBLIC NOTICE of reattlon. Some form or a black.list coul<1 vtry Haily happen." • Two of the world's best-dressed women, Prln· ttn Grace of Mon11co Md Jacqu~J.lDe K~utdy OaaHl1, ·S pon11ored an up-lo • $S,OOO-a-tlckct tribute to the late Joeephtne Baker, who won fame wearing just a sten1 or bananas tied to ber waiat. The former Grace Kelly did not attend the tribute in person, but her cochairwoman, Mrs . Onassis. greeted s uch performers as Mohammad All and IJtirtd Bergman. The benefit at New York ••11tcus ooce •City's Metropolitan Opera House -which also had a few cheap seals at $15 -raised money for Variety Clubs lnt.ernllional, a show business charily. • The planners of Jimmy Carter°• presidential inauguration say they will put on a more modest celebration than the $4 million extravaganza thal installed &lcbard M. Nlxoo in 1973. Washington atl-Omey Bardyl R. Tirana says Carter will use nothing like the $900,000 imitation marble reviewing stands that held and abeltered Nixon and 22,000 others four years ago. That was "too extravagant" for Carter, Tirana said. Tirana and South Carolinian VlckJ Rogers, both longtime Carter supporters, have been named by lhe Pres ident-elect as chairmen or the committees planning festivities for the Jan. 20 inaugural. * . Abba Eban, former Israeli minister of foreign affairs, said he will sttrve as chairman o( a new in· stilule of strategic studies al Tel Aviv University. Eban said the institute was tablished to keep tabs on lm· porlant Middle East develop- ments. He said it would "help to insure that right choices are taken in matters in which Israel cannot afford to go wrong." The institute would provide nonpolitical judgments about t.he capacities and intentions of Arab nations, Eban said. ~··" * Vice Presidenl·elect Wi.lter Mondale and his wife, Joan, are on a week's vacation at Caneel Bay Plantation on the island of St. J ohn 's in the Virgin lslandi .. An aide said Mondale took with him a file of briefing papers identical to \hose President-elect Jimmy Carlcr took to his vacation on St. Simon·~ lsland off the Georgia coast. The papers outlined priorities for the change or administrations. The Mondales left their children at home. The only phone in their beachside collage is a Secret Service hotline. • Pat Lawford, sister of the late President John F. Kennedy, is in Venezuela !or a four-day visit. ·~ ,-~ . ~ 4' Mrs. Lawford and her sister Eu.nice Shriver planned to at· tend a symposium on mental re tardation in Caracas. Mrs. Shriver and Mrs. PATLAWFORO Lawford are representing the Kennedy Foundation at lhe sym- posium, which is sponsored by the Venezuelan Association for Retarded Children. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTJCE F ICTITIOUS llUSlfllSS FfCTITIOUS llUS!f\IESS HllMISTATEMEltT HAMESTAT EMEHT Tf'iteo folfoNt"'f OtriOns 4'rf' dOfno bU\f r.,_. toll')W•n') of'r"\00 h cb"° br 1 n~\~i ~"~ t~ ICALEIOOSCOPE AllTIST S al\d W PHOTOG~l\Plil'. 1°"' MANAGEMENT, SH Nor111 Main Ro••m..,y Pl<1<t. (O\l<t M~~~ Sire•• SMl• ""~•CA •1101 C..hlornl• •7677 R19\<11lt l Ferou,on Ent•rprlw\, El•ev J0$•1>" SU011er. 1•6' Int." Cllllornl• CQrpora!oon. 515 llo\tmerv Pl•<e, Co11e Moe. Norin MalnSl•t•t. SAnl• .. ,.. CA'1701 r.tlllo•n1e'nUJ Tl\11 DuslM\\ 1$ condutf~ by a <Or· t nl• buSlneu 11 conduct&<! by •n 111 Pofdhon ''"'°''~' R•o.O•le/Ferouiqn ElvevJo\lph SltOMr E,.,.,~,.,ts. tftc Th•• s••l•m•nt was f•••d wllll lt.o Wllllem W. Fer9111Gn,Jr. (ounly Cler~ of OrMQC Cc>un!v O'I 0t Pr-t$1cH'll •oc.-r u. 1'16. Thi• \l11emen1 we1 lllod wttll .... County Cltrll oi Or•n?• Ccl<lnly Oii ()(I u. 1•16. WEIHFILO & TAYLOR AttortlOYI al LIW lta•lle•n Genier, Sullt eo\ IWO N. H1~r 91V4. fuli.r1on, CA nus Pul>li.had Or•no.· <~••I Oailt Pll&I fllo• q I& U, lO .. 16 0 .. 76 PUBLIC NOTICE Cl'·l071 SUPEalOR COURT OF THE STATI 01' CALI 1'0.HfA fl'Olt THll COUNTY 01" OltAfllOfi He. AIU14 fllOTICIE 0,. HE All ING 0,. PETITION ,.0. PltOllATE 01' WI Li. aHO FOii 1.lfTr••~ TISTAM!H· Tt.RY E\l.tl• of JOSIEPHtltE 0, Ll\fll ( .. STER. Ollt~ht!d. NOTtCe IS ttEllEOY GIVEN tllal GARY WAI. TEA l.UC .. S ll&s lil•CI ""'•In ., 11tt111011 tor Prol>lltt ot Wiii •nd l0t h•u1tnc• nl Lefler\ T<!ll"'*'• 13ry to 11\r Ptlltfolltr rolertnc• 10 F'4Ml Pvbll\h•O Or,.noe Coest Delly PllOt, IJl'.t 1~. 1~ •• t'l(.I N~v 1, 9, 1t16 430-1• PUBLIC N()T[CE FIClllfOUS 8USINEU HllME STATEMEfllT t ~ I •lll)W lf'tQ P"f\On I\ ~ntJ t)i,r.1 ""' \ ANO£qSON ll~PMAL T PAVtNr. CO fJ\) C•r,..,1l1"'" """'·• (0\1• ,,,..,..~ ... CA •71.)~ ' M\r ., 1•1 P•ul Anc1 .. ''°"' 4\1 (,trfM 11on A.-. r.11\la Me.a. CA."'"' '"'' t>u•I""" I• cone1u<CM llV an In cf1vil'JuAI Mlrlln•I P•ul A!\Cl•f\Oll T'll•\ \lnl•mtnl wu fll"'1 wUh ow ~nfv (.!Or• ol Or.mgu County"" 0-f n 1•16 l'Hm Pub41\ll<!d Or11>4e Coest Ollly Ptlol Otl. 21>, Nov.,,•."· 1~76 .,,._,. PUBLIC NOTICE Whltll I\ m~• lor tur1Mr D11'11tulftt\, l---,-IC-T_f_T-10.,..-U_S_l _U_S_IH_l_U __ _ """ 11\AI 111411111\<1 a nd OIGC. ot t1urll\Q HAMI STATEMENT "'" ••m• ,,., llttn s•I f~ '°""""'"'" Tl'wt loll-lno person 1, OOl"O but• ~Ir~ 0~~.:!.:~.~1';;,;11~ :,,~~ llUU \ c.our1 111 ion CIYlc C•n1t• 0 ,1.,.. Wt<I, fME PORSCHE STOit(, t~ 8 ,,.,,,. c11v "' ~1n1• Alla C•lllom•• S1~1~';"~~~~7,;~~m1 aa"""- O..ftd l)"llh<lr t7, ltl6 Or , S\lft\•I 9Ht ll, c;A '0411 WILL.t•M I . SI JO""· Tit .. f\U\lnt\t IJ tonduct..i by ... •n· Cl\unfy (l•r• d1Yldu•I t081tlST, OAltNlll,, OARRl!H Ollly N Lnvln04r 9y: CO.••••" Oarr111 lM• •l•ltnwnt '"" llltd wi1ft ""' J.Olt lu•ln•n C.nttr O•l•t. Suitt 10 Counlv Cler• of d••noo County e>n No•. ,..~ a..to. CA. nru 9 Tth 0!41 IU .. ,44 '· 1 I~ ,..,_,,tor: P.111111'"' .... o ,._ .... ., ..... P\lbll•l\•cl O••noe CO•~I 0.lly Piiot. r vbl•lllt<J ranll@ -..vUI ...,lty Ptllll Nov J, J •. ttl• •• u~ '~ No• •, "· JJ '°· ,.,. ,,., '" PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC N01'tCE ; ' DAILY PILOT The Blccest Marketpltce on tl\9 Oran11 co,.a~ DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You (on Stll 11. find II, I rode It With o Wonl Ad (642-s~_fil Onr Coll Scrnce f O\I (1ed11 App•ovof Real Estate .•....•.•..••......•••• ERRORS: Advertisers stiould check tfteir ads daily and report ·er· rors immediately. The DAILY PILOT assumes liability for the first in- correct insertion only. Publisher 's Notice: i\111 ('.d .-... t.11<' ud Vl'f[l,,NI 111 lhts ncw,,11apt:r I:\ 11ub- JNt lo lilt' Ft•tll-ral Fair 1l1)l1Stn)! 1\1·1 of !!)fj8 whith mLike" 11 1lleg11l lc .ulvc rt1:>1· any pre- l crenct'. hnlltJtton, ur dtsc•ri mrn;il111n hase<l ot\ rac·!', l'Olor, rl'l11-:1on, sex, 11r n:1t1un.11 11n~111, or ~in 111l1•11l11•11 to mak(• any 1'111'1t fH'1•l1•1'1'lh'I', ltnll[~. 't11111. or dt!>t'1111111wtion .. . Tu•-?'Y• NO'llembef 9. 1978 HouHs For SQll• IHCMIHI For Sale a ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~::!.'!,~~.,~ .... Houses for Sate GtMf'ol I 002 GeMral I 002 Hou•u for s• IHousu For Sute ~;::~:~··········;~·~~ ~;.::;:;··········;~~; ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .....•.•....•...•....•• ···~··················· G....,-9' t • •oo GtMral I 002 ·········~-~·········· ········-··········'··· lfl'YOU'VF. ALWAYS WAN'l'f;D 1'0 LJV1'! ,BV'.l'JlEOC~AN Spoct aculur 180 des cwcun vlelf & m11.Cnlfi ecmt suni.et1. Uliil 3BH omc:e Ii 4\JA bO~ w/· i.parklfoa pool ii~414S Or nhg\011 A\·e. h\ ~me Stu.n<et1 ta ll6ted Ml only $l,D8.500. .1 • ... AS/\ND«Sr;A REALTY \8'15· HIWPORT HMHTS HStM"~li ANXIOUS 0 . ')'IER PR1CE REDUeTION A sweepi~ ¥ic:w from this imma('. btfly de coralloU & lnd.bcpd 3 hr, 2 b a , 1" H • u l r l u 1n I? d Turtl.,roek home. Wood decking. gas BlH~ & rnOl'e! 545-~91. I . . 3 BDRM. CONDO - $55.500 Located c lose t o Uana Point Marina, the very popular 3 bdrm .. 2·s tory Buccaneer model. Move in' now! A splendid investment in a fast ~rowing area showing high apprecia· tion. H~ t;uafutlli~ -10 P£igo.liOK • • CORONA DEL MAR · 675-3000 VACANT ON RUE FOHTAIHILEAU Cosmopolitan townhome in Big Can· yon : 12' high decorative iron entry gate. cobbles t one driveway , landscaped patio with swirling jacuzzi and a 3 bedroom floor plan. Owner will lease, lease option or sell for $189,500 CUTS ,Ill I I Custom bulll home de signed tor entertaining and family fun. · ~Iassive bedrooms euc i:iialiRr:!~~f.;Ye':ll.~ Getteral \\1th walk· in doitets 11nd 206 l iv•nlde . N.I . . , 1002 U,_..IVU~ ll()M~§ .., .•.•..•.•••.....•... private bath. 1'ons o 646-4463 ;;uragc rmrklng. llearl ot WANTS •• Newporl llei~b~ on pool .. snlesperson. Pica s~ sized lot. $118.500 Full call 0,. come by. price. Call 646· 1111. 110'.\H: Plus apartment. s:io.ooo. Thnl's r i'g hl :tl<l,000!' '.\lust 'have ull cnsh. Cnll 5~t>-58ttO ·H.B. STEAL Blflly up graded & lndsrpd 4 br. 2 ba. F H home. Extensive Ul!e of brick & paneling. Truly a spedal home at a low. low price of StH,!-!00. ~5-9491. ~ Walker & lee Reel fstafe ISAYCREST L ari.;•• famil) ,huml' "count lht·m · 5 b..;drms. -I hulhs , formLil dmmg. family room. laundry rm, offic<', :<..tura141: ;1rea in attic !loom fur a pool and mudt mudt 11lol'l'. SH9,500, PETE BARRE1T -REALTY- 642-5200 BIG CANYON REAL TORS·: 675-6000 2443 East Coasl Highway. Corona del Mar <il~o 111 Mrs.1 Vr1ch, .it 5-IG $99() ~ CUSTOM Gflteral I0021General 1002 Spectacular 1lK 10 ~'I ft. .i ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• ••• •••••••••••••• bedroom home in final lltaJ?es of l'Ol1:>lru('t111n F:itn1ly room and lthrary overlooking goq;en11!> pool arl'a a nd 14olf course. 2 ~5lory h v111g room wHh mass ive f1replucc and \icw loft. , $385,000. 640-6161 ~ I THE ILUFFS J ust listed -2 bdrm., 2 bath end unit with wet bar. Beautiful- ly decorated; near pool. $83,950 -See this quickly 673-4400 ~~!~!!.~~-~ ...••.. ,~~!!!.':!~.~~ ....... . G"'9t'OI I 002 G..-ral I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• New under construction, Contemp. Cape Cod. Ou.k Ors., S BR, ~Pf~ Ba., 3 frplcs. Lodscpd . Boat slip. $.175.000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 34, P.1.y\1d1· Dr111. r• B ol'> bi(; I 1ooz 1e.....-e1 f,002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• W ESL.l·:Y '\J TAYLOR CO. HEAi.TORS si 11t'l' 1 ~Mt> llG CANYON "'Y~SAILLES" ~ Unsurpassed beauty in this lux· urious air·cond model. Beautifully customized & prof. decorated. 4 BR, den & forma l DR. Dream kitchen. Italian while m arble, expensive wallpapers, ,cptrig' & drapes. Great view! !·$271,SOO. 2 RUE ST. CLO'VD ~ Open Wed. 1·5 2111 S• Joa ... .._Roed NEWPORT CEMTBl, H.I. -~44-4!J_O •HERITAGE '!'ht, 11<•1\ p.q"·1· 11111 not HEALTH FORCES k1tU\\lll~·I.\' .1l('1•pl .111 y SALE-$52,750 Waterfront Cando '1'C'rrif1c \ il·w "1th 1111' boat o.,llp. llu:tllt~ 11p- gr:1dtn~. :i lli.;drm~. 21 • httth:-.. dtnllH! rm. lpl<• 0 f It• r l' cl 111 t It t' d Is - tnm111at 111~ hu\t'r ll•r Sl40.CJOO t.1 l-i2ii> COATS& WALLACE GeMraf I 002 CftMrol , I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• REAU ORS . 1111 <'I \t.,ttt;! lor· n•;tlli•---------t:nusual ovporlunily LO l':>lak \I h1d1 " 111 \ uil:i own this large t lROI) S(t , ••....•...•........... General 1002 i1nn 111 1 h1· la11 MESA VERDE Ft. i :J bt·droom, 3 b.1th Houses for Sale 4BR-FAMILY Townhomc with hui.:c bonui; room. ideal for a $84,500 pool table or arlists hide· .•..................... "4tiH Smit~ tfo~ R£AlTORS 4 BEDROOM + FAMILY ROOM 1h ACRE lmm11culalc Mesa \"erd..: :.i·way. Gourmet klll'llC'n l hl.'druorn <loll house! O\ e r looks bcautt.lul Ht"autiful P a<:<>selle prh·ate patio. This pro· home. Slat<' en1ry way. ~rty is shown hr ~·P· <;igantlc formnl Jh·in~ p<>inlmt•nl only. l'lcJ::.c _:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: morn --massive wall 01 call 842·2535. f'treplat·e. Huge famil) room. Spotless gourmc r::::;~~--·jjij REAL ESTATE, INC . THIS IS WHAT CAH'T BE fOUMD Division of Harbor Investment Co. Near :-.:\•W(lOrl s hal'k General 1002 G.aeral 1002 bay 1s a tug i bl'droom. •••••••• • • • •• ••••••••• • •••••• ••• • • • ••••••••••• f;umly r09m, l1repla4•,•, 31·---!!!!1!!!!!!1!!!111!!1!!!!!1--I ba1h al only Sli:l.~tO' Thi:" Huntinqton Beach ~;~~l~~,i~e:i~~~:h~::',~uzi;~'. Deane Home pool, ~aun<i, billianJs & Cle:in, nl'al. 4 hl'clrm. pri\·utc purk Call famrm.r..:t•cntl y patntcd :>l!i-2313 in :11111 out. Boal door. """'"'''' , .,, H•.•1' patio, 11.(e b;1tk yard. EXECUTIVE REHT AL SERVICE HOMES. Al'TS. CON· DOS : from S40U •mo. /\gent, 6iJ.7t>Ol NEWPORT SHORES 2·Story A·frnme: wood he ;i m e.cl ceiling~: ·I h<irm ,,., 2 bath s. sccluck'll patio. Walk lo heath; pools & lennb., ~l.IJO(l ti73-3tiO:I 1142·2253 associated BROKERS :lfl\L ~ORS 202'f W Bolbc..o 6 7 l (66' Quirt lrt.!1' l111L·d ~tn•rt ln )k1rn\l' clrt\l' SeC'IUdNI l'ntr.v tn '·" 1,,h ll\•1ng room. Et1tl'ttrl'an kild•l'll · ~l'f>.Jr:olt· l.1111af\' ruom. ~w11· carpd .tnd. "fhtrkl· 1ni:: paint ~ !°>Wl'l'Pina ~n ..... t1•r lwdrn"m t"Jlll J•l1•x ll11g,., ltugl· re11r ~.it'd ' lioom l'iir 1111111 :111cl ·111;1\lw 1l'l1t11-,· !'>l'iler h1H1L:h1 Ill'\\ ,1111! Jllll~l kitchen. Se clud e d mas ter wing-plus Country Cutie U..:uuli f ul up J,trad cd honw w1lh :I ht·drms. 2 buths a nd a nttt• \ q!l'la· ble J,lardl·n. PrtcNI al 011 ly $57,500. Call nuw for appt. [ta .,ili~af;lll ~1:~~1 '~:n~y1o~~rr;;i.~: --------- '1·11' l'i~ ~1.:,uo clo \\ 11 • (/ttlf'k i'lli l~Jlll INVESTMENT TRAILER PARK with I~ ~pates. :! • 1 aC'n·~ •~v1th :.! IH111M'"· l'ool :1ncl ,..hultl••ho;:1rtl I mill's 'trorn 1't•rr1s l..1kc l'u II fH'I('(' ~l;)() 1100 ('\I.I,: ~51i ::!litiO «;;SEL ECT T'PROPERTIES 4 BEDROOM HOME UNDER i60,000 .. . J '""1lt•11 111 tlw <'.•111l'r11n l.•l.111' 111 lt•11 hofllH'' l1 >ill I r11 1• l "t l 1 fl I II " ru1111.1' tJ11w 1 ·1 ·"I.I Iii" lt11·p1.11•• 1111;'1' \.1rd . 111.I p.1t111 .lit t lt'Lt~I Ill. 111 ... 1 111 '"'II lo•r lhh u111 more r :imily sizcdd·I ~~~~~~!M~~l bedrooms . Owner! lran:1ferred. Must i;ee l believe. Hurry-cull 7:;2 1700 now! BEACHGtAHT ""·;;1 fo ij ;f Jj I Iurry on tlus onl'' ' [~M~S] c;>uality Bllilt Custom homl" ni:ar best ~t·1\ 1>orl Bay brachcs. 3 lkdrm. dinini:: rm. fami· Jy rm. 2 h;1th::.. Fant;1s til' hmm· on stra<lu. Uffl'rcd at Sl37,500. Call 540·1151 fi'1. Q . ,. '1... •t " /4[ ,.,,,.; l®.IHMtl NO Tl Cf For New season 546-4141 ~w', COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE, IN·c. ~W~-~----Sc;>UEEZE Cool ocean breezes bathe this fll nlasti<' 3 Br. 2 hath split level gianl. Huge t•orn er lot w /c u stom latice covered putio + room for R 1V. Complelte- ly upgraded. Ll!ss lhun one nulc from the hlut·1 Pac1fil'. Priced Ull(frr $75.LHIO. C;.i II for a1>JXlllll· ml'lll. 8"2·253.5. ----------FORMAL inl1) y(lttl' we t,,111t and \'alk to ~l'Wpurl" l.imous w,·dl-(1' 1rnm 1h1s l hl'droom 1'1•11111sula l'ornl hom1• l"t•atures t ir l' p I :1 N · .1 n d i.: re a l p,1t to. :\ow Sl3~1.LJOO. [~-___ =::u:r= ___ - ENTRY Courl~·anl to t•nlr~· hull. to i.,~eal t loor plan -one lt•\'cl. For lari.:t• lamily. S bt•drm ~. 2 •, ))alhs. formal dinint.:. IV.l' l1v rm, Call 640-9900 Jlw .Jk,al €'.JlalR d'Yntt Valley Rea l~y +?lut/fam . sep Jn"n'1----------rm. sliding ~al>:. do_w-. to l;irgc. rear JSatio. Thl' most house l ot' the S811,250. Co:.t:.i :'llc::.a Cameo Hi9hlands COSTA MESA Lurge 3 br. 2 b:i homr. Gas bltn!l, OW. FA ht•al. bnck fpk. Ownl'I' paint· mg lhruout. new c;irprt:;, Ohle g;tr, Lgc p;1tio w1bltn 13BQ. Calldayornight'. 646·3!128: ('\'PS .54G·!Ut)I Lachenmyer Realtor Ocean v1rw. privatc1---------- 1555 W. Baker, C.M. N .. 1 to Ma•k•I Basket S49· 86SS EXECUTIVE BEACH EST A TE l BR ASSUME $48,800 ~HERITAGE REALTORS COSTA MESA Treenned appro.11'11 lu SUPER CHARMER th1!-nl':•r n<'l'~"' rtln-.11 ---------- Cleanc:-.t h11nH· 111 t ·0,.1;, L.irgl• lt\'tnt.: room w11h Ml'sa's mo~t 1rnirnl:t1 t•ral·kl1ni: firt•pl.11·1· arPa 3 Kini.: !-t/t•d (;ourml'l kttdwn +dm F am1l v t•111t:rta1nm1·111 bt•cfrooms "1th m.1~"1\ t' room i~ ~111n1· I 1rc11lu1•c• & mas ter suite ~Iovl' 10 l' on d ll 1 on • 1; 1g:1n111• a cl Jo 1n111 1-: t e rr at l' fire platl'. Wilt• ~aver Scparat-.: \\ tni: for kitc·hC'n. Don·1 miss lhb ma~lt•r s u1ll' & ch1ld l'\:n s b 1 • II ciuurlt•rs. Take over 9', super uy · Slii •950 · u \' t\ loa n. No new loan PAIMT·N·SA VE 3 +POOL Sl!l.000 b11\'s tins ~I hd. 2 ba. rec r'm. lh~F p<111I horn\!. :"<ct•ils TLC hut what a buy' J.ot·atl•d on qu1l't tn·e lined slreet. (; I / I" H ,\ w t• I e om c . pnce. Call !Hti· 7171. 0 .. 11, ,,, ., • "· , ,,11 • • , ., 1 • costs. S.1881 mo pays all. -[ "· tml Won't la:;t. Call now {8 . . 96.1-711111 ~ , , ~,u ·11 ::"·'\•'I' •:fl''. I' , RE--A D-T-HIS [~lfi~H1l ,-& ....... ~-.~,,.~.-...._m-,L~·. 5"5,W!H. rr. f ~-'.:h, 11 .E. S,\LESl'EllSUN OW..,ER rJTA __ _, _',:_ T ii t-: UEST WAY TO ,.... -~ ..---~I/\ I\ E :\Io N 1-; Y IS Europe Bound OOOH EASTSIDE R-2 Rare bu1ldable R·2 lot. Charming older home rl'· ccntly l'rpld. drpd. & paneled. llu ~e Llt w torn er ston~ Crpk. Separ;1le hobby rm. Harbor Hi. Dulld a unit: for :o.lraJnrnll}<' .. Jui;l li~t · L'd Our t'~l'lu:;h'" 1>16-771 l. ------MM LOOKING .... . .for a home in Newport Beal'h's J;:astbluff • Big Canyon H arbor View - Tht• Bluffs -W<>slclirf • Irvin e's Turllerock. etc.? We have lovely homes to show you in all UH'$U ureH. und m1.1th IJ'IOre ... plcasc cull c. F. Colesworthv · REALTORS 640-00fO THE-RANCH One of the must soughl after & prestigious «1 re;r.; of Irvine. I\ "country" atmosphere w /towering lrei;s. MaJestic 2 story mansion w /4 bdrm, 3 baths, huge 18x24 ,game (~'-}:': beach nghls. combine w spa{'tous IUR 28 .\ in prime l'cl ~l a~ca ror P<'tfect family home ,\II new c rpts . fi rs. l'Stm drp.c;, kit :ipirl's. Sl2i!,500. Shown hy a ppl. by owner. Open I louse Sul & TUSTIM GREENS· 2 B.c: Condo. Squeaky Clean! Great. for Starter Home or Investment. S.13.950 - Ct-ntury Finandal Hit rs (THE IIOM ESELLl'.:HS> HE.\L EST1\TE IS l.\ Don't n11>.s this C<J!-ta B u Y 1 N Ii .\ () T :\ll•sa .j bedrm hnnH' SELl.J~G . >SO'. co:i1. tcalUrtng tormal d1ntni.:. l\ILSSION OFF EH ElJ TO hW kit. w'fcl'incll<'. llugl' HUSli\f.SS UHIENTED living urea l'~nte r!'d S /\LES PE It S 0 NS . around man.y trees and L E A R N T ii E 44' coverL'<l p11t10. Corner EXClTJ:-;G FIELD OF lo ca llo'n , lot s or JH;SIUENTl.\L S1\LES privaey-room {~motor TO l.NVEST011S. NO home. boat or trailer. OPEN-JIOUSl':S, NO !'need n i:ht at $69,600. D H I V I N G P E 0 P L E Call 546·~. /\HOUNI> JN YOUH C/\R .. J UST WOHi\ W J T H 0 U It INVESTORS. TOP COM· whut a relirf ... Nu rn11111 · t<:nuncc co11clom1111um dose lo freeways and lrvme·s b-.:st. Deerficld . ;J bedroom. dramalic two·story .. lormal dinin)( room. fin•place, private patio. Clost> lo PQOI and recreut1on cent e r . $69,950. Call 640-9900- •m &iiii'' MESA VERDE cooper & associates ATTEHTIOH INVESTORS 6 UHITS OCEAH S I 12,000 :1 hln<'k' t11 lw.11 h 10 pr111<• 1 it 0 W 111' I ~ h I fl :t I l' U l'lp.1111~h :-l1.1n·11111Hh wtth :ll'l'hl·<I 1·011rl \ ard & low rn.11nl\•11am·1• llq?h in l'Ultll' IA 111 ~how l'<t~h nuw \\Ith m1n11nu111 rc'luir('d 1tuw11 µ:1ym.-nt llurr)' fur thh uniq111• find .; l"IMn \• ollwr 111H•111mcnl <1pport11111ttl'"" t ',111 todJy fl6.1-l~l. · 1 [ii'lfijilil LIVEOH THE LAKE LoH'b ;! ,.,1nry, 3 br, 2 bo Clu::-h'r hotnl' lno rom· mon wall l L~<' bon11s (•'R w/wet hur Total i-cruri· l}'. dtthhou!lc rac1lilies. rishln1Z. No maintenance. lt:>umrc living :it Its best. ·~15.\H!H. _----.,., Walker & lee Aeal lstate Whi• up one set for yourself. another for a great gift! Spark sporty ou1flts with flame·btight warmth-~nit cap. mittens and the boOt·lOP cuffs of synthtl•c worsted, CombiM solid. •1ariegated colors. Pat· tern 7360: S1ie~ S, M. L Incl. Sl.00 for uoh pattern. Add 35l' each pattern tor llr~t-class airmail and handling. Send to: Ahce 6roo~5 Needleoralt Dept. 105 Oa1tyP1lot Sox 163, Old Chelsea Sta .. · New York. NY 10(}11. Print Name. A'ddress. Zip, Paltern Number, M<>t!E"'UIM\ ever blfOft!. 200 deslrns plus 3 fret pfi11led In. sfd1t1 NEW 1916 NE£DL!CllAFT CATAlOO! 14n u•erythf111. 75c:. Crtcllit •Ith S-0tm • 'SI .00 Crtdlet I Wardroh • SI .00 Nifty fllty -.ms -$1.00 111,,1, Crochet ··---·-·· $1.00 Sew + Kiii{ W "-··· $1.25 Nt•dltPofnt l ook --.SI.OD rltwtr Crtcftt1 ~ · • Sl.00 Halrpt. Crodtet "'911 .. $1,00 lftstt11t Crtcht h ok $1.00 1~sta11t Ma~fMt l ook • $1.00 l11•t•11t "'"'' lhk ,$1.00 Colll!ffttt Cllt look SI.DO Co111l•t• Afpus :14 St,00 12 Prl.N Afah•H :11 .~o, look.•f It Quilts :1 _so, MllftU• Quilt leol :2 _$0t JS a11ma ••t l odai es __ so, l•l er 1$ Jiffy llWIJ _50, Sun l·S. l;.H·0558 752·5353, Bill l\I adi~an ~-------. --- SEEK & FIND• WEST INDIES N L'A U DA 0 IN I R TN 0 MS EB I A C K J U V I R G I N I S M E S G A S M L I G R E N A 0 R N A U 0 E T R H I Y 6 N T 0 B A G 0 A E N C N F K E A V A W G~A 0 N H A V A N G T F I N C E C I S E N K S K A W A R A B 0 T S A N L N T S T C A R I B H M R 0 C T A G I AQO UNDIE SJBUDRASNUK S W N U L N A T 0 B A G 0 A N E A S A I A N Y L U T S C A C A 0 G E T N H U S R G R A N A I N S M 0 N T S R A N G DD 0 SS t'a AH AM AS U A I B 0 I It S S A H A V H T A R R E S T N 0 M T N A I L S A N J I A H C V I R E L E N N M R T H P C A I C 0 S E L 0 N Y T A lns1tuct1ons: Hidden words below appear forward. back· ward, up, down or diagon•llv. Find each ind box it In.~ · Bahamas St. Kitts Nassau -' Bananas Havana Windward .; Arawak Ki ngston T<1bago , .. Grenada Montserrat Virgin Is. Tomorrow: Heredity Getteral 1002 Getteral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• macnab / Irvine realty LINDA ISU'S AMIST This home has everything including VIEW of turning basin! Custom en- try over-brilliant swimming pool to h and.carved 18' double doors. Western quarry tile, paneled oak , antique copper , thick textured fabries & .quality carpets. 5 bedrooms each w/b ath. One of California 's most spectacular re- sidences. Call for color brochure or appt. Cathy Schweickert 642·8235. (N60) 642·1235 901 Oov&r Onve 644·'200 Harbor View Contttr Irvin~ at Campus Vall~y Cent&r ' 752-1414 r MlSSJON P/\ID. CALL -----..--- 4iP. HERITAGE REALTORS ."/"k~ &lat. 9'6.rtt Valley Realty HUNTINGTON Rl-:.1\Cll. !IU2·:.!158 ,\SK FOil . __ · , VINCI·:. Cl.1.ss~f1e~I ~ds , s;ll . hi.i; Jlavc !iomrlhing to SC'IJ? Ile~.• "~·~II _11< m:; or Classil'icd atls dQ it well. ~~~~~~~~~~ Sell idle items ll-12.56; ·any item. {,12·S<:?R. = S©~dU~-~~tf~' T hot Intriguing Word Game with o Chuckle ------Ed~•·~, CLAY• POllAN 0 '1eorro"oe lnOatJ ot ,.,,, four IC'O"'bfed woHh bo low to foun fou' ••l'l'P'e word,, HOYRET I 1 12 I I I I HOG OR 1 1· I I I I F A Y 0 H J ., Have you noticed how TV I I! I I •epai•men are 1u't like the fa. . . . . . mou1 light Broc:ade? Bov, can ....--------. 1hey -' ~~,C......;E._I .....;.T ,..;;IC.....;.H,...I .;;...l ..... , ,~1 O Co"'o'••• lh• thuckl• qu~,~~ , • • • • . . bv 11111"9 "' th .. m1•.unq word \.-...1-_,l,-.&-...L.._,l,---.I vou deve•1>1> ftom iloe> No, 3 below 6 u~~R~~s~~~~c l(llfRS I I I I I I I SCRAM-LETS Answers in Classlfi'°lion 5300 GHeral I 002 G"erol I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• IA YSHORES -PRIVATE AREA Custom 4 bdrm .• 4 bath home -like new. Bay view from .spaei.ous master suite. J ust steps lo private beach. $179,500 A COLDWIU IA.HUI eo. 644-1766 2181 SAN JOAQUIN HILLS AD IN NEWPORT CENTER !:~~~! .......... !?~,!:~~~! .......... !~.~~ CE . 110181 ILllNS ca. OVER 50 YEAR S OF SEFNICE LIDO· ISLI CVIA OltVllTOI Lovely & Roomy 1 Sty. 'J'ile Roof. 4 Bedrooms, 2 . Baths. Huge Patio. Near Ba~rront & 'Sandy BMch. $13Z,500 • or&J!i PAl&.Y 1-s 2t0 VfA CORDOVA, UOO ISLE Spacious S plit-Level Contemporary 5 Bedrooms. Entertainment Lounge & Wet (hr. Separate Guost '""Quarters. 3 Baths, Patio with Most Unusual Jacuzzi. $207 .500 Ill DOYEi DRIVE 631 ·\800 , -........... , 1 ' I i t • ' '" ,. ~:~.~.5:!'!••••••• ~.~~••••••• ~~~!.':!~~~•••••••!~.~~•~••••••• ~4!'!:!!.~~•••••••g~::.~.~....... TIJ8Sday.Novel'flber9, 1978 DAILY PILOT .. Ge.w.. 1002 Corona ct.i Mar 1022 lrtlM · 1044ff"YIM 9044 M.wport l•o'h 1069 twport leoch ltH ~~!~!~~•~••••••• OtMr RHt Est... o.t.ff Re ... t ... •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••··••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SenCI ••••••••••••••••••••••• '•••••••••••••••••••··• OM THEW .4 TER PRIVATE •••••• :.~~!~ ..... !~.7.~ ldcotM ftrop.rty 2000 "9c:ome Preperiy 20! 2 Story wHh View BEACH ACC ESS of;J, _j " ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••-•• • :SI t!l,500 4 IR SI I s.ooo. • ••• 1111.1.ror ~.\l'TY TAX S ... Tll! \.h,irm11lri I lk\rm homl I Ill' l.lrlCt' I!\ r1ghl, Lh1· ' ~ e lmmJCUJllt~2 u ' ~ U.\, '' UMfTS "1th I.ire(· 11\IOI: r110111, , .. , .. 1t11111 1 .. l!l t"Jt, 1111 frph· 'h:ilrl: 'roor. lwo SIJS,400 oa LISS! ~te>.acan t1l1· 1·ntn .111 ""tr bdrm," 1:ran1, th-.: DOLL HOUSE. in quiet area. 2 Bdrm. r~~;:J· 1.~~nr'!:i~lir~~~~ Tax s helter galo1·e! Down puy many q uullly Jf11u11n1 >·1"1 '' 111,.11 i.11('d. th,· &convert. d e n . $145,000 1Jstt'dJtonlyS72,50U rnents a~ low a s $j400! BUY ONE menlS. Your uwn 11rn·a1c I J n cl 1 ~ r \' ,. , t h , beach oul fr unl .11111 onl> h,olhr<WJrll" im .' two .rntl •Bl-:RTltl\ ll P.N IW• or BUY T H EM ALL# -your •block lo the co!n111u111l> thd1rcpl.cl'('' u1 e tw Sl'AClOUS 2 bdrm. home. large bric k REALTOKS 4!12-4121 c ho ice. All s how cash spendable. ptlQI uncl tl'nl\IS ('ourt 644•721 1 ONE FOR THANKSGIVING patio w /fountains & outdoor garden 2l5 L}t<t Mtir, S.ihClem. Pick one or all -. MO. ld4111l locallun ro1· thl' Experience Uw comfort of this large room. $165,000 tumlly w1ih d1lldrcn lc Se JHn , UNITS INCOME t:1iJoy thl? 11wpcrouscom· ~o~ony plan 400 home. Formal step-up (;(}ZY brick frplc . for snug~lc time, CQIM1h"Cl.io 1 1 f71 Duplex $!70 munlty aetiv1ucs. 111vmf'{rroof!l, stcp·down dining room and adds an intim ate touch to t his 3 bdrm. • ••• .,. ... •h••••···~·· 4 Plcx 9"'>80 - a rge amity room. makes for g racious home. s147•000 cus1'()M " bi9!)R()OM. 6 Plex ~)80 WATERFRONT OWNER. ('a11rn11 ('n•51 livin~. This tf b edroom home is coove· fomtly room-wlUi w~ 4 Plcx S780 HOMI ., Twnhm :1 Br <h•n & lrrnl nicn.t ly located in a c hoice l r vine bur, ,lo vol y cnc\o:.t!J .7 Plcx ell"" REALESTATE dtnl', :!IOO sqft ot up.i;rcl fl · I LIDO Rte".&Lty d J\ .p.& ov . ---63H400 l'lci:ant·<'. ~·l'l' IJlld Vil a ge. Private t e n n is and pool. 1iO.A grou~ !4. R~ ~~· •t 7 Plcx $1175 4 IEQROOM PLUS s 11 7 ,11110 II " .1fl11 1 $85,SOO. Call fortlctails . ' 3377 Yia Lklo. N.I. 67J-7l00· "C:('IO~D~EALTY * 7 Plc:1. $12.15 DIHftLUS v1.i1w 11 CALLNOW 752-7315 lll-2212or IOPlex $1720 This ~!~~R~n~~llll(lc ~~!!~~~~: ••••••• ~?.~~ DONALD M . BIRD ~!'!!'!~.~~~~ .•... ~~~.~~':r.!~.~~~~ ..• ~?.~~ 831 " 9411 • :~~:~~ ~: PRICE Sl7.000 $57,SOO $.1,500 $5.500 ~7.500 SJ? .500 $88,900 $125,000 Sl27,500 Sl35,000 !>tory r11 m1Jhn i.: ot.1111"t>wnt-r <ill1 cl11n l'~h.1 A sso ciates, Re altors • EXCHA .. G! • LOWEST PRICE Santo Ano IOIO "ith O\l.'1· ~.400 i-•t fl. ol l'or . l111·d ~·I ::!Ul7 :.\J1Jl1• II ~ou l1av'-' tnl'Olllll pro IM NIWPORT ••••••••••••••••••••••• h\ln~ an •.i i' lcl<'titt!d on S4!1,50o 1:!1·11:;!1ll!JO(ll pt-rly unywhi;rl• 1n HEIGHTS Charm 2 llH S3G.OOO 3 ro Units Sll,750 $835.400 '-<'l'ludc·cl l rt·l· lined Hunti"C)tonBeoch 1040 Irvine 1044 Orani.:t' t:ounty. WI:' will Mil. Co!>ta Mell'a S4!l.90U. ,lrl'l't llllllUll'' trum' lilt :!•, 11 .t ,·ll<'" •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• li.icJeaJ Udrm .. Z h:ith. E>.pund1..'<1 f.1m11\ room Ow11 1J l(l !>Sli l <!OOor bc.tl'h T11t1 rn.iny l'USlom '11.11· 11111 ' .., 11I1 t I c• "'' HJ\ '(.'110 SA:\ .I OAQUJ N "noel etas.. Ol'l!an '1ew and huj!l! mu~1•·r i.une !06-K!llO f " l11•h IJ1n 1111 "· 1Jlil 1, m"kt' •h1~ the mo-l homl' ealun•.., lo ml•nllun • ' · "' GI M 8 3 ur :lit UJ, vupul.ir S.in L:ii:una home $125,1100 • ~ • ~ Hambhni: i:round-. "'th j!.tr. :\r Su l'~.L-t l,'IJt,I en ar eauty l.111s Hl•\ ~l.1n y UIJ HORINC. REALTY for the lca!>I pnn· in the 0th~ Red btote room for 3 pools +-){1\ ~l7.IJClll .\~! S.im Cr.Ull' Su p1·r .uldc d f amily i:r.t•le' \'lt'w i.?colf ,·uur'C' "r book. 31 nnlv ~W.!ISO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Park111••. For J lll l'\l"\\ li-151170ur.>lll l!Ulll · b d .~lakl• Stl5,00ll S..17 il>ll * 494-8057 *. hurn· c.ill5'1HZ:H:l " " r ooru . :J c rms. l '• ,,..,,,, ~· ·-·~1,.., ~~~~7uniqut• hu11ll' <•all1----------1 bmaJth1'u·r ,.Nc1·at1111:is1 .1 pin, orlS33·3:.!lS LAGUNA [®-' ·. ! l .,.1VESTMEll...lf ' ·' ~ ,o pin1: '1-:W L'n1v l'k i>"tt.•1·•. 0»t11 1•• ' •• •• ' f"llll ""' "'"''"'· ''··wn,\1ll h.111·11.. ' ~ HIOE ... WAY 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Take advantage call our lnvcsl ment Division Specialist-; today. 752-1700 \1::)]THE REAL \\.)l ESTATERS t J t ' I , [ • ~ ~UV u. T"11hm 3 llr ;?I . Ila, "' I Br, rur n, \Ox40 w/awn· '!~~'Ii ti SPECIAL' I SJl ·Sl!OO I 1· l'I ,.I I 2 lkdrms & den m l'it· 1n•'. & ~tor.1"C i.herl, hus ;' ; i'';nrlllY homl' 111 re~;clen l~t~~t~:Jawl 0 Rrekal ~~:~~5'~u s :i;. 7~~1! c~·r nyon w1~erluded rear 1m"e. nr :ihoppuU(, $4500. Income Propft"ty 2000 Retttats . ----~--1--11:11 :in•a on bri.:t· lot 2 ~ .. J .. ,...... 1S33.Jl!15 yard Patio, ter racl' &. HARIOR VIEW HOME &Ui-1064 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrt.c'<' house. l ~J!lc to town 0 r I gin u I I' or I ti t In o . . • TRI N.l::X. w /pool :.! Br Houses FarnistMd Bll.:t HA.S5l.IJ(lll. ----WALNUTSQUARE &h<'ach.AJl~his fororiJy M<Xlt!I. 3 llr. 211 Ila + 11)(2h.sclfront d.fu.ll ba~h, units: Cd!\~ SU<t,500.••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------1 645-3474 Jlunl1ngton t • .inclm.11k CONDO ~.U;50.Cullnowt•HC'4! IJl>nu!lrmw ,liiltbdrm & JU,,tr~fml~ht•f'linside.St:t 6p.1711.2owncr/Agt lolboalsland 3101> Secluded Mansl•on l'omlo, iltllb 11\'l'r Ill 2 -645-6646 full h alh , .lir l'Ond, up WllW' OIWllltlJ.:, $1850. ---. ----••••••••••••••••••••••• hr. 2 ba. l·11,1111n 1k1'11r.11 :! swry. :.!llr, ~u;i , tam '~~ til73 LIVE,.... I · iJ Lge bt'Clrfi1, on w11o•lt•d i·f'I . rirv J>:tl w ,., lrln rm Tiil' p.it1o, ,11r co, ~d, ~pamsh till', tr<>hl, lot" of ' · ·" 3 BH . 2 bu ; me ud111 .. Or I t I. I I 11111111 t · 1 t I r1 hnd\ work. 11i•w li1tl~c11 •··sln•s• Propcrt" 1400 • IMVESTMEMT util .. w111ter, $-100/l\Io (' nl•r n •orrna 1111 l~:S!!!!~!!!~l ')l'aUI J.:1'11 lll'll an•a. ·"' l' I ,1'01'111'! 0 ." e PDC"<TIG € -~.. , In" ·t0 11 1l•••,11l1''''"111' ,., .. ,,. 11111· !<.1t '·•1 111 "~> 1n•·+m11l'h111on• ••••••••••••••••••·•••• PROPERTY WILLIAMWINTOM ..,, "' ' ,.. ' (l'I' l;t('. :t\llll,1IJJL• l',tll) r1,'1.'~I •' , .. •'"n I: HQMC"C "' tplcint;1mil~·rnnm.~t~·p l.>.•c• Shown h~ 11p11rn11t ~ '"''' . ~> ()1'~::--11o l 'Sf. SPECTACULAR! 0"11er's unit vcrv Reull':stult• ll75·3331 <•utlhelo;w&. .. hd1•1 111111 Cl S.\T&Sl 1'\1f\;)1or,1ppl lJ ._ E ST '"11·r 5H· ;,1111 ('H l l WOOL>lllll tH;f·"l''"'hnw :100:-.l Nl·w11rn l. '.l:tt 11421 l'ortStwl'lil!lll New offil'l' l>u1ldln14 In s p:inous . or may e CoronodelMar 312<1: pnvalc y.irrl \\1th 111~11 l\ -A S IDE • :'>:!li-77:r. :i llr :i Ila, i\ C. S7!1 !IOfl• Fel' L.intl IS:I ~>00 :\l'"J>t)rl tk.idr Choice sm aller with srparute 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ja.:u11.1 l'nn·cl tu ~ .. 11. :IB I< :!BA 11r1 tll• <•I • • EMERALD BAY U ~11 1 , .. 1., .,.,.,., l1xat1on An\low.owner. bl.'Clroom .:ucstquartCr!>. TlllS ,.1 ..,,. 1 ownt"r must lllll"'l' l'J'l <1w1wr,h1p w/111tuw ~• 1 ·'" BY OWNER 1'·''" \\ l.1111' 21:1 t:l!I :!l.:l I ~ ownri 11 "'" --"" Agent646.it.lli3 To fulfill your t;ix shC'ller • "' eun, cute, ""'' 0~ No Money Down 1111 •11111'1 1 l.7'' :11111 l h~hh u11i.:r:11l1•cl i 11111 m 1.u(llf v :111r :1 llJ Twnhw OCEAM SIDE THE COVE nt..'l.><IS thl•re arL• two cle 11"Y· 2 br. \ ba hou~e \ 1•.,\1:1•:1! 11~.\I I'\' llunun~ton Cn11t11wnt;d at lt.cnihoSan .lu.ilfmn :s llr&llL•n<1•r 4Br1 3 ha Orf1<·cllu1ldini.t luxe unit:. rn ;idd1l10n ,\\I II l5 Lhru 3 /JO. 11 J I •. ·1-1 ., \'h1·t · "'Ul "r \'I ... You r l·han r" lur ,, ('.w"' 'I"' ur h t It r )'OU need a s bort term ust c oi.1nl( c osl mo\L'~ JJI• h • tl\\ 11h111111" ··ntl u1111. 1:r1·l·nl1lh. olvmp1t• ,1 • ~ " ~ c " ' 1"'"' ,.,. ..,.:. e "ll war rng •~ o 1»rO· · ,\OU In. eturun:.. ht·r~ II I . • ti·plt', 11:""·'" lloors ,, ... IJ(>Cll tit J.>ll l'ntd Jlf. Sl'rl.lllMlb) ll\\Oer497·<!7ZI "'lf'W'lhoy" llayfront q ,oou t>lo·S-191 sperl1vc l l!na nl s nmtal.cnll:G75-6688 1~·' 3 Bcllrm~. 2 h.1111, f,0111'1!'' 1 ·11 k 1 Br .! IS;~ ,.um.1hh: i .. ln;in. \o; w l·l1·c·1 111,lat1t• 11ll1•r !. awur!l wrnnrn~ Ci>mlo ---_,_ ---Fireplaces, patios. ond Costa Mesa 3124 t.:rt-at nl·1t.:hborh11111l '1''" q•t '"'"· '""1 '• sunw ~IM.:1::!7 tor il'll. purif11•r 1111 111 lli l!h EXCEPTIONAL With1:i'l>o3t ... hpa1door ORA.H~~ garai;t•s. Tip.top cond1·••••••••••••••••••••••• (.lu1ck ot•c·upan1·v l>h 11.11111 ~IJ.lt I.it " hlt11'. " mu Full 1or1t'l' ~19 OIMI h1:.1m i·li.:' m ,1.,,.1\·c tplt I' a I k I 1 k ,. :. t' \ l 1 n g $2.20.01111. ()\\ nl•r ll-10 8UH COUMTY uon Outswndml! \'alue C.:0~11\I ~ll<.:JAL Onlv '"''<·"'"' llu1 I \' 'l'fl 11111· l'ltd qi & 1'·'110 '.II''' g-,.,.. .1fl "pin l'r'llll' & 1n1rro1·1·1l "1•tlJ.1r . 1n enh.tllCl'S lhls lo\'ely 3 ,--.•.. ., al SI '9 , ...... "73 "C<" Ch 2 b Id Ir ,.,...,.,. S'ih'l511 11"11 ,. \J!l .., ....... u " • bdrm , 2 bath f:imit>''\G:\IFIC1'.:\1 3 1lr,IMI 901.0 ...auM-• ,,,:;.;'.".':;~,.~"""';.,,. urmmg r. ea or II i .. 11,1,.. onlv pleJS<'. :-.ccd <1U1t•k I.I\ llm. f11rmJI d111 area h J l d d dei.:rcc uct-.m view. nev. f ' """" I 1t11ll<tut'h. arl studio or Roberts I ' . . -l''C.ro\\ All "' ""l'l'JllllJ.! \ ll'\\' uf ome) ll~ re uce to huml'. Sp)gl..1:.' 11111 hy s~s~~~2.~o;o.010.~°..o~so~o:ono.~7 [~-1~~~-i~i;:t .. t"ve·_h.w~portt.~ .. v .• c334rler.·1:cN2~a74s30h3Rle6u91· • • • .I ll~!. • .!II\,\\ ,.,hul" ()\\''\ER H l::Dl.T1' •. I> 1 l\11ls lm1m•d1.ill'h adJ lo ~ S85.00 o w 11 l' r 113 :! b!l 1111 & . •om:t .., ____ ,, ...... -~ .,.... qucl c·lub o l In llll' fi~~tp~ y d r r Realty 0111) ::.IO,JIM(llll(.1.'" """It h1-<lrm' or :I + den. Ulll golf i:our .... · & 1•).1•lu rJC· m IHO·liSI 16.!llteacb lh• •••II I . 11111 'IUl' fir,·pl ,tn :, di,•a m l.O\\l'r 11'\l'I ticlrm!'I ,'(;. ~..,,..~n.-.~ Ch-..vLoke Areo ear·ol .Jt.i59 ~q. t o · ••••••••••••••••••••••• r .1111 111" k 11 l'li . n n ,. w p 111.1. U\.ll.::ICJUU cY -· • • fkt' blll ldrnJ!. fulJy as-T~plex, Or ange, $79.SOO Lido lslc _ 2 Br 2 Ba $470:: boUll(l.H •00 • :111 \ l.11. .. 11·11111. pn1 .Ill' ~-~ ""'< T. b 11 111 rns' ~ludr. ~hlr l>drm wen~ 499-2800 Tus tin & 23rd St. s umal>le, no·f<'c firs. Triplex. Coslu Mes.A. mo 0 ,. th'ru J'ut••,. ----------t>•",il·h c1r1I ) ..!"".000 · ~ .. .,.,,,. ar e · ' · · 1)11t11 encl wulled 11.11111 ti e ... , ~ ..,,,., 1 ill x.12 K.'15-1 Lovely 3 Hit horn\' w /2 Seller carnt!s ll )CJr trade • · · ABANDONED!! PRICE SLASHED SS,000 I SI0,000~11 llun-y' . ;\lonl an.t~ Sub 115.UOU MYSTIC HILLS r pl (' s . 1.) c (' 0 r ;'I t 0 r ~Cl'Olld. Will dOht' In Un(' 4-Plcx, ·rus\in, tradl' G7a~727. <t:l6·J4IJ ___ - OW, · \, \(; ~:;..;T Public No tice Pniw llllh ;,i;.;;.ll I for :rnn. :IBA. ~aun;i. 1·1l'w· wallpupl'I' & n11rrurcd wel·k. Oanu Wllh1lc or 81,;nits. Anahl!im, trade 3 Dr 2 Ha. Lieto Sand:s. ' .'t Ill u.">.•5 Assume Gov't Loans :i PPI \'1t"W· \ '""'' I: rl'.•l •·X•'l' dllor" Side \ 11rcl offer:. Don Lake Prrnl'. only al(t. 1133· l 7titl blk tx.:h. romm pool. S4SO. \munL' l'an qualil\ \coT Ll HTl.EHllCI~ 1:1.1-:.'lw . horn<'. ~1 5!1,!lllU .. \J.:t•nt. boat lrlr11urk1ni:.owni'r l>c.·i UXJ<; --d 1 .• 1 04S.7575,ti73-20.'i8 r >;l'lll'I' <.11',lh'l':lll.' ;.i nti Mesa Verde 111•\\ lu:in l"ll~\,, 111\~ Ill l'l.J11ll,•IUr &/\ln11lflllll (i737li01 munnA north . wanls u:n ,., . , 1!1 us r1 .1 --- ""''Jiit a11cl r1·.1ll \ :1 ReducedThousands ml' i1 I ' :1 ,\ •I ~\:1:1.:.m ;;,2;12til\kcla\s t>l;>i:.?:!t Place . 4.272 sq. fl . Many im· OUMsUnfumished :-la,,hl'fl pric-1• to s1:t.:MJ' I t·n· ... i . n ,111 i il.i· p ay h:i• 1111 ,\,:Ill. lh·i· .11;. -quirk sail'. CJll tor aµi>t. Quail ~ Triplex. only 4 ycurs old, H 1 l11·ilroom pl11 ~ f;11•11I' o"111.r 1,. ,1 ,1.,.11111J.! lhe 1 Ir 1• 1 11 Cc•nt11ry 2l .. Wl•:-tcliff" Pro rt" prov1•m t-11l s Income ••••••••••••••*'•••••••• r1Join • ('uo..i ... 11'l·•·t l11wot 1 it·~. 1'.11111 ~ .,·•1.1•· · 1t •\lll•', lJ NI V 1•,\t'K P7~2_.!!,• s t.,021. n.ilo. 's 100.o.oo. GeMt"ol J202 ( pnn· "" I II' l'"'l"lll I\ c· Ill. I H:-i. l'Jll K 1_ 10<:1 I ''h II . I II .• , I~ >I .,. .. v with lllWC'r1111: t'lm:-' '"' hnnw 1111 tht· i.:oll rourw' " :in<.l' 111 r ... ~ ,.,, BEACH DELIGHT 1400 OU.AllSt. Nlw .. 011i 1Ac.. Y J::AG 1'4 ll It EAL r Y. ••••••··~··•••••••••••• 11 .1 l;tr!!l' lot llw IH>ol ur l'ruli">""n.111 1 grnomt'cl ~ > W '."\E H \' ;-.. I() LS lam rm. tl111 r111. 111,10) 111!-!hly upi;rd 'd hca1•h ___,_..,._.. --5.51J.til7t Nl-:ED A R1':NTAL? j(Jr<fcn' Tn· .111~ ot f1•1" v.ml.... haml ... oilw tlt·i·ui Cloi-t• lo .\>JllU) IJeathl'"· :i up~raJn •. 011 cul tll• sat'. home with rna11y !'Sim Commcrcl• --2--0-.,.-A-L_O_T_ We have them! 1-4 Bdrrn 01·ass111m•:s:11.1110t11.111JI 111 1Hh 111111· ... ,111d t1•x bdrms. ta0111\· room ,\ppl. 1111l y 752·i l 2b ft-a lures <iskml( S74.SOO. Property ,600 .... Kids,pets,singleok. •>nly ~JIH' Cl"ncr 1\dl 1u r•'' I l11llr111,, lull urt•.i rht<f ,..·dr1-.im \\k!l.l\'c; Agt li31·3!IOl.lort;.lti 7114 ••••••••••-'• ... ••••••• '*'sciuesthouse. NEWEHA·fce 638-830tt earn' t>·•PL'r' Suhmil ' '""'' 1h11111).! 1.uurnwl k1ll'hen c;ard<'n p,1110. -. ------SYLVAN ------BAYFR (1 ) is a 4BR. Only -;--Submit' ~17 r,1!11) k1ICU\:ll ..... m1[y -room ;.i1, lJr i;.1raj?(' s.r.; .• oo Hand1 San Joaquin l'On · w ~a y i l y W•O 0 d t> d HEWftORT SHORES ONT SS9.SOO. Low down. TUST IN. l.;aurcl~oo~ ',., ... ' ' "1th r.i1St'dhl.'.i1lh IJ.._H, T.1rbt•ll, Hl.l'llS l'Jll do Leasl• opllon al l11nct ... capint!.201'1Sdl·n.3 WA,TERfRONT Olfice hl\_tld{'JU, s pec· ~ILOTRE1\LP'.STA1'!l pat1oh<>m4!. Unfurn1s he?-[~ ·1 tJllS40 li-'ll !Jti2-551;ti toda~·s market \OJl~l!. l>drms. and 1L'" in 1m ... right o n the be:irh. lacula• .vi4~~Urfou!' 540-0MS 2s&.on . 3BR, 2BA. l'oun-111Pil: TARBELL o~El_t"_~_l'_H_ll_H: l.o" ~~~~~l_o_r_io_r sal~12 _!_6$1~ ~~'.~'ate cvnd 1t 1011 ~ ~:~:s,~~~Yor~~~.~dr~,c~k~ ~:\i~~:n~~!c~~~.lnt --------~7r ~~~~~~: r;:,r.•u;~;~: ____ ,,,_ d o 11 l I bu' r I •--------•I tt•'ll ,.RU.._._ EASTS ID E C · M · te nnis courts. Asso. du-.: " • . l' '· , L'\\' l' l'k I' t 1n,I(. Owner an\IOUS . "'""'* ""' TRIPLEX. S8100. nro~s ~,-l>rclrm' lln·pl.1t·l· oak r. Ill\ c eri; R-...it L7r.6 I .. ,, paid Lease 5425 mo. + ATIENTIO... r1la11kl'll n'"'"'· 11·1'.1ndJ. T"nhm :!llr. i.!ll.1. wet .A.•~••~ " . S95.000. l'.111 PUESTIGt-; CUI Of' v ~ 61 Remo de led S82,000 deposit.\>. "!!1 lnColifornia" \i1tPllr.in.r' '""'or h.•r_•.r.rk chn _rm h.s t, loc I 'V._...,..._. ... ._ llOMES,til5·00IH ---. ------8-17·2ll59orll ll92·3710 C.:allS44·SJJ(i VA IUYE•S :i.>114 "' ownr110..iu2tl Pt F'ASUHL' P AJ \CL'. ---Commt<rc1a l Jui 63xl25. -------" l'r11fi·..,~t11111ll\ ln1l"·p1l ~~l!\M) :-ubmtl''l ,1111<'11. .•. I I :h' ood .. :d hl ... I• c..ln~yownl'r.5Br.3B<a .dtn· Near 19th & r amona.6-P lex Costa Mcs a .lalboolslcmd 3206' :1 tHlrm, f.1m l.11dh·n I •h.11 m111" .·1 lit -·· IS, 111.THS. call ,.._ '·" e. u:s . w e • s near '"" de n xtrJs HV + S25 (""' ''"' "'5" 51-9 000 <•o 3828 0 I 1. ' ' " w---" . c v ..: I d I ,., . . . ~ ...... .,,,.,,., "· I • • .,.. . • wncr ...................... .. ~1· u•lllUS 1111. \\II lo.11 ht•lnt' 11-12:?~..... ATTENTION uvus 0 e .,l!(' u (!( boal storai.:e.511!·3161:1. A r . I \\,1lk 111 !"lnwl 1111 .. 11 1 .. 1 .1 <II'~;' lltll ~I-...,l, 1113 pn,·atc road·· rtl'hly ap· ---I P __. 2000 gent. rm.on Y _ 2000 11'1 ft. Childrl'n &pel~ 11 .. 11 ~d1uvh ,.hopp1111: ,, ll:!1o w \\ it-.un (' ,1 IMVESTORS! po1nled 4 Bdrm. conL.em· rOn SJ\LF. or 1st> 3 +dt'n. ncome r0 r• •Y • 67 Steps To Sand ok. 3 hr, fam rm, 2':"' ba. 3 p.1rk .... S-IG-17'>1, •""8 33'i I I\ 17 •Ito.I:! Ill• I. I B II rm . Ur a cl fo r d porary home. with,..irrat New cplS & pu1nl. Walk ••••••••••••••••••••••• . p u ti OS, b UY VIC w s . 'fo•vnhousu end unit. 'icws. Owner must sell! t o bch . t enn. pools. i7uniiMotcl//\pt S650/ofr. Avail Nov. 5th. C.:m·N·cd patio. ncnr pool Sl!IS,000. 1'42·3850. Pro1>erly llou~e 8 PLEX $400,000. SIOO,OOO Dnwn Call Now! 675·8771 -· Walker 8 lee Real lstate Ph:540-36«6 4@~Y We're here lo he lp! MOVE UP to btl1 5 bdrm • :i bath home m "''"rahh• I-'\ Fiim r111. "t•\ 11.11 • h 1 m"lr .. 11lt1• \\ •' "di cu .. 1r i1lnlt•t-~al,• ol \ t1UI l'I e"•nt ho1111 ~. "' Ii .• 1 !lblt ~Til Sharp adullll only {'Ondn In J\tarincr''I Cove. 2 l.arj.lo l.>('dtcl\1m11. gurrle11 pnllo, S{llll'lllU!I I 1 VIOi: room. f'u 11 pr11'•' S-t:J,000 JIY,{, clown. !!li2 771111. Dmt0 Point 102 6 ••..........•....••..•. Ocean View Dup~l Hr Dona Pt. Marino 2 Yl'.i r-. oc" . .2 lkd r m' , d t' n . I 1 1 ha I h'. fir1•pl:i1·Ps. :-.p.1nou,,, ~11:!.:JIM) World W ide Brokers lotboo 6 73.4545 • !,OT • C II t·r J0.000 Sq rt i:.1011 P•lll n11·1c1 JI lo• .111111\ tor 't1111•, & of 111 t' hldi:~ 'i~1 INMI .1,1, W '1·.1h H1•,oll\ ·1111r1 l'o,1,t II"' So I .11~.1111.1 1•1•1 :!:!Ji l' 11' I •Im II 11 m " ~ 1• .1 r \lannJ :i llr ~ H 11 H l111k ~1•1· Ill -'l>PICl ~;fi.~JO (\\' llWllt I t I 1 !1'1'7 H!.1$7 nr rt \ 'l'lll 111; I 1034 ···•···········•······· an!l cluhhou:;c. This in· -----OwncrC;irry Balance Real Estate vcslm1•nt i~ onl' that will a Rr 3 Ba on waler. Nwpt Brend & butler units in Agenl673·4S45 2 BR, den. frpl. Single by IUl-'1AV pract1t·ally 1•arry itself. S hrs, $97.500. $32,000 Oran~e County t1hows gnr. $435 l\to/ye:µ-ly ITlLY.ru IL'., a l'l:in !J5 that Is in dwn. h:il 7•' i' ''•no points. i;ood :.pcnduble. 832·2823 Loh for Sole 2200 3 BR, 1 ba. Single gar, ('XCrllt'nt condition. Att ----------Clbhs e, pools en. 12PLEX ••••••••••••••••••••••• Frplc.Winler,$425 KMOCK! KMOCK! now 111 orllL•r 111 i:t•t u tax loguno Niguel I 052 6-1.2-i~:l Four 1 Bit. eight 2 BR. LOtS COST ... MES... WILLIAM WINTON Wait till vou sec this aih•unl<Jl?l' hrforc J!l77. ••••••••••••••••••••••• apt. complex avail. 15% • "'. "' Real Estate 675-3331 l\nm•k Out! Low W '!!. l'riccd al ~7,!ISO Oy owner , 4Bd,-2Ba. HEARTHEOCEAN Down good tax s helter . Twovacanl,l ·w1tholder J h d r, l' or 11 e r Io t . L.ai:una Ni1:ucl, Lns Ser· Cu!>lOm 3 Br. 2 I.la, f3m 832·2823 house, next door ls newer Balboa Penins411a 3207 Uc1·11ratnr carpl'ls & ranos . Vu. $1!9,000. rm.Sl20,000IC':JSl!Option 24UHITS construc tion. Can be ••••••••••••••••••••••• !lrnpes. \'t•ry shaq1 & 49.;-4800 or offer. 645·2016 owner bought as a package or 3Br, 2 bath. Across from rlr.on <1tartrr home. J Yr -------aJ.'t. Eight 1 BR, ~een 2 BR separate. Call for more Bay beach. Lovely view. \\.irranty' l:.111 ('Oll(•t·t , '.\Irrnardt Bav TcrraCl' 4 w/pool, renls p.le~11.~nlly il)fo rmalion . Agl, $490yrly.67S.1304 \•.K 11:11; i----------br, 3 l)a. ::.119,500. Prin Rc:rnl duplex, 3Ur, l 1"'.iba, low, should' bo rau;ed. 673-7601 i BUST MY BUTTONS onJy. OpN1 h~c Sun 1 t, P''l patio, lndry f:l t . Wouldgiveg:1;1penda-Qualnt2Br ,SOft.towater,. 1;.,11l. \\'1th Thi· ~11111 l'f ALPINE VILLA ~~05SI J~pm,..:_____ 117,000 Owner. !>52·7351 hie. Good reo al a rea. Momwtain De~rt 20S E. Balboa Bl. $300. t.-11 w11h ""I•· ,t,1111•.11,1• The design 1s !luperb, orti4a·2.130· ----l!.'.t!·282J •• Resort• '2400 963-8.17?. Jl 1•11tn & h.1l1·011v ovc•r frnm lht• :-oaring cl' 1 1hn>1s Oci•:i~T~t!ev~~~ J BR Near Golf Course ~UPLEX H.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -P-o-ln-t-. -4-B-r.-3-b_a_,_b_l_k_lo lrn•l.1ott ll\tni.: room to tlh' lw aut1ful ,rick Avai labl e for only $75 0-00 Beaut1·rul new .__h.ttNlt/mo. I I I I Zll.\, lrl! fn mrm, frplc. By owner. T.lc.tul1ful 3 Rr . .,,,0 cl\I\ ., b . d • , "" ..,.,., ~ .. p,1r,111• m :tl>lc•r \U1t'' rp c.r .1v1,n1t rm 'ch11!~~g lush npls. This lo,•l'ly 212 Ila on '·• Jere, l'UI tll ::::·=:3· ou mil own. homu furnished w /82 675·52-16 111 lt•HI htlllll' (.;h1·1•rful rm' am1 v rm . uvuY s ac lot 2 fpk's, hui:c °"'·~ ac r es overlookin g t..111·h1•1l, "'II I> It "1th loll, launch·y rm & :'i home rs pracl·ll un-GUEST HOMES beautJ·rul Apple Valley, Corono ....... M-3222 I.,, I' r hl'llc\Uhly :it $77,500. F.1 m )(m, lit t' pal11 ""'" -l'J's th1 u l''..imoly rrn, "'rms. .nnJ( your amr· Uo11'1 w;ut on lhis one. w/new d••l'klnl!, gar <I II ave sever a I 1tuest 5.700' high Jn the moun-••••••••••••••••••••••• T <' r r a r ,. P .i t 1 '' • ly, lur1i:e or .\>mall &!>cltlf' opnr. mui;l st-c ! t>nl homes avail. in vario11s taipl. 10% will car r y Spacious 2 BR,+ ram-rm. 111a11 1cured yar d s '"comfort & r•"·:.,y. S!lJ.500.f.t6-4:i71i are . Pranke Cou t bMiince 536--9lS3days w/ lge private palio ••.11 -4.t5fl l:loselo44acreparkw1th -----1 LA<is.R fv ·d !1 y, :;;:; · . ood b ml g f l • -------i pools & tennis $116,500 .----CURTlS BAADLEY OP EN llOUSE . '• versi e. Vanous Y. Acre lot Jn beautiful w u n mip ace ~co~REALTORS I si>:es 1ro·rn &-~00 beds. s··1 I k _,,,. d + aaragc. So. of Hw • E3 •99-4584 Daily 1·5, 2011 Kings nd. Will show good rj5forn. T10vPer a$17e00s. ~·E uiowln. $425 mo. 673-6651. $46 750 $7900 DOWN 3 Hit, hu~c fam·r m Call Bob 1.122823 • • m q y. , 2 bedrm. Townhomc wilh 552·7000 v I ~ w + Inc 0 m e CA~ c'o•ST 49S-4166 Bob. Shorccliffs. 2 nR. de~ 2 Ek'-drnom. 2 bath, in· MONARCH BAY Sl99.000 .. Jim Bor, A~. IN E EHTS spacious llv·r m . gian t <llvldual Condom1n1um . 2 new crpts, new drapes. TVHJ LEL. A.C .. f' .. · . ·.< .-.. VIEW V STM Rmte:Ms Farms back ynrd. Pvt bch. $57:'._ new painl. T ako over CaU ll2·Zli3 '"-... •• • 2700 898·3533 or 675·8824 or: rar 11aral(e W/l'l{'c door FHA loan & owner will Put in a pool w/rnom to Son Clemente 107t. ----------1 ~· • 67s-6224 opt'n\'r -hi i:h ly up hc•lp fin:mre. $331 . per REA LTORS _ spare for garde ns & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··~··••••••••••••••••••1---------- iiradl'<l, !'nrpcllni:, wood mo. includes all. 136,001 -JlUt l os. J Bed room. 2 Bdrm hm1!le . Uy Owner. 32 UMITS $400mo. lge modern 3 Br3 punl'lmi: & mirror~. En 1-'ull price. STYLED fur mu I di ni nii room Primt-IOI.'. tmm:ic concl. 32 Condom.In I um uoits. SAN LUIS OBISPO 1nnndrydp.164x.2r.1M.8ga.r, patio. JOY tht' community pool. 531·5800 IY lnl'l't'll~ tu outdoors. $62.500. Call 498·:l005 for Separate deeds. All rent· 991 JU('UX7.i, le11111s CllUrh & lnternotiond Reol FOR THE flprfr('t for ('nlerlaining. 11ppl. Will ,l(o l-':111l ! l'<I and in C'XCellent condi· ~Acres w /4 yr old 3 DR f ,Q.. K€Y clubhnu~c Wh o'" first'! SJtiO ooo house, l!ood hideaway. View o OCoan & Bay • . ·v __ P.•€•A-LT•O-R•S•A-•I ~646.n Ntow-'JH>!~fkl:!.T· Estate M•twork TIMES . BY OWNER ~~~', ~~1g_ra.,~ :;~teP~~fco! Presently rented. Could New 3 br, 2 ba, unr. i1r be used for lra>t sheller & rurn. Yrly or Wntr. Walle: -------A ho m e tha l p rov•·s Z Br hou"'r· $$2,500. Walk $.910,000. Cn~h inves t· lo Bi c Be h Irvine 1044 sophisticated . modern to "Riviera 8 ('llch". men~ for 1976, $100,000. future developme nt. . A orono ac or- MESA VERDE ANYTIME ••••••••••••••••••••••• :ctylinll can be bt'autlful. 496-7222 831-0836 Ocean vu. Pnmeloc. Gd ond additional Invest· R.V. Purk or Camp China Cove. Duplex • Pleasanl 4 bdrm .. 