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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-12-07 - Orange Coast Pilot., .. . State Death Law Nixe ' ' DAILY PILOT Gymnast Olga Korbut * * * 10< * * * Reveals Wedding Plans TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 7, 1976 ~"•NO. MJ, I HCTIOttt, i. ,.AOll .. .. • • • • :Marines Continue .Assault Probe Wonaan Slain Police Seeking HB Son-in-law By ROBERT BARKER Ol t ... O•lly "1191 S4llff Police com bed Huntington Beach today for a 23-year old man they !>uspect o( slaying his mother-in -law Monday after- noon Detective Dick Nolen said Mrs. Muriel Norton, so. was found shot to death m her home at 15161 Davis Lane, Huntington Beach, at2:30p.m. Wanted for ques tio ning is Daniel Bu yher. 23, of 5441 Hen- dricksen Drive. Offi cers said that police rushed to the No rton home after neighbors reported that Mrs. Man Shoots Intruder, Self CATHEDRAL CITY (AP) -A man apparently an1ered over ~r drinkers in front ol his home cd one of the intruders with high-powered rine. then killed h1mself, Riverside County sheriff's deputies sald DeWitt Woodford. 56, had called deputies to comp18UI in the past about a group ol people in a pkkup truck drink1ng in froot of hb home, investigators said. Sunday night he didn't call. Inatead, he took his gun, went out on his front lawn and fired one INK that killed Alberto Cantu, 211 "Cathedral City, and woundea Richard Navarro, 24, whose nd- dres s was unknown, said aherirr's Sgt. David Weakly. Nortoo and Buyher had engaged in a loud argument. Police said neighbors told them Buyher was trying to force Mrs. Norton to tell him the whereabouts of his estranged wife, Linda. A neighbor woman said she could hear Mrs. Norton say, "I WJSh you could gel it through your thick skull ... She said she then heard Mrs Norton scream and the front door slam v1olenlly. Witnesses said they then saw a young man running down the street to the residence of 5441 Hendricksen. Buyher reportedly resided there with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ferguson. Police cordoned off the area. but Buy he r either slipped through the dragnet or had ned the scene before authorities ar· nved Buyher is described as 6 feel tall and weighing about 200 pounds, with blond, curly hair Nolen said the weapon used in Mrs. Norton's death was a small caliber handgun. He said the victim was i;hot in the temple. . Nolen said that Buyher had no car and apparenUy had fled on foot. The Huntlnaton Beach police Special Weapons and Tactics <SWAT> unit moved Into the house 1bortly before dark. The neighborhood is betwen Bolsa Chica and Graham Streets, just south or Edina er A venue. When SWAT team members emeried. they said the television wu olaying and a can of beer <See SUSPECT, P .. e AZ> Olga to Wed (;owned, She's Mwn on Mate ST. LOUIS (AP) -Everybody's darling of the Wl· even parallel bars, Russian gymnast Olga Korbut, ap- parently is geUing ready to settle down to married life. r4 ' I .. Miss Korbut, ~ bought a wedding dress at a -1 C Penney store over the weeke'l'.Mt' and in· dicated she would br married next year in Russia. saicl Edna Welch, the store's bridal consul- tant. . I SWAT Tea• Gathers I o.,.,.....,....., .. ..,,_ POLICE SWAT TEAM MEMBERS GATHER FOR CAR TOP STRATEGY SESSION Huntington Beach Murder Suspect Apparently Lett Beninci Warm TV, a 8Hr and Hfl Luggage Court Nixes California Death Penalty SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The California Supreme Court ruled today that the state's death penalty is unconstitutional in light of recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions. The unanimous decision, writ· ten by Chier Justice Donald R. Wright, held tbat CalJfornia's capital punishment law ls invalid since It violates current U.S. Supreme Court guidelines re-· gard1ng Imposition oC the death penalty. It said the law lmpropeTly re- quires the death penalty under specified Instances without pro- v Id in e ror consideration of mitigatlne clrcumstances. The decialon said the slate's death penalty law makes "death a mandatory punishment tor those c~tegorles of llrat~erree murder encompassed by the 1peclal circumstances" section of the ll\W "without provision or consldetatlon or evidence of miUgatln1 clrcumst.ances .•. " 'Shooting Crows' Sniper Suspect Remains in Jail A young Huntington Qeach oil field worker who Insists he was only target-shooting at crows re· mained jailed today, 85 detec- tives and the District Attorney's Office assessed hls case. Mark Allen Smith, 21, of 2801 Florida St., is held In Ueu of $10,000 bail on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon. The Hu.ntineton Beach police SW AT unit rHponded to the call about noon Monday wben tbe re- port came ln that a sniper was I'M WRITING TO SANTA. ONL'I 17 SHOPPING ~YS LEFT".1 firing on a city work crew. Smith, a well-puller, was ar· rested without incident at his apartment after police said two shots he fired narrowly missed a trio of city surveyors working in the area or Huntington and 17th Streets. "One round passed so close they heard It and then after they ran a considerable distance another round passed quite close by," a police 1pokeaman said to- day. "They felt. under tbe clrcumatancea, they bad ade· quate reuon to believe he m~ have had more than erows on bl.a mind," tbe officer continued. The older, rural area ol central HunUngtoan Beach ls infested wttbcrow1. Murder Attempt Weighed By PIOLIP ROSMAIUN or• o.11., .. 1 ... ..- After a 'rocky start Monday. l the Marine Corps resumed a j fact-ftndine investieaUon today lo determine whether 14 black! Camp Pendleton marines will · ' stand courts-martial on charges of assau l llng six .,.bite leathernecks. Governm.nt prosecutor James Patrick McHenry opened t.he possibility or amending char1es to include conspiracy lo commit murder and attempted murder this n:ioming. Major McHenry said whether the charges are Included at any possible court martial ls up to the investigating officers conducting the bearing. According to the prosecutors, the victims, one oC whom re- mains hospitalized, were al· tacked by black servicemen Nov. 13 who believed a meeting of the Ku Klux Klan was being held. The victims, slabbed and beaten, had actually been in the middle or an unauthorized beer drinking session, authorities said, and were not connected with the kian. Pendleton of- ficiala. after first denying any klan activities on the base, later admitted that there had been a KKK meeting in the barracks, but in another room. Pendleton commanders made a belated attempt to break up the base KKK chapter by transfer- ring its membera to other bases. Hearings to determine the evidence a1atn1t the 14 accused black marines are scheduled Wa week and next. Three or the men were scrutinized Monday, and each orthelr cases continued. The real action came during a (See KLAN. Page A2) Coast Weather Fair but baiy weather expected throuah Wednes· day with cbllly nipts In the low SOI, hi1hs ot7C>-7S. INSIPE TODAY Nf\O York 1Wdfnc1 git1c1 Bing ,Croab11 a ro111fng 10flcom1 ottd tonight the vct1ran crooner ~ on Broadloa¥. Storti, Al. ' ta•ex . ... . .... ltOltlUT Aslced whom she would marry. the gold medal winner in the 1972 Olympics, satd only, "A boy." . · Koala Autopsy InvuU,atora 11.y wbat.eVer tbe outcome, at the very least Smith ll expected to be charged wtth diachar•ln1 a firearm lnllde city limit.a. AU Alt All A4 Miss Korbut was in St. Louis to perform 1n an exhibition with other Soviet gym- nasts. The dress cost $177. She also bought a SSS fin~ertlp vell and paid for the purchases with three $100 bills, store employea said. SAN DIEGO {AP> -The San Dte10 Zoo 11y1 the death of one of the koalas donated by Australia ror the Bicentennial resulted from an Intestinal inflammation coupled •Ith a virus infection In th Uvtr. ' C-C IHO, IMO••V-•t .. f•t1w11 .... -..... , None of the tbree surveyors ln tbe team that came under ftrt -or feel \hey dld -waa hit, but all are a bit aore today from tbelr frantJc divea ror c:over. \ A• •t-t .... AU Alt An A4 A4 1 t\2 DAILY PILOT s Tuesday Decembt'r 7 1976 Swine Flu Reported Government Confirms Wisconsin Case AT LANTA (AP I Govern- ment scientists have made the lir:.t confirmation that a Wisconsin m;.in :.uHered Crom l\\1nC flu, a spokesman for the national Center for Diseuse Co"- trol i.aid today. "Material lcs llng by the CD<.: ls pos1t1vc for swine mfluenla A New Jcr:.L·y-7G," said inform a· tion ofrict•r Don Oerrt-lh "Further 1nvc:-.t1gation is necessary before the China Veto :.1gnif1cance Of the !>Wiiie flu Cat\ be assessed." he said Offlc1als in W1:.cons1n 1nd1t·at ed last w~ekend that Don llarns, a Brodhead farm worker, had contracted swine flu. JlJs case is the first confirmed this Call by anal)'s1s of throul t·ultures, Be rreth said A Concordia. Mo , ldPphone linem:rn, L<1r r y llard1:.on, 1s ~llcved to have surrere<J the db· ease in late Octobt•r, but throat cultures that might have shown viral infection could not be taken because ~lardi son recovered before 1t was sus pected he had swine nu, Berreth said. Tests o n Hardison 's blood showed a rise in antibodies against swine flu, an increase tun~istent with having suffered th(' diseasl'. Berreth said. Tests on Harris' blood have not shown the presence of sw~e flu antibodies, but Berreth said that is not necessarily contradictory to the throat culture findin g because the antibodies build only gradually after the illness oc- curs. U.N. Chief Wins Re-election Vote Three CDC epidemiologists have gone from Concordia to Brohead. a s mall south·cent.ral WlSconsin town. to check Harris and other area persons who have shown s ymptoms or respiratory Illness, Berreth said. ''There 1s, howevl'r. no indica· tJon that there 1s extensive upper respiratory illness in that area," he said. UN ITED NATIONS. NY <API Kurt Wi.1ldhe1m was re- commended for re-election as U.N secretary ~1.·n<'ral by the Security Council today after an 1n1llal veto by China. The General Assembly will make the f in a l d ecision, bu t it is a formality. Diplomats emer~ing from the closed meeting said the second· round vote was 14-0 with one abstention to elect the 57-year- old Austrian rtiplomat to another term as h ead of the world body. H<' is compl<.'tini.: <t fivr• vcar term to wh1l·h he "'a" l'lc<·ll'd m 1971 on lh<.' rC'ltrf'm(•nl nr lhl• late U Thant The JOb pav.., SI 19.580 a }t•ar Chm<i . \.\-h1ch hi.I.., wanll'<.I l!O meont.' from th<' Third World as s Pc r 1• tar y g e n c r JI. v (' t cJ cd Waldh<.'1m m the rir.,t round in or- der to support former Mexican President Luis Echevcrna, the diplomats said The Chinl'se ab!>- tamed on the dec1s1vc ballot. they said China's first-round \Clo had hecn cxp<•ctt•d II 1:-. customary to conduet a" many ballots as n1·t·<~sar; until a candidate receives at lca:.t nine or the 15 council vot~ without a neg all\ c vole from any or lht• five permanent powl•r:-. China. Cruted States. Soviet Union, Bn tam and Franc<.'. 01plomats sai<I thr first liallot votl' for Waldheim w;c, 13 l wtlh 1 abs tention , presumably Panama The vote for Echcverna in both rounds ""as 01-4 with 7 a bs ten lions They ~a ve no detailed breakdown on the former Mex 1can leader. who ha:-. long "antl'<I the ll N µost Waldhl'1m. who \\LI<\ draflC<l m to the· G t>rma n arm\ during Wnrl<i W ar II . rost• 1n t he dlplomat1c SC'r v1cr alter t h<.' w:ir. becoming a mbassador lo the l 'n1lNl :'l:atton .., Jnd foreig n mm1stN I !co ran un!luccessfullv for pres1dl'nt or Austna in the spring of 1971 He b ec ame th e f o urth secretarv ~cnt•ral of the United Nations in th<.' tumultuous days that folio\\ ed l'ckmg's admission lo the L'nited Nations In three ditys o f i.ec r e t ballotin& in December 1971, only Waldheim ..tmong 12 candidates avoided \'d o h) all five permanent power~ Waldheim, who will be 58 on l>cc 21 . 1.., a brisk. shm man ~tandini:: 6 feet 3 As secretary- ~f'neral he has traveled widely, s poken oftl'n and nudged thP Security Council and General A"· semhly to act lie ha~ sometimes mC'urred the wrath of the WMit l)y seemtnR to -.upport Third World c:iu.c;e-s too muc h Uhya Text Told MOSCOW I AP > L1l>yan lcarlt•r Moammar Khaddf) i.a1d he hopes the Carter adm1rustra l.100 "w1Jl avo1d the mistakes lhal were made by the pre\'1oos ad m1nistrat1on. and we arc ready to • me<'t new American steps hair way if they are m ke<>pmg with the aspirations of peoples." the • Sc:mct news agency Tass report· ed today. 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CO•I., 1MMt\• M~·"'t ~f\.IOf"'9 ldill0t C,.•rln Iii LH\ tUtM,.,, H"lt 4 "1\1•1\t MAf'l .. ,,.. l•ttr' Olm!tl' t,tna ,,..4 nownt 11.1.~,, .. , l.••ll'Y .... ,. 11 .. 0tt,.,..,,•\l•Aott """"""' ........ ,,.,, .. _ • ..., .. _d S.Oflt1111o.t(• Vtll•f 0 10t l t ,_fl tto.1 •t \.11'1 O•t qo ''"""'"" l •l•pllon• f714)14~2t CtH11fled Advt rtlllng M:t>M71 $.tdrlltCMC\. V•lft't N•W\ Otfl\• Ut..UtO fro"'~., (t•'Nftte ·~ rrom "MttPtOrl~ (Gt.ml't'°""""ftttl•t lf0.1HO (#yrlqlll tt16 <><•""" c .... l'Votl.i"t C..... ~'t Nft ,..., lMflt\. •U\fthft~\ ~!ffJll6f "'•tttr er 1dvtrthttntfth N r•t" ,,._y b9 rttr•thlftG e.ltf\twt ti••c•11 .. ,,'ft1Httt\ •• t .. ..,,,...,...,,.., il<tto"41 <'•" H•hr. NII •I Chi• IWltM C•l1tern1• Sv•tcr et1.,, ,., <•tt••r l) if tN1111111, '' fll'llf ,. \0 IMftt,..tr . ff'flh•rf *'tlf'WhO"'\U M~ff\tf A~Wl,..llftolo CHINA VETO OVERRULED U.N . 's Kurt Waldheim Classe s Resume P UTNAM, Conn. <API Schoolchildren returned to class today under court order for the first time s ineC' last We<lnl'S day, when schools were closed because voters had refused lo ap- prove a t-0wn budget. But the highway crew. library workers and to wn hall staff are still Wlthout paying jobs, pending a vol<' Thursday on the third pro· posed budgel Recent blood s pecimens from the farm worker are being tested at the CDC, and a blood sample taken while he was ill is on its way to Atlanta. Berreth said. The swine nu case suffered by Harris. 23. was diagno.'>ied by Dr. Bernard Easterd ay, a University of Wisconsin influenza expert who had gone t o Ute Brodhead farm to check an outbreak of swine n1: among hogs there, Ber- reth said. Eas terday confirmed that several hogs contracted the dis- ease So me '.'!is consin 0H1cia ls speculated that Harris caught the disease by working with the hogs. but the source of rus swine nu case has not been pos1tivcly determined, Berreth said The source of the Missouri telephone lineman's apparent case also as undetermi.ned, Ber- reth said. Slightly more than 30 million /\mcricans had been inoculated against s wine flu by NO\'. 27, the latest national figures available through the CDC. • The number of inoculations in- crea s ed the week after Hardison 's apparent swine nu case was reported but dropped back the next week. Federal officials hoped to in- oculate all Americans 18 years and older in a $135 million na- t iona I immunization program begun after the disease struck Army recruits at Ft. Dix, N.J., last winter, killing one. Fr .. Page Al KLAN HEARING • • • break in the proceromgs, when Ku Klux Klan Grand Dragon David Duke of Lou1s1ana ap· peared outside the hearing room. A band of about 20 persons pro- tes ting th e detention of the marines spotted Duke and four of his klansmen who unfurled a KKK flag. The group, calling itself the Committee Against Racism, mobbed the klans men, and a \"lolent fight started when a woman picketer brought down her sign with force atop Duke's blond. blue-eyed bead. Several blows were ex- changed, with at least one KKK member s triking the woman picketer. Pendle ton military polirc quickly dispersed the m elee . .,w. ingmg heavy-duty batons. There were no reported injuries. The protesters were hustled orr tht' base The KKK <'ort<'ge \\U!\ allowed to remain. thouRh MP-; Jtrurfly ordered Dukl· o; peopll• to put away their nag f,1ghl ln lC'n MP:-. .,1()()(1 \ 1g1l outside headquarters tcxh•>. In the hearings. Chief Govcrn- m<.'nt Prose cutor James Patrick Mr llenrv revealed the Martn(' ('orps w·111 seek st1fft•r chargei. than those lodged against the ac- cul>ed mt>n. The prosecution has indicatro at leas t lhrc·e of the injured marines suHered collapsed lungs from deep stab wounds. The cases against Sgt. William Spencer, 23, of High Point, N.C .. and PFC Donald R . Hunter, 23, of Winston-Salem, N.C .. were con- tinued for a week. No testimony was heard Spencer was to seek represen· talion by another m ilitary lawyer. Capt. Willhelm Bennett. Hunter's counsel told lnveslJgat- ing Officer Thomas F. Smith he needed more time to review the evidence. After ace epting written testimony from the victims or the atta~k abo~t thei,r inj,uries, Capt. Daruel H. Koenig, attorney for Lance Cpl. Bobby R. Bishop, asked and receiyed a postpone- ment of the case until Thursday. Today three more of the ac- cused marin es were scheduled to be heard. They are Lance Cpl. Gregory A. Coffee. 21, of St. Louis, Mo., L ance Cpl. Rlcl<y C. McGilvery, 19, of Dallu, Tex .. and Sgt. Herm an Fletcher, 23, of High Point. N.C. McGllver y's case was con· tJnued after the M ar1ne asked to be represented by El Toro Capt. S. B. Ray. McGllvery·s current counsel Capt. Daniel C. Slanhope. said "we'd proceed un- der a ver y strong objection" when in vest igatin g oHicer William H alsey denied request for addition al counsel, beside Ray. Stanhope a rgued that his client was entitled to a n extr a attorney, since the government had as- si~ned t wo m en to handle the case against McGllvery. Perr y Par ks. an aid e to Congressw o m a n Yvonne Br aithwaite B urke, was a spec- tator at Monday's hearing. C>Uier s pectators included Car· rel Reavis. pr esident of the Montford Point Marines Associa· Uon. retired veterans of the first group ol black marines admitted into the corps: and Joe Stone and Myonia Gibbs of the San Diego Urban League. wruch first ex- posed KKK activity at Camp Pendleton. Big3 Hail Delay on Bags DETROIT CAP) -The n a- tion's biggest auto compan ies praised the federal government's decision not to require air balls in new car s . Ralph Nad e r, a s~e.c_la l is t in a uto saf e t y, crillc1zed the d~cision. Transportation Secr etary Wi llia m T. Cole ma n Jr. a n- nounced Monday that passive restraint devices. of whlch air bags are the best known, would not be m andatory witil the 1981 model year a t the earliest. Nader said the decision "will doom thousands of Americans to needless death a nd injury on Ute highway." General Motor s Corp., Ford Motor Company, and Chrysler Cor p . agreed with Coleman th at th e a ir bag require- men ts s ho uld be p ut off for rurtherlestlng. Toll at 3, 790 ANKARA, Turkey (AP) -The ki lle r q uak e tha t rocked Turkey's eastern province of Van 10 days ago c laimed 3.790 lives, Housing and Reconstruction Minister Nurettln Ok announced Monday. Officials earlier ex- presaed tear the final toll would reach 5,000. Ok &old a news coo- f erence lhe quake left a bout 50..0001>9r1on1 ho melea. ArlllS Ca«!he Cleared Officials remove ammunition, mortars. han d g r enades and weapons part~ from what is described as one of the largest illegal arms caches ever found in California . The multi-chambered under- ground hiding place was found by children on a hike near Lancaster Pregnancy Coverage Ruled as Optional Job Fonns Stump Kids Plll LADELPJllA (AP) One in sevcn r Philadelphia high school seniors who look a lltcra<:y test was unable to fill out a JOb applicatton, one in 12 couldn ·1 define thl' word "credit" and one in 14 dJdn 't know how to read a news papl•r WASHI NGTON CAP> Employers do not have to cove r pregn ancy-related costs in their health plans for employes, lhc U.S. Supreme Court ruled to· day. In a 6-J decision. the court said the General Elcctnc Co. did not violate the rederal Civil R1ghL'> Act by excluding pregnancy Huntington l)river Jailed Over Crmh A Hunt in gton Reach man who admitled in cou rt that he was drunk behind the wheel of his car when it smashed head-on into anoth e r auto o n West Coast Highway in Newport Beach has been sentenced to nine months ln Or~e County Jail and placed on three years probation. Superior Court Judge James H . Walsworth further ordered Mike Lee Green, 21, to stay away from alcohol and make full restit ution to a woman who was seriously injured in the crash. The woman was identified as Rosemary Trotta. 32. who was seriously injured when Lee's car crossed a double yellow line and rammed h er auto SepL 11. Lee later ple aded guitly to charges of drunken driving. A passenger in Lee's car, Shevawn Green , 19, also was In- jured in the collision. Bomb in Evidence OAKLAND CAP) -Despite str enuo us d e fe nse objections, fragments of a pipe bomb found in a Be rkeley garage rented by Wendy Yoshim ura nave been In- troduced as e vidence at her weapons possession trial. Police Sgt. Michael Drucquer. a bomb disposal t echnician, testahed Monday that he exploded the bomb at a deserted athletic field on t he near by University or California campus. After the last column which i ·W89 abovt natural and cultured pearls, I have had many readers ask about the other types of pearls too. It's grat1fy1ng to find so many people who are reading the column and find It sllmulaltng their interest in gems. Lake Biwa (Bee-wah) Japan Is the most prolific source of fresh water pearls that are grown in a mollusc s1m tar to the salt water variety TheSe pear1s are irregular 1n shape (baroQue) and color Their very difference from the norm makes them at1rac11ve and Interesting. We found an unusual Blwa that had developed In the shlQe of a aoss. It Is approximately one and 11 quarter inche• long and lhfee ~or an.incb wide. Our Jeweler has fashioned 1t into a dramatic pendant. The l arge Blwaa make up beautifully M r1ngs also our own MlsalsslPf>I River bed is the source of .some very pretty colored pearla -all shades of pastels and even some brown and blacks. These differ from the Japanese variety In that they are natLKal. an accident of nature. The onN from Lake Blwa are • from its disability insurance pro e.ram. The decision strikes down a pollcy of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. which said GE and other employers must provide for s ick leave and pregnant "omen if they provide s uch benefits for othe r d1s- ab1hties. The opinion . written by Jus tice Wilham H . Rehnquist. reversed a ruling by the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in favor or 43 women employes or GE who work m plants at Richmond, Portsmouth and Salem, Va . Tyler. Tex .. Ft. Wayne and Tell City. Ind .. and Philadelphia, The women had flied a class. action suit on behalf of more than 100,000 female employesofGE. But S upt Michael Marcase s aid Monday he was pleased with the over- all test results. because 89.2 percent of the seruors passC<l 1t. The test , called "The ,\s sessmenl of l''unctional Literacy" was dcs1gnC<l by the school dis trict and given to 13.088 studenL'> in Philadelphia'::. 23 public high schools last October. fi'ro1tt Page A I "The plan, in effect is nothing more than an insurance package which covers some risks but ex eludes others." the high court said. " ... There is no risk from which men arc protected and women are not. Likewise, there is no risk from which women are protected and men are not." SUSPECT • • Chief J us lice Warren E. had been opened and partially drunk They reported that they found what was believed lo be the sus pec t 's bags packed 1n tht· bedroom. Pohcc said they were seeking murder warrants from the dis- trict attorney's orrice today. Burger and Justices Potter Stewart, Byron R. While and Lewis F. Powell Jr. joined in Rehnquist 's majority opinion. Justice Harry A . Blackmun con· curred in part. Justices William J . Brennan Jr .• Thurgood Marshall and John Paul Stevens dissented. The court's majority opinion said the GE plan, which 1s com- pany financed rather than in· s ured. "does not exclude anyone from benefit eligibility because of gender but merely removes one physical condition -pre· gnancy -from the list of com· pensable disabilities.'' 5 Terrorists Claim Kidnap T he court's decision could save GF. millions of dollars in benefits dating to 1971. Com panies with s imilar health insuran ce programs also had countless millions or dollars on Ute line. The court ruled that the GE employes failed to prove thal the lack of pregnancy benefits were "designed to errect an invidious discrimination against the mem- bc:!rs of one sex or the other." @ GiEM WISiE 17th''"'" W.UCllH "a• .....,..,.. ..... MEXICO CIT V' (AP) -Four men and a woman claiming to be members of the 23rd of Sep· lem ber Communist League ki~· napcd a Mexican industrialist Monday and demanded $500,000 ransom within 48 hours , federal police repor ted. The Police said Is aac Duck Amkie was kidnapcd in the ex- ecutive oHices of Missteen In· ternaclonal, a Mexican clothing factory. Witnesses told police the five armed terrorists entered the fac- tory about 10 a m . went upstairs to Duek 's fifth-noor office and or- dered him to leave with them. I ~ cultured. The fresh waler pearls from the M1ssls!:t1pp1 are not as abundant as the Blwas and are rougher in texture. . The Mobe rmoh·bay) pearl IB cultured and Is produced by placing an object. usually a hemisphere of mother-ol-peAr1' 1n the shell ol a treSh watet mussel where 11 Is coated with necre They are cul from tho shell and pegged for sethng - usually 1n earrings With the lnlinlte variety ot1 pearlro. natural and cultured · frosh and sail water~ there is. 11fways one that will make a lasting and memorable gift 1u11I right for someone spectal to YoU 11•1 \ .. Tuesdmy. Decem!Mr 7. 1076 DAILY PILOT A.S OCTD's $1 Million a Mile 'Useless' 81 KATHY CLANCY OI tM 0•11, l'tlMM.tlf The Orange County Transit '.J)btracl COCTO) may end up ..fpendlng $1 million a nuJe for a 1'ap1d lr~it corridor that would be uaeles11 tor th" n~xt 30 to 4() )'ears, Director Al Holllnden aaid M011dav. · Hollindcn, the m&yar of f'OUn· lain Valley. told fellow tran:sit • directors that while the Soutllem • Pa<'1fic Transportation Company ls preparing to abandon portioM * * * OCTD's Building Cost Up The Orange County Tran!>1I Distracts <OCTD1 new Carden Grove admin1strat1on bwldinR. on'..'c expected to c<>bl S:! m1ll1on, now has a S2.7 million pncctdg Directors Monday or<.len•d staff members to amend the cun · struction budget lo reflect the in crease. They wt'r e told the prit·e hike resulted from tughcr build· ing coslo; than expt>cled and ex pansion of the hu1lding OCTD Plannini.: Dirc.:ctor Tom Jenkins said tht• three-story IJui lding ~as 1n('rca:.cd from 40,000 to '14,()()() square rcl'l. and ('(>nstrurl ton ('USU. Jumped from tht• S.">ll pc1 square root e1>11mall'd earlier to Sltl Jll'r ::.quan• fool l11 da\ Tht> frd<>ral goYcrnmcnl \qll p<ty S2 I million of lht• total prirclag. J cnk '"" s.11d "'hllc· Gard<.>n <.: ro\ •' .... 111 pa) $400,000 and OCTO ''ii! ::.pt>rul St 10.000 The building '"to b<· l0t·ated in Uw Gard('n c; rtl\'l' C1v1l' Center al Garden Grn\<' • Boulc.,,ard and Eudic1 Strc·<·t OCTD oft1t·wh hope lo mOH' 1n b.\ Jul) l!>i8 \1,•;1 11.,., l11lt• d1rt·~·t11rs ap proved leai;in,:? add1t1nnal .;p;ic·t· for tht• dis t nl't 111 a clown town !);.inti.I Ana offiec building (~enNal Man ager Ed l;()r1t1 'i;Jld lhl' l'Xtra <!.150 !-.ljUal'l• fret u( sp;H:c will hou:1t' OCTO cmplnyr n•li!tions and m anaJ,!t•mc11t in formation dt•parl ml'nt.-; The Sl.12ti·a-month orfu:t• will ht• in the samt-1200 N Mam Sl location hou!>1ng othl'r OCTO ad min1i.trat1ve ofhres. OCTD Board C.:h;orman Ralph Cl<trk "'as not plt·a:.cd with tht· rC<Jlll'St for mJd1tm11al "l>al·l' Ill' said '' ht•n Loni / l·arlu·r -.ought p l' r m is ., 1 o n t o r 't 1> J n d l h <' ~mplovc· n•lat 1un... funrt 1on. he ~aid rt "11ultl C'o..,t 110 Jdd1uonal mmw\ Hut l.•Jrttl ... 11d the t·1Ctr;.i space .... ould ha\1• IJl'l'n n('(•<h'<I \\hl'thcr or not l'm(lhl\t' rc•l,1t11m., ..... 1::. t'IC pandl•d 1t • * OCTD Travel Rule Outlined Orani.:e Count} Traus1l 01stncl (OCTD 1 d1r1·<·tors dec1dt'd Mon dJ} that c1r,trn·t employes should !ull111., lht· '"mt· tn.av\•I eirpcn:.1: '1(1llt•\ th.11 d1rl·dori.do 1>11 t'l'tt11., "'ho 11-e<•ntly adopt t'l'I .1 polH' n·11uinn~ that their 0 1.\ II t I ,1 \ t•I I \ 111' ll "11 ''-be 81Jp1 l)Vt'(! b' ttw h1111rrl uµandcd thc1l pultn 111 .Jll oc-·1 n cmployes as .-1•1l In tht• l•J,t, (;l·neral ManaJ(er F.d Loril1 had the µm~er to ap pro\" .. mpl11\ I' It J\ l•I rt'flUC'SO. of 1t.s Orange County riibt-or- w11y, it 1s muklng JO.tcHO-'year commitments on other portiorus. That could mean. he explained later, that OCTD could wtnd up buylng part or the right-of·WllY for ruture rapid transit bul could not use it unW those commit- ments expire. Hollinden said the dilemma ls thul lf OCTD doesn't purchase the portions now being eba.11· doned, they probably will be lost C<w r apid tnns1t rorever. However, if the land 1:. purchas~ now. it may be uselE.'SS for many years to come. OCTD Plann lng Director Tom Jenkins said today the commtl· men ts Involve guarantees Southern Paclflc may be givlng t.o some industrial concerns to run freight. service during the »to-40·yeat life of ao industnal plant.. Jenkins said OCTD officials would m eet. with Southern Pacific s legal counsel lo learn 1f :.uch commitment:. are being made. Jle said Southern Pac1hc has proposed abandoning 2.0:l miles of its right-of way from Garfield A venue to the coast m Hunt· mgton Beach And 1t has proposed abandon· ing a ::.even·mile stretch from Santa Ana to Stanton . The fear is, Jenkins explam ed. that if the remainder of the Deily l"llol Sl1H "'°t• CHARLES EGLETT PRACTICES ON HARPSICHORD AT ORANGE COAST COLLEGE For Small Group of Muslclana, Fascination With 18th Century Instrument Revival Strikes Chord Shining HarpsichO~d Enchants StudenJ,s By EVE GUMPEL 01 t ... D•llV Piiot Stitt The l'risp. sparklin)( nole::. of a harpsichord fill the air The class 1s silent and attentive. 'Thal was a nice piece," s1~hs oru· :student when it 1s finished. The one-unit class meets al IJrange Coast College on Monday allcmoons from 2-5. It ts open to ad' :meed piano students. There 1:s on ea!>y <:amaraderie in lht• group, and an undisguised en- thusiasm for the course. Why would anyone take up the harvsi<'hnrd. an instrument that had 1t o; he} day in the 18th cen tury" .. , think 1t 's neat, · swd Helen Crabtree. who owns her own harpo;1chord and drives in every week from Long Beach· for the class. Linda Baker or Costa Mesa said she was hooked after listen· in~ to a record. "I just sat there and played lhe record over and over.·· she said Charles EJ?~ert. also of Costa !'rll':sa. saisJ he used Lo sneak 111 lo the practtcm~ room and pluy the hurpsichor d . Or . John Colyar, who teaches the class, fmnlly l'aught him al 1t and con- \'lnced him to takC' the course Switching from the pi ano to the h&rp:sic hord 1s s imilar lo ... w1tl'hm~ from power stet>nng to J car without 1t. Col} ar says But h~ recommend" the cla"s to piano majors .is u mt·uns to im· prove t heir sense or style. p:irtt<'ularly "'hen playing piece::. or1Jtinally composed for the harpsichord Th~ OCC harp~ichord is a rrl'f'l('h l>oublc It Wil~ bUJlt rrom a kit produced by a Connecticut firm. In shape it is st m1lar to a grand piano, but is much narrower Still, it nearly fills thc small room in which the class meets. Harpsichords unlike pianos are made for small rooms. however. They arc chamber in· ~truments a nd their sound doesn 'l carry in a large room The harpsichord doesn't have the dynamics of a piano. either The pianist plays loud or softer depending on how ha.rd he stn kes a key. but the harpsichordist has to play everything at the saml' volume On the othe r hand. thl! harpsichord ha:, u "sh1n1ni.:, sparkling quality." said Colyar, and a C'larily the piano lacks. Nevertheless. the hafPs1chord will always have a hlriitcd ap peal. he believes, because it 1:-. restricted to HaToque music "It's not the kind of music ~ou get lost in," observes Nat1ca Greer of Dalboa Island But that doesn't deter her "I love Baroque music and I love the harpsichord.·· she said She pl ans to ~el her own harpsichord some day · 1f i.hc can learn to tune il "It has l o be tuned ('\'Cry week," she explained "Thal'~ the main reason I don l have one.·· Wine Festival Orgy Blots Tow11r's Image PAW PAW. Mich. (AP) or- ficials have soured on Paw Paw·s four -day annual Wtnl' 1est1val, which they say has degenerated mlo a,. bacchanalian orgy that corrupts the village youth. "Drunks fall on peoples rront lawns" d uring lht:' festival . clai med village pr esident Charles Sm ith as the council vot· ed Monday lo withdraw support from next year 's 10th annual celebration. "A moral blot on Pa"' Paw," 1s how Police Chief George Fadel characterized the event. ounng wh.1ch local vintners hand out Pilot Logbook rree wine to all comers and lake them on tours of lht?tr winen es The council action bans tne leslival, held each September. from using village property, e mployes or money. Richard Burnham. president of the Paw Paw Grape and Wine Festi val 1\Ssoc1alion. s aid the move would spel I the f cs ti v a l's doom and would hurt the Jm·al wme tn· dustry. Burnham accused lhe council of "total overreaction·• and claimed the festival had "pro- moted the image of this com· munity as a grape and wine center • former Pacific Electnc Red Car llnc ls not given up, OCTD would • not be able to develop the str-etch for rapid transit. The d1str1ct has ab-Out $20 million in reserve Cunds which could be used for purchasing the right-or.way, Jenkins said, but federa l and slate funds probably would be sought tor the purchase instead. And while OCTO could seek condemnation uction against the railroad for the oortions not Bl.9 ltlil&on abandoned, Jenkins s&1d, such proceedln&s would oo lengthy nnd difficult. Instead or i,eeking condemna- tion ol any stretch<.~ not aban· doned by the railroad, Jcokins said, the district w<>Wd prefer lo seek a joint use of tbe land. That could Involve building an elevated transit line along the corridor. he said, or ptirhap:. building a corridor alo.ngside Southe rn PacHlc's railroad tracks. . Mobil Leading Irvine Co. Bid A S28U m illion cash orrer by the Mobil Oil Company is still the lead bid in the three·wa,y race for control or the Irvine Company. Tbe new bidding deadline is now noon Thursday for the other two contende rs -the Cadillac Fairview Corporation of Toronto, Canada and u consortium headed by Charles Allen and Alfred Taubman. · However, the greatest interest is now centering on an apparent fourth contender , whose identity is still a mystery. The new group is apparently making a last- mlnute move to e nter the already closed bidding battle. Comments made outside Judge James F . Judge's courtroom Monday mdicated that the new group is prepared to top any ex- isting orrer to buy the Irvine Company. The James Irvine Foundation or court could reopen bidding which was closed to new contenders Nov. 24 by foundation trustees. Foundation attorney Howard Privett huddled w1lh the uniden- l1f1ed bidders and then left the <.'Ourthouse with no comment Prior to the latest bid by the Mobil Oil Company, the Cadillac Fairview Corporation submitted a new bid of $286.2 million Mon- day. The orfcr was $2.2 million higher than the Canadian firm '!> earlier offer but il apparently fai led lo impress foundation trustees who have made it clear that they prefer all cash bids. The Cadillac Fairview offer calls for the payment or $266.2 million in cash and the balance in ten.year notes. Still in the running but without an orcer lo show Monday is a con- sortium headed by Wall Street rinancier Charles Allen and Detroit developer Alfred Taub- man. The Allen Taubman combine's latest bid was $292.5 million in a mix or cash and notes. Foundation trustees regard it as inferior to the Mobil offer. But Joan Irvine Smith considers it to be the best offer submitted at this point of the negoti aUons. The current bidding battle de· velope d when Mrs . Smith. largest individual stock holder, took lega l action to halt the (pun· dalion 's sale of its 5<1 .5 percent. controlling interest in the Irvine Company to Mobil. She said the full selling price of $200 million or $24 a share would have been unfair to minority s tockholders. The g r and- Kissinger Leaves WASHINGTON CAP) -Henry Kissinger is orr today on his last d ipl o m atic ''hurrah" as secret ary of state, carrying a message of support for the NATO alliance to Brussels for President-elect Carter. daughter or the lrvme Company founder owns 21.4 percent of the company stock. Mobil's latest offer of $28\ .9 million works out ut a per share offer of $33.0S. Bing Opens To Cheers Of. Friends By STANLEY JOHNSON NEW YORK (AP) -Btn~ Crosby ope ns o n Broadway tonight for the first time in 45 years. one day after a cheenng audience refused lo let him off the stage where the New York Philharmonic performs. Crosby. 72. did 40 minutes of encores Monday night for an au- dience of 2,500 who paid up to $250 a ticket at A very Fisher llaJI to benefit Fordham Prep, a Roman Catholic boys' school. "It was a great evening wasn't 1l," said Tricia Nixon Cox. daughter of the former president. "the best show I've ever seen." Dressed in chiffon shaded from pink to oran~e. she was there with her father's friend, Charles "Bebe" Reboio. lier sister, Juli<• Nixon Eisenhower , was on the guest list a long with Nixon in timate Robert Abplanalp. Crosby. whose voice has lowered a major third with the years, looked half h1s age and confessed to the<rowd, "To show how much I care, I wore my hair.'' Cros by is bald. Mayor Abraham 0. Beame gave a certificate or appredation to the man he called "the superstar of show business'" for the "enjoyment he has brought to three generations or New Yorkers." Crosby, who opens a two-week run at a commercial Broadway theater toni~ht, appeared as im- pressed by singing in Avery F1::.- her Hall as the audience was hav- ing him there. "It's fantastic," he said, "for a crooner to appear in this hall. What acoustics! What a thrill to appear in ill" The hall has just undergone a $6-millfon rebuilding lo correct its formerly horrible sound qualities. When Crosby and his family, who appeared with s inger Rosemary Clooney and British comedian Ri chard Bennett. finally got offstage, they crcssed the Lincoln Center Plaza to the Promenade of the New York State Theatre for a gala dinner. Bing was wrapped in a black Persian lamb coal with a black mink collar. • 41 Teachers Join ·Daily Pilot Class f'ortv ont:' t•lcmcntary :incl scconrlary t c al·hers rrom 15 Orang.-Coast. schools were cx· pt>Cled lo take pnrl in thr Oally Pilot newspapt>r in the rlasi.room Crow and catny ~tephany Newsman Views 'Mad World' 1 t~aeher's workshop today m , COfita Mesa. The workshop is intended t.o , fomiharize area teachers with the ~eekly c urrent events I !1lmstnp program provided by the Daily Pilot to 30 area schools, I and to share melbods of using the • newspaper as a teaching tool. J Ms. Margaret McGahan, school 1 ser vices director for Visual I Education Con~u ltant !i or I Madison, Wis. will lead tbe I workshop. I The VEC proara m is designed I t.o sUmulate student. interest in 1 current a/lairs. : Teachers participating in the 1 South Co u t. Plain Hotel workshop -re· 1 From Edison High . Mel : fttckman and Velma Kraus nick. • From Jo'ountaln Valley High. ; l)cn Elle r man and Wa rren Pendleton. : From Dana Hiiis H1ah: Genet J Ch avez, Mark and Mayra f Nieuwulondt, Larry McBride 111nd 8111 Prestrldgt'. From El Toro Hlgh: Cynthia rrom Estancia High: Dw1ght. F.vans •. J&ne Whale, Re m Cham· pion and Susan Kent. From Irvine High: Mildred Miller and Marlene Portevent. From Mate r Oei Hip: Sister Mary Raphael and Miss'RO&eann KosuJandlch. · Fl'om Mission Viejo High: Pete Husk, Jean E. Topley and Keith Nelson. 1-'rom Newport Harbor High: Ken Bauermeister. From Burke Elementary School: Florine Ellerman. f'rom Gisler Middle School· Bob Lent, Jan Colllna and .lktty Risner. .. From Harbour View tJemen· Ury School, CHuntll'!«.ton Beach)~ Ka~y WoOdaand Melin. d• f'tolt. . From Lin coin 'Middle Sc hoot: Trudy M arcoa, Hcnrtettn Olander. Ella Mae MeniJI aoct Susie Allenbaugh. From Nig\l,el ntlb Juntor· High: Joyce Hassing. f.'rom Sowers Middle School: Leo Garcia, Maqile Suski, Patti Hughes, Jeanne MuJUaian. Inter& Chen and Patty Oates. From Chorles w: TrWlnkle Elementary: Ken McMUllan. • By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01t ... 0.~ Piiot Stiff A port.ion or my Thursday afternoon was spent crouched behind a 1953 Cadillac on Ocean Avenue in Seal Beach, beside baldheaded Bob Sanders of the Long Beach Indepen- dent Press-Telegram. We wel'e waiting for the SWAT team t6 either flu.sh out a barricaded fugitive oferasijlim and all his real or imagined problems .. They talked him out. WE ·WE&E two media middlemen wtth an atm y of lawmen to the front of u~ and an arnay of ~pectat.ors to \.be rear of us. -• Neither ol us presented our best pro· rile to the cr<lvd wiiting lo' see the bank . robbeey suspect either d.r•gged away or vi•Hi. blown away and you can bet \here were qutet cl'leertna sec- llondor~ach way. . I A few of the younger people-maybe they 11t1tl believe in R.Obin Hood-hoped the bank bandll suspect had escaped and th& police had nobody at all barricaded lnslde that 1arage. • • • "DJa\tin leaky tra.nsmlssl~I " I snarled to Sanders, re- orran1ln1 my aching, oil·t plotcncd knees. "Where the hell L• my photographtt?'' snapped San- ders. ''Your attention please ... all you people on Ocean Aven~e •.. Move back. Move back to Slitth Street .•. ," the Police bullhorn bawled. I\ SWAT team sniper with scope-mounted rifle was re- ady on a rooftop. As I hiked back to a pay phone to call the office. there was a little girl tugging at her mother. "Mommy, mommy.can't we go watch!" she begged. Still another citizen stood on her lawn, arms folded, sur· veying the tense scene a few blocks away with obvious dis· approval. Sbe didn't like the disruption or downtown Seal Beach life, especially since it was \be second one In a week. following a dive-bombing exhibition by a lovesick boy in a stolen plane. "WELL. 'THEY' are sure spending our tax dollars lb1s week and 'they' were doing preUy well befcfre without try- ing hard," sbe snapped. Friday I would be out on another tense confrontation wUh a desperalunad holding bis mother hostage aft.er fir· lnl nll\e shots out of a Westminster hou e. . One wonders if the world has gone mad, especially counting the number of such lncident.s 1n the news across the country in recent times, especially just this past week. SOCIETY TODAY is a little frightening. One doubts, wtth lt.s complelClt1 and the complexities of human beings who are shaped IUld molded by geneUes and the world about them, that an•wera or solutions wtll ever come. • sanders or the 1. P·T and I had crouched behind the 1953 Cadillac for a long Ume Thursday beforo l hustled back to t.bc P•Y phone to call my office and report the status or the confrontation. . "Keep your story short," an editor told me. "Bear In rn'11d these thlngs are gettina fairly common." I A4 DAIL y PILOT Tuesday. December 7. 1976 ·.co!~:tng fu.) War Alert Ordered ·~ ,·_ ----~ Is rael P rep a ri ng t,o Invade Lebarwn? Mexicans Give Up New Lau with T om ,'!l"phine ~ RE ME MBERING: J•\mny how today I got thinking about my old Atwater Kent radio. They don't make them anymore. As a mcil- ter of fact, they d1dn 'l make them any more when 1 bought mme. As a youngster. I was aJways fascinated by gadgets operated by electricity. I had a workdesk in my room covered with wires. lights, switches and plugs. I did my share to keep the fuse 111 dustry in business. No doubt that was why I fell in Jove with the old Atwater Kent radio when I found 1t at a salvage s tore that day in downtown Lagwia. IL came in a case that must have weighed 60 pounds. It had knobs and switches all over the front. There was a place to plug in earphones. A loudspeaker as large as a platter sat atop the set. C learl y, this was a marvelous machine. THEY SOLD IT to me for 50 cents and I lugged it horn<'. The next miracle was that I ~ot the thing workmg. l would plug in the earphones. twist the knobs and listen delightedly, day and night. Some time later, my very best buddy was havin~ a birth- day and I wanted to do something really nice for him. So, l'm sure to the utter delight of my parents, 1 lugged the old Atwater Kent down to Morris Connally's house and gave him my SO-cent much used radio. That day was a warm and bright December Sunday, :nuch like today as a matter of fact. Morris was delighted with the gift. We took the old battered set to his room and plugged it in. Morris put on the earphones, twisted dials and smiled. PRE'JTY SOON Morris' big brother Boyce came in. He want- ed l<> try the radio too Boyce put on the earphones and twisted the dials. Then he stopped. Ile pressed the phones to his cars. He wasn't smiling. "My God,·• he said. "The Japanese have jus t bombed Pearl Harbor. "This ~uy is say- ing Pearl Harbor IS in names.'' We asked Boyce what was Pearl Harbor, anyway'? "That's in Hawrui . you dum- mies." he replied. still pressing the earphones. "That's where our Pacific Fleet 1s anchored. We must be tn the war now." So that was Dec 7, 1941 And we were plun.:ed mto World War II on that bright and s unny December da) Only later did we learn that the USS Arizona sank in rtamin~ wreckage in Pearl Harbor that day. And 1,107 members of lhc 1.500-man crew died aboard her. TWO LAGUNA BEA CH brothers, Makolm and Gordon Shive, died on the Amona. So did Ftlomeno Santos of Halboa, Arthur C. Manlove of Orange, Lc1.1. IS P. Sharon or Santa Ana and two oth••r brothers from this rt•i:ion, Oonald and Joseph Lakin Gordon Shiv~ w~ a Manne rind Malcc>lm was <1 Novy r01d1oman third cla!>s The Navy Department allowed them to be f\tnlloned together aboard thf' l 'SS Arizona. It wil.S a short war for them Gordon was 20. Malcolm WJS 19. And all or thul "'ru. 35 years ago today I ~ues' thtit 's why I 1tot thlnk· mg <1houl my old Atw11kr K •nl radio. BEIRUT, Lebanon tAP) - Palestinian le;aders ordered thCJr guerrillas on a mwmum war wert along the Lebanese-Israeli border today, charging that Israeli forces were preparing to invade southern Lebanon by land and sea. A spokesman for the Palesti- nian high command in Beirut said joint forces of guerrillas and leftist Lebanese Moslems were deployed at strategic positions BillylA•n Plain s. Ga .• will go "straight to hell" Wlthout him as mayor, says Billy Carter, brother of tbe President-elect. Carter was defeated 90-71 in his second bid for lhe top office in his hometown. ·'The people of Plains probably think they've got enough Carters winning elections," bis brother s aid. along a 30-mile stretch ol the Lebanese coast north or the lsraelJ frontier. GUl!:RBILLAS AND Chris· tians reported lbelr forces locked in artillery duels just north ol the border for the second day. Palestinian spokesmen charged that Israeli artillery was sup- porting the Christians. The fighting forced United Na· Uons truce observers to abandon some border observation out· ~ts. A sec rlty spokesman in Beirut 1 ld at least ooe villager was kil d and seven were wounded. A Palestinian state· ment cla med that "many clvihans di under the rubbleol their demo · ed homes." THERE AS NO immediate. comment from Israel on the Palestinian claims. Israel bas said repeatedly that it would not permit the guerrillas to return to the bases in southern Lebanon from which they raided northern Israel before the Lebanese civil war. But Christian forces with Israeli support have driven the Pa1estinians from most of their bases in the frontier region, and they have not been able to re· cover them. Israel also has said it would not countenance an advance by Syrian peacekeeping troops into southernmost Lebanon to end the shooting between the Christians and Pa1esUnians. The Palestinian command also was working to avert a Syrian at- tack on Yaslr Arafat's Al Fatah guerrillas in northern· Lebanon who clashed Monday in Tripoli with guerrillas of the pro-Syrian Saiqa organization. A spokesman s aid "stringent disciplinary measures•' were being taken. THE SPOKESMAN SAID 27 persons were killed and 20 Bolllh Discovered In Carter's Mail WASHINGTON <A Pl -Packages delivered to President-elect Carter's transition headquarters here are routinely screened in an X· ray machine . The safeguard process paid off Monday wheD it tumed up a bomb. The Distract of Columbia police bomb squad removed the package from the building and successful- ly defused the bomb. "It appeared to be a capable explosive device," said Sgt. Charles Collins. police depart· ment spokesman. The bomb was contained m a package found in the mail room of the fifth.floor of· fices in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare North Building being used by the Carter transition team. Soviet s S~t Bla•t U PPSALA, Sweden CAP) The Soviet Union set off a large underground nuclear explosion today in the Semipa1atinsk area of Soviet Asia, the Uppsala Seismological Institution re- ported. A spokesman declined lo estimate the strength or the nuclear device but iiaid the blast (at 8.57 p m . PST Monday) was nearly as large as the one re- cordt'<i Nov. 23. That explosion was described as "one of the ma- JOr ones but not the biggest.'' Dq~•do1t Dna•~d WASHINGTON CAP) -Presi- tln1t Ford says 1t is "Just not true" I hat he has been depressed :ind reclu!!lve since lORin~ the (_1_N_SH_O_R_r _J election last month, and in fact he intends to be active in Republican politics. Ford's denial of published re· ports of his depressed mood was relayed to reporters by his press secretary, Ron Nessen, after the President met with members of the Repu blican national ex· ecutlve committee at the White House Monday. Mb .. ot1a'11 Mb .. 11g SALISBURY, Rhodesja CAP > A Roman Catholic missionary from Switzerland was reported missing and feared murdered or kidnaped today following the weekend killing of three other Catholic missionaries by a black gunman. Father George Oreger, 45, was last seen four days ago outside a store in the Nyajena triba1 re- serve, a known hiding place for black guerrillas about 190 miles south of Salisbury. the Rhodesian capital. Police were searching the thickly-wooded area .• Rain Drenches the East ~ Travel Advisories Greet Ohio Driven T""Jlft"a• ur~• ...... ...... "'· '""""""'0119 l4 " Am~nllo 11 I\ An<lw>•-3' " " AllMt• ,. ,. .n f1.a11::,.n U.-ltt II ., 81"""f(" 1 ' .1J ........ 0 u &o\IO'I 31 ,, .01 a.-nw lli. ,. ., 8'/ffAIO ~ ll .tl Ol•t-ll I .111 C.nc"•"811 0 'U ,,, ~v•I-" 1D .41 o-n-~ )\ DnMoi~\ 11 .. °'"°'' ~ ,. .n O<ICutl\ " _,. .ot GttM&.t., ,, • .Ol ....,....luCy *' ,., Hou\ton .. lll t 00 ll'd..,..,.Ol)CIJ 4] n .11 K..,_Clty JS 1 lA\V-\ "° ,. LlnteA0<ll ., ,. ... Ml""'I II n Mllw""'" ,, °' o.-,,....oe1_., ........... -...... 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SM~ eno Sell .. ,,..,clino Yali.'fl. IM'*Yi ~••bite_, __ ,,._ IH<ll ... ., ·-~ .. ,...,. ~­°' ,_ .. tf the MN by 9""1i. SH ---.... MY' llMMllO .. _. 10, ...... l\ltllll ..... '°· Ill .... -telM, lllfll\t -Id nwl09 ft'IWl'I " .. 61, wttll ...... "-10 .. H. -111 IM ..... ,,&, 111 ............ ,..,. ..-11aw oe.-. 