2 ba ' ---------c T"or $99,500, e nJOY 3 S% fncd yar d . Covrd rMrlt In 197'7 or $59,000. ground. gar, fiUndOt'k, Crpl. bllni.. Spot.less. Li:c . lot, lie.-1 __________ 1 BDRM$ .. z bat.hs. a tam . ._.1 •1 __ V' I patio. Very clean inside. E1tccllent. location. Hold PORTERVILLE ~:=· mo. S75-4868 or tachedgi1r<1J1c.Sllv.ooo rm. whh r1rcplace. First '""h•vn 1e o 1067 lmmac cond. Open hie for3t.o~yrs.andthenre· latboa Boy Prop. Smart &. Modern. J Jlr, dJss condition' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sal/Sun. 149 W. A•e sell. No management CITRUS RANCH RealtOf's Townhomc with view. AF.GEAN HTS. patio Cornelio. S .C or call headache!;. For af)l>t. to Prime 1>'.V. !or ation. ho me. 36R 2UA. ten· 498-3006 see. (Pr tnclpals only). 131 Acre working citrus * 675-7060 * $M.000 Alf' !IG3·6767. ms/pool. Low dn. pymt. Coll l'hll McNamee, ranch with packln1 _________ , ----StB.500. 24?Gt Daphne E . Architect dcsiirned. COD· Village Real Estate, plant. 60 +Acres avallu· TRY TlllS ON 581-2818 lemporacy home on gOlf ~ ble for development. 2 14iAtoePcmnsufa 1007 ••FOR LOXURYu •---------• course. with ocean view, ---------1 "-· 1 1 ed u••u-•un••••n••• l'OOL-JACUZZI-2000 Mtwport .. ach 1069 3BH,28A.Sl4$,000. ~~ nuuses, 3 akcs ocat 7UNITS·S295.000 KQ. rt. d ecorated to ••••••••••••••••••••••• • lttOWHltt on property. All cqOlp- 2 br, frpl, ••r, klds, pell! OK. Fee Malo Rentals, 540-5310 harming , seclµded Jasmine Crett, 2 RR. 2 bn. condo. f'or1nal din • den w/wet bar. 2 beaut. pat.loll. Avoil. now. $7SO. AgtCIW~30 Ba11rh CoH11gr $6-1,500 perfectio n, cathe drnl IYOWHER 4AHCHOIA•• bll'RlCIATIOM menl~AL~~istrty. 5Blt.,3b11 .$t84,.'i00 ceilings, custom dra pes, Bayfronl 118.CoUlns I sle. ~s NtwPOURPLEXES.Jn tHVISTMltCTS 4 8R.3 bo. S\37,000 gas BBQ, auto. gar dr. 11.ie.73c, .... 1111a"-.fe.11...aE trade or fin n nee . 1.7.,1· .. -, .. ·,"'"'!""" ... 7,7•1 I liu otln1t o n Beach . ASM.ll'{E en EEK'S 2nn &tdcon $121l,5()() Unbelievable. S911.50o.i---------IT~ .. ,.,,..v.,ua; M" $298.000. 673·1'170 or .... -IAver :tge your money 132·2823 most. popuhir m odel-· Marsh nil tuly 6754000 P h; !'62·77SI OPEN DAILY 558·8723 with 10'.4 down. 1---------rlan 2 wllh 2 bedrms &: -----JNT'I K f: NETWO RK den; on green~t wl\I\ Coronodel Mar 102,1~--·-· -··----• llA.M. T06 P .M. * A·FRAME * Ocean-City View KEHTllOGRS R.d 16tat• ooean vlew from puUo. A. ....................... 1--------1 . BIG DEAL woboeRIDGI 2·~ly. 3 BR, 2 ba. Wolk. Your rtlerlcb w1ll dri" REALTY 84Ml00 hch•MJC 1100 on*y"canlrnly8l1 .. •nm11 ... ' lpen('rludmct~. DON'T IUY SUPER LOCATION It's a blit 4 bedrm + de11 to occon. tennis & pools. up tha htn to your new ••••••••••••••••••••••• .., " ~ A DUPLEX IH COM homr llnd when you sec It Wurmlnitlon Mod el B Necdll TLC but u "whale home nnd ~Y "Wow!.. Wlll Duy.~ll·Exchng o I • a m e n l t le s · n-r . Ouutltol 4 bedroom you'll 1tay"lt'f'Cudeal,". wwnhome.Xlnt loculioft~ otabuy"nt$72,000 sr.ectaculor, one of·tt S, ... CIOUS uny realorpc.rsoilal Clubbooae.pooljacun1. '"'ore y()u \'C' ,11N'fl OUr horn", only " vn1•r~ 11)(), """ h ' Ch 0 •• pnr dCS no·0 ~ ..,.......,,.. h le--'·cou.,.• oce1111 vll'w 1-.:ii·h unit 11 ~1 S .. 000 .,.,." ... ere usn t lm~n 1mch o :S.! u "11 .. C.4YWOODWLTY k nd vh-w nt • never 4-PLIX 5-PllX ,,...,,,....yanyw ere. ,,...., ..... hairJ Rr.2 n u,\\/ralmo!ll ,_Uf<t'ot~~ ~ an Ideally located and Call Steve, <21:1 )!122·1068 *541•1290 * ait11ln price. lmmnc. ~ SlOE·RY.SIDPL Jl'a.n Cal.C~t lnvcstmcnt COLIOFMIWPORT 2000 liq, Ct • 2 frplt"• wet ";"i{~-iU'Fll~~· . decont('d homr nn the or !714)5.'i2 4000 ----ready for occup"~cy. tuuc locuUOft ln Hunt· 114.832 2&23 llALTOllS b1.1r,,lndrv + ovc.•nltel ·-·----•J1'11r k t•t f or qu i l t< tPYOU 01)\'n ltou!\e Sal/Sun . I ll ... _ .. ,.,,. •-;1t..a..-.t. 2.SUE.Cstt•wv,COM ·' 962 4411 t:U)54 some• me Lt!l'll make a Call for more deta1t1 n~ton ar vvvr He• " ........ ' <'U 1o1aral{r All for • • 1 · Vouclon'tnl•('d·11f(unlq haveuservkotootteror 4~1,....,_, .. r.,.,.... Orcolunll3w)lhcoMln _,ed ltoO 675-5511 $14!l uv. Tot I en• .,,,..,. deal call "dr"w , .. ~. l " when °00 o......i t II I d '"" ""°V' .,..,.._,.. 11 • T h 1----------• •"""' .J r ~ ~ R.cl C t " 0 , ,.._.s o 11r • p 11ct• nn 1.1 come. u r ry . ef ••••••••••,•••••••••••• mo ~."°°hkndlr•. Cnll Th<' f ustcst draw rn the arpe l)leco an ud In lhe Onll.Y In th<.• D ail y Pilot • won't IMt. Call TOBI; Sl~OOO CASH for units, H•~uomolhln«youwant own<>1 <711 1493-4814 l'r111 Wcst. .. n 01111.Y ruo R""'" tll-3310 l'i~~-~i Ad.s! C:ill now Classified Seclloo •• -SELL idle iterd1 with a ?t~ .. ~?Y et 84GVn. 1_.sttttl abo". strip to lt'llf Claulfied a.eta d onb'· Cl.Asslrlf'd Ad. 64% 56'78. t"-~~~~~~-·1-~'""~""'~'""~----Phone 842,$618. Dally Pilot Classtried Ad -. ~ stores, officH . 64o.8300 ll well • .U.$178 • •• -' ( • .JO DAILY PILOT Tu.adey. N~mber 9, 1 m tto.H U•fwwlaa.d HoeHt U•fw..W.cf Ape fMSah IWlhhtrl ~h u.i.tw.. ,.,....ah u.funL ..... faoe•te u,.tlra. •. ' ..................................................................... ······················j······················· .....••••••••••..••...• ·HoaetUafwwi1"1• .._..U.fw htul HomHU.f••••d lnlee 3244 t4 ....... ~L. 3•6t •-1.och 3741CostaM.sa llJ4 C..toMua 3124 .............. _. J140 ...................... • ~............ ....................... .. .. ~ ~ '.6 ~ •••• .,!' • 3Jl.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ........................................................................................... . C-0...dtl M• 3222 foual111tt •Y • ~ 3244 ...................... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• n TL8EROCK, .VJEWo'· 3 BLtJFFS-3 Br 2\11 Ba tam Oceanfront bach Btlldln, BBAND NEW ........... ~~ . ' Edt /Jt okb et ur 2 a, am rm. inc . • li te cooklnt; Also U'2 br Delu110 S br, J.,. -·ell. 3 BR.,.aln. rm., ram.rm., n &~r b r~ b u: l • * •E...,.."'•S * llm, li;e yard. Nr tcnnlll rm. form. dme, )'1'1)' 1st . opts. UtH .• incl. tl9S lo Lowe It and dbl1u .. paUo,frpJo.17l.3 lrpl., 3 full boths +•ow· ~'W"t d r. i~is/ c, " "'""" & µool. ~15 mo. S200Sec. 644·78971..ves. s:ns 497.3195. 536-0321 Al abama. SM·Std or 111~ t'cnlcr. Spacious • n ry rm, ~10 2BR.2~ho ........ $.52.S dt•p Aiit H.339879 WFSTCflFF 3 u z B · • MS-1718 custom home. odJ. to city ~ ~ 531·9~5 i.ot. 1 OR, den, 2 ba •.... $415 --·-, • • r tc· :i, H•wport .. ach 37 H \ 1--------- Erk, 2 bib. rrom beuch no fee. 2Bll. & Pool. ....... $475 Ur 2 811, on t'ul d~ sac. tva~ rm, hcust ki hlb. ••••••••••••••••••••••• me It ? Br. 1 ~ b a. Ne• amed coll"s. & to Rocke, br. 2 ba. DW, 2ntt.l'lan A •••..••. s.soo 11tc yd. clo.,l· to schls & a to s ops, :sc "· IEST cpU/drps,dryer"relrt&: nd. lhruout. ~ pc R/0 DU cp•-dr"" ... .,5 3HR, 2 e ............. $4SO µk . $425 . 5S2 Ot\30 art hbrn;~ .. Grdnrrt i.npc~,· $700 IUY Incl. Now paint. au. mo "' .. .,.,, ...... . · ....,, ... ~ . ..,, · 2 Bil & 0~11 •·•SO 7PI\' ino tHn·&lSlla ti " C"ll8'8·51.25a1\5:30. . · . ._. .. on~......... oo;t~ « 531·9MS Al:l · t: • • .. • • • • .., 1• Somo peaplc say you itot 5~ the J'Xlfhw,,vs of ti plr1e forest. Meander pmt .. KJNG Si 2 Ur 2 Ba, pvt No tee. J lJR, 1''U, 2 lla. ' ... $4!>5 3248 2 nr, 1 l>a house. $360. whnl vou pav for! We of. tumbling waterfalls tind quiet pools. Lls1cn to th~ '4 llockl to beec:lt ----------i Sun Luis !t('y •····· SG~ lolJutto .. ach Avail immtid. Ope n 1 " d pullo, y11nl; l:Jr. ulll rm. Huntlnc)ton •och l240 .UHt, F R . • ....... ~t.O • ••• •• ••• •••• •• ••. •• ••• h ou 11 0 S 8 t 1 S un 3. 5 for mor(', And lhe prtco is soun of bubbhng str\'ams dnd growing lhhl9$. z br, palnlcd, drapes, S.150. Opn Sul & Sun. 428 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 BR .............. $475 3Dr, 2b,i 1 hi bu.It! home !>IG.Jl6G leu. llh'mbershlp In a )bur adult er.,~nl home At Pln~k ~llage Is crptl, l ba, CU llOve. Orrhld.M1·4117 • • 1·ur, 2 Ba, avail" 9/15. Md wtihaveothcrsror Ocean&. coastal views. Heal"? t:lub. ·A t4?nnla etotalretre.t1.L Here~coneajoyunusuaJprtvac:y · closect .aar. No po\.s, ne> · l • r <.: h 11 d e I com • lmmc..'<laale occupancy Wa~her / dryer $480 BEACII Llving yrly. 2 br, club. l-ree tennla lesson1. and lwru"•. ....., • chUdrcn. 1215 • depoclt. ¥..xdU51VC r v111c r rraCl!, r c n 'W c. '"'. 8 . SJ~o 3 b s·2" A • Bllliarda. Swimmln... ., ~l2tbSt&Pei:an. hlO executive 4 Br. 21f, $-UjS/mo.636·5070 4!.. .. -4&1 ti-tl·~ r " a. &•· Golf Driving Hang~. Ba, lg. pvt pool, walk to SBR vacant near bcac·h. ' Co:llll Hoyu lc. wh1tcwutcr ,Saunas +Ji' r e at ac-A RECREATION PARADISE. TIA.Otennlscourts.' (II!.~ 3 Br 2 Da ~ rro l>cach :.hopping & pork l D ''"b i • .. I Su DBQ Swimming pool plus unique vollcYJall pool. JocuzzL "tc. rm, DBQ,• .... '""ty' . • · 3UA :\ 1•ar gar. Brick v ew, 4 r , 2,... a, $SM. n· livtl cs: ay s. .. -"~ ~mo. le.a::.<', ~..irdcn & pall~. $-175. 063-6372 clds wtr/~1"1.<'e\r. 499-3200 Let our specialized ren· Parties wil.h live bands. Sand YOU~U court. Mounlaln lodge clubhouse Hall + HBHS, $350. pool service 1nduded. «83l-072Q. tal serv)j:e find you FreeSunda.ybrunch. wlthflreploce,comiersatlonplt,bUUards.gym,aouna. _96W.;...._100 __ •_va_. ____ ~ chlldren & pets welcome. 1 Ufi. 2 bn, 2·story, with qu'1)1{ted tenant.a. Also, "75·3152 hUl!C' polio & back yard. Rancho San Joaquin 2 Br. House for lse, 2 Br 2. Ba, \\C have both monUI to Your rent doltars go even Hurry lo thll eood ltfe and I hen relax. Vacaat I br. a ba, f~le, • ''blks lob'h yrlylt:c2 Ur GuuJ neigbborhood .. 7 d\!n, pvt pall°" on GOif lam rm, ocean \leW, month & yearly leues r urther .. •A t errific FROM$26ST0$355 ~a.l~,a~Uo. 411 -2 Ha. W/0, puliu, SJsO Y_rs old. S4SO/m~. !'gt. course$495.640.0997 close t~ bc:h. $550. avml. Call llurbara or maintenance c.-ew, pro-t I ell H &.W N Le r>.. d a ama. . ' 644 83% 963·5678,Ask for Dick. 494·4127C\S. l:arol fcsslonul management ~nc~u ng e<it aler. o ~ iwquire . spadoua 3 Br, a ll atraa, mo. · 3br +den or 4 br, 2 ba. stare that cnres, and OnoBcdroom.OnoBatn AvaU now. Kida OK. s. or Hwy, charming Clean 3 br, 2 ba. cpts, 1-'.R., D.IL, frplc. s:igsC~~an 2 br, frplc, ocean lay&ltochRealty friendl y ndghbo r &. TwoBedroom.Tv.ol331h $265• Cont act Terry newer 3br 2hu lndry drps. enc l patio . mo7S2·6800;cve&44·4663 \1ew, $!ISO . South ~~~~6~7~5-~3~0~0~0~~~ Models o!>('n d:ulv ll>-7. 1300Adn11is Ave .. inCosl6Mesa, 84.2·8328 . : . . $345/mo. 963-4569 Laguna. (213)284-5966 # Or eo11~ no pets. $495. G75·G!>OO __ S3l·!ISIS A.gt. No Jo'ee. LEASES AVAILt\BLE -~-------Sorry, no one und\!r 21 & , across from ar1ge Coast ""'!S" 1----;;;._-----1 Live in Irvine Village. Spectacular ocn vu, 3 Br no pets. Roomma te between Harbor and Faltview. • Co•ta Mesa 3224 we have homes avail. for 2\.'l Ba. fplc, dshwshr, San Juan . service nvailable. MOil· (?lq) 540 !300 Hufttt~ ••••••••••••••••--••••• FOR LEASE: 3 bed.rm: 2 lca.!.c in .. bltns, 1059 Santa Anu, c-.1 tr · . 3278 Ui·lo-month occupancy. · · NOW REN11NG H.tHMlr 314Z ;\I ESA DEL l\IAR, 4 Br. ba, br1tnd new, 1700 sq.ft . Walnut Square S445 mo. 75~·51107 or •••• :!:! •• ~•••••••••• · •••••••••••••••••"'••••• Fam Rm, bltns. fplc, dbl Landlng home w /3 car Rant'h Cul.Homes ti42·8907 Oakwood Garden Apta Costa MHa 3824 Costa Mesa 3824 NEW 3 Br, z Ba Oondo W i!:tr w/opnr, "1cd back yd gar. $525/mo. incldg Dei!r11c•ld Univ Pk NEW 3 Br 2~ 83 Twnhse, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• lo tennis, poo\, Jacu.i&L w/fruil trees. $425, 1st + gardener. No pets. CUlvcrdaJi: Cul.Park 4 Br. 2 ba, ~eon vu. Top encl dbl gar. d~h~hsr. 880 lrvine (at 16lh) ,.,. • ~ .-:--..,!JI!. $150. ee8-5'700evs. SlSO ctn. dep. No dog1. FOR LEASE: 3bedrm, 2 2 bdrm, your choicl! of 3 Of The r. Wot Id. Nr. dip;. fplc, pool & ,Ju~. l l114)~ --"" ~.,..... "9 3144 544-5100 bu, brand new 1900 sq.rt. from $340 lo s-100. schools. $500. 400-5809 nu Dana Hbr. Ref s 5ml FOX HOU.OW VILLAGE "* ---------' '··.odlng 11ome w/!ormal 3 bdrm. your choice or 14 L-aHIUs 3250 petaOK. $4!i0.49342G0 l700 l Slh St <at Dover) REflESHMINTS!! •••••••••••• .. ••• .. •••• ~Dr. l ba , cpL;;, drps, dab· ...,. f ~· ~· (714)642-8170 •-"'-~-wshr.stv. children OK no din. rm., tam rm. wet rom$335. to~75 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR, 1 Ba, many xlras. I 04M to 71'M SAT & SUH "--- pt!ts. $275/mo. 166 bar.$S75./mo. incldg 4 bdrm your choice orli.t1..!!Yr.old .. DR,fam-rm, s:tl5 mo. Jst & last mo. 2 br, winter rental $300. Secst~ty W•"4 JC>CMf!UAptt •. Jllagnolia. S.tS·1657. gardener. No pets. rrom$4.50loS495 lge yrd, frplc, cul-de·suc. down . $1 00 non· (213) 4'5-5963 or (213) For ..tT..-h RenUn&fr'omtaeO. ----------• Roberis Realty No Fees 1mmed poss. Bargain at reCundable re pair & 447.9443 Adult apts. Leuint pre_. EASTSIDB 3hr , 21hba RAHCHRE:ALTY $350.Long leasepossible. clcn'g.dep.830-0SGS ---------• Live near the beac h in a sparkling view now is a preaUgc Condo. l yr. old, parUy 848·1688 551·2000 S ubmit lltltS. Agt. w t ...... _ 3298 Bayfrontluxury2br,2ba, ne w townhome or your own'. Enjoy Irvine comnaunlty, turn. 5-175/mo. 54tHJG96 &U-7211 es mensrn pvt club. References. p · v o dburn · ng f 1· r e place Twenty Pergola. Culver ----------1.. . . UNIVERSITY PARK Vi ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avail Nov. 1 for l mo. ri acy' w 0 1 ' & Sandburg, 2 blocks ao. 3 BDRM . Fam. rm. fncd. S~>uing.2d~e·Wrsthi~i~~r. 111. 3 Br 2•1 Ba + IJonus LGCJllna HICJUel 3252 3 BR, 1 BA , dble gar, 499·4147 swimming pool & jacuzzi. Attached of San Diego Frwy. yd. Kid s O K. 2J03 r, 3 • Pu:. cp g, rm •. Xlnt Joe. A\ajl Nov ••••••••••••••••••••••• fenced yd. $.175/mn. lot. ---------·garage, 30' back yard. 2 bedrooms, l lh ~1100 Fedcnol ~.~7·67!11 ~ftizsb~~;p'mfocd yd , 1 . S495. 5H ·7014 orl'anoramiccoaslVu,2Ilr H.l::.Nl'twork 5Jl ·5800 BEACJIFRONT 1 br for ,baths. Adults. Enjoy the luxury of a : . . 833·3215 condo + t.anat rm. Pool . mature adlts. S22S mo. ... •th th . t •t WOODRIDGE J bedroom nruok~1ew 2 Affordahlc$165 lbr kids & rec rm. l'acific bl Westminster Village Avl.12/1675-3824 nc w.-omew1 OU avmg oownt . PINESAPTS l>lory townhome St25. ls 1 OK ice • ·Sign by 11110.& ~cl SIOO. Vi ll a~c Adlls s385. Twnhse. 2 Ur 2 sly, 2 t•ar • • • Rtttts guor-'"d for I Ytor 1, 2 & 3 bdr m units. mo . Cc 11 tr a I a I r , pcM •.sg~ t· j 540.5370 J:'H El-: Hl::NT! 8t'£tut1ful f;.IU-lG44 &5411.2873 clcc openmg gur, 11001, NEWPORT DEAt:ll . 2 621 W . WU.., Coato Mesa l)eidgned Hke early rcfrigC'r.1tor, washer & ' am en a s. · 4 b<lrm. 2'.2 bu excrntl,•c etl'. W JD, 0 /W, l1llc, Bedroom furnis hed. .642-4991 California bungalows . dryer includl'd. Pool Nr.Ocean2br $28S.Kids , home 1o Irvine. J>cts,MissionViejo 3267 rhild.OK.S385.8!12·2438 S t e ps from l>eac h . Fl"om $?70. 11!> +:.pa. A mu.:.t l>ee! Ask p.:ts. sgls. Fee kids, ok! 2) rs new. 1 > r ••••••••••••••••••••••• COftdomi • $375/mo. Ai:t. 752·73l5 cC:sta Mtso 3824 Costa Meso 3124 Pineslonc. Ofc hrs 3-5:30 t1or l_!<>1b. orl. S75h2ir11!00Y lien· Main Rentals, 540-5370 leai;e. 551·2000, Agent __ 3 BR Cordova, view, front Unfurni':h:d 3425 CHARMING 1 Hr apt, 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• wk.days. 9·3:30 wknda. un, n~en ~. · 1 • courtyard Lrg fenced blk l t $l9c 552-<>400 $240 2 br, gat'. Kids, sgls. •Rancho San Joaquin lge ·d atios · $350 er mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• o ~can_. w in er ., New adul!Materfront. apt!! l & 2 br apls Crom Sl65.1---------- s.i:l5. l\lo. 4 lm, 2 Ba. ra.m· OK. Fee z Br 2'"1 Ba, fple, din rm, ~68. P 7 · P · Son Clemente. Drund new mo. UtH nol ancl. 673·6441 in Mesa Verde. Ueuuliful Cpls. drps, bltns. Kids ownhome 2 br. 2 ba. rm,evcryth1ng sparkhng MainHcntals.540·5:rrn Wf.!tbar,upgrades,pa\10, 3411 · luxurycondos,2llr,2ba. Free r ont ln el<S.'hgforllle landscaping. Excep· ok,11opcts.Callbetween Pool. nice area, $295. new. Vacunt & ready. 1 1 pool. S-195. t>W·0496 Hewporl Beoch 3269 c11sy walk to beach. Util housekeeping Share tionally rich interiors. 9 &5. 548·1>4!13 mo .• lndry lacil. ~ao i\l(t. 546 li&lO Two sty 3 Br 2 Ha. ge Y' ••••••••••••••••••••••• pd. S3SO-S400. Mo. WCP small hse ~'l blk bch F 1&2 bdrms from S275 . an 7. F'r I 2 br du' child OK Z car gar . $395. Nr. * E~CLUSIVE * OCEANFRONT VIEW Ab't.498-1522. 21-39 yrs.° 673·5040 days, Mesa Verde Villas, 15SS Quit!t Garden Trl·plex, ~~ · • • I• · Bushard. 846-9088 University Parlt CO\OO 2 + Den 2 car 67J.7493e Mesa Verde Dnve East. 2Br, bllns, encl. gar, ZY 3 Br 2 Ba, air cond, S?30.h-~ Village lll · · • 1 3Br 2Ba,2car cncl gar, v c 1 M •. <714 > lndrv.S225 mo.767Scott bllA~.lndryrm.nrfwy. '.\T:.11n Rcnt:ils. ~..t0·5370 For Lease 3 br, 3 bn, frplc , ( s l 0 n r or d m 0 de1 ) private par~ing, fu 1 patio. 2 p00ls, newly de· Lg 2br aiit nr. bch. "est .,,.~588:1 cs a· Pl AP.' 2 75l·JS25 <lays Avail now. $365. 963-2187 maint yd., cstm pool, security bwldml[. Lease, . $350 ~ · b h u .,..,.. • tr.JSJa-• ·1 _________ _ S275. 3 br dup. Kids, pets, walk to bch. SS50 mo. in· town home. End unit. S500 p/mo Agt G44·7211 ~~~· 546 34~0. m1 c . area. Winter $325·$350. HY uoT? ' . eves. leoch 3141 OK. Ft~. 1 d 1 Beautiful greenbelt locu· · · · _ · ' Incl. ulil. gar & laundry W " Dupl ., 0 1 8 "ncl \Jain Hentalo;, 510 5370 <' u <"" poo service. tton. 3 BR. 3 BA, sunken BLUFPS l·lcvcl 3 BR, 2 Townhous~ facil. Vti2·0505, 1115 W. Sunken living•room cic. ~ r 3 ' " •••••••••••••••••••••- &l2·5!18Sor 9GJ·2.'>IJ hvmg room, eo1y family ba. Lovely ~reenl>elt & u...L-'rh-..1 3525 Balboa Bl. Cathl'<lr.il l'C11ing ~ar, no petR .. S2SO mo. f!W 2 br, 2~ ba luxury h rm1n11 .. cu ~ th 2197 D, Amenran Ave. coixlo. Ocean view. Walk IT'S A HOME FREE room \~1t wood-burrung pool. S.525 At!Ui4'1·1133 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ON TllF. BEACll 2 -<lrooms. p; ba s 5Jli 06i0 or SIU 19'.!7 for to bch. All appliances •. . I llr. 2 1).1 . lri>I<' :\1any RENTAL SERVICE r1repl.11:l', plus anoth1•r ..,OW A-VAIL lluntinaton Be· ch 2Br L I So• U 'I Allache<J j.!arai:o appl ..,,.," mo or can be (urn. \lrJ~. ,\II i:.t 11uality. Lq, I 1rcpl.tLC 111 lhl' IUl'J!<' *... . * ,.., a • g i.luf 10. lo.5/mo. 11 Wai.her/dryer hook·UP .,.,...... "' l'Z 2, 3, 4. bdrms -25 Re"" master suite. all·elccln c: TllF: BLUFFS, S500 Lo 11·2 ba. new rpts & incl. ,\dlts. 67~H81.l5 l'vtyard "1th paLln L(',;,~ '"'am~d 2 "r. new 544-6899. i·ov " pal, t'lld ·• cnrc tuls. All pn cu ranges. k .t 1 AND r hi _,,5 h drapes. dryer & rdris in· -A 1 I ._ '-"' ~ u 1----------}J. 2 r11r~.ir w/uµc11cr Neu Ut!ach CALL I t'll'n res ) s1., pcrmont IN · t$275 C II \U ls.S:IMl.mo. :.hag & paint , rdrig, Niguel 315? ~l·clutlcll 1·ul·dc·:;ac. COLl.E<.:T :i ll96S.tlSti painted , tvo'! Use ot BIG CAN YON, $750 to ~6.si~ J;:~n30 • 3 SanJuon , FOXllOl.l..OW tndry. nr :-tores, ucllts .••••••••••••••••••••• ,. nose 111 w11':Z fr"Y ac community club house. SW.Spcrmonth a : · Capbtrono 3778 VlLLAG~ $215 ll42·127•i Scott PanoramiccoastVu2Dr , c:o:-S1:!5. 55IJ R9i9. 3& 1 Ur. $3.'>Cl & S370. Plush tennis courts . pools & HASTINGS & CO. BRANO NEW 3 Br2~ Ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 621 W. Wilson, C.M. 752·1920 ---condo+ lanalrm. Pool & .. • 1 rpt . fresh paint Sinizlc:.. jacu.czi included. "' ail.t Realtors 640..5.'iGO Vi mi from Doheney Sl. 2 Hr condo. completely ti<tl·499t or 6-l2-4221> BE/\UTtL•• ·L new bach rec rm. P acille bl r-.. 1sts1<I~. 2 AR hou~c, fl~· t'hildren, SK·ts ok. i\i.:l'nl, hie immt.'Cliately 3l S.')00 a Bch. & Dana Wharf. $515 furn, pool incl. $300 mo. r.... II di\ $38S ly ~60. 3 11.R hou,sc S3GS no fee . ti73.57·H, 531.H)(liO, monlh. 47 Acacia Tn•I!, Bac:k Bay condo tri·lcvel. per mo. 634-8282 S·SPM, Call 49'J·27SG "inpct51· .. 52F1r00ep. laG~c5·:82r5e6fri0gr. ~-l~c&~-~3 •1 Vuca11 1. C<i ll Sue ;.ll 5.')ot [>l93 lrvinc.S52·7SS2 3br.2ba,:lcar J!ar.Pool !i24·1012 Evs. ~ 5."0·7177. · . • + xlras S.150. 645·7777 South Laquna 3786 !l7~J·337G .,..wport .. each 3Htl 2 BR 4 I k d 2 Ur l 'h Ra, rptc, cpt.s, Su ns h1neyB ShalrlpblEnd R ••')5 Duplexe5 U.,._,. 3600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3126 •••••••••••••••••••••••' . P l'l<. ~ar. ·1 "· drp,;, $325 'llo pets . ~ondo. 2 r. a lns. 3 ,+ den or 4 r . ..., a. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR 2 h·a on the ocean ~t ... !'gb. S225. 631·21JU , Kli 'i!m c'"'.<I blks ncn. Co ~m pool, close to \c::irlr. Walk to be;1ch, Cd.M • Lg. 2 Dr •. 2 Ba. 2 r~ $10o unforn $600. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PARK HEWPOllT !;17ZSOt orK7tl·lOl.O ------Ir v;~~-No is e $325. pools&trnnis.&15·979-1.or ocean vu beamed CCII· ra ,· 0!l I . Ex.lgc2br,2ba.frplc. AP'4RTME"'S ---:>o:tt:i-: CLl-!1\N 3 Dr, 2 Ba, blS.~. tH2·59!ll !\lrs .Jarvis 1n"s frptc' 2 c·1r aftr pvt 0~r si::c1u!1 y, e e283vators. dres~m" rm. /\dulls + 1 l or 2 Bedrooms and J Br 2 Ba l>Out & lrlr ac· It: . , . . . 1 -... • • • ..... .. rec. ac1 1t1es. 4\IU· S ~ " '"~"· wtr rirl. bt & lubt, ~\:.'-\:we pis, new pant. TIIE Tl::RRACE beaut 3 llARBOll lllGllLANDS 3 bch privl. $445 mo. Pl..,""'R.,EK teenager. F'{om $285. Townhouses Ii.? ) fl. l!OOll 11 U. area . '• . ' G1e3203 "~ 1: Gas & W"ler pd A96 7379 From......,. 50 ~··~1 511. ;111.w ~195 mo. A~t. aw lJ lL Br, Cambml~e enrl 0111\ Br .rncit. hack yard & .,,. UYES UP "' · · ·• · · -· l till Cutt.ii.:e E ·:-.uh• --------on grnblt, wetb:ir, fplc .. palm. f pi e. wa lk lo Npl llL"-2Br, hcam ceil· A~tmenb E SUNNY Spacious new 2 Open9-6DalJy I br, 1 i hJ, cpl:. • bonu~ cvrd patio. <'Ice ~a r opnr. :'\fannero; School. library inus, new cpl, patio. gJr. Unfurnish.d TO ITS MAM Br, bllns, ocean view. Spa· Pools-Tennis «µ1 -. llrp!\, bltns. S<!:?;) room. dbl ~ar ' fenced Pool. pc, $.tZS. Ownr/agt & park, Ens1cn & llhr Hi. Nc"1 pets. ""75. "'5·1 .. "". ••••••••••••••••••••••• Over 500 tall trees "nd 10 ~Cl\ mo. 493-7""1 Across from Fashion 1.12 i>:!.l'.1 .,.,.,. ,,..., "· 12 1• ""·2!',.,., '"· .. S l"O mu G73·2425 ...., '" ""' " _, ~> Island at Jamboree on ,.,.,., ,.,., " .,..., """ ~ ~ a.oo Island 3806 streams with walerralls --· s J u1 ffll R d l'O,D<> .:i IJi · ~ l>J, l'lld 1 Ur. :1 n.0'000 :.11lt. l\UJ.!e TuRTLEHOCK Plan Ill. cvs/wknds. -Apartments hrnished ••••••••••••••••••••••• create a relaxing selling St~'.11~1 dt\~Joo ~~~~lde· ant7°~:J :4•·1 690°: . p,iliu. i:.ir \ilull:. only· ha1•k y .11 d . new 1•pt s. 4 Br 1hn'g &. fam rm. pvt Ckcanvicw Condo. 4 Dr, ••••••••••••• •••••••• •• YltLV 1 br. rear J.lUCsl for your spacious new 1 c 1 a e • · · or, _________ _ 11" ll\'l-•• .>It 111:.1. t'\C!-t clrJ>". paint 8791 S.1voy y d, view. S595 mo. chnrm. 21,,_.11a. potll, lert· lolboalslattd 3706 hi;c. No. gar . $225. or 2 bedroom apart · _::l>l::0'..'.:·~07~69~------1•--------• ·,.,i, iti:!i _ ------Cr 'l;r bchnol"' & fwy &l-l-iTIOor SS2·709:l rus. security. h.ids 01< ••••••••••••••••••••••• 494·452-1 men l s· Fr o m . s24 0 · Otn View. New 2Br. 2ba. P&HIMSULA PT. :. Hr . .! llJ, rim rm. frplr -~o ~o. lll2 0516 or l'h~y2 llr Condo.H·.ba. ~Chris,6H·~.Ai:tl::_ 2 BR. gar, child. sgls. BolbooPfltlnsmo 3807 K~~nil~= 0~~1~ad~111~; 8~~~r.j9~~~mo. 2BR.lbaunJSSOO yrly 111 h' 'm. "l" Iv ill'ror.1l· ~ OOR4i Gar. Nr pool. $325 mo. $275. 631·2011, 547·2501 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• only. Office open 9:00 lo ----------• OCEAHFROHT ,.;1 thru1111t, 11nmCllt.a~l' .illr, :!ha. 4 hlks Im m 559-4536. ESPECli\l.LY LARGI'~ 879-1060 Ocean fun $175, utils pd, 6:00. 2300 Fairview Hd. Hufttin«JIOft hoch 3840 3BR.2ba.$550 ••rn~::~~.;.:!)0 11"~;.,~:;;; Wl'~lnrn~tr!\lall,lblkto w th ·d T· h 3 11 4 Bdrm & Den. Front lalboaP'enlnsuio 3707 slv,rcfrig.Fee Costa Mf'~a . Phone ••••••••••••••••••••••• HEWPORTTERRAC~ 11111. ; - . JI• .. r -~ "rhl ... t'ul·d·"ilC' Kids noc r1 itc • wn me r yarrl i:; i.:rc1•n park with a ••••••••••••••••••••••• Main Rentals, 540·5370 5'5·2300 N c w o w n c r 5 of 3 UR, 2ba condo $SOO ,oft HI \I OK s.115 Ph Kol!t·91'>7 2 n.1. Att:. upgrades, \'ww uf the \\;1tcr. hoals •. · Beachwood AplS, 19132 SE.AWIHDCOHDQ • . ., --·--~ --lak('&poolpriv.&10·8542 d s 1 11 II wtNr~HlilJu~ell.St90 Bach. Sl81. mo. lo mo. EIP11ert0Mesa 1 2 eR d 2b3$t50 \kq \ l nlr, .1. ~r. -~a. Sh.1rp, squeul.y CIC Jn :I • ~lm1~ y g us s i ul1I incl. 1 Dr. ti73·5410 or r.ar. 12AO W. Balboa, Ap 2 IEDROOM ~ agnolia. H.B .. offer a 2 • en lw•Jt j('('l'"· s.t2.t/mo In· hr. 2 ba hom1• "/bright. J nr 2 11.1. College Park W.\1'EHF"RONT l10i\1t;S 6i3·7li2ti B.ti7W 160Agt/Owner .USO I ldrmll:.·rn br, 2 ba, JOOO liq. fl. IAYFROMTHOME 1hli.:_1:.-i1<ll'nl'r ,\~ent,no cheerful kitchen. dtnrng hmc. Pnrks, pool ~. tiJl·l tOO -. "" security apl w /pool. 3BR.2ba.$2000Moyrly f,.,. .>I'' lil""'i arl.'u & fr pk Pvt hack sthool. Clean S.IVO inrl Roch opt, furn. util pd, Corona del Mar 312 No children, no pets. Jacuzzi, A/C, d shwhr. STEPS TO IEACH >'I Only :$375. Call lwn moint. 640·1538 i.)I' mature quiet non· .. •••••••••••••••••••• Pool&Rccreatloo Adults only. No pets. 2Blt,2baths.$400 i :-. rt '\;~I 'I;(: ht•' 2 Br 2 B:t, 14-l>l l\1Z1 !~Ill 2.122 3 Bil, 2 bu. on lhc c;inul, s moker, S 17 5. y rly. 1959 Mcrpftt A•e, CM S250. Call new Mgr at i:rdn tip! l'nol, t•••' nn·.1. 673·5580 962·11100 l:;l l.'I 1111 W lllth St RE..,T'*'LS Npt. Shnrl.'<;. S.5:)0/\'rly, -Adult E ·stdc 1&2 br, encl ----------.1 l 1111 I 11.o t lf'an. nl'" do'c to ~rhl11. bch A. Townhom<' -----Wntr. No pets. Ukr, no 'll I gar. Pool, patio. IA1kc irpt'I 1111 ,nJ ~JIS mo <1 hnpp1 n i; s1 so mo :nm.1h,1, ~~s l~y,horc-;,:IOr, lbn,w/w rt'l'.liiSSSOO " l~~-~!!.. new.~OO-S235.644-0R711 ~~~4~h~L ~~i~~lllnhse, associated DllO KCll !. Ill A L T(JP~ l O•'· Y.. lolb•>•1 .. •1 1t.t, I Sh.1q14 Hr. 2 IJ,1. >.Ir.is. ... "" lst!.Al!rnl518·12!JO Nil. Bcach,l hr,$170mo ~ "v IYTHISEA %>< 11.~ lll>l·~ 2 HR, 1 ha.··· · • ~:i:,o "h '1 ~ c: I' l • r r PI c ' /\dull E·side 2 IJr lnhou~e. ----------1 2 tm. 2 H,1. • . . . 'rl:l5 w!'hr/dryt•r. pv1 rnmm C«ona del Mor 3722 CORONA DEL MAR l 'h ba, patw. encl. gur 2 br, cpts .• pool. ploy yd., --------- 11.1q 1 h"mr, c olli·~c l"OOL. 2 Br. lrl! <1110, rlhl l'.irk ilrl'A :i hr.<' h.i . ..:ar. R V totor,q:c. II pl• dhl 11..r All nc\tt ~:r.~ mo. !14~·25!15. <! llH, 2 bu.··· ~1511 lwh. gar, lluli11• fncd yd, •••••••••••••••••••c.••• 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. No pets. Like new. $285. no p els. 2 2 O ~ A • •DELUXE• 11nh &.llr~ lllln«.t:nrl. l.:i Cll(-sla hme. 3 Hr 1·•1 '.11 o ~11111 w ~ard1•ncr, »a nr <tChool & b<.•ach. ~~ w 1lhnut _ ~IH·417 I _ s.•:iO mn. 1>40.4543 2 rrn, 2 ha . ~Za St~,Utmo. 552 !11\:la. __ BAClL All ulils pd. $175. Pool. tennis, continental 644·0878 Dclawaru. 536·0959. Eastbluff 3 br, 2 b4f. i 1m,<ihn. . .'\.i2a 1;:11.2011. •5-17.2so1 or lirl•akf"st Someiieean •. --. ----Lcai:c. lncl.spac.mast.cr J 111' .,, I 1"'5 Bluffs J llr, 2 ha. near " "' dbl • .... >J. '~· 87!1·1060 Catiili·navi·ew~ .. close t Large3br townhouse w/2 •IRANDNEW • suite, din rm & 3BH,2"1ha. ~.-.o 1>Wl.o;ho1l~.S.S2.l"lpcr mo. ' baths. frple. palio &·18r $22Smo.2 Br$275 gara.ge . Auto door 3 llll 2 Lu c1·.11 -.: ... wly rC'ckc. 4;.l I 6.%8 Costa Mesa -3724 shoppin" &. fine beach. Id 11 Ad I d opener ava1·1. Pool •. "" " • .... · ------64<l·20l l., garage. ca oc. u ts. mo. Ix apl.s, spucious "" 3 or 4 llr. 21" ba . ._,.,;, 111.; \LIT 11 cw ~ hr . • •••••••••••••••• •• .,.. •• SJOO. No pl!ts. G45·3381 or rms . xln~ location nr recreaUon area. Adultll l\ptlll"'3Ur.tlplx.J•;,bll, Huntf!MJ*°' :rnrt.2h3 .. s.'!Ull twnhsc. Ni<'l! area. Ill $40.00WEEK &UP 837·9517 llunlingto~Cnlr, Beach only.Nopets. '1•.v.t, ~.llllO, i.:.ar .. lndry rJc H......1..::..-3242 3 Bit 21 · 11·1 ""'WI " . .11 •· 1 R 86• A I W ~, ....--.--• ' • • • • •• J'" l't•ll'.1:s. Frpl, p90I. $475 •~ll•u o"'-1 I Apts 2 Br, l ba apt. So. of llwy, Rlvd/Edinger Ave. con· " m gos ay .,).~ •. ISOuri.15·?330. ••••••••••••••••••••••• :tRn ,21,ba ..••.. $t'4111 m!'t-llll!li •TV&MnidScrvJ\v::lil ndlLc;, no pets. $285 mo. Adult 2 br w/cnc!. s.tar. venlenltoshpp'g&fwys. Managed by IHr :!DJ,rplt'.lgcy;ird. Dr. 3 h;i townhou~.-3 1\ll,21,hu .. · ·· "-'•W •PhoueServ,lildpool ·,. Call 642·5953 wkdys. 2009 Maple. S22"· mo. 846-4990 GranadaMgmt Co. ,~10..,.,e to ~chnols. SJSO, tst S p;trkltnfit Ill'" rond 4 HR, 2l\ b:i. ~Ii~ 11\.Jl llms. ft are 5 Hr. 2376 Ncwpe>rl Bl\•d . <.;~t 673-3983 or 645·9399 eve Mgr Apt D. Gl\·3277 -. • ' & l:ist 54G 03-.12 SI ;o Ca 11 .. (,. i I a .. • SlnAle fumily holllt'' Somcr~l'l mill. rwt pool . 548·9755or1145·3\'67 &wknda. 1 Br, gar & encl. patio. Lge2 bednearroobemac' ~.bath. ~wprt Shore3. 2 br. Z ba. ~6·1:171 orlU6·64$6evt>11. 3 BR,2ba ........... S3R!l AIC.a\,1iln11" 1!169 l'ort Ad 1 R r N '" Avall Nov 15. S31S mo .• LOVJ-..:t.Y 3 fir 2 Ba, mod. -a nn, 2 l>a ........... ~05 0t111h·1i:h. A~t 1Yt2·07~. SUS CASITAS 2 Br, 1 bath, sngl gar. N ...... ~ 'ust .. 1 el ~~ .. 224°0Pets. $265. • 53G·9987 lse. &46-847l eves/wknds l>ltns, ciib, t.l rp:.. tncd 1-1-324,. 3 llR, 2 hn . ~4\!l ----Minutes lo NO.'llncb & J pet.:;/chilrlren. ..,,._.. 1 Pl ...... >-1111: "'CH YE'*'RLY huck yd. dbl itar. wtr pd. :.::':••••••••••••••••~ 3 RR, 2 hu. · · · · ~I() Hlli CAl'IYUN TWNllSi-; RH rurn. /\dulLo;, no pcts. 6'10·72."W' 3BR duplex 1 t,'J ba cpts $l75 2 br, 2 bu, gar, pool, 01 ~ "" d l ;;';'!"' ltl'dl•in1ls Dr. $400. IRVINETllE R /\NCll :~~·~:~g~ .~: ~::;;n~()l~I·~,~ ~1.i,1;;~\i~;1~(';~ln 2110N1•wJll1rlRlvd.CM. ONBEGONIA' drps . frplc. b'itn s '. k~~ei~:n~~lll.540·5370 oc~:nn~~JJ~u~~~· :u~:\ i J4831S t.nrgec'lecul11o1o~home 1n •·flm111t11nd2hr.2ha 'J"l.YRach huuse inlrlr C'hnrmln112brm,corncr _552·73SOorG4S·2.130· port•h , $475 ~ utll. OUPLJ-:X 21\r, (pk. lndry :1elt't1. area. 4 Rcdroom. c 11~1 rpt & llrµo;. 1 .. 1w<·:-.t prk. SH~S. 1~urn, ul1ls.rwl. hll:. No pets or chlldrt•n nr:ind new 8 plex, 3 nr, z SEE THE SlA tl45·1S96 rm. SWS. t.l\'7 R Jo~nn. family room "C;lscadr" 1111cc ,1\'1111 in Ne" porls 350 Avtx·s doSl. 11ft4Pi\l ~1.ill. mnlhly. Ru, ownrs unit, ~l~o I& 2 2 Dr, dshwr, frpl, encl. ---------- 1 714 J U22 8303 ~vs . with lfardcncr. $S2!i /mo. most pn·~l1i:lo11s lll!w 1fr· COLI! OF NEWPORT nr apts, no pcl.11 <714 ) gar. View balruny. No Dench, Yearly 1i23.f>81 I 137 d~!I. 1\l(t. 752-7315 vclopmcnt. SliJO. IH4 !1_7U Newly dcco11. 1 br rluplcx. n EALTOHS 827·2479 pets. 205 15th St. 5J6.872!J 3 br, 1 ba, frplc. ---------Quiel . Empl'd ullult 2SlSK Cst.Jlwy.CdM or536·171R 646-921~ $375. Sl7S.Sot.:stShore..,,3BR. Oceanfront, yrly. Vix 4 0 /35. lld11 . Nn 1wts. 6755511 LGE 2Rrlnlriplx.w/gar. inrKDCK.I 48 2 o3 ISte ram rm. i.hurp & n llR. 2 ha. lower rluplcx . 5'18·10'..!t • nr shops. 1"'2 ~a. adlt.s. LARC:~ 2 Br 2 Da, yard. •1 dge rt y': \"O nt' Pnnl. lake, sec frpl , laundry room --BR d 1~ rds 637-8828 (7H> &: a r Brook h u rs t new Y dcrt •no pc s. r ~.a.3281 rvc'>. ___ Agent G7.5·7()(.(I RAt'h. type l Br trlr. Adult Old CdM 2 + en, • · &.ll:unlllon. $275. 846·9088 ly lllc. M25. 642·3443 23 C park. No pets. $140. + i:nr, no dogi;. $3GS. Dave East Sid<' 1 br. p001 Ind • :1 llr.2 b11 on cul-de-i;ac St. Univ .. Pk 5 br hm. Prime 't5 AMPU5Da:IRVlllE llurhor Vil.'w llllls. excr. ul1I ~8·617:4 ~·· AJrt. f•lt-7211 patio, i:ar .• $190. •AM 'new units, l & 2 Dr. '21 ~ l~ccrtnc~la~ ~lti!i~~!I~ In N. Mei;a Verde. Ubl loc. Pvt comm ten & home•. :l Bii, 2 ha .• view. • 800·5594. ' ' to $!85. 7911 Stork, otr iuy ron ap · ed fl"))lc, covr'd patio, nice pool. $595. 552·8587, OPEN DAILY L .. ~c. Ai,'1 . tl<M·7311;i Dano Point 3726 Co1to Mesa 3824 Deach Blvd . 894·6U8 baths. ncwl)" de~'?,raCal ii decor. $'125. mo. Water 752-9381 8A.M. TUfi I' \I ---••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR Furn &. Unfurn. C'urpcled & drop" ..... incl. 550 Ol2S --. --NF.WPORT Crri;t. 4 Br, s u p E n v i l )'a 2 nr. 2 l>a, pref mnturc o M;iture Adults. Gd. Joe. l bdrm, 2 bath Twn. lot appt. 340-8222 , , ---------Beautiful new Broodmoor 1'urtle Ilk ~ ul1'l!~nl: Jo'am km, 2'~ Da . Fpk, w/Courtyard l br pvt retired. No µCl$. n MS-0632 llouse. Very s harp. Child lm b /ftr'U •2 br t ownhou11c. Mesa home in Woodbrtdl(e ~'-'11rficld W 1vn ~ ;ir wNlrnr, full rec flll'11. no J>('lll. $185: 400.sitlJ or chlldrenS19S..642·SM8 . 0 .K •• nopeU.654·1l32 mac 1 rw • Wrde. Pollo, p00I, $29.'>. avallnble for lease. • ows n nuL .~11u:1rc $550 642·"2*1 r,732332 Utlle Beauty $145, stv.. Vrlylac.$17bmo. Childok.1133·11974 5450/mo. J ll d .. 2 Rn, The Ranch Callf. llomes ' 2BR, l BA w/crpf.!, drps. refrtg. Fee. I & 3 br apls. cplA, drpe. 673.()697. enclosed slrlum. Choice Grl't!nlrce RJcquetClub HEAR THE OCEAN .-..ltC)tonleoch 3740 blln11 . $265/mo. OPF,N MalnRcntols,540·5370 Family welcome, Mric. t:WPORT DEACH: 3 28R l\lesn Verde VillJ corner lot Nr rilay. Colony Colll!ge rark Cu!ltom 3 Br, 2 Ila. C!'m ••••••••••••••••••••••• S AT & SUN. 2 24 Matthews 8"0·3229 eve, Bedroom. fAmUy room. Condo-Pool. 1uirn)!c, i:round & ·swimming RANCH REALTY rm.s.s2Slacorlscoplion. SMALLBf:ACHllOT l':I,. ,\voc:ido.C.M. 28R 2!MTOWN1IOUSJ:: 522·3Sl4d1'J15 occ•n view, look·oul. yard Kid10K.$325.l'b . ........i u dNI l SSI 2000 R $2.'i~) • k Paho &Lndry Hkup · S45·3'711G an a 1~ pg~n rnrpc s • i;1s.201G oom11 wo! LOVELY II(. 3 br. ncwl S2iS 548.1971 l Rr. 1 ba apt, rnrd s m $000/mo.Alf.. 752·'7315 & other orncn:~acs. Mu:<t HV llms Carmel 3 Hr Apt!'l $120. mt> fi36·70SG redecorated, idt'nl loc. -. yard & patio. t Sm chUd NEWPORT SHOR ES Dana Point l226 UC!edl.o beht•vc.11200 ~;~~ J;:1~efo~~.~~1.'~~~111:1't~ +F'R n~ park &. sc'hool LCICJUftO hoch l748 No pt•ts. $275. Mgr. at E Sido.28R Duplex, S225 OK. Encl gnr, atondlotJ H~ blks. lO ocean. Super ••••••••••••• •• •••••••• ~ il o~ rear ( c~1f 't .·u S450 mn t>-l4·'7770 S.'ff5 ~o &14 .;7;0 . ••••••••••• •••••••••••• 970.2631. 288S ~1endoio. Cpls, drps. stovC. ynrd.. range. 536·500fl, 2 br. duplex. Ownr. (714) NEW 3 Dr 2 I-lo, xlnt nrrn. ccren. on 11c 1 1es . __ __ • · , h N apt. A Reapon. t p l. no pel8, 870.9203 S3l!S mo. /\•.t 496·27110 552-4833 Nwpt Jlt13 RR, 2 nu. nrw !Jae ' ' ''llr bench. Utll 642·25\ll 646 2612 2Ur, 1\.\ ba, cl~ aar, nu'----------"'' S ~ , J)t1 $1!l$>$225 mo: SGS wk. SH4RP·MEW ' paint dr!l:s; Nr ahop/ f'v<J. 4!Y.H349 l'urtle Rock Glt1n. new ex· 2 loiiy. 4 nr, 2t\ b;i. E\cc crJlts, Jl.ilnt. etc. • !I.• 143$ N. C!'t. 4~1·250ll 2 Br. 2 Ba. :>pts in be9t E. 3 BR, pool, kl.di;. pets. tr111u p. S2JOmo. 8-i7·63·U ST 11r232 ~. 4lir, t'hldrn pets al· t>iw lllOy lnrl"'JKi, nr mo.l't41l:f757"H'_· __ snfa $275 t;!l l 20 11 or6312333 WO ~ lowed. '675. 552.7350; e\•t•rythln.i. Chlldrt>n. STUDIO. util/ceblc pd. Sldt' localion. Eu c h s..'7.2Soi orfl'7tMM. ' --·--- •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• 04!\ 2330. pcL1 OK. ~/rno. lnclda WESTCLIFF 11iniilc pt·r~on only. No w/punrl,lna, frJllc, bltns 4·Plci, 2 Br 2 Ba. cpts Br. 3 bn. 1tud1. 2 t0r aar , pool,uuna llleMlf. Npt Crc:<l . $4'75/mo. G4U.2055 day or •Y•s. 3 Br. f'nm Rm, 3 no, -•rdnr. Nnw :lVllll IA1vcly 2 br. 2 hl', tury, pets . Cl'ntrn l $180. ~.n.fl il F. rl s hw s hr. NEW 2 br. 2 ba,ttrpk, drpe,$2l5. ReC'1,nopets w/vu Mbrshp Sun/Sllil Terrace, 3 81' end un· &IO-oo74. ~iinc. home ~ 1300 494 1'1782 ll:arthy cpla & drp& d/w, JocuuJ, gnr. View Upslairf. 963-2532 ewport Creal, uparaded Clb Inc. $450 9f..1·14SS it. Fplc, uptrr11dcd. l'lec thruout, pvt patio, Ror, or occnn. Teen child ok. 5 l'lan, pool, Jacuul. pr opnr. Sdf cl.ft ovn. Greentree, beaut 3 br, 2 la\'\? somcthlntt you want $195 lndry rue •• Crom $375 mo. &e2·'7992 T r 7 u pa It y P il o l &auna, tennh1. cholc. 3 F\nd whial you wtnt ln Shutttrt Ir nr pool. $4$0. ba, t mn. free renl on yr to Jell? Cl111sUltd adll do Util~. pd. Oceanvu. Fee lmmtdlat.e occupancy. Cla!!slfied Ad to buy. 6Cll Br. 3 BA, F1un Rm, 1eo Dt11ly Piiot Classlfleds. 873-0944 eves. lse ms. 640-4462. eve~. it well 6'2·5678. M :un Kentals, 540.mo Holly Altl 559• 1828. auLOed Ad• 642-S618 or rent someth101. opt. $550.117).2332 . , --I , Al••=··· u.tw... f ·•····················· : t ........... 316t I .. •••M••••••••••••••• jJJCAUTIPU WATERFRONT 2 Bit., upgrllded carp. mirror bar. Private club •llSOmo/leue. 631·1160 • Slllll• Park Newport w/baleooy. 1240. mo. fW0-4391 afl. 5. llEACH 2 bl.ta, new palol 3 Br a Ba dphc, fplc bltns. palJo. 1ar. No pet.s S400 yrly. 6U-168a s-c1......... . 3876 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WHITEWATER Vu , 1ar<len fletUng, lge 2 lir, adlt., $265 mo. 245 W. Marqulta, 493·.3967/ J446-~ ~ OCEANFRONT luxury·2 br, den, frplc, pvt step:, · • to bch. $S90. 4~2807 Cosy qulel 2 Br. ot'f'BI\ view, paUo, gar, $250. turn. SUS. unfurn. Adullll only. No pels. 493·3$J9 Ocean view. lge deck, 2 br, 1 ba. $235. mo. Alt 8pm, 496-3438 ~Laguna 3886 --·············•!,!•····· Lge, qulel, luxurious ex· Schools and Instruction This variety of fine schools ·could introduce you to a new tomorrow l"or rurther Information regarding placement I)~ advertising in the Dally Pilot Schools and Instruction Directory -CALL' 642-56 78, EXT. 325 ChffdNn'a and AdUft1' a .... , ~ Tap Jazr •iwoom Dlecottt.que TUIM!llng • 0.nce !HfciH ..., ... eom.cty • . . CAll FOR FREE BROCHURE lpedat BalMt/Tap Co"'41'nation cs j"• 2750 HARBOR BOULCVARD, SU ITE 7-8 COLLCGL CENTER.COSTA MESA, CA 92626 Phone: 714-540-5953 ec. 2 br, 2 b" apl .t:levator to scenic priv. -----------------_:::::=======-::=========-1 bch. Party & game room *~ l total acc. Perfect hvln~ er wknd retreat for the ---------------- adventurous adull. $5l5. mo. yrly. lse 499·2835 WtstmiMttr 319 ; •...•.•................ 1 BR Condo, newly rcdcc. Pool, patio, gur, adults, ·no peta. Aft. 6pm, \ { 531 ·6814 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE EXCITING PALM MISA APTS. ltllNUTES TO NPT OCH. Dach, 1&2 BR. from $1!15. Adults. No Pets 1561 Mesa Dr. (5 Bllc.s Ea~l of Newport Blvd.) 546 98ti0 -Roet111 4000 ~······················· ROOMS $2S wk up wllh kltch~n. $40.00 wk up ~ apts S.18-97SS or 645·3967 ~wrk~ rem. Chr1stlun, ktt , prvl 't:. 11lcp~ 10 bch. N. B • > Sl50. 675-1700, 6-15·<!2~ )IOTEL. ocean 1 lllock. $25 w<·•·k. C11ll 91lll·2fi2G or • 6<15·0973 JlntJ: Heh .Ccnlul Lugun:i. ful ly . equip. room. $1.'IO mo Newport Air Associates Flight Schoo~ & Flying Club LEARN TO·FLY $650 IFh101t.dMJ A•eil_..I * FAA .APPROVED * . CMrHI~~ 35 Hours lloghl tome 1n Cessna 150 s w1ll'l 20 hour~ dudl 1n!itrucr1on Ouo mt"mbersh•p Free dueo; tnd1v1dual 1n,1ruc.1ton. la1l0<eo lo YOUR abrltly 2,, AIRCRAf:T AVAii.AiLE AT LOWiST RA TES IH ORAHGE COUHTY Learn to fly now --and ha•• fun! • Special Ratu for CCMMtefciol or ln1tn.fft•nt Students. For Compl•te Detail1 Call HOW 979-11 SS 1971 l Airport Wfltf South Huttotti.T.._...MM_ Ore...-c_.ty~ share uttl Cull twr lU ·~~~------••••••• . AM,arl.~PM .494·1!112 ~, '61eepiiig r oom & balh. very lite kit. pri vg:,. ' Quiet. No smoking, no 'pets. Older lady prer • •• 64$.~lJS HotelJ. Motels 41 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HoUdayGue1h7 Laguna area rl"x1dent.s eicpectlng &Ut''t-. 1 c · .1111tl!r them ... t t;3,tle , Laauna Oct.an V il'"' "I Villa for n ""'ck or mnn· • Ac receive 10' o 1hscounl f'Oov/Dcc only . .,or re· -servu\1ona call 494 ~ .~1tHCMM • 4150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Loving earl'. 21 hrs, ba lanced dtelc;. Pvt room. Pllll<MI. f>.U·JIUJ \acatloft Rentals 4250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Luxur!OU5, furn. vlllu on Sayullla Beach near Puerta Vallartoi. 4 br, 4 'ba. $500. wk. 73l·J77'7 BIG B EAIJ Jlous«' for t. 3Br , 2ba. $22 per day. C4ll aft 8. 49'-4192 ARCE CABIN·nt<; BEAR nr. aid i.lopo•<; -~ps J2. Col TV, pr10lt.1 • hit' ~·3'116/ 540·4J I I or <$C.M11 ----•1tewtal1 to Shtre 4' lOO '•······················ ".t.Rtottio & '!lcro" LURM ALL TH~ LA TEST. DAMCES A Lifetime Of Fun Thru Dancing • Singles or Couples. All Ages View Studio or Your Home No Contracts Satisfaction Guaranteed Brush Up Courses-All Dances ~CHA-CH"~ 645-0758 ·~woro INCOMPATIBL~ Office R•ntol 4400 Office Rent°' 4400 ~ ROOM ~t ATt:S!' ••••••• •• ••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• •• ••••• , Hou~·Mn1"'. 8)2 '4 1 •I I SO I W l'ff D PRIME LOCATION . TakeaThc GUt'l!!WOrk estc I r. Good ex~ure. EH~ In· Out Of FindlnC Newport f1nanc1;it Ctr i.:r(':>" & e~res'I Ph·nl) or 111AT RIGHT PERSON UctMftCJ Offlu Space park1ni:. On lirookhursl S..• SS by Si..riltC) Cull on Site i\bna~l'r & l\llant.a an Huntmi:ton (714 )642 3111 c-ct246 ~Heh. l\pprox1matcly .slb•r• house, no pcts.1 _________ 1800 sq. fl. of ground floor 1 •• cv i cl n at Y S I • le r I i1pacc. Sii:nmg. $32.'i/mo. .. Galdenwest. Family a\· lrmcf Hew Bldg. Ca 11 i\l r . plum m c r, -nioa.phere. '1S0mo. Orticcs wilh private 963-6767. Mll-0&17. baths. 45 Cent.<. a sq ft. an· ------ 1 ~ cludmg ulltillcs. :JO<HlOO ,._~~"'M or F to shnrc :IBR fl •t rrv: sq. . um s. 1 •Pl. )Jnlbn• Penn. $125 Roy McCardl• mo + utt I. 673 54.90 ----Realtor I 810 Mewport ·s tudent 11ecka m a ture Costa Mesa S .. 8-7 729 non·smoke.r. Sl25 + ulll.1-_______ _ -M7·020S,8·10pm . ---~· -----CDM 350 lo 104.'0 sq. rt ,1.#rf /F .. 2Rr, 2ba Calif Apt /\/C, nc\\ly d <'rnr.ikd ··i M:11n/~acl\rlbur, SA. Masters, Rrkr. ti73-4120 Sl32.SO. Pool etc. 751·8181 --- WESTCLIFF BLDG. NEWPORT BfACH rou"''' wwucllll Ol'•'f• •rtG .,.,,,... Atrn ../AltCond•l-"O ./c-,.... .. -, .. ..1-./f ....... /,...._&_• ..,/ •••O• M fW'C9 ./s.cy --· ..... ./ .......... -.... Call Mr. Howard 645·6101 --If You Need A Staffed & ~~/Fshare2Br,2Ba .c;au FurnlJShed OHlcc. call -- S J\pts . SA . Main / THE t:XECUTIVI': •lMOFREERENT• l McArthr. Pool. Sl37.SO. SUITE. Rent lnl'luf!es 1·2·3 Rm. offices from SI 640-7014 I/lime recept., phone & S ~ 25 per mo. Adj . mail service, util & Atrporter Hot~I. No lease -GcragesforR...t 4350 janitorial. Secy's & ore rl'Q.833-3223TU noon ••••••••••••••••••••••• equip avail. Ncwporl ~-60' PER SQ FT ..,.....age garage for rent. Center t>W-S470 1617 W"""'TCL1FF·NB See Mgr 1959 Maple Ave. ~ -Apt 5, c. M. Pla10 Executives Suites.1 ___ A_G_T_._54_1_·5032 ___ 1 t ~ sq n view o f<'. All 1 .rcBalboa Island. 2 car 11CrV1ces. Airport Tower FOR LEASE • J1 garage+!\torage, $6S mo, Plaza, 2082 Michelson. 3 OFFICES yrly lse. 548-4970 Irvine. 752.0234 SI SS MO EACH ••GAR/\GE, slnale car, TOP LOCATIONS Fine COST/\ MF.SI\ Loe 'ln.COO Block of Acacia, Harbor Mru's bHt. 100 752· I 700 MICROWAVE COOKING CLASSES "learn to really asa you •lPIRSivt klv1st11enl" We teach every phase of MICROWAVE COOKINli Me.ts •• F ish •. Poultry •• Vegetables Candy •• Party Foods •. BBQ •• Sauces Baking •. Defrost •• Browning Recipes •• Etc • COMPLETE I HOUR_. Week COWM Aftffftooa & ET .... ONLY $30 ENROLLMENT Is INFORMATION 768-5011 2400 I .AHcl• ll'lry, Wt. 226 (Upstairs) MISSION VIEJO a I 0th '1 of a lllilt Ho. of 4i1111Co IR .AUcla lulMes1 C....... IRVINE EQUESTRIAN CIENTER 7386 E•t Co•t Higllwsv Corone dll Mar, C.ClfOfnle 92625 Clnses Mcntt Fol nmNJ For Tffftt A .AcMb For tftforwwffon c~ f714J 640..1710 17141640.1712 ------- ' RMISTfll HOW FOi OUR REI SlMIMAI YOU AND TRUST DEEDS: ln..tt.g For A I OO/o-14°/o R .... WHY: To , • ...,. lllHlvt 1efe, Pf'Oflt.W. l11•nt-11t opport•11ltlH fro111 nperlHctd .......... M....,.n ttttd Tltle Officers. WHAT IS A TRUST DllD? HOW SAii AH THm T1mo .............. " .... "'" '" .. ww.c1"' .... . WHERE: ~oI•' ,,.., ht s~ .t s .... ..._ ""-oy.s ..... . WHl!M: w ... ,,01, ,...,,...._ 11 • ot7:J0p.a. HOW: C.it 11141 542-5661 or rwt.rw Hier c..-fw y•r reHnatlt11. ,.._. .....,.., ••••••••• ...ti hr• tit .._ FUI ~. ...... ••·•·•·•·····•···············••••••••• . ......... ······················ ..... ········· ' .................... Miid .. ....._.._ a-...'""'..-. OSTROW, WINKELMAN & ASSOC • I SOt M. M• 5-la._ C714t 54J.5'61 0 CdM. Dave S ., l\gt. To 500 sq ft . f'rorn sso lL~:~R.ntat 440 ~~!:!NOMICS.fi~~~f,Oo r•-mMHI Tells yOu how to • •• •• •• • • • • • • • •••• • • • • • Fashion Jal, 14th floor, l:-~~,,!.-l!!-!!!!-~-~·!!-11·.~~PJ c.>''The last apace la cor, 1ulle, apaclacular INVESTMENT DlVISION fix it or how -Mariners Mlle Square oce.o/mln view. Ideal . . . -· I Tuesday. November 9 1976 DAILY PILOT 8 J J Irvine College of Business W1pa1t._ce -4 ec.fWace _.. yowt with • ........ ...,, wtle p9d fcil»t At lnlM -. c ..... , ._ y• ..• ._. tM ..... lob ftMlf ya. ... to e.ne. We'I...., ya. to ......... T•a y ... dlek• of,....,., SICUT ARY • RIC8'nc>HIST STINOGW~lll • IOOIOCHPM GauYt.AL OfflCE ASSIST.AMT MEDICAl..lEG.AL SPICl.WUTIOM , TYPtHG • SHOllTH.AM> UUSH-UP ' ' . . DAY AHD IYENIMG PROGRAMS A P(GptrlmtcA correct .......... ••ir'••1..t, loeahd ,_ tM .... of tM Me~r•IH 1.-..1 -.I ... 1trtal COlllpleL J. P111e ...... .A51llf9tc:•7 Most c~I a.. lfhe lost IS _... o.w 400 • ..,11yan tMne ,....nhd In• gr....._ Call '40W for lllOnt lllfonnatlOft md broc......._ 1700 E. GARRY A Y. SANTA AMA 92705 ......,.,. '-Y· .t Drw MJ 556-8890 MAPLE AVENUE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL DAY CARE 7 AM -6 PM Tuition -165 Very reasonable rates for extended day care. ./Beginners Spanish /Phonic Approach To Reading /New Metric Systems /Planned Activities REGISTE R NOW FOR FALL SIMESTEll IOHOl!ttGARTIH a I ST & JHO GUDIS 2070~.A· .... CoetaMtta 646-4334 Short Term~ Year Course lor AaS0<:1ate in Arts Degree P?I Financing Available ~ 200 NewPort Center Dr. &t11e 200 Newport Beach, Ca. = _ t Phone 640-0500 ~ DESIGi PLR~ D61GTlPl.IWl ~slGn PLAZA 1>€5Kin PLAZA Richard's Beauty Colle<Je <..' ..... 'TUITION SPECIAL C• For Prlie lwforwtatlo. ca ..... LNCllftgTo Uc ...... a.. Co.....tology & M.IC9'iftCJ Wltlt Tr...., ht T1le Art of Sc ... :la eel Mais (Open For Customer Business) 200/e Dllc .. t to s.lor Cltftaa 1..-.,, W .. esdcly it T'hlndclys 462 CE. 17th StrMt Costa M11a 645-3150 <All Work ts Done By Students) ~--------- in the DAILY PILOT IDI CllFTllS IUGS AHD WAU. HAMGIHG CL.ASSIS C•rH 11 3 two a.a. lnson cOt11pletfll lft .. weetl. · MonthH)t 1 0· I Z lnMRcJI 7.9 USI OUll TUflTIMG TOOLS SRH TOTAL-COST OF COURSE $26.95 (Materials Included) For details call 546·6340 •become confused easfly • daydream in school •feel lost. .• •feel like a ralfure • have poor grades • learn slowly 'WE SPECIALIZE IN DISCOVERING AND HANDLING THE BASIC B~ARIERS TO· LEARNING. ~ '--( ... . we can help THE STUDENT IMPROVEMENtCENTER Call 642-9088 Business Refttol 4450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 901 Dover Drive N ewPort Beach nessjlnnst/ A1tmtee •TC>P • . ••••••••••••••••••••••• * LOC4TIOH * S..sJnesa Successful relall or Opportunity SOOS service location on E. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 17th Street in Costa •F\lrnilurc&PlywdMlg. Mesa. •Lad lea Wear, Hi·Clasi. ! • 1800Square feet •BOOKSTORE • 2 Aulo boys •DRAPERY WKRM • On·11ltc park1ng *RUG /U PHL Cleaner ,,.. Excellent exposure •FURNITURE Reflo •Large sign area Contacl Al?nlSam Crani- REALONOMICS, Col1). (714)645-4170 ~0·0601t Brokers 675-0700 LAUNDROMAT LAGUNA llACH IMVESTMEMT COMMERCIAL STOHF: 20 Wa!hersondl0dr)'erq or office rental. Separate In top location or Costa bldg. & rest rm . · ol Mc!'la for $16.000. C.11 ror Pleadilly Clrcu11. $160 speclfle terms.673-8550 • Mo. ELEC. & WATl':R ON•dr10°11 )10N•OH1N<•• ·~~;;.to;~;! [ Vtd-iff I lndntrial Rental 4500 EWJNG BUSINESS for ••••••••••••••••••••••• sale, Mfg., bedspread, PltlME LOC •TIOo.JI pillows, table akirts, seat "" " cushlont, etc. eau aft Good exposure. Easy in· 'lPM. 644-4311 gress & egress. Plenly of1--------- parktng. On Br~hurst Manufacturinf·Weldlng & AUanta In Huntington Machlnlnf·F abricatlng Beach. Appro1Clmately Neu SU.000. yr. Active 800 sq. fl. of ground Ooor ~hop. Agt. Sall\ Crane, space. Signing. 