111 IM ao. -..... " "' ...... -... .._. ,.._ •1 N4ldl ll!Ce 1M * eftd *°II ,..,.. ... wounded In the outbreak of violence at lbe Nabar al·Bared refugee camp on the outskirts or Tripoli, Lebanon's second lar1e1t city .and a Moslem stronghold. It w.s the biggest outbreak of fighting since the Syrian army s topped the Lebanese civU war last month. The camp was. ringed by Syrian tooops and tanks of the Arab League peacekeeping army, and the Palestinian spokesman said, "We are in con· tact with the peacekeepers' com- mand to bead off a Syrian attack· onthebeaie1edcamp." The pro-.Syrian and anti-Syrian guerrillu clubed following the funeral of an Al Fatah officer shot by Saiqa gunmen. A security spokesman said Saiqa men tried to take their headquarters in the refugee camp which Al Falah OC· . cupied several months ago. ......... o .. Jim Wright (D·Texas). who won an upset 148-147 victory to become House majority leader. joins new House speaker Thomas P. O'Neill CD-Mass.) in pledges to get the jobless back to work and clean up the House's scan- dal-tarnished image. Mistrial Declared On Mandel Charge BALTIMORE (AP) -A mistrial was declared today in the political corruption trial or Maryland Gov. Marvin Mandel and four CO· defendants on the ground,., of publicity interfering with the se· questered jury. U.S. District Judge John H. Pratt said be granted the defense motion reluctantly but was con- vinced that events following the disclosure Jut Friday ol two a]. leged juror fix attempts had made it virtually impossible for Mandel and the others to get a fair trial. "The government will natural- ly seek a prompt retrial or the case," Pratt said. PRATT SAID THAT even though the ~ jurors and alternates • were locked up before the two alleged jury tamper· ing attempts w e r e dis· closed, these procedures w e r e a p • MAHOIL parently inadequate. Chief prosecutor Barnet D. Skolnik argued that a mistrial would play Into the hands of un- identified "sharks" he insisted had been trying to abort the trial of Mandel and codefendants W. Da1e Hess, Ernest N. Cory Jr. and brothers William A. and HarryW. Rodgers Ill. · He quoted Charles Neiswender as saying in an affidavit: "I was hired by an individual to throw a snag into the Mandel tria1 and to develop a story that the fix was in." A Baltimore Furniture salesman, Waller Weiker.;, was charged with jury tampering. MANDEL AND THE others are accused of participating in a scheme through which he re- ceived gifts and business in- terests in return for alleged ef· 1 forts to get the 1972 General As· sembly to legislate benefits for Marlboro Race Track, which the others secretly purchased Dec. 31.1971. Prosecutors asked Pratt to re- quest that the jurors not discuss ~ase with anyone because of the l'bssibilily of another trial. MANDEL H AD NO im- mediate comment but said he mighthaveone later. "No one ever wants to see a mistrial, but the judll!e was absolutely correct in his judg- ment," said Arnold Weiner. CULJACAN. Mexico CAP> Peasant Invaders are wllbdr• lng from private farms in Sl.nalo stale they occupied last week, and their leaders sa.y farm wof\ could resume today. The leaders of the peasants de-- mandlng land agreed to suspend the occupation of about 100,000 acres after the state government warned that the squatters would be removed "one way or another." THE WI THDRAWAL agr~ ment, announced by the office ol Gov. Alfonso G. Calderon after he, Atty. Gen. Armado Estrada and other officials met with the leaders of the squatters, said the peasants would be of! the private property by Wednesday. The peasants' leaders agreed to suspend the demonstration un. ti! Federal District Judge Jose Galvan Rojas rules oo a lan- downers' petition asking that the; mvasion be declared illega1. Tht judge is expected to rule on the petition Wednesday. The occupation by th. peasants, estimated to number between 3,200 and 9,000, nearly · paraJyzed farm work in the rich vegetable and grain-producing• valleys of Carrizo, Fuerte and Gusave, north or Culiacan, the state capital. The squatters established some 80 shanty camps in the area. OWNERS SAID THEY were in danger of losing crops because the peasants cut off water in some irrigation canals. No arrests or violence was r~. port~. . . Thousands of landless Mex- icans began occupying large ranches in northern Mexico last month. encouraged by slate· ments Crom the outgoing ad- minislr'alion of President Luis Echeverria that the 250-acre con· stitutional limit on private farms was being violated by land· holding Cami hes. JUST BEFORE TIIE end of his term Dec . 1, Echeverria ex· propriated nearly a quarter of a million acres of prime farm and grazing land in Sonora s tate, north or Sinaloa, and turned it over to 8,000 landless peasants. The landowners argue that large farms m·ade up of in- dividual holdings of various members of a family are lega1, but the peasants' leaders contend that this is an evasion or the land reform laws. Kitchen Help for the Holidays Look to t he food pages of the Daily Pilot for timely tips on menu planning, especially during the holidays. Food E ditor Barbara Gius orrers a host of ideas and recipes to help you add sparkle to yoar holiday menus for family or friends. Along with guidance to the best food values ·of the season, you'll find holiday bargains among the advertisements placed by the Orange Coast's leading grocery markets. For extra kitchen help during the holidays, tum to the food pages in the People section of the Wednesday DAILY PILOT 642~4321 • Oil Terminal Supported Officer Calls Pollution Charge 'Pure Bilge' APWl,._to TAKES OATH -Rose Ann Vui ch of Dinuba and California 's first woman ~enator is sworn to office as the California Legislature t·onvencd Monday at Sacramento. Tax Relief Issue Opens Legislature SACRAMENTO CA P) -The Californie Legislature 's 1977 session is just one day old, and Democrats -who hold their big- gest maJoritv in this century - are alreadv sniping at their Democratic governor. ThP deplctf'd Republican caucus, which now holds only 37 of the leg1slatun"s 120 seats, had no need durmg Monday's open- ing session to attack I)emocratic Gov. Edmund Rrown J r. because Oemocrats were doing plenty of it. A SSE MBLYMAN Dan Boatwright CO -Concordi, chairman of the Ways and Means Committee and author of a major property lax r elief bill, told re- porters a rival proposal ad- vanced by Brown's finance direc-tor was .. an ms ult" and pro- bably worse than no bill at aJI. Two Senate Democrats, Alfred Alquist (0 -San Jose). und Arlen Gregorio CO-San Mateo J. charged that Rrown was warned two years ago that the state men- tal hospital system was a "poten- tial time bomb," but that Brown blocked efforts to resolve the problem. But property tax relief was the number one issue of the first day of the nef.' session. Nearly half of the three dozen bills introduced the first day dealt directly or in- d1roctly with property tax relief. THEY INCLUDED some ex- treme solutions such as total abolition of property taxes on owner-occupied homes with a thift of $1 billion a year in taxes rom local government to the state Brown. in an impromptu news f onference. said he wanted to avoid "a shell game" that simply stufts the tax burden from one croup of taxpil~l'rs lo another. ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -A top U.S. Coast Guard officer baa discounted as ''pure bilge" allegat1•1rt~ that a proposed oil terminal in the Port of I .onJ.: Beach would add as much air pollution to Southl'rn California as 6 million new cars. Rear Adm. Robert I. Price, commander of the 11th Coast Guard District, made the remark Mtin- day at a public hearing on the possible en'11ronmcn- tal impact of the Standard Oil Co. of Ohio fac1hty The cost of the terminal is estimated at $500 million STATE AIR Resources Board chairman Tom Quinn has claimed lbat the terminal l'Ould · ·un· dermine many years and billions of dollars of ef· forts to abate air pollution in our state."· Quinn has supported that cnt1c1sm of the pro- ject by pointing to one forecast which theuriic!'t that under the worst po,ssiblc conditions -and if giant oil tankers from Alaska purge their cargo tanks 1n port -resulting air pollution could roughly equal that emitted by 6 million automobiles. PRICE SUPPORTED Standard Oil'::, clu1m that possible pollution from purgmg in purl 1s not a reaJ issue. Price said it would be possible for ::,hips to purge their cargo tanks in part. but added. "I du not see any r eason why they would do so ·' Price also said the Coast Guard would be t'm powered to prevent the purging of c11rgo tanks on grounds that it would create an unsafe cond1l1on LATER MONDAY from SaC'ramcnto, Quinn said he has indications that at least one ship purgc:d its tanks while at an existing terminal in the Port of Long Beach during mid-October. He said that a British Petroleum Co. Ltd. ship captain has told state offidals that it 1s "normal" for ships to purge their tanks within hour::, of leav ing port -a practice which Quinn says contributes to Southern California air pollution. THE PORT OF WNG BEACH terminal. which MirwrQuake Shakes Baja, Arizona ~4i~2a SAN DIEGO CA Pl -An earth· quake centered in the sea near Baja California awoke some rest· dents of Arizona and Southern California early today. Seismologists at CaJtech said the temblor measured 5.0 on the Richter scale and was centered in the Gulf of Califorrua. SO miles south of Yuma, Ariz. THE RICHTER scale is a measurement of ground move- ment. A 5.0 reading is considered a minor quake. The only damage reported was a cracked window at Wellton, Ariz., 14 miles east of Yuma. POLICE IN YUMA said they had r eceived about two dozen phone calls from persons who felt the tremor, although there were no damage reports. In San Diego, residents were awakened and called the police and sheriff's department. but a police spokesman said, "All they wanted to know was if there had been a quake. There wasn't any damage as far as we know." A sheriff's spokesman also said there were no reports of damage A San Diego fire department spokesman said the tremor was felt "ver y we ll" in the depart ment's communications center. about 150 feet underground But there was no damage. ·Swpect Releases :Hostage, Gives Up LOS ANGELES <AP> -A school custodian whose rather died of • lung cancer held a toy gun to a hostage's head for 2"'1 hours atop one • of the world's tallest buildings -then surrendered after a radio sta· • 1100 broadcast his protest aiainst sm9king. Dolphin Lair. 21 , was booked for investigation of kidnaping and held on SS.000 ba1 I after the incident Monday that caused a rush-hour traffic jam m downtown Los Angeles, police said. . St:.ind<.1rd Oal ~a):, wouJd help in the d1stnbution of surplus oal on the West Coast to the Midwest. 1s be· m~ supported by the Ford Administration and many lt'g1sl:.itors a~ hemg 1n the national Interest. Stait-officials say that if a California pipeltne to the nudwest i!. required, the best approach would be tu build ~n offs.bore terminal near Guadalupe Dunes on the Santa Barbara County coast, inslead of at Long Beach. HOWEVER, PRICE testified against an off· shore terminal. "(regard it (an offshore site) as less safe than thl' proposed Long Beach terminal," said Price. "It 1s my opinion that there Wlll be stronger supervision of the operation, less potential for conflict with other traffic. and s:reater ability to confine any spillage 111 the hxed berth within the port complex than rn an offshore location.·· . Patrollllan Kills Donkey in Dark LEMOORE !APl -California Highway Patrolman Glenn Phillips went looking for a stray dunkt-y and found 1t the hard way. Officers had been ait'rted Monday to watch for a donkey loo:,c 1n the Lemoore 11rea. THE BLACK AN1~1AL loomed up in front of Phillips in the darkness and his patrol car hit and killed It. "All of a sudden. there il was right in front of me and there was no way l could avoid it," the patrolman said. Hundreds or spectators watched from the streets as police helicopters hovered near the roof of the 62-story United California Bank Building, where l..alr held building engineer Martin Hickey near roof's edge. threatening murder or suicide. .. ::: .. ·::; .. . ~ St....._t Pa,,.r Rlglat• llplteld SAN FRANCISCO <AP) --Public school officials cannot re- quire submission of an underground student newspaper for their ap- proval prior to distribution or sale on school grounds, the California Supreme Court ruled Monday. St l by Justice Raymond L. 8 e Sullivan reversed a lower ( J The unanimous decision court ruling denying an in· I junction and damages, held I state law does not authorize such prior restraint and sent the matter I back for further proceedings in line with the high court's views. 1 Pauy Hearst Dew ht Co•rt I I I I I LOS ANGELES CAP) -Court officials say Patricia Hearst will travel here under private guard Thursday for her first court ap- pearance since she was released on bail. She will appear before Superior Court Judge William Ritzi in connection with her trial on kidnaping, bank robbery and assault charges scheduled Jan. 10. Brotmt Baclu f'bed Seainice• LOS ANGELES CAP) -Gov. Edmund G:Brown has defended the state's new specific sentencing legislation to doubtful law en- forcement officials. saying that fixed sentences make criminal justice faste r and more certain. . "It's really a philosophical matter. I think punishment ought to be swift, certain and definite," Brown told the officials at their re- gular monthly m,eeling Monday. Site Face• Rap h• A••alllt U VENTURA CAP> -Sentencing has been set for Jan. 5 for a psychiatric technician who pleaded no contest to beating and chok- ing a mentally retarded patient at Camarillo State Hospital. Eva Hernandez pleaded no contest Monday to misdemeanor as- ault charges before Superior Court Judge Adrian Adams. •. ••• 11• ........ . CANADIAN WHISKY A BLEND ()¥ (.ANAOA'S FINEST WHISllllS o STILlEO. ACi[D. llLcNOEO ANO 801TLCO UNOO I•! Slll'fllVISION· OF THE CANAOIAN GO\l(AN!o4flll •Mll()llT[O 81 SfAGllAM OIS TILLER!> COMAANY,NY 11¥ IBIS WHISl'.Y IS SIX YF.ARS OLD BLENOfO ANO 801TlEO IN CANADA IY JOSEPH E SEAGRAM (. SONS l,.IMIT£: IW>lll"OO o-.11AAIO CANAD-' OISl•lUAS 'lllCE iM. 8b8 PROOF Tuesday. December 7 1976 01\IL y PILOT AS • AP WlrepllOlo Reporter William Farr won his five-year battle to pro· t ect news sources Monday when a California appeals court in Los Angeles ordered the Manson trial judge to drop his contempt prosecu- tion of Farr. Couple File Suit In 'Color' Issu e LOS ANGELES (AP! J\ black man and his white wife have filed a $3.1 million suit against the city of Wtutt1er, a number of city officials. and Los Angeles County. claiming the couple was driven out of Wh1tt1er because of their color. The suit was filed by George and Barbara Fisher, who operate a gardening service. Christmas Tree Lot 'Stripped' ONTARIO (AP ) Somebody took all the Christmas trees. A 15-acre lot with some 2,500 small pine trees was sold by a nursery company earlier this year tu a <:onstruction firm - which kept the t recs growing so Boy Scouts could sl'll them and raise money for a campground. BUT OVER the weekend swarms of pooplc chopped down tre<>s and hauled them off. "Starting I ast Friday night people just started commg to the lot and cutting down the trees," said Bob Demayo of Armstrong Nurseries Co. "MAYBE THEY thought the trees were just up for grabs. Maybe lhl'y didn't care. But some came in trucks and cut six or seven -and now there's prac- tically nothing left " He said the Presley Construc- tion Co., a home development firm. "held ore cleanng the land so the trees would still be there - for sale for Christmw;." THE SCOUTS <:ou ld have made $6,000 to $8.000 from the trees. Demayo said. The axing hadn 't tx·en reparted to police, said Demayo, "But maybe if you print this In the paper some of the people who took the trees will reel gµHty enough to donate a sum equal to the price. _ . "It's nice to think so, anyhow -for Christmas." The Gift Classic container, with a bottle of V.O. inside, .. I . .,1 16 ' D .\11~\J PILOT EIJITORIAL P 1\GE Planning Challenge 1\n~1tw1m ullorw.·l l'lo)d F'arano wall huve a big JOl.J 011 his hands when he steps into the Orange County Pl:mning ('omm1ss1on 1JO~t now held by Shirley Grin dlc lie will rcph.1cc the most outspoken. most con- trovers1:.il amt h) f:tr the most diligent of the five· nwmhl·r tounty 1.null'I F;.1rano. a lll·Yl'W' member of the Anaheim Plan- 111ng Comm1:-.s1on. wus appmnted by Supervisor Ralph Clark last \\-eek after Mrs Grindle resigned. She cited finClnt·ial 'l'<1sor1:; anti <'rilidzed pressure put upon l'kl'll'd off1<·1<1ls m:.iking Ian<! use decisions because of c:,impaign don atrons Mrs <:riudlP ha.s plt'<.Jgcd to help acquaint Farano \\tth c.·ou11t~· pl~111ning issues and he would be wise to hc<.'d her ad\. it•t• Farano .. m Anaheim resident 14 years. already has hud ;.1111plt• opportunity to witness how explosive mid poorly l'Ontrollcd growth affected his o":n com munity. partH:ularly the flood plain sprawl in the San ta Ana C<.tn) on And he already has spoken against growth f4'or g rowth's sake and in favor of growth planned to produce a good laving environment. There c:ertaanly ts room for that kind of thinking on lht• county c:umm.1sswn. which loo often has been little mun• th.111 .1 mhl>N stamp for devdopcrs' plan· nmg Mexico's Future When Jose Lop('/. Portillo accepted th(• red, while .1.nd g1·ccn sash of Me.-uco s presidency last week, he <tS:-.umed a hC'uv y burden 1 lis pn:dN·t'ssor turned over a country battered ht!> socaul progrum.s, engaged in heavy deficit Sf)end ing. Critic':. !:>:JY that he tried to push Mexico too rapidly and th~y pomt to the results. The peso. wtuch has been pegged al 121h to the U.S. dollar for 22 years, was allowed to float on Sept 1 and again on OC'l. 26. It dropped sharply rn value and is still bobbing about on a sea of uncertainty and rumor, causing hardship on both sides of the border. President Echeverria added to the instability when he expropriated large amounts of farm land during his final days in office and turned it over to peasants. President Lopez Portillo vowed in his inaugural address Lt> bring austerity to Mexico as a way of lire. He indi<'aled he will curtail government spending, im- prove exports and assist troubled businesses. particularly those that create jobs. The new president said his government" ill foster poltcies that lead to an improved society. The focus. he scud. will be on meeting the basic needs of the larges t sector of the population. striving for "at leas t mmimal levels of well being in food. health and education." . He indicated the re Wlll be particular emphasis on !>t1mulatmg the agricuJtural industry, mining and ~teel and production of electricity. Given the raw materiaJs 1t possesses. Mexico should be able lo return Lo a stable and growing economy. And Mexico's economic and social stability is of pnmc importance m United Stales foreign policy dealings, with special significance for her close neighbors here in Southern California. , · bv 1nfl<1l1on ;111d 1·urrency devaluation, dissent over land 1·xproprwt ion, industrial s lowdown, unemploy· ' ment µu:-.hini.: 50 pl·rccnt and raging rumors. Formt·r Pn:~u.Jent Lub Echeverria, to accomplish A political science professor. novelist and fornH?r minister of finance, Lopez Portillo is a man of many gifts and he will need every bit of that talent for the task al hand. We wish him well with his important work · 'Let '.c; see, now. Oil ... aJJ. all! fvlore .. Nm.vs Items ·We Can .... , Anticipate "[ __ A_R_T_H_O_P_P_E __ ] /11 order to ·'JXlr1· busi1 rt'adt•rs the lrnuble of glancing nt tlw papers for thi· rlt'.rt .,1·vt>ruL mul'llhs. here are WllHI tlw ITlllrt' ~1!11$1llt(l1UU lit•ud/.m(' .\"tnm·s 111111 h<JtJr to sa.11 Washington, Dl·c. 12 lhghlv infor med sourn•s l>:.trd tod:.iv that .hmmy Carter would announce the appomtml·nl tomorro'A of .r S 1• I y w v n I•' u r I h t n h 1• h 1 s Sel·retar~ of Com mt·r Cl Furth, a rd.1t 1vrlv unknown Wit hit tt F'alls h.1nker Pl11in.,, Uec. JJ J1mm .~ l 0 Jrter tocfay .1nnounc<'<I thl' ap pmntmcnt of .I Sr m p:-.011 F('rn lo b<' hr~ "t'l'retar} ur ('urn mer ct . Fern. a rt> lat1vl'h un known i\tlan t J b • .rnk<'r Yt ashlngton, Jan. 20 111 h1!1 lmtut:ural 1\d drt<.,~ ht'rP lnrlay, President ('art\•r called for "A New Spinl" 111 America bas t>d on "love, toh'rJnct' a11d decency " ( 'ongrcsMonal leader'> Of both pa1 lies applauded the speech and plt'<laed their "full coopcr~uon" "'the new Adm 1n1strat1on Wnbtn~lOD, Jan. ZI Prest· ch' n t C a rt er sent h 1' r. r s t mr,sag(• to Congres'l today It t·,11ll'd for a SlS billion lax cllt to 'l t1mulatt• th(• e('onomy," rnuplt'<l with "a comprehem>ivc tJ\ rerorm pro,;r11m to C'IO'lc all l11opholt's · Wuhlnl(ton , Jan. Z4 Conaress today pasiied Prt"\ldenl Dt>ar Gloon1 y Gus I bought a box or Christmas cards and found the printed message says, .. Peace on Earth Good Will Toward Men." So now l have lo go through every one of them and change "Men" to "Persons" Dad Rat that women's lih! V.J Gloomy (,u\ comm1nn .trt \u.tM'n•Utd b't rt11•Cf•"\ .. nd do not n•ct-\\ArOy rtflt<t ,,,,. v'"""'' _., ,.,,. nrw P"P•r Ser"Cl 1ou1 ~t pr-rve tu C,tot»mv Gu\ Daily Piiot Carter's $15 billion lax cut and sent the tax reform program lo the House Ways and Means Com- m 1 l t c e for "an exhaustive study ·· Princeton, ~.J ., Feb. l -Ac· cording to th(' IJtcst Gallup Poll, 83 ~rcent o( the Amenc<tn pe<>· pie feel Jj.,.my Carter 1s do- mg a good jOb as Pteslden.L after his first ten days in office. Washington. March 3 _;The cost of living to&&.~rceltt~ur­ mg February for an annual rate of 12 percent. A White House spokesman said there was "no cause for alarm" and noted that unemployment was "at least holding steady" at 7.9 percent: Waah lngt o n, May I Rep\lblican leaders in Congress today accused the President of "trying to spend the nation into bankruptcy without curing a a froblem the country f c • • {\ Wa>lte H o u ~e 1opokesm an' UW ·~""~a.ck RepUmlcans in Cbn,.._,.. •re responsible for pigeonholing the President's New Spirit pro- grams. Prlacdoa, N.J ., May 7 -The latf'St Gallup Poll showed that only 32.5 percent feel Lhe Presi- dent Is doing a good JOh. Carter Appointments Watched Tension in Nuclear Industry WASHJNGTON A wave of coid fear spread among manufacturers of nuclear power pl:.inls and the ul1ht1es that use them as word leaked out last week of three names being con- sidered by Pre~1denl·elect Carter for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission 1NRC >. The industry's consensus was voiced by one major utility: if these lhrce lake control of the r1Vl.·· mcmb<'r HC as Carter ap· point m c n t" over the next JR months, lh<.'re 1s no futurt: for nuclear power an this ('ountry Indeed, 1f Just one member of the lethal tno were named to an cx1l.t1ng .vacancy on the commission. one major elec- tncal contractor says ll will con· sider shullmg down it s reactor d'evelopment program. Actually, Carter i~barely mto formation of h1a ~bJDet aod nowhere nea!'J decidlril tQ\Y r'e· iulatory. comtniss1on nonrtna· t1ons. Neverlhel•, U\ero is no doubt lhe three names genetat· 111g frenzy an the nuclear Tnduslcj urc at()ng with many others - on Carter's lisl. Ttie fact that lhe.v are there 'is eoough to cause the utilities C1nd manofact141'ers lo reexamine future plan~. THAT FIRST NRC appoint· ment by the new President is awaited with intensity not for what one mere Co11Jmissioner could do but what it teUs abQut the new Pres1clent. On this, a9 on other iaSlles, tbe 22-mQnth cam- paign left unans\!Pered qunUona: Is Carter a pragmatic engineer who appreciates thtre can be no sol ution or energy probl~m!! without nuclear power? Or docs he side with ecological re· ( EVANS-NOVAK J formers who would reduce hvang standards ralhl'r than cxcrc 1se the nuclear oplmn? The latter possibthty, suggl•st cd b_v Car\cr 's tampa11{n rhetoric, grew in the eyes ill the nuclear industry as lhesl• three names began circulating a:; N HC possibilities. Anthon y Ro1 s man , :is. a Washington lawyer land close associate or anti-nuclear acl1vbt Ralph Nader l who has lrrcd lawswls lo block atomic power plants. Ro1sman operates act 1vc ly with the anti nudear Natural Resources Defense Council and 1s nationally known an the move ment to block atomic power The most militant of the three possib1ht1es, he is also the lt'ast likely to be appointed, ac('ordin,:: to Carter transit ion offrc1all. DR. DEAN E. Abrahamson, 42, a University of Minnesota professor leaching "energy policy." While one key Carter ad viser considers Abrahamson •• "moderate" who might well bl' ,..•n NRC appointment, his past ·.writings seem basically 1m moderate. lo 1974 , he declared "nuclear fission is not an ucccp table m eans or produ cing energy." In 1975, he wrote that only a federal police could main- tain security at nuclear power plants, adding: "The response to nuclear power wiJI be the gar rison slate:· Harold P. G ree l\, 54, a Washington lawyer associated with the Naltonal Law Center al the George Washington Universi- ty and an expert on legal pro- blems affecting atomic ener~y. Green, less well known und less radical than Rois man and Abrahamson, considers himself a mlddle-roadcr on nuclear power problems Hut 111du~1n view~ him w11h scurn:ly it's~ ap prehens1on than the other two poss1b1lrtrc:. Onl' of lhl· Prt!~ldent clt·l·I !'> t·ner~v a1lv1"t'rs lotd us ht: con s1dtr-; lhl• surlacing ol the lhn·l· names a :-. an 1nclusl ry prt· l•mpt1ve stnkc to kill them off ll~ 11oss1 b1llties In truth. howevt·r. l'Orporate officials were not play ang u sophisticated Washtnl{l<HI ~ame but reflecting genuine fear derived from Curler 's studied ambivalence rl'garding nucle:.ir power dunng the campaign TllAT AMBIVALENCE su<· cceded in convincing both side!