132S/mo. 645-4170 Call Mr. Plummer.•--------- 983-6767. R ... 1 Wanted 4600 Jr Dept Outlet Stor e Ideal ror couple. Net!' $1000 p/mo. $11,000 foll BY 11/14, quiet.. reap., price. Somo tttm11. J\gt. fom. desires l Dr or lf'e _s_aim_C_r_an_e_. 64_~_•_7_o -- ••••••••••••••••••••••• bucl'L 546-03'8 d a ya Pina & Sandwich 1-'l..N.B. JOOO ft. WCJl·facln~ for 2 « 3 man firm Law CD~f dlx !':trites from S150 /, ,h slgning Is suodcck . Lib., Zero& avalJ. Util in<"ld. l\/C k . +op ant J•t C .$44.aJ.ll. •• 644'9450 JanltOC' 675·6000 ' p e. (I ~~~====t=::===::::::Jt===~~==1~~~~~~~~~~~ • I GARAGE SALE 11d1 In the Daily Pilot brtn1 h•P· PY reswla. To place your drawin& card, phone M2·S6'78 today. Sll()()O. mthly neL OrcaL Soult\ Oranite eo-antJ locaUon. aeal.s 48. First clasel Terma. UBI, 751·3741 • .. I •J2 DAILY PILOT Tuteday, November 9. 1978 ,.Add 1t...Build 1t .. D1cJper 1t...Hammer it... Carpet I it. .. Cement it...W1re it. .. Hoe it ... Clean it ... Move lt...Press lt ... Paint it .. Nail it .. Plaster it...Fix ~t. .. ' SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb it. .. Patch il ... P1pe 1t...Remo<So• H ••• ' Root it ... Lanpscape it ... Tile It ... Trim lt...Sew !t. .. Haul it... Add it... Pldnt it . Alter It .. Learn it. .. Appliance RC'palr CGr'f"nter CMnHtt/Concnte GarcMniftCJ Hou•Kleonlng l.clftdscopiftCJ Paintln<J/Poperi"CJ P«r¥ln<J RooflncJ .......................................................................................................................................... ················ ....... ··················· .......................... . APl'LIANCJ-: ltl-~PAIR LOU '~ HOM!'.: !;tBP/\IKS. <.;ontruclor . Cur.torn Expr Japanrse gurdener. Want a REALLY Cl.Ei\N E~pr 'd Land:icapers. ,Pl<:"~'EHS PAINTING Ile p n 1 rs & Co m po $10 Serv1cd.'.all 3!> Yr ~""· curpentry, work: color, Ulllil'cliall'. Compl mJinttrnJnel' & llOUSE? Call Gm~h11m ~prinklcrs. Install & re· ):;'(p': rJ r~ll~. rates. free ASPHALT REPAIR$ Shini:lti\. lnsp<'('Uon1<, (714 > M!I i422 C Jhnl. vluml)lng & clcc. al!IQ t•uncn·te cullini:. /\II clcunup, fr ci.ltrcas llaro Glrl. tree ests, 1)45.5123 v111r. <.:oncn•lt• & I.Irick {'!It lull Gene M2 ()458 .Lf' lrt~rd/llc'd l.o pr1r1·~. rr ........ 1 5.51 20~1 work i.:uar. 1.i t·'d, 7Sl 1937 --work 645·7978.M~ PalniYCM.1rCastfe ~· 1 t.'i.t 8305020&orS•ll S930 -rs tffn<J bonded . ansurrd <192 3728 Jlousecleamni: Uy ANN . . • ., " T.... I I R I ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----_ ---WEEDING CU :ANUPS t:xpcrientcd wirch. ALL PllASt.:s • A' rg Elllt lSly ....-la tn.V son •po r C.:are fnr Aft l'r S< hoolt.>rs Carpet Set"•lce LEONI TE CON CR ET!:; •Complete M.untenanct' .&!JJ-OGIW alter 5pm Spnnkll•r:1, turf, pl..1ns, 1 Slv $46Stlntr$15rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• Morrell or Peterson ••••••••••••••••••••••• STAMP J NG . Cob t't~est 642-~7 '-'lC StJlC'lic283'J74 l'ntes1ndmlr"l1labor Call6ll ·2440 CANOPYTVSVCCO. Sl51wk 003 2507 Shampoo & t.lNm clean blestone brark & talc llOUl>cclcanmg & Bulldrng Call M1lchell ~5 I~ C:uur, mi.rli , rn·e est. Oran~e Co l\6phall Co 1st Rate Servke --IOI{ <.:ulor bn~htener~; puuo:.,ct~04o-i~s J~panesc Canlcner. MJmlen.lnl·e.Vcry 'fl'dfi27·7'j)our5520l:M atFatrPr1ces9t.O·ltl.'U Will llabv~1L n1~hls or whl earpl!> 10 man t:omplele maanl, free rcasnnable.559·1~ Mcnonry -----pt st /R · wk nth CJI for "HI k ·~ hll'Jl'h Clc:.rn hv rm, din. C ontroctor •• cst. l.09-6333 <After 7 pm. • ....................... 1':11ntan1: lnl/ Ext. Lie Q "' *PO•r r11. mulhl•r 1n my hmc rm & hull SIS ,\v)t rrn ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plolcs11ionalc11rpt!tclean-Fit<'Plaees Planters 11~931. fid. 1-'rec c~t. ··:·~·:••••••,•••:••··~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• f>l£>37t>S S7 50,rnurh$l ~'"1aarSS l.EEM.JAfiVIS Ron'sLcrwnSer•ic• ing, also floor cure & Bnrk{'oncr.acPutin Worlqiaur.Won't beun-I A};1ll Pl:A.'i~1':1.~!~<· Cl'ram1c tile. Tub~, -. • <:uur1•lunpclo<fur.Cap1 Additiot11>&Heroudclin1t &\'AIWCLEANUP '14andow c:tte. Dutch Dloc.~Wfal.I~ BRQPits~·rbirlMt.tipm~968~ Frt•t•F.~~LfYJ l!:.i.iof.A:?5 show<•ri.&<lruynl>otmls. BusineuSen 1ce n •pair. 15 yrs e>.pr Do 96:1-5.51.3 Lic 3l7l!SG Callforl'Sl.557·6109 Maintenance Service ne ,~st~64~·0464 •CUSTOM PAINTING •_ _ _ 1"re~'l':>l 673-1753 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wv rk lllY l>t!lf. Her~ --~J'M508 VFHY NF!\T l'ATCll ll<>OKK 1-~1·:1'1 N(; 5;u oiui: s;_inffrfttCJ' • G~ Senlces ... ---------1-'reecsl. Slumpslone. l1le, 11 l 4 UAL I ·r 'f · L <l • • Tree Sff•ice I .. "f ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'ats JantlO'"'al Serv1'~u. bloc·kw .. tl~.·. bn""k. pl11n Ri\Tf':S JOllS&Tl::XTUHI:: ••••••••••••••••••••••• AH t>hJsc•s bookkl."t'I> n~, •• • •• •• ••• •• • • •• •• ••• •• .. • ...... -.. .~ '" ~ L" l ""3 1139 (• t'J Ill u-.-•·'Pt"'tt N "oud1'rtyem, .. 'e"le"'n ter.:.Qu"IJty· .. ork 0 lrt>. Cillnru('('~\!iOnotvei; r rcc...... QU ' f'"'mQvals. t r1n1n11n" • . \\Jlc·mt'lll\, puvrnll. <·l<' .1rpc ,, JO wa ny yours STRUCTUR/\l, t:NG. ,...,...,e ""' ~ .::11 ani::. O • w • .. .. .. -.. "-., 4 H !>. l'>.11t·r. v./ CPA'" 11r rn1ne. ~1:p;i ir s •& For plan check:.. sii:n charge for lon_)t i.~ars. cm.008-7914 ai; prices. liob 750-9354. GUARANTEED Paint~P1ont&PetCare pnmin.:. fret-<.·1>L. L1c 'd I.it :.mJll J\'<'l s !16:! l!:!!Wl d1.·aninj( ll)(l < rUJr work structures, IJtd.:i. iW2·!lti6b Loe ~L Refs. 644 ,1>720, Rf• It 8 b I e. e {( i ci en t. !J60.J9S3 llljl. I ntr & Ex tr. Free •••• • •• •• • • • ••• • •• •• ••• Fully mi.u1'Nl 642·21>24 -ut h1..e1t1•r i.avan~s. Fr est 673·6548 _ Newport Bearh. Hunt· Mo•i"'" i·~l.rxpert work.642·02\15 SAINT'S 1'1 of . Pel & "'"~ rrunu10 fur '"'·nc· Borr & Associates 645 Jt.lt; GardeNn<J -~ .. .., Pl t c h c .... "' .. '"u . br11Utng mgton Beach area. Anita ••••••••••••••••••••••• JNTl::RlOR/BXTERIOR p .an • art.' svs an nm t1on & UeJuly. l't1u1n· Uu!i1m•,.,Sl•n1t·t·s \\' C C lCI •••••••••••••••••••··~· ••• • •• ••• &180647 'IOVING"Let2E "d cttransp+pclboard· l B h · It ' ~lunlhlyStJtl'nwnt s .c Jrc Jrpc caners ExprdHaw11an~anJcncr. ~ ." • • ••••••••••• " · xpr 1\ecousl1eJll.'l'1l'gs 25)1rS 1n~s"'>avJ11.f'romS2.50. enanc~. _a u n g. lm:omc 'l".1x l'Jyroll :Skam cll"111 or i.h.impoo Yd l'leanups, tramming, :>kiplc:iader. dump truck. Xlnt housccleamng done ~r~. Z5~~: .. .,>.'~.,:;;as, cxpcr . gt14.ll3™1 afl CP!\I ~r...:.:"il _11 S. 1117-116."8 751·52505· UwtS •T;ii..l'IJnning• AlsoUpholstl.'ryAllY.?rk pruning. Lt Jl aul"g ~auling, trce."".k, grad· by lady w/expr, depen· ""'°" Tut....& l2 I llroadv. ay C .\l ..euar Heh ~IC,fr est 6'15·WB7 1ng, demohtaon,etc. dable,owntrans8<17·J637 • . . Painting. lnt/~xl. fleas, P1umbiftC) ""\'"9 e fi4:! O.'il 1 _ H1.·as lluk!. &15·37 lti · 7S1·3930 1-'ricndly ~ov1ng Co. ~rri di.•pendable. Free est. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• ----1101 IDAYSl'J::CIAL Shades or Green-Yard Haull Janitorial c1~nl. friendly ~ervace. Cal1Jay645·7965 Plumbini.t & ll eatinl( Tutor S~rvicc .. S late c~nte-r , . . Care. Hoyul '>l'fVlce. n9 Lowes t poss r atos • Hupalr.NOJOIJl1-•r.m.1.ll' Teachers cert.1fic,atc, •• ;.~;.•••••••••••••••• Shu mpo u or St e:i m ·' . t ··L·. th" •.:. 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• K47 0992 p & O T i "' IV .-, btwn noon & 4 E Al Cl ' . I •) It I'\ 11 · II or uOY. II 0 .:.ar pnc ... s. H . . c \ . . . I • l(Jf\0 l"CJOft "" rKJ Call : Davt'.'nPort 7Sl ·9677 . • Hemudl'lirli.! Our !-pccial h· ca nu r 7 r. n, • a IM() !1485 aulmg/movmg, cleanup o rn p cl c d an i lo~· a PaifttirKJ/Poperin9 ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ----536_·_44_39 _______ _ ·ay. n ·p.nr'> rt•s1 d ; at~ .. s.1.1 ,l.1. a·ll3547 & S7/up. Trcework. n eas, serv1ccs ,F'lomm/ es.••••••••••••••••••••••• •OttC,\NTlJNING ,. PLUMUt-:n Ht.>purr. re WindowCleanllMI c·omnn ,\II \\cJrl; guJr · 5.17 •• !% Cabellero & Sons. Ex pr fast, free est 842 4597 • !'~~2;a oor Care Painl·Repair.35 yrs in i\llen-Conn-lt~~crs p 1 PC', 111 :; l J 11 at lo n •••••••••••••••~-: •••••• l'JlurnlluCon:.l.!l62·1!:JM •Cl\HrETSAVl-:llS• ~=~~~~~~-[J6.:~~ ~fl YOU H/\Vt::JTRE-:AOY ----------1 area. workmanship Ncwporl0rgan:-,ti-IS·lS30 ~~t51.>i.. G. Gidley,tlcar View Window i ihr!> ll}dro -.tl'.1m rll'an'i! 4 m · l'LLH/\Ul.lT/\WAY guar.Takeadvant.ofmy , . . h . · Washing & llouseclean· --2S', :.J\ltnl(S on all carpel P · TIM f>-18·6306 ISELL Idle items with a exper. 530·7056. SELL uilc items_ ~1l a i ng. Qua Ii t y work. Fmd what you want in cleanrng. Fr ests. DailyPiJot.ClassifledAd. ~~1ly.P1lotClass1f1edJ\d.1ScJ1th1ngsfastw1lbDaily guaranteed. 613.5130 _U.ialy 1'1lot Classifieds. 9634291 Want ad resulls G •2·5678 Classified /\ds 642·5678 642·5618. Want Ads Call 642-5678 6-12-5678. Palol Want Ads. eves & wknds. lusiMu Money to loan 5025Lost&Found 5300 Jobs Wantl!'CI, 7075 ~~~~t::! ••••• ?!.~~ HelpW..tecl 7100 Help Wonted 7'00 H .. pWont~d 7IOOHelpWonted 7100 Opportunity 5005 •••• •••• •• •• •• • •• •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• •••••••• J\ssociate Rep ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• •• ••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••· ••••••••••••••••••••••• I d , 2nd & 3rd T.D.'s LOST, mule Cockalecl MALE NURSE, ~vaal. for I 8 OR OVER BOAT COMPANY CORO .. ,A DEL MAR LOA~S A V.\ll.1\ B.Lt-; , . Gan do IP h, •. W a I I private duty. Late cook· HO EXP ER HEC Needs Final Assemblers " Crrlltt n11t 1mi>ur\J11t answer lo a ~hislle. Vi c. ing & hskpi;. Hcfs. • r.rCl & ch:t·or:.ali,·e :ic t.7:l·4>!8J llrokl•r Wilson & \'actnria, C~. 496-7635 F.xpcr. req'd. A1so, nl'l.od tt·'~'" '''" ..,hn1>1>l' Hrady -----Sl5 Reward. &16 2379 Ir you're new to Orange Gel-Coat Touch·up man. to 111,11-.l• m•llll')' ~ .. coo+ Mortgages, Trust . BOOKKEEPER. cicp~r. Co .. temporarily discon· Apply in person, 7.30 3. ''"'·nton TakcoHrim Deeds 5035 REW.\l.lD f-OR LOST full charge, thru trial t1nuing ~our edul·ataon. Sk1pjack Boals, 1763 uwdiatt•I\' ••••••••••••••••••••••• DOG Shl'p/Cotlae fem. balance. $li00 mo. rercnlly d1schaq~cd Placentia,C.M. BA y & BEACH ""Qucerul'", li e. 1002722). ~6-4650 from lhe ·service or for LOANS 9% V 1 c . S un f Io we r & any reason seeking tern· BOAT REPAIRMEN REALTY 6 75·3000 O Smalll'y. 01557·6l6fl Help Wonted 7 100 porary or career employ· Must have exper. yacht COOKS The Jolly Roger Rec;taurant as arccpting apphcallons for Expcr'd 1-'ry Cooks. Xlnl fringl' henrl1ls & hours. Apply tn person, 22873 Lake Forl'st Dn\le, El Toro. -----------• Also 2nd TD loans ••••••••••••••••••••••• menl. consider this uni· hull repair & paintin11. Faare!>t 1'l·rmo;,incc 19-l!J LOST, Siamese male. ACCOUNTING CLERK qu1:oppor. You can earn Need neat workers COUNTER HELP, at ,\FFll.l\'fl~ • S attlerMtg.Co. wlfk,1 t•oll;ir & t Jg Accuratt:w/figurl's &<lc· w /cle,a r record . Kustcrs, Cleaners, 1534 SECO.._.D 642·2 171 545·0611 w/C~t.addre~s. Jli4171; tail. 10 Key by touch Sl96PERWEEK Clackies Boal Yard , Newport Blvd. CM. ~ - ---Vic. Nl'whope & Warner, Good typist. i\llract1vc 673·61!34. 541H213 INCOME! Wl· Huy :inrl Trnsl lkrds ~iiv:i.i~Work)752·11535 or N.A. loc. 640 .. 1850 Based on your produc· BOOKS --------- Pl nr Cull l1ml' manage· Cu:.h 1111m\·d i li la 12ti0 ACCOUNTS ti vi t Y • comm• + Students COUNTER HELP mL•nt I.JU:'> ol your own. Turnu Hit~· lrwl''>l. Co Pt't"sonols 5350 incentives & eJ(tra profit F\all & P /t1mc. Apply Del RECEIVA.LE h g b Th HCM.ISt'Wi•t>s & Taco, 25'"'2 La P~~ Rd, '\1l l''Jl<:r rc11. complcll' ••• •• •• •• •••• ••• •••••• • s a rt n onus. c ..., M .. tr.itnin.: + ,Int ineume Announcements/ Dnnkan..e problem? Pvt Yacht club needs Women & Men we are Moonlightt>rs Laguna llills. ln\'l'i.lm••nt 1secored1 PH"sonals/ Calli\lcoholllelplanc A1RClerkfullllme Wed· lookingformaybetircd Million Dollar corp. COUNTERGIRL. CJll l't1lll'C'l :it r. Ame« lost & found 24 hrs ;1 day IU5·3lt10 Sun. Must bo able to ortyping, Colding papers, needs men & women or 1213Jt>t:i 1112s ••••••••••••••••••••••• work w/club members warehouse jobs•& work· any .ai;:e who enjoy BalboJ Island. To S3 hr , ----------tle-qol Noticu 5200 ABORTION Compul n bckg rnd ang for a Jamal~ income. speaking w/olhers &who <'all 675·8571_. ____ _ ----••••••••••••••••••••••• CounschnR& 1tcrcrr al helpful but not man-Work w/young people are bored w_tthe avcr:ige DF.Ll Assistant. Mature DATA ENTRY ACCOUNTING CLERK Full lime position open as a video rusplay terminal operator for a Basic/ Four mini-computer. Some ex- penence 1s desirable. but wall train m· dividual with demonstrated typing ac· curacy and s peed. Work in pleasant envir onment with good company benefits including 2 weeks vacation after one year. company paid it.roup insurance, credit union, etc. Apply at, ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT llO W. lay St., Costa Mesa between the hours of 8:00AM·5:00PM. c~ for owoi11twnt ~ 642-4321, ut 276. Equal Opportunity Employer RESTAURANT NolH'(' 1s herl'by given l'rl'I!. 1t• ... l ,l\"J1l.wknds datory. Call Wed·Sun Rapid advancement run oflhemallJobs. ll\'rson. i\ppfy 1n person, '' 1'""" V11·JO ,.rea t h ;i t C :.a 1 h c r 1 n c 24 I Ir 111-lpltnl' ~17 !M!IS 673-3555. possrble. If you 're 18 or 1500 · Bl d CM Hetp Wanted 7t 00 He4 Wonted 7100 P.H mn~ uni) opl'rat1on th ri ~ 1 e no, on. Is not --, .. ,, .T.,-over & would be av a al. to No 'actu:.i I selling in· ewr10rt v ' ' · ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••~••••••••••••••••••• <:ro:-.""' s 11.111111 mo. rc~JX>th1bldoranyd1'hts I n1 .. c •. ~A:>; · . ACC'TS Payable Bkkpr. start work immcd. cull vo~ved & no scl\•nit ap· Ud1v<:rymcnfor homcuc· DISllW/\SllF.R . l m ·i---------- O'•t11·r r1•111r111ni.: u1 1>r \lah11tt1c-. ronlraC'teu Carini.:. 1·unft<lcntral <'x~rnccei:;arf" Fuur to betwn!Jam&Jpm P<>antrncnls. Work w/onc llv.LATlmt•s. ml'<liatc oi1t•nin)!. Applv Fr .1m•1• ;and must sdl. hy anyorw but 01)!-dl Munsdini; & n •frrrJI 5 ay.s w • urnrlurc of lhc most popular &: Call5-l!l 1710. in Pl'f:-.on Mul<louns Irish l'r1·1· ... 1.11uhni::hullil1nj!11l \•>'-'.l.W7ti .\borl11111, :ulo11t1011 & store.Cal1Betly.U42·2053 539-1183 succcs!>flll products 011 --- ----l'ub.202NcwportCcntcr rn.1111r .,h11m1mi: 1·1•nll'r kt'l'Pln.I! btwn 9-lOAM the markel tod~. An 1~-DEL TACO Dr. N.B. 111,iclt• ~ 11.il tu °'\'tllni: Lost & found 5300 APC.\HF: 547 2!>63 /\ppli 3 nee· part Dept. Automotive. expensive product who s Needs KtH·hen llelp --------- \i:t 11;17 l:!t>el ••••••••••••••••••••••• --lmmed. opening. Self New Dctatl Shop needs name as a hous\·hold PJttmc pos1t1011" avail. DISHWASHER ---1:-·ol '' 0 (' l Hiit ht • SPIHITl'.\I. ltf-:Aot:R help d th t th Id l> h I '> "l) h 11 L" \ l' ·r· '\ ... \ L 1 \ .... · : .i • · w a: 1-'lillv l.it'"ns"cl • starter w /parts back · • wor ruou e wnr · a Y c II· l>~ ·" r · Relief Shaft. •·• •"' ·' ,,, .... .,, "1'm" l1rv,.n, ho'h' ' " Top wages paid En"1ne \"ork n · youthful 631 1831 i -20 "upcr·or I.I h '' ··~ ... ' 31:? N. El(.' Jm1no Heal ground a mu:.t. SS hr to · .. ., 1 a • · • " 1 HOUSEKEEPER/CHIEF •'""'l>"rl e.11· 11'1 tail Urch1tl, C..:t.l;\I Steamers en" painters fn""'ndly a· lmosphere & Ave,1 ·~1 II u l 1 San C..:l,.mcnlc. For appt, start. Call Kate 642·0Z42 ' ~ • "' "" l..Jdo Convalescent Ctr "1' "1'' ro·.i'> vi ''r i.;:1 ~l 4 ,.12 90:l ... \ ~92.9136 • • buffers & Polishers, UP· have fun while you earn -·--·------- r:!l'.l 1:11,; :!~i•ir: ..s APT HOUSE· holstery shampooers, top pay. You receive a DENTAL ASSISTANT-At Ne:~t~~hor~~e7764 hH."'iU Col'kapoo Tm'<inf"RnobTubrs?" MEWPO~T rheckout,pick·up&de· guar~1nteedsalary +ex· lc;1sl l yr cxper. Ex-"" CoffeeShop5111 Days 'r,·m.1h·flni:,W !>tdcl':\1 l>att•l'.irly-TakcTnµs /\sst. Mgr·MAINT· llvcry.Applyal tremely liberal com· 11anded duties. X-ray. OONUTShopHclp,r/time ,,.""I fll'I' mu ~IX I.UH__ l>1JmOnd <l1rls, EN1\NCE. Couple, full 20S9.HarborBl,CM mission & bonuses. Con· 1>ut ·t1mc. Cal l Dr. PM shift. No cxpcr nee. 1' i\I 111· I r•111l lw.1rh l·'-0 LI;.; D .!;-. 11 r 1 n i: c r <:uy" U1.c. lime. Salary open. Exp. 645·1030 tests & othl'r incentives. Wcmer. l:S47 8501. Female. al:e 25·'15. Apply 111•1·d~1111ct1•r l11\ln.!1.tro' SJl!Jllld di"kl· diJin. EVEFOTODATE nJ ... 1 Lid / ts V Xln.L .~dvancemenl 0-L:"1TA-l. II.SST, some inpcrson,Mr.Donul,135 I•' m l Ill ;st .1. I l I) y ... o c .. 1 ren pc . Auto Parts. Toyota, olvo Po b I t r b lh , .... ~ E h SI .lll'.I r h & ~l .i ll'r 11 ll :il-l·O~l t, A31 15S2. !'M·2tHl or 4!tH2G8 Dealer in Mission Viejo, ssi 1 1 ies or 0 men front nCftte 1luties. Ex· · 17t · •Costa Mesa. Xii t..'l11.'Jt1111h 1111ty __ :!pm Hpm needs qualified parts &women. per Sal mornml! & ~Ion Beer Tovern·C.M. ENGINEER Fo~:~~~~un~!OP1 ment of !>mall electro-: mechanical assemblies, Expcr. an documenta• tion. production lino troubleshooting & cost 'r eduction. Degreed engineer pref'd. STACOSWITCH INC 1139 Buker Costa Mesa 549-3041 Equal Oppor Employer ---counter man. Call Terry dav•;. Ur. !:ichu mm. DRIVER '""1 •I' \111 .FO\ 'l;l)\\'hl"·•mo,cd *KARE111o..1•5* ASSEMBLERS 831·2880 No exp€'r. nee. You re-8'17°>1501 r arl tame for sehl EXEC. SECRETARY for ''' rw.irt.v 1cirnpl'l1t1 .. n \acL.ii: :-.11:uci " ----------• ce1vcrullpaywh1lebe1ni; C"h.ldrn, must be Q\•r 25. investment co. in 111 1, .11• 1•flrn• lo.1ld1cn nl5 l:?:.>tl Ol.JTCALL l\1,\.-.SAGE Min 6 mo's eJ(pe.r. in any trained. You can work DENTAL/ASSIST Lave nr JIU area. No spec Fashion Island. Must ·'' ul l ... oct llrm • l 111. --------1 Rr':'>l 2,\)1 11:111-l?llO o( the followinjl: PC As· AYON morning or ev~. hr.; On· Cll~\IRSIDE. Expr only. lie reqd ~1·3325. have 4 yrs cxper., type .. 1 17 11 FOL.' n parl :'.1.1mr"e 6 i;embly~ Harne~s, Con ly 10 min. by fwy. from 2 cl"vs, 1 eve per wk. . . 65·70 wpm. sh 80-90 wpm. ''" ut.l k1ll .. rl. \IC c )I . ., II d . u~ Drug s a I cs I ad y *SHARON'S* nei:lur or Solder. Color NeedExtraSS a surroun ing com· P/tamc llunlington • · ·Apply, TMI 369 San 1'.1rk •1-;•1 :!.>~tl l'odc not rl'q'J . .J::xcC'llcnl mumlacs. \'ou owe it lo Harbor 8-411 lltil7 Cosmelitaan. mature ex· Miguel Dr . Sulle 200, OLTC1\LL :\1 1\SSAG E co. benefits includt.>s 1 To Make yourself to al least rn· · per only need apply. N.B. SweepiftCJ Ser.,ice ''1"~' rn1mthlv "'i 111, p 11. I., h.1n•lll'' 1t l'.'I 1hh,hnl .11 t'llllnh .\ i'•pll J•nl•'t11 ~1(10 duv. II t Bl , •I Ti t I I-ell :-.ll W11 ,1w:i1rh. \ 11 ll,1lh<1,1 1'1t·I'. Fn t'\l' :ti 1 2:!ii In 11h•1111fy 49!11:!24 wki; , acation after 0 Christmas Menier? vcstigalc lhts unusual DENTAL Downtown llntg Bch.1----------EXOTIC GIRLS mo's. 11 1'.ud holtliays, Earn ahout $40 on every 1JP1>0r. <.:ontacl Jenelle llrthnclonllc chairslde as· 536-27()1 EX· SE R VJ CE MEN l!roup ansuranrc starts SJOO you sell as au i\ VON Taulbee. !133-l!O!lli. ~1st. l::.xpl'r prcf"d. Costa ELECTRO MIC WITH good ~ccords r Ul ''\ O llltl 1 .. ns:.l1<.h ~l.1!.~.l$!l' & t\10(Jl'ltnl: d ( I & (\cprescn t:i ti v c. Sc 11 l\frsa. 54ti·Sl70. !Jecded for ~ss1gnments COCKTAILS Sht•••Jl ilul! puppv nr ::.:in Outrall Only 542 :lltiU ay 0 Hru many beautiful gifts. jewelry, BOYS AND GIRLS TECHNICIAN in ~he a~t~vo Ar my. Cl1•m<'nl1• Uo):. Club ----------1 mor~pply Personnel cosmetics more. 1 '11 Mas!'.ion V1e10 • El Toro DENTAL ASSISTANT. Background digital & Basic trarnang not r e. ~;111"~1 m11nthh .1~12.'ll>.>i.! p Q BOXES s how you' how. Call Jrca. E;irn your own Part umc w /prcvcntion analog ci r c uitr y . qui red in many cases. ·~i·. C'o1 i..1.111.;, J l'ktnJ! -------• • OOCUMENTOR 5'1(}.7041orZenalh 7·1359. money sdlin~ subscrip· cxpt•r. xray he. for a hap· Diversified work load in Coot act your Army ~Ll.J l'O I ur .ulltl\1l. UBI. FOt;' O: l'uppv. Jl:trl For Rent ·---------1 taons arter i;chool. For in· PY chrl•rful ore Ill Hunt. design & testing of in· Recruiter: °:•I r.11 Term•r. \'le <JS Joann DIVISION rormation,call830·091J Bch.!162-1734 strum entallon. Ad· 1525Mesa Verdc E. -'-l C \1 \pl .I fl.lt1·f•lq1 631 0727 BABYSITTER who can -vancl'd Kinetics, Inc. Costa Mesa 540·1026 LAUNDROMAT --• Addresso"raph l ove 9 mnnth old. BUSY-NOH SMOKING l>cnlal Hcceptionisl 1231 v·ct ri s CM 1---------t.'(ll0:-..1> I I d -----" l!:x1>enencc111.:c. 1 0 a t., · .,._ ________ _ t,r»·,~iOllllmo ,. · -~··m.il' og, 'TJIEEXl'l-:HIENCE'" Multtgraph Mature. r eliable. my Off i ee n eeds 2 coi ~""O 646·7lf.S.KO.E. 1• 0 111 .. 1,11ul1rv trnublc trN· t "klN1 rt•l h P" 292 I S. Do1·m1-hnmc 2112 days a week. s. alrsp"r!lnns. Urop by "" """' FACTORY ~ \clult molr·I Cloo;cd ~ • -l1o1 :1 • \\',1._h,,. '· 12 lf.1rh \ tr.C'I 1.12 :!110 l"lr<'t11t T\' 1-°llr llci.crva· SANTA AMA Wl'st mins ler I Bois a Kahle Klty, 870 W. 19th ---------•I ELECTRONIC TECH BT.UEJEJ\N JOBS ;1,n •;'" n~ 1n:nt1r~1i n~, -SCRAM LETS -llon,, :..111 !l'i:'i:-. Equal Opr>0r Employer Chiea. M2·0560. _s_t._C.:\J. 6'1G·3!197 DIET ARY AIDE ;1ectron~~s manur ~~as ~!:ic~s~~a~~a~ers .11:.'.1' .~ m1'1'~ wit;• u0:,.1 . *PALM READER* Babysitlrr-Tcacher wants CAB DRIVERS .. ~ ~l~c~on'lc~'~~~;,"& te~~ Inspectors h·rm~ /\Rt M..'fi \ZOO __ ,., ANSWERS Pa~•. prl's<·nt & fut11rr ASSEMBLERS mature loving woman lo Menor Women Mature individual re · inspector. 2 Yrll of elcc-GC'n'I Lato r, 3'>0 •q '12?" Sil w/tO mo old baby Mustbc25nrovt·r quired for dl''iScrts . tronic study In college or Unskilled Workers •"\\it l.~.\IE.,rf'.• Tho·nn C.rra<inl-~.w:!l:l .''II I · td ~ FVllTime Mon-Fri l0am-2pm. Hcfs /\pplylnl'erson Wl'ekl'rlds, 6a.m . 2:30 equi val ent work or Day&SwingShirts l;tll .\l".ir•I' SIS,000 h1.1nl\ llt·1·t11:-Drvor<"c·d , drprr,\cd . XJntopporlunatyinMi.c;-rcq"d.Lag Hch •l94·2536 YellowCab pm. l'lcosc eall Ms. military l'XPCr. rcq'd. ·on ThcJ obTraining llur1:i·r'l':.11 rrrc::1m l 'll,\lt<:r: despnnd1•nt. & desp:11rc1l 51011 VaeJo Indus trial Babysaiter/Housckceper, ll251SlalerAvenue GarveyatS.17-l~OOo. Xlnt henl'f1ls ancluding TempAssiCJ""'fl'ts 1,10 11"1 \I ~lb ~2•000 ll:i\I' ynu n(i!ll'L'll how TV Doctor dt> .. lfl'S, h•malc• Complex. J\J U.1.l have )Ive-in. 2 boys 8 & 3. Mu~l )o'ounlain Valley BEVERL y MANOR mcdical/<lcntal. KO.J::. Apply Daily luri:r·r<" <·er rt'PJ1rme11 .11 c JU~t hke c~mpan10n!.. h11> ,:..1ust b" I h Id h --Disc lns-~~s K...il S I t I h SU 500 " .. manual clexlenty in sml ove c 1 ren. ave ex per -C PENTERS 2<U52 Vaa Ebtra<la rrvmcm '"y er¥ CH, pc ';1ot~,,';~Jnclscu!J) ' i~~'.'.ill~:.,n'U:,y0,\;~i[h~yt ~~c~".olt.I or ovr. CJll compone!"ts.Jo'amiharaty & refs. Good pay . AR 0 TS Lagunallllls 102E.B97a9k_~300rSt,C.M. NewportBcb 83.1-1441 .,.,c 000 ... " """""" using microscope very 1>14·1537. 8 A Equal Qpnnrtunitv ,, Oranae 547.9535 IUrl' ......,, L1l.\R(;F.1 ----------i ,,,. " ., l'ru!\hcd and cub<'<l ,.enonol St't"•ices 5360 help Cul. Gd benchls, Mi11 J yr exf)(!r rcq'd. Employer ----• F\allerton 879·11762 ice $34.950. f-'Ol1:\l>. t.rg pd bird l'un ••••••••••••••••••••••• .!lalary commensurate BA 8 YS 1 TT ER· Nd Must have own tools & ~~~~~~~~~~ ENGINEER Equal Opr>0r Employer •RERTIIA llF.NRY J'l.ov 7, vie Methodist Disco & Soul dance w/cxpr. Cal l Carol mature woman, 5 days, transp.Top wages&xlnt P/Tlmc mgmnl position n~:.\t.TORS '192-<112l ch u r c h , II e 1 I & chi:1Sl's now forminJ:. 5111·3830 for appt. 7:30 to 4 pm. Exprd, refs. benefits. Apply to Secun· Sell idle itcmR 642·5678 open. 768·30G4 ar1 GPM. CLJ\SSI Fl ED will sell It. I I "'t s "I G Id l 0 •211c1H My home, HB. 846-2774 lY Guard, Wcslsat'I , .. ·rp,1---------215 )1• " .1r,. :1n' t•m. ro t•nwes . ,,., · ·• • (;:'111642·455'1afl4: 30 ""' B b 'tl d d 5 1 275 McCorm~") ·.l.\ve, H-'""WClftted 7100tt.lpW•tf'CI 7IOOH.a...Wotlftd 7100 • L()ST. al Jolly Ro"er. Soc., .... C'ubs 5 400 ASSISTANT 3 ysa er nee e t ay M • .,. ... .,.. W d 50 0 " .. ' wk 2·30 S·30pm N R 2 ~ta csa. •••••••••••••••••••••••1••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• &ls1Mss ant• I <N.n.) ladies wallrl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TO CONTROLLER Ho, 7 & 9· s I ' . . ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• nnod Orive~s l.ic .. F.lc. ARF.YOUINACL1\SS For smrill Oran1to l:o. 64/~ . a ary open. CarpetCl•aMr HEED ACT10N! Hew a rel. l'n qucsllons BY YOURSELF? electronic manuf. co. 640·2700 btwn 8:30-5:30 Vnalcd Ru::.111rsc; rnvesl· askNJ 6407SSG Jtas your ranancial Must be familiar w/sim· Babysitter live·in. speak . . mt•nt~. Im·. California's -;ecunty m ade you a pie consolidated state· EngUsh, Nwpt Bell area, Cashier, Cafeteria help. 2 laqte~l husinesl> s.1lcs R~ward for rl"lurn of Rlur tarjtet for social clim· ments: forecasting; SEC own rm. 640-1660 positions. One Sam-2pm le:im. 25 11H1ccs s t;ite 1 oinl rrrnle. Siamese cJl. bcrs? At Vidcov 1ew reporting; corporation & o~e noon·9pm. Call wadc,6 m0rJnJ!eCounty _F.Jst_!!.luffo.~~-•~---Di:tmnnd Club, you'll t ax returns. Reply to BABYSITTER, Kin· :>111·067t exl495ber.9am to scrvu·c your n('Cds. we WST rro m bas ket. Blue meet other singles who Classlried ad no 7AA c/o dl.'rgarten t eacher nds C" · led e d "" atl! fo b h 0 ·1 p·1 t PO Bo. 1'560 woman to care for yr old •• eanang women wan . ar e!-,~r r usr· Cordurnv s lacks, plaid can afford t e best life Cosaa Y Ma o • C 1 f ~2,,...., • boy, during school hrs. $3.50+ per hr. Must have ncsscstosrll,wchavc blouse.Heward.645-5744 has to offer. T h e ta esa. a1 . ..,,,.,., h SC Pl car 673·7868 people wath SSOOO. · Diamond Club Mcm· EquaJOppor Employer My omenr • st aia. --· -· -------1 5200.000. who arc reacly, l' I e :u e 11 c IP. 1.os l bcrship is S2500. Other ~~~~~~~~~~I 545·7024 Clerieal willing & ah la to buy W1reha1r Fox Terrier. Memberships from $125. BANKlNO Production Clerk llUW. bei(te m11lc. Ans to S5S 7C1?0 ASSISTANT NEW ACCOU....,,S Good with math & de· CALL 011 "Rags". Vic of 16th & . M" ..... "GERS "' Don't setUe for less when """"" CLERK tails, work in manu(tc· 1525 Mesa Verde Dr. Ortinito. Charles Heller ynucanhavclhebcst. O\•er 21. 5 d ay week. turlngarea. .. Eao;t, Su1to 106, Costa Park. C.M. Re ward.1---------1 Salary $600 +. /\dull Bank exper.req'd. St _.._ •tesr• 646·1670 art 4. I N pets Ph Contact Bob Creight.on enogr .. .,.,.,., " ·• comp eit. o . one Irvine NationaJ Bank Heavy t.ypin~ for small 751.3741 . LOST lattlc girl!! blk rn.foy!Mftt& f«appt.betwecn9om& 833-3700 £.O.E omce. Experience pre· l><'nlw/theprofe!lsaonal Cockapoo. No t ags. Pr.,.-atiOft 5pm. Newpor t. Village ferTed. Apply mornings An,wers ''Todo". ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apts. 63S Baker, Costa IEAUTYSTYUST al: 17352 Ar mstrong. ln•eshMttt PLEASE PH 842-32'71. Sc:hooli & Mesa. 557.()075 Must do latest trend!! In Irvine. (Nr. RC'dhill & Opportunity 50 I 5 1 . l'lfod Si Oran e IMfruc:tfOft 7005 natural slyling. 837-4250; MaMrthur). 540-8503. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .tQl , ' · · .It •••••••••••••••••••••••SELL Idle items with a 837-8779· COMPANION, female Profit Shnrlng investors ''"'• In Ccl l\~ Vicinity Dally Pilot Clu$iflt>d A<f. wuntC'd to invl'11t in Ir" G40.0090or673 4572 ••,.. l"'RTE ... DER •OAT BUILDER over~ yr11. Non-smoker. " .., ~ "" " f" Cooktn!I. no houseclean· Tnmuran Charter Busi NOW IS THE TIME Jo\Jll or Ptr\.llme c Smoll cstm yard. needs lnit. raTt time only . nes~. N.B. (114J67S·10l7 (or Job seekers lo check Be rN1<1y to work a11 a Toplac6yourmcssagc oil types of expr d boat 673·15116 afttipm. the Dally Pilot Hr-Ip prof~iuonalbartcndcrin bcforelhc bulldc•rs&toolers. ----------1 Min $3,000, 100% tu 11htllrr this Yt:Jr. 120' .. cap1tJI RrAln"' rt'lurn of In• vc.stment In 1977. CPA manaRed. c1111644·0782 Wanted dasiiif1<'at~on. 11 l wrt'lt. f're-o Job phacc· readln" public, P.sQUAHED BOATS COOK, cxperlenct>d In lhc job you want 1s not montanil\l&nco.. " S41·2873 Muiean Food, 34224 I.he.re you ml1thl comilder Amerlcan Bartenders ~:Uhyo~~lol -1-0-... -,-C-... -R-.-it-u<re--.. -5-• Coasl Hwy, Dana Pt. ot'rertna your scrviee!I School "" "" r~" •'"" 496-4470 with :in nd In the Job llO& E. 1'7lh St, SA Oass/tied, &4.2·S6'78 Conlract job. Boat .-.. ---------1 Wanted category. Phone 834-1960 • pair. Hrly rat.. 6;3-7569 Find what you want In 642·5'78 days 768-S2A8 aft 6. Daily PUol Classifieds. • • I FREE REAL ESTATE CAREER SEMINAR "No Obligation or Cost" TUESDAY, NOV. 9th at 8 P.M. 16241 8"ch llvd., HuntilM)ton leach IECOME PART OF ONE OF THE TOP PAYIHG CAREERS IN SALES SEE ROBERTS: • Advanced Marketing Techniques • Audio-Visual Sales Training Program • ;Amaz>ng ERA Electronrc Property Presonlalton System • Success Formula HEAR ROBERTS:• 1976 Career Opportunities • Unique Prolesslonal Tratnlng Program OPa. TO THI PUILIC COMPLIMENTARY ltERtESHMEHTS lnffn1hd PWMM. llcf'Med ""..alctMecl _... IH itf'CI tO cal far UMhd MGfincJ ec:comMadotlOM 848-1688 Roberts. Realty 8 t.oartlons Sefving The South Bay a Orange County .... Wca.t•d 7IOOH .. W•t•d 7100HtlpWa.ted 7100HefpWanta<t 7 100 HetpWonhd 7 100 HdpWont.d 71 00 TU8$day.Novomber9,1978 OAILYPILOT 8J3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• FACTORY HOUSEKEIPIR MOTOR ROUTE P 'l S111t..... 10 $70 wk up •••••••• t r EX AS H I:. ~-1 "" to; ft Y FrH to y 04' 1049 G•oge Sale 8055 Mlaullaneoua 1010 Work in 011 :ilr cond & Hynt11q;t o n Harbor Dal.JY Piiot r oute In Men, lat.li11,,, i.ludcnh /1. .A.1 m5pr.R501o.15 COltV artrr11 PLl:NTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• <:urpelt.'d nn•:a w /FM Jlomt' 20 hn wk, $2.50 Ncwporl Beuc h. afltr· t::vi•:c/Sul SH 7 tl~I. ~""'s; s; " OF :\10~EY plus l.'u1>h i\bandnn1•d blark Lab/ :\tOVll\G SALi:: Sofas. WA .... TED mut1ic. Mu&l h&\'l' p.i hr. Oulic• Ind Ille noorus, Monday throu1>h 830·7111Kl Tripi~ A. rntt'<l rompany bonu .. es. fnngo bonc>flt1 Doberman puppy , turn Imp• pirlurn " uen('t} lo work w miao hukp'ii & care of 1 child t-'rld11y, plu!I Satu1dJ)' -----half ChrliHrnJ:. S1·;i11un to matun• 111dlv1duul 1n remote 311 01os Swl'et misc' Nov 12: 13, 11 10 $• TOP CASll DO Lt.Alt miniature p.irli unurr ,1 ufh'r •1.'hOUI Hrs 2 7 pm and Sunday mornin~'I .,URCHASI ~G n .t-:10' s11le:s P\'r:con:c PoSllloni. l~.ll h ,1r,•11 lh·.iurdle:<!< d1i.po'l1l 111r1. love11bl\' Ul032 Norton In l' A I l> .,. o R you I{ m 1 c r oHOPQ. 11 c rm ,1 1 •1 h '1''rl. 8Ul·S9S8 l'v ~JOO per month g1 Oh S.W 12 Mo's. 8 hr duy A1>PI>• uva.1l1tblc lo Lo6 AnsckN 1•C t.''<l)Hh·m·t.>. "'file/\ 1-· Nt't'<ls J hom.: l~ll) 7535. JE\\ i-:1.nv. WATCll ~. ; work. Jira 7am·3 :klprn or 121JHrntl-S7U l duyi. CJ!lh d~posll requlrl'd at (X'r'>onnd nfr I JKUllJ urcu nulional rda1l 1'1111• Prl'' • Tex a~ ---HorHs 1060 AHT OLIJt-;crs GOl.U T op pa} +co twni•fit,. A"kfi>rJuhcl'l'll'tt>Oll Call 6-i2-4321, usk for BeJch l ntfll••I S1 hnnl swes.Ladtelid<'pt. 1tcr11111n ('vrJI, k\" 711, ll.inihon~.i J'uppici., l ••••••••••••••••••••••• S l L.V£H S£KVJC~:. Glllser Tuul C'u , 1101 t; -c1rculut1on l.>lstnct, bc·fori• 11 IJ ii.I Call Toll Fret Fon Worlh, Tt•>.J~ 7t.llll. wki., ·11 (rl'rmJn !.hi P + f> al' ode. 1 m il h oriic 1''1 NE Fl' H N & A:-; Curnei:1e Ave, !-.Jnta Uou1ockcq1cr. must be -I.ab 6t Wolmcrllnci Sp1nt~.OJ!>hyt;ickmcl. ·r1QL1ES 002200 Alla, ~O 4080 >.Int al rlc11nlni;, lnllr>'. ._.aED QC INSPECTOR 1-800 325-8409 Tow Truda Driut' ~7 IS!r.! $ae)O. ~-1>11111 eves - ----1runin1> Hcf'$ & r 11r, 2!1 1"'111: .1-;1ectroni•'> mJnur hJ!-H Ch Oq:r 21. ci..11. pref t:hihu.ihua & Terrier. --LUGGAGE TAGS ----------1 ht~ \\k S350 rno &&-i·4ti55 MONEY? Jll imml'<.I 111w11rn.: 101 o arq• ~.1IJry -+ t·orum . Ill'. !-.11n11\ Color .a Yt'aro;. rwarn\lno mare, mu:1l set• from \our bu~ml'~i. card. FIELDSERVICE ---unelectronit-.ledi&te't toCallH' vuca .. l'll' ,\ (' M.1lt• Neull•t~d DG.i-42114 l o ap pr ~. I::ng o r Sc!nd olll' card tor c.u•h R"'•RESE""T"'TIV"' llOt:sl':l\1•:f:1f)o:n , live-in 1n11n••c1ur. 2 Y1 i. of cll'I' Ask for Autnmvltvt• :-.crvk.-11os Wn tern ~.MS 0527. 1 U"" ""' "' .. I We have openlngr; for "" \UR PU!\ 0111: Kl)arc Wu We:.l-~oil ~11rp. ha~ im ~·If. .~·a~~~\' I ~i'f~~·~al~l~~ 1400) people lo wurk ~I.I t(tq11~:1,c 'l\11ly i'" i•ol~·t~ o;. Mr. Philltp or ~I f ;I \•1m1no HNI. S.in ~dlul ll' to Wl'l'~" hl0<·~ rodo i\r111>1,1n / M ,;;;n C oll; rel urn Pl' I m ,111 cnt I .v mt:d. va1·Jnc1c~ r1Jr a hit! l' '''°" 10 tla•s rlell\erin" · v.i t·n wo n M1ssSusan H ill. ··men" l'mix.nu ni:.itl'."ci; b Sun1•tb t•o1)form utlon i.eoh.-d ullrat·tivc tai; & l' 1 1en, 1ke lo ,·ook . , " milil;iry t•:11pcr rc,i'd ln''"IL h1111w 1147 '1Hl-i -,. \' l' r i. '1t11 1' '111lbou1 til>le to tuke cnre of 1>m;.,ll ll•ltophonc d&rt'ctorlc~ in Xlnt ht•ndit .. rndutltn~ Thu• are I'• ,11 d \ 1:i·n1. 1., 1,.,1 ·11 _ · · xln\ blood line. reg. l\tuat 11trap, nu•ctlnu u1rlln~ <'r:iflsm.m w /ut least 3 houi.1i 1111 . ttalboa Ii.I. :! the Orang(' C'11 urc•a m1..-dicul dt•ntJI. E O.l::. salaried positions. Twkl'lm~· 1'1<'.1ltH' bJlci.. Fvmlhlro 8050 ~31116 __ 1.0 . rti11wtl'tnl"ntis l'r« Yrll cxper In 1111 phui.cs t'I 1·• .... 7 1 ... 5 Work ~ou r ll\'Jllablt' 7511$Xt ~" xin1 vent lu:.i. & thdt~ 1-·or u r I II un•n, uvy • 1111 " d I h h Disc lnstrumenh •••• ·-·... . . I •• • •••••••••••••••••••••• Heglstcred Qtr hor11c & I d I n 10 at c a rfH' n try, l>.iy wk. Non·s moki•r ay Ii; l ours. Men m L' 11 k < :\I , I BUY T h C j)t·r~u11.1 lfl• lug ('ll<' oi.<· plumh1n11 &clcc\nl':il Salar) flcxiblt'.MS l;IJO womenovcrll!Wllh t-ur,, 10:.i ... ;tl'rSt,;. l'l'obop. lllli~rsolll ** ** .B orsesonalc \\11llpap1•r, Cabt'll' v• Thl.'rl.' will be consH.11.'ra l!I ti) ortl75.J62!> llfl. i; ,.1,1ti1111 11 ai:ons or 1111• !lill·;,;1011 •:1lt·i.1lt'r,nn for l'urkl'I s w :'1111111•11 lo di) la1 ltt' (;UOll ui.vd Furmtun: & 496·9004 liJI ~·1044 "Day t;lo' pupcr o.e w1• Ille truv .. hn~ from 1111r -trul.'~i. .ll l' lll•cdctl '"'UAL Y PNs, Newport Uch, l':--· 'l·w~11u1wr roult'. \lu:<I 1\pphJtH'c :. -Oil I will J1tw~ry 8070 will b,u·k & 111 111 \niir 11 1 lant to uur walnl>ltlt• l louwwivt·~ or 'hut 111\, 1'11.'J'unt ouldovr -W (ir k T IT i.ieronly. f)40·W.JO ___ '.~~l'rn11~1t;~c·,",t',h1.l<•1r11.I ~~7:.! •• 11'11\11'._, i<Cll or S~l.L for \'ou. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ta"l>. Or try l"-11 1·artb '10wrvoni "hrr1· vuu malt• or lcmalt', phonl' \ ..ihd llrtvt'rs lie. & Ca hf. Assurance MCJr. . ·• ••, .,:, -MASTERS .AUCTION l>ol"k to h:ll'k will do warranty work~ lt11111 )our hume. $3 hr liceni.e plates req'i.l. (iui. Vonni.: u"i,:rci.ll l' ino1n >.1m11ll.' makt•r ".111tt·d ult 5 30 P:\f. _ 646 8686 & 833 9625 W AMT ED PHll"l•:S bout !thaw pri'p:11 ,1t1t111 li1571!ltlur831·3056. __ allowarwe paid. l>a1ly ,,1..'t'klng :in OPl•llttunrtv !\lu"l ha\'C IJ<:lury 1•i.p<'r 1'H''"t filhq>m .,,irl • --·--TOP CJ\Sll DOLLA ll sz4,5c1 11 •• 1°g~:ISls.sOO ... i (;all !lh. ~l cUon.1111. draws:1v~nl. Forimmc:"<l ...,/new \lii.sw n \'icJIJ on t1~al11y .:JrnH·nt,, l.trn,• llis lh-iollle SAVI::' New&us\'dfurn, PAID FOR YOUR ~ ~ ~~ 9711, e-<t 47 for mon· assignm ents lollnw1ng ,. um Pan y. 1 , 1 " 1\.ls11 1nd~u,11:1.1l !1'~1ch111c ll:ll lllti6 appl':;. misc. Wilson's Jt:Wt:LRV, WATCllt:S. ti !ltui.:~ SI ~.01•J information INSPECTORS !>hort lratnmg l>C,,.,1011 m1mmum tll<pr m qoahl) '".!_i.!_1le (. alhtt..11 titi17. Har~ain Nook, Now 2 AllT OBJECTS. C.OLO. \Oor mon• Sl.10 cu _ __ Apply at the loeutton 1·1mlrol Ue111l'l' lltlt 1w1· -Vt:1..r1n.1rv ll o'tf>l t :d Stores -545 & 1114 W. S I LVER SE R V JC Jo;, St1h•,,Tu,.. Included F ILE cr.t:HK • Rt<•ivlnCJ/Me4:h'I ne~~~~t~ ~~:1 :30PM Sal co,;,menwr.1t~· w "'" ;cf~~~~-\01. ~~~ ~<,'~\'; ft\•crpt1111u:.1 !>ecrc1.1ry. l!llh, C :\1. 642-7!130 & Fl ~ 1-: F URN & AN Druw ~<1~,c~~~:r scml .. ~ ttmc, no ex per n•'C' :! Yr., ret·ent ex per in Uaily ~ginniryi: pr. >.Int t711et it-.. t:urol d ,1v. Apply ,,,., :.onnc·l t.~~I y, :lH:.111 1-;. C!>l. Hwy s.u!-3262.. -WE BU\' TIQUES. &lS -2200 nJme, ;uhlre~s. phone &. Phone: &15·0000___ ,\ll'l'l metnl, plJ:.11, & 1'ue~day~v. !Jlh al Slll·3k.10 or appl - -oft. L ·' i: u 11 a 11£' ac h ----\\'Jtcrbcd, huge, custom Beaut. opal necklace gold 'H'll mak\.' Ollt' <'Jrti J>l•r· FOODSERVICE mad11neparll'-Soml!PC 2Q..IDW.A!Si'letonJ\\'I.' l'n111cd !)Chool lh:.trnl V I S l 'I' FHl\NCE , m.1de./\llacccss.S25Q.or setting baby pearl:. tui: \dd2'lcal'h. /\II ~iround hd""r. mim l''J>er desired. Orange Ht!al ~late bl•.!_1J1~ t~ :Ill 1~----fo:!'\l;(.A=" I>, 11.1ly. Spain tx-st o(f,•r. &H·i438. worth sss. Ofr. lllugg1c Scmd check or money u1 · "' •In-Process <OfCt;lassell on \\Cck,·ncl P·'"":. when - --673·2089 derto· rcl>taurant :H Ol'W l11c:al Above Katell:l) BROKER • S e<retarft-s to SI 500 you JOlll lht• Arm\' with Lennox chma. serv for 12, PILOT ftRlt-'TIMG c'ec athlcllc dull. \Ion \1111 I yr exper 1" in 2611 Woodland On\'e • S•c retont-s/Lenal ouiu;intccd ·•'!.l''nm!'nt l'mplt :\Jonarch puttrn, Unstoclc 8075 p n. Ro ~'"' L'r1 approx 10· JO ., 30 pr1X'C'SS ur all l'll l'I n.>llll' ~ ... -.. ,.. .v x 1""'1 T • • • ~ • Anaheim F111Anal 1ht l'ntrlr 1 IK t11 Eun•Jlt' llS d11,tom,1 \\ 'lru pieces in perl ••••••••••••••••••••••• c'-. l.1 •1 ,·~J .• '·•. 9262\l C;illfo_ru~pl.~571i2:1i. m~pet·t111n. ~l ust l.11ow ,.., "I 1· SE VICES .1 le r ed .... U\ v" " " vu l'lilor t•odt·:.. blucpnnb & 1..r •• 31(00 IU/ R Etnpluyer~ Pa~ All rec'> prd<'ll l'd l (I lo ~:loo l'llOu. I Vl' Ul> ~. Ke~. i\lori;:m marc. broke ---Gt-n~ol Offic• "'hcmlll1t•s -La Palma) l.11Hc111dcrs,\gcnt•) (':J'>i.. lionl" p ,1111 10 \l;iplc l'abinel col•Jr tv. lo ride & drive, blkl3ccrclraltl.'r.holds 11Kl·I! l'l•rmani'nl part ti me. * Proto-S04'n:~ :1328 W. Isl Strel'l 'w<.-d a imifl·~swn.il "11., 11120 Birc·h St. Ste 11~1 •111Jhfll'd 1•nli~11•"" (':ill 21" l.'On~oll' S250. "mer parade :\lor~;1n t:eldlng. <>f l>t!t<•". new l.'ond. s200. ___ .. s~1nta Aou I t tl :'\t'\\IM>rtB<:ach tl331SIW yuur 1\rn1v H1•('r111ll'I' 0Jk "lll cbOJrll w Ent:. \\.'clolcl'll (714 ) 6735276.CJllaftllA.\I. Mulll M1ll1on l111l!.11• I Yr~ <'Xp<•r. rn source 11f .... "'" uwnt'< or m.HIJ~c "" ..,.. 1 d & I -- Cr j I uclwccn l•·r"" r":-11\ .. r1l1al t .,,.ulu l'.ill lvr .\1111t !-~tall ti:l Wl5 :\I l'l>J \ crdc I~ ""' c c rmrror l' aw 3311· IOI I 1.'0rp. slu '"" llC\\ ti I' Ill •111 1•1 •1·1r1 Ill'' Ill I\ Clllill I I u .... ' ' ' ' .. I l ... ~5 I t b r1· t -------CUSTOM I r V 111 ... ::. .. "Cl .. II • ' ' " ,,,.c f:JI' xwlf•'atn ie"' I 11flll'l' w Ith .. ,,Ul.'l'Cl> ... IUI l'O'llll ;\h•,.;1 ;.111 10..'fl l'l' ...... w.1 nu u e ~ ,. ~ ~ ~ \111..,l ~n11w color l'IHlc, 118 F:ur Or. Bid" 1.1 SECRETARY -Sli:J Ph · 548 7tsOO Machinery 8078 lhu ia ·tll' po~1t1 c II t h I ., b,1t•ki:rouml •>1 rec:ruil WOVE .... WOODS :. · s • · ,. ' 'Ul'P1111 "· st• l'lllU H:. Ur:rngl'Cu. Fa1ri::rou11cls 1 I :\lu:-.1 hl• t'liPl't·, or \\',1ttl 1''" 1.-. .... 1 l..'•lll..t.u b. 1. --••••••••••••••••••••••• "" minded Pl'OPll• lo in \\'111 pcr1orm lll"IJl'l.'llCln L'ost;J ;\lc"a lllJ.:. l'tJllHllJ.: am manal! 1-!JOltl.'d, ra:.l al·Cur:ile Apply Jlt •lpm, lll1tl' r.111j! "1~c utlrn_i ~cl !0 r L'raflsman lbl mdl, drill •sor; TO!lo'I OFF• lr'OOUC'C inei<pl'll"I\'!• na ,1l J>1thrunt1 at·lor;. &. as· !Entt'r Ft'<lm :-.:c\\ pod rng pco11ll'. \lyst UI.' ault• tvpt"l \111llipl<! dullt·~. lln•t IUi Zbl l'l.ll'l'. ;Ii II -,:iii· .. t.;i.m~o.k.' r\ · I ~c, prl.':'S. i,3hp, ft switch. Wd 0 \'<'1' IOlll·i.lOC'k pullcrus • t1011;illv known nrochtt'th ,.1sl with in·huu!>l' ins pce· "l\d) Ill t·<1111 n111 nll·al•· with turu;, ~ulfl'< lhl.. mag l.ttlic. A' bd no n1tr S ,. u I k !!U<lll bc11ct1ts. ~J. Sl'ntl WA hi ., 1\l-;o MINl·llLIND. from t1111·11C1· l't'l'C µu1k 1tonwh\'nrcqu1rcd. >ro c·r11nwiwr' n·~umc lii l,.;L:I'. J020 \\' ITRESS '; s · ~l'l'.S.Sl'r .. many Craftsman °tbl saw , li45·11!J~I 1133.9770 till: & vthe1 b1·111:f1t s, -----l::xce cnl i.:il.1ry. I''\ I' tinw lll•l11 11.:! tlatlv. g.011d1cs ... ,us. Colton, '"'u"''' lO", ~,, nllr. 1(1" --- - --- II If Jn ant, Santa .l\na ...,,,.,.,. ... , ' •lt'usanl s11n·ouml1n·•~ & 1.:,_,, .. 1J .. nl t11 l1l•r1uf1t' ir1· :'\UR SE· R='J W antetl . l>\'llNcs. cur• u t1WJlll't' ·r1n11 "· .31>2<12 •"r11\\ 11 ~plkh 642 !/002 d .a .. ,.. ~ "' ~ m•"'lt l"'l 1 d"nl ~l l 111 !12i01 " -·-·--~aw,g c01111.1)44·5"27 CARPET rclJxcd :1tmnsphcr<' :-O:o t'lutlc t 11ok-. \'.ll'atrnn Surgical nurw w.1nteu '' u ' -\\1llcy f'JrkwJy,l.a~unJ -l'Xper net" & 1w i.t'llinl! .illl'r t; m•"' lt l':Jid for hl'ad, neck & Cac1:1I 'l ur aiu:r . U}n:r.m1t· -if:CRl':'fAIU\I. \VOUK. ~1cul'I lwuul Sohd Wnlnut D111 1Misc.tlcm.cMH 8080 in,·ol\'ed Xlnt ••PJ>Or for h•il1d<1y... croup 1n· p lastic s urgt-on. Wtll gro\\lh poll•ntl.tf with a Gil \\pmg skills. 1 Iii·~ --111~ llm i.l.'l, w,ti' tabli! &!••••••••••••••••••••••• PL 4 U.OOsH\HydAG ad\'anl'C•mcnl ("all ~u ranrc: ~tarh d;iy nf train. Some trav<'I & ~ohd _buc;vd firm, na )X'rdav lo~larLtiJl·l425. \\'lt.l.l~GTOTlt1\\'1'A.." 2 lc•avl's. ti hi bal'I' fullv1 i<3:t ·t!O'I;;. T 1 me I If e hlr c & munv mon· academic affiliation llonal in Sl'OP<' · - - - -TIS-mpti'lmrprt'ft•rrctl uphols C'h.alr, & 7' bulCci.;''rop:me molor fuel l:l.tlk, (..c1wt•"l priCl'S on an,• l.ibranes. Inc 1-:'lual Op Apply h:r~onncl Salar y open . Wrt le 1'11r 1·v11l 1dc11tial in ----------1 T1-.11111n1? ll. ""'•i:m,·11t 111 ~1000 Also: J:irk \\ood 23 net gals. Make ofr. mu)or hr:.1nd. Call for p<ir Emplm···r :\1 I-' DOCUMENTOR (.'bss1f1cd ad no. 7W, c 0 ten 1ew "cntl resume to Sl::CL RlTY ~tatc' nr Eurof)<! l'p to I u 11 s 11 c d cl t• s k & 1~·7670, l!:xl. 25 free quote. 10·5pm. ----U:ulyPilot,POHoxl;;60, P.U. Box 10!17:>, SJnl;; ATEAS[ S2~U ll l'<t'h paid t o ;::~.~~~1gcredcnzaSt2S.Refrig, blk '''°·swivel __ 111 1 1497·13~ GLAZER Cosla Mesa. C. 92GZl.i AnJ. 92iu2. <:uJ hltl'<I l'llhst"''" L'all -'"' rocker. BW TV. 2 5· Toron.1do lawn \'ac S75. DIVISION -----------1 of Hn1porf B•.oeh .\i m) ltccrwll't RC'.\ \:\I l''M Stereo radio drawer ch ests. M 1sc l'atr 1ts1'<1 '•de pipes Slll. 1\11 around lnr general '"rv1cc shop 111 Oraoi:c l'U11nl > • fl J1CI \' ul·a lion. ~lt·dic:al l'l.111, 'lc-.111) 1 mrloyrn ... 111 ;,3,, i.;;i;1 ,\dd1 essogr.1ph :\lulll.:rJph 292 1 S. Doimlt-r Sonfo .Ana .._.URSES AIDES --1:.2s \11.' .. a \'crt11• 1: 1"'11 ="(J\\ \1.'teplln" .\.phonograph, :.pace (or 152·0i8-I afl. '1 Hh21 II I> \Ultl'r fo1• ,.. tml,1 :\k-..1 :;111 ltl:!ti --Rttpirotory \pplt1 .111u11.,l-111 ta(ll•dcck,blOwuodcnb. --\\'ICKFH-IJ . 11 ,1 1.inl1M1.11dorh1?hlm•·l:il. :>.ceded Jt llunt111,:ton \' Jllc} Coil\. """I' .\pp· I) in peri;nn M:Jh:? Th•rapy Tech STORE SECURITY Mt'n:hondi,• S2:?.1 1.;1rls pmk lwn bed 'c h ~I 1 1t}. '1 lhp 3 ph.1w mut111 si:;. Clrtlrl .. d or l{""''lr~ \\'l' pre .... ·ntlv ha\•' .in ••••••••••••••••••••••• & ti chlr lln·:.:.er & oll1cr \\?Ohct " 1 1 1 11 '· 11111 P\ 1-'11l .1"tlt• ~ whh for 1921 ' ',.. tt~ms tHO 5291 1 c w J.:.l"\!t'll .l('l'l'll Chc' 1 uh't ~-;5 ... 01blcm-. 11.\IHCL''l l l~<i I' \HUH 'It Equ.11 01>por l:.mplu~ 1·r ~ e w man .\' l' II LI l1t•twecn.i P:\I &5 P\I dtgiblc w e'<!)l'r \lu ... l opc11111i: f1Jr ,1 m.itun Antiqut5 8005 ____ , m;11trt"':. Sltghtly ~11'\'ll ~ t.iillri.;hl l (•r •s :. ~ be able to I.lo arll'nJI g<•ntlcman 111 't1ll l' •••••••••••••••••••••••' \\'ICl'f:H l>a\' Hed i· J'-. fl ccvr •. tl'll\P 111ct'\' PJ•·k·.1r1I '.Iii' ~1·n•t'11 :! \,.~1.,t.111b :\l•.:d<:<I :\ht'l Ill' Ltn·nsccl lii:>·IJliOll HUR SES AIDES I I ood I 7 '"h 1 s 1• c u r 1 t ' I 11 r t h t • ,.. · ( I 1 ~1 5 '1 t 11 ' ~ 1 ga"""· I .~ 1 t . W d I d \<IUth \\'tth full canvpv, 11g. Hh ••· ~ ·' u~ Ill' <I r ,.1 1 1. I 'llJ .,.,., L' • ('h11"tm.1:-'\':""" on er an ~.,) ·'0 ''"0 " .• l~•.i:u jl ol.> •• ..,r .. C11nl:tl'l lktl\ ,\moru,o. Whitt· " /cref'n ucC'e11t "~~II 1 t. ... ,.., " cvci. "' IKlh -..1. C'l 1i 12.1:n:1 I 1 fo:x11cr pn·r'd :\1~-.:i \'rrr1P Con\' llosp, .,.,, C <'Oler St. l '.:\t. •Keypunch• II \I H :\l11cl1·b ru·1·1lt'd ll•r _ r.';.:~;~:1 CoslJ :\le111011al ~·,1~~~~e~~~~~~i~'r~.1;r~~; Of Antiques! ::i,-ll~~~~r;~:~~l\.~~~~ \\ 111 _Tsnt'\''''" _,,j;lt -l..tt~ '"'''!(Old lwc~tl $tlt1. ----------1 pf•1ntnwnt to 111kn'1\·11 11 U (; E w u r c h u 11 "l' Ull~.i·u,,1 s:J~. :\lu!>I !>di ' ' -\\ rritl)!ht 1rnn 1r.1 earl ... hair l'Ulltn!-: cl.1~· .. h:11r *Operator* HUR SES AIDES H H S.,IH ;\TllHY -- l'rammcd with tl\l'I' j()(I S:?Oll t.'10 21!UH '-''es & S45J?1Mlrirn11.J1111m Sli5.HltHIOi l music lrn"t'i.. 1111·kdo ,11,11r1,. ti-lh t!l:l!I t'Ulltt1 i: & !'untltl 1•11111\r, Ir•·•· b-t.;o:ttl Tl'mp I 'l 111w :\l u~t ht• ,\llSh1th l·:xpt•r a lilt• lo 1!1·111011!>1 rat" l'rd'll . .Xl111 hl'mlits llmr :ityh't w lollt1\\llll!, .. p,·1·ll Jlltl Jl'CUl'J<'} ~ .,al;1ry :\ppl). 1~1·. + hn11u" I ,111·r;1t1\'c Sonw l"11.ll11g &. lrutl:>t nh Park S6iperior llcon p1J11os, circu:-. or S 11 I • 'I 1 ·1 1 lnur/011ttlr t·:1qit·I ~:1:; g:in., \\a 1· """'· ,, 11\c1 rom 1011M't•1:rpt nw~ts:!O 'i:JFurdlrm·k ~randCatl\cr docks, r11u~t l.~·11 1.::xc1::ss S2·IOO.Xlnt xli :ll'I ' fJ,,t'tnutml( J11l1quc~ llcrn.1gl· l·11rn., ltkt' n.iw - -· " ('.\Hl't-:T ('nntral'lor hus iU )tb n•!I :"~Ion .-1ush. ;\I u'l Sl•l I'. li75·500tj &, l~I<! :!~Ill '"VP Ill )!!I l11('Ut IClll '""' llH. ex pr t.il'~ll l'tl C.111 t 11;; Su1wrrnr ,\\I' I\• 10 IH'r"1n T UI'!\ ,~ JJi u:llJ4i lt11 JIJl•I '\<·\l l•il I lkh \,I;! l·I Ill We<l'>. l'nt\·er,11y l'Jtk •---------1 Coiffl'ur'i, l>!ll:i:? C'ul\l'r. -HurHS Aid.s TllJo:l!,\l'IST :.1u~l work ~t·t'\1t:c Sl.t lkl11 w1111te<I .di :.htfls .\pply .ii !-,.10 F llnl<' :.1 ,ile or fem. Sal t' 1.-mt• n t ,, c; ,. n, r ,1 1 111w11 + l'omm ·' vDIY m llm.pital, Hr:.pirulor) ~pr<;on . lla_rh111· \'1rw f'ht•r:rpy lkpt 4Hti·l 122 Slwll. 25tW! San J1,'JflUUl Jlrlls Rel. <..cm . REST.AURAHT ------- I h•cr ~L.000.\X)(I Worth H l'.I :. 111 1 c cs . T r p I l 'urnl bl. dua I 1111 !), <' 111 pit Aml•ric.111 lnlcrnJllonal ~· l·~s.rr. IJ111 ltm . Scl, ly tuned $75 llldl• ,1 l>t•rl, l'l.LSll ll' !::iof,1 & ti' l.ov (i.1l1('nt•&; hiO:!·T l\t'ltl·r 1'.11tl f IJb, UaL So[J. i;rn cord, uhl btl Sl:!:"1. 1·,..•:1t, l nlattl \\llOd g.1mc 1nl! Si., I rv111t'. Tt•I. t~IO l\IH~ f)IS·-1:!7!1. "ct w1match1111! tbls & _I_n _•m_e:!'i'i:!_!ll>«i___ LAMIHATORS & Orderll.s ASSIST. MGR Scr\'icc Slat ion A1lrn 3N1~hts&Sun,n!'1..'<l food tlant. exprr'1I Uay .t -.cntt:t' ri<JX•r. Orow111~ En·-: Full & 11 lime. Ap co w oppor lur citf\ .Jnl'c ply Sht-11 St;itiun 17th & 7;,.i 17i7, Open \\"•ti thrn ---------wall unil, i;la"s l o1 Sat !.IAM t114P\! \1:.it' 1>011hl1· Canop~· 11 1.'<l;tWheel :\t :Ji l cart. :,4~1 dinelle sl0l.lg.la01[>$,<1ll -----l·)·a01e. 1\11t1qul•d while. Anltquc Sideboard, oth~r wood k1111,! st. bdrm !-Cl HAN0'!:.1.\:-.I ror rcp1111 s & mnintenanC'1'. \\\•,hail ('orp s.ulhoal f:"J><'r. prcf'r~ ~fay\'iew 01 _,11111 h.is irnm ... d l.:onv Hosp. :,JS;, Thurm \,1r:.inr1t·~ ror h ,10(1 ~~l &i23505_. __ _ ment CJll for Jppt lr\';nc. ~B. · AJ1t1q. 13:ithluh for i.ale l1ootl condition. s:;o. mi-;c furn S.16·1>100 w ar01\Hrt'. All in xlnt Claw Cet•l vood cond. 002·0';52 ----------1 concl :;;,1 4760 Ca II Ii 11 511;0 IJmm:llul' w ,11 1 ... J st 1 ~--------­ ' r 1·io.1w1 "'" h,I\ c 111wn· '\ur-.m)! S.'i7·1>'232 -----------$100. fl.l5·218G. White Cnb. xlnt cond. $30. ------ . -----void \civet cha11·, T\\lnBed,complcte.Sl S. l pnght lkl"kcr Ornlht•rs Spanish drt'!