>. in California's fiercely fought :rn 11 nuclear referendum <which lost as did every other such stall' \Ole this year) that in his heart he was on their side. Ounng the Oregon Democratic pn mary, he endorsed that sl ate's anti nuclear initiative facing J broader Oregon electorate 1n the fall. he declined lo help the re fcrendum . Carter's frequently stated pos1 hon, echoed in the nrsl prcs1den tial debate, as thal he would use atomu· po'At'r ;h ,1 1.1 .. 1 rl•,1111 uni\' II -.rJ n•<1u1red, hl' wuultl 111 sbl •111 salt•tv mcasun·s, wh1l'h h1• then lt-:t\•cl ffil'Jsllfl'" ol1v111uslv -.pawtll'<I h\ f11s C''l:)ll'l'leO('(' .11"> .1 n,1v,1 l l'\UC'l1•111· l'11g1111•1•r hut tnn .,l!ll'n•d l[1\1•;1rs1111111t dJk by l'X 1w11s l.':.1mpa1 i;tn1•1 (';1rll'r was plJ~ 1ng ttw nuch·ur c·ng1ncl'r who 011 p o s l' s n u l' t •· J I' p o w 1.· r I s u fl p I l' m 1.: 11 I a r v I o l h 1• Soulh('rn1•r who s upports ra('1;il lllll•i;tr.1t11111 .ind lht• Aunapuli!'> gradu.it•· who w.rnh d1·fcns1· cul i;J lh11 org.1nizcd labor !>. lorcctul ,1d vncut1• ... or nu('lcar energy h<.•ltt'Vl' ('arlt•r u:. l'rc111 dent will l ;11•1• I hl' int•sca1>:.1bll· necci;:.11,\' of nuek.1r 1x1wt•r lo n· dU('C rt•ltJnet• on lon•1gn ml Whl'llwr tl11· m·w l'n•..,sdcnt s lauor ..1lltc~ an· l'orrel'l in th1~ lorcra:-.1 will bt• l\•s lcri qu11·kly b\ how h<· fills lhl' l')d:-.l1n,:: N It<· vat:ant·v If C Jrlc:r choOSl's ccolog1e.1l 1logmu11sm oH·r energy 1>rJ,::mat1sm, lhl' bu'i1 ncss dec1sio11 ... in the nucll·~ll' 111 dustrv will be duly aflcCl<.'d 111 a WJY lhal could only furthl'r rl' duce option'! for handling the na lion s unsolved cncrg.v problem Mail Makes the Day I wonder if anyone has ever written in praise or receiVLng mail? To me, it is one oft.be great minor deligha of life -and yet. of all the various loves that have been apostropblied by writers, 1 doubt if the love of getting mail has ever gained its pro- per share of expression. (SYDNEY HARRIS) It 1s, I 11uppose, useless to ex- plain this to those who do nol share such anticipatory feelings -and unnecessary to explain 1t to those who do. The world is ruvided into the poets and lhc plodders! those who look up 111 the morning, and those who look down Brown's 'Honeymoon' Is Over Notthemaal that comes to the office, of course. although even this contain~ an occasional flash o( pleasure. But mail deltvere<l to the· home makes the morning somehow complete; and those days which bring us nothing but bills and circulars have a panit of obscure regret a bout them. TUE Pl.ODOF.RS arc worthy folk -worthier, In their wuy, lhan dreamer11 like you and me -but lhe morning mail hold11 fOr them no proml11c or secret de· lights or exquisite terrors nr almost unbearable hopes. Vet, the ultimate paradox or the subjc<'l i:; that thl'y ore the in· defoli1l11blc loller writers, while Wf' who love· lo n•ccive them rarely write them The convt>n1n g or lh<' new Legislature this week marks the halfway point In Ciovernor Jcrrv Brown'11 four year term. r crhaps because or the natural <'harlsmta of youth, und his pen('hnnt for an unorthodoxy which at times borders on the absurd. Brown has enjoyed an unusually long "honeymoon" as governor In the spirit or giving lhe new governor a ('han('e to get or· gunizcd he has been al low e d to parry hard qu~stions with ques- tions, shift responsibllll ty t o the uglslature or to sub - ordlnntcs, or to otherwise Cault the Republkon 1ldmlnlstration in Washington or the previoua ~late odmlnlstra· Uon. But the dnys of rcckonlnfC have Arrived. The nimble footed shadow boxlnll wlll no tonier serve. Having been In power for two ycurs he Is now to be held ac- ......... I ( EARL WATERS J countable for the condition or the stale. His record has now become indelible. IRONICALLY, Brown might have prolonged his fortuitous im - age or "popular young governor" were it not for his strong personal ambitions. Succumbing to those he kicked over the lraces. Dis- carding his pose as a "non- po Ii tic i a n too busy with gubern atorial duties" .to participate in the mundane af. fairs or partisan politics, he leaped into the hustings in an er. fort to capture the Democratic presidential nomination. ln the doing he focused atknllon on his conduct as governor. And. allhou1h inter est. in Brown as a presidential con· tend.~r hu now passed, tho spoUlght on him as govemor 'tl'as grown more intense. Insuring that this attention wltl btncerorth be more critical is the fact that hi~ highly touted "popolartty" has been dama1ed more than so mewhat , perhaps ir- retrievably, by his championing of the farm tabor Prop. 14 issue .. Jr the 5 to 3 defeat of that measure is an index of Brown's personal strength he is already a has been. As the while glare of light' shines on the stark record his bon- homie and bon mots are re. vealed as coverups for failures and Ignorance. For that record is largely one of lnacllon. Despite his seeming dedication to work, as attributed to long hours or seclusion in hiS' ofrlcc, things just aren't gettine done. THE STYLE that emerges is one of action being reaction. Not only did Brown pass the op- portunity to spell out adminiatra- Uon goals for legtslaUve con· sideratloh, he has failed to pro- vide them for his departments. Instead he await.I a crisis and then ptun.aes into U>tal eoncent.ra· t.lon to the complete obliteration 0( all other problems. Aside from tho pasaaie of the farm labor le1tslatlon, Brown can claim no algnlficant achieve· menta durlng hl1 flnt two years. 'tlu1t wu clearly apparent when. during his pre!i1de>nl1al bid, he himself put forth as a major ac- complishment the enactment or a law limiting the amount or water to be used in nushing toilets. So rar he hns won most of his public approval by his stance as a fiscal conservative. Yet, In his two years the state budget has in· creased more than 25 percent and state taxes have been raised almost Sl billion. AS FOK his ability as an ex- ecutive, the fact that an average of 500 appointive positions have gone unfilled is only one lndica- tion of ineptness. More slgnlrl- cant. are the messes erupting In prepaJd health prpgrams. state ment.al hospitals, highway con· st.ruction programs, and soon to be disclosed problems in the motor veblcle department. Regardless of the genesis of tbuc m61adm ln1Strntlons. Brown has now been governor sufficiently long t.o be held responsible. And even if hu IOIDebow manages ~ get those problems squared away. hi$ ten dency to sioglc·ISSUf' preoccupa- tion harbors the potcnth•I for other areu of crla18 . In the country, in the summer, waiting for the mailman is one or the high points or lhe day. It is here we feel it most keenly -de- tached Crom friends, happy and yet Incomplete, needing some re- assurance that we are a part of someone else's world A l.E1TER from an old friend casta its radiations over the en- tire day; an invitation to a party (even one we mean to decline) gives a sense of worth and im- portance to the week; even a re- minder or club dues. or an an- nouncement of births, engage· ment~ and marrl3ges among people no~ particularly close to us, brings the world lnto sharper and friendlier focus. And then. for those of us to wbom the morning mall ls a high adventure, there is aJways a feel· Ing of anticipotlon or tomorrow's deliveries. We may not know what we are anticipating, but we sense something just beyond the horbon, about to soil int.o view - Uke the navy-0r 'Jilnhlsh, brlnf· ln1 ivor y, aod apes, and peacocb. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT llt4it1t \' I\ rrd 1'11h{1\~ TIWm<1' l\rrt rl. Fd1tM IJart>ora k r1'll>1(h f.1lrlor111I 1'0111• ftl1111r Tiw coehlorwl 11.l)IC' of 1111' Pailt l'tlo1 <;t·•·lo~ lo 111f01"m and ~l11t1ulatl' tl'iltlt'r' II\ pn·.,rnl in1 1m thl"I P••i.tl' di\ rr ~•· l'ttlllmrnlm y on topic~ nf i11tt'1 t·~t hv ~nndt<'ll'f l'll rulumm,li. 11nc1 r.1rt1)t1t11i.h. b~ prtwld1n11 .i (111 uru for 1 cadt•T!lj \'ll'"~ and h} pri·~t·n11n~ lhlfo """'~paprr'll nplnlntl\ a11tl 1tlc•ots on <'IH r('rJt lnpft·~ Thr rdllnrrnl ov1nio11s of the> 0111ly 1'1111( a111x·11r onl~ 1n lht' <•1Jll1•11.11 n>lumn nl llw top uf the-p1111c>. 011111100~ t'~ 11rl·~~rcl h\ nw 1·ot11mru~•~ unll ('111 toorll~I' 111111 lt•llc•r wnl<'t ~JI 1• lhc1r "" n and no cndm !lt'mt•nl nf lh('1r \U'"~ IH· lh1• l>.111} l'llut ~hould !>(' 1nff'rr1•d Tue 'day, Dec. 7. 1976 Ad a Success Neglectful Friends Write MILWAUKEE <A P > A lonely nursing home resident, 81 yeur-old Stasia Pokora, placed a clasMf1cd newspaper ad chastisUlg fnends for abandoning her Three bundles of ma.ti later, s he says 1t pays to advertise. ··1 thought a few people would respond," s he suid, gazing at the let- ters and cards that arnv('<f since Wed ncsday .. Dul I saw the one hutch the first day, then another .holy cat:;.·· MISS POKORA IS a frag1ll' but sp ri g h tly lad y <·onf1 ncd to a \\heelcha1r s1nt·c su!fcnng a stroke in Julv. She pl aced the advertisement in a Milwaukee n1:wspaper Thunksgiv ing Day .. I would like VERY, VERY much to hear from my friends, k•ttc•rs, cards, more so. a\ 1s1t." '.'>ht•sa1d 1n the ad. A nc\\:. story l'arnt'<i by The As soc1ated Prt"i'> last week nott'<i thut she wankd to "1.in1.:'' friend:. who had apparently forgotten about her and that sht• "as :-.till wa1t1ng for u n•spon:.t· lo the .1cl BY SUN DAV. MOH i·: than IOU l'aros und lt•llt•rs had l>ct•n recc1\cd by Miss Pokora ot the Manna View Manor Nursing Home "ll 's kind of a joke because a1J of a sudden everyone ts trying to see me, talk to me and know somcthmg about me." Miss Pokora said. "Jt's very ruce." One letter came from a friend she had not seen in a bout 45 years "SHE SAID SHE never knew what happened to me, but now U1at she knows, she said she will wntc to me au the time ... MlSS Pokora Said A group of fifth grade students from u Milwa ukee school sent ktters .. Thes e kids are so swecl. They m ust have a teacher w1lh a heart." Miss Pokora said "I GOT ONE LETI'ER from a boy "ho said, 'I'm 13 but I love old pt'Ople I want to be your fncnd and I hope you·11 be mine too.· They·re ::.o nice." she added. Miss Pokora said she planned to place another newspaper ad thankinJ,! friends and strangl'rS who had con tactcd ht>r .. And 1£ l don t get any more atten- tion after that." she :.idded, "J'll start l>ombardinJ! tht•m with tl'lcphonl' CJllS .•• Knievel To Test Sharks CHICAGO (AP) Evel Knievel as al tl <igain. This time he will attempt to jump his m otorcycle 90 feet across a tank containing 12 sharks on network television here Jan. 31. Each of the s harks. prom oters of t he act said , will be "no less than eight feet long ." They will be captured in F1orida and s hipped to C hi cag o for the daredevil stunt. QUEENIE ' U •W S Pt.E.WTY oF f\ENTY :z::-,,wr~' Tuesday. December 7. 1976 DAILY PILOT .41 By Phil lnterlandi Capital Slated As Guinea Pig SACRAMENTO (AP) -Someolthe Brown ad· ministration ·s stetewide propooals to dlscouraae cl· Ly auto use and promote mass transit may be tested on state em ployes in Sacramento. The current draft. of the Capitol Area Plan, drawn by a locally starred stale agency, contalns proposals to increase bus service and have the state subsidize fares for slate employes. It also includes some bus lanes on city streets. higher rates for one-passenger cars and lower rates for car pools in state-controlled parking spaces, ahd a reduction in the number or those spaces from 7,000 to5,500. There are also proposals for more bike paths and van pools. "WE'R E GOING to rent a special jet plane JUSt to trans po rt the sharks," said Michael 1(.-7 (. ............. ", ....... •··~ ......... ....,.. ... _ .. The plan's goal by the year 2000 is to increase the number of slate employes who commute lo downtown Sacramento by bus to 50 percent or more, with another 30 percent riding in car pools, 5 percent in motorcycles, bicycles or on foot, and 15 percent in s ingle-occupant cars . Selig man, a producer of tbeevent. He said Knievel's stunt will be "the toughest Jump h e's ever at- tempted." T H E J U MP, Seligman said, is to be one in a series of seven "death defying" a c t s lo be telecast over CBS as part of a 90-minule program. '°\ 'Y THE .J2~:s HU.TIH6 All COHO. tfi-. •• .,.. • •• , ..... 4•9"1 !.t '1t• .,.,, 1A1.1--.,...1 ••• ,lf,fJV'll fr) lie declined to say what 1.<i· , ... ""'•A the other stunts would 1~l· "' N'""' w. • 495-0401 QUALITY 1n1urance at reasonable prices! HOME OWNERS AUTO I _,_ "' ... NA110NAL PUZZLE. Co. l be 642-1753 Stars of 'Soaps' p;;.· A-N-ew-S-er-v-ic_e.:;fo=r=Y=ou=r=A=r=ea=!~ MAHllEO OYH 25 , •••..•. C OLLEGE STUD!HT • $1HGll OYEll 2 0 • SJ 16. rlR flAR s1so. szs.ooo ... ~~.-~!. 56 7. sso.ooo .. ".1~~~~ s I 6 6. 1lloM lettffMJ .... SGYings .. LOClft CO'Hr yo. ••• We probaMy payMg for too .-ch. z Ill • z g WA NT£D: 'People tJh., "''" I Do T/wir Thing sP£:~:: ,~,nd Go Travel P'H flAR INDUSTRIAL STORE KEEPERS FACTORIES APARTMENTS CONTRACTORS YACHTS 0 0 ' ' A f It If) c ... l s t Child Gets Some Welcome DALLAS CAI'> Paul Miller picked up his wife . .Judy, and their brand new daughter. their first child. at the hospital On the wuy home. Mr., ~I Iller saw 40 friend<> and co-workers standing out- side the ad agency "here• she works and appl.1uJ i.ng 1'1.nd thc•rc "J' :i b11lboarrl ··welcoml' to t he World . Jcnn1ft'r t.0111 ~e \Idl er Your Aunts & t nd,•s «ll'" about t 1 mt' I' aul &. Juel} I 'Wl' h .1<1 lo do someth1n ~ fobulous because 1t·s ht•r first child. ~ht•., 37 and 1t'i. n• all) JU '>l ,, \\ c•nckrful 1 h 1 n ~ , · ., a 1 .t M r' M1llN ' frtt•nl.l. s u.,Jn Zjllt•r I "~'"' nl•vrr i.o lt h u l. k t• II a n d o v C' r \\ ht·lmt·•I HI my lift'." ltrc; M1llt•r.,.11d LOS /I.NG ELES <AP> -On Wednesday after noon. four CBS soap opera sturs a.re forsakinj'.! tears tor tunes in a musical special CBS calls "After !lours: From Janice, John, Mary and Michael, with Love ·· <Channel 2, 2 p m. J What a title . It runs almost as long as the show . which stars J a nice Lynde and John McCook of "The Youn~ and the Restless," and Michael Nouri and Mary Stuart of "Search for Tomorrow · · TllE IDE A OF THE OPUS, which may lead to .i series of s1m1lar specials with other CBS daytime ~tars, is lo give the performers a chance lo s how they can do more than look gnm between com- mercials This 1s a fine idea, as many mummers in soap operadom have legitimate stage backgrounds. have a ppeared in stage musicals and can sing and do a bat of hoofing when the occasion demands. Alas, in Wednesday·s "After Hours" the ladies an<I gents, respectively decked out in evening gowns and tuxcdocs. don't often rise to the occasion They <1r<.' l'om pctent. but not very rousing. TRUE, THE Y COMM ENCE ON a prom1s1ng note make that notes -when they ope n the show by doing a tune in four-part harmony. They sound a bit like the Modernaires of radio days, a good crew mdeed. It hints of nifty musical things lo come. But after solo turns in which McCook, Nouri, Miss Lynde and M iss Stuart musicaUy explain their b3<'ki:rounds. a slide to dull begins. It doesn 't halt when tht·~ pause for a question--------- ..,rs~1on with a fnendly TY RE\'I E\V aud1t•nre Thl' questions con----------l'ern 'foun's age, what prompted Miss Lynde to be an actress, whether Mrt"ook·s lafe 1s akin to that of the character he pla~ s. and how lonR Miss Stuart -a star of her soap opN a C\ er since it began in 1951 -has been in show b11 I.ATER . MISS LYNDE, AN attractive hrunctte. has a ~oat "Silly Love Songs ··McCook. tall. dark and possessed of a matinee·1dol profile, plays piano and sin~s "I Wnte lhe Songs," backed by a full orchestr a. Each effort is technically pror1cient, each shows the result or long hours of vocal trummg, but nt>1lhcr con lams the spark that distinguishes __...,.._._-~---.rI ARE YOU PUZZLED FOR ••• MEN'S GIFTS ? -Neck wear • -Sport Shirts -Sweaters -Slacks -~coats $1°'" JI tin ca -Sox --1.eisure Suits 5fKH JI "'"' ... You can buy aH of thn• at Greaffy Reduced Prices SAVl~S OF 30 to 600/o at The Mewporter Men's Shop 111 tM ... ..,..... WI Hotel C ..... 1 1107 Jw::t:a.M R...._...wpott IHCh T...,._. 644-0llO 0,..10.,..w ... MIR.ttns.t.t .. ,,_ ....., 10te4,.,... • , •AIRLIN E RESERVATIONS •CR UISES •CON DOMINIUM R E NTALS I N HAWAII, M EXICO & TH E CARIBBEAN *SCUBA D IVING TH ROUGHOUT TH E WO RLD SMALL BOAT LARGE BOAT DISCOUNTS EXTtNOEO CRUISING TO MEXICAN WATtRS COMMERCIAL BOATS Come to us when you wa11t to go. oriywhere. COME AND GO TRAVEL BOB PALEY MORTHOC-546·3205 SOUTH 0 C-6 4 2 • 6 5 0 0 1145 S. COAST HWY. LAGUNA BEACH, CA 92651 PHONE 497-2402 & ASSOC, INC. SAVE $1500 * TAX FREE THIS YEAR WITH AN INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT We've already mailed a Mariners Money Memo to you. 1£ you read it, you know an Individual Retirement Account at Mariners Savings can mean substantial tax savings to you for 1976 . But you must open your retirement account before December 3 1st. AVOID THE RUSHI Last year so many depositors waited until the last minute to open their "IRA" that some had to wait. A void the crowds this year. Open your "IRA" today with a minimum b ala nce and d eposit your total tax- deferred amount on or before December 3 l st (as much as $1,500 or 15 % of your income whichever is less). Start saving for your retire ment now and enjoy a tax deduc tion a l the same time. Come to Mariners and open your "IRA" today. Earn as much as 8 .06% annually on a 7.75% • • certificate account. Mariners pays higher interest than any bank. • A husband and wile can tu-defer aa much a1 $3,000 per year. • 'Suh1cct lo 1ubtlantial lnter .. t penalties when principal ia withdrawn prior to matu11ty. • Mariners Savings and Loan AssoclatlOn FS[Ic --- NEWPORT BEACH• 1515 Westcllff Drive (Main Office) (714) 642·4000 r ~· DAILY PILOT December 7 1976 Lltl. B d Most Caves In Kentucky Attorney May Get Defender X Theater Gets Religion Calvary Chapel Moves /111,0 Old Porrw Howe By STEVE MIT<'llEU. OI ... 0..ly p, .. , \WI used to perform at the Red Lantern, as well as other :.tage stars This holiday season might not be a bad lime to note that outside the Uruted Stales and Canada, not just the ma1ority but the enormous majority of the world's people have never ever heard or cranberries let alone eaten any or same. If what Frank Sinatra is quoted as saying is true, he has developed u dandy wnnklc for celebrating the holidays with his family. On Christmas Eve, it's report1..'CJ, ht• stows away tus wristwatch, and doesn't put 1t on again for however long unltl the offspring and the of- 1 !spring of the offs pring are gone. All s tone fruit trees evolved Crom almond trees. . . Seals must teach their young to s wim ... And. s wartly, birds used to have!teeth. It has been widely re- ported that the thing called sea level is not really level, that in fact the oceans' sur- faces are made up entirely of hills and valleys. Presumably, most or these change constantly Rut a client asks 1f any such 1r regularities remain permanently fixed in their geographic pos1t1ons Some do, indeed Just northward from San Juan. Puerto R1eo. for instance. Ships J{omg into that port tn· variably slide into a v;iJley and then pull up a watery hill before anchoring. CAVES Q. "You once said Delaware is the only state without any caves What state has the most caves?" A. Kentucky with about 2,000 Next comes Tennessee with mayb<' 1,500 After that is Virginia with approximately 1.200. Do you know how a typical former ts most likely lo contract a minor ca:.e of poison ivy rash? By petting his dog Cert ainly, another nomin<'e for the "My Name Is a Poem " Club should be Mavis Oavas of Abilene, Kan. Three out of every four obscene telephone callers. studies 1nd1cate, arc men under age ~- Address mail to L M. IJoyd, /'.(J. Uor 151ill C'osla Mesa.92626 Deatlu Elsewhere OCE:\NSIO I-; (/\P l Requiem Mass was sung Monday for Thy a ThiRui, a Vietnamese bl'<lllli('Hln who served both M;iauc Eisenhower and Queen Moth er Ela lahc•th of En~land Mrs But. 58. died Thursday . La'>t vear. Mrs B111 was nown io Caltforni:.i as a refugee with Mrs. Eisenhower as her:.ponsor Ne" port Beach at torney Roland Stewart Bar cume may be represented by th (• pubhc defender when he goes on trial Dec. 13 1n Orange County Supenor Court. Judge Kennt'lh Williams granted a dcluy from the originally scheduled trial d11tc of Nov. 29 to allow time for the public defender s or f1 t·e to investigate B.ircu me 's financial status J UD G•; WILLIAMS was told before i::rantmg the delay that Barc·umc" 39. of 901 Sand Castle Orwe. apphed for and was £iven food :.tamp~ He recentl) :.pphl'<I to the 1:ount.> for possible e mpl oy ment ...... a clerical worker. Barcumc faees tnal on criminal chargc•s fakd after he allegedly mis handlC'd thl• $103 ouu estate of a San Clemente man 't\hO died 1n 1!170 after naming Barcumc as his administrator Barcumf: wa:-. st•n tenced to six months to five years in stale prison by Judge Williams after pleading guilty lo h.'SM'r charges. His motion to withdraw that pica and go on trial was grantl-d after Judge Williams ri· fused to reduce hts Sl'n· tence BARCl'ME'S dl'CISIOn meant that 22 ft·lony counts contained in a Grand Jury ind1('tm1mt "en' revived. Th<'y an elude perjury. grand theft .. offering false evidence a nd prepanng false evidenct'. It is alleged that an estimated $53.000 of the SIOJ.000 estatl' left hv widower Wilson F.ugenc Luther, X5. "ho II vt.'<1 at 138 W. E~calones. San Cleml·ntC'. V.:.t 'i w1thd r::iwn from h1 -. estalt• without authority Heritage House Set Of,...,_.,., ""t ••ti "'I '" ""'4•t • .,.,,., W')Ul•1tJ-' t(' 0 41•fj HUll••O FJOAfAT r t fTOh H ~f\~QO Pl:'~ .,.. .., •'>'" '' 0-r"""'~' .. ,.,,. "' ... ~') M .,.""'C)' 41 •t .,~ OttAt tf,•tr 11 Dr' ,..f I ,,._, • ,,_,-. 1 f';f "'""' '"' Mft Huh !Mr 1 "' .. 'IP\ H 4bbud f Met'" • ... UL T'I·lftlGHOH fUMHALHOMI Corona del Mar 673·9450 Costa Me<ia 646-2424 HUHOADWAY MO ITU AO I 10 B roadway Co'lla Mesa 642·9 150 Mc.COIMICIC MOITUAlllS Laguna Be11ch 494-941 5 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Cao1strano 495·1776 ,.ACIFIC VllW MEMOllAL ,. .... Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport. Cahforn1a 64~·2700 rtHFAMILY COLOHIAL fUHll.Al HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 SMnHS' MOITUAU 627 Main St Huntington Beech 636-6539 SMlfH TUTHILL u..- OUI WISTCLfH CHA"8. Mortuary • • 846-4888 427E 17thSt. Cotta Mesa PUBLIC NOTICE lllCTtTIOUS I U5tNfSS NAM£ \TATEMENT fttfo folto•'"O °"'''°"'are 001"4 bu1.I· ftf"\\., •MOllE CHAIN CO, 16' )?nd SI~ ... fWOOf't 8fl'ACt\ C_, ff'M>*"'•~ P ICO\l'\•r 10tt nnci St . ""'"00<1 &-•< h Ca C•rt W Aclll:erm•n. 810 LAqUNI ltd . Fllllt•IM CA Thh bu\,,._"'t 1\ ronductM bv a hm. .. td p,,r-tMr\PUP ThOm•' P KOVHJ,. fhi' \l•ttmt"t WI\ hled •+th ...... County''"''" of Or•nor County on Nov ......... 0 ... 1& P UBLIC NOTICE F!CT!TtOUS BU)!NfSS NAME STATEM!NT TM loHovtlrtQ Ofl,.\On ,, OO•OQ t-u\I ""'"·" S•VlOR SP" co p 0 !\<le m Cmt• IW>w CA '1UI 1ll P.0\-1. N..._.t8H<~ C• John C. S1vlor 111 Pro\Pflt 1 N<WPD"llH<h(A TN\ "'"""" I\ condurlf'd by •n In dl"•du.al J<IMC S1vtor T.,k 't•t•m•nl w,u fHMt !#ti,, '"' Couftly C•er\ ot Orono-C:-y on Ot<...,be< J, .. ,. -,_ Publl"""' Or MCI" Coa\t 0.,11 P•lol Pvbtt"'-d 0r•"9f' c .. ,, o.<lv f>llOI ~· •• l> JO .,.,, O•< 1 '"' 4nJ.'6 O.Umbor 1 u 11 ,. "" ,"",. SENIOR' CITIZENS 108" Off All m 78 Parch•••• SAVE ON ALL l'URC.UASES BV 8CCOMINC.. A MLMBlR OF OUR SlNIOR ClflllNS SAVINC\ 'LAN AT NO COST TO VOU AENTAL!i •.All Prt·P•W RX Pro9r91111 Honored SALES ORANGE COUNTY It "us the first le~1t.matt· thedtt:r in north Orange County, opening its door:. in 1922 as the Hed Lantern Theater. Then it became c. movie house. seating more than 400 lilingoers. More recently, the Brea Theater became an X-ratcd mov1t• hou:.c, complete with dim red and green lights. Now the 54-year-old buildinJ( hou:.1•:. about 150 G t member:. of the Calvary Chapel of Brea. un off:.hrx1l e 8 or the Santa Ana-based nondenominational church. .. We'rt• go1n1: to make 1t a community i:alher- mg place 11gain," he srud BAER. A FORMER INSURANCE agent and )OUth pastor for a denominational church in Fullerton. stud his congn•gation has grown from .. about 50 a month ago lo 150 last Sunday." "l thfok the pro~rty owner and the cily are a lot happier" 1th Cal vury being here than the rormer tenants," BaC'r :.;iid. "We fll tn better with the community." YMCA $10,000 From Hoag A $10.000 i::rant has been awarded to the Orange Coast YMCA by the lloag Foundataon, prov1dmg the Y can rdlse an add1t1onal $11,JOO in matching funds for a capital improvement pro1ect. "THOSE DIM UGIITS WERE u blessing for the former patrons," laui::hed .Jim Daer, pa:.tor ut the four-week old chapel. "They hid the dirt. 1 mean this place was really dlrty ... The Brea Theater was that city's only movie house, and, until lasl month, :.ho" ed onl} adult films. Support Payments Record &tablished The proJect as a pool CO\·er in the form of a bubble that 't\ all allow for mcreased use or the pool dur1n~ the winter months Jam de Boom, the YM- (.'A t•xt•cutive director, :.aid t•ovenng the pool will also reduce healing and chemical costs and :.hould sa\'e the Y $300-400 each month out of its month out of its or)(:J'al· operating budget Public d1ssat1sfact1on w1tl'r the theater operu- taon began last Augu:.t, "when the former operators quit sho" mi:: Wall Disney films and :.tarted showing X-rated movies," Pastor BaC'r said THEATER OPERATIONS ENDED NO\'. I and the Cost a Mesa-ba:.ed church organ1tat1on began cleaning up the 438-scal theater for chapt!I !>erv1cel! Baer said at took 40 to 50 volunteer:. an entire Saturday to spruce up t~f: tn'itde of the movie houi.e "Surprisine•y, the only refurb1sh1ng It needed was to be cleaned out," hc :.aid. "We took out the red and green ltghts, ll't more. light into the lheat('r, clcan1..'<i up the :-.eat:. and aisles, and really bnghlcnt~J lhc place," hl' said C'HURCll ME~IBERS REPLA<.:tm THE mar· quc with a Calv;iry Chapel si~n. and future plans in· elude mstallmg a natural wood racode on th(• theater "This was the place cveryon<' u~ed to gather an the old days," Baer ~aid. Ile said Judy Gurland Collections of child support payments by the Orange County dastnct attorney's office topped the S1 million mark in November establtshmg a record for the family supportd1vts1on Deputy D1str1ct Attorney Bruce Patterson said the total was 54 percent tugher than lhat or the same month in 1975 lie estimated that the total collected in the year ending Dec 31 will top $10 mtlhon, again a new record. Patterson attributed the n:.e 1n collections rrom increased staffing an has d1vis1on following the pass ing of tougher new federal leg1slallon last year "We arc activl'ly seeking out parents who are reluctant 1n their obligation to ·support their duldren." Patterson said. "Qur efforts to this end have taken many Orange County families off the welfare rolls." News from all over C.liforni• it rounded up each d•y In the DAILY PILOT ASK NOT FOR WHOM THE BELL TINKLES; IT TINKLES FOR THEE •.• Most of us sec the familiar Salvation Army ladil!c; only during the Christmas season. lmklmg th1:tir little bells as they stand beside then kl'ttlec; on street·corners or in shopping centers. But through1111l the year, The Salvation Army ,asserts itc; spintucJI drive to heal and comfort those society has Ov<!r· looked or ignored -the poor, the sick. the under· privileged youngsters, the handicapped, the shut-inc;, the senior citizens, the skid·row derelict. the c;tranger tin cl the dic;ac;;tcr vicl 1m Dcdict:1tion to C11Jd, Service to Socicly. day in crnd day out, year nfter ycM <.lfter yeM Quietly, efficiently, Lealou!'ily. the "Army'' does lhl' rob for us. So whl'n you hctlr the llnklc of the h1 11 tlw .. vcar. give more c;;o the Salvtllion Army can help more And if you would like to know more aboul thl' program 1n Ornnge County, 1f you would lik{' to volunteer for Salvation Army involvement, if vrn1 rl1n contribute more than the k<>ttle will hold.call The Salvation Army P.1ul 11 Kunl,•r, R1•g1nn.1I 01rnclor ~1'rvlc1• Exlt•n-.11 •11 1141~ ">lilnford /\~"111w C.ird"n <irov,• C.1lifor111.i Ti f,•ph11111• !'l.!O [1771 • A Urutod Way Mc>mber Agency • I I Number 35 in a series of public service advertisements sponsored bv Avco Finenclal Services, Newport Beach, Callfornia " DAIL v PILOT Al Toys: Some May Prove Hazardous PUBUCNOTICE PUBLIC N()11CE t PICTITIOUI IUllNHI PICTITIOUI IUSINIU • ·-·ITATIMINT MAMISTAT•M•NT • TlwlOl-1111-"°"' •••dOl"Qbu\4 TM '91-1"9 Ptr'°"' erecaot119-ll By tbe A1toclated Preu Warning: that cuddly lookmg teddy bear may be hazardous to your heallh. That's \be message from the . Consumer Product Safety Co m- ' rrussion, which has started another holiday campaitin on toy safety. AMERICANS ARE EXPECTED to spend an estimated ~button on toys and games m the coming Chris tmas season alone. They also w1U spend about $20 million on Christmas tree lights -35 million seta of them, ac- cording to the com mission. Toy manufacturers started gearing up for the holiday early this year. Some 5,000 ne w items -many of them linked to popular television shows -were on display last ( CON.SUMER J February at the American Toy Fair an New York and th~ products arc on store shel\'eS across the country. Sales of toys, games and Chrislm1ts ornaments are expected to set a re cord this year, according to David A. Muter, president of the Toy Manufac- turers of America. MiUer estimated that this year's s11les will be 6 to 8 per· cent higher than last year's WIDLE THE MANUFACTURERS and retailers worry about profits. the safety commission worries about possible hazards. The fed eral ugency estimates that 150,000 children will be seriously injured as a result of acc1 - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Tahoe OK For Singer Questioned SOUTH LAKE TAHOE (AP > The Ca lifornia Tahoe Regional Planning Agen· cy said it is investigating charges that preferential treatment was given /1 singer Helen Reddy in coMection with a perrrut to expand her $1,.,,000 Lake Tahoe beach house. CRTA member and South Lake Tahoe City Counci lm a n N\)rm Woods made the charges last week at a n agency meeting. He said either a mistake was made or "favorite treatment" was given the enter- tainer. THE FAMILY CIRCLs· By Bil Kcunc "Is o Christmas list s'posed to be the stuff you're gettin' or the stuff you're givin'?" Decoy Use Approved SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Police may legally use minors as decoys to track down drug pushers. the state Court of Appeal says. dents with toys this year The comm1ss1on has the authonty lo ban dangerous toys such as those containing rigid wires and sharp points. That includes stuffed arumals and dolls lhal m 1ght appear harmless, but contain hidden dangers. Until two years ago. the com- mission issued a list of banned toys and volunteers patrolled :.tores look· ing for hazardous products. The hst was dropped, however, and the com- mission says it has no plans to re· mslate it, despite the protests of some consumer groups. printed and distributed, some Items already bad been w1thdrawn from the market or chan1ed in design to eliminate the hazard. ThLs led to potential legal problems. In addition, the spokesman sald, the lisl was actually m1.1leading to some people who assumed that any toy not on the lis t was automatically l'lass1fied us safe. Not so. Many toys simply were not tested at all because of lack or money and staff. ~-'~ nena.. • Ml!WPORT &EACH LANO COM-ii.uNTI• IELLUM' FANCY. l'ANY, 1 Arlt10 Newport IHth, 0000!., MJI Al-Ori_,., H-inQloof GllH<wrole,,.., lelCh. C.lll01nl1 '1MI ~ 0•~1•1 Het .. M, H U Def _, llleh•rO Ota4' Trom_h_r ~ ~. u l'•lm•. c.111orn1atOUJ ii.1htna Drive, Hw•ttnelol\ lea~'\ -rllfft H-"'· llH O.t M¥ c.<1torl\le tJMI • L.M.,UP4'lm• C•1'1ornl1tl»f) JUnMllt jlllarle Tr ___ , Tiii• t>uslnt» I\ conll..Cltd by • .. ,, Alllefl• Orlve, H11nll"9I"" leacl\ t•l•orrat .,.rtntr\hlD c..tuornl• .,.,.! ~ o ... itt H9999M TIU. t>wllntu h <onOutltd t>y • T'lllO •l•ltmtnt w•• filed ••lh Ille 90fler11.,.,1nen.hlp • COUnly Clerk ol Oranoe Coo;nty on J M T•om•nh•uMr ,. DKernber 1e. 1'1•. ,..,., ,,.,.,,,,..., wa• 11...i wltll 11- 1'•7Jf1 County Cltr~ ol Oran99 County on No,. Publlllled Or ancie Co•\I O•llY Ptlol omtler 1'. ''" _; No• n. :IO. •no o..: 1. u. "" ·~ '• ... ,"' Put>ll\hed Ore .... Coa•I O.lty Pi~ P UBLIC N011CE Ho¥. u. >0.inc1 o.c. i. "· "1• _,: . . .. THE COMMISSION IS CONCEN· '~C:~~~~!::~1:,:.:s PUBLIC NO'nCE trating on educating the public with a n..1011owln91>enonuredolnobu\1·1-----------~ •. variety of promotional efforts. ,.._ ••: $->Om lii.L&OA PAVILION CATERINO NOTIC•TOCIHOITOllS I A CO MMISSION SPOKESMAN Therearespecificsafetyslandards COMPii.Nv.~M.in s1.,Po&oo•i su,u1011cou11ToHM• C said the banned toy lli.t had several for some toys, m alnly those involving e.1-. c.1uornl• .,~, sun OI' CALI '011N1A "°" drawbacks. I · · II I · alt be ~11.-...... 1441 Elc,•nSt.,Cott• TH•cOUNTYO,OIUNGll e ectr1c1ty. A e ectric oys must Mew ca11>o•n1a.,.,, No. A•1tn1 Ftrst, it was difficult to keep the list labeled with a warning message and a w1tt1am H. c-111. 143 F1owu E•llf•ol JOHN M0001E Oto<••""<! d B . ini end . $Crwt.Cotl•Mt••.C•lllo•nlam11 NOTICEISHl!RE8YCIVENtot ... Up tO ale. Y thP. time the hsl was m mum age reCOmm ation. This l>ullntu I• «>nOutl..S llY • cr..Stlon. olllle Al>O•t n•mtO otc«lerof. r -======================i1 ventral partnerthtp t"4t itU CJl"r\.On\ hAVl"O Chim\ aqa..n'\' U\tleM•\Of'I OW WtO dt>CeOtnt •r• r~u•rto •o fU' Gratuity Sentence Cut Short SAN DIEGO <AP> - Dom1n1c J "'Bud" Alessio of San Diego, serving a six-month sen· tence f or giving gratuities to a prison of· f1c1al. is to be released early from fed eral prison al Terminal Island, Long Beach. Warden Lee Jett said Aless1o's sentence is be· ing r e du ced by t t~ months f or goo d behavior and he will leave the prison Fridav. Alessio was convicted or providing gratuities to Anthony Santi ago, ad· mmistrator of Lompoc Federal Correctional lnstitut1on, in 1971 to in- sure favorable treat· ment for two Alessio family members his father John and his uncle "------ Angelo ™' ii.et~ wa1 fttt"<I wltl't the t"*"' wltn tM rwc•\1arv ¥OU<....,., in. Cownty Clerll of Or•nte Cckmly"" No•· 1,,. olllo ot ,.,. ct•r~ of lht -"'.: -It. ltl• lltlecl <""'1 or 10 oro .. nt tntm •llhl"' '41• '*l\""'YOUCller\ IOll\eu,,.,.,.,IQ"ed• Pvtlll-Or-eo .. 1 o.lly "'""· sii.Ll IE T RE ... NOlOS MtmlM'• -n.>0.1no0.C '· u. "" "'Ill• JAMES 0 CUNOERSON A LI"'> Ct.WOOf'allOn AltOfMY' •t la'# 1lS1t PUBLIC NOTICE P•-Ito V•l•n<I '• ....... 101 ~ Hill .. CA '1Ul. which " lhe ol«e of• -----------'>u\J ...... , o• ·~ \lf'td,.HIQn#d It\ •11 tt\41t • "CTITIOUS IUSINIU l•t"l Ptrt•lnl"9 IO the 9\lale of .. _, <II'• NAMI STATIMINT <-1>1. within four mon1ht ..... u.r, The 1o11ow1119 -.on1 .,, dOlno t>usl tin.I publlullonof I"'' nollct • .., .. , 0.t..S No.,.mt>er 10. 191' JIM"S TRUCl(INO SERVICE 1l14 LILLI& J MOOOtE N..-Ro .. Cost• Mu•. ~lltorfl'• Admtnl\lratrla wllh '"" mi. Will ii.1111 .. ed Oflhe Wiii J~ "-Hou<-. ,,,., C-ln110 ot lht ebO•t n•me(I ot<•OW<>I • -..no .. , •. l..a9UM Hiiis. Celllornt•"1•» U.lLll T Rl!YNOLDS. Mt-r J ...... w. Heroin. H121 F•rtnl"9 JAME\ o. GUNOllUON, El Toro. Callfornla '16l0 A uw c..r-1tlon Thi• t>u•lrotn I• cond"'ltd t>y • lltlO<MYUI U• -r•l~rtne,.hlo. UUI '•-cleValtn<ll, . . Jo~l>ll A. Houct1. Sult• 101 Thi• •••••m•nl wa. moc1 w1111 "'" u~ ..... .,.11 ... CA •nn :.ouroty Cl9fil of 0,..<>99 c.ounty bn No.,. Ttltpl\OM" (114) UMO.O -. ;rnt>er II, 1t7•. """"'°' 1or Admlnl11ra1rl• ~71'0 with Wiii Annt ud P\il>ll""'O Oran9e Coast Oelty P1•01, Publl\1'1 .. 0 O• ""Cl' Coa•I O~lly Pilo• • NoY.?l,10,•noO.C 7,H,lt76 -~It Nov l•.JJ '.)/) •ndDe< '·"'' .eos11;·~ PUBLIC NOTICE "71 FICTITIOUS IUSINIEU NAME. STii.TEMENT TIW fol-"9 0-'""'• are 00i"9 llu>I· nHS•\ T ERCO, JOJO So. "-dh•ll AYI!., S.... t.IAM CA'l1105 Tuot1n9 ;,no Cnq1n"t r •no Afowaurc"\. Co. • C11ttorn1d <OtOOf• 1""1, lOlOSo. -111 A.,.., S..t• Arw. CA927~ Th•~ t>U'Mnttn •'}conducted by • cot -olt-Toot1119 and En91,,..,.ron11 Roo-.,rce-~ Co RoO.• It~ K• 11.on. A'~\tAnl Sire Ttt1t. '\t.-t-rn«-nt •I\ hied w.th the ~ey Ch.•rti. ot Or~nQe (oyol., Ofl Nuw omt>erll,197•. "•1n1 P\1011-0 OrM>go Co•~I Oaoly Pilol . P UBLIC NOTICE THI CA Lt l'OllNIA 01,AllTMINT ' 01' TllA~l"OltTATION HAS llEN \ ltlOU•ST•D TO ,U.LISH THE • ,Ol.LOWING NOTICI IV ~ .. ._, .... 1 ... a1w- o...111y Celltret ...... S.•la Au 11 .. 1.,. Put>I l( Not I(. No 1-71·4. NPO&S No CAOlo.Jt•' .aJJ lnd••n• A .. nu. Suitt, R1 .. no0t CA .,SO. -(11•t ... tl>O NOTICI llP1tllc1tkHI fer .· WHlt 011<~•..-ll"'tolr-, tNau ..... 1 , .. ,111 •• 1 OIK-. ~ lllml,..tloft \y01tm '-"''"' .... , .. , ... c.111 .... 1. o.p.,,m..,101 Tr•,._,.,._ HE ALSO said he felt special treatment for the- singer could have result· ed from her reported friend s hip with California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., but he did not expand. The decision involved a 1975 San Mateo County cue in which police employed a 17-year -old un dercover agent to allegedly purchase mar11uana from two high school youths. John and An t:clo Alessio also were charged with giving gratuities lo a prison of- fic1 al and eventually pleaded guilty, with John drawing a $5,000 fme and Angelo being fined NO• lO,....O O.c. 1. u .11, 191' SOOlo-1~ Oher1tt 1 • Jeff Wald, the s inger's husband and manager, said the cha rges by Woods are "complettt and utter fabrication. I've had no special con· sideration given me." ADDRESSING himself to Woods' re- mark about Gov. Brown, hesaJd "He (Brown) haJ> never seen the house· I'm going to have to call him and explain." Woods said most lake homeowners must ap pear at a full TRPA hearing to request a variance lo t>xpand. but said Ms Redd} '41 request was appro'\ ed at staff level The Mark Celebrates Bubbly 50 SAN FRANCISCO (API -The champagne poured more freely \han usual as guests celebral· ed the 50th anniv~~""> of the Mark Hopkins Hotel in one of the world 's most famous ban: The Top of The Mark There . wher e thousands o f US servicemen had their lut rung before going overseu ln World War IJ, the at.ory went round qain about tbe Mark of Nob HiU and the saloon upon top. A FEW YEARS ago, somebody estimated that more than 30 miWon people had visited the famous barroom and en- joyed the spectacular view. The hotel was the In· apiration of the late George Smith, who once admitted a big mls- cakulatlon: he thought prohibition would last a nd built the Mark without a bar. IN 1131, Smith with aome difficulty con- vinced his board of direc· tors to put up $100,000 for a fancy bar. Three months and 20 days after the Top of The Mark opened in May 1939, the whole sum was back in the Ult . 'Iloday, the Mark Is managed by Pan American subsidiary In· t.ernational Hotels. Sanctuary Set MIAMI (AP) -Miami Seaquarium, 6S ac,. of blrd and matlne life on Virlinia Key, bu been declared an outclal wUdli!e aa.nctuary by the Dade Count.Y Park and Recl'eaUoa Dept. "-P "We do not perceive any evil policy in the utilization by police of minors as decoys in the legitimate pursuit of drug pushers whose pnme markets are m mors attending high school," said the decision written by Justice Robert Kane. S!.SOO. PUBLIC NOTICE Tiw> Slate ol Catllornl•, O.O..rt....i of Tr9n\oor1a1lort Ol\trtcl 7, P. O &ol Jl04, Tttmlnal AMU. Lo• A-.... CA 'IOOSI, M\ tol..0 a RtPOrl OI W"'lt 01•· PICTITIOUS IUllNIU <l'l<lfOI' 4ncl APOllMI lor r•QUI,.......,, NAM• STATIMINT to• Int do\tllar gt ol whtH Into Th~ tollowlnQ per1A>f1\ •r• OcMno bu4-I Nt"•OOr-t Oa1 ,.. ... , Tl.., O.oertmrnl of Trt<\.-l•tlon CAllFOR HI" INJECllOH prOPOH\ lo ducnorg11 drwnto•lnq MOlOING CO. INC . 200 6rl99\ wo\lt.,nron1unctlon,.lth<0n>trutt1Clll AvenU'I Co\ta Mt\a, C•lllorroltY!•U 11<.tl••llO\ •\..o<laltd wltll IM repl<IC9· -------------------------------1 C•MCO. a Callfornl.1 co•l>O'Jhon ,.,....1 ot ti\\· Rout• 1 \Pacltlc Co4•1 100 8•1ci9• Avenut. Cost• Mou M•cinwot brooo• cro"'"CI N•woorl CAJllo•nl1'2627 8 •¥ coni.l'llllltn ec11'VHle~ 11.-P Tiii• 1111,1,...., h condutt..S b¥ • cor \t....,ul..S to comm•,,<• In ttw '11<'1"9 Ill WectcWI Plaaa 1028 lrVlDe. Newpor1 Beoch, CaWorn1«1, Phone 642-7061 -•llon 1911 Cl MCO On '"" bd•I• ot prellmln•rv "•ff ,.... Ru\Hlliillt>ert v•tw """ •oe>ll<ation of lawlut \I.;. People without insulation in their attic liave something missing upstairs. Pr•\tdtf'lt o.arO\ •l'Wi r19ulatlon,. th~ CAlltOfnlA Thi\ \t•tement was fllM w tO\ thP Req'onat Watt,. Ou.lit~ Cont rot &oef'd c;ou.,ty C1*rk ol Or on,.. C.ounly on No• S.rol1 ii.ne R~oon. ttnlallvtty or~ ""'°'r 10. tt7• to l\\W w•'i. dl\.C.h•rQie rtqar.menh ....._ •l'\CluO•no ,,,lutnl tirnltal•Oft\. •I'd Pub41,hed O.•nte Col\t O!llly Pilot -••I Condition• Ptr>on• W•llllno lo 1;10• 16, n lO •')(! Oec 1. "lb ~ ,, tom""'"' Ul>Oll or ot>f.ct lo'"' or'OOOflCI <11'\therQt" rttQu•r•m•nh •r• 1nv'1flod \a ,....,,,,., u,,,. in wrltltWJ to tM anow -t· 0-.\\ no l•l•r lll•n 01c~mlM'r 1' 1t7' PUBLIC NOTICE -----------Alt commenl\ or ot>Jt<llon> r"tol,.. FICTITIOUJ IUSINISS or1.,. to ,,.. •bO,,.. O•t• wtll 11t <-Nii.Ml ITATl'MINT \ldtrtd In I ... lormul•I'°" ol fiMI de· ~ tl)41o•lno ~''°" I\ do411Q bu 1 1..-m1n.attom. r199rd1no tM w..t.itt di,,.. nitt\ -4\-t r\erOf U no Oble<tlOin\ .,. rectl__,, RECENCY INTER •ORS '' ..... Aeolonel 8oardwllt lu ... Cl<sc ... r• ICam<llh Court. N ewPor1 O..ch. CA reoulrtrntnt\ A s>Ybtlc M•rlrMJ wUI l9e l?Ml ,..111 .._, req..e1I ot lflY lt11trt\ll>O Anita Jovc't Palm•r 1S <am.ah• oer'tOf' Court NPW00'18tacn. CA ~161>) Tiie R-1 .. WHI• Ol>t ... r911, .... 1">1• ...,,,,..., 11 con<lu<ttll t>y en In laled OO<umtnll, l•<I "'"'" tOln- v.-i..---'l'!e(I" teUl ... d. •nd P\IWI 11'1~ Anita Joyce Palmrr •• on fltt •nd may lie l"'Ot<l«I or Tiil• •l•l•mtrot WI\ filed w!lll ,.,. <ocN«I •I '"' ROQk>nal eo.rd Oft .... C.OU..lvCIMkolOran99Countvoro No• Ull lndlena Avtnu•. Suitt t, ""'be' 10 1'16 Rilr~"'IOt, CA, llu•lnt llu .. ,.u houri • , ... 11 t 00• m loS·OOp m.•te-d•V\· · Publl\~ O•a1>9e Coot O.llt PllOI P\it>ll.....S O"tnQe Cott! Ollily Pllol, Nov. 16. U . :IO. and D•c 1. lt16 ''" 16 DIKtmller 1, lt1' ~· ~RMIGHT? Learn What Makes The Lindora Method So Effective A complete program to instruct patients how to lose weight easily, then how to maintain their lean weight. Doily therapy, with audio and sub-liminol visual aids lo promote motrvation and encouragement. H.C.G .. a fat mobilizing substance. makes It easier fcx patients to lose weight without fatigue ex excessive hunger. Undora·s very special diet. designed for ropd wf?lfj'tt m md rrproved eothg hd:>its. Behavior modiflcolton techniques to learn weight control. Undora's easy-to-follow maintenance program to prevent regaining. lhe entire program Is under the strict supervision of medical doctors. specialists In boriotrlc medicine . I Coll lot tnfo1mol1on Monday lhlU frjdoy 9 A.M TO iPM -2'M TO 6 PM. NEWPORT BEACH 640-6831 l 11 Hoc air rises. When ic ri~ co ;in ntllc with no insuhition, the hem ju:-l h'Cps on going. Right nut of the house. Since ytx.i"rc pa~ 111~ j.!ood money to h¢lt thi1l air, it doesn't mnkc sense to Id it get ;iway. Proper insulntion keep<. it in~ide. So insulate. And whl'n you <lo, make sure yru do it properly. Ask your in..,ubtion contmcmr or salc~­ man about R-vuluc. R \.titre io; the tnic measure o( resistance to heat flow through insulation. An R-valuc of 19 is recommended for homes with both heating and coolinµ. Jmulation can cut the amount of gas Yeti use for heming by up to 2Cf%. With energy costs steadHy ~oing up, this is no time to <lclay. The quicker you fill in whnt's miss- in~ upsmirs, the sooner you'll Mtirt s.wing down below. Call an insulation contractor Ot' the Gas Company for a free estimate. --UUIOllM-- ' f crh-n u r d COSTA MESA 557-1893 IA·~O""" 1·• Pfofe• •v"<ll Bl\.llJ Son temordino • E. long 8eoch • MIJSlon Hiiia Howthorne • Orange • Newport aeoch Gorden Gfov• • Long Beach • fi'oaodena Lo Habfo • Woodland Hiiis • Sherman Oaks West Covina • Fulleffon • Riverside • Sonia Monica Costa Mesa • 'omona • C.nllo• • Hollywood ~~~GK ltldoro Medicd Ct11ca Ol9 owned ond Odlri"*t•ed bv MedlCCJI Oocioo · ~ reltnct !Mir pmctlce to 8orlotra. AU. Ct'ilc p~ Dociori ond NLrtes ore lcerlled by lhe Stat• of Calllomta. 1: I I • 1! • Ii ti t • • I • l • 1 : • Tuesday. Oeeemb9r 7, 19n TV Highlights KHJ fJ8: 00 -••The Barefoot Con· tessa ... Edmond O'Brien won a support. ing Oscar in this 1954 movie.drama with Humphrey Bogart, Ava Gardner and Rossano Brazzi. I . :· KCOP.Q) 8:00 -Golden Era of the Silents. The birth of the movie industry. is chronicled in this special documen· . tary. · KCET .@ 9:00 -.. Steambath." A highly acclaimed drama returns to Channel 28 with Bill Bixby as a frustrat· ed victim in God's waiting room and ·Valerie Perrine supplying the sex ap· peal .• TV DAILY LOG t1 TUESDAY ,, ! I EVENING . < 8:00 ; G D 00 ®H!ZJ CD tD News ! . a IZJJ oo <lZll oo m llews • g iM> hkers lnhthll Con- : llnued from 5 30PM. laker5 Y' · Clucago. · (l) Gomer Pylt 1. I!) Gtulsmole ~ m r11trid1e fJmily' xmw1m·l1 ~;. f1ll Melllbtrship Appeal/loom : QJI Dinah! · ftJ Uttle llasuls ·~ -6:30- , · O Dinah! Guests include fol•~ r1elds. Alan Krng, SJndy Duncan. lhll 6uby, Peter Duchon and John Rodbv & Super Band · ll)AndyGnttrtb 1101 MtlY Griffin ShO'll' , m f1mil, Affair : l!.1) W Gunsmoh 7:00 .~ D D rI11 C'J m llen •(l) M1 lltret Sons ,t e) To Tell the Trutb ,. I!) C04!Centrat1011 . mt Love Lucy • Q)The FBI /'<fl) Alrleric.allsrael lewisll Hour ~ ·m Meinbership Appul/M1<Nt11/ • ltllflf Report • ,(<2tl r}_) Bonma ~ Or1matk Series ;. m Adll1ms hmtl~ :. -7:30- , U Clnclid Cmlm : ,m The Odd to11p1e · U ri_o, ·n1 l§J Hot1,wooc1 Squ11u ~ W The Gar., Show f O The Joker's Wild ...., G» luO, Bunch ~ • 1'1.1) Q) lbsllwitle Oft the Road (, •W Channel 21 Ton1chl/Membt1· •• ship .,,.,, ; tm _,,., Sport's World ~ ;(3tJ C.lebrit, Sweepstake\ ... m nuh Gotdoft :} 8:00 ~ 111 ~ CO TOiiy Orl1ndo and ,O.twll Gunl~ are Abe Vr~oda and lh~ • 8iy City Roller; : •8 l21J r&J r10 tm 111 8.u Blad ~ "lu1n11I~" Bragg encounter~ •an attractive WAC num who was dl~o ; " high ~hool cl•s~mdle. but "hrn $1\e encounl~rs Casey slie mllllt$ no '. Stcret ol h-.r 1nt•nt1ons-and lhr. : <.au~ a $errous cta~h betwun lh• • two ··black shuo " • Mo.it'. ( C:) (Zllf) "Mall llfltll lhe . ky (yes" (dra) ·11 -Voetor Buono, • ,1\e~nan Wynn. Anlon.o Sabato .UJ Mo.it: (Zllr) ... ,., l)t lifdie,. (mus) ·~-OICk Van Dyh. Janet lf.tlh .. U ( 2111 <t J) Ot' Ma,,, D1Js ''RIChie BrallCllU 011t" Rrcllw. 1111$11, line With a posltt riff and, 11~1ng )onnt s adwice. devr:.n • blnrre tchemt 111 Ofeltr to mttl htt. ....... : {C_J (?Irr)""" ......... c .. ltua" (d11) -~4-flumphrty 8oe"'1. Ava C.rdner. Rosuno BrmL .ldofllleW\ld II) Wdtll £11 If Ille sae.ts r 1tm .cloc:umtnla1y an the birth ol lht !rim 111d-str1 tD llrtws/Nilic AffllB QfJ lilowlt; (.CJ (211r) '11" c.tdler'" (d'4) '11 -Mtehael W1lnt1, Jut Micllael Vtnc~!tl C> TMASUR£1 A fbtiofl'l * Gloeflpllic S,.C~I IU!lded by CUlf fD ~ llltltftll Ceorr8'1\IC ~ 'irtasurr" lhe \lory of Mtl Ytslltt. ti dtwe shQp owrtff turnrrt IJUSUfe hvnler a11d h11 quut IOI' th .. Sp.int&~ ealleon AfO(ha and h~r lllcratfVt c.argo, '°51 ott rhe flond~ ICe1s 1n 1622 '"d now •orth ptrhip-. SIOO m1lhon e an,inte • hycMc ""-"'• -1:30- 1 (fJI) <lJ) rn i lnlfnt & ley "Two ol Our Weullo<> Are ,l!41SS1n(' laverM and Shllfty play cltteelrve when lhe11 odd·b.111 nerah !Mn. Lenny and Squ121y, dt~Pl>tar, '•Cns·Wlls •• ClliNll "9CnM •• Sltllltillt CMffy 9:00 .. cm CD (}) M•••V K Sudden )Jmploms al illness In two of rts female personnel-Hot lips alld Qlonel Potter's favorite mare- ,midt cause '°' concern in Ille 4 77111. Hot lips, sulferina chronic •11d11 pain, Informs the depmlnt POiier-bound for a To-yq reunion wlth ltis wile-that she wants tM•hye, not frank Borns, lo ,.rform the suraer, should hri condition riqu11e II. • @ (I) Cl) Ptlict WtMH ''l ait'' follow1111 the 1101 of • colleae student (Tisha SttrlinC). MPdon centen Oii tft OYeNtlfouS •PUS RWlilJ t•td (&mt Oa~ son) and Sits Anderson and Crowl~y offer advice lo other campus wom~n on how lo avoid allacker\. U (iltl f8)) l)?J Rich Man, rOOf Man No rnlormat1on availablt Q) Tony Curlis, Mclean * Stevenson And Jud1 Collins Join Merv G) Mer¥ Griffin Show Q) R£V. IKE * JOY Of LIVING!! TURN ON YOUR POWER Of SElf MOTIVATION CBRn. l•t fD Chinese Procrams tli) Membership Appul/Hollywood htnislon Thutre "Steambdth' Bruce Jav frr edman's murh d1\Cu~d. comedy ldkH platr 1n a ~teamroom where a melting pol of char3Clers are 1n l1n1bo-and •I lh• mere 1 ot lh< Puerto Rican attendant \\llO 1~. in rtdhtv ~d -9:30- 0 17 13J 1 a One 01pt A Time It s been two ye~rs. but Ann's lalher ~Jill 1ns1$IS ~he can'! mJk~ rl on her nl'in and recent event> mav tU)l prove him ri~hl '8 The Bold Ones W [spedl>(u~r '76 10:00 D 111) (fl Cll Swrttk e rair m cf1J1 m ro1iu s10,, A bl•ck ad1v1sl. who l1nances his ac l1v111as from the proceeds ul a Yrt•'S ol bank robb,ri~s. and a lt6111 ul policemen rndulce 1n mutual 110111•, men! ma cal and mouse oonlr'I 0 I!) News 1 6 Bonanu 0 FAMILY-HIT * BY ALCOHOLISM U ( 29 JI ) ,,.. hmily 'Skelton Ill lhe Cb.el Dou• mu~I r.ce lhe truth abOul t11s "strr s alculroh>m when ;Irr lOmes hClme for a vr-.11 ·:ze Gunsmoh m Bmt1 de Primavera -10:30-m mm Ne"' 11:00 o o m >• 11etrt D 1 1 10 i~1 6 Nt"' O :ze Lou Amenun Style 0 Ctltbrity Rt•11t (D lil.t'f Hlrt111a11, Ma'J Hlrtm1n m hits of the lluarrt 11 1 3 Stu,.p the Sb rs tli) Membusllip Appul/Mrne: "lllld Hurts and IAfoftelJ" -11:30- 0 111 f~) r•"i CBS ult Mootie e 2l1 1> c101 m JollnrtJ c..- f tJ Tlre l'Tl a• 8 ( 2tJ ! a ) 3to T"'41J Movit of the Wee• M4n l'lho Wuuld Nol CJ1r'' QI flews Qel flit 190 Clllll m """1Mowit 12:00 • ltst .. Grotldto D llltw!.: CC) "hsurrtctt011 of bdllry....,.. lesltt Nids(n CD Motle:: "l:lO to Y•ma" (wn) '57-GJtnn ford. Vtn Hetlm. -12:30-e All-'lipt SM: "11tt UniY1te6," "Tht ltur," "The lh11 w~ •. ••d•Wtf His Hu41" CD MeM: C> "TIM Goldtfr A11ww (adv) '64-fab Hunter 1:00 D ·u1 'TI rf~ T-row tmlllt m Club 2:00 D lllotit o..Mtlt1hirt: "In <* Cluup." "c-pjrKJ of Hurts" CD All·ll11kl Slit•: "Tiie Bia Stmt." "So (Mb °'' llicht" 3:00 u Motit: re; "TIM 1111, AMtrtun'' M.rlon Brando DAmM£ llOYllS D£Cllllll11 le•, !tr,_ cemre._.. tie tlllt "1(. lllelWies. 10:00 0 CO "Mew to It Ytf1, Ytry,.,... (a>m) '55-Betty Cnblt "fiM Claws le Caire" (d1i1) ·o -Aa1m fom11off • (111 "tl-tf411t" (dra) '47- John Glrfltld, Jo111 Crawfonl. 