>Sl'f 5;,o ~5 i517 \\'Jnl1•ll lur dH,cl Prnno 97 yrs olcl S.%0 hnth 75 1 O:i65 1 1·3, ------111.:' "11 th• r\·i:ul.ir '1"" RH SUPERVISOR SKIPPER HOMEMAKERS 8081 :\u\\ lhJl llll' kut~ ,If\' 11,11 ~ II) '"'''"'' "h\ llol i.;11 111 11ovrk ' I r.1111<'<' \~ th1u Thur~ 'hilt"' i \:\I t11 ·, Jlll'\I t-"p.111 time ,11111 i-1 1 Lh1u !>\Ill ,,1m1 huur... \ppl\ lu th• 'cl II r 1 l \ /. U ,1 1 11 .! i j \hC· 1011\1.. \\l', Lu .... lJ ;.3 :Jo !-.hill ;\Ju,,t ha\<' •• ,. 11 I .. h II ' j) I I ;i I ,.upc "1-.ory l',111..·r Xlnt ti.·no:tih l'1111t .11·t \I r:o J, 11!.CO , (.'1"l,1 :\I l''ll \lemon JI ll o:-p1t .d. h-12·2734. HF:T,\11. S \LJ-;S F tltme 11'l Jtl salc ... pc.·r:-on w.1111- cd for rap1dl} i.;ro"' 1111! <,pecwlly ~:imc :,tore' ;\l ust be serious minded. 'ielf moll' atmJ.? & fll·XI bit'. Apply 1n person Cht>ss & 1;.1m1:~ l'nhmtl l'<L 2iUO W l'oa~t ll\1 y, fJO" l'fl•1I y,11 hi l'll'J:.t' Pvt. Ply (114 )51h 71\63 t;;U 71~!.I alt I ..:•H' .. 111h•I J1h. llll'lt:1lmi: . - --The rastel>l dr3\\ '" th~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• exp, qu.illftLiliuns & Apph onces 80 I 0 I' lk,.•l!ncr o;ofa, antq West. .a t>n1ly Pilot SSS CASH FOR ,,•mlJI\' 6.. 1'.1t k.1~11111 J •• 1" 11•1\\ ,I\ .111 ""''" ,\ ~11111 111'1 Ill •'ll:lllll• Ill' m111. ~<ilar\' rl'Q mls tu ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'rl!tlrnunl ~ecrel.1ry. C.ill (;la~~•fied ,\d J>hont• . dJ"tlwd .,ti nu 1~11; l>a1 Scol~man Ice :\1 aker ;.r,:! toi:! '>t2·.l678. C.ocMI used I urn refrig,. \It .... J ly P1lul. l'.O. box t:iW. ew· -ui.t.>d I month. S2SO -- - _ lr1t·-. i.til\'l'S ~1_6·_0_7b!J_. _. Costa :\ksa. l':i. !i21i26 installed 673· 1234!. WAHTED OHIENTAL RUGS Pcr.~l:in & Chinese alsn Tapestry, l'\'l Pt y's only. !HO 7014 TUI'~~~~~~ '\\•\, r ,\ ..-.... \l ·1l1111~1 0 tem~o TDIPOft,\llY HELi' Call 540·4455 Equal (lpp<ir Jo:niployrr HOSTESS Mu~t be :!I .\pph hrt"n 'J & ~-llnb llu r nl< l<t•,tJurnnl. J7 ~ ·''"'"" hi 111d. '\ fl ---:-.:l·Wpt>t 1 lkach. -----...... -_, ...... ,_.__~....., _ _,._ __ .. ~11111 f'RGT 0 1\ :\I AGED HOT P8XAn5w•r.Serv. RETAILSALES sr:-.1ortLoan f>frr "''SK POINT S:ilc. 3JOll W '\lnl o.pporl\10\l\' Ill \l_i.. P 1l1me shill.~ w, •(11111' Off s 1· Sl ""' \\' u I. . I .• p ice . upp tel;, . o· Jleci•pt /Secrelar ,. l<i~nr-1 arner nr rur, ::>ant.1 ~11>0 \ l<'Jll cuma>un) Ale wknd'i. Pntrl while tram •· t• ' '" (' II · 79 b 1 tllJll!!l"Y "" rrn..,ig. '11 Sl'l'rt'lar1cs 10$11-0!I /\11.1 Y ·2!:"..!t ·1 '~ C' m Y "x Pr 1" mg. EOB. 113;1 :J.13:l. & P/11m1• po,1llon~ avuil G or I" t l "'"'"I --------11·ram1cs 11r :-ml l'll'C· -· ----J'hnnt• for appl 5.;i.fl2l2. v l' '~n·p """'" Kenmorl' Wa~hcr & Gai. lr11111I.' <·nm11<1ncnti; 1wc. 2 PIX Answ•r. S..-v I Ir im· l t·r~o~mrl /\gene) Urvcr SI 7~ "'nmnr • ~.·r s m1n1mum cx pr. :-.,1 ~1ur·'. de1""'n(fu'·le ·1n ac;k fnr ;\ r . Wc1>l , •\88 EJ'ith Losla~l C'sa ·v · h s1•' '-' c, ,. t n ' ,.. u Nl·Wporl !'>lat1t11H'r'. Su1tc224 642-1470 • as e r -~· r _l'IJ:. u:ll> SJl11ry commensurate d 1 v . 11 e c tJ o cl for ------i.>r yer Sb,-,, 1,enmorl' "'1'\pr Xlnl benefits 1?ra,·cy.1nl ~hifl. IOpnl RM3·1 I ~~......,..... was her SJ5. (.;uar . l".ill CJrol.-5813830 for fj,1m, Mun, Tues. WC'tl & P /llmc. Mes11 V1•nlc T.\XCONSULTANT 5'1fHlli7l •11"1'1 Thu1·-.. Hcq's nl"ruratt: t"onv llosp, 1.t11 <.;enter ncC'ds p;1rlnl'r . Ile ply --------i ---r I I 1 t p I h I Kelvinalor rcfri~. bronie, LIGAL SECRETARY •in~ :i u' :>" :m w 'e !-.t, (' :\1. [1-lll·!i;~. Rox 17211. rn inc, Ct\ i\vc. c;1i:1• Be:iul. cone.I lra I tll n).!. Qua II f 1,•rl ---9'.!713 LEADWOMAM "·"l1t•rwm,Jt...'orporat•• llt'r"•ll!. cull :;~1;.77;; RH'S Top freeze r . S200 ""l•t Cir t..W·tll!(MI :\lnn F11. !1.1rn noon lnr TECH I I 5'\11·33>!7 Jmsn:s.s lil'I '' c<'11 i t :10 -- -ChGrCJe Positi9n M C AH -------~ tl•·~111·tllownrlo.""""t 111 LVH«RH .1ppl __ _ Wt'cku.ivi.&Wce~ends Ccramir-; nr !lcience 22CuFt,,1debvs1dc Wl·-.l l hr• \\ t!Hl.ll .S \1 os r J 11 10 ('h;1rllt' '"r~l'. p1-;01'1.1-: PEHSO'-Chullcn~lnit po~111011 h•r liJt·k1:1ou11tl mandatory rn~hot1"l' rclnl(, white. 11 I' \ l 1· I I-l I. \ '-() mi-1111 .t I 11111' & l 1 ,. ,I\ 1-:'<•'I' tll't-.ls p llmi· ,1, , ;ipahlt• 1ndl\ 1duolo; Xlnl IJi.t~tl' 11111lt·rstJmllnJl uf ::Ji;; . .\Ctcr S, l.i 12 li:J5 1 l \l Klf>l ~ \Al 111' lll<'rth Xlnt ~ •• lnr:i. ct "'()< 111 w h-.11' "'lll•I~ Ful lxmdil~. 1n:.ur. cll'cl10111l·~ nrnndutory. 3 - 1h 1r\1·r" .1rt• 1n lhl' l1t·ne1tl' lyeapitahLt.-.l.t.73 2223 PorlcSu • )I" t·"tpr nee . Xlnt L.:.cd\V.1i.he r&Oryt'r,S5<J lrcmh l{l\1tr.1. 1,r1 ... k ParlcS6ipmor ------11, • ., pmAor 1Jcncr1h. i;alary t um c.1. '61 C..:•Jr-..Jtr ~onv . t I d .. h < 1 ..... ,uptnor \C m .. 11~urul<' \V/h"Ck · Need'l work. Bst olr. 'nn ~ .inu l l' 11 1 ' lllj!'\upHIUI \\f' '\ 11\ h ll4Z '1~10 ~ ~ u 1,..,111 J reJ-. \hhl hn\l' ""'l'"r i· -... itroum.l.;\h"i'\IOn\'1eJo ln t>t2758He\'l'"-- ..... l (lf',J( 1\l'f'L", \I',\" l"L 'l.t!W!Klft 111 h 1.1:.1_:!110 PHONE SALES . I I I .. ll '" I .~ ~ , '""' -;,\J.t-:s 111 I' 1 Co mpo· cus n.a area .,,1 ... aro licycles 8020 1111d lmc tt.1\1•1 111.111r \\\!US \11L l)lltJ '-l'f\ttc rhnnc• S::ilcs pcoi>lc . ncnh L'o~IJ Mel>J loc Stll ·:ll\:lOforappt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111111 n1hrntun• '\o t ~ SJ I .1r1 1· II Fr 1 11.: l male or fom:rll-. Ill to 1J5 S11lary, >-lot. (11turl'. Fo1 -:\lot orcross. Like new !X'n••nce n1•1· ""1 t r o.11n tw-ncf11 ' Hl'I: Ill'!. l'Jrk ~cur:. of age t:uurJntccd 1ntervtl'W, C:ill btwn Mathe ws l\l ono ShofJ ';,)D07i!lfor,1ppt :"ewpnn no. I l'a rk wages or commissions noon & 2PM only . TEMPO Uieycle.$115.lr10·6S02 . ----"rw porl Or. N .H 250 East lilh Street, (2 1JlAA5·8543 ------ HOSTESS "~ 2U22 Suite 0, Co!lta Meso, . 1 -f-1-1 P ll r Of1 fe~,~oriccty & tnp S luildl!MJ Materials 8025 ;\lu~l be 21. Apply IH't11o n --------bctwcen S:OO & g ;3() p.m. ::>n es, u or. I me. or m rnt.'u1alc >penu1ijs ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 & :; . R 0 h R II r n .. :\\,11n1enance m :in wanted 646-4223. 11cpre<1cntat1ve for Na· Keypunch o~,.ator1 /\PPllOX. 250 ~heel'\ or ltt-~laurnnt. 37 l,.ushion purl 11 m~ :\t ('Donald'!. Equal Opportunity ti 0 " a 1 Vil um 1 n C 0 · Dictaphone Secy's 3/8" ''Xleri or plywood. l~l:ind, !" n.. · :l OO hr. f>56·99"1J. _ ___ I::mployl.'r lmmi'<i. openini:is. no C'< PBX Op1trators usc<I. Ai.k for Duve. 177 ---MarineEfectr0ttlc perrcqu1rcd.497·21~-S.a-etariHw/sh It;. 22nd St. CM blwn HOSTESS StnluT•ehnician • SAJ.f:Sl./\DV, ci..per'd, Typbts Ram.spm,644-087R !\Ion thru l''ra ll s. Apply ~ktnlt exp. h;•nl'h man I hotographer , some <'X· mat11rt', C1l1mc. /\\'ail D ~ ----80_4_0_, 111.'1 T ,1co. 2:i2!i2 La l'a' '"tlh L'''•. 1• "d~r 1,,.. per 1n shooting chldrn. u11y1>, c\ co; & "knds. AJ>P· Accounting Clb 09' " ""'" "'' " ~ ly 1'11 ""r'lrtn, Air•'"·· In· NEVL-:R /\ l·'EE ••••••••••••••••••••••• lid, t.ni:un.i 1 1111~. c , & t ', fl f,1m. etc Reply to I' 0 ,.. ..: .. ~ r_ • ------•Oi)d . P·'~.. icnu ts. 11ox741l,CM,Ca.!l2t127. lt•ruatlonul <:lft Shop, LOC'ali\reas /\KC Dach~hunds• -11nu~ecle:111lng Sen·icc N H hl.>]h-1.:> - -2(>.IJW1:sll'hffl>r.N.B. TEMPO Stds <'h. s tk• bhots • nlls maluro "'Oml·n l'1T , MJ\.~Sl-:USI:: 118.28> legit. ftLUMIER. REPAIR -Temporary llelp wormd• PSV lslll• $100 f t'ilrtll'C'._TOJ'·S~IH~.:;123_ full time position In f/t1~c S'\'.l'llr sm111(''< ~i\l,~~;/MGl\11', nt.'W 17802Sky P :irk lrvinc up.1-728·4485 -... ' HOUSEICEEf'HS :\~assnl(e i'\~ e')'· "".<'. per. Cnll;.3(1 W>2_. __ s tore. mens/ woml·I\~ Call 540·4455 VORKSJllRE T E RKIER \\1• tr·1111 "111 .... 1020,1 t•o nl e mpor :rr~· Equnl OpporEmplo.v<'r PUPS Chumfi b lood • •-W"'ITRESSES . ' · '-• ~ . "' Pre-Sch ool T eac her t J> i · .-a "' • ,1nyt1mc eeded n C.. II s por sweur . us 1111ni. lines. ltny :) l)s ~tud : l\l alure pt'oplc. l;oorl n a ernoons. 1 avnil in both rlt'pt~. l!:x· service 5:111 li455 ~ benefits. Adult re ... nlcnl MF.OICi\l.. Bock Office. _552_·_74_94_. _______ 1 1icr only ne('ll upply 1111---------------~ care cent('r fl.'11 .:t,r,r,;; h:irp, 1 yr exp., In a11 1__________ person. Kenneth Uoyd of TEST AKC J\Cghan Pup.a, blk ' ---dut1c1. lrv1neCUnlc. Mr. Ne11tport. 2700 W. Coast m:isk, s llvcr/whl & ~ llou~eke<'pinl!, Ille Afler K!.!lly, 113.'19490 PRESSMEN Hwy. NR a p-r i col. L o v n b I c = noons. T op pa). N U -----• TECHNICIAN pe sonali'1"• ~·"-O"',.. • area. SH ·6S96. • :\I E D I C A L U 0 0 K · r "'""· """ """· ~ KEEPER. t'ront office. Immediate openings for SALES-RETAIL 2·4 Yrlll ex per. In rt:lated KEESllONO PUPPIES : Housekeeper & Various r11mlllar with peg board pres~men w /recent .ex· Plumbln& fixtures & sup· field. Test & trouble:.hoot /\KC reg. !o'or appoint. • OuUes. Ancrnoon ~h•ft. system . f'Xp. only. Con· perien ce operatina plies. Exper'd only.Cull rll111tal PCB'11. Must. be 1114)SSl·4000 : , Also. kitchen & cltnin!l tact :\1r Uurlcy, 826·3600 heavy stenm system con· 536·14SI. fomlhnr w/hoth analo& & ----------t • rm h1•lp in Ruest home.•-----.;__---1 trolk-d rubber pressea ln· -------diglt:il eirt'uitry. AKC DOIERMAHS &~-6711:1. ~ted1cal 1-'ro nl & Back clud1na transfe r. book & • * * • • • * • * • • * • t:xc•llenl co. benefits in· I Owk• •75, M/f ~ -Of<:. J>:xp & refs a m1111l, slug loaded preio11es. rn .. 'U""'ES ,. 1 d l k ti ""~ · .. * ..... cue w i; v11ca un 492 ..... 10-L. e Housekeeper for 2 adults. OHr 30 Newpo~t are a. centlvo paid system & • IOOKS • nfle1r 6 mo·s, lJ paid __ ,.,. --- .t Good plam cook PO Box 8122. 1' ounlam excellent co. paid fringe • , ., JlWl&.ltY • h 1 · d · IH6·09i3 Volley. Ca 92708 benents . • '11 t ,1,' 'LANTS • ,.ir~n:t'Y~,i :.~t:o~~Y 1 ~r f;-..e to You 8045 i ----Apply Dom·noon dally • 1:01 11r1,\ .. 1 1h .. ,t· '"" • hire & m. 11y more. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Have Mmething to sell? MEN. per mh . p/llm1~ for • 1111·n·1 """'" • \ "" 1·J11 • Apply Personnel :;er mam She1). 0 mo':c. Classlfll'd ads do il well. I.A Times om~ de a very • ~ F • 11.1 111\'m 111! 111r •ul~ 1n ~ • mall.', blk1lnn. ~hots & • -----In New1lor l /C. Mesa. • l"•\1lli••lll'llll•ll'ru111 .. DOCUMENTOR II &Iii Ltll4S n 4 t • • * * * • • * * * • * ~ Must huvc cJependoblc • ll \II.\ I'll.OT • .-!L_ · 11 • _. __ • • \ rn :t .. rur At 11<• r clinble. $275 l.o • ('lllttS1 \I \.'\ T1n:1: ,.. DIVISION ~ • At"..,~ 11 tr~'''• $3.'141 mo. Mll·l740. VOIT, IMC. • r11111 lh11••· nn11~ .. 111 .. m. • ::: •. • 11111.11111 --------llOIS ,.1111 .. ('hr••t111,1• c,,.., • y • • Harbor It Our t:hn•lm.1~ ft•'"'' II ., • • '' 1\1 ~;o' ~ ' • Ma mt Trn\'. pt'rm. Earn Santa Ana, Collf. • .11t11<·w1 "'" n Th111 "'"' • ., • 111<1'>1'\I '" • S l7S·S~OO wk . Fuller • """' \t" 11\h 11u11 o .. ,. • .. c .. 11 ,, i. A .. ~ i\ .1 k 1 .. r • Brush SMle<i, 564 mt. • Hit h I '.111 h I .... 11 & u~k • • """ 1 "" '"'" \ 1 \ An Equal OpPortunlty '"' , .. 111 t h1i-11nu~ \11 • I If 1 ' ' l•t•i • Sell thlnp tast wl\h Oatly Employer M /F • '"''"' lur 111t,,110 .. 11111t. • « ' '"''" 111 ''1 tii 1111111 • Pilot W 11nt Ada. : • • • • • • • • • • • • • __...... , ___________ , •••• * ••• *. -•• 'I Addrc8110fir&Ph M11lllAr11ph 2921 S. Daimler SAMTAAHA Equal Oppor Kmployer ,, ... NOTICE how Dolly Piiot Class· 1fied od11 tl1~plny lht•tr mC!ISllJilCll with lc11lhlU\,\' and Impact ': Our ads, we are proud to s11y, rcolly icet results . Phooti 64256i8. •***********• « ~ Christmos « it G ifts For « « Everyone • : Whul a wontlt•rf11I wa~· to « _."'II ~nur ._ot•rlit•:. l or • t'hri,tmu-; · n ghl •>ul • • lrnrn 1111d1·ro11r -fr ' ii C'l llt I "i'r ,\l /\S 1' H I•: I·: «. ************* • **********•• • ii? IF YOUR « : IUSINESS • IS il • , G WTS ·T O't'S • • SPORTINC Goons .. • c1.0!111~c; 1>orrt-:1tY • • JJ..Wl·;LJn' ·llAIH « « ~!LISI<' l"lHl~l'Wlll~ • • /\~TllJUl·:s llOIU111-:s • • llCX>I\~ 1\111'1.IA 'lit:l:;S tt • 110 A TS II U\ Jo:s • AUT0~10Utt.Jo:.s • tr St•ll them the i.implo • ., 111111 ~ul<~' \\ ••Y I rum • 11111ll·r our • • r111usn11\S Tin: 1·: • ************* You Ctlfl heue111e4 ""' "" fw U .00 ---- $$$CASHFOR Good usetl furn/refrigs, frzrs/stovcs. S 16 0768 WANTED·Wut c hcs & Clnck!', workinit or not. l'r. 1;12.0:1&1 Matte l TUFT STUFF !'ihuppinit bahkcl toy in gd cnnd 55ti·6311!t. ---_.._ ___ _ Musical IMtr'&lrMnh 8083 •..•.............•..... 'onn :\1in O· '.\1 a\ic elet-. organ. excellent cond1 lion, $000, P.P. 532·1259 Pets 8087 ••••••••••••••••••••••• R1\li\''J"S Prof Pel & Planl Cure sv-. Ill home. Pct. lrunsp & boarding av:.111 from $2.50. Lie. MllS. IU7·8fi58 Ohl yellow head pa r rot, 1 mos. old. very t ome. W /c:1ge $350. (93-2776 '9Clft01 Ii °"Ja"a 8090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.owrcy ori:nn, mod. LSC. ntk conll•m1l. Like nu. s:J00:_!l75_71:tli_afl G~m- Upril(ht Decker Brother:. 1>lano 97 yr1:1 old. S950 Pvt. J>ty. <7M l5't6·7863 ----Smnll Uprl(lht Pinn<> SISO. 642·1731 Wu rlitze r O r ga n w/rhythm section. Xlnt cond. SSSO. Call aft 5PM. 968·2581 rv. Redlo, HlA,S....-.0 8098 ~······················ ~n Radio, R EALlSTIC TRC·$$, 1 mo old. S195. AFTSPM. 548-8813 ~ust s•ll San11ul QR 1500 QUPd receiver. 8SR t u rnt11b l e. (4) 3' speakers. $250 or orr . 675-9115. ------- FINAL CLOSEOUT SALE! 25" Color ~onsole TV's, 2 '(r pictu re t ube warrn . $166·S225. All Service & Repair Co. 807 W. 19th St. C.tnMes a. Tanbera TDC 310 ca_ssette deck, i1· mtrll & Dolby sys. Jual Cfllplty svs &. re · ullbrated . S32S. Ph : 557·3651, hrs 8·5: 30. .. l -•J4 DAILY PILOT T d NOY9fnber9 1978 • _,_---.=-._..;;;,__...;:;,.;;...;._, _____ ..:..u:.:n:;:;:.::•:L.:Y·~.;.;;.;.;.:;.;:.....;;.;...· ~ Tn.cka 9560 Aalto1, hapor+ecf A.tot, t"'porled Awtes. l"'porled AMto1, UHd A.dot, Uttd lo.ts & M..tne 1oat 9040 loots. Star '090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• •••• •••••••••• •• ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• e.,.lpmettt •••••~!_~:_-:_•••••••••• •••••;•••••~••••••••• l!n3 f'ord Ru1, Got PHii, IMW 9712 ~ 9 738 Triumph 9767 AMC 9905 d 99•0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1s· Cenlury Bay Boal. 2()•x. 70'x ~· covered o..f.eu Blue Hard body· P /S, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••.•••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••. •••••••••••••••••• •••• General 90 I 0 Ready to ao (rartics) for your boat c:on11u-uc P tB. S4.000 mi. A•k•na , 1973 MAZOA 1972 TRIUMPH • • ?$ I.TD Escc. c:or. Im· ••••••••••••••••••••••• G7'L8990or645-466S lion Tt'lcphonu poltl!I $6,~ n Ad : 1974 Dod~e ltX2 SIDAM 72SA~IC Sprlu\it V 80w~n m ac. lo mlh!al(e. 111r • "'I • r.11nl bU)C, 15 ~SS, P IS. Sl'ITflRE r /1 on air 11uto. flll cood lovol) gr~\•n • .Boal Auembler, ex 18' Lyman lapstrake In w/roof & c:hllln hotal to J'/8 & \/<.; $3500 C II 4 spet'd, radio & hl·utcr Low mileuec car In o"ncr. 30m f,()('..il rnilcs. $4300/tx-l er• P l l only. board . Bea•t. ba)' t>bclter any tyl)I.: of cr11Cl 1>31 3010 • • • a U~SHGE >. •Ch 'Ck t h~ urcuc "'hu~. Ila~ ru<lao. 6'W·~!W afh·r I 813LQ li~ ~ .. ~~:,8;0 Ps~i 11oal C:lrpcnters,eat 64&5"9t. pttce • l "-/II'-dtp w .. ••k<IJ•· ""''1 2 1""7 only. cruiser or occon (a.5ber, "75 Dodi.te U :IOO, J>reen OMLY $1395 .1ra i•r .., u u:Jr o ..... ~ft .... " ~~u:1l hove .own t oob. ••rt llOu n <l, s35oo. Tr•tpOriotlon cabin. p s, c:ui.l ~hel ving, 1~~IPQ>. Buick 9910 ~l'\.>tlcodi, \i.k ror Oud (.;lipper Manne, lilt .t:: .. t.40 8208 •••••••••••••..-••••-••• p oH do wn door . BUY OR ,MAR9UISTOYOTA ONLY $2495 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •'70 Gli.\ .. <>•1. radio. ;.11r, Oc d al S l\tlSSION VIEJO MARI".\ UIS TOY OT 4 ..., c1 enl , JOltt Ania. all. Soil 9060 ~.Sate/ 8 ·x 11 'x90 ". $6500. LEASE HOW 831•2880 495•1210 .,... '15 Rivi~ra, lourlrd. xlnl nu I 1l m .11 1 '" p w r locrti,Mari1t• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rfttt 9120 ~0797. MISSlONVIEJ O rond . lii.l ofr ovl'r 11111er lnki., ~uw. Cull Equipmettt 9030 lloble111. tr lr, new trans & ••••••••••••••••••••••• i. Mazda notary w/shell Free S ye:ir . 50,000 m ile 'M Mat.du RX3 Coupe, ·I 831-2811> 495·12 I 0 ;~.!;1; I c • P v l Pt Y · ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• more. $1,425. 646-82~ or 12' E~ Dor:ado, self many .i.lr.i:.. 2s.soo mi: warranty available on al! sJxl, undt•r wl'oty, very .71 ·rtt G'l'S. mech.x!Jtt, 1 __ · ·1.s Grimoda. J'/S. Jlt B, 40 Lb Danforth 35 lb CQtt 581-7505. c 0 n t d • w / s h o w er · >.ll)t cond. 675·2033 our r e m a i ni n g 1976 .!:_l~n 1137 320'l m1lei1. $2300/best: o!fcr Coclllctei 9915 WI' r14d10, healer, w/w. lk l ' , . d. Loaded w /extras. 1\174 l models. wa er .0 8· assorte. '74 E RICS ON 35 & too Ford RangerXL1', lo M~echs lenJ 9740 lll\22103 ••••••••••••••••••••••• V ~. bru wn. s 3s50~ blocks, w11~dvune, llDF . Newpo rt J\loor i n r.:. mi u:gcco <.jO.J847 or ... 9570 IE•TTHE •••••••••••••·••••••••• -· Ul11M865. yacht "Lissa '', Blox· • . • -" • "~ 'f'Clft.J "" -h ams . 21st St. N.B . 532•900· <7l4 > S63-3S38, 6"2·12S2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PRICEINCRE•se l!lllO Mc~roes 220• 4 S\XI. v...1k 9 770 (! ' '1;.a 1-'ord Stu W.:n, SS,ooO 53657ft7 "" '° A'{/ ... M radio n"W 1'n· ui fWCIC)en -'{·\. ii l 581·1549eves. · · Mot--r:••/ ·m Dod0 e Van. C C:"I, "d. " · • "" ('~· un~ m ~'" Vl.'r}' c can,. -~ " " .. tenor & tares. 211 mt.11cr •••••• •••••• •• •• ••••••• ,, d "3 ".,..., '73 CATALINA 27 ''Nug· Scoo ~ 9150 milc uge,pundcd &cptd. '"•DDLEt•CK '75VWScirocco lop ~:._._u !;"""" OOHP Mi:r<" $200. Cl $1400 ;a• .. " gul. Liest offer or trl1dc ~ ----Jtuns Good get ". National Champion ••••••••••••••••••••••• ean. 545 ·2779 V ALL!Y IMPORTS roa· pickup or pu 1H•I. fully cquiped '7<1 Torino W~n. l.i pass •• &12 2581 racer . Xlnt cood. P vt "15 Kawasaki 400. Mint . 831·2040 495.4949 I.ii& O'J70 dGys ot 67J·%76 Ofrcr ti75·!:18i8 mr. ruck. lo ml., $3100. . pty. 968-l396 8hape. S'750. After 2pm, ·74 Dodge Yun 0100. Cust aft tipm. .. ti7:J.24~ " S ll.fhtly u s ed ,1ohp, Pvt dock avail, up to 55' 631·0185 int.,manyxtru~.Clc.an & l975BMW 2002,xlnt cond. •-·~:;an~~~rrJ~i~n • .:$~~~ Na.hers lOO.'i Ford Gah1~1e~ ~:J9~a~:lr }~f ~~;~· Pwr.boat. Dover Shores. '72 Honda 750. Fanlaslic sharp. $4.500. 496·3806· all xtrus + sun r oof, 1.C'GI• 962·3170 V 8, ru!lio, new brnk<•!t, • 536•0025 • • No lave aboards or parly condition. Complete sad· •76 Ford van E -lOO Xtras m ake offer. Must sell New• Used CadiJ)ac clean. l 0¥.ucr, shariJ~ · OC: work on boats, pl~~se. die bags. Winds hield. 6 c y I, s li c k.· •1 2 m : 645·6365 eves or early OVER I 00 '67 YW Sqbck $400 49'1·41511 nfl 5 PM . Boats. Power 9040 Limit .your electrolysis & Low mileage. You m u::.l $1300/b::.t orr . 556.8078 morns ask for Cindy. MERCEDES 496·9610 --- ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11ecur1 ty.1'S3.7S per !l. see tobeh~ve.StSOO. Ctill ----------1----------Quality and PfiCl' Uncoln 994 5 l97S BAYLINER 2250, 1213) 9244405. 646-5967 after 9:30pm ·~ink ~t~~eC:'hra[crv;~s Capri 9715 H ON DlfSPI U.~Y '%~~~)~i~u~~?n~~~f::~ GUdrdntcl'll ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vol vo, VllF. fl>•bndge, HOllE 3.5 lik• new. '65. Honda 150, 5700 orii.: vii ~ng, Jn g d c~nd. ~··•••··~··•••••••••••• CMKe 0 m S offer. musl sell. 67s.4978. Lc.1\ln).; Spt"c1.1I l' m any xtra!), low h rs, Call 675-8546 rrules, runs great, l sl b"TS-0703. 72 Capr! V6, Headers, AUTHORIZ 'D l'rd w cJ RJln 191SMARKIV l.l',1thcr , i.plit powe r scuts. stereo radio & full power. (347LVYl. 546-0089 Sl75takes.548·3011 mags, Stereo, :o;potler:., MEHC£DES Dt::ALk:lt '72 VW Beetle, new tires. ---------~1·73 Catalina 27, standard 76 G:\tC Van. l'IS, t>/B. comp s us p. <1Sm mi 6862 Manc:he,tcr, new brakes. xlnt cond. l.trl:l"'I \l'h't lllln ol l\l'w '" u~u ( J1.lall.1t ~ rn t976 Bayliner. 20' Fish· ng, outboard. Nation;il Yamaha 'i 4, 360 Enduro. AM/FM quad, pm !)\rip· 675·1995 or 548-3565. Huenn P3rk SlllSO. 540-8Hl0 erman. must sell. $6700. champion racer. Xlnt. Low Mileage. Xtras. 10g, c:ust mt. only 2000 S2SOO. 523·7250 $9495 Call 495·•1328 condauon. 968·1396 Mon· 556-8399. 675-2642 87195 · 0 th s A L' '611 VW Fastback. Very ----------1 nu. many xtras. . ...... C . . d pd n e unta na .-wy. good "Ond. New tu•e•. Thurs PM 's. .S9.l-4605 11 apn, air con . 4 s . ~ ~ 01Jngc County Boat for sale. '74 Wriedt ---------197-tZSOEnduro. super cond. Pvt pty. 'i2 28l>SE 4.5 ~llJ. BciJ.:<' ___ c._1_lt_4_94_·9_39C_> ___ 1 17' fiberl(ld!)S·455 c.i.Vent~re 21·, 3 s oils: S350 Auto1Wanted 9590 Sacrificc/bstofr.Askror melall1c ~/brn lcath_c_r .70 VWUuR.l83Seng.Rii; Open Sunday C:idillac Masll'' Dc.1lcr ~<•lKI lt.11 Lto1 Blvd. 1974 MARK IV F\Jll power. stereo rad!Q. lcatbcr & split pow~( ~e..ilb. (292LA1'1f ). • Olds Cr us ad er en g. motor. trlr & xtras. Call Call 495·4328 •••••••••••••••• ••••••• Don.. eves, 675·U1Sti, day!) ant., AM/I-M stereo, 1-l). r lutch. !loll) cnrb, mags. w/Berkl~y Je t Drive. 496-3765 CASH FOR CARS•. 63-l·llt<I. Pll. r.w. w /8 trk t:ipe, St iut . ..,.2.3379 Sealed bids "C:Cepted un· '71 Yamaha l\_tX 90. S2SO. ---------..,.., .,,. .. d d t 11 1'o S O II S ·d r xtra nice clean car. (714 > --------• til Nov. 17th at lOa m. loats SUps/ goo con 1 ion, ca P o ar pa1 or Cns1J Mr-.i ;.10.9 100 7595 i\linimum I.lid $2.250. Doc'ks • 9070 bi5-7237afteriGpm. clean used cars,lrucks & 631-1276. 'fi9VWbus,'7Gengincun· Bo t b . Corvettes. As k for Paul Datsun 9720 -• der warranty $2100. Cu ll a may e !>Ccll al Llle ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,..tor Homes O'Neill. ••••• •••• •••••••••••••• 73 M !)cdnn. xlnt cond. 1:140· l29ti. Nabers Cadillac Guard Jldqlrs next to DOCK l-'ORRENT Sol&/Rent • 9160 HOWARDCh•vrol•t Soles&Leasin9 lake car or t ruck -i ---------1 Newpor t P ier. <;.a ll NcwpQrl lsland 26 »a• • .. " "' SS.500 payoff. 5:lli·!ll5. 'lj7VW. BAJABUv 640 21"'" s~m Cp • '<.(). ••••• •••••••••••••••• Dove & Quail Sls. TOP Dollar P01id 1!.·1)'' <'C"'' <'r l>cst orfnr · "" " " rn. fl7:J.3064aft.5pm Beaut. 2s • Dip lo m a t NEWP0°T llEACll On Al.LTrade·ins " ""'"'' ,_ n 673-tiOl\6 ufl 4 pm. l>an i.i· Slickcrafl w/tan/lrl. Dock space l ·Livc aboard Mo_tor Hom e for r ent. ---NEWPORT DATSUN ·75 2400, auto trans, ai Maverick 9941 Own ANX 1 Wunt Jgr t IO' II 20 25• Da.tly, wkly, mth!y. Sip~ WE PAY TOP DOLi.AH 888 D Str t eond, ell't. sunroof. uc '71 VW HUG Li"ht blue. '72 Flcl'lwoo<l Drou"hnm, ••••••••••••••••••••••'\. · 1 · · • up 0 ' .regs ps · o H t · d FOR1'0PUSL'OCAllS 0 •& e& .. .. " boat now. Avery & Co. iiwror sail 675.8330 1 ·. ass ereo. air con . i:. lire:.. /\M/F:\l, rccor<lin • Only 42,000 m i. New 1 owner. t:xec. car. •R•REIE•UTY • 675·8900 or6·1.c .. '""5 · • crwse control. "·1"7lil'' L'UJtEtl",N, no•t L'S'l'lC ~cur !\tarArthur l r c 1 .,. b "" "" "" • .. , ~"" .,. .,.. " ,-,. c. i.::i:.~cl c sll'rco. xtra uc brakeo;, shocks. r adial S3ti00. a I MO·l:lliv etwn •73 ·~averl•·k Gr·•b'--r · ---"'-=-----S LIP WANTL'D ·. 34 ' -'L.Spm. or CL1\.SSICS &Jamboree Road::. k (l'}OO ) 96•·4'" ~"'"" '" ~ N ,,., c. ... lan ~ mt ran~c lire:;. 1-'erfect car. $1995. . "" , .... ~ evc•s. Only 25,000 mi.. flke new . Calamaran. .NewPorl or S 1 , . 1 1 k your car is t'Xtr3 clean 833-1300 M:111le Yl·llow. 58.00U mi Ph 645·8"57 nd You donl need a gun to D·nnPo'nt 673·3620 a e 76 Su t :in l 1 c !)ecus rlr!-lt. ---------1,Jr. 1'11t;Y SI0,!100 . '76 Senile. Sll.O<l-0. /\II cAo/C. VP-81'c:auloA.l\tlr/aFmsl\.I• "draw fast " "'hen you a 1 · · Vogue) 2S' Motorhome. BAUER BUICK DRIVE A &U 7572 '65 vw. Ong paint. ttuns xlr:is. Must sell! 573.7900 , ,., , placean adinthcDailyS p ace f o r 25·30' GMC Chassis w/454 hp 29"l5 HarborBlvd. -. ~d. look:. ~d. S/00. Ph; days or&-125004 stereo.$2,495.75Ml441. l'ilotWanl Ads!Cullnow Fibergla~s Sailboat. eng.Cstmintr,xlntcond. Costa Mei.a 07!1 2500 LITI"LE... ·m Merredes 2.'iOSE Cp1.•, 6'15·8763..ifl-t -642·5678. Newport l714)675·8900 fully self contained w/all ---------1 SAVE A LOT rare 4 s1HI, bc~1ut lru • '71 Cad. 4 Dr. Ab11olu!ely Mercwy 9950 ~ extras . 7000 m i. N WE nuv cond. b2.000 ~ ... $4000/b!> 1\166 vw i-';1stback. needs 1mmac. Nl'W parnt, Vin~ I ••••••••••••••••••••• .,, -------------------w t raders. Sl 9.950. Call •USED CARS& SHOP &COMPARt: ofr. 549·:tG37 :inytamc work .. li est. 0 H e r. top, br:ikes. tires, e!'t:· ,74 Mere Comel.2dr,Gcyl, Got eleven , . .. pipers p1p1ng you want to lease before Christmas? Mo ve them under our tree. On e a c h Thurs da y from November 11th through Decembe r 16th, the Daily Pilot will publis h s pecial pages to make it easier for you to convert your saleable items to Christmas cas h. Buy a box under our tree & sell y our toys , s port s equipm e nt , lug g a ge, applian c es, 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 inexpe n sive. Rates are $4.00 for the smaller box to $22.50 for the largest box. BIG, BIG SA VIN GS if you run more than one time. For·more information and to place your ad just call 642·5678 and ask for your Christmas Ad-Viser for more Jnformatlon. Your credit is good with us. We'll bill you or you can charge your ad to your Master Charge or BankAmerlcard. DAILY PILOT 642-5678 675-2881 orS58·0054. T H UC KS• BARWICK DATSUN 498-1366 tuned, "hate on wh1t11, like new 0.nl" 1.0 OOOmi. II •MB '71450St. BluN blue full li:ather Lor al re · ~ • -rre11·•-c TroY_. 9170 ComcanorCa SanJuanCapistrJno '655 b k .· . . S2700 673-882 t '' ....... 11:'1 FREEA ·al lmm;1cSl4.~I quarc ae· <tllor 's pri<le & JOY. · • ••••••••••••••••••••••• pprals 831-1375493·3375 Wisco21711155titi591. Engmerebwlt ~do w. dealer p11ce.·00Mercury Marqws,4dr Zl • 69 Shasta S/C. Awning. Groth Cht>•rolet -------------Sl.10. 6-12·258..t 610-SS(j(J hardtop, Cull pwr. Xlnt hit c b. X I n t con d 18211 Beach Blvd. TOP BUYER 2-73 350SL cond. S!IOO. MH409. Reasonable. s.lll-5028 lluntiniiton Beach See us rirst, & laM '. Top MERCEDES BENZ 'it VW Com•. Hcd. Nu '73 CADILLAC 847-6087 * 549·3331 dollar paidfor imporb 11/\ROTOl-'IND! rad1als.AM1F~.xl cond S edcmDeVille MustoncJ 9952 Starc:reaft Te nt Trlr. Dix ---COSTA MESA a 11 ~lrou n d. SZ 70 O. Ori~ ownt'r, 'most xlr::is. ••••••••••••••••••••••• mdl. Sl ps I!. used J timt's. TOP DOLLAR D TS HOUSE OF li30 SJ~. _ _ 53.ooo mi ~1200 x:11 woo. 74 J\fustung n. r adials',' bst orr. Cdl\l. 675-17114. P/\10 A UN IMPORTS i i vw 412 W!!n. Ai\t /F~I. K-S wkclv~. air. 4 spd , vin r oof , 74 23' Prowler. full sci( l:\tM EUl/\TELY 28-15 Harbor Hint m110. lo m1, ).ffll. 1•111111 •• • -sharp. S2900. 673·0053 FOH /\LL Cost<t :'11esa 510 HltO 213/921-8588 "'"l·"'.,'5 aft "•'"•kiiil•.·· ,,, 1'.I lloa ado la<l l'OllV, ---• conl'd,_awnin~. ui.cd ti 1-0l'L' G''C I'S "'"JV< "~ ~ s Sh 68 u t g -,.. · "-,I .~ A' 714/523·7250 11 111.1~' ~ all xlras. u/X'r arp inus an , times.v oingoutofstatc. C 11 <>RCO'IE IN •;3 240Z Air. i;len•o. t I I dcd t"" 53.450. &.16-437G ,\ ~ • •• VW Bu~ ·0-1. Xlnl l'ttnd \\'ht\• 11 n •tl Ira!. Sl5,SOO. ic n com .• oa . see ..,, ____ ----TOScJo:us mags.S1t;<1<1.C;ill •7·4 450 SE "\c-\1Ures.n1d1o&brks 1 1;;:11;151 appreciute.1"16·3436 Auto Service & NEWPORT IMPORTS ~lHl731 •· .. wnr. $750 1'1·t. Ply. 9 7 M . , 1 d Parts 9400 :uoow .Cl>l llwy,NB 73 Dalsun :!40Z. J1r, f':xl'cullvc •)WIH'<l. ;J.i.11(111 t7111:Hf.,.781>3 Camaro 9 I 6G ust ani:., ?'~t con• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642 9405 ma. new l\ll(•hchn llrl'~. · ,_ · - --••••••••••••••••••••••• like new. Sllc . 8 yrs • stcrt•o, mal!~. xlnt con<l. Tan w lob:HTo brwn 111· 71 Su pay .flu~. ~unroof. 1968 Cam~1ro Very dean, ownr. Sl495. 546·3653 '63 P l y'. narr at·uda ----------S.'l!l50.SllH!47li I 'I•· I 11 k t ransm issio}l, bra nd TOP ------tr . A:'ll /F:'I. P.o wc1 ''" 1•'\\ .ora11i.:cw1 > :.tl', xlnt t•ond, auto. rad.io, Oldsmobile 99SS new. 40 m;. ~2 Price •73 Datsun 610 Sta wJg. nu1se. fully equ1p1w<l. int. ~ll50 ur orr. 5"18·!.1960 air. pwr :.teenng. ~1675. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 84&-0027 DOLLAR Air cond, lug rack. Call Sl~.~ 11'~ X:t3·088tl, 9 lu S rt~s: 67511631\ cvs, Call 8..13-00ill 'TI Olds Cutlass conv. l!nJ 5 ton tow bar with chains. Fits any vehicle. Phone 675·0686 ·10 V\V .1650 enJ:ine, lcsi; than 300 miles. sooo. CJll I.lob Jl !li!1· 1887. Aaltos for Sol& PAID '1~·9390 &t>l..t·li4~allS. '71 Dasher, Sllll>O. Under . mac .. loadedw/all xtr as. FOR CL E/\N •73 DATSUN P ickup, 1976 MBZ280 16,000 ml. s teel belted Cltevrolet 9920 S2625/bst ofr.645-662S. ll res. a 1 r . I\ M I f ' i\1, •••• ••• • • •• • • • • •• • • ••• • , ~ IMPORT CARS ca m per s h ell, s t ep Automal1e.icunroof&air s ter eo t ape, -d eck . Don'tSe&Us Firsf ... 63 0!ds.A/C. PIS. auto: ALLMODELS bumper, cu~l. inlenor l'Onll. l.1k c NF.W! :>.15-03.Jli •-~s UL tt>t Radio.$32S.Cal1556-8.1Si S24 00. Ph afL 5 30, 189JNH:\I J. _, ff S OS • a Cler Spm 552:11;0 ''lfY D •t ---------------· $12 500 Volvo 9772 OU on Piitto 9951 ·;2 510 Sedan. ~ Spd. lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• luy From ••••••••••••••••••••••• m 1 I ea g l'. c I ca 11 . ~I Cadillac 'JJ CONNELL, '72 Runabout. auto, air, :\lechana·ally perfccl. 2600 ...._ ••& /\~1 radio, new tire~ • ••••• •• •• ••• •• • •• • •• •• S1"'50 Ph CAU 1!!70 y • p i " : .ron· · • C.ta M.so $40 9IOO OU re oy n9 very clean. low mi. run ~ittffs 9520 'i2 Oahun 2-lOZ Nu cni: VOLVO Too M'!;Ch!',. ·~-~1ust sell. Sl,450. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l UUY JlJ~t\ CARS 1\ir. mug ¥.hel'I.-. <.'lt•an. ·;;s 220S 111 (;ood Coml CONNELL •O\iE~H iOCARS• USEU AUTO PA HTS S3.84o. ti4a·O·l7li llc\JIL {'OS.? :'ltu~t i>l'll. HERE NOW ·74 Pinto R u n about. IN JNVE!liT Oll Y 5"10·5125 ~7-0037 .7" -8210. 29.ooo~r. ~Int s.?2~· 67:J.t:J:l4i __ _ CHEVROLET Stereo tape deck, center --d :... i d 11...1E console $\850. 751·8342 or l\N.ITIQtlES •-CJ ... S"'. IC'S A.utoi, Imported con .. ew l res, ra ao ·1;11 220 Dieiwl. i\ll•d1'ly & *" W COLORS ""'""l'".rbor Blvd. "•S..9331 ext435 afl2·30. L'-F d"" t·"· ,'; 11 . •••••••••••••••••••• ••• 52350. 498-2977 olh1•rw1s<' xlnl. 30mpi:., 11...1E "'°"° ~.. "' • · • · r ~om or s 0 n o s 1 L s 4 7 s II t . k . *." w .. MODELS co~;s:'.1M200ESI\ '7'1 Pinto. Like ne w. New Royces: from s:.oo to General 970 I Ferrari 9723 71!)1 , .... 5.?..,,o · '1 i.: ~ H II .,.. "' '"" muag~ s, 11' in gs on 3 re·. lt'r'""'. , new shocks. Onfy S.50.000 cnrs ••••• •••• ••• ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• •• •• · · · -· 7G &. ,._;-y UUY-Sl-:LL·TH/\111·~ •7,1 ,Jensen llcalcy. Very .68 330 GTC Mint facl Dc~~fn~'lt~~w s : 1974 Monte: c::arlo. 1 ownr . 25,000 miles. Must Sel,t. / ELZ FARGO & CO c!l:an. Low milcaAc. AM· air, d rk bl u /l<1~ an t. Porsche 9750 MARC?UIS VOLVO fully eqw p d xlnt cond. S2J00.545-4664 " 8JOS. Main .... 5anla 1\na t}'500 1 s ~l~r1c~~ r9ud ia ls SlUlOO. &14·08..50 /642·005'1 ••••••••••••••••• 9 •••••• MISSION VIEJO ~~':fcty's $3300. 546·6700 Plymouth 9960 ,, 10 toli, l\1on. S11l &'~kt;!ls c o.,5.4 41 eves Fiat ____ -9725 1974 Porsche 14 831-2880 495· I 210 ••••••••••••••oo••••••• Closed Sund a) s -----••••••••••••••• ••••••• • 5 spct-d, r;1dio & healer --1973 CHEVY. ATLAS __ *_5_47•9709 * AlfaRon1eo 9705 Moving toP1lls,Pa.Hav<' 1<~:.\~23 >· ll urr)'·won 'l ORAHGECOUNTY NOVA-3DOOR 1946 Ford Woody Wugon ••••••••••••••••••••••• clean ·;5 fo'i<tt124 Sptdt.'r MOW 55995 VOLVO Automalic, radio. pwr. C~slt>rl91~nt0Ufh· Rea u t. ori c l'o ud Rare ·_,:1 l3UO S 111dcr w /AU1 /f i\1 , lut: rk slecring & low mileage. 1•• ,_ · I , -Vclocc. &1pcr1>. i\11 orig. but n<iy . 12.0011 mi' PHILLIPS EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO Suocr clean ! <SD102~). Open ally & n. 'ill .w Po:.s1b y uc:~t in !SWlc S4 9, 0 " I I 0 II' o o r B I k f} & 1 I L.ar~csl Vol\·o Dealc•r 'I.~ PM ti40.820R IW2·1~Jsi v " 49-.1-ti26~--u c . nnlrne ( pc an Unangc Counl>' OHL Y $2695 2929 Har bor Bl vd. :> · 5 L' s d · * 837-2400 * UlJ~'orLEASB M•R9UISVOLVO Costa M-a ' 'lo De Soto. purltJll) ai. Aud' -9 707 i rial PY er 12,1100 m1, "' ... a semblc-d. rebll c·n~. 1(()0(1 I xlnt cond. S5300. 518 3!1llll For S<1le 1!17:"i 1'or-.1:hc. DIRECT )'llSSION Vtl-:JO 546· I 934 h<xh· $)5C) or ht!"l ufrc~r ••••••••••••••••••••••• nU 2·30 P)J !tllS. ,Jnl tont.J .. bt'~l of ~· -~~t~·,!l!~i~ 831-2880 495-1210 ---' 8Jli l~~I . ~~2Tf~i~~~~~ i~af~!J·r~~~~~1~~r r<:,u~~I; t;~,g:h~·~IHl~:1. ~tll'"t• !~ n ,Bcl ,Aire:-;:OOO mi.~ Culs~:!'~Jb~~~!~~o '58MG.ACOUPE t\otomat1t·w1lha11 cond ---------C)I. ~<I MPG, sis95 . sealStationWaao.nstan· lt,tr(', «II OlljHfl.11 c;CIO() 'V" .. k h Comp l'llslom ml & e,l, 2025 s. M hester 89 1-Zl7 1 '1 1671 1· .• ) t'n{'(' t Ill -.ll'rl'O 8 tral'k. 'l>ec1al Roll R 97 56 anc ------dard equip.menl in,ct~.es rnct·h:anll'.11 1·oncl :\lust pncermholh . 1 1 u.,., ...... ~.fl S oyce A he' 750-2011 '72 CHEVY ... OVA elect ronac lgn1t1o if. !)ell lhl' Wt•Ck tll "at11>C}' m,tgS, O m ' ...,.,~.,..,, ii •• •••••• •• ••• • • ••• •• • 0 • na Im ro d\ ( b k estate. ~l 11kc• ofri·r or OHLYSl995 6.Sl88306 #lOEALERINU.S.A. 2 Door Auto m a tic, pop:~re/es ~°c"~r~anes~, d ' l l MAR9UIS TOY OT A radio. hculer & vinyl top. tra e or >oa s, i.:uns or '74 FIAT 124 ROY automatic transmission, jewelry, clc. MISSION VIEJO SPIDER IRR (4~16). Bictra Shurp! rubber bumper guards. 645·2200 831-2880495·1210 Mint. AM/FM Stereo. 5 CARVER NOWS2595 AMrndlo,llghtpackaul ---r ROUS· ROYCE PHILLIPS s t a n d a r d s i r-'52 Ford ru. Su per '7-1 Alldl 100 l.S. AM/FM spd. 1 owner. Lo pay· IS40Hmbore• Uuk k,.Pont1ac&Opcl whitewalls,deloxewbe thruout. SJli .'i//>esl orrer. ster eo. clean, $4000. ments. 7966No. :_w~S.•c11 * 837•2400 * covers. lcl\ remote mir· Pvt !'arty. 833-R03ti 675·6W9 BRITISH CAR CO. •SALES' ror electric clock, luR- Rec:reational iJ Audi IOOl.S. Auto, AJC. 213/990·2525 ClOno suN011vs •SERVICE Contlneftfat 9930 Jtole rack, tailgate auJO Vehic...... 9530 qmn1ro /\M/lo~M stereo. 714/694 2854 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lock, 360cld, 4 bbl, "8 ..... • •LEASl .... G ennlnc. heavy duty SOS· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cslm lc<tthcr mlr . vinyl ---------fo11ota 9765 " 1970 4 dr, beaut orig r ond, " 1,76 CHl .. 001( l op . n l' w M i c h e Ii n Honda 9727 ' Ova-eas xlnt mechunic"lly, every pension pockoge, air ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ,.., "' u condltlona·n". l int"''' ad. Is 97'J 1·n20 •••••••••••••••••• ••••• $1695 C 11 ,. "' .... MOTORHOME .::_~a ... _._·"'----'11 DeliYery ~.fa~~7~ory. . u windshield. <DP·il1l Self-contai ned . du nt IMW 9712 Brand t~ew •76 Scrl'icc&parti. n1>Wo1>cn $1995 t ank s & a i r cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• HONDA Cars on Sat's 8 to 4 for your 74 Mork IV. rww radials. (36SRDK). TQYOTAS conv~nicnce. show room rond. l\lusl 5cc in i:orage are a SI 2•000 OVER 100 'lell. ,;500 .,, o rfcr . Ask for Hick To Choose Ft'om! S41i·!J~; Orange Coast CREVIER 9550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Toyota Lndc:rs-r. '62. '72 Trans., Norseman wide tir es. man y xtras . M6 9SS2. 1964 Jeep Wagone('r. 4x4, eng In xlnl cond. $2000 <ZCH.523) Pvt ply, m ust sell. BJS.2616. '63 Scout 4x4. 2tmpg .. bud body, i;d mcch'I. $800. !l44.(llif(I •USED IMW"s* '73 Unvaria·<OOOLVY) 'iS 2002 · <G29NOK) '76 200.2.A • (()t99) CloHd On Sundoys ORANGE COUMTY 'S OLDEST UNIVERSITY HERE NOW 9932 Dally Pilot ; •••••••••• •• •• ••• •• •• •• 3.'lO West Bay St. otdsmobile HOftCla Ccrs • GMC Trucks 2850 Harbor Bh-d. Costa Mesa 540·9640 '71 HONDA 600 Sedan, nins good. $600. or beat offer. 836-644 l 1975HONDA •NEW COLORS '71 Corvette . White T-lop. Costa .Meso '. •NEW MODELS lf!lrn~c. ri1any extras. Ph POfttlac 9965 huge Savinitl' on Al.I. re· 19b6 Ho•bor (.t.\ 646 930) 003.7(j(JR aft 5. •••••••••••••••••••••;• main In&; n ew 7tis & -----------1·75 •7" Top, or ange, air , ·74 f'lreblrd E.1 prll 400. Demos. 1970VOl.VO xtras. S8J95. or offer. P vt A/C, AM/FM stereo. '4 The IJftter DurJtuin BEST OPJo't:R ply. 552·0143 aft. 6 now r adlal11, pwr wJri. MAR9UIS TOY OT A 64'1-7187 dows/door locks. '8,<R>O MISSION VIE J O Dodp 9935 ml. Xlnl cond. $3800. t>h 831·2880 495-1210 Autos. Used ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67S-038.i CMc Hotchbock 1973 TOY OT A ••••••• •• •••• ••• ••••••• '63 Dodge Convert. Top --------- General 990 I r;hape, lo ml'g , potential 1973 1..c?\fnns. super clean, ••••••••••••••••••••••• classic. $G75. 540·6336 P/S, P/8, a ir. $2695. Xlnl eves or 8.13·_.flro days. mcch cond. 645·2004 ~\illy fa ctory equipped MARK 11 COUl'E ~. w I I o w m 11 c a .: c . t..ow mllcoi1r. 4 SJ)('l'rl. \I (00.0fMN). uir coud & 1>wr. i.tl'er Salcs·Scrvicc·Leasinn NOW $2795 1 n I!. I mm a c: u 1 t1 l l' ROYt C-.. er,lnc. PHILLIPS lh.ruoot. (J81lltPq ). Nnw -" Buick. Pontiac & Op~I n'<luced l.u fruck1 9560 Rolls toyce . UMW * 837·2400 * ONLY $2595 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lS40 J 111nhort>r T '16 Oodgl! Charger. o Mos. Thunderbird 9970 old. s.ooo M ih·s. 60/4~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bcmrh i1eut . Pull J><IW('r '00 '!'·Bird. Gd cond. f\111 Maroon. $5500. 8 /\ M. to pnwcr, lo ml. $900. Ph s P M3k'!iryf(. 5511·~ 971Mlltt on 3::W_. __ _ '68 Dodge ·~T·Bird. xlnt cond, AMC 9905 s.tiS 151·9006 $5000. ••. •• •• •• •• •• •• •....... 400·9694 or 831·3044 '74 Ctrl'rnlln. 29,000 m l Ford 9940 Ye«Jll 9974 Newport Beach tHO G4t4 MAR~UIS TOYO A '7S Chev ~T. Pl~. p/b air --------'---1975 Hondo C M c MISSION Vli<:J O cond, nu lirM. brkti , & '?4 3.0 CS. Snrf , Velour $2000 548-1319uflGPM lll·2880495Al 2 10 shocks w/lo ulll. body. mt., olr, !ller('n le I ll~. J 0730 --- fl&3..5891. nuto. $18,000. 750 9415 ..,. " Trt.-a. 9747 1-----------........... ~........... ... . .,.,.... '7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Chev Luv, xlnl cond. 1975 Bl\JW lo:idcd, 111,000 'S8 X K JS 0 J ag u a i' 197GTH·7 Low mileage. ~· ~ campe r ah.~11. $2450. rni,$7500.Cull Restored & beautiful Mu,ticll Eves: 499-ISGS ____ 67S·:w.6 $6.000. Call 645·2471111ft 6. 991·3120 Wknd~ 7~·7508 a Suc11£1ce ! $1695/bst otr •• ••••• •• •••••• ••• •• ••• •••••••••••••••••• ..... Pvt ply. Ask for Doo. '6S Gnlaxlc. New Ures, '14 VEGA OT Oatchboc:k. nu 615·1186. day 60,000 mi. l Owner. (}d lo4Ued,wryclcon. 634 1114. ~~gconl1_S48·6633 ~1-8586 ----- \ Huntingt o n Bea c h Fo11ntaiit Valley EDITION Afternoo11 N. Y. Stoe.ks VOL. 69, NO. 31,, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEM BER 9, 1976 TEN CENTSi ·Coast Firms High Medicaid Earners: i . WASHINGTON (AP) -For Ule second straight year, the American physician listed as re· ceiving the most money from '9!edicaid is Dr. William A. Triebel of New York, who re· teived $785,114 in 1975. Triebel was one of 2.553 doc· 10rs, d~nf.i.Lts, ~and JaboratorieSit'fiBt received more than $100,000 from Medicaid last year,-{lccording to a Department Pollution Winning In LA By The Assodated Press The national eftort t.o control air pollution by 1985 is not succeeding In New York and Los Angeles, bys a White House adviser on air quality. John A. Busterud, acting chairman of the President's Council on Environmental Quali- ty. i;aid •·exceptional control standards may be necessary" to curb air pollution in the nation 's two most populous Yeas. He also said the effort has created more jobs than it has destroyed. Bus terud , s peaki ng i n Anaheim at the firth annual In· ternational PoUution Engineer· ing Exposition and Congress, · predicted that by the early 1980s, most of the nation's 247 air quaii· ty control re gions will meet primary federal health-related standards for air quallty. He said actual air pollution emission le vels in the Los Angeles basin fall below the federal maximum. but that the ~ea's valleys and sWUly climate C"Jluse photochemical pollutants to exceed federal standards. " "Los Angeles bas oo real pro- • blem with industrial pollutipn," l said Busterud ... That city really 'lteeds to get its act together in terms of mass transit and other <See SMOG, Page AZ> * * * Sea Breezes Waft Snwg Along Comt OCEANSIDE (AP) -Smog blamed on sea breeus from Los Angeles is still besieging the roas t as far south as San Diego and up to eight miles inland. Since last week, outdoor physical education has been can· celled at several schools. A health advisory was issued Monday by the San Diego County Air Pollution Control District for the second straight day with more smog expected today The ozone or smog level m Oceanside r ea ched 21 pe r million parts of air -.12 part above the federal maximum for <'lean air Smog levels reached .12 in Chula Vista and .11 in the Kearny Mesa area of central San Diego. A gi rb' tennis match in La Jolla was moved t.o the Claire· moot section north of Kearny Mesa. Meteorologi~t Hal Brown said higher temperatures inland heal ed the land. warming the trapped cool air and causing pollutants to rise and scatter. But along the coast, smog remained trapped. A weak Santa Ana condition also helped contain smog pro· pelled by northwest sea breezes from the Los Angeles area, Brown said. GW7WTops TV Rating NEW YORK (AP) - Twice as many television sets in New York and Los Angeles were tuned to "Gone With the Wind," SUnday night than t.o all other programs combined, the A.C. Nielsen Company says. Nielsen said today NBC got 65 percent of &lnday night's TV audience in New York and 64 percent· in Los Angeles. National figures bad not been com· piled, the company said. Figures tor tho second part shown Monday night were not avaUable. NBC estimated Its au- dlen c e at 90 m illion viewers Sunday, 110 milllon Monday nlchl. of Health, Education and Well are report issued Monday. Triebel operates a group or methadone maintenance clinics tor former heroin addicts. Firms in Newport Beach ud Huntington Beach were among -tbos~ from Orange County listed as receiving more than $100,000. • Altogether, the 2,533 providers received $445.3 million for 16.3 percent of the more than $2. 7 billion spent providing health care for 23 million poor Americans last year. "The fact that th~e medical providers received the stated amounts from the Medicaid pro- gram should not be construed as any evidence of wrongdoing, nor do the amounts llsted necessarily Tepresent 'earnings' or 'pro· fits'," HEW said. The information oo what HEW called "hieh volume" Medicaid providers was released on re·. 'lUest under the Freedom ot Jn. iormation Act. The University Hos pital Pharmacy in Huntington Beach received $136,773 and Goldstein and Kent of Newport Beach re- ceived $130,994. Also li;ited in the HEW report were Norman K. Bepls Jr., $102,038 and Pregnancy Control Medical Group, $225,281, both of San(aAna. County ot Orange Pharmacy. Orange, received $198,~. Hef· fner Medical Group, Anaheim, received $164,4«. Harbor Pharmacy of Fullerton received $100,896. The biggest payment to a single pharmacy was Sl.4 million to Medical Health Pharmacy of Milwaukee, Wis. The largest to a cba1n p~armacy wu $1.7 millloa to Peoples Dru1 in the Washington, D.C., area. Those receiving more than $100,000 in Medicaid payments included 99S doctors and 312 den· lists in solo and group practice, 127 solo and chain laboratori~ and 1,099 solo and chain pharmacies. Fountain Valley Stink Brea Firm. So11rce . Of --onia Stench! Bit by Car Michael J . McDonald, 14, gets emergency treatment after being s truck by a car Monday afternoon in Hunt· ington Beach. The boy was reported in satisfactory con· dition today at Pacifica Hospital. Police said Young McDonald. 20202 Sunshine Drive, was hit at Adams Avenue and Magnolia Street by a car driven by Michael L. Ferran. 23, of 123 17th St., Huntington Beach. Police are still looking into the cause of the accident. Carter Misses Big Mayors' Meeting CHJCAGO (AP) -If Jimmy Carter wanted to reassure the na- tion's big.city m ayors he is in their corner. he passed up a perfect opportunity at the mayors· urban strategy session. "He sent a lightweight. and some of us are mad." said one mayor. "But w e don't know where Samuels (Hands with Carter so we don't know wh at it means.·• Howa r d Sam uels. an un dersecretary or Commerce un· der President Johnson and an un· successful Democratic candidate for governor of New York. was Carter's choice to monitor the two-day U .s. Conference or HBWom an Found D e ad In Jacuzzi Riverside County coroner's in· vestigators are probing lbe death of a Huntington Beach woman whose bodf. was found bobbing in a poolside .facuzzl bath at a Palm Springs hotel Monday night . No foul play is suspected in the death of Mrs. Irene Dorothy Mason, 63, al this point in the in· vestigation, authorities say. An autopsy on the body of Mrs. Mason, who lived at 17171 Bolsa Chica St., was ordel'ed to de· termine what killed the victim wbo had been spending a long weekend visit in Palm Springs. She was registered there with a friend, Mrs. Ruth Masters, who left the victim in the Dunes Hotel swimming pool area about mid· night. lnvesllgators said Mrs. Mason wore a bathing suit. N£JJ'15 ,.fl\'ALYSl .'i Mayors m eeting that concluded Monday. · Samuels said he holds no formal position on the Carter transition team, but was asked to sit as an observer at the mayor's meeting by top Ca rter aide Hamilton Jordan. ·Tm not a s pokesman for Carter, I 'm jusl free-lancing thjs for him," said Samuels, stress· ing at least twice, "I don't speak for the presitent-elect." However, 'Samuels did speak, and often. Frequently he began his presentations by saying, "I think J can speak for the pre· sident·elect on this ... " Part of the negative reaction lo Samuels was simply the hurt that Carter didn't send "an insider," one of the small group of advisers known to be close t.o him. That would have sent a strong signal of support lo the mayors, who for years have complained that they are being ignored in Washington. Other criticis m of Samuels stemmed from the things be said and the fact that he said so much. However, since it never was clear whether Samuels spoke for (See CARTER, Page A2) Speakers Spirited Off A thief who apparentely shinnied bis way up to the loot or else had access to a hydraulic snorkel-tower device bas struck at HWlt· ington Beach High School. By RA Y~TllADA OI Ille D.tll llot~I An industria accident by ·an Orange Count chemical firm Saturday morning caused a heavy ammonia odor to permeate the air around Ellis Avenue and Ward Street in Fountain Valley, sanitation and water officials said today. Sanitation District officials confirmed that the firm in· volved is the Collier Carbon and Chemical Corporation of 2601 E . Imperial Highway, Brea. Traces of the ammonia re· leased into the air al the Orange County Water District COCWD) facility, 10500 Ellis /\ve., were still present Sunday and Monday, police Siiiu, but the air appears to be clear to· day. The concentration of am· monia reached a level of six times greater than normal . Saturday r. a,ccoldioe, t.o Daryl Batley, vCWD admmistrative assistant. The OCWD plant routinely re- moves much smaller amounts• of ammonia from waste water. The gas is released into the air and seldom causes any environ· mental problems, officials said. Police received eight com- plaints from. residents around the waler facility Saturday. The Orange County Sanitation Dis· trict facility, adjacent to the OCWD plant, also received 10 calls with one complaint sent to the Souther n Californfa Air Pollution Control District. police said. Officer Gerald Watson said today he is still feeling the er.' feels of the ammonia he inhaled Saturday when he investigated the complaints. "I still have an irritation in my throat and some trouble breathing but I 'm okay," Watson said today. No injuries from residents in the surrounding area were re· ported as a result of the color· less gas. The trouble began at the chemical firm when a large quan- tity or ammonia was leaked into cooling waters during a heal ex· change process, said J ohn Thomas, sanitation district of· ficial. HB Trustees Re-review Applicants Huntington Beach City School District trustees will reinterview applicants for positions on com· munity advisory committee at a board meeting this evening at 7 o'clock in the Gisler School Mall, 21141 Strathmoor Lane, Hunt· ington Beach. . Trustees approved a list of 14 committee members three weeks ago but were advised to bold ln- terviews again by the county counsel. Because the interviews were origlnaUy held in clOled meet· mis. the county counsel aclvbed. the lnLstees to conduct the 1elec- tJon process again ~the event a violation of the Ralph M. Brown Act occurred. The 8rown Act prevents elected officials lrom holding closed seas Iona on certain topics. A hotel employe discovered the body In the Jacuzzi swirling bath about a ball-hour after the visit· ing Mrs. MHters left her compa· nlon and retired to thcir hotel room. The body was taken to Wlefel & Son Mortuary in Palm Sprinp, where a 1polte1man said today it was understood she would be transferred to Forest Lawn· Cypreu for funeral services. T he high-rise heist directly across the street from police headquarters involved theft of a loudspeaker and six outlets that direct sound throughout the football stadium. Flu Shots Slated School officials who re-Fra. twine nu hnmunbatlons A spokesman for that mortuary laid today funeral ar· rangemenll are pendlnc. I ~--,..- porLed the 1rand theft will be given to ~ public Wed· Monday aald the sound nnday and Thund~ from 5 fp 9 equipment waf valued at p.m. at the Mu--Parle COm· S350 and bad to be '""' meticulously unbolted munlty Center, 7000 Norma I Drive, HunUntton Beach. The tom the top or a is-root· event ia sponsored by the Hunt· _ie_1_ep_h_o_ne_po_le_·~-=-=-:;:, :::::::_;.... .. :· inltOD lnttrcommunlt.y HolpttaJ. ~ The cooling water was then released with the ammonia into the sewage lines -unknown to the firm's engineers., Thomas said. The quantity of ammonia in the sewage was not realized un· ti! it reached OCWD's waste water purific ation facility. Sanitation officials were not aware of its presence until then, Thomas said. 12 Get Raises "Usually, If a firm has a large concentration_ .J>f a chemical like ammoaia in the waste lines, they call us and let us know." Thomas said. The sanitation official said the firro involved was one of the coun-· ty's major dischargers of am- monia. "We were quite shocked - we have never had levels of (See AMMONIA, Page AZ) Attorney Pay Hike 'Def erred' in HB By ROBEllT BAllKElt Of tM Delly ~llet Stttf Huntington-Beach City Coun-· cil members balked Monday ftighl at giving a pay ralse to City Attorney Don Bonfa wbea they were passing out salary hikes to 12 other department heads. . 1 The council voted unanimous· Jy to exclude Bonfa from the 1 • pay increase list after criticism: was leve l ed al Bonfa'sj perfor mance by City Coun·1 cilman Richar d Siebert. I DAiiy P'llet Staff """'• HE'LL HAVE TO WAIT City Attorney Bonf• Valley Sets Hearings on Development The Fountain Valley Cjty Council will bold another series of public hearings on the pro- posed city center and industrial area redevelopment plans tonight at 8 o'clock in the council chambers, 10200 Slater Ave. After the public hearings, the council, acting as the Fountain Valley Redevelopment Agency, will consider tentative approval of an ordinance adopting the pro. posed plans. The city center plan involves commercial development in the area around Brookhurst Street and Slater A venue near the civic center. The industrial plan includes partially developed areas in the eastern and aoulbern sect.on of the city. Woman Dies In Wheelchair LOS ANGELES (AP) -An elderly n ursing home paUent strapped to a wheelchair drowned when aht' apparently man eu vered he~self into a partially filled tnerapy pool, autboriUea aay. Tbe body of Clara Davis, 74, 1 patient at Pre1tl1.~ e CGnnleseent Center in North Hollywood. was cliKov•td Monday In about 15 lDdMI of wac.r 111 tbe pool. A coroa..-11 spokesmen 1aJd U. death appeared to be an ac· ddental drowin,1 but an autopsy w11 scheduled lor ~. , Siebert said this morning the action was not a denial or a pay increase for Bonfa but was in· stead a deferral. \ "I want the city council t~ µlee a look at the facts before making a decision on Bonfa's pay, perha ps in two weeks," Siebert said. S~bert said during Monday's counbH meeting be doesn't think the city.has been receiving ade· quate legal counsel from Bonfa. Siebert said that be would.I spell out specific criticism later. Bonla'• ollice ;nctudes i· staff attorneys. The city attorney said toda he had talked to Siebert morning and that they plan discuss the council man•s; criticisms. I The other department bea~ were given a pay raise of sev~ percent retroactive to July L f They will receive another two percent raise on Jan. 1. The cost to the city is approJ· imatelv 134.000 with department di.rector averaging more than I' $2,000 yearly boost, according to Personnel Director Ed Thompson. <Sff BON FA, Page AZ> We athe r Fog and low clouds alonk the coast tonight and Wed- nesday. Beach blgh$ in lo\. ?Os, lows to mid 50s. I NSIDE TODAY " A to0man toho lox. her ;J or a paJI raile became ahl won't hov. 1tz 10Uh her bosi CamlOI IU him unctr.· ,,,. federal Cfoil Right• Act. - Story,A7 • t ' . l 1 I ' A.2 DAIL V PILOT H/F 'Girl, 8, Kidnaped, Molested While family members slept In adjoining bedrooms, an 8-year- old girl was kidnaped from her home Monday night, taken to a nearby vacant house and sexual· ly assaulted, according to Santa Ana police. The youngster was released by her abductor after spending a I terrifying hour in his control, • police said. I She was taken to Sa.l'lta Ana· Tustin Community Hospital for treatment and released early to- day. Police arc looking for a transient wtio they believe has been sleeping in empty houses in the 1100 block of South Shelly Street. People who might have knowledge of the whereabouts of such a person have been asked to contact investigator Skip Lynn at the Santa Ana Police Depart· ment at 834 ·427R PoHce said the young victim descnbed her assailant as a dark I complexioned. dark ha.ired man. They said she could offer little beyond that brief description and said s he at first believed she was being removed from her bed by a family member Front Page A J SMOG •.. kinds of imaginative transporta- tion methods, including. car pools, taxes on parking and park- ing restrictions . "I don 'l think it's right for us in Washington to say yo11're killing yourself in Los Angeles and you have lo stop. But the Air Pollu- tion Control District is going to have lo prescribe some rather stringent medicine if they are ~o­ ing to reach air quality standards by 1985 ... Busteru<l said New York's air pollution orohl<'ms stem from the mass burning of sulphur fu<'l s for heat and energy, ::rnd auto emissions. ''Nuclear powPr would be one way of solving many of New York 's power.pollution pro- blems," he said, "but we've had a real problem in ~etlln~ nuclear power plants approved." Busterud also said lhat despite fears the right against pollution would cause employment pro- 1 blems, the nationwide effort to ,clean up the environment has created more Jobs than 1t has ta.ken :'I" ay About On!.' m illion Jobs arc now connerted "1th pollution control nation"' 1de. he sct1d. Fro• Page .41 AMMONIA. • ammonia this high before," Bailey said. "This 1~ the first time 1n nine years of operation this has happcned. It's not very common,'' he 11ddcd. "If we detect hi~lt levels again we will shut down our processing plant." said Batley. Saturday 's ammonia content in the "'aste water rcacht-d 200 parts per million. The normal level is only ubout 35 parts per million, Railey s aid OCWO and the sanitation dis- trl<'t plt1n to <.'OOperat<' on a hypas) s~ stf'm to prevent pro- hlt'm~ like Saturday's from rc- t·urnng, Hailey said. However. ThomM said he had nn knowledge or any SUC'h pro- pos~ proJect , when contacted todav G~ Attack Cited SAN GA BRIEL (AP> -Police Offirer Billy Mcllvan is recover· mg from bullet woundc; received 1n what he described as the latest incident in two-years or ba;assmcnl by members or a street gang. The incidents have I occurred since he wusinstrumen- tal in sending one gang member to prison two years a~o. l OAAHQE COAll M 1, DAILY PILOT TYQ. t"'O"' f':et•t• 0.tly POnl Mtfoiwf\trt! ' ~ ft·"""1 ltw ~"'""' "'•" "OVl>t;\Nl<I ~'""'°"MW>* (t\•..,l ~t1~1f'lliq (o~•lllY s.r.,.f' ... ,. ..-f•••l'M\· "''" Wbtl\1'14tod ~ftd•¥ thf'W..-lltt~y fOI' f1t•t• ~'-' "'"'•"6ft A•.uPI ••11~1 fllQf~ "-'••" Jew,.. t•·"' v.11 ... 1rw•l"I•. S•Od'~' v ... ..,.., •""" I .t~ 8•.,1\1\owtll\ C..\t A\•W)*•t~1 """'""''' f1f'W\ t'\ P'l#bl•\~ \4tv•,.•V\ M°'IO \tro.Y' '"" DrtN'IMI Olil .. IV\l"Q D'•"'' I• •t DO Yflhl Rh ~f"t f "t• Mo•. (4httr-Nf tftt ,_, ..... ., .. .._ .'"'""'"' ...... P"vW: .,..., J>O • tlorltf V•tA 0fA\t,,.l"ll tf'ld c;.,,,,.,.,.Min.,,.·• T"~••ICH•H '"''''' Tfilief't•t• ............ M-'~~Q1ft.O CcMM 0•11 .. M. \.••• •It-O' Mt" AU•\f .. ftl M.tl"l•9•t°"1 l°'ltw'\ ••M'1 t•t•tt Wtoo\t Or•"oe Co\tntY lditor """,t~~~~~~. ~=.~~~2!,"<· Mo111,,. A<N'"" tt.o 1oa 1t0 - OfflcH l t QU"" "'"'" tl!llAOl"l"IPW"V•ttSf,.,.,.i C.rt\t,tMt\t 'lOW•UftA'l\MH I '•ddlfll{\411'~ """"'" ,,>111 "" "•1 lfn..td •t \i11n Ott~ fret w'4Y Telephone ('M4)142432t , Cl•nltled Advert111ntM2•1171 f•--1110t-0tvm,~11 .. Mo.1t20 eo. .. itM 1t~ 0--• Ce••I ....... ,.,.. ... C.-.,_,, kre ,._.. ••'•'-UIV't,•t.,,_,~ rdt..,l•I ""'"•' er ••w•r•h•"'~"'' ,,...,..,,. may oe r.iJtffvc...-wtt'-•V\ tkfl .. t ••""I'•'~ t f <-""'-·· ~~ ..... ~ .... :::!~11=·-.:· ,~::, i:;-:, ;:i::te...•;. :::w:.:e _, .. , ........... . ( Tuesday. Novembor9, 1970 Sink in Style Caviar: Good to Laat Pound LONDON (AP) -At a Ume wheo the British P<>Wld ls sadly alnklnt ftom at1bt and the na1 of emplre ls well below half•taff Vbcounl Richard Thonau Orlando Newport bas done what be tbinkS is the only sensible thing left for a chap to do. He bas opened a caviar bar in Knightsbridge so those aboard the sinking ship can go down ln style. "IT SOUNDS LIKE A DANCE of the decadent before they go, but actu:dly it's bloody good business. There's all kinds of money around," said the 28-year-old son and heir to the Earl of Bradford who once Prince Charles dlsappears up the nuptial aisle could rank as Britain 's most eligible bachelor. ' The viscount-family motto: Nee temere. nee timide °(Neither rash nor timid ) -figured that his caviar bar close to Hyde Park Harrod's "and the better embassies" would attract tourists fro~ the de lue luxe hotels and a scattering or diplomats. BUT SINCE OPENING IN APlllL he finds the pike frequented more and more by his British compatriots. "People with any cash lei\ are very concerned about spending it on something worthwhile before it devalues altogether or the tax man g rabs it ,'' explained bis lordsh.lp. "Holidays and cruises can be checked, so you might as well treat yourself to a good tuck-in before It's too late. Where evading taxes are concerned, we're getting almost as good as the Italians and the French, and of course they come here in droves on shopping sprees. "WE'VE MADE CAVIAR LESS frightening," said the viscount in modest self-appr aisal of h.ls contribution to the nation's morale in these trylng times. "When you consider filet steak goes for three pounds <$4.80 ) a Pound, caviar is damned good value. It's price has increased very liWe over the past 20 years compared with smoked salmon and lobster, which have gone quite mad. People come here for a lunch of pressed caviar, the cheese board and a bottle ot wine and can get out for 7.50 pounds ($12). "Wh y, I think the biggest bill we've had in here has been 61 pounds ($97.60) for four people, but that was for caviar, lobster and a bit of booze.'· DO THE CUSTOMERS EVER REALIZE that the beam ing, bearded Maitre D taJcing their coats or squinUng at the caviar scale$6 is a member or the nobility? "If they don't, I tell them," said the viscount with becoming frankness. Even prouder than his listing in Debreu. 's, the •:iscount is de- lighted over tne one star accorded his restaurant in the latest Egon ~o1?ay food guide and the recommendation: ".Management yo~g. r1v1l and eager." r "That's me, you know." lie beamed a smile as golden as his best caviar. Kialoa Pulls 'Ahead In Mazatlan Race Kialoa appeared to be livini? up to her long distance potential 10 day as she had carved out a 50- mile lead over her nearest com petitor in the 1,032-mtle Los Angeles to M aza\lan yacht race Skipper Jim Kilroy's position report at 8 a . m. today placed the 79-foot ketch off Point Abreojos on the Baja California coast, about 463 miles from the start. Closest yacht to Kialoa was Ragtime, the 62-foot sloop sailed by Bill Pasquini and Bill While of Long Beach. She bad logged 414 miles along the rhumbllne. Escort vessels in the fleet rl'- ported continued light winds of about fi V( knots from the east. Kialoa 's position gave her the overall handicap and Class A lead in the race. Second on han- dlcap time was Malin Burnham's -Ericson-46 Invader. San Dieeo Yacht Club and third was Morrie Kirk's 40-foot sloop Hurricane Deck, Balboa YathtClub. Class leaders on handicap Lime : Class A l. Kialoa 2. Whistle Wing IV 3, Miramar. Class B 1. Invader 2. Hurricane Deck 3. RagdolL Class C 1. Cottontail 2. Bingo 3. Vector. Class D 1. America Jane III 2. Ghost 11 3. Captain Marvel. Agents Bit? FBI lndktments· Hinted WASHINGTON (AP) -The New York Times re- ported today that the government may seek indict- ments against 10 to 20 present or former FBI officials. The Times said department lawyers concluded they could s upport charges tha,t the persons under in- vestigation knew of or approved illegal investigative techniques. Justice Department spokesmen refused comment on the report. The Times quoted federal sources as saying pro- secutors in the department's civil rights division found evidence of illegal wiretaps, bugs, burglaries, mail openings a nd otherpractices. The sources told the Times that a memorandum on the subject was expected to be submitted to Atty. Gen. Edward H. Levi this week. The newspaper said the lawyers w ere expected to recommend that Levi permit the m to seek indictments against some or all· of those named. 'Ghastly Price' Cou11Cil Says No To Huntington Span Huntington Beach City Council members voted unanimously Monday night to shelve plans for an overh ead ·bridge across Golden West Street to Central Park. The council decided instead to find alternative ways to spend a $143,700 grant for park develop· ment from the Department of Housing and U rban Develop- menL Tbe decision was made after a <'Ouncil liaison committee of Norma Gibbs and Richard Siebert met with park officials. "We didn't want to spend the money for the bridge just because funds were available,·• Mrs. Gibbs said. "It's not worth the ghastly price." The city would have provided matching funds for the proJ>OSed project south of Talbert Avenue. Siebert said the park ls cur- renUy underdeveloped "and iL's dllflcutt to know where to place the brid.re at the present time." Mayor Pro Tem Ron Pattinson 1ald µtat be would like to see the money ll)(!nt on maintenance of pub. "We owe il to the public to make it as good o park as possible," be said. Officials indicated that a cross- inC signal will eventually be in- stalled in the a rea to permit pedestrian crossing. Panel Plans Charter Meet The Huntington Beach Charter Revision Committee will meet tonight al 7: 30 ln room B-8 of the administration building in lhe civic ccpter. 2000 Main St. Chairm an Jerome Bame said that Chy Clerk Alicia Wentworth a nd City 1 ttorney Don Bonfa will discuss whether their offi<.'es should remain elective or be made appolnU ve. Bame sald the committee is lUlnf • look at a wide range or sugetted cban1es ln lhe clty charter. Caiholic Sex Curb Rule Eyed WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's Roman Catholic bishops have been asked to approve u pastoral letter settlna strict rules on sexual behavior for Catholirs. The 36-page document, which is expected to s tir angry criticism among some Catholics, was presented Monday to the 250 members of the NaUonal Con· rerence or Catholic Bl.shops al their four-day annual meeting here. A final vote on amend- ments and the code itself is scheduled Thursday. The pastoral letter, two years in the writing, touches on a varie- ty o[ subjects and Is mainly a restatement of views by the church wrapped into a single package. Jt rejects the view that "mar- riages can deteriorate to such an extent that the m arital union is destroyed and the spouses are no longer obliged lo keep their pro- mise of lifelong fidelity. •'The covenant between a man and woman joined in Christian :narriage is as indissoluble and 1•.revocable as God's love for h.is people and Christ's love for His church," the proposed document says. On birth control. the letter says "in contraceptive intercourse the procreative or life-giving mean- ing or intercourse is deliberately separated from its love-giving meaning and is repudiated; the wrongness of such an act Hes in the repudiation of this value." A section added Monday says\ "We are awar e that many couples face agonizing decisions regarding artificial contracep- tion. We urge them not to lose heart nor lo turn from the com- munity or faith. "Rather, they shouJd take ap- propriate pastoral counsel, seek help in prayer and sacraments, and investigate m eans of birth limitation. At the same time we invite those who dissent Crom this teaching of the church to a pr ayerful a nd studied re- consideration of their position.·' On the question of homosex- uality, the Jetter says "genital sexual behavior is oriented toward marriage and must be heterosexual.'' Fr0ttt Page AJ BONFA ... Thompson said the pay raises were generally in line with those given previously to other employe groups in the city Department directors recei v- ing the pay hikes included Thompson; Warren Hall , treasurer; Richard Harlow, as- sistant city administrator; Ben Arguello, finance director · and Vince Moorhouse, department of harbors a nd beaches. Also, John Behrens. building department; Waller Johnson. library director ; Ed wa rd Selich. planning director; Bill Hartge, public works director: Norm Worthy, recreation and parks director: Ray Picard, fi re chief ; and E a rle Robitaille. police chief. .. The d e p artment h eads formerly were me mbers of the now defunct Executive Manage- ment Team which represented them in salary negotiations. In the future, their jobs wiJI be evaluated by City Ad · ministrator Bud Belsito who will make s alary recommenda· tions to the council. This process wasn't followed this year because Belsito has been permanent city ad- ministrator only since July. 9131n9 of Sr.olt•<>h dPo;c••nl 1 l;"tke qr(!at pl"l:ISurfJ 1n m11k1nq my dollars slrf'tc.h I Irv to p11c,-. th•S •d oo alonq to our custome•'l by s1ocl\1•11 many comb1n11t1on p1!!c:"<. or 1ew?lrv lhal is, pieces lhat c:in sorv1J mull1pl" puroo._,, .. of ado r nmPnt P1n-pnnc11n1 comb•nat1on5 "'" lhe mor,t u<,ual of courso but we extend lhat idea to clasp d~orators and -i1tath1TI11nts 101 nnos and b1ar.ol1JIS We haJe a hon,.y·bee rin9·pin comb1nat1on that le; 1<J1y 1ma<J1native ThPro 1s a striklnqly beautiful onyll anrl diamond nearl that sorve5 "lither as a •tnq or pendant This •S ltuly a mechan1('11I en91neonn9 ma'>lorp1Pco. We have neckl ac e brn colo t comb1nnt1on s that l')•v~ VCN d•lfertJnt lenrit hi; ol nf'Cl.w111e when corn1J1n11rl in t1•flllrf'nt ways Therl) life WlllChfl<; IOO w1lh a wide vRr •"'Y or colorer! "llraps and even C11llerent colored bezels One of the mo'\t classic ;1nrl versa11lo r.omb1n<111ons 1s 11 basic earring wHh a variety of drops th111 complPlelv chon91> lhft look -and lhtt r.01ors Th1"1 •dee Is great for tho 1rave1or 11 Chicken lake ...... Intruders with designs on David Rohn 's chickens had better think twice. The big bird is a creation of Rahn .at his farm in Modjeska Canyon. Smokey Bear Dead. Of Old Age at 25 WASHINGTON (AP) -The origin11l Smokey. Bear. for 25 years a li.ving symbol of forest fire prevention. died today a t the National Zoo and presumably went to what Congress once re- ferred to as "that great honey trt>e in the ~k y ." Smokey retired m May 1975 and was r eplaced by another. younger Smokey. Both were housed at the National Zoo. Smokey 's death was an- nounced by. the Agriculture Department. which had handled the forest fire prevention pro- gram through its U.S. Forest Ser\'iCe agency. 0£ficials said the old Smoicey died "in lus retire- ment cage" at the zoo. Congress in a joint resolution two years ago s~ci!ied that the bt>a r 's remains be shipped to Capitan, N.M. Smokey will be buried in several days at the Smokey Bear His torical Park there . The original Smokey was found in 1950 as a cub, badly burned Orange Woman Dies of Burns A 59-year-old Orange woman died at the UCI Medical Center burn unit Monday of injuries suf. fered in an a ccident Oct. JO, Orange County Coroner's de· puties said today. Esther Lee Gray, of 1931 E. Meats Ave .• was injured at her home when she dropped a match and her clothing ignited, deputies said. She suffered burns over 70 percent of her body, the coroner reported. @ t;iEM WISE Mary Barr. Certlll&:f Gemo1oglst ft'oip. a forest fire that swept through part of the Lincoln N-'1- bonal Forest. He was found clinging to ·a charred tree, was treated for burns and was fl own to Santa Fe. N. M .• for furthe r treatment and was gradually nursed back to health. Io June 1950, Smokey was elected as the first living symbol of the forest fire prevention cam- paign which started ln 1942. Soon afterward. Smokey was fl own here a nd in a brief ceremony w.as installed officiaJ.iy at the zoo. • The new Smokey Bear bas a similar background, also fouad in the Lincoln National Forest. f'r..,P~Al CARTER ..• Carter. the mayors never were certain wheth er to take his state- ments as being significant. . . Samu.els supported the mayors' request~ror federal help, CARTER FAMILY FINDS SECLUSI0~4 but repealed several qualifica- tions Carter himself has sounded -warning that Carter would not just throw money at lbeir pro- blems and stressing the need for strict fiscal management. After making the latter point several times, be told a commit- tee of mayors that the federal government under Carter might be able to help i mpose manage- mentdlscipline. q111Ps you a whole e11rrinq:. wardrobe without h11111nq to carry '>O muc~1 around wllll) you. You will always have 1ust 1he 11qh1 accen1 l or each cO'>lu~~ lnd occasion • OnA ol my mosl ambillous soecu1I order designs for ii cuc;1omor was a necklace contain ing 25 carats o l d1amond'S It could be worn with or w ithout a pendant tttlilchmenl but the big bonus was tho double clasps thnl mad" it useabl e as two d11mond t>rit:elets CHARLES H. BARR I consider It a ro11I challenge to seo what I can design 10 strelch my ru5tomers' 1ewelry dolla~ 100. If you have a plec1t or 1ew<1lrv (or many) that you wislt 10 make Into someth1nq. new. bring them 1n and lots cons•der the poss1b11illes. Do It <ooon lhouqh b ec:au!'ie. Christmas 1'1 comlnq and our Shop worll gots vory l'loavy st Christmns lime and I don't want to d1sappo•nt anyone w11h a hollday deadline. Our window featuring the "Diamonds In Orbit '77" that I wrote about In an earllef column. Is now on display -· so come see! • \' ., ............. Wetfclff l'lne ~a..c11 ,. l . . • Irvine EDITION VOL. 69, NO. 31~, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PA~ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Carter ·Ange~ Mayors Conj ere nee 'Lightweight' Draws Fire cmCAGO (AP) -ll Jimmy I Carter wanted to reassure the na· lion's big-city mayors be is in their corner. he passed up a ·perfect opportunity at the mayors' urban strategy session. "He sent a lightweight, and some of us are m ad," said one mayor . "But we don't know where Samuels stands with Carter so we don't know what it means.•• I Howard Samuels. an un· dersecretary of Commerc:e un· Lead Now 50Miles For Ki aloa Kialoa appeared to be living up to her long distance potential to- day as s he had carved out a SO· mile lead over her nearest com· petitor in the 1.032-mile Los Angeles to Mazatlan yacht race. . Skipper Jim Kilroy's position •report at 8 a.m. today placed the 7!Hoot ketch oft Point Abreojos on the Baja California coast, about 463 miles from the start. Closest yacht to Kialoa was Ragtime, the 62-foot sloop sailed by Bill Pasquini and Bill White of Long Beach. She had logged 414 miles along the rhumbline. Escort vessels in the fleet re· ported continued light winds of about five knots from the east. Kialoa's position gave her the overall handicap and Class A lead in the race. Second on han· dicaptime was Ma lin Bumham's Ericson-46 Invader, San Diego Yacht Club and third was Morrie Kirk's 40-foot sloop Hurricane ·Deck, Balboa YachtCtub. ~. Class leaders on handicap ,~me: 'Class A 1. Kialoa 2. Whistle Wing fV 3, Mira mar. Class B 1. Invader 2. Hurricane Deck 3. Ragdoll. Class C 1. Cottontail 2. Bingo 3. Vector. Class D 1. America Jane Ill 2. Ghost JI 3. Ca plain Marvel His R e prieve Not Wanted SALT LAKE CITY CAP) Gary Mark Gilmore, condemned to dje before a Utah firing squad next Monday in the first execu- tion in the United States since 1967, bas been given a reprieve he dldn 't want. The Utah Supreme Court stayed by a vole of 3-2 a district judge"s order of execution Mon· d ay . He was convicted or murdering a night clerk during a motel robbery. The 35-year·old Gilmore sent lwo handwritten notes before the decision asking the justices to disregard efrorts to delay bis ex· ecution, which he has said he prefers to a lire in prison. Officers On Take? BOSTON (AP> -Police in· vestigators say about 200 of· ficers assigned lo Boston's enter· tainment and business districts were familiar with organized crime members and ignored ob· vious Jaw violations. . I NSIDE T ODA 'l' A 100m01l tDM loHI her job or .a pa11 roile ~ ilw t00n'l how '" "11th ltn' boa connot ne him &nllCkT-the /ederal Civil Rlghl1 Act. St0f1/,A7. . .-,._ der President J ohnsoo and an UD· successful Democratic candidate for governor of New York, wu Carter's choice to monitor the two-day U .S. Conference of CARTER FAMILY FINDS SECLUSION-A4 Mayors meeting that concluded Monday. Samuels said he bolds no formal position on the Carte.r transition team , but was asked to sit u an observer at the mayor's meeting by top Carter aide Hamilton Jordan. "I'm not a spokesman for Carter, I'm just free-lancing this for him.'' said Samuels, stress- ing at least twice, "I don't speak for the president-elect.•' However, Samuels did speak, and often. FrequenUy he began his presentations by saying, •'I think I can speak for the pre- sident-elect on this .• .'' · Part of tbe negative reaction to Santa A na Case Girl, 8, Kidnaped, Samuels wu simply the hurt that Carter didn•t send ••an insider." one ol the a mall gt"OUp of advisers known to be close to him. That wowd have sent a strong signal of support to the mayors, who for years have complained that they are being ignored in Washington. Other criticism or Samuels stemmed from the things he said and the fact that he said so much. However, s ince it never was clear whether Samuels spoke for (See CARTER. Page AZ> Probe Set In Hinshaw Molested in County Time Issue Wh·1 f ·1 bers I · bee 1 · · t ho · The jury in the Superior Court .. •.e arn1ymem septm ns eepmgm empy usesm trial o r Orange County adjo~ng bedr:ooms, an 8-year-the 1100 block of South Shelly Congressman Andrew Hinshaw old girl was kid~aped from her Street . . has been sent home until Wed- home Monday mght. taken to a People who mig ht have nesday so the judge can conduct nearby vacant house. and sexual· knowledge of the whereabouts of a hearing demanded by the de- ly assa~lted, according to Santa such a 1>_erson !tave bee!l asked to fenseoutofthe jury'spresence. Ana police. contact mvesttgator Skip Lynn at Judge Frank )>omenichini is- Tbe youngster was rele~ecl by the Santa Ana Police Depart-sued the directive after" bearing her . a~uctor af~er ~pending a ment _at 834-~8. . . testimonSly ,Hins haw in which te1:ifym~ hour m his control, Po~ce said the _young victim he admit pending DO more • police said. descnbe~ her assa1lan~ as a dark than five perc nt of his work time She was taken to Santa Ana· complexioned, dark hrured man. in 1972 OD bis duties as the coun- ·Tustin Community Hospital for They said she c;ould offer: li~Ue ty's assessor. treatment and released early to-beyond tha t brief descnpt1on day. and said she at first believed s he Police are looking for a was being removed from her bed transient who they believe has by a family member. lrvi11e to Ponder Removal of Trees Irvine City Councilmen to- night are expected to act on an Irvine Company request to re- move more tban 22,000 trees in the Northeast Quadrant of Wood· bridge. A staff report bas recom- mended approval, which means the loss of 888 eucalyptus trees plus au the citrus trees (approx- imately 22,000) in the 159-acre area bordered by Irvine Center l)rive, J effrey Road, Barranca Road and Woodbridge Lake. lf approved,' the tree removal wol.lld be completed within 120 days. opening the door for the planned development ot the Woodbridge area. A study eonducted by the Reynolds Environmental Group said 865 of the eucalyptus trees are dead or dying and may be harmful to adjacent healthy trees. An additional 23 healthy eucalyptus trees would be re- moved for the planned East YaJe Looprigbtofway. The study also claims the eucalyptus grove is oveN:rowded and poses a public safety hazard in high winds. The trees are between 70-100 years old and range from 60 to 120 feet in height. The put)llc meeting begins at 7:30 p.m. in Council Chambers. Irvine Town Center. Smog Wins Battle In LA, NY Areas By The Aasoda~ Press The national effort to control air pollution by 1985 is notsueceed.ing in New York and Los Angeles, says a WhUe House adviser on air quality. J ohn A. Busterud, acting chairman of the President's Council on Environmental Quall· ty, s aid "exceptional control standards m ay be necessacy" to curb air poUution in the nation's two most populous areas. He also said the effort hu created more jobs than It has destroyed. Busterud. spe-akinl in Anaheim at the fifth annual Jn. ternational PolluUon Elllineer· ing Exposition and Congress, predicted that by U..earty ~. most oC the nation's 3'1 air quail· ty control regions will meet primary federal beAltb-related standards for air qua.ti~~· * * * He said a~tual air pollution. emission I vels· in the Los Angeles bas n fall below the federal maximum, but that the area's valleys and sunny climate· cause photochemical pollutants to exceed federal standards. "Los Angeles has no real pro- blem with industrial pollution." said Busterud. "Thal city really needs to get its act together in tenns of mass transit and other kinds of imaginative transporta- tion methods, including car pools, taxes on parlclng and park· ing restrictions. ··1 don't think it's right for us in Washington to say you're killing younelf in Los Angeles and you have to stop. But the Air Pollu- tion Control District ts going to have to prescribe some rather strtncent medicine U they are go- ing to reach air quality standards <SeeSMOO. Pare AZ) *· * * Sm.og Wafts. In Sea Breezes Take Blame OCEANSIDE (AP) -· SlbOI blamed on. sea brHllll from JAi .... An1elea ls still ~ tlae d>Ut u far IOUtJt • &m 'Dtqo and up toeiibt milel ~ Since last week, dutdoor physical education bu been can· celled at several scboola. A health advisory wu lsauecl Monday by the San Diego County Afr PoUuUon Control District for the second straight day with mo ... smog expected today. The orone or smo, lev~ ln Oceanside reached .21 per mllllon part.a of alr -.12 part. abovo tbe federal maxianDD tor clean air. .. Smog levels reached .12 Sn Cbwa Vista and .11 ln the Kearny Mesa area of central San Diego. A cirla' tennil malch in La Jolla •aa moved td the Clai.re- mont ~n north of Kearny Mesa. Meteorotoslst Hal Bron said hieber temperatures tnland heat· ed the lanct1 warm ins the trapped cool alt ana cauatnc pollgt.anta to rile ud 1eatter. But alone the coat.1J110« remalntd trapped. A wea.t Sant. An.a conditicm also helped ~ontaln •moe pro- pelled by northwest aea breeies from Ute LH Anietes area, Brownuld. The judge is now being asked to rule before the jury returns that the county's abandonment of claims again st assessor 's employes who drew overtime in 1972 to work on Hinshaw's Co ngressional campaign in- validates all related criminal charges against Hinshaw. Defe n se attorney John Nc:NichoJu contends that it the claims against the employes are unjust, it is equally unjust to pro- secute bis client on charges con- nected to that overtime. Hinshaw 's admission that he spent almost no time on his job- related duties came during tough quest ioning by prosecutor William Evans. Evans was pressing the con- gressman to explain why he had so liUle knowledge of numerous, allegedly criminal acts com- mitted by members of his own sWf. Hinshaw acknowledged that the county required his signature on overtime a nd vacation slips prepared in his office during 1972, but told Evans that he bad d ecide d to d el egate the authority. Evans, in cross examination, asked the forme r assessor if be ever took the trouble to keep himself informed on the volume of overtime compiled by his staff during 1972. "Not specifically." Hinshaw told him. "I was only interested in getting the job done." Hins haw fa ces multiple criminal charges including grand theft, conspiracy and em- bezzlement stemming from his alleged illegal actions as county assessor In 1972. It is alleged that the Newport Beach Republican uliliied coun- ty manpowe r and materials while running for Congress in that year. He has been convicted of bribery charges related to that same period and is free from his state prison sentence pending ap- peal. Hinshaw, 51, repeated Monday his frequent denial that assessor's. employes worked on his cam· paign by assignment from their county duUes. GJfTWTops TV Rating NEW YORK (AP) - Twice as many television Jets in New York and Los An1eles were tuned to "Gone With the Wind.'' Sunday nlebt than to all other pro1ram1 combined, the A.C. Nielsen Comp&nf Sl,)'S. Nielaen said today NBC got 65 percent of SUnday nl1bt '1 TV audience in New Yort and 6' percent. in Lo. An8•le1. NatJ.ooal fl~ bad not Hell com· piled, tbe comp1QY nkL f'tiures for the second part shown lloaday night wen not H•Uable. NBC esUmaled Its au.- dlence at 10 million vleweu Sunday. 110 mlWon Monday nJOL ri,otlny's Closing N.Y.Stoeks . TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1976 ' TEN CENT5' Chicken J o ke Intruders with designs on David Rohn's chickens had better think twice. The big bird. is a creation of Rahn at his farm in Modjeska Canyon. MacArthur, Bristol Bbttlene cks Slated It's going to be a bit confusing for drivers who r e ly on MacArthur Boulevard or Bristol Street beginning Wednesday. After 10 a .m ., northbound traf· fie on MacArthur Boulevard will be rerouted onto the new re- aligned MacArthur, according to CalTrans traffic engineer Bob Siefert. Motorists will no longer be able to make a left tum on Bristol Street. Instead, they must travel north to Jamboree Road before con- necting with Bristol. And sou thbound (old) MacArthur drivers will no longer be able to turn left onto University Drive to enter Irvine. They will use Bonita Canyon Road instead. As for the short stretch of Bristol between MacArthur and Jamboree, westbound (towards Costa Mesa>. traffic will be cutoff for about two weeks beginning Wednesday. Eastbound traffic will flow norm aJJy until the piece is com- pletely shut down in late Nov· ember. the total closure will last ap. proximately three weeks for coo,, strqction. 1 Tflenagain,don'tbeloniL 1 The stretch of Bristol was to t have been closed one month ago 1 , but was delayed due to construc- tion problems. Area Medicaid Tall~ $1 Million Plus WASHINGTON <AP) -For the second straight year, the American physician listed as re· ceiving the most money from Medicaid is Dr. William /\. Triebel or New York, who re- ceived $785, l 14 in 1975. Triebel was one or 2.553 doc· tors. dentists, pharmacies and laboratories that received more than Sl00,000 from Medicaid last year, according to a Department or Health, Education a nd Welfare report issued Monday. Triebel oper ates a group of methadone 111aintenance clinics for former hefoin addicts. Firms In Newport Beach and Huntington Beach were among those from Orange County listed as receivlni more than $100,000. Altogether, the 2,533 providers received $445.3 million for 16.3 percent of the more than $2. 7 billion spent providing health care for 23 million poor Americans last year. "The fact that these medical providers received the stated amounll from the Medicaid pro- gram should not be construed as • any evidence of wrongdoing, nor do the amounts listed necessarily represent ·earnings• or 'pro· flta','' HEW said. The information bn what HEW Single& to Meet Sln•les ln the DeerfJeJd area or Irvine are invited to Join the new- ly formed Deerfield Singles Club. The next meetlnc will be bcld Friday evenln1 for lnt.roduct1001 and plannln• of club ac:tJvttles. For More tnfotmaUoo call MM146. called "high volume" Medicaid providers was r eleased on re·· quest under the Freedom o( In· formation Act. The University Hospital Pharmacy in Huntington Beactt received $136,773 and Goldstein and Kent of Newport Beach re- ceived $130,994. Also listed in the HEW report were Norman K. Bepls Jr. $102,038 and Pregnancy Control Medi cal Group, $225,281, both of Santa Ana. . County of Orange Pharmacy. Orange, received $198,858. ffef. fner Medical Group. AnaheJm,· received $164,444. \ · Harbor Pharmacy of E\lllet'ton received $100,896. The biggest payment to a single pharmacy was $1.4 million to Medical Health Pharmacy o( Milwaukee. Wis. The largest to a chain pharmacy was $1.7 mUUOQ t o P eoples Dru g in the Washington, D.C .. area. Those recelvlni more tban $100,000 ln Medicaid eaY!Df!DbJ included 995 doctors and 312 den- tists in solo and ~ practice~ 1Z1 solo and eha.m laboratories and 1,099 solo ancl cbalD pharmacies. , POUCE SEEK l -~ . .... . . FERRET 1DIEF RENO, Nev. (AP) -Poll want to ferret out lbe ~ responslble for theft of a fens bere. Officers 1aid llondal tbe lei'~ ret -a kind of weasel -wu taken from a local pet &bop bJ two )'OUDJ men. Tbe animal's · ·WOJ1h I.a about '80._ • AZ DAILYPILOT D•llf ,. ... Stall l'Mte lrvfne Eagle J1rrfil Kearns of Boy Scout Troop 607 was recently honored as an Eagle Scout. He has earned 28 badges during his nine year scout- ing career. The l&-year-0Jd junior at University High School is the son of Mrs. Loretta Kearns, 19522 Sierra Seco Road, Irvine. Gulf's Well ·Delayed by ·Anchor Woe Gull Oil Corporation's efforts to punch down an exploratory of- fshoreoil well about28milesfrom San Clemente Island has been de· layed again, officials announced today. . • Crewmen are s till experiencing difficulty in getting the oil rig Aleutian Key anchored over the site. The delay may stretch into two weeks before drilling begins . The 9,000·foot test well was sup· posed to have been started last Wednesday but inability to anchor the huge floating drill plat· form has forced delays. A s pokesman for Keydril Com· ., pany, operator of the S40 million semi-submersible oil drilling platform. said today it will be next week before work begins. R.H. Grahn, the spokesman. said a very hard and irregular ocean botto m caused several or the eight 30,000-pound anchors used to hold the pla tform in place to drag on the ocean floor. HB Wo1nQ1''s Death in Bath Under Study Riverside County coroner's in vesllgators are probing the death of a Huntington Beach woman whose body was round bobbing in a poolside J acuzzi bath at a Palm Spnngs hotel Monday night. No foul play 1s suspected in the death of Mrs. I rcnc Dorothy Mason. 63, at this point in the 1n vestigation. authorities say. An autopsy on the body of Mrs . Mn.son. who lived at 171 71 Bolsa Chica St.. \I> as ordt'red to de· lt'rmtnc wh;it killed the victim who had been s pend.mg a long weelcend visit 1n Palm Spnnais. She was registt>red there with R friend, Mrs Ruth Masters. ~ho left the \'acllm an the Dunes Hotel 1 :o1~1mmmg pool area about mid 'nljO?ht I lmec;t11tatorc; s:ud Mr.s. Mason "'orr a bath1n5: s uit A hotel cmploye discovered the body in the Jacun1 swirling bath about a half-hour after the visit· mg Mrs l\1 a.ster<; left her com pa ruon and retired to their hotel room. The body was taken lQ Wiefel & Son Mortuary in Palm Spnngs, where a spokesman said today it was understood she would be transferred to Forest Lawn- • Cypress for funeral services. A spokes m an for that mortuary said today funeral ar· rangem ents are pending. ORA NOE COAST DAILY PILOT Ttwt()r~ (IW\I ()Ally "j~ W'!l1"'#1\!r11111,rt111" b-rwdt .... ..._'lln Pu" hPW~"lw<IOV1fW>()r•-.qr CM" ~f\Jlh~ G,aM (IA"., ~ .. "'''" ... ' t'f'I\ .,. 0¥f)tl\fted ~"'•• '"'""'"~ ,,.,,.., •~ (~''"' ,.._U ~41f00tl 6-AC h ... W'\tl"f'tilll ... ~fl! ,-,,..,.., •t11'11 Yfllf"y ltwt"I,. 1-•ddlt"'i.w ' V1 H•'t """ lA9VN 0.--.r" ~lrt C'>•\t A "'"IQ'•,....,,"'•' rt· tl4'ft i\ f>\ft>HVW-G ~tlurttA•t. •NI \o~"' f l'W oP•"llOolll nyb h\fr\1""1 Olitf'll I\ •I \JO W. ~I "4• ,.,-..,. ~.,,. M-U C•l1tM~• .. .,..,. lle .. f1 N -~"'""t •f'd Pvbll• .... IH'll c .... , Y·o Pt~.a."t•,_.Oef'W'f'al~~ l--••llH¥11 EO•f&I ,_, .... ......, .. Mo,...1,..1c111or QI-N l -llltM,. I' N•ll .A\\l\ltl"t M•"•O'ftiO lea.tot\ 0111CH (Mlt M,.\.l ))t'!Wf\t ft\y\fr""f \.•~l•e<." tlk G•t f'W'Wt'ff•'\t,..t "~1~::.t·~~ .. ~'W'O"t~",.'!':"~~d ••SMO••QOF'n'*"'t Telephon• (714)642-4321 Cl1Hlfled Adve'1l1lng 042-Mn '..ctdt•bac.k V•lltYNtMOttk,. H1-t)10 • '°"" )•*" e,.,....,," CIS-OUO ~~i:: =~· ":.!7'~ (~~~ .. ~~=I~:. M•'1tf tf 1'9"'1'11'1111¥1•111111\ ft•UU\ n\Af .. oot.-VCM • '"'•u• 1DHi4\ f't••M h t lAlllll flit , ... ,~-· l+<.•111114 (If\\ ..... ,. f\a•d tt CAit1.t Mt\.f1 C•Ufef"le, Sw•'<"•'••~ It• f''''~' U S't :r..:~~-~ :~~~J~ ,,.l~lf MJlll.,f ' Tuesdoy. Novembor 9 1976 Catholic Sex Curb Rule Eyed WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's Roman Catholic bishops have been asked lo approve a putoral letter setting strict rules on sexual behavior for Catholics. The 36-page document, which is ex pected to stir angry criticism among some Catholics, was presented Monday lo the 250 members of the National Con· ference of Catholic Bishops at their four-day annual meeting here. A final vote on amend· ments and the code itself is scheduled Thursday. The pastoral letter. two years in the writing, touches on a varie- ty of subjects and is mainly a restatement of views by the church wrapped into a single package. It rejects the view that "mar- riages can deteriorate to such an extent that the marilaJ union is destroyed and the spouses are no longer obliged to keep their pro- mise of lifelong fidelity. "'The covenant between a man and woman joined in Christian marriage is as indissoluble and irrevocable as God's love for Ms people and Christ's love for His church," the proposed document' says. On birth control. the letter says "in contraceptive intercourse the procreative or life.giving m ean- ing of intercourse is deliberately sepa rated from its love-giving meaning and is repudiated: the wrongness of such an act lies in the repudiation of this value." A section added Monday says, "We are aware tha t many couples face agonizing decisions regarding artificial contracep- tion. We urge them not to lose heart nor to turn from the com- munity of faith. "Rather . they s hould take ap· propriate pastoral counsel. seek help in prayer and sacraments. and investigate means of birth limitation . Al the same time we invite those who dissent from this teaching of the church lo a prayerful and studied r e consideration of their pos1t1on." On the quest ion or homosex uality, the lette r says "genital sexual behavior is ori ented toward marriage and must b:. hctcrosexua I.'' But it adds: "Like everyone else. homosexuals should not suf. for from prejudice again~t their basic human rights. The Chris · liati community should provide them with love and pastoral care _" Stating their case against abor lion. the Jetter states strongly that a fetus is a human from the start. saying: "While the '<'tus may not be aware of itself and its rights, it is a human entity. a human being with potential. not a potential human being." Irvine School Board Plans For Election Roard members of the Irvine Unified School District will set the s tage for next year's school board election during Wedncs· day night's regular meetins.?. The March 8. 1977. election will fill the seats held by truste€.'s Charles JI. Boulanger and Franklin S. Hurd. Their four year terms expire on March 31. 1977. Trustees are expected to pass a te!i-Olution ordering the election An election calendar is now available at distnct offices. but prospective candidates should contact the Orange County Registrar of Voters for complelf• information on eligibiHty. filing and campaign statements. Tru11tees will also hear a mini· report on the basic skill deve lop· ment program at Los Naranjos Elementary School. The public meeting begins at 7:30p.m. at Los Naranjos School. 