11:00 D (C) "fttfft" (dra) ·5~ Jeff Chandler, Jane Ru~etl. 1?:00 ... ...,, .. Sc:«tMt' (dtl) 'l6-Kall1111M Hepb111n. 1:00 a "Cla'*"' £""""'° Cd11> '61-0lane McBain. Chtd Everett. Arthur ~enntdy 2:00 Ill (C) "Mnlilt ltova•" (dt'a) '52-Jose Ferrer. Isa ZU Gabor. l:ollelt ,,..tthand 3:00 (lJ (C) .. ,~ ...... , ,,.," (dra) '66-Glf.n11 f01d. 3-:.10 e (]:) "ti&llt 111 .,.. Plana" (dra) '62-RorallO Bram. Oltvil de Ha.illand, Y.eltt M1mitu1. Danfiers, Benefits 'Pill' to Bear New Caution WASHINGTON (AP) -Women who buy birth control pills soon will also get a brochure from their pharmacists tbat lists the hazards and benerits of the medication, the Food and Drug Administration says. The FDA announced it plans to require that a new brochure be given to each of the 8 million to 10 million American women who use the pill. The brochures would be supplied by drug companies to pharmacists. who would enclose one each time a woman got a new or renewal prescription. • THE BROCHURE WIU.. EXPLAIN the health hazards that have been linked to the pill. Until now. such information has been available from a woman's doctor only il she requested it". It will also tell womel'\ that the pill has been shown to be the most effective contraceptive on the market. The new brochure would advise women that. birth control pills: -SHOULD NOT BE TAKEN BY women over 40 because of the increased risk of heart attacks. -Should never be taken by pregnant women because they may injure the fetus. -Should be discontinued three months before a woman tries to become pregnant, to avoid potential birth defects. -Should be discon· ( J tinued at least four weeks M'rDICl~E before any type of sur-c.. 1-. gery that would involve --------- increased risk or blood. clotting or prolonged bed rest, because pill users are four to six times more likely to have blood clots after surgery than those not on the pill. -APPEAR TO BE ASSOCIATED with non- malignant liver tumors which, although rare, can be fatal if they rupture and result in internal bleed· ing. -Have not been linked tQ cancer. although women taking them should be carefully monitored by thi!ir doctors for abnormal uterine bleeding and lumps in the breasts. The FDA 's proposed brochure would say that birth control pills are more effective than any other form or contraception, short of surgical steriliza· tion, and would compare the risks of the pill with other methods as well as the risks of pregnancy itself. DRUG COMPANIES ALSO WOULD be re· quired to expand the summary of information in· eluded in every pill packet, and to make major re- vislons in information about the pill distributed to physicians within 120days. The proposed language in the patient brochure all(1 pill packet summary is open for public com· ment for 60 days, following publication today in the Federal Register. The FDA said t he final regula· lions will take effect 60 days after publication. Manufacturers are being encouraged to begin offering the new information, on a voluntary basu •. as soon as possible. the agency s aid. Haley, Comets Sued by Agency LOS ANGELES CAP) -The rock 'n' roll group Bill Haley and the Comets has been ordered to pay a defaultjudgment of $240,000 to its former manager. Sandra Shekel Hart of the Jolly Joyce agency of Philadelphia sued the group Feb. 24, alleging she negotiated numerous contracts for the Comets since a June 1973 personal management contract was signed. She contended that Haley, now living in Vera Cruz, Mexico. consistently renegotiated concert agreements without paying her a commission. Superior Court Commissioner Leo Rich signed the default judgment. , Mrs. Hart had sought $250,000 in damages from the defendants, alleging they charged that much to her account in three years . Cadavers at Work BUFFALO. N.Y. (AP) -Cadavers are being Wied here in simulated automobile-crash experi· menls to determine whether they can belp .re· searchers Im prove traflic safety. Calspan Corp., a research company in sub· urban Cheektowaga. said it has used 13 cadavers in the last year in indoor tests "to see whether they duplicate the responses of living humans" involved in highway crashes. ·-..... -,, . .. -·-~ . ..--. - PonYTales Santa His Best Bet . MIDDLETOWN, Conn. <AP) -"Please, San· ta, give me a winner for Christmas," read the plea ~ found in one of the mailboxes placed around the city for mail to Santa Claus. It was written oo a Connecticut off.track bet- ting sheet. "I hope he'll tbi.nJt or us iC Santa comeli through," said Bernard O'Rourke, head or the city department that installed the maUboxes. F'OLKS K4T MORE MEAT .---------~ SELL.SELL-SELL thotle Christmas items from undcrodr DAILY PILOT CHRISTMAS TREE CALL our Chrilltm as Ad-Viser at 642-5678 '\1 Ma11or Ne~t."f Former ast r.onaut Edagr D. Mitchell, sixth American to walk on the moon, is ·m aking a stab at a more earthly en· deavor. He is seek· ing the post of m ayo r of Palm Beach, Fla. WASHINGTON (AP) -Americans are eating more meat and fewer potatoes than they did 40 years ago, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Cosmetic Sutrery is the ·answ~r ... if you wish to Jtt oK younger and improve the, appearance of your bo<iy. Bureau data show meat consumption has risen from 117 pounds per capita in 1935 to 186 pounds in 1970, while potato consumption has fallen from 198 pounds per capita in 1910 to 91 pounds in 1970. American Cosmetic Surgery Center, lnc. · · • FACt.: LltT • MISt.: • t.:H:S • 11 \Ill Tit\ \~l'I . \\T • UHE.\Sl'• llll'S . T11u;11s . STO~l \t:ll • :-1\1 \ J•t:t.I .• Cell 642-5678. Put a few words to work for ou. CALL 898-&705rorano<h~1gq1111Jll'1u1 •111,1111111 P'l.t.\St.. ~OTt.i l111•Li.i.1t !'tool I. \, , ..... I. I•' ;!1tlll 1ll '.'Oh I •'',,,~hi.II" ... , .... 11 I"'"" • ·~··. ""'"''' ,,._,..4 • r,. ..... ,..., • .,.,. •rf'~ ...... ~ ,.-, AMERICAN COSMETIC SURGERY CENTER INC. r.ss2 so> .. A•• . """'"'11•• s ..... ~ 198 110~ FREE: . .with loans of $5,000 or more.· You can be the proud owner of this prized Gitanc lU·spt ed French bicycle. It's you rs free wh<.'n you bu rrow ~5.000 ur more tu buy a car. boat. airplane or to fin ance home improvements. al Fre nch Bank of California. f\ewport Beach. One of France's finest ui cvcks wi th a con:-;uml'r loan at i1ttracti ve you a touch of class when you rt· wheeling around. If yuu 'rl' n ol ;1 cyclist, someone.on yo ur Christina:; list is! Call 640-~4 70 or visit us soon. We have lots of money to lend ~tt competitive rates, bul our supply 111 these·imp01ted bike::; is limikd. French Bank of California rntes. is our \\'ay of introducing thl' new bra nch of French Bw1 k of C~tliforni;i. subsidi llt)' 11f thl' \rnrlcl 's l;1rgl'st bank !JUtsi<le thc·:u.S. \\\.'IJ ~tl so :tcld our clistifictl \'L' Frl'nch Bank T-sbirt to gin· \ STORE HOURS: Weekdays, 9 e.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. SUNDAY, 12 TO 5 P.M. shop ROBERT'S for Christmas · Make ROBERT'S your Holld•y Shopping He•d~ • quarter• for the Christmas season. Located In Orange County, ROBERT'S has 40,000 sq. ft. fully stocked with quality contemPorary furniture and orig1nar Accessories. A gift for the home is, always appreciated ... and ROBERT'S features unique designs that capture the tone and style of today's living. ROBERTS staff of professional d~corators Is eager to help you select a perfect gift at an affocdable price. So shop ROBERT'S for a Modern, Merry Christmas! One of th• Southl•nd•a LergHt & Flneat eon.ctJon• of Modem Rmlture, Ughtlng end Acceuorle• -"'04• ···~-;r~5~~ contemporary furniture po-.. _...,........,.~ 229 NOF(T1t HARIOR BLW>., FUU.£RT0N. ~IA 82832 • Phone (714) 871·51~ I Wectneect1y. December a. 19711 DAIL v PILOT AJ I Two Productions Open· MARAnot MAN •~-== ~ ..... ..,,.....,.. pi~ ------· WhUe no more new U\eater productions will be opening this year along the Orange Coast, there's an opera at Orange Coast College and a play al San· ta Ana College with a local actress in the leading role both making their debuts on Wednesday. The OCC opera u "Hansel and Gretel," to be presented by the college's Five Penny Opera Com- pany io the OCC auditorium. Carole 'Boelter, wbo translated the script from German \o English, is directing the produc·. lion, which will be staged Wed- nesday through Saturday O{ this week and next at 8 p.m. At Santa Ana College, Foun- tain Valley actress LaDonna DeBarros, who bas performed ._ __ .;.._.;.;.._...:;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;:.!.. ___ .....;;;;_.J for·a number of local communi- --------------------ty theater groups, plays the lead DE uuos "NORMAN IS THAT YOU?" lttGt "SEX WITH A SMILE" IR) ... OCKY HOUOlt rlCTUll SHOW" "PHANTOM OF ftARA.Dtlr + "StlTHS .. CIU "SIUNT MOVIE" "IANAHAS .. l~t "Rl!TUIH OF MAH CAWD HOISi" ''MISSOURI IR.EAJ(S"' lftGJ "MARA TMOH MAM" llJ "THE NEXT MAN"' PLUS (PQ) THE RETURN Of A MAN CAUlO HOllSI HUHTl"TOM CINEMA .... , ... ''"'~~· U f.0601 Ul•Ull "The Next Man" PLUS {R) I m11 Ml WIUIO '' KJll .=:::====:;1 in Christopher Fry's "The Lady's Not for Burning." Performances will be given Wednesday through Saturday at 8 o'clock and Sunday al 2:30 in Phillips Hall on the Santa Ana campus. Rdservations 835-5971 between l and4p.m. ON THE LOCAL 111EATER scene, three pro- ductions wind up their respective engagements with final performances this weekend. These are "The Mousetrap" at the Westminster Community Theater, "Last of the Red Hot Lovers" at the San Clemente Community Thealer and "From Here to Kingdom Come" atOrange CoastCollege. "Mousetrap" is entering a holdover weekend under the direction of Ron Albert.sen with Glenn Bradley, Susan Kellogg and Michael Fiore in the leading roles. Closing performances are Thursday through Saturday at 8:30 in the theater, 7272 Maple St., Westminster. Reservations 893-8626. ALSO ON STAGE Thursday through Saturday at 8:30 is "Last of the Red Hot Lovers" at San Clemente Commullity Theater, 202 Avenida CabriUo, San Clemente. Joanne Applegett directs the Neil Simon comedy with Tony Brandt playing the UUe role. Reservations 492-0465. "From Here to Kinedom Come," an original musical plav about the Children's Crusade, re- sumes Wednesday and continues through Saturday ~ith an 8 o'clock curtain in the Orange Coast College Dram a Lab Theater. Author Jon McDonald is directing and admission is free. Two professional productions continue their Tuesday-through-Sunday schedules along the coast -"Saturday Sunday Monday" at South Coast Repertory and "The Sound of Music" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse. MARTIN BENSON DIRECTS "Saturday Sun- day Monday." a comedy about a weekend in the lives of an Italian family. Curtain time is 8 o'clock with a 3 p. m. m atinee on Sunday at the SCR theater. 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservations 646·1363. At Sebastian's, ''The Sound or Music" is sold out through December, but will continue through to you It wurlcl •.. • =··IL_..._ PIEll~OllMANCI! SCHl!DVLE '""-• O.C. 7 ............. •1:00 PM WH .. 0tc I ............ •1100 PM '"""'• 0.C. t .......... •1.00 PM ,,,1.,0.C. IO ••.•...• ,. •t:OOPM Set , 0.C II ..... '? 00-t 00 PM Sun..Ollc 12 ••• 2001A(l'&OOPM • 11,lt 0"'• 11 YIU. & VNOlll Sl'ECIAl DISCOUNT P<IGHT T-.• Oec.1 Ullt !:-1::.riiltr~~"" T1cQt ............... (213} 437-2255 OON'TAAIJI TMI OlllA f HT ,AMIL\' alil1111U.IH1'UNT "'"°"''"' •11111111 HIAME 6Tllll!T CMll.OlllN'I TILIV»IQN WQOIMOI" e101tlC1~•1n1, ltll MUPP fl; IN(. .. , •• ..W .......... 4'0!C' ....... .... ,,.......,,.~ DON'T Miii ITll 100~ IEATI AVAILABLE ,____LONG BEACH ~RENA- I • .....,,.~ -.__MAH' "DAY DREAMS" Intermission Tom Titus Feb. 20 at the dinner theater, 140 Avenida Pico San Clemente. Call 492-9950 for reservations' and performance times. English Debut LOS ANGELES CAP ) -Dir ec tor Lina Wertmuller will start her first English-language film in Calabria, ltaly, on Jan. 3. The new movie " ..... ._.,._(II Sovnt COAIT 'LAU e.......... 14t.JJJZ CIMIMALAHD THIAntl "'""",,. US-7601 is tentatively titled ''A ..,_ .... ......,~...,..,.1'"rw.-t-!~!"""'!~!'ll"'~~---1 Night Full of Rain" and A . "TH AMAZING it features Giancarlo 'Y ._ DOIEAMANS" (0) Giannini and Candice "DOC IAVAOI" Bergen a s marrie d ~"MORMANISTHATYour j o u r n a l i s t s . M i s s ~ "SHllLOC• HO&.MIS Wer t muller wrote the SMAITH llOTHa" script. lHE CITY SHOPPING CENTRE J4IOl111ttlSt ~l!lll t&et1AH1•C ORANGE •532·6721 f'~A ... _LUEY ......... .:\~tr~:·" .......... ''THE NEXT MAH" OU 1tlt SllT/$1M-4:1M:ll "THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KlllG" Mt SAT/iUM:.J+tt SO. COAST PLAZA JllOl1>1t1I St 5~11111 "" ""'"' 11MARATHON MAM" lRI. 1:10-tO U. T l'UM-1 :H•l :4 .. 1:4 .. ..... ,., .. CINEMALANO Im St N;;rw Aa>llt• IJS TSO! MALICE IN WONOERLANO" (X) 1 • t:llUT/\1"6-hJM:lt .,, .... ..,. . "Fl£SH GORDON" l<H SAJ/SllM-1:1 .. l:U 1:1 .. 11:11 CIHEMALAND wis. h .r•11 ._,,, .. •» 1501 flll '6111•' "MARATHON MAN" !RI "MARATHON MAN". Ill ~ CITT CEMTRE C IMfMA\ S.A. FRWY IMANCHHTER EX.I _a.a . FAWY ICITY DA. [ll(J • "SHOUT AT THE DEVIL" -HIATSCOUT AMO CAntOUSI THUISDAY"' • "IUGSY MALOMIE" "THI 114 IUS" • "lllTUIM.OF A MAN CALLED HOISIN "MISSOUll llUICS• INI ~·•uc1 tH woHDHLANDN '"FUSH GOIDOM" Ill s~ .. 1Price12:3010 2:00 p.m. lnc ... ~&H I SI.JS Open Doily 12:30 p.m. AHOTMIW Situ•• FILM lSHOwnMIS) 7:JO I t :lO Brl1tol •I Mo1cAtthur Santa Ana 540-7444 7:Jo a ti41-••TS MT/SIM-1:11·1:41-1: ... .,, .. , .. ,1 ., :~ l HOW fUNHY"~H SIX Sl?l•I \ 1 IM-2400 IVllYTHING YOU WANTED tO KNOW AIOUT HX t•I ' --GENE WILDER Jill CLAYBURGH RICHARD PRYOR ...... ,,." ... """""SILVER STREAK" ................ CO .. "'X_"Crll_ ;o·,;:,"', .. '°"'•"'•-PATRICK McGOOHAN.-- UIClUSfYI OIANGI COUfm IM4CMMINT ._ ____ . _ _. ST&m mD4T DIC. 10 .....__..;;.1;.__.::;r~ "I UHAWAT IUT Ullll" CAHIE111 "u' IOLUHAll 111 -•-•m .... ~"' tMOUY AT TMI DIVll tNI ' '"" ~...;....;.-.JGlUt SCOUT & CAtMOUSI tMUISDAY ('O "lllHloWn IUT HlUI" CAHll 111 •IUI IOlllHAll t•l -•-•m--SHOUT AT THI DIVll !'01 '"" --~oam SCOUT' CATHOU$f fHUISOA -~-----~~-~~-~L~ IACC WlltOH e llTA MOlllHO THI l lTZ (II "US fllHll & THE llAN 11) IOAl>I Of lAllOHll 1.·,ASSION ltOTION 1•1 2.•IVl & THI HANDYMAN 111 3 .. AUCl GOOD IOOY 111 l.·NOIMAH •• IS THAT YOU?c'OI · 2.·MISSOUll lllAKS..1 ...-. ......... ~ 3.·lffUIH Of MAH CALLED HOISr 111 • •VHloWAf •Ur JllUI" CAUll t•I .iul ROLUllAll t•J fNllll 01 a lllfll l..c>MIN111 2.·SHAM!t00111 l..LtPSTICK 111 aolQlll • &tvtlfTlltl • nu oe l..OMlH 111 • 2AIDlll & THI IUN 111 ) .• Wffllt UHi flYH 111 ~-........ CA) .. ""' 1•.-::::" 1.·TW0.11flJf1Wl~NING 111 m ·Ill I 2 . .flHlll & THI llAH t•I i • .oaTOll Nl .OWi IMIAllH 1.-ftltuMIAU WY IN I 2.·t.UNf 11.AClCTOfl 1'<11 l · WMlft lll mn fNI mct0•• ...... ~ ACO\- tAl«O COtn'llA lOS ~ llMHll&YOlllOIOllt- .. , Tuetday. Oecem~ 7. 19711 n • Tables '{11rn on Taxes Taxable Income Vmhr $19,999? Watch Out New Orleans Bank Closes A,.Wlreplloto International City Bank of New Orleans was declared in- solvent and closed last week. The Bank of New Orleans assumed JC B assets. totaling $160 million, and was to re· open the bank's nine offices Monday. The bank had 70,000 depositors. WASHING1'0N (AP) -The new math of the new tax law rou1d cost uncounted numbers of Americans as much as $23 more an lncome taxes because they earned $1 too much in 1978. That's just one of the quirks to be found in the Tax Reform Act of 1976, and it occurs bec11use Congress has decided most Americans should read thel.l' tax bills from a table rather than <.'ompute the amo unt mathematically. THAT DECISION actually may benem countless other tax· payers who could find themselves saving as much as $23 if they can sbave their 1976 in· come by as little as $1. An example or a taxpayer who would have to pay extra would be a typical married person filing a separate return. If. for example, the mcome was $18,050, the tax would be $.5,181. Ir the person earned $1 more, the income tax would go up $23 to $5.~. But there's yet another twist never before faced by almost 40 million of the nation's 85 million mdJvidual taxpayers. MANY OF THEM could find themselves paying slighUy more in laxes for 1976 than in 1975 on exactly the same amount of in· come. Conversely. others may find themselves paying slightly less in 1976 on the same amount or money as earned in 1975. Milk Price Hikes Due? SACRAMENTO IAP) Dairy farmers will get more for their drinking milk erfecllve Dec. 12, but it is unknown JUSt how Ute tn· creas e wall s how up at the supermarket. .. We are hoping much of 1t will be absorbed " by the markets and not show up as retrul price in· creases. Dick Thompson, depart· ment spokes man. said Monday The increase from $9.81 to $10.23 per 100 pounds of Cl ass I milk, the kind people drink. is the first increase m more than two years ,Magazf ne Pur~laasPd Robert Hughes. president of Hughes Ad Ho u:.t', has an· nounced purchase of the finan· cially tr o ubled Orange Coast /Newport Life Magazine and renamed the pubhcallon Orange Country /Newport Life Hughes purchased the magazine from Ron Guccione, who 1s no longer as sociated with TAKING STOCK it. Rob Bryant, a Newport· Beach-based publicist and free lance writer, was named to edit the monthly publication. Tom Arcuri is associate publisher and heads a sales staff or five. Sales and editorial offices are at 3931 MacArthur Dl vd , Newport Beach. S ult Settled John Jay Corley, president or National Sys t e ms Corp., Newport Beach. has announced that the U.S. Uistnct Court has confirmed the class action settle· ment announced by the company Junes. The settlement involved no ad· mission of liability, with res pect to the action filed in the U S. Dis· trict Court against the company and certain of its officers, direc- tors and other defendants. The complaint had alleged a violation of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and certain regulations or the SEC. AboHtlon IJrged WASHINGTON (AP) -The chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission has recommended that federal regulatory commissions, includ· ing his, be abolished. Chairman William T. Bagley made the recommendation in a letter to Thomas B. Lance, the Georgia banker appointed budget director by President· elect Jimmy Carter. N<Jr:dstront to BMild Br.uce Nordstrom, a chain of specialty stores, has selected South Coast .Plaza as the site of a three-level. 120,000-square-foot store, its first in California. GOVERNMENT-APPROVED INCOME TAX SAVINGS Reduce your ·~income faxes while saving for your retirement Government-approved savings plan for in· come tax savings on both principal and interest 1• 1rnmgs arc now authOrrzed for qualified 1nd1· 111duats There 1s an RFS plan which may vl>ry well fit your parllcular circumstance For 1nd1v1dual wage earners not covered by another qualified retirement plan as well as SPlf·employed persons there 1s the IRA or lnd1· v1dual Rellrement Account Plan. You may set aside 15°,, of your income annually up to S 1 500 and deduct the amount lrom both federal and state income taxes Both husband and wife may qualify thereby tak1nq total deductions ot up to S3.000 No income ta x 1s paid on the interest on these savings until withdrawn after age 591 2. plans who may be terminating employment. (or whoSP. plan 1s beinq terminated by their com· pany) the IRA plan provides fortransferof1hese funds tree ol current income taxes 1f arranged w1th1n sixty days of the d1stribut1on of such funds For self-employed 1nd1v1duals, the new Keogh Plan now authorizes a federal tax deduc· t1on ol $7,500 or 15°0 of earned income. whichever is less. 5 2,500 or 10% for state. The interest earned on these savings is completely exempt from stale and federal income taxes until withdrawn al reliremenl after age 59'12. For participants 1n other qualified retirement For more mtormatlOn regarding the above plans. simply 1nq1..11re al any of our twelve offices. Ask us rKJw what you must do to meet December 31st de00line. ****** 11111111 73/% Realize. Nowearn /4 o 8 06% an annual yield of • o by compounding dally. $1000 minimum balance, 6 year minimum. Federal. regulations permit withdrawals from certificate accounts before mah.Jnty. bul there 1s a substantial reduction in inleresl earnings. REPUBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS ,.,,,,.,..... ..... ,.,... " ro.. tou1io.... .,, 0.-. C°""'Y SANTA ANA 17th St. West ol Newport Freewey (714) 541·5286 ANAHEIM 202 Anaheim Plaza, 500 N. Euclid St. (714) 956-8290 LAGUNA NIOU!L 30232 Crown Valley Perkway (714) '495·0850 WESTMINSTER 134 Westminster M1ll/Bolaa & San Diogo Fwy. (714) 89"4·5347 ...... 01110.1 '"· lA0£HA ?WIN L•lce A¥9. (t!S) 791-1281168l·M11 Twel,,. Loullofl1: AL TADENA• ANAHl!IM •ARCADIA• 9UR6ANI< Cl.AREMONT • HACll!NOA HEIOMTI • 1.AOUN" NIOUEL • LOS AN0Elt8 l"ASAOENA • 1"1CO RIVl!RA •SANTA ANA• WESTMINSTER /f!J~l•l1. Cf1Mt•rt1d Ofl(J SU/Jllflll~MI Oy •ot11c••• or /h(I U11•1•d SJtlff Oowmotrttfll This case of the government collecting more on the one hand and less on the others is the result or domg away with the tax rate scbedul~ for 90 percent or American taxpayers. The use ol tables has been a growing trend in income taxation and with it the kind of discrepancies to be ex- perienced this year by almost every taxpayer. Last year, for Instance, an estimated 50 percent of 85 million taxpayers used what were then the optional adjusted gross in· come tables to find their tax bilJs. These tables also had built into them the same kinds or quirks found this year, but for fewer people. BUT FOR 117'. staff members of congressional tax writing com- mittees estimate, about 90 per- cent of taxpayers will be re- quired to use tbe taxable income tables that list tax bills for taxa- ble incomes of up to $19,999. Above that figure, t.axpayers will continue to use the rate formulas and will not find themselves in tbe same situation. For instance, a single taxpayer with a taxable income or $15,800 will have a tax of $3,760. But a similar taxpayer earning $1 will have to pay $3,776, or $16 more. If this second taxpayer had been aJ. lowed to use the old system, the mathematical formula involving high school-level multiplication, subtraction and addition, there would be no increase in taxes. SIMILARLY, FOR married couples filing jointly with taxable incomes of $16,050 and $16,051, there is a big difference. The first couple will find a tax or $3,267, and the second, $3,281, or $14 more. Again, with last year's system in use, both couples would have paid the same taxes. Of course, the system also can be reversed. Knocking as little as $1 ore the income of the second married couple or the second single taxpayer saves these in· divlduals $14 or $16, respectJvely, in taxes. The second new wrinkle to be f0W1d ln the tax law could result in anywhere from $6 to $16 more or lf'ss in taxes for various categories of taxpayers, com· pared with what was paid trust year on the same taxable in· come. FOR INSTANCE, THE tables say o married couple with taxa- ble income or $16,001 will pay a lax or $3,267 this year. Last year the tax on the same income was $3,260. But this year the same couple, if it has an income of $16.049, will pay a tax or $3,267, or $7 less than last year's lax of $3,274 on the same taxable income. Similar comparisons can be made for all filing categories but the bottom line is that no tax· payer will know whether he or she will benefit or pay more because of the tables until com- puting taxable income. lol•• Branlll Robert S. Strauss. outgoing nation al Democratic party chairman, has been named to the board of di.rectors of Braniff International Corp., according Lo board chairman Harding Lawrence. CAB Investigates 2% Air Fares Hike WASHINGTON (AP) -The Civil Aeronautics Hoard is in· vestigaling a request for a 2 percent across-the-board Care increase by four airlines, CAB officials said. THE AIRLINES -TRANS WORLD, United, American and Frontier -proposed the increase e'rfeclive Jan. 15 on flights with.in the 48 contiguous states. The increase would have taken effect automatically, but it was suspended by the CAB, which said it needed further study. CAB of- ficials said they will complete their review by Jan. 15. A 2 percent increase would mean a jump from $384 to $392 in the daytime coach round-trip fare between Washington and Los Angeles. A SPOKESMAN FOR THE CAB SAID the proposal for the in· crease _was baseil on the airlines' r~turn on investment for the year ended m June. The spokesman said the CAB believes fare hikes should be based on the most current information available and will seek updated figures to cover the year which ended in September. A 2 percent rare increase for domestic airlines took effect Sept. 15 for flights with.in the 48 contiguous states. Over The Counter NASO Listinqs 21\. Jl'J4 11''• ,. U'h U'll 1Jp11 and Dowrur •>r. S''> UPS ANO OOWNS h 21~> NEW YORK. (AP) -Tr>e t01iowl119 11.i •l't •~ ""°""" tne o.,,, the Counter l"' • llO<h •nd """'"'' lltal ,...,. 90tle up :18 3'I the "'°'I ancl down lhe moot b.tloe<! on :;~ !;~~ ro;ce'll:o~Mno• r•t•rdles. ol llOlume •• •8 NO -ur11Ytt lrodlno Del.,.. U .,. Incl· 11•1, 1''' -Ntl •ncl ~rcenl•o• Cl\anqtl\ Mt I,.,. '' • 9""4 Ott,eretv.• ~t•Ptrt the prrvl<>u'l t~nQ ''4 ,,_,, bid Pl'•<• .,,d tod•Y'• ••tt ~ oric•. "~ ,, ..• U"S M me lA\I O"I B•Co"'l>UI N•lw 11 1 O~\M ll•< 1 • ,., 4)umm1t Prrtru·t1 ) • ', 8•1rdAtom1t \ \ •"• • 1 A lf:Mi(tfll'tnl h ,..._ _. '-'t U•1tr<W\ (Of'IJ l + ', Sth.4•• E•,. ,,,, l .. 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' P•ff'll L t .07 ~ ,.00 NI. .. ,,,... 10.0t 11.0J "M • , 7 f 'ff I , t.21 I. : NM"'*"\~ M NL fi'IUI "•r J" 6. Mullll V•rl11 P U4 US Ille l*il •• ' ,.._A ~fl ~ft A 11-•. • -e k t"'' N 10.Jt ~·a W.llk 0 •• ,. 6.M \10(-t JI U.,U L ,...,..... •·'2. 1.'6 -OI -'" M4' &0 N t·°' .I Wltln l!q 10 $1 NL 11.C ~lll •• 7 1 ~ ~ c "·o i:· ~·II('; ~·l ''" ~. 1111 'Hi 'Ut II •• , .. , n ~" 011 , tt ,, .. := 1: '~ ~~ (:C,.'4' .... ~1 · i..~ 1 1: ~t .....,.., ... ~·•· · ,._ ~ ut •· ,·: 1 1Z writ'~..! •ioJ· .. 11Nc11 HJI .:4t ,. hlen ... , t.n .. I,, • NL ,_ • '"" tU• ..... N ... 10. ·'" • NI • ™'-<hlr .. ) ,,. ) ' i Tuesday'H Afternoon Price8 Tueaday. December 7. Hl76 DAILY PILOT ~ f :J NYSE COMPOSITE . TRANSACTIONS Tailor Wines Coke Purchase o.i.t•U1>nf l"'l"'9 !• .. tOllllM .... Yo'11, M-u. l'eclflc, 1'8W, htlOfl. Otl•oll •llCI CJMIM.tll •IO<l t•( ....... t -,_,......,. ... lllallGft•I IU-1.UO..ot S.C"rtllff Otai.r> -IMllMI • 'fltW\ ,..., • 11•:\t tw C"J 51.,1,..._ O)t • l2 S'4 ~.,lldnl ., • ''° , .... -" ,,:'-¥~::: ' ·~ m:-: :z $10llVC 11010 UO 1~"' + ~• 5'ollVC pl I ortOO Ill/) tr.MW , !O I )S )S IDnCon )6 \ J 14 Stot>SN>o I S 7 14_, '• Storlec •• 11 1 Jt 10"' " SIQft•8 I 1 tJ U + SlfldRltt 10 • 12 i) + " $1uWor I ~1 ' • 41 U-... S4:WotA.tt0 • A1'~-'• SluWrpl8 S 1 ts"'+ '-SV.•511o ott A i1 41', kPrG I Ge ' Jl t2\ll '"' SunQ\m 40 1 ,. n" • '" SUl\Co 2 ' es •t\1-'• s..neo ,,,, n •1 ov.-1, WIWI\ I 09 10 U fl" + " WNKlr I t 32 l•1"-''-Sunch plJ lO I 12 • ~~ 1tt» •0 ll'·H •~ 5'.iperl/'al 6' 10 21 21'.., _ 'II SuorOll t IO IO » Ut • I s..o;.., G t4 t UO '"' • \'t =~ro A ~~ ·:~ Swen• 1~ I 41 11"" + ·~ f brOft .. • 5' ti v. ~ .... Sy1>rt1r>l2 40 7 ll~-I.