1 Smoketree Lane. No Number For Handle BISMARCK. N.D. (AP> What's in a name? Not numbers. according to the North Dakota Supreme Co~rt. The high court refused to over- turn a Cass County Distdcl Court's rejection or Michael Herbert Dengler's petition to chan ge his name to 1069. Dengler said the numbers ex· press bis philosophy ol his rela· tions hip with nature, Ume and the Universe. As aoclAte Justice P8ul M. Sand dl11acreed, sayU!g "We arc satisfied that the legislature, In glvlna authority to the courts to change a name, had in mind a name u understood and defined by common law and did not ln· elude chance from a name lo a ou.mber." Agents Bit? FBI lndictmenu Hinted WASHINGTON <AP) -The New York Times re· ported today that lhe government may seek indjct- m('nts against 10 to 20 present or former FBI oHicials. The Times said department lawyers concluded lhcy could support charges that the persons under in- vestigation knew or or approved illegal investigative techniques. J usticc Department spokesmen refused comment on the r e port. The Times quoted federal sources as saying pro· secutors in the department's civil rights division !ound evidence of illegal wiretaps, bugs, burglaries, mail openings and other practices. . The sources told the Times that a memorandum on the subject was expected to be submitted to Atty. Gen. Edward H. Levi this week. The newspaper said the lawyers were expected to recommend that Levi permit them to seek indictments against some or all or those named. Original Symbol Smokey the Bear Dies of Old Age LIVING SYMBOL DIES 'Smokey the Bear' f.,ro'" Page AJ CARTER ... Carter. the mayors never were certain whether to take his state· ments as being s ignificant. S am uels s upport ed the mayors' request for federal help, but repealed several qualifica- tions Carter himself has sounded warning that Carter would not just throw money at their pro· blems and stressmg the need for stnct fiscal management. After makmg the latter point several times, he told a commit· tee of mayors lhat the federal government under Carter might be able to help impose manage- mentdiscipline . However willing the mayors may have been to hear that from Carter. and several mayors said they "w e l comed Carter's challenge." it was clear they were not happy to hear it from Samuels. Coleman Young or Detroit was the most outspoken mayor on Samuels' appearance. Young s aid the cities would be in trouble "if they have t o depend on Mr. Samuels. I guess he's the man who recommended that President Ford let New York go down the drain." Samuels. in a magazine article last. year. said deCault might be less painful for New York City than deeper and deeper budget cuts Arraignment Delayed in Shock Case A lO·w~ck delay was orde red today in the Orange County Superior Court arraignment or a Laguna Niguel man charged with responsibility in the elec· trocution or his neighbor's 18· month-old daughter. Judge James H . Walsworth set Jan. 31 as arraignment dale for Daniel Gonzales Guzman, 32, of 29821 Paseo de Ocaso, when it was explained thal defense at- tom ey ALicemarie StoUer was a p pointed lo the Harbor Municip~I Court Monday and can no longer defend hirn. Guzman was indicted by the Grand Jury on charges or in- voluntary m nnslaugbter oCter Kelly ~lC'hellc Mc Mullen, 18 months, was s hocked and killed by a high voltage wire allegedly rigged by the defendant in hill rront vard. Guzman told office~ that the "1re was intended lo keep cats and doss off his flower beds. The chlld'a parent~. his next door neighbors, sued him for $300,000 indamaccs. WASHINGTON (AP) -The origina l Smokey Bear, a symbol of forest !ire prevention for 25 years, died today at the National .ZOO. Cause of death: infirmities and old age. His age was the equivalent of more than 70 years in human terms. As provided by Congress . Smokey's remains were being shipped bac k to his original forest home in New Mexico. He will be buried at Smokey Bear Historical State Park near Capitan, N.M .. within sight of Capitan Mountain where be was found in 1950. Officials said a short burial ceremony is being planned by the New Mexico State Park Com· mission. In 1974, with lhe bear suffering from arthritis a nd other ail- ments. Congress approved a re- solution authorizing Smokey up- on death to be returned to New Mexico "for proper disposition and a pet manent memorial." One version of the resolution as it was considered in the House re· ferred to Smokey one day pass- ing on to a "great hooey tree in the sky." But this was considered a bit irreverent for s uch a noble creature and the honey tree line was omitted in the final version. Smokey officially retired as the nation's forest fire prevention symbol in May 1975 and was replaced by another bear, now called Smokey. But for 25 year s after he was found as a badly burned cub after a fire in New Mexico's Lincoln National forest. the old Smokey was top bear for a generation or children and adults who came to recognize his familiar hat and bulky figure as the symbol of fire prevention. Smokey was a prime attraction al the National Zoo but was not the run·of·the-mill bear. His keeper said Smokey was more of an executive type and was not a bear to beg for tidbits and food from tourists. As a cub. Smokey was rescued by firefighters in 1950 as the severely burned animal clung to a charred tree. After t reatment and recovery, Smokey was flown to Washington, D.C. and in June 1950 was offi cially designated as a living symbol of forest fire pre· vention. In 1962. a young female named Goldie was provided Smokey In hopes they would produce an of· (spring and bear heir. Bo1nq of Scottish descent I take great pleasure In making my dollRrs stretch. I try to pass this ide a along to our custome rs by stocl\lng many combination pieces of jewelrv: that Is, p1occs that can c;orvo mull 1pl e purposo<i of adornmPnt P ln·pendi'lnt comb1nat1on'l aro 1118 mo,t u<;u al. ol cou1c;o. but .,,,. e 11tend that idea to clasp dt?corators ;ind Rll:'lr.hrnr>nts 101 rtnQs and breco101; We have n honey-bee rt ng·pln CQm t)1n8llOn lhat IS very lmaq1na11vl!. There 1'1 o st11k1ngl v b"au1ilul onyic anti diamond heart that serves etlher as a ring or pendant. This is trulv a mechanical engineering mac,f9rp1ece We have n ock lac o·bracelet combinations that give you d1llerel'lt lengths of nocl<waro when combined In different ways. There are watches too. with a wldo vartelv of colored saraps and ovan d1ll erent colored bezels One of lhe most cl1ss1c and versatil e comb.nal1ons ls a basic earring with a variety of drops that complotoly chango the 1001< -and the colors Thl'l idea Is gr'lat for 11'18 trl'l91er 1t ' ' Juvenile ~rimes Studied Irvine police officer James Broomfield is nearing comple- tion of schooling on juvenile de· linquency preveation. The eight-week program al the Univcnity o C Southern California's Delinquency Co nt ro l lnslilute feat u res techniques for 1 dealing wtth youth and communily problems. Upon re - ettOOMfllLO turning to his regular assignment Nov. ts. Broomfield will discuss his train- mg for possible incorporation in · to lbe Irvine Police Department program. Nearly 2,000 graduates have been instructed in juveile de- linquency and community rela- tions theories since lbe institute opened in 1946. Broomfield, a n I rvine resident. graduated -from USC with a degree in public administration. He was a member of the Costa Mesa Police Department before moving to the newly formed Irvine force. He is attend in~ the semlnar un- der a full·tuitlon scholarship rrom the Automobile Club of Southern California. Froae Page Al SMOG •.. by 1985." , Busterud said New Yorkf air pollution problems stem from the mass burning of sulphur fuels for beat and e n ergy, and auto emissions. "Nuclear power would be one way of solving many of New York's power-pollution pro- blems." he said, "but we've had a real problem in getting nuclear power plants approved." Busterud also said that despite fears the fight against pollution would cause employment pro· blems, the nationwide effort to clean up the environment has created more jobs than it has taken away. About one million jobs are now connect"Cd with pollution control nationwide, be said. He said that while the one miJlion jobs are not a net in· crease, as a result of 1975 en- vironmental expenditures. 300,000 persons now work in pollution control-related jobs who otherwise would be un· employed. In contrast, be said, 17,890 jobs have been lost since 1971 as direct or indirect result of pollu- tion control enforcement na· tionwide -less than one-fiftieth or one percent or the nation's total labor for ce. Off -highway Fund Audited SACRAMENTO (A P ) -The Off.Highway Vehicle Fund was being charged for work that was not performed in the program, a state audit has found. The audit report. issued Mon- day, could not estimate how wi de spre~d the falsified timekeepingwas. But it brought a warning that one legislator said state depart· menls dealing with federal funds better heed: ll could jeopardize federal matching funds. @ EiEM WISE Mary Barr. Certified Pemologist l~fte .Jtcdge Alicc marie Huber Stotler of Corona del Mar has been a ppointed b y Governor Brown Co the Harbor Judicial District bench. The 34-year-o ld attorney replace s B e tt y Lou Lamoreaux. who has been e levate d to the Superior Court. See story, Page A3. Ammonia PerIDeates Area City By RAY ESTRADA Ol 111• 01lly f'ilol Stall An industrial accident by an Orange County chemical firm Saturday morning caused a h e avy ammonia odor to permeate the air around Ellis Avenue and Ward Stree t ln Fountain Valley, sanitation and water officials said today. Sanitation Dis trict officials confirmed that the firm in- volved is the Collier Carbon and Chemical Corporation or 2601 E Imperial Highway, Brc::\, Traces of the ammonia r e- l e a sed into the air at the Orange County Water District WCWDl facility, 10500 Ellis Ave .. we re still present Sunday and Monday. police said, but the air appears to be clear to- day. The concentration or am- monia reached a level or six times greater than normal Saturday. according to Daryl Bailey. OCWD administrative assistant. The OCWD plant routinely re· moves much smaller amounts oC ammonia from waste water. The gas is released into the air and seldom causes any environ- mental problem s. officials said . Police received eight com- plaints Crom residents around the waler facility Saturday. The Orange County Sanitation Dis- trict facility. adjacent to the OCWD plant, also received 10 calls with one complaint sent to the Southern California Air Pollutio n Control District. police said. orncer Gerald Watson said today he is still feeling the ef- fects or the ammonia he inhaled Saturday when he investigated the complaints. "I still have an irritation in my throat and some trouble bre athing but I 'm okay," Watson said today. No Injuries from residents Jn the surrounding area were re- ported as a result or the color- less gas. 111v,..·: yo u a wholo earrlnQ w tr droh•) w11hout hllvlnq IO 1..Hrv <;1) mu1 ti arnunrl wit h you. Yoo will alwnv'> .h t1111'! ju<;t\ the riq111 ;i r:cont tor eacl\ r:o'llum" inti occrtc;1on. Onn n l mv m •J<,I ;1mh1hOU" .prr.1al order <J1>c.11')nc; lor 1 , 11<.1 >mor waq a 111•ck•.1c•! ont.11n1n 11 25 cara h o( '1 1 1mond'> II could h•• worn w11h or w1thou1 o pend.int .lt1<1rhment hut lhr> b1') bonu'J wa1 the double ela<;o'I 1n11 m1 de ti u5 A8 ble a'l two •lrilmond bracelets CIIARLE$ H. BARR I consider 11 :i rPal ch;lllnnqe 10 'i<'" whi\I I can rle'i1Qn lo 11rctch my customers ' 1ewclr~ rfollars too. If you hilvP a p1oce ol lewelry lor mRny) that vou w1'lh to makn into someth1n'l new, bring them in and let's consider the poCJslbili!fes. Do 1( s oon thouqh, becau s ~ Chrio;lm.ic; is comlnq and out o;hop work qots vArV h"~VV at . Chrtc;1rnac; t"ne ;'llHJ I don\, war11 10 d15,1pooin1 anvonn w11h a holiday deadline. Our window featuring tr\a' "Diamonds 1n Orbit '71" that'1' wroto about In an eartiot" column. 1s now on display ..i..11 so come see• 11 •c~e40- L111111 ••r '17th & """ Wtttdlff Pin e .....,..~ .. l Tuesday's Clo8ing P rices NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Tuelday Novomber 9 1976 l/N DAILY PILOT J\ J:J Wlrke d Casla FlotD Poor IBM Mulls Glut of Money By MtLTON MOSKOWITZ lnlernational Bus10e.5s Mach\ne~ Cl BM> has thls devil of a problem. one that you and 1 m1eM lust alter. It's stuck with this wicked cash now As a res ult, lt bas more money than IL knows whal to do With The now 1s speeding up this year nt such ~ r npld paco that people may soon bt: asking: "Is IBM a computer maker or a bank?" Such a question 1s logical in hght of IBM's third quarter report Jn lhe three months ended Sept 30, IBM took in $132 milhon from in teresl earned on its Money Tree spare cash. which 1s lodged in marketable secunt1es such 11s mwuc1pal bonds, U S Treasury notes and lime deposits JN OTHER WORDS, IBM is really makmg more money off its money than most companies :ire making of( theJr operations As a mnller of fact, IBM is making more money renting oul 1ls money than most big banks are makmg on their lending a"Cl1v1Ues The $13.2 million cash influx Crom interest on invest· ments was up 80 percent over what IBM realized Crom this source m the comparable 1975 penod The reason for the big jump 1s that IBM is selling more of 1ta ~qwpment rather than renting or leasing it . Outright sales produce an 1mmed1ate proC1t, instead 0£ spreading 1l over a number of years. That 1s what's happen· mg to IBM this year. The money Is arriving 1n great tor- rents And it's not easy to fmd a proper use tor it, not when you have so much already. EVEN BEFORE 1976 STA1lTED, IBM bad on-hand cash and marketable secuntaes totaling $4 5 billion The company earned $360 million on its Portfolio m 1975. The in come this year w1U obviously exceed $400 milhon And IBM 's hquid assets wtll be well above $5 b1lhon You have to have some sympathy for I BM lt generates so much profit from 1ls position as the world's largest sup· plier of data processing eqwpment that 1t has little d1fflcul· ty fund1ng its huge capital expenditure budget It's doing so well this year that it raised the annual dividend rate to $9 ht paid $6 50 last year) And It's sttl1 lett WJth all lh1s mon•y that it doesn't know what to do with. If IBM were another company, it might Just use lhts cash to acqwre other comparues IBM has so much in the till that 1t could soon become the biggest corporation m the world. It even bas enough money to buy an 011 company (a s mall one anyway) But IBM 1s being s ued 1n courts all over the land The Justice Department and numerous competitors are de· mandmg that IBM be declared an 11legal monopoly and broken up mto smaller pieces With this threat hanging over 1l, IRM is not about to ape Lhe conglomerates It's not going to throw its money around It's JUSt going to sit on 1t -and take money off its money So m eel I 8 M . the banker Dow Fails to Break 930 Support Level NEW YORK <AP> -The stock market added a bit more to its post-election losses man erratic session today The Dow Jones average of industnal stocks was down 2 91 po\nts to 930 77 after a net drop of 32 41 m four sessions smcelh'eelechon a week ago Losers outnumbered gamers by about a 5.3 margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues Tradtng was moderate Analysts s aid some chart-watchers had been hoping for an upsWlllg in the market today with the Dow Just above the 930 level -the point from which it began its last rally a few weeks ago But the idea didn't seem to catch on with many t raders in the face of cont1nwng concern about the sluggish pace of the economy Dow,01te•A verages o-O'CI •:JO,,_, •l 711 ,. 9127+ OM 7'1 ,,_ 0 u '.,, >oo 1S4 601 3•~ 400 , 511 )00 A ttte ric-on ~eader• What S toc k• Did NEW YORI( (API Pnv .i.d'l•nm ,!f'•V cs,~~ Otcllnet 111 1174 V11<ll1~ 414 310 Tot-I tnuu 18'0 lM Ht"' 1'76 lll9ht 11 0 ~ .... ,. '°"-'------·j q WHAT AMUI UIU NEW YORK IAPl Synebob Sto~b In The Spotlight + 'h • I~ .. ,.~ .. + v. + 11'\ !~ + "' . ' + ~ + 1 .. J .... ' II) + ·~ . '• . ~. + l\ • 71_. Up VP Vo UI' Vp VD VP UD VP VO Vo Up Ur> UP UP Vo Vo VP Vo VII ttS 100 •• H p •S •• ., • t H H 'I " •• 46 . ~ ~· Ott " J °" ., Otl • ' Oii •• 011 11 Oii >, Ofl ,, Oii 7 4 Oii 11 Oii • ' Oii •• Off 6l Oii At g: ., ~ H· rMi H Oii 16 Off ~' Laguna/South ('.oast VOL. 69,, NO. 314, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1976 Afternoon .Y. Stocks TEN CENTS! City Coffers Feel Festival's Success By JACK CHAPPELL Of ti•• Dally '"H•Utatt The Laguna Beach Festi"'.al of Arts doled out nearly $250,000 t.bis year in grants for cultural pursuits, scholarships and to the city for retirement of Main Beach Park bonds. The Festival's largesse equals $17 for every Laguna Beach resi· dent, Paul Griem, treasurer, told the annual membership meeting Monday. Griem 's report was one of several covering the Festival of Att.s oper,tions this past year. Income from all sources totaled $797,880, up about $39,000 from last year. Grounds attendance at the 41.st Laguna Beach· Festival of Arts and Pageant of the Masters was the highest in the event's history. This year 144,523 people toured the crounds, up nearly0lO percent from lut year. The Paceant of the Masters drew 113,.qe people and brought Income of 9653,069. Thia year the festival will pay the cily of Lacuna Beach $169,300 in grounds rental for the festival part and Irvine Bowl facilities. Eighty -percent ol the rental payment is earmarked for pay- ment of the city's Main Beach ' Park bonds, 1S percent la for city disbursal to civic and cultural en· deavors and four percent la d• signaled for general fUncl uae, usually for upkeep ot the festival grounds. Festival Vice President Helen Keeley hailed the role ol volun· teer models in the pagea,pL 'Ibis year, more than 1,000 peo- ple volunteered for cast and back· stage positions. Two "living pie· Seniors Priced Out of Hillside? (' HEADS FESTIVAL AGAIN Laguna's James Schmitz Festival President Re-e lected Laguna Beach builder James Schmitz was re·elected president :Of the Laguna Beach Festival of 1 ~ following the annual mem-, rshlp meeting and election onday, an election which found 20-year board member David Young defeated for re-election. Young, who rirst was elected to the Festival of Arts board of directors in 1953, finished fourth in a field of six candidates for the three open positions on the nine member board Board member Anne Chase was the top vote getter with 637 ballots. Incumbent Paul Griem was second with S40 and new board me mbe r Lee Ch.ildress was elected with 496 votes. Candidates Phil Freeman and Roger Nudd finished fifth and s1xth with 319 and 306 votes, respectively There are about 3.600 voting m embe r s o r t h e nonprofit Festival of Arts. I The nine member board of directors 1s the goventing body for the Festi val of Arts wtuch lhls year had incom e of nearly $800,000 and dis bursed nearly $250,000 an c ultur al grants, stbolarships and payment to the city of Laguna Beach. At a meeting of the board following the general me m- bership session. Schm1tz was un- animously re-elected 'president of the board. Helen Keeley was re-elected vice president, Griem was re-elected Treasurer and 0 . E. "Bud " Schroeder was re- elected secretary In parting remarks. Young said he appr eciated the op- portunity to serve on the board. "It's been a great pleasure, thank you," he said. He noted that he had beeo on the body a long lime, and added th•t be had found himself dis- senting with the board increas- ingly. "My usefulness has served its purpose," he sa;id. (See ELECTION, Page AZ> By KATHY CLANCY Oftl1• Dally l'I ... 5'aft Lower-income senior citizens probably couldn't afford to buy homes proposed for a hillside site in the Laguna Greenbelt, accord- ing to an Orange County planning report. The report, based on a consul- tant's study. said instead of the average $23,485 selling price pro- mised by the developer, the homes likely would cost from GJVIWTops TV Rating NEW YORK (AP) - Twice as many television sets in New York and Los Angeles were tuned to "Gone With the Wind," Sunday night than to all other programs combtr.ed, the A.C. Nielsen Company says. Nielsen said today NBC got 65 percent of Sunday night's TV audience in New York and 64 percent in Los Angeles . National figures had not been com- piled. the company said. Figures for the s~nd part shown Monday night were not available. NBC estimated its au- d ience at 90 million v iewe r s Sunday, 110 million Monday night. Sore Eyes Won't Have This Sighl A San Clemente th.ief who stole a custom-made eye chart may be under the illusion today that his Vlsion is twice as good as it is. The chart was taken Monday from outside the office of Dr. Bruce M. Ewing, an optometrist. Ewing kept the spe<:ial masonite chart, attached to a wooden post, outdoors in his parking lot to utilize natural light. It had another special quality: It was twice normal size. Pa- tients, Dr. Ewing said, would stand 40 feet from it to test their sight, rather than the normal 20. Dr. Ewing said the extra dis- tance gives a better measure of eyesight. Besides, he said, he's only got an 18-foot office. He didn't have to get very close Monday to see the sign had been snapped from the post. leaving a wooden stub. He plans to replace the sign. using a stronger post. "I'm think- ing in terms of steel this time,'· he said. taguna Care Home· s Loses Court Case An Orange County Superior Court jury has awarded a total or $.12,SOO in damages against the operators of ·a Laguna Beach n""5inl home after listening to testimony by the daughter of an 82·year-old patient. The Jury in Judge Philip Schwab's courtroom awarded $25,000 to Lillian Cobliu, 82, a founer patient at Laguna Beach NW'Sing Home, ~ Glenneyre St .. and $7,500 to her daughter, Barbar. Kllvans. lt was alleged against the nurs- ing home and operator Beverly Arnold that Mrs. Coblill could walk and could feed herBelf when .. '"(,# I she was admitted to the home u mentally incompetent in Aprtl 1974 at a care rate ol t;U.50 a day. It was alleged that wben Mrs. Klivans removed her mother from the facility in September 1975. the elderly woman had suf· fered a broken left hip, was cov· ered with sores, was paralyzed below the waist and could no longer walk or feed herself. 1t was testified before Judce Schwab that Mrs. Coblitz, who is now being care for by private nurses at a Laguna Hills home, · has no more than a few months to llve. /• $32,752 to $38,026. And while lower· level income is estimated at $10,750 for a two- person household, county plan- ners said, lenders would require an annual income of $13,100 to $15,210 before approving a loan for the higher·priced units. Chief reason for the jUmp in price, the consultant said, is that only about half the 1,285 modular homes the developer proposed on the 473-acre Marcroft property could be accommodated on the hilly site. Since fixed development costs -land, roads, wat.er, sewer and utility lines -remain the same, county planners said, the selling cost per home mustjump. County planners stopped short of-making a reeommendalionl.or or against approvir.g a land use amendment which would pave the way for the senior citizens <See HOUSES, P1ge AZ> Stanee Unknown Carter Lightweight Irks City Mayors CIDCAGO CAP) -If Jimmy Carter wanted to reusure the na- tion 's big-city mayors he is in their corner, he passed up a perfect opportunity at the mayors' urban strategy session. "He sent a lightweight, and some or us are mad," said one mayor. "But we don't ltnow CARTEP' F~LY ANDS SECLUSION-A4 where Samuels stands with Carter so we don't know what it means." Howard Samuels, an un- dersecretary of Commerce un- der PTesident J ohnson and an un- successful Democratic candidate for governor of New York, was Carter's choice to monitor the two-day U.S . Conference of Mayors meeting that concluded Monday. Samuels said he holds no formal position on the Carter transition team, but was asked to sit as an observer at the mayor's meeting by top Carter aide Hamilton Jordan. "I'm not a spokesman for Carter, I 'm just free-lancing this for him," sajd Samuels, stress- ing at least tt.iice. "I don't speak No Blue Flu , NEJf'S .4NALYSIS for the president-elect." However, Samuels did speak, and .often. Frequently he began his presentations by saying, "I think I can spe ak for the pre· sident-elect on this ... " . Part of the negative reaction to SamU.els was simply the hurt that Carter didn't send "an insider," one oft.he small group of advisers known to be close to him. That would have sent a strong signal of support to the mayors, who for years have complained that they are being ignored in Washington. Other criticism of Samuels stemmed from the things he said and the fact that he said so much. However , s ince it never was clear whether Samuels spoke for Carter, the mayors never were certain whether to take his state- ments as being significant. Samuel s s upported the mayors' request for federal help, but repeated several qualifica- tions Carter himself has sounded -warning that Carter would not just throw money at their pro- blems and stressing the need for strict fiscal management. Laguna Beach Police Capt. Neil Purcell, who sometim es arrests people with byperdermic needles, meets •the business .end of Nurse Mary Anderson's weaton as city employes received their flu vaccinations Monday at the Laguna Beach Free Clinic. Flu shots wiU be given at tbe clinic, 460 Ocean Ave .• from 1 to 4 p.m:~och Monday of t.h1s month. .., . "' .... •• . tures .. casts required 368 models and 92 backstage wqrkers, abe said. Durinc the last academic year, the Festival of Arts granted 43 Laauna Beach students in &He arts nearly $29,000 in scbolarabips. For the 1976-77 academic yen, $32,750 will go to 45 students in writing, drama, dance, music Clait!ken ;Joke and art/orarts, Glenn Vedder, scbolanblp chairman, said. Speelal ,-rants such as the BUI Martin and Roy Ropp awards will brine the total scbolanbip fUnd to$3S,OOO. Griem summed up the Festival ol Arts operation this way; "When you tallG about the festival, you necessarily fin!! youndf t1llttne in superlatives." Intruders with designs on Da~id Ro\)11 's chickens had better think twice. The big bird is a creation of Rahn at his farm in Modjeska Canyon. Sewer Panel Eyes Cle01ente's Status The board or directors of the South East Regional Reclama- tion Authority (SERRA) took steps Monday to readmit the city of San Clemente into the regional sewage trealment agency. An agreement was drafted and is expected to be signed by the member agencies and the San Clemente City Council within the next two weeks. The SERRA board will vote final approval, if aH agency members sign, at a Dec. 10 meet- ing. Member agencies are the city of San Juan Capistrano, the Capistrano Beach and Dana Point sanitary districts and the Moulton-Niguel and Santa Mt.rgarlta water districts. Immediate costs to San Clemente would be $3,511 plus in- terest for the city share or SERRA budget expenses over the past two years, plus more than $61,000 for the city share or studies prepared of a regional ocean outfall at Dana Point. The outfall will carry sewage from agency members for dis· posal at sea. San Clemente's share or that cost has been estimated at $6.8 million. with Burglars Ransack Packing Crates Burglars ripped open is· pack· ing crates at El Camino Van and Storage and ransacked most of , them, se,attering their cont.ents on the warehouse floor, San CJemente police said today. Police were puzzled over the weekend burtlary, which wu reported Monday, because altbouah apparently nothing was taken, it looked as though bur1lars bad searched for aometbln1. Workers at the warehoule, at 218 Calle de Los Molinot, took inventory today to de\ermlne any losses . ) ,, most or it -87 1h percent -paid through federal and state grants. 'San Clemente was a charter 'i member of the agency, formed in 1970, but dropped out in 1974, cit~ • ing cost overruns. 1 The City Council recently vot·I ed to rejoin, under heavy pressure from the San Diego-1 Regional Water Quality Control. Board .. The water board has imposed strict s anctions against city operation of its sewage treat- ment plant, after charging "gross violations" of effluent standards. The board made it clear that rejoining SERRA was one or numerous steps the city should take before sanctions, including a partial ban on new sewer con- nections. are lifted. Orang~ Coa4f la: 4.. LG::Ts-sz. Weath er . Fog and low clouds along the coast tonight and Wed- nesday. Beach highs in low 705, lows to mid 50s. I NSIDE TODAY A womon aollo lotel her job_ or a ~ roilt btcGMH !ht won't Nlf1C'lf% wfth her boa ccinrwt 11.lt him under tht f•dtral Cfvfl Rights Act. -- StM7J, A7. • f t I A 2 DAIL y PILOT l/SC Catholic Sex Curb Rule Eyed WASHJNOTON (AP) The nation's Roman Catholic bishops ~ave been asked to a pprove a pastoral letter setting strict rules .on sexual beha v1or Cor C:itbolics. The 36-page document, which is expect ed to stlr angry criticism among some Catholics, was presented Monday to the 250 members of the Nationa.l Con- lerence or Cotholk Bishops at their four-day annual meeting here. A final vote on amend- ments and the code Itself ls scheduled Thursday. The pastoral letter, two years In the writing, touches on a varie- ty of s ubjects and is mainly a restatement of views by the church wrapped into a single package. It rejects the view that "mar- riages can deteriorate to such an exte nt that the manta! union is destroyed and the spouses are no longer obliged to keep their pro- mise or lifelong fidelity. "The covenant between a man and woman joined in Christian , marriage is as indissoluble and irrevocable as God's love for his I people and Christ's love for His church," the proposed document I says. I On birth control, the letter says ··1n contraceptive intercourse the procreative or life-giving mean· ing of intercourse is deliberately separated Crom Its love-giving meaning and is repudiated; the wrongness of s uch an act lies in the repudiation or this value .•. 1 A section added Monday says, •"We are aware that many 1 couples face agonizing decisions ' ttgarding artificial contracep- tion. We urge them not to lose heart nor to turn from the com- munity of faith. "Rather, they should talce ap- propriate pastoral counsel, seek help in prayer and sacrament.'!, and investigate means or birth limitation. At the same time we invite those who dissent from this teaching of the church to a prayerful a nd studied r e - l consideration of their position.'' On the question of hom08ex- I uality. the letter says "genital sex ual beha vior is oriented toward marriage and must be I ~eterosexual." Gulf's Well .Delayed by Anchor Woe Gulf Oil Corporation·sefforts lo punch down an exploratory of rs hore oil well about 28 mile!> frqm San Cle mente Island ha!t been de layed again. offi cials announced today Cr ewme n Jre still e -<!)<'nr ncing difficult y in gclt1n~ th(' oal n~ ,\leut1an Key anl'h<>rl·d over the· !>It\' The delay may stretch into two '' 'Tk., before d ri I ltn~ be~m~. Tht• ~.000 f<><it t<'~l ~d i was s up .powd to ha q : bc1•n ~tarted last W1•dnci;d ay but 1nab1hly lo am·hnr thc hu~c floatmg dnll plttt form ha-, rnrc·c·d delay'> 1\ spokl•S mHn fo r Kl•yrtnl Com pany, operator of the ~O rn1lllon .semi·'iubme r .,1blc oil drillini? platform. c,:11d tod:.y It will be next week before work bi-gins R JI Grahn. the spokesman, .5.ltd .1 \c•rv h,1rd and 1rre~ular O<'t'on bottom c aused !te veral of the eight 30.000 pound anch<lrs used to hold the platlorm in place to drag on the OCl'an Ooor There l"I a l 1 ,.<' in r rew or 72 men aboa rd thr Al eutian Key, a sell propelled dr-ill rig hemg ustd by Gulf in the flr!lt of four Tanm•r .Bank 011 lea~e tractc; lntPrf PrPn<"f" Call 1~ MOSCOW tAP l Thr SQv1el \Jnion has defended IL~ J)()h Cy on l~m1gratlon and asst>rtt>d that •Western calls for rell'asc or somr of its ('lti1cns a mount lo "an· terferrnre in the internal affairs {}(the US S.R " ORANGE COAST • " DAILY PILOT ~:~,:.~,. ~ "\.·, ~:,"r, ~:~!j~ ;;;:.: ,,:.;:; (,,D<4\I P\tf\h\•ll~fJ (•"""'•"¥ \iro.tt ftfl "''*'' •41o' o• p1,N1\,..,lf AAo"d4t IPl'ftoVt" f~•f't.ii!"°' '"' '"'1111 -..,..,. M"Woet"1 f\••fh H~tl""JtOI'\ f\flot!H'lil I~ I.ft•!\ V• l,.y hV·*"" \•11,,l•IM • V .. I'"• •"f '""°""·""'~"'..,."'"c~· .,..,..,"'O...,.._,,, ,, ''°" \ ""'"''"'""d '•I J•IJ•O ~ \.A••w\ f!w r••nt' O•I eubt• ..... ~ P'•"' t\ ·~ uo "'°''' ...... )t'"'''°''-~'· (•l·•••l'M•.,.,. "-""-a •• , .... "' A~ P.;ot,""" Jtc•" ,_..,.,, V•tr D•,..\.0-M •"" 0.M •.el MfN">-' '"'"'" ttnw•I J ,,, •' , ............ ...,,.,... M•Nql•1E81"" C',._.rif\ M LM\ ••tfWf'd 19 IUH A\· \l•nl MAr+A4 f"O (O.llW\ L1aune 81ecll ()fl~• n .. "'•""'••'• ,~,...., W •OtMaAHIH\ IJ 0 .,...., • t7~'1 Oftle .. '"'''M.-'• )l')W.U f)\y\.,~t H~i~l'\oqton ft•ttft 1 tlO, f'lo•U•l\N•••·n•td ~60U1f\.t1 • V.tlltt¥ H')l'}t \Ill Jiii!., ,.,,.._, •I'-"" Ot•Qf) f '~•"v T1l1pho11e f1U)6'2·432! CtH1lll1d Advtrllllllg 642·5178 l.aguna &Hall All ~•ntntnt1· T 1l1phan1 49+!M66 From k f' rt.,..,..1\1• 4t~ ~l'f l""'t 1tr• 0.•"•• (4•0 """'••l'l'"'O ('1"'°' ~'I N9 N 'llf\ ,,.,,., UI" tt4t ~ ~ ,.,-. .-1 fT'•tt•' f'lf •f'I v• r tl"l•f"I•"'' ,. .... '"' """'" _.,. r••r•,.wutl tll'•tho"'t '•"• .. • ptrmi.11•" ot U0¥''ct'"O'W'fll•t ,..,.""" ''"'' •&,, ••• ~··· •• (C'l\t• ~·· ,,.,~•or"tf \wbur•O•••'\ l'>Y '''•"'' U \0 tn"'"'"I"' n., ,.,. t \f ,, ·1't~f"'• "" h•'Y """'"~,..,.., \.110m""","''" Going Dow11 Workmen toil on a $.595,000 utility under- ground ing project along Alta Vista Boulevard in Laguna Beach. When com· pleted the project will elimi!"ate about 70 utility poles and overhead wires. The cost of the project will be borne by about 400 property owners. and the ut.ility com- panies. Construction has reqw.red some rerouting o f traffic aJong Alta Vista. Tennis Site Annex On Tap in Laguna A plan lo annex a portion of Abalone Point -the site of a planned Irvine Cov~ tennis C?urt racility -will be diseussed m a public hearing at 7::M> tonight by the Laguna Beach Planning Commission. The commission is lo decide on an Agriculture/Recreation pre· :r.oning or Abalone Point, a knoll jutting into the sea just south of Morro Cove, as the first step toward city annexation of that portion of the property now in COWlty territory . A portion or the private enclave is already in the City. While the Irvine company and the Irvine Cove Association ap· pear not to oppose annexation, they would oppose it if the city at· tempted to block construction or the tennis courts. The city staff report on the pro· posed annexation notes if the pro· perty were in the city the design review ordinance would bear on the tennis court project. The staff report cites "concern about the construction or tennjs courts adjacent to the knoll and at the entrance to the city." Sea Breezes Waft Smog Along Coast OCEANSIDE CAP) Smog b1 <1mcd on sea hreczes from Los Angeles 1s still bcs1ei!1ng th<.' coas t a~ far south a s San Diego and up lo eight m 1lcs inland. Since last week. outdoor phys ical educ~tion ha~ be<·n can celled at several s choob. A health adv1sorv was issued Monday by the San D1e1:0 County Air Pollution Control D1sln<"l for the second straight day with more smog expected loda.) The ozone or smog level 1n Oceans ide reached .21 per million parts or :iir -.12 part above the federal m aximum for clean air Smog levels r ea<.-hed 12 in Chula Vista and . ll in the Kearny Mesa area of central San Diego. A girlli' tenni~ match m La JQlltt w~1s m oved to the Claire· mont ~ert1on north of K earny Mesa Meteorologist Hal Rrown s a1rt higher tempe ratures inland heat cd the land. warming the trapped cool air and causing p<11lut anLs to n sc and scatter. Rut 1-1lon1o? tht• coa!lt, smo~ remained traprx.-d A weak Santa Ana condition also helped contain smog p ro- pelled by northwest sea breezes from the Los Angeles a rea, Brown said. Plans by the association to de· velop the facility while in the county ha ve been delayed. The county maintained that when the Irvine Company deeded the property to the association, land divis ion approval was not obtained from the county. Until that issue is solved, the county ~on 't consider development. Other commission items in- clude: .Consideration or plans by the Fes tival of Arts for razing or the old School of Art and festival ad- mmistration buildings and con· struction of a new office facility. A r eport by the Parking, Transportation and Circulation c ommittee recommending 77 new yield s igns a nd JO new stop signs al inte rs ections throughout the city . Arraignment Delayed in Shock Case A J()...wcek delay was ordered t oday in the Orange County Superior Court arraignment of a Laguna Niguel man charged with responsibility in the elec- t rocution of his neighbor's 18· month-old daug hter. Judge J ames II. WaJsworth set Jan. 31 as arraignment date for Daniel Gonzales Guzman, 32, of 29821 Paseo de Ocaso. when 1t was explained that defense at- torney Ali cemarie Stotler was appointed lo the Harbor Municipal Court Monday and cari no longer defend him. Guzman was indicted by the Grand Jury on charges or in· voluntary m ans laughter after Kelly Michelle McMullen, 18 months , w~s s hocked and killed l.Jy a high voltage wire allegedly ngged by the de fendant in his front vard. Guzman told offi cers that the wire was tntended to keep cats and dogs oH his flower beds. The child 's parents, his next door neighbors, s ued him for $300,000 in damages . Marines to Mark 20lst Birthday Camp Pendleton c-clebrates the 2<>lat Marine Corps birthday with a pageant at 10 a .m . Wednesday that features period uniforms from 177Stothe present. The public Is invited. Informa- tion is available by calling 725-5517. Kialoa Pulls Ahead In Mazatlan Race Kialoa appeared lo be livmg ur to her long distance pOtential to- day as she had carved out a 50· mile lead over her nearest com- petitor In the 1,032-mile Los Antrele!i to M aiatlan yacht race. Skipper Jim Kllroy's positlon report. at 8 o.m . today placed the 79-(oot ketch ofr r olnt Abrcojos on the Baja California roast. about~ miles from the start. Closest yacht to Kinloa was Ragtime. the 62-foot sloop sailed by Bill Pas quini and Bill White or Long Se:ach. She had logged 414 mil,!$ along the rbumbllnc. Escort vessels In the nret re- ported continued LiJtht wlnds oC about five knots fro~ lhe east. < Kialoa 's position gave her the overall handicap and Cla.cis A lead in the race. Second on han· dicap time was Malin Bumh8:m's Ericson-46 Invader. San Dteao Yacht Club and third was Morrie Kirk's 40-fool stoop Hurricane Deck, Balboa Yacht Club. Cl ass l eaders on hondlcap time: Class A 1. Ki3loa 2 Whistle Wing lV 3, Mira mar. , Class B 1. Invader 2. Hurn cane Deck 3. Raatdoll. Class C 1. Cottontttll 2. liingo S. ... Vl'ctor Clttss 0 1. Americo Jane Ill 2. Ghost 113. Captain Marvel. f'roaa Page Al HOUSES •.. housing complex. But their report lists considera- tions county orricials believe the planning commission should con- sider before forwarding a recom- mendation on t he development to county supervisors. The commission is expected to spend much or this afternoon dis. cussing the senior citi:r.ens pro· posal, along with other county general plan amendments. County planners, in their re- port, identified the area, which lies just outside Laguna Beach ci- ty limits, as an e nvironmentally sensitive one. But, they said. county officials also are con- cerned about the need for low-cost housing. In addition to a fear the houses might not be low -cost, however. county oHicials said safeguards to prevent s peculators from later boosting prices have not been de· veloped. Such safegua rds would involve time and expense, they said. both in screening applicants and con- trolling resales . The consultant also said the cost or clearing and landscaping a 200-foot firebreak on the brushy site would cost $1.9 t.o $2.2 million, adding to the cos t of homes and monthly maintenance costs as- sessed to homeowners. In addition, the consultanl said 33 of the 611 homes would have to be built uphill, requiring the elderly residents to climb stairs to enter their homes. f'ro• Page A J ELECTION. • Schmitz hailed Young's long participation with the festival. "His many years or dedicated service will be sorely missed and I will mi ss Dave Young," Schmitz said. Mrs. Childress. who will take Young's seat on the board, has been active in the Pageant of the Masters cast. In other action, the Festival or Ahs membership voted approval for a special election to de· termine if the organization should stop requiring the handJ- ing of election ballots by a certified public accountant, a re- quirement which cost St ,500 in the last election. Being 01 Scot11<;n crr.scenl t rake great ple;ic;ure in mak111Q mv dollar-; slretch I try 10 pa<; 111 1s i dea a l o n q to ou, customers by stocking manv comb1nat•on P•ecos or 1ewelry that is, pieces lhilt can servP mu ll1plo pu r poses o r adornment Pi n -p endan t c ombinet1on c; are Iha moc;t usual o l c ou rse. but wo e.ctend that idea to clasp decorators and allachmenls lor nngs and bracelels We h a11e a ho ney·bOf" rinq·p1n combination that ,., verv 1maqinal1ve There 1s a stnk~ngty beau11ru1 onyl( anri diamond l'reilrt that servec, either as a """ or pondant Thts Is truly a mechan•t>l\I en91neennq ma-.terp1ece We hav o n ecklace·bracolet comb1n a1 1ori, that give you d1lleren1 lenglhs of neckware when combined 1n d11feron1 WllYS TMre are w atches too with a wide var1£1ty ol colored straps and even d1llerent c010<ed belels. One ol thn mo<.t rt;w; r. nnrJ voro;atlle comhintJl1on'I 1s a be'l•c eamnq w1tn 11 variety of Crops thal compit"elv ct1,lnge lhe took -11nd thn rotor, Th1<1 idea I<; qri-.111 lor I he tr111nlnr 11 1,000,000·plus County Firms Paid Medicaid WASHlNGTON CAP) -For the second straight year, the Arnerican physician listed as re- ceiving tbe most money from Medicaid is Dr. William A. Triebel of New Yo.rk, who re- ceived $785,114 ln 1975. Triebel was one of 2.55.1 doc· tors, denUsts, pharmacies and laboratories that received more lhan $100,000 from Medicaid last. year, according to a Department of Health, Education and Welfare report Issued Monday. Triebel operates a group of mttbadone maintenance clinics for former heroin addicts. Firms in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach were among those from Orange County listed as receiving more than $100,000. Altogether, the 2,533 providers received $445.3 million for 16.3 percent of the more than $2. 7 '°' M<lnager Eyes Street Sale Guideli~s Laguna Beach City Manager Al Theal will report back to the City Council Wednesday on pro- posed guidelines for future street craft and art. shows. The report is the result or a flap between lhe Chamber of Com- merce and the Laguna Craft Guild which erupted Wednesday at the City-Couneil meeting: Jack Schere, president or t he chamber, charged that "import- ed shoddy merchandise" being sold through the Guild shows was ruining the city's image. Further, the chamber and merchants claimed the shows were bad for business during the critical Christmas s ales period. The craft gulld had been hold- ing semiannual street shows plus an exhibition and show on th~ Festival or Arts grounds durinit t.he Winter Festival. This year, however, the guild sought and received city permits for lour shows betwee n Thanksgiving and Christmas. Guild President Tom Leslie, derued Sc here's accusations and said the craftsmen's orgaruza· lion poHced itself and drummed out persons who attempted to sell manufactured or poor quality work. Theal is expe cted to recom- mend ways the city can improve communications between it and the organizations involved so that problems can be addr~sed betore~permlts are· t.s~ued: Other council business in· eludes: -A formal position in opposi- tion to new ofC offshore oil leas- ing. ~onsideration of appraisals for park sites in Arch Beach Heigh Le;. -Costs of increased radar traffic enforcement on Laguna Canyon Road. Jewels, Cash Taken Jewelry and cash valued at $1,355 was s tolen from a Laguna Niguel home by burglars who pried open the rear door. Orange County sheriff's of. fi cers said intruders broke into the home of salesman Joseph Nigliaccio, <40, of 23692 Blue Fin Cove, while he was away al work. @ (;EM WISE Mary Barr. C-erttlied Oemolog1st billion spent providing health ('are ror 23 mlllion poor Americans las t y.:ur. "The fact that these medical providers received the staled amounts from the Medicaid pro- gram should not be construed aa any evidence of wrongdoing, nor do the amount.a listed necessarily represent 'earnings' or 'pro- fit.a'." HEW said. The information on what HEW called "high volume" Medicaid providers was released oo re· quest under the Freedom of In- formation Act. T he University Hospital Pharmacy in Huntington Beach received $136,773 and Goldstein and Kent or Newport. Beach re- ceived $130.994. Also listed in the HEW report were Norm a n K . Bepls Jr .. $102,038 and Pre gnancy Control Medical Group, $225,281, bolh of Santa Ana. County or Orange Pharmacy, Orange, r~ceived $198,858. Hef- fner Medi~al Group, Anaheim. received $164,444. Harbor Pharmacy of Fullerton received $100,896 .• The biggest payment to a single pharmacy was $1.4 million to Medical Health Pharmacy or Milwaukee, Wls. Thelargestto• chain pharmacy was $1.7 million to Peoples Drug in the Washington, D.C., area. Those receiving more than $100,000 in Medicaid payments included 995 doctors and 312 den· tists in solo and group practice. 1.27 solo and chain laboratories and 1,099 solo and ch1l~ pharmacies. SA Girl, 8, Kidnaped in Sex Assault · While family members slept in · adjoining bedrooms, an 8-year- old girl was kidnaped rrom her home Monday night, taken to a nearby vacant house and sexual- ly assaulted, according to Santa Ana police. . The youngster was released by her abductor after spending a terrifying hour in his control. police said. She was taken to Santa Ana- Tuslin Community Hospital for treatment and released early to- day. Police are looking for a transient who they believe has been s leeping in empty houses ln the 1100 block of South Shelly Street. People who might have knowledge or the whereabouts or s uch a person have been asked to contact investigator Skip Lynn at the Santa Ana Police Depart- ment at 834-4278. Police said the young victim described her assailant as a dark complexione d, dark haired man. They said she could offer little beyond that brief description and said she at first believed she \"as being removed from her bed by.a famil y member. UFW Suit Dropped FRESNO (AP> -SeparalJ; lawsuits filed by the UniteCI Farm Workers of America against Kern County authorities and Tulare County growers hav~ been dismissed ln (ederal court, Both stemmed from the bitter um table grape strike. q1vn~ vou i wno1" rarrinl'J wMc1rohn wittrnul t1M1nQ to carry '>0 rlH1r..ll aro1inr1 w11h you You will alw;ivs h11vo tlJ'>I ' lhe riqhl ar.cenl f r)r ll.lCh • c.oc;ium" 1r1d or: '"'on Ono ol my mo\t amu1t10u5 'iP"r.:•al orr.IM dn<.1r1n'-. lor tit ru.,1omur wa~ :i n,.c\d:ice con1a1n1n 9 25 carat<; 011• n1amontf-; II cou'rl l'" wr>ro with or without A P"n•lilnf .ill.\ChmP-nl hlll I he h•IJ hr>nu~· was tho double clat.o' th.11 m ade it us~a b lo as two d•ilmOnc1 hr ac»IPt., I rons111r.r 11 1 r••1I rhall"nl'J9 1'1 soc wh 1t I r.1'l 0" •l'Jn lo Streich mv r.uc;1om1~r5 1ewelry dollnrs Ion II you h:lv8 ii P"~co ol l!'W"'rv ,,, rnin~l !hill ynu w1•,t1 IO m,lkr• 1n10 "'lmnlh·n~ new. brinQ lhem 1n 11ncl let's con,tel tr the po~~·b1l11>M Do It ~ soon l hOU'l h bPC IUS& Chris1mec; 1··, r.om1riq al'ld Ou{ .. shop work q'lt<; vwy 1\11.ivy Ill Ch11stm.ts l •mu 11nc1 I aon 111 w.1111 to <11·,,1000•'11 .111yonu wit~ CHARLES H. BARR a holiday doadline . Our wtncow fea1urin9 lhi "Diamonds 1r1 Orbit '77" lhat•f wrote about 1n an earll~ column. 111 now on displav -.. so come see• '1 t 71'1 1 1,....1n. Wettellff .. o'H ....,_.a.ech .,,,, ~ "\ • Orange Coast ED ITI ON Tod«y's C:lo. ing'i • Stoeks VOL. 69, NO. 314, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1976 C T.EN CENTS! , British Going· Broke in Proper Style~ LONDON (AP> -At a time when the British pound ls sadly sinking from sight and the flag of empire is well ~w ball-staff, Viscount Richard Thomas Orlando Newport bas done what be thinks is the only sens Ible thing left for a chap to do. rub .nor timid) -figured lbat his caviar bar close lo Hyde Parle, Harrod'• "and the helter embassies" would attract tourisls from tbe de lue luxe hotels and a scattering of diplomats. • He bas opened a caviar bar in Knigbtsbridee so those aboard the BVT SINCE OPENING IN APRIL be finds the place frequeated sin.king ship can go down in style. more and more by his British cqmpatriots. "IT SOUNDS LIKE A DANCE of the decadent before they go. ..People with any cash lefl are very concerned about spending it but actually it •s bloody good business. There's all kiads of money on something worthwhile before it devalues altogether or the tax around," said the 28-year~ld son and heir to lbe Earl of Bradford, man grabs it," explained his lordship. who once Prince Charles disappears up the nupt.ial aisle, could rank "Holidays and cruises can be checked, so you micht aa well as Britain's most eligible bachelor. · treat yourself to a good tuck· in before it's too late. Where evading· The viscount-family motto: Nee temere, nee timide (Neither taxes are concerned, we're getting almost as good as the Italians ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ and the French, and of course they come here in droves on shopplnl · sprees. · ..WE'VE MADE CAVIAR LESS frightening," said the viscou.ot ln modest self-appraisal of his contribution to the nation'• morale in these trying times. · "When you consider filet steak goes for three pounds ($4.80) a pound, caviar Is damned good value. It's price bas increased ¥fJ'Y Utile over the past 20 years compared with smoked salmon and lobster, which have gone quite mad. Peoele come here for a lunch ol pressed caviar. the cheese board and a bOtUe of wine and can eet out for7.50pounds ($12). , <See SINKING, Paie Al) Medicaid Earners Listed LA's Last Gasp WASHINGTON (AP) -For the second straight year, the American physician listed as re· ceiving the most money Crom Medicaid is Dr. William A. Triebel or New York, who re- ceived $785,114 in 1975. Triebel was one or 2.553 doc-tors, dentists, pharmacies and laboratories that received more than $100,000 from Medicaid last year, according to a Department of Health, Educ:ation and Welfare report issued Monday. Triebel operates a group of methado~ maintenance clinics for former heroin addicts. Firms in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach were among those from Orange County listed as receiving more than $100,000. Altogether, the 2,533 providers received $445.3 million for 16.3 percent of the more than $2. 7 billion spent providing health care for 23 million poor Americans last year. "The fact that these medical providers received the stated amounts from 41e Medicaid pro- . gram s liould not be construed as t any evidence of wrongdoing, nor 'iio the amounts listed necessarily represent 'earnings' or 'pro- fits'," HEW said. The information on what HEW called "hjgh volume" Medicaid providers was released on re- quest under the Freedom of In- formation Act. The Univer s ity Hospital Pharmacy in Huntington Beach received $136,773 and Goldstein and Kent of Newport Beach re- ceived Sll0.994 . Also lilted in the HEW report were Norman K . Bepls Jr., $102,038 and Pregnancy Control Medical Group, $225,281, both of Santa Ana. County of Orange Pharmacy. Orange, received $198,858. Hef- fner Medical Group, Anaheim, received 1164,444 .. Harbor Pharmacy or Fullerton received Sl00.89fi The biggest payment to a !dngle pharmacy was $1 .4 million to Medical Health Pharmacy of Milwaukee, Wis. The largest to a chain pharmacy was fl 7 million t o Peoples Drug in the Wuhinston. D.C., area. (See MEDICAID. Page Al> Kialoa Takes 50-mile Lead To Mazatlan Ki aloa appeared to be living up to her long distance potential to- day as she had carved out a SO. mile lead over her nearest com· petitor in the l ,032·mile Los Angeles to Mazatlan yacht race. l Skipper Jim Kilroy's position report at 8 a .m . today placed the 7&-foot ketch off Point Abreojos on the Baja California coast. about 463 miles from the start. Chi~ken Joke Intruders with designs on David Rohn 's chickens had better think twice. The big bird is a creation of Rahn at his farm in Modjeska Canyon. Smokey the Bear Dies of -Old Age WASHINGTON (AP) -The original Smokey Bear, a symbol of forest fire prevention for 25 years, died today at the National Zoo. Cause of death: infirmities and old age. His age was the equivalent of ttlOtt than 70 years in human terms. As provided by Congress, Smokey's r emains were being shipped back to his original forest home in New Mexico. He will be buried at Smokey Bear Historic al State Park near Capitan. N.M., within sight of Capitan Mountain where he was found in 1950. Officials said a short burial ceremony Is being planned by the New Mexico Slate Park Com· miuion. In 1974, with the bear sutrering Crom arthritis and otber a il- ments. Congress approved a re· solution authorizing Smokey up· on death to be returned to New Mexico "for pl'Oper disposition and a permanent memorial." One Ten ion of tbe resolatioo as it was c:oosidered in the House re- ferred to Smokey one qy pass· ing oq to a ••great hooey tree in the sky." But this was considered a bit irreverent for such a noble creature and the honey tree line <See S"OKEY, Page A2) Thie1'es Lose Way, Caught Police aaid'two young bandits took a wrong turn alter holding up a Costa Mesa service station ear- ly today. The pair got lost in Mesa Verde and a police helicopter found them before they found their way out or a maze of residential streets. The Los Angeles County pair were booked on suspicion of armed robbery with bail set at $25,000 each . Police said the ban-' dits threatened the attendant at the Chevron Station at 3190 Harbor Blvd. with a wrench before fieelng in their red truck with an undiaclosed amount of cub. The money was recovered, police said. Smog Blots Out Clea.n Air By The Assoc;.ated Press The national eat> rt to control air pollution by 1985 is not succeeding in ~ew York and Los Angeles. says a White House adviser on air quality. John A . Buster ud , acting chairman of the President ·s Council on Environmental Qu ali· ty, said .. exceptional control standards may be necessary" to curb air pollution in the nation's Probe Set In Hinshaw Time Issue The jury in the Superior Court trial of Orange County Congressman Andrew Hinshaw bas been sent hofl\4 until Wed · nesday so the judga:!lll conduct a bea~~iand by tte de· t•e J{ify"s ese~ . Judge Frank Domenichinl is- sued the directive after " hearing {estimony by Hinshaw in which he admitted spending no more than five percent of his work time in 1972 on his duties as the coun· ty·s assessor. The judge is now being asked to rule before the jury returns that the county's abandonment or claims against asseuor 's employes who drew•overtime in 1972 to· work o n Hinshaw's Congressional campaign in· validates all related criminal charges against Hinshaw. Defe nse attorn ey John· McNicholas contends that if the claims against the employes are unjust, it is equally unjust to pro- secute his client on charges con- nected to that overtime. Hinshaw's admission that he spent almost no time 9ft bis job- related duties came di.Iring tough questioDing by pTosecutor William E vans. Evans was pressing the con· gressman to explain why he had -so little knowledge oC numerous, allegedly criminal acts com· mitted by members or his own starr. Hinshaw acknowledged that the-county required his signature on overtime a nd vacation slips prepared in his office during 1972, but told Eva~ that he had decided to d e legate the authority. Evans, in cros!I exatnlnat.ion. asked the rormer assessor Ir he ever took the trouble to keep himself informed on the volume or overtime compiled by bis staff during 1972. ''Not specifically," Hinshaw told him. "I was only interested in getting the job done." Hinshaw races multi ple criminal ch a rges including grand theft, conspiracy and em· beulement stemming from his alleged illegal actions as county asiessor in 1972. two moat populous areas. He also said the effort has created more jobs than il has deslroyed. Bu sterud, speaking in Anaheim al the fifth annual In· temational Pollution Eniloeer- ing Exposition a nd Congress, predicted that bythe early 1980s, most of the nation ·s 2A1 air quaii· ty control regions will meet primary rederal health-related Alicemarie Huber Stotler of Corona del M;lr bas been appointed by Governor Brown to th e Harbor Judicial District bench .. The 34-year-o ld attorn ey r ep l aces Betty Lou Lamoreaux, who has been elevated to the Superior Court .. See story. Page A3. Sea Breezes Waft Smog Arong Coast OCEANSIDE (AP) -Smog blamed on sea breezes from Los Angeles is still besieging the coast as far south as San Diego and up lo eight miles inland. Since last week, outdoor physical education has been can· celled at several schools. A health advisory w~ issued Monday by the San Diego County Air Pollution Control District for the second straieht day with more smog expected today. The ozoqe or smog level in Oceanside reached .21 per million parts of alr -, .12 part above the federal maximum for clean alr. Smog le-I.els reached .12 in Chula Vista and .11 in the Kearny Mesa area or central San Diego. A glrls • teoni& match in La Jollr was moved to the Claire. mont section north of Keamy Mesa. standards for air quality. He said actual air pollution emission levels in the Los Angeles basin fall below the· rederal maximum, but that th~ area's valleys and sunny climate· cause photochemical pollutants. to exceed rederal standards. "Los Angeles has ~real pro- blem with industrial poUution," said Busterud. •'That city really <SeeSMOG, Page.A2) Ammonia Source Identified By RAY ESTRADA Oflllt O•llY ~llotSlalt .. An illdustrial accident by all Orange County chemical firm Saturday morning caused a h eavy ammon ia odor to permeate the air around Ellis Avenue and Ward Street in Fountaln Valley, sanitation and water officials said today. . Sanitation District officials confirmed that. the rirm in· volved is the Collier Carboll and Chemical Corporation of 2601 E . Imperial Highway. Brea. Traces of the ammonia re- leased into the air at the Orange County Water District (OCWD) facility, '10500 Elliaj Ave., were s till present SUnday and Monday, police said. buti the air appears to be ctlear toe! day. The concentration or am-. monia reached a level of six times greater than normal Saturday, according to Daryl Bailey, OCWD admihistrativ assistant. The OCWD plant routinely r moves much smaller amoun of ~mrnonia from wastP. water. The gas is released into the and seldom causes any environ- mental problems. officials said. P ollce recelved eight com• plaints from residents around the water facility Saturday. The Orange County Sanitation Dis. trict facility, adjacent to the OCWD plant, also received 10 calls with one complaint sent to the Southern California Air Pollution Control District •. Police said. Officer Gerald Watson said .. today he is stlll feeling the ef- fects o( the ammonia be inhaled Saturday when' 'he investigated the complaints. Coast Weather Closest yacht to Kialoa was Ragtime, the 62·root sloop sailed by Bill Pasquini and Bill White of Long Beach. She bad logged 414 miles alone the rhumbllne. Escort vessels in the neet re- ported continued lieht winds of about five knots from the east. Big City Mayors Flay Carter Foe and low clQuds alone the coast tonieht and Wed- nesday. Beacla bighsinlow 705, lows to mid SOs. INSIDE TODA 'Y A ~ 10llo lo•e1 her job ur. a fo11 ram btcOMle w tOOn't bGN MS IOUh lwr boas CGmlOt ~ hint ~ the federal Chill ,Ri ghts Act. Stofll,A1. 1 JOaloa 's position gave her the overall handicap and Class A lead in the race. Second on han- dJcap time was Malin Burnham 's Ericson-46 Invader, San Diego Yacht Club and third was Morrie JCirk 's 40·Coot sloop Hurricane Dec:k, Balboa Yacht Cub. C11as Jeaclur1S'rl handicap Ume: Class A 1. Klaloa 2. Whistle Wing IV 3, Mir amar. Clan B 1. lnvader2. Hurricane Declt 3. RagdolL C1au c 1. Cottontail 1. Bineo 3. Vector. Class D 1. America Jane m 2. Gboltll 3. Ca..t •1 .. lland. ' -· ,,_ • .J CIDCAGO (AP) -It Jimm1 C&rUr waated to reasure the na~ tioo'a big-dty mayors he la in their corner, he passed vP a. perfect opportunity at tbe mayon• urban atratea HUion. CAAtTER FAMILY F1NDS SECLUSION-M "He sent a lightweight, and some or us are mad, .. said one mayor. "But we don't 'know where Samuels stands wlth Carter so we don't know what it means.'' Howard Samuels. an un· deraecretary of Commerce W · der President Jo~ and an un·. ~ for him," said Samuel.r, Streu· ing at least twice. "I don't apealc for the president-elect." However. Samuels did speak, ( ivEWSANALYSI J and often. Frequently he began successful Democrauc candidate his presentations by aayinJ, '·:. for governor or New York, was th.int I can speak for the pre. Carter's choice to monitor the sident·elect on thlJ •.. " .two-dlly U.S. Conference of Part of lbe oe1aUve reactioo to Mayors meetlnl that concluded samuels was simply the hurt that Mooct.y. Carter aidn'l send "an lnsldeir,"· Samu~ said be bolds no oneofu.e1mallaroupof advtsers Cormal polition oo the Cuter known to be. tlose to him. That translUon team, but was asked to would hue Hilt a ltr'Cl!DI alpal stt u an observer at the mayor'• ol aupport to the mayon, wbo for meeUn1 by top Carter aide years bave complained that they ~aml\toD Jordan. -.betnl l~ 1n WMhlnctoo. "I'm not a spokesman to~. OtW criUclam ot Sam-.ls eart.r, l 'm Jut ftee-lmdne tbt;S,.4~ed from the thtQp ~laid and the ract that be aaid so.mach. However, since tt never was clear wbetber Samuels spoke for Carter, the mayors never were certain "hetber,to take his state- ment.t as being srgnificanl. Samuels SUPJ>Orted the mayors' reque.t rof fed~ral help, but repeated ieveral qualillca- Uons Carter bimseff baa aoaded -wamtn1 lhat c.n.er would not j1'St 1.blow money a( their pro. blellftl ud st.reasfni the need 1.-ltrlct flKal management. Atte matln1 ~ latter point several tlm~. be toad a C001mlt· .tee ol mayors \hat tbe federal . <&le cui:~a, Pace Al> .. ' ' Tuesd November 9 1~6 MA INE AllWlt ....... loWP ~rP01Der Plans for a $600 million hydroelectric project on the St. John River m northern Maine m ay be thwarted by the discovery of a rare wild s napdragon . rurbish lousewort, on the site where two dams are to be built. <Story PageA7) Fro• Page Al CARTER ••. government under Carter might be able to help impose manage· mentdiscipline. However willing the mayors may have been to hear that from Carter, and several mayors said they "welcomed Carter's challenge.•· It was clear they were not happy lo hear it from Samuels . Coleman Young or Detroit was the most outspoken mayor on Samuels' appearance. Young said the cities would be in trouble '"if they have to depend 1dn Mr. Samuels. I guess he's the 1 man who r ecommended that , President Ford let New York go down the drain." I Samu~ls. in a magazine article 1 last year. said default might be 1less painful for New York City than deeper and deeper budget culs. Court Denies ' AbolJtWn Plea wk/NGTON CAP ) The Supreme Cou r~ turned down Monday a request by two senators and a congressman to temporarily set aside a lower court's order directing the federal government to keep pay- • ing for elective abortions. The justices denied the petition for inJunct1ve relief hied by Sens James Buckley IC R·N.Y. l. and Jess Jesse A. llclms IR N.C >. and Rep. Henry J Hyde IR·m 1. wh.lch ~ought to temporarily cut orr such funding Coast College Signups Begin Registration ha,s begun for more than 230 day and evenin~ nine werk classes al Orange Coast CollcR'' S1g:nups run from 8 a.m. lo 7 p m throul(h Thursday and from M am to 3 p.m. Friday Ul the OCC Admissions and Records building The classes. whlch run from one·hall to four unlls each, begin the week or Nov. IS. Class schedules art" available in the ad- missions om cc F,....P~AI MEDICAID Those rccl'iving more lhan S\00,000 in Medicaid payments included 995 doctors and 312 den· t1sts in solo and group practice. lZ1 solo and chain laboratories and 1,099 solo and chain phRrmacies ORANGE COAST r DAILY PILOT C:':r.~~·~~1.•r,::.:.:::: o. (.'::-< ..... •Puet1\l\l"lflC.,._•~ ~ .. '•"'•'!Of\',.'• ~t>l•"'4d Mo~t'f 1~CPllO'I\ '''cNY fOf (.4' tA Mil-Y ~'tltOO'\ &fecf'il, .. v-i,tu~'"" """"'"'"~"" '•'" V~ll•f. 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INl-U •-1~1y, I ., , Strict Ll•lts <t' • -. . 'L ·Catholics Eye Behavior Rules WASHINGTON (AP) The nation's Roman Catholic bishops have been asked to approve a pastoral letter setllng strict rules on sexual behavior for Catholics. The 36-page document, which is expected to stir angry crilicism among some Catholics. was presepted Monday lo the 250 members of the National Con- ference of Catholic Bishops at their four-day -a nnual meeting here. A final vote on amend- ments and the code itself is scheduled Thursday. The pastoral letter. two years in the writing, touches on a varie- ty or subjects and is mainly a restatement of views by the church wrapped into a :.mgle package. toward marriage and must Ix heterosexual " Fro• PClfJ_. AJ SMOG ••• needs to get its act together in tenns or mass transit and other lunds of imaginative transporta· tion methods, including car pools. taxes on parking and park- ing restrictions. ·•1 don't think it's right for us in Washfagton to say you're kilting yourself in Los Ang~les and you have to stop. But the Air Pollu- tion Control District is going to have to prescribe some rather stnngenl medicine if they are go- ing to reach air quality standards by 198S." All Wlr""9to F~PageAJ SMOKEY ••. •was omitted ln the final versiop. Stnokey orrtclally ret.i.red a: the nation's forest fire prevenU01 !lymbol In May 197S and wa: replaced by another bear. no11 <'alled Smokev. • But for 25 years after he wa: Cound as a badly bu.med cub aft u fire in New Mexico's UncolJ National forest. the old Smoke) was top bear for a generation o children and adults who came l< recognize hts familiar hat anc bulky fi gure as the symbol of firt prevention. · Smokey was a prime attraction at the National Zoo but was not the run.or-the·mill bear. His keeper said Smokey was more of an executive type and was not a bear to beg for tidbits and food from tourists. As a cub, Smokey was rescued by firefighters in 1950 as the severely burned animal clung tc a charred tree. After treatment and recovery, Smokey was flown to Washington. O.C. and in June 1950 was officially designated as a hvmg symbol or forest hre pre- vention. It rejects the view that "mar- riages can deteriorate lo such an extent that the marital union is destroyed and the spouses are no longer obliged to keep their pro- mise of We long fidelity. "The covenant between a man and woman joined in Christian marriage is as indjssoluble and irrevocable as God's love for his people and Christ's love for ff.is church," the proposed document says. Busterud sajd New York's air pOllution problems stem from the mass burning of sulphur fuels for heat and e nergy. and autt' emissions. GOES TO THE GREAT HONEY TREE IN THE SKY Smokey the Bear, 25-year Living Legend In 1962. a young female named Goldie was provided Smokey in hopes they would produce an orfspnng and bear heir • On birth control. the letter says "in contraceptive intercourse the procreative or life-giving mean- ing or intercourse is deliberately separated from its love-giving meaning and is repudiated; the ~Tongness of such an act lies in the repud1 ation-of this value." "Nuclear power would be one way or solving many of New York 's power-pollution pro·· blems." he said, "but we've had a real problem in getting nuclear power plants approved." Busterud also said that despite rears the fight against pollution would cause employment pro- blems, the nationwide effort to clean up the environment has created more jobs than it has laken away. Girl, 8, Kidnaped, Molested ill County TONIGlfr A section added Monday says, ··we are aware that m a ny couples face agonizing decisions regarding artificial contracep lion. We urge them not to lose heart nor to turn from the com- munity or faith. "Rather, they should take ap- propriate pastoral counsel. seek help in prayer and sacraments, and investigate means or birth limitation. At the same time we invite those who dissent from this teaching of the church to a prayerful and studied re- consideration of their position.·· On the question of homosex- uality, the letter says "genital sexual behavior is oriented About one million jobs are now conne~ted with pollution control nat1onw1de. he said. lie said that while the one million jobs are not a net in· crease. as a result of 1975 en· \'lr onmental expenditures . 300.000 persons now work in pollution control-related job~ who Otherwise WOUid be Un· employed. In contrast. he said, 17,890 jt>t>s have been lost since 1971 c.s direct or indirect result or pollu- tion control enforcement na- tionwide -less than one-fiftieth of one percent of the nation's total labor force. While family members slept in adjoining bedrooms. an 8-year- old girl was ·kid._.-ped from her home Monday night. taken to a nearby vacant house and sexual- ly assaulted, accord.Ing to Santa Ana police. The youngster was released by her abductor after spending a terrifying hour in his control. police said. She was taken to Santa Ana· Tustin Community Hospital for treatment and released early to· day. Police are looking for a transient who they believe has been sleeping in empty houses in the 1100 block of South Shelly Street. MacArthur, Bristol Bottlenecks Slated People who might have knowledge or the whereabouls or such a person have been asked to contact investigator Skip Lynn al the Santa Ana Police Depart· ment at834·4278. Police said the young victim described her as~Ailaql asp, d~rk complexioned, dark haired man. They said s he could offer little It's goir.g to be a bit confusing for drivers who rely on MacArthur Boulevard or Bristol Street beginning Wednesday. After 10 a.m., northbound traf- fic on MacArthur Boulevard will be rerouted onto the new re· alhrned MacArthur, according to CalTrans traffic engineer Bob- Siefert. Motorists will no longer he able to make a left turn on Bristol Street. Instead, they must travel north lo Jamboree Road before con necting with Bris tol. And southhound ro ldl MacArthur drivers will no longer he able to turn left onto University OTivetoenter Irvine. They will use Bonita Canyon Road instead. A~ for the short stretch of Rnstol bet ween MacArthur and Jamboree, westbound (towar& Costa Mesa), lralficwill be cutoff for about two weeka beginning Wednesday. Eastbound trarric will flow normally until the piece is com- pletely shut down in late Nov- ember. Synchronized Swimming Set A synchroniied swimming ex- hibition, performed by Costa Mesa's Department or Leisure Services team. the "Synchro Sylphs." will be held in the Estancia High School pool Fri· day and Saturday nighls. The girls. ranging in age rrom six to 15. will perform complicat- ed synchroniied swimming ex- ercises beginning at 7:30 both nights. The cost is $1.50 for adults and 75 cenls for children. For further information oo the water show. call Pat Sanchez at 556-5300. Unlocked Window Admits Burglar A burglar who entered a Costa Mesa area home via the unlocked window tell with cash and tools valued al more than $1,000. Orange County sheriff's officers said. DeputletJ said the property w3s taken from the ho.me ol retired barbormaster Christopher Roberts, 79, of 1Sl7 Superior Ave., while he was asleep ln bed. The tools were taken from a nearby bedroom •nd t.he cash from the victim's pants pocket. - 1'he total closure will last ap- proximately three weeks for con- struction. Then again. don't bet on it. The stretch of Bristol was to have been closed one month ago but was delayed due to construc- tion problems. Scandal Costly NEW YORK (l\P) -ln· \'estigatlon of the U.S. MiUtary Academy's cheating scandal cost the academy al least $279,182, an academy spokesman says. SINKING IN STYLE ••• pounds ($97.60) for four people. but that was for caviar, lobster and a bit or booze ... DO THE CUSTOMERS EVER REALIZE that the beaming. beardeli Maitre D taking their coals or squinting al the caviar scales 1s a member or the nl>bility? "H they don't, I tell them." said the viscount with becoming frankness. _ Even prouder than his listing in Debrell's, the viscount is de- lighted over the one star accorded his restaurant ln the latest E~on Roi:iay food guide and lbe recommendation : "Management young, c1v1l and eager." "That's me. you know." He beamed a smile as golden as his best caviar. No Number For Handle BISMARCK. N.D. (AP) What's in a name? Not numbers, according to the North Dakota Supreme Court. The high court refused to over- turn a Cass County District Court's rejection pf Michael Herbert Dengler's petition to change his name to 1069. Dengler said the numbers ex· press his philosophy of bis rela· tionship with nature, tim~ and the universe. Associate Justice Paul M. Sand disagreed, saying "We are satisfied lhat the legislature, in giving authority lo the courts to change a name, had in mind a name as understood and defined by common law and did not in· elude change from a name to a number." ~es to Mark 20lst Birthday Camp Pendleton celebrates the 2i0Ut Marine Corps blrthday with a pageant at 10 a.m. Wednesday that featurel period uniforms from 1715 to tbe present. The publtc ts invited. Inlonna· tlon ls available by calling 72S-SS17. • Being o f ScotltSh descenl 1 take greal pleasure 1n making my dollars slretch. I trv 10 pass this Idea alonq 10 our cuslomers by s1ocl\ing many comb1natton pieces of jewelry that Is, piece' lhat can serve mul!1ple purposes ot adornment P1n •pendant comb1na11ons are the most usual, of course. but we extend that idea to clasp decorators and allachmonls for rings and bracelols. We have t.. honev·bec ring·p1n combination lhat Is very lmaglnattve. Thtrn is a str1kln91y boaultful onyK and diamond heart l hal 'IMves either as a n ng or pendant Th1<; Is truly a mech;in1c;il engineering mas1erp1e<;o. Wo havo necl<lace-br acelot combmat1ons thal qlvo you d1fleren1 leng!hs of nockware when combined 1n d1flerent ways. Thero are watches too. with a wido variety ot colored slrap'l and even dtlf Prent COiored bezels Ono ot th8 most classic and versatile comb11n11on'l 1s a basic earring wtth a vanely of . drOP' that completely change the look -and the colors This 1doa Is great tor tho lravelor 11 , beyond · that b rier description and said she al rl~l believed she was being rernoved from her bed bya family member. GWlWTops TV Rating NEW YORK (AP) Twice as many television sets in New York and Los Angeles were tuned to "Gone With the Wind," Sunday night than to all other programs combined. the A.C. Nielsen Company says. Nielsen said today NBC got 65 percent or Sunday night's TV audience in New York and 64 percent in Los Angeles. Nationa,l figures had not been com- pil~. the company said. Figur~s f Pf the second. part sbown. :Atonday night wete not available. NBC estimated ils au- dience at 90 million viewers Sunday. 110 million Monday night. His Reprieve Not Wanted SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Gary Mark Gilmore. condemned to die before a Utah firing squad next Monday in the first execu- tion in the United States since 1967. has been given· a reprieve he didn't want. The Utah Supreme Court stayed by a vote o{ 3·2 a district judge's order of execution Mon· day. He was convicted of murdering a night clerk during a motel robbery. The 35-year-old Gilmore sent two handwritten notes before the decision asking the justices to disregard efforts to delay his ex- ecution, which be has said he prefers to a life in prison. @ 6EM WISE Mary Barr. Certified Oemolog1s1 NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD -Regular meeUn~. Costa Mesa city coWlcil charq- bers, 7:30 p.m. "BEHIND THE HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles t . Brown lecturer. OCC Forum. 7:30p.m. "SATU RDAY . SUNDAY , MON DAY " South Coast Repertory Theater. Tuesday. Sunday through Dec. 19, 8 p.m WEDNESDAY. NOV. 10 CO AST COMMUN IT Y COLLEGE BOARD -Regula1 meeting. 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. OCC LECTURE -"Antique~ and Collectibles." Allen Lawton lecturer, Fine Arts Bldg. 119, 7:30 p.m School Board Sets Meeting I On McNally Trustees of the Newport-Mes,a Unified School District will di~­ cuss the proposed relocation of McNally Continuation High School again tonight. The school board bas been stu- dying the move for the past two months. The continuation school serves studenls who must work, have learning disabilities or who have ·been expelled from oJ,her cam- puses. It is located on 19th Street between Newport and Harbor Boulevards in Costa Mesa. District ofCicials are consider- ing selling the site. A district spokesman said to- day no decision is anticipat~ during tonight's 7:30 meeting~ Costa Mesa City Council cham,- bcrs. Officers On Takei BOSTON <AP) -Police ~­vesligators say about 200 • ficers assigned to Boston's enl t· tainment and business distric_t$ were familiar with organize(! crime members and ignored ob- vious law violations. q1v•''i yC111 .1 who le e11rrir1t1, w'lrdrohq w1lhout hdv•nQ 10 •• t arry <;t> much .1round wllh vou You will :ilw;iys helve 1ust thl) 11riht accent lor each co~lum.> :incl occasion One of my mos1 amb111ous '>POC1al order designs tor a <.11'l tomcr was a necklac4 conla fn1 n<J 25 carals di diamond, II could be wom w11h or w1thou1 a pendant a11achmMt Oul lho big boous wn 1ho double clasps tt1at made it useab lo as two d1amorid brace1e1c; . CllARLES H. BARR I consider 11 a rPal challenge to SCI} Whill I Ciln design lq c;trPtch my cuslomers· 1ewelry dollars too If you have a piece or 1t'wl'lry for many) that you w1i;h 10 makei into some1h1'.l,g new. bring them 1n and lets consider lhe poss1b1l111es. Do It soon \hough . because Christmas is cnm•nq and our shop worl\ fJP1S vory heilvy et Chrlstm115 t1m'3 rtnd I don~ w;inl to disappoint anyone with a hollday deodllne. Our window featuring thl8 "Diamonds in Orbit '77" that' I wrote about 1n an earlier column. Is now on dlsolay - so como soe' 17ltl & lnlM We1kNff "111• Hewponhcicll ) --, Orange Coast EDIT ION -, TohY'• (;losl•g: .~. Stoek8 VOL 69, NO. JU, 2 S~CTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUN TY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1976 LA . Lo~ing .to Smog; Tight Rllles .. IJ1ed: By Tbe Aaaodated Press The national effort to control air pollution by 1985 is not succeeding · in New York and Los Angeles, says a White House adviser on air quality. John A. Busterud, act ing chairman of the President's Coun~il on Environmental Quali· ty, said "exceptional control standards may be necessary" to curb air pollution in the nation's Medicaid Earners Listed WASHINGTON <AP> -For the second straight year , the American physician listed as re· cetving the most money Crom Medicaid is Dr. William A. Triebel of New York, who re ceived $785,114 in 1975. Triebel was one of 2.553 doc· tors, dentists, pharmacies and laboratories that received more than $100,000 from Medicaid last year, according to a Department of Health, Education and Welfare report issued Monday. Triebel oper ates a group of methadone maintenance clinics for former heroin addicts. Firms in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach were among those from Orange County Listed as receivin~ more than $100.000. Altogether . the 2.533 providers received $445.3 million for 16.3 percent of the more than S2. 7 billion s pent providing health ca r e for 23 million poor Americans last year. "The fact that these medical providers r eceived the stated amount.£.lmm..tlla.Jl.adkajd pro- 'gram Jmrol~l:FUed as 1 any evidence of wrongdoing, nor Clo the amounts lisled necessarily represent ·earnings ' or 'pro- fits'," HEW said. The information on what HEW called "high volume" Medicaid providers was released on re· quest under the Freedom of In formation Act. The Uni ve r s ity Hospita l Pharmac) in Huntmgton Beach received $136.773 and Goldstein and Kent of Newport Beach re· ce1ved $130,994 Also listed in the HEW report · were Norman K. Bepls Jr .. $102,038 and Pre11tnancy Control Medical Group, $225.281, both or Santa Ana County of Orange Pharmacy. Orange. received $198,8.58. Hef- fn er Medical Group. Anaheim. received Sl64.444 Harbor Pharmacy oC Fullerton rrce1ved Sl00.896 The b1gge t payment to a single pharmacy wa" $1.4 million to Medical Health Pharmacy of Miiwaukee, Wis. The largest to a chain pharmacy was Sl.7 millfon t o Peop l e s Drug in t he Wuhington. D.C . area. (~e MEDICAID, Paie A2) two most populous areas. He also said the erfort has created more jobs than it has destroved. Busterud, s peakin g in Anaheim at the fifth annual In· temational Pollution Ebginttr· ing Exposition .and Congress, predicted that by the early 19805, most ot the nation's 247 air quaii· ty control regions will meet primary federal health-related Chi~ken Joke standards for air quahty. He said actual air pollution emission levels in the Los Angeles basin fall below the federal maximum, but that the area's valleys and sWUly climate cause photocbemlcal pollutants tooexceed .federal standards. "Los Angeles bas QO real pro· blem wilb .industrial pollution," said Busterud. "That city really needs to get its act together in 011ty Pllol PMIO by lllCll1rd Koolllor Intruders with designs on David Rohn 's c hickens had better think twice. The big bird is a creation of Rahn at hi s farm in Modjeska Canyon. Smokey the Bear Dies of Old Age WASHINGTON <AP) The onginal Smokey Bear. a symbol of forest fire prevention for 2S years, died today at lhe National Zoo. Cause of death: infirmities and old age His a ge was the equivalent of more than 70 years in human terms. the sky." But this was considered a bit irreverent for such a noble creature and the honey tree line <See SMOKEY, PageA2) No N'fmber For Handle terms of mass tranalt and other kinds of imaginative transporta· lion methods, including car pools, taxes on parking and park· ing restrictions. "I don't think lt 's right for us in Washington to say you're killing yourself in Los Angeles and you have to stop. But the Air Pollu· tion Control District is going to have to prescribe some rather stringent medicine ii they are go- / ing to reach air quality standards by 1985 .• , Busterud said New York's air pollution problem& st~m from the mass burning of sulphur fuels for heat and energy, and auto emissions. "Nuclear power would be one way of solving many of New York's power· pollution pro· blems,'' be said, ''but we've had a real problem in getting nuclear oo•et pluta appr<Mld. .. BwMrud uo aald that despite lean the flcbt ap.imt pollutioft would' ca•e emp~t pro- blems, the nationwide effort to clean up the environment has created more jobs than it bu takeoaway. · About one mlllion jobs are now conUtted with pollution control: nationwide, be said. . CSeeSMOG, PqeAJ) ·. Teinpers· Flare · Senior Center Ignites Ire By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of lh• Oo141y l'llOI SUH Tempers f!ared Monday night as the Newport Beach city coun· cit staged the first of two public hearings on the city's application of funds for a senior citizen cente5 in Corona del Mar. Tb4r hearing and council dis- cussion took nearly three-and-a· half hours and councilmen Ray Williams a nd Lucilie Kuehn Probe Set In Hinshaw Time Issue The jury In the Superior Court tri a l of O r a n ge Cq unty Congressman Andrew Hinshaw has been sent home until Wed· nesday so lbe judge~flll conduct _ ~ h~~ting demandeif by tbe de-~ -• presence. Judge Frank Domenicbinl is· engaged in':\ verbalbatUe at the close of pubbc testimony. Mr~. Kuehn. the center's staunchest supporter on the city council. tore into-a list of pro- posed points that Wllliams said he wanted the staff to cover in a repart before the next hearing on the gran\ set for..J>.ec.-l~L Williams bad asked the staff to clarify a number of points such as providing a definition of af· sued the dlrec er " h-...~· lil6--s win he admitted spending no more than five percent of his work time in 1972 on his duties as the coun- ty's assessor . The judge is now being asked to rule before t he jury returns that the county's abandonment of claims agains t a ss essor's employes who drew overtime in 1972 to work on Hinshaw 's Congressiona l campaign in· validates all related criminal charges against Hinshaw. Defens e attorney John McNicholas contends that if the claims against the employes are unjust, it is equally unjust to pro- secute bis client on charges con· nected to that overtime. Hinshaw's admission that he spent almost no time on his job- related duties came during tough questioning b y prosecutor William Evans. Evans was pressing the con· gressman to explain why he had so little knowledge of numerous, allegedly crimrnal acts com· mitted by members of his own staff. Hinshaw acknowledged that . 0.11, Piiot ll•rf PflOt• Alicemarie Huber Stotler of .Corona del Mar bas been appointed by Governor Brown to the Harbor Judicial District bench. The 34·year ·old attorney r ep lac es Betty Lou L amoreaux, wbo has been elevated to the Superior Court. See story. Page A3. Sea Breezes Waft Smog AwngCoast flrmaUve action, a recommenda" lion on the appropriateness ol tbe site and exploralion of offers· from local banks and churches t.Q house senior citizen programs. Mrs. Kuehn termed the list un~ necessary and suggested that it Williams had done bis homework be would already know the aNwersto lilsquesU()os. Wfiiiams:teaponded by term- <See StNIOB, Pace .U> · Ammonia Source Identified By KAY ESTllADA OUM Dall, l'lltll5'atf An industrial accident by an Orange County cbemlcal finn Satur4ay morning caused a heavy .aar ... onla odor le permeate t.he air around Ema Avenue and Ward Street ia Feuntala Vall6y ....... aal water officials .aid today. Sanitation District officials confirmed that. the firm in· volved is the Collier Carbon and Chemical Corporation of 2601 E . Imperial Highway, Brea. Traces of the ammonia re. leased into tbe air at t~ Orange County Water Distriq COCWD> facility, 10500 Ellia love., were still present Sunday and Monday, police said. but the air appears to be clear tA). day. Tbe coneentration of am· monla reached a level of silt times greater than normal Sa"Wrday. accordinl to Daryl Bailey; OCWD admlniatraUvts aasJatant. • '!be OCWI> plant rouilDely re-moves m~b smaller amounts ol ammonia from waste water. The 1a• ii released into the air ud seldom cauaes any envirol\- mental problems, officiala saicf;' Police received eifht com· plaints from resident.a aro\lDlll l lhe water facility Saturday. ~ Orange Couaty Sanitation Dia·• trtct tacillty, adjacent to the : ... _ ..... Kialoa Takes 50-mile Lead To Mazatlan As provided by Congress, Smokey's remains were being shipped back to his original forest home m New Mexico. He will be buried al Smokey Bear Historical State Park near Capitan, N.M., within sight of Capitan Mountain where be was found in 1950. BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) What's in a name? Not numbers, according to the North Dakota Supreme Court. the county required his signature on overtime and vacation sli ps prepared in his office during 1972, but told Evans that he bad decided to delegate the authority. OCEANSIDE (AP) -Smog blamed on sea breezes from Los Angeles ls stilJ besieging the coast as far south as San Diego and up to eight miles inland. Since last wee k, outdoor physical education has been can· celled at several schools. OCWD plant, also recetved • calls witb one complaint sent ,....._ .~ Kialoa appeared to~ living up to her long distance potential to- day as s he had carved out a 50- mile lead over her nearest com· petitor in th' 1,032-mile Los Angeles to Mazatlan yacht race. Skipper Jim Kilroy's position report at 8 a.m . today placed lhe 79-foot ketch off Point Abreojos on the Baja California coast, about 463 miles from lhe start. Closest yacht to Kialoa was Ragtime, the 62·foot s loop sailed by ~lll Pasquini and Bill White of Long Beach. She bad logged 414 miles along the rbumbline. Escort vessels in the fleet re· ported continued light winds of ..about Cive knots from lheeast. KJaloa's position gave her the overall handicap and Class A \ead In the race. Second on han· di cap time was Malin Burnham 's Ericson·46 Invader, San Diego Yacht Club and third was Morrie Kirk's 40-foot sloop Hurricane Deck, Balboa YacbtCJub. Class leaders on handicap tJme: Class A 1. Klaloa 2. Whistle Wing IV 3, Miramar. Cius B 1. Invader 2. Hurricane Deck 3. Ragdoll. Class C 1. Cottontail 2. Bingo 3. Vector. Class D 1. America Jane IJI 2. \ O~t 113. Capt.ain Marvel. Officials said a short burial ceremony is being planned by tht! New Mexico State Park Com· mission. In 1974. with the bear s uffering from arthritis and Gther ail· ments, Congress approved a re- solution authorizing Smokey up- on death to be r eturned to New Mexi co "for proper disposition and a permanent memorial." One version of tbe resolution as it was considered in the House re- f erred to Smokey one day pass- ing on to a "grea~ honey tree in The high court refused to over· turn a Cass County District Court's rejection of Michael Herbert Dengler's petition to c ha nge hi s n ame to 1069. Dengler s aid the numbers ex· press his philosophy of hls.rela-· tlonship with nature, time and the universe. Associate Jus tice Paul M. Sand disagreed, saying "We are satisfied that the legislature, in giving authority to lhe courts to change a name, bad in mind a name as understood and defined by common law and dJd not in· elude change from a name to a number.'' Evans, in c ross examination. asked the former assessor lf he ever took the trouble to keep himself informed on the vohlme of overtime compiled by bis staff during 1972. "Not specifically," Hinshaw told him. "I was only interested in getting the job done." Hinshaw faces multiple criminal charges including grand theft, conspiracy and em· bezzlement stemming from bis alleged illegal actions as county assessor in 1972. A. health advisory was issued Monday by the San Diego County Air Pollution Control District for the second straight day with more smog expected today. The ozone or smog level in Oceanside r eached .21 per million parts of air -.12 part above the federal maximum for cl~an air. Smog levels reached .12 in Chula Vista and .11 in Ule Kearny Mesa area of central San Diego. A girls• tennis match in La Jolla was moved to the Claire- mont section north of KeaJl'ly Mesa. Ship Sinking •· 1n Style LONDON (AP) -At a time when the Britlsb pound is sadly sinking from sight and the nae o( empire is well below half-staff, Viscount Richard TbomuOrlanclo Newport bas done what be thinks is the only aenaible thing left for a chap to do. He bas opened •caviar bar iD Knight.abridge so those a board lbe sintlng ship can go down in style. .. IT SOtJNDS LIKE A DANCE of the decadent before they go, but actually it's bloody sood business. There's all kinds ot money around," said the 28-year-old aon and heir to the Earl of Bradlord, who once Prince Charles disappears up the nuptiaJ aisle, could rank as Britain's most.eligible bachelor. The viscount·family motto: Nee t.emere, nee Umide (Neither rash nor timid ) -figured that bis caviar bar close to Hyde Park. Harrod's "and the better embassies" would 1ttnct tourists from the de lue luxe hotcb and a acattertnr ol dlplomats. BUT SINCE OPENING IN AP&ILbe finds the piece f'hlquented more and more l>y his Brillsh compaU'lota. " .... ·•People wilh any cash left are •ery concerned about spending it on somethinC worthwhile before it devalues altoaelber or the tax man grabs it,•' explalrled bis lordship. "Holiday1 and cruises can be cheeked, so you mitbt as well treat yourself to a good tuck-in before lt'• too late. Where. EWadint' taxes are concerned, we're getting almost as good as the Italians and the French, and ol coune th.ey come here tn drov• on shopping sprees. "WE'VE MADE CA ma LEM frilbtealq, .. aaid the Vt.ec.t ln modest telr·appraisal ol his contrlbatlon to the naUon's morale lD these try in• um ... "When yo(a comlder met ateat IMS for tbree poanda <•.•)a pound, a'riar la damned iood value. n '1 prlee hi laaeued ..., lltUe o.er &be put~ years compared wltll smoked aalmon and lobster. which ban pe quite mad. People come here for a l&me• ol pressed caviar. tbe c:bee9e board ad a botUe ol wllM and can 1.l CNt for1.50POWld <SU>. (See 81HIDN~, Pap.AZ> ' , I the SouUfern California A Pollullon Control District, police said, • , Officer Ger,ld Watson Hid Sod&¥ be is atm feellna the .i, fecta of Lhe ammonia he ~tel Saturday wben be tnveat.111ted the complalnla. I Coast Weaiher roe &Dd Jow clouds~ tbe eoaaa .. too11bt and Wed· nnday. IWach bllhalnlow '7U9, loWl.to mid 50t. LIVING SYMBOL DIES 'Smokey the Bear' Fro• Pqe A J SMOKEY •.. was omitted in the Cinal version. Smokey orricially retired as the nation's fores t fire prevention symbol in May 197~ and was replaced by another bear, now called Smokey. But for 25 years after he was found as a badly burned cub after a fire in New Mexico's Lincoln National forest, the old Smokey was top bear for a generation of children and adults who came to recognize his familiar hat and bulky fi gure as the symbol of fire prevention. Smokey was a prime attraction at the National Zoo but was not the run-of·the-mill bear. His keeper said Smokey was more of an executive type and was not a bear to bee for lldbits and food from tourists. A.r:. a cub. Smokey was rescued bv firefighters in 1950 as the :jcverely burned animal clung Lo iJ. charred Lr<'<' After treatment <itnd recovery. Smokey was flown to Washington. 