<. Syttron _ f -f 1 5'4-I• Tlcor I ' II ••• ,. + ., TRE Co<o IJ II ,~, TRWln t 40 ' 413 H'' •lit TRW pf 4 40 , S 1' +? TAWOI A !O 12 10\. + l'lo Tart8rd 80 • 1 lt 11. a•cot1Hllt ,, ) • •• ..... tO s ., ' T •ll•t(.B I t I 11'' ~ ::::rv J.'.~2 10 .~~ ul\ : -Vtflt I •I IS\lo +I Tapp.1n 10 ' '1 ••;, . t <Ml<t 70 12 llS AO -lllo To<"1\o~olt 18 •Ii< TecM l<on 12 24 tl' • • \'I Tt~ltO•H )() ti H 4l'h 1'1 T•ltc.or JO S 11 1 -"• tlt<ln I 01 1 240 &• '• T tloc,,.•npt II S 111> -~. Ttltt Cp II 9S 111\ .. T"""<olHtOI )41\+1o TuoroPel I I lS7 Ullo+ ~~ ~:~~~ 2 lh II~ ~!~-:-'" Tt•Com I 10 11 • J1\, \~ le<E\I I ts I 0 JI'" • " hETpt l +o U ll'io + '' T•ETPl181 11 30-.,. I'> Te•G\ T 1 I 17l •4\lt t '• r~.1no tb•) u "'•• '• T .. ln\l 111 ?91 101'~ -'' Tewlnl 13 Ill l '> TuOG• 1011 ~ 7711, -'" t Ptld )~ fl 1 29 • 1 I ft,Vtll \ 1110 iJU 21111 ''• l~u\411 l lO tO lU 11 .., + v, ••11 llld s• >'• • '°' TutrOll 110 • 119 26"' •• Te•trpt I AO U 74\o """"' IA & 1l II ' Thome.a H 10 10 41 , Tt.omtn u ~ l7 to'. 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Tr•vtr\ IOI U O• :16'~-" Trl<h\ I Ue • H """ .... ~;:~r,:''i ·. \~ ~~-.,. ~~1~,~c S& ;• :~ ~~~; ~ Jot>l<•n 3011 ISi l'>~t '• Tuc.tonO 1 01 t •144 tS t-•' titenC..n SO 9 11" tQ_t.,. .. • • tcot.AI> aO 10 101 16' 1 TytuCc>ro SO 1 .t•S 7111, -'. -u-u U4llnc tO • )Al 76"\-\~ UAL pf •O l >•• ~ • t11, UGI CP I aO 8 lb " -•• ~~1!.n/ I~ t rl~ m:: ~= UMET Tr • 31 1'11 UOP 72t.. 35 IJ\l > ''> Ulllnd I SO 4 ~ >4'"-.. UlllnQf I 7• I 41\i> U4 RCO I 30 I 6 20>\ • 'I• Uner<o &O S S 101 l It• Un8encp SA 11 12• 10\o • \11 ~c:.~ ~~I~ m r,~ •. , Ur\ Comm re lS b \.It-I/• ~~~p,. If ,:~ 1~~:-~ u..e1p1 •SO tl:IO 49"1+ .. ~~:r1',,,' ~. : ~~\, + I U.. flO.lllY 1 8 4<'t \lnOCAI 1 10 I U2 56'~ 'I• voe. on so 10 17\, •, UPac"' J 40 11 ns 100~. • " U..Pec Of 41 t 11\.o • '" Union• 111< )A 'ii -1 .. lJnlroyol SOIH '1'11 l\o ~lr\~1f~d: 9 H~ ~ .. _.,., vnB<ndr>IAo 22 11., ~~~~' 1'~ s ri! ,;~. .• UFlnCll 1'4 1 1)9 1l .a. 1;. Un Guunly IS Al ll + V. Ulllum 2 4' 9 14 2'V.. Ulllum pf'l 10 '"° 2H~. V• \Mllllld 60I> 1 It 11"-. ''• Uf\Ulnl)f 0 1 171~+ 1.1\ UlllllM 10 ~ 7J ..... + \II UJer8-I 04 8 IS 1l"H '-" UnllMM a0 57 10'11-lo\ \Jn Nv<lr 1 t 101 J)~ • ,,,. U..llPk Mlt1 48 S g, + '-" Ul'llllhlQ 14 ' It ti lo USl'oS I II• • 13 II . US"ldG 2 M 12 164 S2V.+ \II USGve>• I 60 ll S$1 21:\o • II• USGvt>I 1 llO • 78 Us.Hom 1612 100 1'4 USlnd AO" 1na 7''t + .,,, ~~t:i~:?n~' S 1g ;~ • I\ uss-110 ' 101 75\~-'• US Sl..,1110 t Sl6 48'' ·~ vnot>.K 111 31 n -v.. vnTech 1 '° I OS 36lll. '" unTtchot 8 , lt lb•''-• v. unTchr>ll J7 1 IOH~+ '~ U..ITtl I 2010 1•9 19 vn1r.1w1 •I 2 Un Tl !pll SO S 2l'h unuroo 10 1n " , ... -·~ U..1••• S6 I 6 ,, .. Ull~t! I S. I 28 28 -.,, 8~1'.\"te 1 <:11 m ~:·:. '" U•lllt I' 'Hoa 19 II'" Ulohlnl 1 ?Oa II IHO •l'•, UlahPL J 11 9 ll 41~ + ~\ UIPLpl ? 80 14 Jt••-Vo -Y-V -VFC:> I 10 I h 19 vs1eo,.o .. & " ., • ., .. "• Vell•Yln 40 1 '41 1 ' .. '• Varian tt 12 It 14 It-''" Vero Int • •• '''• • "• llt'10oCo • 1' SI\ • Vtnl<~ 10 6 J JI.\• I\ llOIS. I l1• 12 141/•-V. Vfl(O 10. I 102 20 -~ VI.com tn1 10 •• ''"' • •"4 ~:~~ o,s. ;,~· I~~: ~ VaEPot s • rllO ss •') VoEP Ol11! • ""o Ill/). 2 VaEP pl7'0 .. IJ llV. •• ~:~2rpl: ~ .:l8o :A~-;I.~ vorneell) inc 10 6t SI\ V\ilcan Mir I 10 21 71 -l1I -w-w-Wlt>A pl4 SO tlOO SO + 'It w .. ,,., •• so " 1& n . . Wtchpl t,10 , IJ SI , • WKh Riiy 79 l'"-Vo W11Marl 10 U 71 1011-IA ¥'481Qfh t 10 8 71 ...... + '"' Wlkr 4 1 40.t I II 11 r..:::~ I ~I~ I~ ~\~: :z WallJ pl I rl30 11\'t• " =~~~ .. ~ : ·~·" .. Wlttlf<O ~ l &Vo, .~ wam5 I 15 10 11~ • •• WrnCO<!I , .. ''"' • I\ Spreads Waves By Mll.1'()N MOSKOWIT'L 8800, the nation's fourth largest advertising agencr, lasl month resia,:nc<l lhe accounl of the ·raylor Wine C~ pany. While not a huge account, 1t 's nol iosubslant . representing about $1.8 i:nJlllon or advertls1ng 11 year. Tnyl r is the r.remier producer of wines In New York and It's e nation s largest producer of champagne under th<i Tayltr and Great Western labels. u·s not a client an advertisiQ_g agency likes t o part • with. So why did BBOO ~ ' throw lt out ? ·~ The' answer is that '~ ~ Money ' BBDO handles the ad· T vertis1ng for Pepa1·Cola. ree And Taylor Wine, whocsc history goes back more than 200 years, ls about t.o be acqull'ed by Pepsi's archrlval, the Coca·Cola Company. ~ JN THE ADVERTISING AGENCY business, lhal poses a conflict or interest. No agency handling a Ford Motor car would be selected to prepare advert1s1ng for Frigidaire, 11 div1s1on of General Mot.ors. Yes, the giant Coca·Cola Compsny of Atlanta 1s about to get into the wine business. They used lo Joke In !-'ran~<' about Coke being the vm ordinrure of Amen cans With wine consumption movmg up steadily in the United States, Cocoa·Cola ts spreading its chips on the b~veragc roulelk table. Many or the squares on this table are already COY~ by Coca·Cola markers. The Taylor and Great Western tablt' wines. dessert wines and sparkling wines will Join a cor porale Lineup that includes lhe following COCA·COLA~ TAB. FRESCA, SPRITE. Mr. Pl88 and Fanta soft drinks; Minute Maid and Snow Crop frozen citrus Juices; Hi-C rruitdnnks, Maryland Cup and llutternut coffees and teas; Admiration, Thom.is J Webb and Hugg ms Gourmet Mocha Java coffees. Coca·Cola thus seems poised lo explo1l llle beverage market, whichever w11y 1t JUmps The Taylor acqws1tton 1s costmg Coke some bi~ chips. It plans to trade stock worth about S90 m1l11on That's for a company currently earning $6 million on ~ales of $70 million a year Coke earns $240 m11tion on sales of $2.8 balhon. which indicates that the wine business 1s still Just a ripple m the over·all beverage market THE COKE-TAYLOR COCKTAIL matches one already concocted by B BDO's big soft dnnk client Pepsi owns Monsieur H enn Wines, which imports several French table wines as well as one of the top-selling wmes In the American market, Yago Sant 'Gna. Bringing Taylor wines mto the house will also pit Coca Cola against one of its largest botUers, the Coca Cola Botti mg Company of New York. This bottler ranks as one of lhe , largest wine producers in the country lt\rough its ownership of Franzta , one of California's bag wineries, and Mogen David, Chicago.based master of the sweet wane busmess The Taylor acqu1s1tion also raises the qucstmn of what they will serve at the Jimmy Carler Inaugural Ball J. Paul Austin, chairman of Coca-Cola, was a ma1or backer <1f Carter. Donald Kendall, chairman of Pepsi, was a maJor backer of ex·Pres1dent Nixon Job Competition Mars Up Swing BETHLEHEM. Pa. (APJ -Prospects for Jobs arc brighter, but competition will be keen when an estimated one milhon students getting college degrees this academic year start looking for work, says the College Placement Council. After two years of decline, the council's annual survey or about 600 employers reports a 12 percent increase in those who expect to hire new graduates. THE STRONGEST JOB UPSURGE 1s 1n the engineer. mg field, where employers are expected to increase their hiring of new graduates by 24 percent, the survey showed The next best field of job possibilities 1s for graduates with mathematical and other technical degrees. The survey predicts increased hinng of 13 percent in those areas. The only decrease shown m the survey is for state and local governmenl 1obs, with hiring expected lo drop 9 per· cent, the survey showed Federal government 1obs are ex· peeled to mcrease by less than 1 percent FOR TH~ FIRST nME SINCE December 1973, hinng of graduates with degrees in the liberal arts is expected to mcrease. by 8 percent. But a spokesman for the council warned competition would be intense in that category About 40 percent of graduates this academic year will get degrees in the liberal arts. while only 5 percent of the graduates will get engmeenng degrees, the spokesman said. The council Is a nonprofit organization which coordinates college career planmnJ( and placement ac· liVlties on campuses across the country Utility Struggles To Give Refunds JACKSON, Mich. (AP) -A Michigan public ut1hty is trylng to give more back nearly $30 million to its gas and elec tnc customers, but some of them are look In• the gift horse in the mouth. Consumers Power Company 111 resorting to a coslly na· tlonal advertising campalgn to track down 1979 and 1971 customers who don't know (hey're entlUed to $5 or $10 re funds. =~~~ ,, ,f •• t JI\; :~ w.1110, 1 "•• 11 "~-v. "SOME 0 F THEM WHO received our refund check~ ww.N•t '° • • ... ,.... . thought they were bills, and they wrote us a check." soys Wi\11$11 I S S 1011, WMYi•I I,. • 2' 2•\t • .,, Jack Mercado. who heads the refund project ror Consumers w .. 1,1111 100 it 011 u~-''• pnu1er. Wtlklr\J n It •• 21\11 • \II v - Way(;ol ._ • • 1·~· ~ The company has purchased ads in the Wall Street Wt.,0 pl1 t0 . I 1•'ll.. , W1N11u1111 • 11 •"'• "" Journal, the National Observer, 45 state daily newspapers WH lllN ~ 7 ) t~ • l'I ' =r:'..?:I e721~ "s ,~:z : '.~ and 135 weekly papers and bought tune on 38 radio stations ,. •n 1 • .., ,. and a dozen television stations to get the message out, =::;.,AOf~,: "° ; !. ~. Mercado says. fllPIPtttJ1AO I t ~ • · · wtte1T'r1" • i uvo " He declined to estimate the cost ofthe search, hut so,id ll ~~"·~'~ .~ ,;:=: ~ wlll be borne by s hareholders, not customers . Wl'll'!OtA.JIOO ' IJ6 u .... . _.. .. ,"" ' " Hiit •• · IT'S NOT A CASE OF generosltv. Con11umers l'ower, f"ll'WI -• A ll'h+ !.\ l ., WV111ot11AO10 '' 11v.-v. the state's second argest public utility, was ordered to •Unot• tc>.. , '°',.• ..., make Uie refunds earll4!'1' th1s year after a len°thy court b .. t• Wll\iftcr14.'°.. 1 ,,,,., • ... .. .. -Vol p11 M 1S ,.._,. • \~ tie w..ttll t1 6 tfl Olot .. • ='!lrot.U ·• "t; ~= ~ An ln1ham County Circuit Court judge agreed with lhe w.~' A ' 1 ,,_ • 111 state attorney general's olnce that the utility had failed to ~,111 uo u 2~ !j'~: ~ Hetl a reduction in ita rat.es art er a federal Income tnx llur· Wlll•I"' i.*"1' •44 i "'•"' char1ewueUmlnatedlnl'70. Wllefl~I :.II t t 1 h -v; 'Mllll'tl l'I • . ylOO ft -,_.. """ ""'' '°"" ,.,. ~ Mot W'lfl,.. pl s .. l'o '°". " ,~ l""'I ~~ t•o p I '""'' t..... Cl'O pl P..l') (IO!ot tNI f'fl! ......... Ml 1i11w .. , ' -W --WW--1( Y-1· ~=''•., !P '~::: :: a11J,IOot 1 Mll"• ~ WflovrW ot' U •Vt-\4 x~o•c:111~1a •u ll\\-\ flHllflt 1 JD t ,;; ui.. lit 1~ JlO Mt fflt• \a •-<o 41 1 M 17 •• 1. Xtral'IC 21 .16 1~11 • ., v, f!Nt...-er 11 ., •~·"'¥Wit fif •• w .. 1100 IOAl;)-1t w.oco 10. c '° , . ..,. It Y"1•!1'14 • 11 1011\• •11 f~ .1 .. 10 t1t 14\'a-\'a n t 1tU I°' lt•4-~ w.d,..I '011 111 !OV•+ Z.ltt<:Mp 11 6 cU !CV.• '' '~ft• I .~ ... , i t .H I ,._.\'a~ 1?0 I oe ?•~•Ir\ lolfl)IAo 10 1 12"'-I• fVl~IM • l t t~t U'"• lo\ l ... '6 .+ J~ ..... ~ 110 l) J1 • ,_. r..,.11 -4 U ,,,..,_ \, Wlll!M •• • • 11 •t + 1 IA ' 1'--n:-.,._ ;fJ::'' Jf 1' Al\ 4 \'a J.:r' i:l 6 lU 7~ ... = \11%1! lf .t:·:::: 1 ~~ .. t:t1 1 I .. ": ~ :V1i1~1_~t~ 1l 1i .. •1'-&Y<1'f'ltd J'~) '•~-U WIMtM90 to tf' 6111,• " 10 M J d 14'1h I.ta WVtyCllrp UJ 114!. \Ii n ' • ~ Ul<I-"" Al4 DAIL\' PILOT Tuesday. Dec•mber T, 1918 &~ ~ "Got a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn.Po.t will . • A @ n n r,::J cut red tape, qetting the ar1swers and action !IOU 11 ~ U need to solve inequities In government and busi-a ness. Mail your qutstions to Pat Dunn At Your a 0 Service, Orange Coa.'ft Daily Pilo( P.O. Box 1560, ,., • ~ @ rr w a ©@ Costa Mesa. CA 92626. lnclude your telephom: number. 1'11e column appears daily except Saturdays. Nursing Along a Career DEAR PAT: I have been a practicing Licensed Vocational Nurse for several years. What pro· ced~re would be involved to upgrade to a Regi:itered Nurse? I've heard varying stories re· ga~ding further education, testing and challenge re- qwrements. Where can I write to find out about scholastic requirements and the state's testing pro- cedure? A.R., Costa Mesa The California Board of Nursing EducaUo.n and Nurse Registration says that the usual procedur~ for an LVN going lnto an RN program Is for the stu-. dent to complete required advanced RN courses ln nursing and science. The right to chaUenge RN courses ls decided by each individual college. Upon completion of required courses, the RN candidate may submit her transcript of credits to the board and If require ments have been met, the Ucensing exam can be taken. Complete information may be obtained by writing t-0 the Board of Nursing, 1020 N St., Room 448, Sacramento, CA 95814. Ba~ Food'• Meat Standard. DEAR PAT: /\.s a new mother, I'm inter ested in finding out how much meat actually is contained in baby food "high meat" dinners. I'd also like to know the meat content of other baby foods that coo· tain meat. L.P .. San Clemente High meat dinners for babies a re not all that high in meat content. Only 30 percent meat is re- quired by federal standards administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Meat and broth baby food dini:ie rs must contain 65 percent meat, and 8 percent meat is required for vegetable and meat dinners. Where can I get Lifeline Tele'-hone Service? f mm ll'.. Po(lftc: Tel1•ph1me. In 19( n. Wt~ .n!r('(!IJC• ·d L1ldir·· li 11.'phonc '~·iv,,.', r rt· d• w · ~ • 1L1rn1·1 • w th l1i<C'd or I n11t1" I r" 1 .qu " V/.· ,flt:r 11 r • .w I<'' 52 .SO Cl P11H1th I •r (1I1·11!•'<i r:·n• • · t < 11r.,01 <oll111u f, J, 1 r, n(1: iq• • ·" 11' '" ' L '" 1 •! I ii , y 1r 1111 l:,l y ur Po1_,1,, T• 11 1 l ll 1' 1 rv1u q,,nr;•..,.>nlGI1\1• A 1•J l•il•I• • ; • ~ A1 '{1"11··, Cl<'01'IJ•• lO•J1'fV '>o,, Dieq,-. • '" f H1'"' \.\. " J ,(Jn.ft Uftl\J~ ol thv t.O\f hoy oM t'ontnsuL1. @ Pacific Telephone (:Dior BUfler Fruirated .. DEAR PAT: I bought several gallons of paint on sale, and none of it was any good. I t.ook It back lo the store for a refund, but the retailer told me he would not r efund my money because tbe paint was a sale item. I wrote to the manufacturer, but have not received any response. The amount of money in- volved is too sm all to go to small ·Claims court. Do I have any recourse, or have I just been taken? G.N., Costa Mesa Your best bet would be to contact tbe National Paint & Coatings Association. 1500 Rhode Island Ave., N. W ., W asbingtoo, D.C. 20005. This organiza· tion offers lo relay complaints directly to member ma.nufacturers. However, there ls· no ml.nlmum Umilfor small claims so you may sUU goto court: 1t'0111an'• Place In the Boue DEAR PAT: Is there any organization that sup- ports women running for public office? I've beard there is . and I'd like to know its name and address. J.A .. Huntington Beach You can contact the National Women's Polillcal Caucus, 19'lJ Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006. In addition to supporting women seeking public office, this group also lobbies for the Equal Rights Amendment. Swine Flu Fear Hits Communion BOSTON (AP J -Stirred by fears of saliva- fingered priests spreading swine nu, a suburban {'Ouple say they w11l keep trying to force a more sanit ary way of serving communion. even though their latest request was turned down by a Roman Catholic card in al. John and Alice Drennan of Needham have cam- paigned to change church'rules since the threat of swine Clu emerged. They want priests to place com· munion bread wafers in churchgoers' ha nds. not directly on their tongues. THEIR CASE WAS TAKEN TO Humberto Cardinal Medeiros by their local bishop, Daniel Hart. The bishop said that the cardinal turned down tbe1r request. ~) "The church's r~sonin'g is that there is not the danger that Mr. Brennan sees in this form of dis- tribution of communion," Bishop Hart said. The Brenn ans tried but failed to bring the issue up for consideration last month at the National Con- ference of Bishops in Washington. THE UN ITED STATES, ITALV and Ireland arc the only {'ountries where distribution of commu- nion by hand is forbidden. "We asked that communion be allowed by hand as a prevention against swine flu and other viral and bacterial mfections," Brennan said. "We pre· sented pretty strong scientifi c evidence. The whole health argument was completedly ignored. To me. it was kind of silly.·' Brennan, 59. is assistant to the director of the Forsyth Rcsc~rch Center in Boston. which studies oral diseases. TRADITIONALLY, THE PRIEST PLACES bread wafers directly on the tongue of those re- cei•1ing communion. "He goes from one person to the next and n ext and next, .. Brennan said. "lie gets his fingers wet from the saliva . The medical authorities we have talked to agree that thjs is unhygienic." Brennan said he and his wife will ur'ge Catholics to write to their bishops to push for (•hange. And he said lherc is a way people can act on lheirown. •·we advise as many people as we can to take communion in the hand," he said. ·'They can do this by just pulling their hand out to the priest, and we think that 1C l he pnests are Christians, they won't refuse." FRE~Ji eur eHRl~TMA~ TREE~ ALL TRHS 4 ft. and o•er win be kept in water from HM l day th.y ARRIVE. Ow TnH ~ so .. FRESH" wll hH• to 11.., llepplftg ....... hands. r•o~.._•011PO-.ia11t<:1...-.~-..•o•<ll~~_.. •• ..,Q•••_..._....,-._..~, OPEM 7 DAYS A WEEK -8:00 A.M. to I 0:00 P.M. DICIMIER 2Rd THRU DECEMIER 21st "-9"Cl-.~~ill'O----..,....Q-·~-Q-<ll ....... Q ................. ._..~ ......... .f ••HOLD IACIC IMR.ATIOM"'-Ute MOMY SfllftCJ c..-. CUSTOM FLOCKING FIR'= PROOFING . FREE CANDY CANE FOR THE KIDS Rt!SH CllT TREES A VAii.AiU .,...... Ar • Scotch ...... Plt:Mfatlon She•itd D«*)lat Rr MoYI• Ar • Whlh Ffr Sff•wT1p1 wi-, .. ,, ... ""• ...... "' .... ,......... .,.,., ttt.-y i..c-• """" psi(ffflMI-.! ,_, .. ,._,, ....... '\ --,_,,_..,... ........ ..... " ........ ,.,,....,t ,_ ,_ ~ .. ""4.. • . ; ...... !. ~. ~·::.;a:..i•t·~·: . ·. . .:A:f'."I""'·~" t:.ft ... .... ~~·..:..i~.!,\-.,,.l .. : .. . . ··,.-.p;r.~y.~:1.0·, .. Law Aped Opinion Backs Bid : . ~ .. \. :~···::·· ... ~ .. ; ./· ... :;~~.'T" . ~ •. ·•tll': "~·· .... ~ 1.,.~0--. ' :.f . i ~. ' • . •. ' .. \~\ •.. ' . .t . • • • ¥ • .... tt .. ~~e.:,:.-..1 . f,.. ··~ .. . '-.; ; 6:.*'i.' ~ ... HOUSTON (AP) - The Houston Post said it learne d that Howard Hughes was negotiating the purchase o f 11 multimillion dollar home in Houston about two months before his April 5 death. DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -The Jowa Execu~ive Council must certify the candidate r~ivtng the most votes in an electJoo as the '1 winner, even if the candidate ls a chimpanzee, Atty. Gen. Richard Turner says. . : . ,:.~ft .. -.'.~:.:'.: Bees Busiest The newspaper report- e d the mystery billionaire recluse would have paid $1.5 million for three penthouses at the top of a 24-story building. "The s tudents in a college town mlcht, in· a mischievous bent, elect by write-ln votes a chimpanzee -albeit a very leamed and eruclite chimpanzee -who, appeariog with tl.ls certificate of election in one band and a banana in the other would be allowed to take his seat (in the state legislature) unnoticed " Turner said . ' WASHINGTON (AP) -World bees bad a busy year, producing a record 596,000 metric ton honey c rop, says the Ag ric ulture Depart- ment. ll has been estimated that Texas will collect ~ million in s tale lax- es if it proves the re- sidence case in court. Turner issued the opinion on a queati~ or whether State Sen.-elect John Scott bad lived in the state long enough. · Turner said the Iowa con11titutlon makes it clear that only the Senate can cJetermine whether its members are qualified. Send roday for a new full rnlor broLhu1,. <l1· 'iCnbing Air Callforn1u's threl.' 1•1 '1.°Vl'll l\l<jlll "un)<!I Tour~ to Arnl'rtr..i\ lary .. ,1 ,k1 "'""' Your packd!Jl' 111 l .ik" lahu<', f.ibul111" 11,.,,, ... 11lv Villley lnclu<ll's hn.-lo<lym!J .111J d.11h,1 l1fl l1Lh·t• 1Aith ll:!ssons 11nd 11mtal ge • .11 .w..id,1bll.' PnCL'' ,1,111 ,1t )USI $53.CXI for four J,1y~. tlm'l' l\l(lhh, p••r rwr.,on. dnu!il .. nrcup.mry (1101 1nrludmy 1.111f,11d G11.'al p<1tkc1'1"' f•n non sk1.,rs. too. L<v11•J11111 .11.1,r l<1111s for f.11mh .. & <Hid !l'''VP' ( J,,. rhe hrnthu11• 10 ~.·l••CI you1 lrn11 1111'1\ .ut,111•1•• 11.Jll11.ih r11w lo\ll to A11 (dhlorn:.1 Ln your 11 .. ~. I ol•jl'lll /\11d 1.1!-1• It •'•"YI < ""''"' ~P • " AIR CALI FORNI.A We're easy to take. Watch Your.Taxes Shrink While Your \ Retire1ne11t Savings Grow At Imperial! Howl It' • I ~ 'ith I · I S · · s s1mp e w · mperra avmgs retirement accounts: the Keogh Plan for self-employeds and the Individual Retire- ~h~ for wage earners. Here's how they work: n If you're self-employed, you can save up to $7500 (or 15% of your net income, whichever's less) every year, tax-deferred! Your principal and your high-earning interest ore tax deductible until you withdraw funds at retirement time (when you'll probably be in ·a lower tax bracket). Up to $2500 is .~IJ=m state tax ret~oo. I remcnt If you're a wage earner, and you're not covered by o qualified retirement program, you .can save for relirement, tax-deferred! Every year you can set aside up to $1500 (or 15% of your income which- ever is less) without paying tax on the principal or inl~rest. When you withdraw funds ot retirement tiqie, you'll normally be taxed at a much lower rote. WhatYou Can Earn: lnc:livtdual Retirement Account Keogh Plan (S 1500 annual contribution) ($7500 annual c.onlribvllon) l 2 5 10 15 20 25 1,500 3,000 7,500 15,000 22.500 30,000 37,500 ,...,.........,,ed forlW>Q• 80.85 246.91 1,303.51 5,249.49 12,631.09 24,479.57 42,135.70 1.580.85 3,246,91 8,803.51 20,249.49 35, 131.09 5V7'1.S7 79,635.70 ~~~""' y """ ,,,...,pot f°'"""G• 1 2 s 10 15 20 25 7,500 15,000 37,500 75,000 112,500 150,000 187,500 404.25 1,234.5-4 6,517.5-4 26.247.39 63,155.40 122,397.77 210,678.40 7,9005 16,234.5.4 44,017.54 101,2.47.39 175,655.40 272,397.77 398,178.40 Above ftgtJres bcHod on our wrrnnt ponbook rote of 5.25% J>9f onnvm. Interest tii9iW A*ihA~ilabiene& these Accounts ~nts Insured To S40,000. aen-M~ • ctaremoftt • C09tl Mete• Dewftto-Loe Afllltfes •E• PeMdeM · •Qlelldofa • """'""1oft Pn• •Newpon a.tlCft 9"wpoft Ctllt« • P•HelieM •RMI.-· •R!Wenldl • • ...... tlolllca 81en'a Medre • •1111111 V..., • •loldJI Gate• ........ C.., •Top .... Ceftyoft • •Det •nt0/Ton•-• •Wfft Lot Aftte'" • W.lt#ood ~ WHt CoYIM • •Wllltti.f • Wllefllft • •Woodin Hlltt Ovef ti Catlfomle offlcff IO "wt ~ '"die wl!lte Pll9" ol '°"' Jei.pfloite cllteetotr rot ttlt office -'"' ~-•Ofllcee °"9n .. 1Vrdt1'-t·1 ••OfftoeeOpen 1111vn1.,.-to-• WHOLLV OWNED SUBSIDIARY OF OVER " Bil LION DOLLAR IMPE.AIAL C:ORPORAl'l((N OF AMERICA om ; " ICA1976 Larry Go/sh wants to educate craftsmen and collectors in the appreciation of quality work. BEA ANDERSON, Editor ' Tu11;d.iy December 7 1976 Bl Fake Fad's Future Fizzles By JUDITH OLSON Of IM O•lly ~llee SWff For the past several years In- dian jewelry has been a fad. Imitations have glutted the market until the average person isn'lsure what's good anymore. This situation is disgusting to Larry Golsh, a jeweler, painter and sculptor who has won ac· claim for his contemporary ap- proach to art. "I hope this Cad is over," he said. "It's crazy. There's even a town in Japan named Reserva· tion which turns out 'fake ' jewelry stamped 'Reservalion- made. "' Golsh, from a Pala mission and Cherokee background, is work· ing in just the opposite direction. "I decided that if lever went lnto jewelry I would do each piece with pride and care. "I would make a few things, quality items. I would try to strive for perfection." Golsh uses some traditional In- dian motifs but leans toward clean lines and mixtures of stones and metals. He puts turquoise nuggets together with gold beads as ac· cents, combines gold, silver and opal in a ring or sets off a necklace with ironwood. Fine turquoise enhances cast silver. Each piece is an entity to be admired as an art obJect as well as adornment. Has rings are massive but flattering to the hand. HOPI TEACHER Golsh, a native of Phoenix who has studied fine arts, archit~· ture and engineering at several colleges, got his inspiration from a Hopi silkscreener who was a silversmith on the side. While attending college he worked part-lime for the silkscreener, who taught him the basics or jewelry making, then encouraged him lo develop his own style. Al the same time he was employed part-time by architect Paolo Soleri in Scottsdale, from whom he gained a contem- porary. broad concept for his work. Golsh became interested in old Indian jewelry as he was learn- ing the craft and discovered that time was the essential ingredient in the pieces, which were made under primitive conditions. He explained that spending time is the only way to make a piece that will I ast and be worn by many generations. Golsh's desire now is to educate both craftsmen and col· lectors in the appreciation or quality work. He does this by lecturing at various museums in the U.S. and talking to young people about working slowly and carefully. ''Two years a~o I ~ot a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to work at St. John's Indian School, a boarding school attended by kids from several tribes in Alaska, New Mexico and Arizona,'· Go I sh said. ST•Ess QUALITY "We did a really neat program with art. I worked on my things there and tried to stress quality." Golsh believes it is the duty of all good craftsmen to encourage younger people to strive for ex- cellence. He also does his part by donat- ing tame lo the editonal ad\•isory board of an Indian arts magazine to help focus on the best work be- ing done in all media. The artist. who once was told by his college counselors lo be "practical" and study engineer- ing, does not believe that '"In- dian-style jewelry" will disap- pear but foresees a trend toward more contemporary lines. Neither of these approaches will be the end either, he said. "Ther e will always be a group of people who do contemporary jewelry but it won't be the total trend. There are too many areas to explore. "Hopefully, there will be more good, innovative design. l would encourage more quality things." Golsh himself is branching out into other areas, such as the but- tons and belt ornaments he is making for a line of Ultrasuede dresses. Whilt! most of his work is priced Crom $300 to several thousand dollars, the soft-spoken craftsman stressed that quality needn't be expensive. "It can be a walk on the beach or or a day in the mountains. But 1t sUll costs because you have to make the tame for 1t." Golsh appeared at the sixth anr nual American Indian Arts Show at Capistrano Trading Post. Proceeds went to the Indian Health Council on the Rincon Reservation near San Diego. The proJCCl which has been four years m the building, ac- cording to Sue D1 Maio, sponsor or lhe show. WI II offer health Md dental care to 2000 Indians from · 17 r eservations in the Pala- Rincon area. Treasyres Seaworthy Dave Marks adds elbow grease to helm. Youn.g Point ANN ARBOR, Mich <AP) - Young children have extremely positive reelinas toward old peo. pie, a University of Mlchiaan study reports. "They view the elderly as warm. permissive and helpful," psychologist Christine Pickford says. "This favornble Impression grows stronger during the early elementary years." During adolescence the at· titude shifls, she not.es. · -Teenagers see old a~e as a time or lost identity and disorien· .tatlon. Adults dread the loss or financial and fhyslcal indepen· dence . An the elderly themselves take a oecatlve view of aging, even thouch tbey have a positive Im age of other old •dults and of themselves. "Children notice the way they are treated," Dt. Plclt.tord ex· - plains. "They are nol concerned with practical matt.en like finan- cial security or f~ health. "They notice. for example, that the elderly have more free time and rellnquish it willingly. PQMISSIVE "Old people are seen as more pennllsive, while parent-aged adult.a are more authoritarian and bossy. Since children equate permissiveness with niceness," she explains. ..