0 .C. and in June 1950 was officially designated as <l living symbol of forest fire pre- vention. In 196~. a young female named Goldie was provided Smokey in hope:; they \~ould produce an of- fspring and bear heir $7.1 Million Bond Plans 'Vntkr Attack Newport Beach city coun- dlmen migh t make another change in the ground rules for the city's open space and park bond election next March Councilman Paul Ryckoff . who first proposed an open space bond elect1011 la:n spnng. sug- g~stcd the latl'Sl change In August. councilmen dcc1d(!(f to as k voters for $7. l million to buy 15 new park sites and make 1mrrovements to existing site!\. The original date for thttt elec t1on wa11 May 31 , the day after the Memorial Dav holiday Last month counc1lml'n changed the • elecllon date to March 13 Monday Ryckoff said he dOt'sn 't think bas$n1J the tied.ion on .. the whole k\t and kabooclle" rs a good Idea and ll.!ked his fl'how councilmen to separate the l$~ue into two pnrts -one for open space acqulSltion and one for park improvement. "We 've got nolhin& to loose in spUtting lhc proposal, .. R> cko{( said. "But 1f the measure totally 108e~. then we're out ol business on thf' whole iotsue .. Thf' quHt1on wu r•ferred to \he city's Parks, Beaches and Recreation Com mlaslon which wut be appointing a citizen com- ' mlttee lo work for pusage of the : bond Issue. The first job or the commltttt : will be to make a recommenda- tion on Ryckoff's proposal and to : Write the ballot propoul luclf. • The deadline for the recommen- l dation and the proposal is Dec. I 13. I ORANGE COAST " DAILY PILOT Ow,,.~"""" Ce,. t 0.ily "''°' W'lt .. Wf\tt., ''"""" tw~ ·~ ,..'#'-Prtu •• ou.e11,fW'l1 ft'Y '""" n1 ~"·' C,0...\1 P\IM· ~I"'' (•"""9•"W k9rf't •W t'"Cfot ~"' t•• lklfltl•""•d M<-·f'tel•• •fW'outl'I ''tci"" "°" t ,,,, • MrW JffWMtt .. <M" MVft•tflllitt(Wll &f.C-~ Fovn •• ~ V•H.-v ,,.,.... \t1110dl•M • \11tl'•" fflld ~ ~!U::A :::~~~i:.c;:~y: ';:' ~:::: 11 ~~',. ~;:;M~':.~~~11t~~~~~JtJ» \-\I U•1 lhwnN -•n\t .. nt •niiif ~lll'IH J•o• c .. ,.f v ............ .._"t •"O"""""'~~.,.., '"-'"'" ....... .,,_ , ... '"t\A,M-IN••tlflt l•i.t CMf'lft N. L-... t ...... ~ ... " A • ._ .. ..,, ..... ,, ... l:dllor• Tetetillon• (7H)~1 CleMlflM Adv•11Jtlnt ta.Mn Tuelday. November 9., 197~ 'Uglat1Dei91at' S.mt Carter Leaves MayOrs Irate CHICAGO (AP) -If Jimmy Carter wanted to reassure the na· tion's big-city mayors he is in their corner, he passed up a perfect opportunity at the mayors' urban strategy session. "He sent a lightweight. and some of us are mad," said one mayor. "But we don't know where Samuels stands with Carter so we don 'l know what it means." Howard Samuels, an ·un· dersecretary of Commerce un· der President Johnson and an un· successful Democratic candidate for governor of New York, was . Carter's choice to monitor the two·day U.S. Conference or CARTER FAMILY FINDS SECLUSION-A4 Mayors meeting that concluded Monday. Samuels said he bolds no formal position on the Carter transition team, but was asked to sit as an observer at lhe mayor's meeting by top Carter aide Hamilton Jordan. "I'm not a spokesman for Carter, I 'm just free·lancing this for him." said Samuels, s tress· ing at least twice, "I don't speak for the president-elect." However, Samuels did speak, and often. Frequently he began his presentations by saying, ". think I can speak for the pre· sident-elect on this ... " Part of the ne~ative reaction to Samuels was simply the hurt that Carter dido 't send "an insider." one of the small group of advisers known to be c lose lo him. That would have sent a strong signal of support to the mayors, who for years have complained that they are belng ignored in Washington. Other critici!irii or Samuels stemmed from the things be said and the fact that he said so much. However, since it never was clear whether Samuels spoke for Carter, the mayors never were certain whether to lake his stat~· ments as being significant. Samuels supported the mayors' request for federal help, but repeated several qualiCica· tions Carter himself has sounded -warning that Carter would not just throw money at their pro- blems and stressing the need for strict fiscal management. After making the latter point several times, he told a commit- tee of mayors that the federal government under Carter might be able to help impose manage. mentdisciptine. However wilting the mayors may have been to hear that from Carter, and several mayors said they ''welcomed Carter's challenge," it was clear they were not happy to hear it from Samuels. Coleman Young of Detroit was the most outspoken mayor on Samuels' appearance. Young said the cities would be in trouble •'if they have to depend on Mr. Samuels. I guess he's the man who r ecommended that President Ford let New York go down the drain." Samuels, in a magazine article last year. said default mjght be less painful for New York City . than deeper and deeper budget cuts. MacArthur, Bristol Bottlenecks Slated It's going to be a bit confusing ror drivers who rely on MacArthur Boulevard or Bristol Street beginning Wednesday. After 10 a.m ., northbound traf- fic on MacArthur Boulevard will be rerouted onto the new re- aliRUed MacArthur, according to CalTrans traffic engineer Bob- Siefert. Motorists will no longer be able to make a left tum on Bristol Street. Getty Heir Asks Control Of Holdings Corona (!el Mar resident Anne Catherine Getty, granddaughter of J . Paul Getty is suing a Getty Oi l Company attorney and the Getty Museum ·s director . charf(· lng them with coercing the late oil billionaire to alter his 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 oC tbe Getty Museum in Malibu. Getty died in June at age 83. leaving an estate of S2 billion to S4 billion. His will was admitted to probate July 7. Miss Getty's suit claims that if a series of changes to the will had not been filed as they were in March, the Getty famJly would have retained control of the mus.um and oil company. Jnstead. the suit claims, Hays now has effective control of Getty Oi l and Bramlett has taken con· trot of 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. Court Denies Abortion Plea WASHINGTON IAP> .-The Supreme Court turned down Monday a reques t by two senators and a congressman to temporarily set aside a lower court's order direclln& the federal 1overnment tA> keep pay· ing for elective abortions. The justices denied the petiUon for injunctive relief filed by Sens. James Buckley CC·R·N.Y.), and Jess Jesse A. Helm.~ <R·N.C. >. and Rep. Henry J . Hyde (R-lll.), which sou1ht. to temporarily cut off 1u~h funding. ,.,...,,...,AJ MEDICAID Those uceivinl more than tl00,000 In MedlcaJd payments . Included -doclor'I and au den· tll~ ln toto and lr'OUI> practlce, 127 JOlo and thaln labont.ortu and l,091 aolo ancl cbaln pbumaclcs. Instead, they must travel north to Jamboree Road before con· necling with Bristol. And southbo und (old ) MacArthur drivers will no longer be a blc to turn I eft onto University Drive to enter Irvine. . They will use Bonita Canyon Road instead. As for the short stretch of Bristol betw~n MacArthur and Jamboree, westboWld (towards Costa Mesa), traffic will be cutoff for about two weeks beginning Wednesday. Eastbound traffic will flow normally until the piece is com- pletely shut down in late Nov· ember. the total closure will last ap- proximately three weeks !or con· struction. Then again, don't bet on iL The stretch of Bristol was to have been closed one month ago but was delayed due to construc- tion problems. FrOlfl Page Al SMOG •.• He said that while the one milUon jobs are not a net in· crease. as a result of 1975 en- vironmental expenditures. 300,000 persons now work in pollution control-related jobs who otherwise would be un- employed. In contrast, he said. 17,890 jobs· have been lost since 1971 c.<> direct or indirect result or pollu- tion control enforcement na- tionwide -less than one-fiftieth of one percent of the nation ·s total labor force. School Board Sets Meeting OnMcNally Trmteea of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District will dis· cuss the proposed relocation of McNally Continuation High School again tonight. The s"Chool board ha been stu- dying the move for the past two months. The cootJnuation school serves students who must work, have learning disabilities or wbo have ~n expelled from other cam· puses. It is located on 19lh Street between Newport and Harbor Boulevarda ln Costa Mesa. District official1 are consider· lng aelllnl the site. A dlalrlct 1pokeaman said to- day no declaion is anticipated during tonight's '7 :30 meeting in Co6ta Mesa City Council cham· ber1. Cerk Fo0nd Dead BAKERStr'JELD CAP) ..:_The' body of clerk Mark L . Vevenautb, 2'. wu found ln a 7-11 store here today. Wrong Tum Auto driven by Mary Mildred Pyle, 50, Corona del Mar, ended up in this unlikely spot Monday afternoon. Newport Beach police said the car swerved out or control while rounding that comer al Fourth and Poinsettia Avenues, crashing into the house at 602 Poinsettia. Mrs. Pyle, 613 Poppy Avenue, wasn't injured seriously;t according to poUce reports. Fro•PageAJ SENIOR CENTER WRANGLE • • • ing her reaction •'emotional'· and saying that her .. tactics are becoming offensive." The dispute on the council was an extension of the acrimony that bad been exeressed earlier by members of the audience who filled the council chambers. About 24 people testified on both sides or the issue. One or those giving testimony was a professional polbter from Santa Ana who cast doubt on the validity of the survey used to establish a need for the center. Gary Lawrence o( Decision Making Information described the survey and ils results as "amateuris h ," "biased" and "an example or whal not to do in making a survey.'' Under Questioning from Mrs. Kuehn, Lawrence acknowledged that he had been invited to t.estj(y against the survey by Coun· cilman Paul Ryckoff. Ryckoff said be had sougbt O\lt the pro- fessional pollster to criticize the survey. Lawrence gave as his creden- tials a doctorate in public opinion survey from Stanford University and responsibility ror voter sur· veys conduc ted for Ronald Reagan's primary campaign and President Ford ·s general elec- tion campaign. He said he "strongly suggests" that the council disregard the survey In making a decision about the center. The council made no commeol on his sugges- tion. Most or those speaking against the grant application, which would be the final phase of a three-year grant from the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development, stressed Officers On Take? BOSTON (AP> -Police in· vestigators s ay about 200 of- ficers assigned to Boston's enter· tainment and business districts were familiar with organized crime members and ignored ob· vious law violations. Being ot Scott1"lh dec;cont I take great plea'>u•e In making mv dollars stretC'h I try to pass this idea along to our customers by stocking many comblnallon piece'! of 1ewelry: that is, pieces lhal' can servo mulli pl o puroosoc; or adornment. Pln·ponoant comb1nat1on'I are the most usual. of course. but we extend tnat Idea to clasp decorators and allachm<?nts for rtngs and bracolet"I that they didn't oppose a center as much -as they opJ>066 use or HUD funds. The first year grant, applioo for in 1974 brought the city $117,000. The second year grant was $234,000. City Manager Bob Wynn said the amount of the third year grant is in question because the city's population has risen above 60.000 which is a benchmark figure set by HUD. He said the grant might be $160,000, reflect· lng the population change. or it could be $351,000, the amount planned for the third year prior to the population change. He said the city staff expects lo know how much the city is eligi- ble !or before the Dec. 13 hear- ing. . Some or the money has been spent financing the city council- appointed Community Develop- ment Citizens Advisory Commit- tee which oversees uses or the fWlds and the applications. The committee two years ago recommended the city buy a $450,000 site for a senior citizen center as the project for the grant and the city made an agreement with the state to buy 3 6 .2-acre site at . Fifth and Marguerite A venues in Corona del Mar. At present there is a private ' day school on the site. Tbe school 's owners, Mr. and Mrs. John Wilson. lease the site on a year·to-year basis. The citizens committee has re- commended that the school buildings be used for the senior ciuzen center that would open next summer when the lease ex· p1res. The Wilsons, in a leller lo the city council, c;aid they are having trouble finding a place to re- locate their school and asked for a further extension. Some of the opposition to the third year grant came from peo- ple who suggested that the site is not a ~ood one and that small neighborhood centers should be establJshed throughout the city. Those speaking on behalf of the proposal said the 9,000 people \n Newport Beach over the age or 60 currently do not have a place to gather and lhe school buildings. with minor modifica{ions would make an ideal location. They contended. in spite of Lawrence's statements about the survey, that there is a need for a facility capable of handling un· der one roof a wide range of educational. informational and recreational programs for senior citizens. Fro• Page A J SINKING IN STYLE ... "Why. I think the biggest bill we've had in here has been 61 pounds ($97.60) for four people. but that was for caviar, lobster and a bit or booze ... DO THE CUSTOMERS EVER REALIZE that the beaming, bearded Maitre 0 taking their coats or squinting at the caviar scale~ Is a member of the nobility? "lf they don't, l tell tbem." said the viscount with becoming frankness. Even prouder than his listing in Debrett 's, the viscount is de-. lighted over the one star accorded his restaurant in the latest Egon Ronay food guide and the recommendation: "Management young. civil and eager." "That's me, you know." He beamed a smile as golden as blS best caviar. @ · 6EMWISE q1voo; you <t i 1101r-eamn<J wMdrobo without tia111nq \cf crirry so muc h arounc1 with . vou You will always have ju$t lhe right ar:cent for oacl\ c°'tume i:1nr1 occasion. Ono ol my most ambitious '!pec1at order designs for a customer was a necklace cont 111n1nq 25 c arats of d1i1morld'> II cou1d be worn with or without a pendnnt allAChmcnl but tho tl1g bonu9 wac; the double clasos lhat maoo 11 u 'ia.\blo as two d11moncJ brar.11101'1 · We havo a honev·bAP r1ng·oin combination thnt •s very 1magmat1ve There " a strlldngly beaulllul onyl! and diamond hear t that 'lorvo q1tller as a rinq or pPndant This is truly a mechanical eng1neertng mastorp1ece. We have nec kla c e•bracole1 comb1nalion11 that give you different lenqtM of neclr.waro when combined 1n dlflerenl waY'. There are wslche'I 100 with a wide vannty of colored straps and even d1 ftoren1 COiored bezels. 1 conr.1der 1l a real challenge II) sec wh 11 I can design to .trctch mf customers 1owelry doll .,., 100 rt you n.we a p1ec411 of Jt'''mlry (or mAnyl that you w15h lo malle into something new. bring them 1n and let's consider the posslb1llli&S. Do I( soon tho ugh . because Cl'lris1mn 1<1 coming and our shop work gots very heavy at Christmas tlm9 and I dorn wont to d1'1app1>1n1 anyone wllh a holldoy deadline. • One of the most cras1Jc and versatile comb1nat1ons is a basic earring wilh a variety of drops that completely change the look -and 1h11 colors This Idea ls great tor the travef1tr· 11 .. Mary Barr. Certified Gemologist CHARLES Ii. HA RR I 71tt 6 lr•ht• Acc.......,G"" We.tc,IH rtne .....,....., H.wpottk.ch c· ' Our window fealuring the ..Diamonds in Orbit 77" that 1 wro te about 1n an earhe1' column. 1s now on display ..u 'lO come see! " l" r . • l Saddleback VOL. 69, NO. 314, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES . . • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR~IA TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1976 Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks TEN CENTS I I ~Dream Come True' Floats for Viejo i· . (. f" ~ •: t· 1-= By ANNE COOPER Oflk DAiiy l'li.. Matt Olympic gold medal swim- ming champion Brian Goodell will ride the Mission Viejo float, ''A Dream Come True," in the Pasadena Rose Parade on New Year's Day. Artists, floral designers, metal sculptors and an engineer are cooperating to produce a float. which will reflect in flowers the MIJslon Viejo ambience, said Art Cook, of the Missioo Viejo Ac- tivities Committee. The Missi.on Viejo Company, developers of the planned Sad- dleback Valley•community, have linanced lhe 50 by l~foot float, presenUy in its final c:onstructlon staees. Its distinguishing featu.res are a Spanish block wall, covered by a canopy of chrysanthemums and carnations. ¥LtaJon V1eJo- style lamppostl and larp baq-ini buketl will alto be apic:tecl infiowers. Floral consultant Barbara Evana, a Mission Viejo resldeot, said she thin.U the co11u1nmlty float bu a 1ood c~ ~ win- ning a prbe in competition witb 60other entries. "lt falla into the category oltbe <See •D&EA.M,' PapAZ) MAC OKs Plan:: .. . Split Vote Backs Shelter Honui+ O.lty ~ ... \IAll ~llotO MISSION VIEJO ENTERS ITS FIRST FLOAT IN PASADENA ROSE PARADE Float Theme, "A Dream Come True," Flt• P•rade Theme, ·~he Good Life" Carter Piques Mayors Sends 'Lightiveight' to Urban Con:venti.on CffiCAGO (AP) -If Jimmy Carter wanted to reassure the na- tion's big-city m ayors he is in their corner, he passed up a perfect oppo rtunity at the mayors' urban strategy session. "He sent a lightweight. and 50me of us are mad," said one mayor. ''But we don't know where Samuels stands with Carter so we don't know what it means.'' Howa rd Samuels, an un- dersecretary or Commerce un· der President J ohnson and an un- $1~cessful Democratic candidate J(lr" governor or New York, was k:arter's choice to monitor the t'ffo-day U.S. Conference or CARTER FAMILY FINDS SECLUSION-A4 Mayors meelmg that concluded Monday. Samuels said he holds no formal position on lbe Carter transition team. but was asked to sit as an observer at the mayor's m eeting by top Carter aide Hamilton J ordan. 'Tm not a spokesman for Carter. I'm just free-lancing this for him," said Samuels. stress- ing at least twice ... I don't speak for the president-elect." However . Samuels did speak, and often. Frequently he began his presentations by saying. "I think r t'an speak for the pre· , sident-elect on this ... Part of the negative reaction to Samuels was simply the hurt that Carter didn't send "an insider." one of the sm all group or advisers known to be close to him. That would have sent a strong signal or support to the mayors, who for years have complained that they are being ignored in Washington. Other criticism of Samuels stemmed from the things he said (See CARTER, Page AZ) Pollution Winning The Battle in LA By The Associated Prus The national efforttocontrol air pollution by 1985 is not succeeding 1n New York and Los Angeles. says a White House adviser on air quality. J ohn A. Busterud, acting chairman of the President's Council on Environmental Quall· ty. said •·exceptional control standards may be necessary .. to curb air pol~tion in the nation's two most popUlous areas. He also said the effort has created more jobs -than it has destroyed, B u s terud , s peakin g in Anaheim at the firth annual..,In- tem ational Pollution Engineer- ing Exposition and Congress, predicted that by the early 1980s. most of tie nation's 247 air quaii·' ty control regions will meet primary federal health-related standards for airquallty. He said actuaJ air pollution. emission levels in the Los Angeles basin fall below the federal maximum, but that the area's valleys and sunny climate cause photochemical pollutants to exceed federal standartb. "Los Angeles has no real pro- blem with industrial pollution,'· said Busterud. "That city really needs to get its act together in· terms of mass transit and other kinds of imaginative transporta· lion methods, including car pools, taxes on parking and park· ing restrictions. By WILLIAM SCllREmER Oll~t D•llY l'llotSt.tll The Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Council (MAC). on a 3-1·1 vote Monday, threw its sup· port to a planned shelter care home for teenagers "in crisis" with their families. The vote came after almost two hours or emotional dis· cussion. during which several au· dience members even issued 1hin.ly-yJtiled thr~ts ag_ain~ the program. Voting against the shelter pro· posal was council m ember Kathleen Kelly. who said the community has enough crisis counselin g programs and doesn't need another one at taxpayers' expense. MAC Chairman Ric hard Lowcock. who earlier appeared to be leaning against the issue, rmaUy abstained from the vote. Though the project, sponsored by the Orange County Depart· ment of Mental Health, must still win support of the county SUpervisors, the MAC vote of confidence was considered vital. County government sources bad indicated that the council's decision would be considered a rell~oa of the oommunity'a at.-tit.Ude toward placement of a home wilhlo it.s ~®daries. The shelter is due to open in January and will be funded primarily with federal Jaw en· forcement grant money. It is simiJar to other homes located in Costa Mesa and Laguna Beach. The project is designed to pro· vide residential, short-term care and counseling for no more than six youngsters and their families ata time. The teens in the home will be the so-called "601 cases," who are guilty of offenses no more serious lban truancy or running away from home. Juvenile criminals. called "602 cases," will not be admitted to the pro. gram . Carole Ne ustadt, the Sad- dleback Valley Unified School District trustee who is also area coordinator for the community mental health clinic, assured the MAC and audienee that the pro- ject is tightly controlled and supervised. But despite such assurances, the opposition forces were vocal. Resident Don McCluskey took the floor and asked Mrs. Neustadt, "What effect would * * GaryStoneg ' there be on lhoae kids if they are • put into a community that is · hostile to the project!" . Mrs. Neustadt ~ed softly, : "Not too good,• to which : McCluskey responded, "Maybe· : you ought to th.ink about that." Attorney Wesley Davis, who · appeared to be speaJdnt for a · number of project opponents, : questioned the funding~ the pro-: <See SHELTER, Pa1eA2) --=--ft---!*~ * . . - Early MAC Backerl Wins Board Post\\ Dally "ltt Sl•ll "'"'- NEW MAC MEMBER Vle)o'• Gary St0"9y One of the earliest backers or a Municipal Advisory Council for Mission Viejo has been appointed to fill a vacant seat on the panel after servin& for two years as head of the MAC's planning com- mittee. Gary Stoney, 34, cl 2'7391 Via Caudaloeo, woo the wanlmous • l-JIUDDOr:Lol the ather...fcm COUD.cil IMlllben llenday lo take the spot vacated in September by Ol!ange County Sheriff's Deputy Cal Neve. Neve, who had served on the cowrdl since its inception in 1974. ' cited personal reasoas for bil re- signation. Tbe new councilman. who has lived in Mission Viejo for almost six years, will serve out the re- mainder of Neve'• term, which eXJ>irea in March of tm. Stoney la an englneerlna I 1eolosilt for a coasuJtiDg firm : in Santa Ana that specializes tn ' such matters as soils ana1ysla for developers Of housing tracts and industrial parks. ··1 aon 't think it's right for us in Washington to say you're killing yourself in Los Angeles and you have to stop. But the Air Pollu· lion Control District is going to have to prescribe some rather stringent m edicine ii they are go- ing to reach air quality standards by 1985." SACC Weaknesses lie wu the only Cllle of 19 can- didates for the vacancy witb ex· tensive experience in MAC ac· tivitie.s. · In a brief resume nbmitted with hJ5 application for the MAC job, Stoney noted that be was a I baieken loke • • Intruders with designs oo David Rohn 's chickens had better thlnt twice. 1be big bird ls a creation of Rahn at his f 4U'Dl 1n ModJelka Caa,on. Busterud s\id New York's air pollution pro61ems stem from the mass burning'or sulphur fuels for (See SMOG, Page AZ) Revealed i~ Study * * * Sea Breezes Waft Smog Al.ong. CotUJt OCEANSIDE (AP) -Smog blamed on sea breezes from Los AngeJea la still besieging the coast, as far south as San Diego and up to eight miles inland. Since last week, outdoor physical educaUoo has been can- celled at several schools. A health advllory was issued Mooday by the San Diego County ·Air Pollutioo Contnl Dlatrict for the second 1tralibt ct.y with By LAURIE KASPER DI ,._. D•llr l'I ... 14.tff Dependence on voluntary ex· ecutive talent and inadequate money sources are two .. fun- damental and inherent weak· nesses' • of the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council CSACC ). This is one of several con· clusions reached by the Ad Hoc Study Committee which was formed last summer to examine the goals, objectives, structure and function of SACC and to s uggest ways for improving the organization's effectiveness. William Monoson, chairman of the committee which present· ed the report to SACC's ex· GWIWTops TYR~ moreamoeupectedtoday. NEW YORK CAP) - Tbe oaone or smog level in Twice as many television Oceanside reached .21 per sets in New York and Los milllon parts of air -.12 part. Angeles were tuned to above the federal maximum for "Gone With the Wind, ... clea1ulr. SUnday bitbt than lo a Smo1 levels reached .12 in other programs combined, Chula Vista and .U ln the Kearny the A,C. Nielaen Company Men area of central San Diego. says. A Cir la' tennis match in La Nielsen said today NBC Jolla w11 moved to the Claire· got 6S percent of Sund1a1 mont aedlon north ol Kearny nl1ht's TV audJence tn Mesa. New Yort and 6' percent· Meteorolo1tat Hal Brown said in Los Angeles. Nallona& bl1ber temperatures Inland beat-~ had not been com· eel the laad, warmiAI the tr8.Pl,*S piled, the company said. eool alr dd tauain1])0llutanta to Ficur" for t.be aecond rtM ucl tcatt.er. 8ul aJ0QS the part abown Monday nicbt ~ 1mor remained trapped. wen not Hall.able. A ••ak Saata Ana coadit.lon NBC ettlmated lta au-allo helped cont81a •moc pro-dlenc:e at to mlllloo P8u.d by norttnrest tea breeaes · ~•ewen Suo:1~ uo from th• Loa Allplu a.tea, miWcm Monday JlrOWli tald. --:-.... :.s ~ .. ~!)"'=;""~------..,-~ ..... ,,,,, d • ecutive board Monday, said their goal is to make SACC, an umbrella organization for homeowner association, civic groups and individuals, "the strongest voice in the Sad- dleback Valley." For the present. Monoson's committee is recommendiqg a membership drive to strengthen SACC's base or influence. To build the needed support, the group has proposed a public information program which wouJd involve printed materials. press liai50n. publie a peaking and personal contacts. They also recommended that committees and SACC directors assume a leadership role in planning and taxation issues, acboola and county ~ MrVtces and operations. But mem bera of the board and the committee seemed to .,,.._tbetr primary problem ii the lack of ~olunteer man-boars neeHd to talk and wort. with county offlclals. MClnOIOR's committee recoaa- meeded that another connnltt• be formed to study ·~ ol de-veloplnc funds to hire a tull- tlme exffutiw aecntary. Volunteers hne other tom· mltments, he expfalnel, bat a person whose Job is to wort • with county offlctals coWd be "very, Vn'J effective," be.a.aid. Tbe ad hoc commlU.ee alao recommeocled that SACC'• bJ· laws be reYJffd to coalorm to tbe eoanell 'a pHeticea • "1 • to implement their reeom· mendatloas. Altboaall DO 8c:tlan •at td• -tM report. JUet BobaJ, .... lldast ol BACC, .. td be .. ''Int· tJ RN'' malt of • repart wU1 ..... ace~ '7 .... a.rd. ~l .'f <SeeSTONEY,PA1eAZ> 1 l Toro Homeowners. Tax Group Meets Tbe El Toro Homeowners AJ... eoclaUon will meet tonlgbt 7:30 la the community room ol the P-. ples Federal Saviop and Loin, building. • The usoclation 'a goals and ob-jeCtlves abd the proereu at Sad• dleback IJomeowners Outraged Over Taxes (SHOOT) will be dis. euued. All El Toro realdentl are invited to attend. Weather Poe acl lcnr clouds aJcma the coast tclD.ltht ud Wecl- DllQy. Beach hlpa 1D low -·lows &o mid SOii. INSIDE TODAY A.,,._ Wo lolet 1'er Joli "' • """ ... bfcaue • ...., .. #% ..,.,,. ,.,, ..,.. caaoC au Mm ...,. Cite /•dnol Ciotl . Rlghf1 Act. awr,,A1. 6 , " "A! DAILY PtLOT SB Tuesday. November 9. tf78 Bishops to Mull Sex Code· I letter Restates Strict Catholic Rulings WASHINGTON <AP> -The naUon's Roman Catholic bishops have ·been naked to approve a pastoral letter setting strict rules on sexual behavior for Catholics. The 36-page document, which is expected to stir angry criticism among some Catholics, was presented Monday to the 250 members of the National Con· !erence of CathoUc Bishops at their four·day annual meeting )lere. A final vote on amend· ments and the code llseU ls scheduled Thursday. The pastoral letter. two years in the writing, touches on a varie· iY oC s ubjects and is mainly a restatement of views by the F,.._ Page A J SHELTER • • gram and warned that devalua- tion of property could occur. Under further questioning, the shelter home organizers con- ceded that there are only 36 re- gistered 601 youngsters in Mis- sion Viejo, compared to 108 in El Toro. Hearing this, several audience members shouted "Put it in El Toro!" But Councilman John Noble, pursuing the issue further , un- veiled the fact that Mission Viejo has more than twice as many re- gistered 602 cases as El Toro. ''It makes you wonder if ther~ had ~en sue h a home earlier. we might not bave so many 602s," Nobl'! said. About a dozen people spoke in favor of tbe shelter, including student leaders f:-om Mission Viejo High School and residents of homes near other shelters along the Orange Coast, who nol· ed that there had been no pro- blem with the homes whatsoever and that property values had re· mained firm. The exact wording of the MAC's support motion provides for a six-month lriaJ period, after which the shelter organizers will be asked lo present a status re- port. From Page AJ CARTER ... and the fact that he said so much. However. since it never was clear whether Samuels spoke for 'Carter, the mayors never were certain whether to take his state· ments as being significant. Samuels supported the ~mayors' request for federal help, 'but repeated several quahfica- tions Carter himsell has sounded • -warning that Carter would not ·Just throw money at their pro- ;blems and stressing Lhe need for Ltrict fiscal management. After making the latter point ~everal times, he told a commit· r~ee of mayors that the federal :,.government under Carter might Lbe able to help impose manage- ~ment discipline. ~ However willing the mayors lmay have been to hear that from Carter. and several mayors said .they ··welcomed Ca rter's ...challenge," it was clear they ~were not happy to hear it from Samuels t Coleman YounR of Detroit was 1the mo.l outspoken mayor on ~Snmut"IS ·appearance. Young said the cities would be j n trouble · '1f they have to depend .on Mr. Samuels. I guess he's the man wbo recommended that President Ford let New York go 'down the drain " Samuels. in a magazine article 'lut year, said default mt1ht be •ftss painCul for New York City than deeper and deeper budeet cut.a. 'Oerk F oond Dead BAKERSFIELD (AP> -The body of clerk Mark L . .Vevenauth, 26, was found in a '7·11 store here today. • • ' Oi.ANOE COAST u DAILY PILOT =~"t.~~~:r.:::1::~~= C0.>1-· ....... -..... ~ ............ . ~":::-=:"'~~:::·=...:.... ;.~.?~ '•'" v ....... ,, .. ,,,.,, , ... , ....... v.u • ., •I'd ~~T~:~~·::r~.::;:1;:. t""'~~-=-i.~:~~A Ill M\1 .. , •-11i.--........ --'•<'• c_, V><t "'nlOonl •NI Go _ _._,,,,,, T-••IC-ff!IV .,_,,.~ ~-........ 0..-.11.LMo Ill(_ ....... AW9'0l•l 'N....., ... lclot.n 1MdMbecll Vellew orftoe 2'701 IA .... -.......... or-,,_ Offk•• .. ""1~t'!. ':~ .. J':'~==-.1 IA•1>At8 .. <~: 11 .. 0._,. '""' Telepho110 (T14)~ ~ CIHllfl•d Ad~W.M71 , . "°""'"'' v11i.' """'°""• ..,..,,. church wrapped into a single. package. ll rejects the view that "ptar- riagea can deteriorate to such an extent that the marital union is destroyed and the spouses are no longer obliged to keep lbeir pro- mise of lifelong fidelity. "The covenant between a man and woman joined in Christian marriage is as indissoluble and irrevocable as God's love for his people and Christ's love for His church," the proposed document says. On birth control, the letter says "in contraceptive intercourse the procreative or life-giving mean- ing of intercourse Is deliberately separated from its love-giving Sl,000,000-plus meaning and is repudiated; the wronancss of s uch an act lies in the repudiation of this value.·· A section added Monday says, "We are. aware that many couples face agonizing decisions regarding artificial contracep. lion. We urge them' not to lose heart nor to turn from the com· munity of faith. "~alher, tbey should take as;· propriale pastoral counsel, seek help in prayer and sacraments, and investigate me~ ol birth limitation. Al t.be same Ume we in vile those who dissent from Ulis teaching oC Uie church lo a prayerful and studied re· consideration of their position." On the question oC bomosex· County Firms Paid Medicaid WASHINGTON (AP) -For the second straight year, the American physician listed as re- ceiving the most money from Medicaid is Dr. William A. Triebel of New York, who re· ceived $785,114 in 1975. Triebel was one or 2.SSJ doc-tors, dentists, pharmacies and laboratories that received more than $100,000 from Medicaid last year. according to a Department oC Health,, Education and Welfare report issued Monday. Tnebel operates a group of methadone maintenance clinics for former heroin addicts. Firms in Newport Beach and Huntington Beach were among those from Orange County listed as rcceivin~ more than $100,000. Altogether. the 2,533 providers received $445.3 million for 16.3 percent of the more than $2. 7 billion spent providing health care for 23 million poor Americans last year. "The fact that these medical providers received the stated amounts from the Medicaid pro- gram should not be construed as any evidence of wrongdoing, nor do the amounts listed necessarily repre~ent 'earnings' or 'pro- fits'," HEW said. The information on what HEW called "high volume" Medicaid providers was released on re-. quest under the Freedom of In- formation Act. The University Hospital Pharmacy in Huntington Beach received $136,773 and Goldstein and Kent of Newport Beach re- ceived $130,994. Also listed in the HEW report were Norman K . Bepls Jr .• $102,038 and Pregnancy Control Medical ~roup, $225,281, both of Santa Ana. uaUty, the letter says "genital sexual behavlor ls oriented toward marriage and must be heterosexual." But it adds: "Uke everyone else, homosexuals should not suf. fer from prejudice against their basic human rights. The Chris· tian community should provide them with love and pastoral care." Stating their case •«iainst abor· lion, the letter stat.es st.roosly that a fetus is a human from the start, saying: "While the fetus may not be aw are of itself and its righta, it is a human entity, a human being with potenUal, not a potential human bel.ni." F,....PageAI SMOG .•• heat and energy. and auto emissions. "Nuclear power would be one way o! solving many ol New York's power -pollution pro· blema.'' he said, "but we've bad a real problem in aetling nuclear power plants approved." Bu.sterud also said that despite fears the fight again.st pollution would cause employment pro· blems, lhe nationwide effort to clean up the environment has created more jobs than it has taken away. . About one million jobs are now connected with pollution control nationwide, be said. He said that while the one million jobs are not a net in·. crease. as .a result of 1975 en· vironmental expenditures, 300,000 persons now work in pollution control-related jobs who otherwise w~uld be un- employed. In contrast, he said, 17,890 jobs have been lost since 1971 as direct or indirect result of pollu· lion control enforcement na· tionwide -less than one-fiftieth of one percent oC the nation's total labor force. Hinshaw J11ry Recessed Defense Demands Hearing Without Panel The jury in tbe SUperior Court tri al of Orange County Congressman Andrew Hinsh.a(lf has been sent home until Wed- nesday so the judge can conduct a hearing demanded by the de· fenseoutof the jury's presence. Judge Frank Domenichini is- sued the directive after" hearing testimony by Hinshaw in which he admitted spending no more than five percent ol bis work time in 1972 on his duties as the coun· ty·s assessor. The judge is now being asked to rule before the jury returns that the county's abandonment of claims against assessor 's employes who drew overtime in 1972 to work on Hinshaw's Congressional campaign in- validates all related criminal charges against Hinshaw. Defense· attorney John· McNicbolas contends that if the claims against the employes are un1ust. it is equally unjust lo pro- secute hts client on charces con· nected to that overtime. Hirushaw's admission that he spent almost no lime on his job· related duties came during touch questioning by prosecutor William Evans. Evans was pressing the con· 11'e5Sman to explain why he bad so little knowledge or numerous. Gulf's Well Delayed by Anchor Woe GullOilCorporation'sefrortsto punch down an exploratory of· Cshoreoil well about28milesfrom San Clemente Isl and has ~n de· layed again, officiab announced today. Crewmen are stlll ~enclng dllnculty in getting the oil rig Aleutian Kty anchored over the site. The delay may stretch into two weeks beforedrilllngbegins. The 9,000.foot test well was sup. Poled to have been started last Wednesday but inability to anchor the huge noatlngdrillplat· rorm bas forced del4l)'I. A spokesman for Keydril COm· p.tny, operator ot the $40 mllllon seml-submeralblo oil drilling platform.said today it will be next week before work begins. R.H. Grahn, the 1pokesman, aald a very hard and lne,War ocean bottom cauaed several ol the eight 30,000·pound ancbon taed t4 bold the pfatfonn 1n place todracontbeoccannoor. Tbere ts a Uve·in crew ol'72 men aboard the Aleutian Key, a •ell· PC'Ol)IUed drill rt1 beint uaed by Gulf in tlre nrst ol four ~r BaM oll luae trarta. • allegedly cri m mat acts com· milled by members of his own staff. Hinshaw acknowledged that the county required his signature on overtime and vacation slips prepared in his oCfice during 1972, but told Evans that be had decided to delegate the authority. Evans, in cross examination, asked the former assessor ll he ever took the trouble to keep himself informed on the volume of overtime compiled by his s taff during 1972. Saddle back Unemployed Receive Aid Free job counseling and place· ment services are now available to unemployed and disadvan· taged residents ol the Sad· dleback Valley in the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council (SACC) office at 23011 Moulton Parkway, Laguna Hills. Sue Prlmich, an interviewer with the Orange County Recruit· ment and Placement Center, has been assigned full-time to the SACC office. It is the eighth "out- reach" office established by the center In the county. The center operates under the Comprehensive Employment and Tralnin1 Act (CETA) to pro· vide job search services and op- portunities for vocational train· ln1. Referrals for support services as housing and child care are also available. F,....PageAJ STONEY ••• charter member ol ihe Seville Homeowner's AssodaUon and "aulsled in the format.ion ol lhis organJution" in 1972. Hj' baa ae"ed as a direetor and planning oommlttee cbalrman of that aroup and, in 1'73, WU part of the ad hoc commiu.ee Conned to study creation of a MAC. When the councll wu formed, Stoney was appointed chairman or the lDJanolac committee and has be[n lnt.a1lvely involved ln community plannlll1 ever alnee. Stoney t1 married and bu two children. After bla nleetlorl. the new councilman was 1wom tn by county S\lper•l•~r T~omH Ril~, who Hid tbe job will in- volve ••a lot of hard wort and rapon1lb1Utr. frustr.Uoa and 1allll actlon.' "Not specifically," Hinshaw told him. "I was only interested in getting the job done.'' Hinshaw faces multiple criminal charges including grand lbert, conspiracy and em· beulement stemming from his alleged lltegal actions as county assessor in 1972. It is alleged that the Newport Beach Republican utilised coun· ty manpower and materials while running Cor Congress in that r.ear. He has been convicted of bnbery charges related to that same period and Is free from his state prison sentence pending ap- peal. Hinshaw, Sl, repeated Monday his frequent denial that assessor's employes worked on his can:i· paign by assignment Crom their county duties. Interference Call MOSCOW CAP) -The Soviet Union bu defended its policy on emigration and asserted that Western calls Cor release of some of its citizens amount to "in· ter!ereoce in the internal affairs of the U.S.S.R." Being of Scottisn descellt I take great pleasure In making my dollars stretch. I try to pass this Idea along 10 our customers by stocking many combination pieces of jewelry: that isf pieces that can serve mull. pie purpo ses or adornment. Pln·pend1nt combinatlon1 ere the most usual. or course. but we extend that Idea to clasp dec:Of'ators end att1chment1 for rings and bracelets. We have a honey·b•• ring·pin combination that Is v•ry Imaginative. There Is a strikingly beautlruf onyic and diamond heart that serves either as 1 ring or pendant. This Is truly a mechanrcat engineering masterpt.ce. We have necklace·br1calet combinations thel give you different lengths of n41e1<wer• when combined In different wteyS. ThMe are watchel too. with a wide variety of colored straps 11nd even dlller•nt QOlortd ~zeta. · One of the most clattJo and verHtlle combinations Is a bl9lc earring with a vnty of . drOl)t that completely c:Mn~ the look -and the colors. Thia Id" la gr.at for the travoler: It a u .-.-,., Geronimo! Sixth graders at Olivewood School in El Toro get a taste of what it's like to bail out the emergency door of a · school bus during evacuation exercises being conducted T by the Saddleback Valley Unified School District. The district figures all its students will ride buses at one time or another and should know what to do in the event • of a serious problem. SA Girl, 8, Kidnaped in Sex Assault While family members slept in adjoining bedrooms, an 8-year- old girl was kidnaped from her home Monday night, taken lo a nearby vacant house and sexual ly assaulted; according to Santa Ana police. The youngster was released by her abductor after spending a terrifying hour in his control, . police said. She was taken to Santa Ana· Tustin Community Hospital for treatment and released early to· day. Police are looking for a transient who they believe has been sleeping in empty houses in the 1100 block of South Shelly Street. People who might have knowledge of the whereabouts of such a person have been asked to contact investigator Skip Lynn at the Santa Ana Police Depart- ment at 834-4278. . Police said the young victim described her assailant as a dark complexioned, dark haired man. They said she could offer little beyond that brief description and said she at first ~lieved she was being removed from her beet by a family member. Marines to Mark 20lst Birthday Camp Pendleton celebrates the 2.0lst Marine Corps birthday with a pageant al 10 a .m . Wednesday that features period unilormS' from 1775 t4 the present. The public is invited. Informa· tlon is available by calling 72S-Ml7. @ GiEM WISE MatY Barr, Certlfie<M3emologl&t" Fro. Page AJ .. 'DREAM' •.• Pioneer Trophy because it d• picts early California," she saicl. Last year a float she designed won the Rose Parade Sweepstakes Award. About 100 people will work in two shirts a day in the week foUowing Christmas to ananie chrysanthemums, carnatiorui. orchids, roses and greens on the float, to reproduce the design. Members oC the Mission Viejo Activities Committee will be as· sisted by high school student.4. More than 31200 man-hours wiU be invested by committee me~· bers in the float project ~ parade day, Cook said. Building of the englne aDa steering mechanjsm Cor the Golt. was begun last April. F1owefs are ordered as early as AugUfl and are grown to order. . Roses and orchids are secured to the float, each flower in its own vial of water. Other blossoms are secured by gluing or inserting stems in the frame Of the float. Mission Viejo's unofficial flower, the agapantbus, is t6o small to pick, and its small blue blossom could not be dist· inguished on the float. Instead, a giant agapanth~, fashioned out of steel, will ado the float. Float builders will - strucl steel props, and the floral designer will put together kits,~ students ca n complet e t}\e larger-than-life hometowp flowers. Mao Warnings? TOKYO (AP) -Bef~ his de- ath, Mao Tse.tung warnett Premier Hua Kuo-feng again.it Mao's wile and the three otbtr radical leaders accused. ol plot· ting with her a1ainst Hua, the Chinese army newspaper Tbia Llberation Army Daily bas .... ported. QIVO'i you a whole eamno wardrobe without having 10 carry so rnucp around with you. You wilt always have just 1 the right accent tor each cos1Ume and occasion. On1t of rny most ambitious "oec1al order designs for a customer was a necktac• • contal n1na 25 c arats of d iamonds It could be worn : with or wllhout a pendant attachment but the big bOnus waa the double clasps that made ll useable as two dlemond bracerets. CHARLES H. BA RR 1 consider It a real challenge to see what I can deS1gn to stretch my customers· jewelry 1 doHars too It you have a piece or jewelry (or many) that you wish to make Into something new. bring tt°"m in and let'• consider the posslb1lltles. Do It soon t hough. because Christmas is coming and our shOp work gt.is very heavy at Christmas 1fma and I don·t want to disappoint anyono-wlth a holiday deadline. Our window reatunng the· "Diamond• In Orbit 77~ that I • wrote about In an earller ootumn. Is '!\ow on dlaplay -• so come seot ' ' I