\hey also Unk niceness wltb be.Ing old." Dr. Pickford's doctoral study at U·M focused on 120 children aced 6 tbroucb 8, comparinc their attitudes and beliels about young adults, aged 25 to 35, and! old adults, aeed 65 and older. Speciflcally, the eumlned whether t.be age of the adult ln· nuenced the child's .reaction to him. By DENNIS McLELLAN Of 1111 D•llY "'°' 5'.tl They're treasures seldom seen this side of Davey Jones' locker. They're not precious gems or gold doubloons, but they're almost as rare and for rue hard boating burrs they're equally awe-inspiring. It's a collection of nautical artifacts. most dating back to before the turn of the century. The marine remnants include brass kerosene lanterns ot aJI sizes, shapes and functions: radio room clocks, port holes, barometers, life jackets, binnacles, wooden ch ests, Japanese sextants and wooc'l- encased thermometers made In Uverpool. There's even a 6-foot helm off a square rigger. It's solid teak wood with brass fittings. This dry·docked array of sea- going treasures -all are func- tional comes from the ship stripping yards of England, Taiwan and Hong Kong. COLLECTION It has been collected by Harold Felix and Sid Marks of Marks Design Associates of Co6ta Mesa. The antiques were on view re- cently at the Bahla Corinthian Yacht Club. Showings are planned for other clubs. The display admittedly is a way~o introduce their new busi- ness. They ore on hand at the showings for consullation. (Pieces are available separate!¥ or as part of a total intertor de· sign). But it's also an opportunity ror boat enthusjasts to see a collec- tion of antiques that is becoming increasingly only visible in hls· tory books. The general reacllon to the ex· hibit, according to F~lix, is one of "ooh and aab." That's tbe s ame response Felix, a long-time sailor. had when he first saw pictures of the collection. He saiq knowledge of ships increases appreciation of the pieces. EN111USIASTJC "I know there are a lot or peo. pie in yacht clubs up and down the coast who would just love to see this stuff," said the Hunt- ington Harbour resident. Marks, who does the designing, came into contact with the anti- ques while serving as a consul- tant to the importer. He and Felix (and son Dave Marks> went into business several months ago. A designer for 27 years, largely in the Denver area. Marks has designed interiors for countless restaurants. motels and offices. The prevailing theme today, he said, is eclectic -a mixture of the old and new worlds. The marine artifacts fit into that trend. Traveling up and down the coast to determine what is available, they said. they round only limited collections, 12 pieces at the most. FOREIGN PORTS Felix noted that most ships brought into Amencan stripping yards are newer than those in foreign ports and rarely have anything worth salvaging. Uke land-locked antiques, the marine pieces are a good invest· ment, they said. As availability diminishes (there's only so many old ships left), the price naturally In· creases. There also has been an One of many artifacts is this binnacle. increase in demand. In the several months since they went into business, Marks said, some of the items have become non·existent. Although it seems there would be more requests for lnterior nautical themes along the coast, Marks said that Is not true. People living inland arc more likely to opt for the marine look. "They miss the water," he re· asons, addin g in the Rocky Mountains it's not uncommon to find restaurants named the Nan - tucket Cove. of View: Elderly Favorable "There's been considerable controversy over whether or not younc children are even aware or age differences," she explains. "For the fir~t half of this century, it was believed that children ,-ere lmperviou.e to racial dif. lerences and other social issues until adolescence. "But in the late 1930s and 1940s, several studies documented the early presence of racial and ethnic prejudices, even ln 3-year-olds. f• STUDllCS Comparable' studies ln the l980a and 1970s have examined children's reactions to age dlf· ferences . One research team concluded that children do not perceive aie differences until qe ~O~whlle another ariuect that 5-year-olds can make these dJs. tinctlon.s. "My. findings strongly suppprt the latter view." Dr. Pickford says. "The children were shown photographs or young and elderly adults and asked to choose, for example, 'Who is busier?' 'Who more often makes you angry?' 'Who shows you how tQ do things?' 'Who Is more likely to boss you around?'" The children showed no con· fusion in choosing who, in the pbot.oe, was older. And they con- sistently attached different character traits to younger and older adults. How did Dr. Pickford know •hich traits to ask about? In a 1>ilot atudy, she asked third and fourth graders to wrlte stories about old people. and based her questions on the age biases they expressed. lbe lnlervlews and the essays reveal that young children agree oo many things: they see old adults less often: they view them as less active, less healthy and, in general, sadder and looeUer than young adults. But they are also seen as nicer and more permissive, Or. Pickford found. DIFFERENCES Young adults are more likely t.o "boss children:• and "make them angry." Yet the children also admit that young /adults "show children how to do things." For the question, "whom do you like most?" young ahd old adulta w11re chosen equally. "That lut point indicates that chlldren feel more ambivalent in their evaluation of young adults," the psychologist says. "Their feelings toward old adults, however. are decisively favorable." Or. Pickford, who received her doctorate at U-M last year, believes her study stronaly sup· ports the trend toward employ· inl the elderly as tutors and ot!ler helpers in the pubUc school system. The children she interviewed expressed a strong fondness or old people and sadness that they were ln!requently in contact with them. "This ls true for adults as well as children," she notes. "Many studies have shown that people have positive feellngs about the elderly as lndlvlduaJs, but negative feeltngs about growing old. ''Thu.e, increased contact with the elderly might also help teen· agers and adults deal less fearfully with old age." -. '-2 DAILY PILOT Tuesday. December 7 1976 ., .. (An '"! Landers ~ She Listens But Cannot Hear ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: My ~mother-in-law reads you every "day. The only way I can help her ~l's . by writing to you, pray you )mnt my letter and hope she re· Hogniies herself. This dear woman is j ust plain deal. When I married into the family <eight years ago), I did like all the others. We shouted in her ear and repeated e very sen· tence three times. Stlll she didn't people ll\ink she is daffy. My mother-in-law is not an old lady -s he's in her mid·~~. Please te ll it like It is Ann. She has perfect eyesigllt so she will be able to re ad your response. TIRED OF YELLING lea.e on life and they are an· ooyed wUb themselves for not bavtn1 gotte• one sooner. The next problem baa a aUgbUy dif· ferent twist. Read oa. Little Goody Two-Shoes'! Please give me some badly needed ad· _ vice. In tbis area I -.m totally in· adequate. -DUMPED ON AND RESENTFUL DEAR DUMPED ON: The best way to turn off gossip Ls to be a poor audience. Simply say, "Isn't that too bad''. or "I'm sorry to bear It." 1bea change the subjet't. knew my father, which was just (me with me. _ Mom's new husband is"a first· class genUl'man. His wife died five years ago. They n~er had any chllch·~-The man u crazy about our kids and they took to him immediately. DEAR T.T.T.: If your husband na-pro1t tb•t your step-dad b an uncle to your children be can call ME "grandmo&ber." Of COGrte they sbouJd call Grandma 's new husband Grandpa. One Isn't enough II they have two. J;ket most or what was said. DEAR TI RE D: People who· have a bearing problem and try to fake It miss out on a major part of living. They owe It to themselves and to their families t.o make an appointment with a SPffialist and learn IHhcy can be helped with a bearing aid. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm sure people write to you from time to time about their hearing -they wish it were better. My problem is just the opposite. I wish it wasn't so good. I hear loo darned much. What can J do when friends w1- load tons or g9ssip on me -stuff l 'd rather not know? DEAR ANN : My mother re- married arter 26 years with a miserable rat. He drank, chased everything in s kirts and even stole money from her purse. Our two preschool children never The problem is this: He would like for them to call him "Grandpa," but MY husband is very much against it. He claims the man is not their Grandpa and they should ull him ··uncle." He says they have ms father and one grandpa is enough. Will you please settle this? -TEMPLE, TEXAS TANC.t.F. Ann Landers discusses teenage drinking -its myths, its re alities. Learn the facts by read ing "Booze and You -f''or Teenagers Only," by Ann Lan- ders. Send 50 cents in coin and a long, self -addressed. stamped envelope to Ann Landers, P .O. Box 1400, Elgin, 111. 60120. l I • I N ow s h e d oesn 't h e ar :'°ANYTHING. It i!> virtually lm· possible to carry on a convers1:1· ! tjor,1 in he r presence. The woman ; makes irrelevant comments and Not everyone can use a bearing aid successfully, but those wbo can say it bas given them a new ls there a way to turn these people off without sQ!Jlld1ng like BiQ Mama Hanqles Lingo ···~ By E RMA BOMBECK If there's one thing that has come out of the Citizens Band Radio craze, it's a new kicky vocabulary . CB senders have a uniqu e way of expressing themselves in a language all their own. Of course, this is nothing new for housewives. For years, we've had our own form of communica- tion that to m y knowledge has never been translated to the American public. These arc just a fe w of the m o re popular phrases. The Bermuda Triangle: A was hing machine that returns one sock out or e very pair thrown m . The Other Side of the Moun- tam : An average ironing. Gray Liberation: A 49-year-old mother entering her last child in first grade. One Flew Over lhe Cuckoo's Nest : Tea ching a teenage son lo drive. Oversuds in g Proble m : A woman who watches 138 soap operas a week. Charmin Squeezer: A woman with time on her hands. One Size Fits All: Porsche. Hamburger H elpe r : More meat. Miracle on 34th Street.: Beauty shop. The Six Mi llion Dollar Man . Son in college. AT WIT 'S END The Oval Office: The garbage car1. Paradise Lost : A missing charge card. $20,000 Pyramid: Women who eat their way from November through Christmas. Bubble Gum Buggy: Station wagon ruu of kids . Breach of Faith: /I. guidance counselor who talked. The Second Car : Any car m the driveway that isn 't runrung. Mary Poppins : New daughler- in-law. Four-on-the-Floor: Twins born ten months apart. The Jet Set: Teenager who lives under a water pik. Flood Pants : Slacks worn by Mom that are too long to be shorts and too short lo keep your daughter from locking you in the closet. Sieve Syndrom e : First few months of a baby's life when every opening in his body has to be plugged up with something. Ma Bell's Umbilical Cord : A phooe with a 35-foot extension. The Pot al the End of the Rain- bow: Toilet training. Magnilique* "Premium ··i • Pop coVrn . . ~ .... ' ' " :· !~~d. ..1 ~- 2525 EASTBLUFF DR. ,, UNCHAINED? Look ut our selecllon or 14K Gold Chains and our New Line of fine 14K Gold Rings for Christmas rTWIU ,_.., 'W'OU TO COMPARE o.u• ,.ICES "fye M Gems 270 E. 171ti St. "'• ...... , .......... ~ ,._. 645-1909 e 1i1·i<:;tn1a':1 {Et·l t'tl':-1 ... !Exhibi t Measures Up ' CALENDAR KIDDIE CAPERS: Clowns, music. gymnastics, magic and juggling are in store for the children 's holiday s how. to be presented at 1 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 11 , in the FoWltain Valley Recreation Cente r. A M E RI CAN F I ELD SEB Vl CE: Adult committee·now is recruiting hflst families for the 1977·78school,year. Capricorn A dre a m of C h r istmas in his eye, 11-year- old Morgan Shevett of New Yor k examines <tJ rcra!t on yardstick fltghl deck of toy aircr a ft· carrier at Museum of Contcm· por ary Crafts in New Yor k . Constructed of plywood, checkers. clothcspms and r ule rs. the ca rrie r is one of many wor ks include<' in Toy Sculptur e exhibit by a rtist William Accors i (b otto m > shown looking through one of his s utiric sculptures. Talenfs Surface W E D :'II t: S D A V , DECEMBER 8 By SYDNEY OM ARR ARIES (M ar c h 21· April 19 ) · Accent on security, build ing, con solidat111~. Relhng most f ro m i n vest m e n ts, h a n dl1 n ~ a dd e d responsibility. TAl'Rl'S IApril 20· May 201 M akc contact with ont' 'A ho ha <i "d1~ap­ peared' Crom vour lifp Opt'n lint'!> of com- munication GEMINI <Mav 21.June 00 >: Nev. a pproach could mean money, profit. ac· quis1 t1on of val uable~. Get to heart or matters. CANCER !June 21 July 221 Lunar cycle Is bigh lake initiative. tmphasis on pe rsona.Ii · ty. pcri.onal appearance LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 > What had been an area of unc<'rlaintv can be a joyous place. VIRGO <A ug. 23-::.Cpt. express, s ubmil con cepts or formats. Take long-range view. SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 2U: Whal seems a serious s e t back 1 ~ merely a temporary de lay. CAPR ICORN ( Det'. 22-Jan. 19>: Accent on marriag e, partnership, public relations, JOint er· forts . Your n a t ur al capabtlitH'S :-.u1 I J l''' AQUARl lJ ~ <Jan. 20-ft·b . I!!) Finish rather than hl'l?lll check :.i~sori;itt· who shares your 1 nterests, concern~ PIS CES 1 Feb. 19 · March 20): I'E'rsonalily, personal rnagn<'l1s m are emphasized. Air o( ex- citement, elegance sur · rounds . Give her a gift to keep her looking and feeling great. • 22 >: Emphasis on desire, ~ details, ability lo over· come obs tac les. So· meone is working in your behalf. Modlne 's offers Gitt Certificates in varying denomi- nations for your specol lody. A gift ot a membe<sr.p, a ma$Soge. or dues. No con- tracts. A philos- ophy of greater quality and a smaller member- st-.p ' LIBRA <Sept. 2J.Oct. 22>: Emphasis on eleva- tion o r s tanding, pre- stige, responsibility and promotion . B e analytical. SCORPIO (Oct. 23· Nov. 21 >: Open lines or communication. Write, UPHOLSTERY ~,.w .... ........ 1'22 H..._ll•'-c..t• W.-141 .. Jlt modine's o prlVote health club for Orange County women 1 2036 QuoH Street =mpus) Beach l-3200 Sponsor is the Orange County West Chapter , ORT. Tickets are $1 and proceeds will support the group's health project. BOWE RS MUSEUM: A family holiday party. open to the public, will take place at 2 p.m. Sunday. Dec. 12, in the Santa Ana museum. A special exhibit entitled. A Ch ildren's World, will be on view. It originated with the Sears. Roebuck collcdion of anti· que toys and comes lo Bowers from the Smithsonian Institution. The party also will include films, stories, a puppet show. tours and refreshments. It will be hosted by Tree Sweet Products in honor of PT A /PTO board mem· bers throughout Orange County. Students a1·e between 16 and 18 and are Cro1n a variety of coun· tries with a variety of ba~k· grounds. Anyow1 wi shing information an AFS "' the host program may caU M~rgie Jager. 645-9336, or Jo Collr,ster, 675-1349. MOTH ERS OF TWINS: Orange Coast members are plan· ning a children's Christmas par· ty at 2 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 11. In the Edison Community Center, }{untington Beach. A special program, A Vis it to ~anta 's Workshop, will be pre· sen\ed by puppeteer , Jim Gam- ble. ~,el/te/11/1 r;f};eR/tio/J Crhil•V'' l•t 1 H•-nr1• 1• 1 1 A'' 111 111 fri101l1u'l • , "N-e'\rlt • ,,,,. t.ftlecUon ol ~•·•~ &o•es Ct>stumB Jewelry Humm841 • ,,..,~, eentH\11~ F1ounn-t'11 ,.,,,., -~ .. Colln<.10t \ Ec:t111on' '" MO"Y ttobbte BEER STEIN MUGS _ MANY OTHER GIFTS FROM WHICH TO CHOOSE -YOU'RE WELCOME TO BROWSE- sabfna's CARDS Ir GIFTS .... .lTl.•MT• A~lOMMAC" I At Ml9"0'11 No fl tc> liL!ii)' "' C()!Jr1"1'(G1f't W'3DI 0-'"°"'~'° IM<lt 1'11-S4l. 10."10 ~ .. ,, .. , SEIKO'S SELF-WINDING CHRONOGRAPH: _......_._.~--.:.I" You can lose one dress size THE CHRISTMAS GIFT THAT KEEPS PACE WITH THE ACTIVE SPORTSMAN. Ho. AVOl9M-$195.00. ?lJ, telt w1nOin11t, Cltl 2 h ~!:\-....r.=ilml'Y wotor tul•d, 12 nour &nd 60 m1nuc .. rtcnrd•r. HAPOLCX mM•rnl,t e:ry~•al St,•unlO\ •ttftf, l•chy'"tter tuner. Here's a Seiko that can do practically anything. What's more. Its bold design ha1monizes with the special slyle of lhe most daring sportsman. Seiko chronographs come 1n a choice of dial colors and !>lylos, so theres one he's bound to like. Look over our varied selection of Seiko Chronographs loday. SEIKO A .H. WEINERT Fi11 r '"""''·" 32 FoJ,;on l~ar'd. N ..... port W o44.'°40 in· time for the holidays NOW7 T• Mf"' wfffl ,_ .. ,......_ • Cl fllWWW .. 9')' ¥flM .. ........... ........ :.~r:·· .. , ....... wMt . ..... ..... ,.,. ~ ltedy ........ ........ .... c_,_to ...,.. ..., .Hr.ctt··· eH ~ " ,,_,.. lb _. ·~ ,_ M-4 .-lttfptoectH•1lt."OC11...,..,. "-dlry r-M'fllt wltti IJ9• w.d. wti.t cOllld i.. lllcet" to lomi t.wwd .. , HELD OVER 2 FINAL DAYS I for the price of ~~~~~ ~SAVE~~ \~~ ................. ~ ··l!'! ........... ,.M, I -, ............. ,.M,. HOU•5~AC,I... · I No Strenuous Exercise ./ No Disrobing I No Shots or Pill I Improved Posture I Nutritional Guidance I 10 years experience 1 CALL NOW for yoUl"6 ,. I 24441'--~ 1 Compum ... tcry v1t1t • • ~ . f Christmas · ;!.i/bale ~~ I Gift . 369F~~~~~~'!R~=o~~u are "* llflcat A«o .. ''°"' Aolptlt Mltfllt' A Yall..&..1-Costa Meto • 631 ·2W ~ 1 .. BOOMER by Joe Marthen FUNKY WINKERBEAN by Tom Batiuk LISTEN TO 11415 1 COAC.~ ! A SCIEN115T HA5 ~CCEEDED IN CROSSING A PLANT CELL WITH AN ANIMAL C£Ll I HOW WEJ..L , ! oo~·r HAVE At-.ll,l- irllNG AGAINST PLANTS ... ABOITT 1J.1AT?! ~· _ ___, NANCY I .. ,.' ,..,,,,.. ...... t,.J"' UNllEO Feature Syndicate ACROSS I 1Jt(~1 ·,h HP'Y ' At>P NJ \UI '"< ., I t I.~ P'''·~ i ,I llf u..0 I ,, '""' ~ 1'1T.l>l'O;tCP 1 t ' ,,, '" • , 1 I. vP f•l' ~ f" .... ,, At I • l M• • t .1 rrr 7 Nt'' J Ill~'"'. ' 9" ,, Pdh•\ A It Ov1•rlu1f•\ ,, F11ri. •' t 1ih1•.1 ·'"' • ) ~.t'fq I f':·'\I • ••• ,, jl'\ ~ • M•lri •· I u ,1 uil JI.; ll••(' ··~ 4 t M• •~1 t: l, fft1Ml'I '' ,' (nd•n'4 wilt fi.!M tit It rf d J Arni'' d d il (11\,,TH'n' 4 ., 01111 f I Of ~ •.I 1Vt1 4 f Mu~•·um Qlllth' 50 l11 Ao11e1 ~ son 51 Act llamlJIY 57 HurrtH :>6 l1c;hent relahv~ 1'0 11 ~ OI a11119nt (I funOamentil €4 H1ea•e1 frt@"t ':, D·~''', li.e ••• Ot• t •J UH t•• tn('l1flil\ 1.t '""' ,., t fl(,1,.i•• r1ftO c ,..,.. ()(Wm 11\ 'llld <' 5'-tAttl \ '" (110 ",..,,. t~rf'll1' ;o ' '•'"~·~ .. 1.jrn.11 Al brtr ~•·' fi11 J Ot•rt O(..f ..ti c, r.o"mf"l•1 b Ala\ 111 8011.n 7 Haro w~1c1 8 Wood kr101 Var 9 F 001pPd~15 10 Wa11der-. 1 1 Sncioller ~ retaltvr 1:>····Sm1tll .· t1·1 1.!0 NDAY Pudlll SOl"9Ct ----I&F ~~ ±.Q s 0 l I 0 .!. 0 p ~It A l ll Ar S T ( p R f {, ( HE II T f S A It A c E N ~ •· I a Ill r O It A HS I f (. ( A ~ T L f I p A I< 00 I E S AN ,_ f A ll A IR r T Ii 0 sir I• R I O A I\ t 0 I 0 A G 0 T • E E s• T I 0 E S I L 10 T •• R A le H ( s I S N 0 0 T l (. 0 f 0 I S P t T HI s c VE • IJ l T 11 I Nrr. A' T f R H 0 v R S ~~..!~ l!.J 0 1i A :l A ~ E WAN ~:! L-.L-L-~ L~ ..! "'A 0 E 0 ~~~J. L~cr.rim.~t common •1lt\~en s Mr~ 44 Rose to a H11,mer ~\JITH!ltl 1'1Loodt:ry 46 Made lact> 2?P11nlr11g 48 Prom1s1n11 fftaCh1nt: oeoole 24 49 Henry VI s (f'"Cr c;oOeQf' • ~ M11*\~1 ~e ~ :0 ll'complete 'i''" l1.1•c !>JAr,1b1m11 • • ~· 1IY •I u.Jri l' fJt111•• • • U1ndt·m • 4. O\lf:'f 111mc•no ::.:. r lrtlJ >"lllO•dS V1(1ie111ly 11 Orum ~·II 57 Food "•' var tll1ckener 1;> Of a Gre~I 56 H1slor1c La~i.-lime$ JJ rrenLh an 59 NewYear nu11y !ICJ\ll WOid JfiFahr•L t2 Stowe .19U SN A characle< tresnm ''" b J Clever say· 40 Slate OI 1119 Det119 u11· by Jeff Miller & Bill Hinds .. .Pt£RI<£ l'l PGNAllZ£D A FIVt·~1WJVf£ MA~, AND rnr; OTl-\fR GUY 17 ~NALIZ£0 Ol£ ALl 1P.E lA.AY, CN£ IUD Tri£ ONION JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS MISS PEACH ( ' j I • ' • THE VIRTUE OF VERA V ALIAMT TUeld11. December 7, 1918 CAIL Y PILOT m • by Lee and Springer llOT Tll.L rye LEARN&!? MOW ANYONE WITH YOUR PROBLE-"S CAN REMAIN SANll l ~ MEl(T; 'rNll D()C1t:)ll MIP 1NE tM1V I l-.------11=--__::~-_J f l U>Z: > • I I 0 0 -- 0 0 0 00 0 0 DR. SMOCK GORDO MOON MULLINS by Charles M. Schulz ..--------.--.~~· I ~~ JUST FJL"."C> OJT HES 100 OW TO ATTEl'{D A MID-l!F~ SE.1\INAR I by Tom K. Ryan I I WAS M~OAIZIN(; ~ t swiss ~ANK ACCO t.iUM~~~. OF CO!Alt'"S' ! WM&I tM AL.ON£ :t WILL.. OF'T'IN FIND MV~SL~ OGtA~lONAL.L.V L.A~ING INTO ~!LINC£ .... l HArE TuOS£ NEW LO-CAL SNOWFLAKES! 0 0 by GeonJe Lemont "1'"HE: CHE:CK'S MADf; ou-r I N S"f"YP"ftC PeNC.lt..-.' •• by Gus Arriola THE GIRLS ~15 _ff;~ .~~~ ~ .,,.~ ~~-... ,~ "Oh. I never spend more than ten cent\ for a Christmas card-people don't read them, they just like to show other people how many they got." DENNIS THE MENACE ~ 'SAYE MY USSERr 1 '' • -·-.... 4 DAILY Pt LOT TuHdll Decel'T'ber 1. 1976 -New Free Agent Rules to Disintegrat~ Reds? LOS ANGEl;ES CAP> Will the new free·aaency rules m baseball mean the dlatinegraUon of Cincinnati's Big Red Machine ? "1 am wor ried about 1l," says Bob Howsam , prt:s1dent and general m anager or the world champions. ''We have worked hard l'> put lhls team together. It's a team of in- tense pride and, more than that, identity with the city and fans it represents. ''The rules are different now. They pose a lotofirn,J>On• derubles. Who knows what the result will be" naseball la Trojans Dealt 66-61 Cage Loss ACSTIN, Tex. John Moore hit 22 points Monday ni~J\l lo pace thl' Unive rsity of Texas to a 66-61 bas ketball victory over the Univers it y o f Sout h e rn California The Longhorns held a 30-18 halftime le<1d, but the TroJans cul the le ad to 51-49 with 6.16 rc- mainan~ In ;u1dit ion to Moore 's 22 points, Jim Krivacs contnbuled 17 points for the Longhorns, who are now 3· l Greg Whale• paced the 1'roja ns wa th 17 points. The Trojans are now I 3. us.c , • ., W h1t1 , , Ht f'ltJit·r\iOl'I 14 Ho• '"Q~Qll1 t, . .Jont~ 1. wuUeme,tr I C,,'tn:' l , Arnold I Jolal ltH~I JEXAS 1641 U•.i,.r 10 ~., 11 ""'•"• 11 t(ftv•c \ 11 Ootti0n .a lol•I 1• u 14"" H•llllll1P I~ ... JO use II l ol•I ,.,..,. USC 11. T•••\ u ._ou1 .. o out Tt:. n , ~' A • » Mlcltlgan Kolb NASHVILLE. Tenn Rickey Green scored 29 pointi. to lead :\I 1 c h 1 ~ a n · s N o I r a n k l' d Woherin~s to 9i 76 t•olle~c· haskethall victor y over Van· cll'rbllt Mond ay na~ht. Gre<'n scored 20 of his p()Jnts clur ing l hl' :H'l'On d ha ir as Micti1g an moved from u 10 point halftime advantage lo lead by as much as 23. Indiana Lo•e• BLOOM I N GTON. lnd Cuards Jay Sh1dlt>r and Larry Johnson s cor ed 20 points apic•t•e Monday ni ght and fifth ranked Kentucky. bursting to a 21 -poinl lead in the first half. rolled lo a (i().51 rnllc~c baskl:lball victor} ovcr No 1 Indiana It \\as the rirsl home loss for the defending J'liCA A ch,1mp1ons 1n thr<'e Vt'ars anti markl'C.l lhl' first ltml'0 10 fou r H':.tri. the•\ ha"' llMit two l'(a me' in J ro" · Ken tucky 1s now 3·0. wlulc• Indian,•. coming off a 59-57 loss to Toledo dropped to 1-2 19f>rs on Top I>\ LLAS Dall' Dillon hit I "' 11 II t'l' throws "' 1th 1i M·comh l<'ft tu I!" e 1mdefeatcd CJI St<.1tc· 1 l..11n1L Be.11'11) a narrow 6X 67 baskt>tbJll 'ic tor> ovt>r wtnll''' S Ml 1>1llon s insurJnc·t· frc•t· t hro"' ~;" c· the 49er., th1· \'it·tm·~ :i' !'-~tlJ ·s Pell' Lod" H'k tut Cl 22 f110tl'r nt lht' h111.zer lo close the i:t1p to one· H1chard .John~on lt.'<I the Long Hl•ac h ulla<'k 'A-tlh 19 polnh. I . .irry Hudson had 12 I SF D .. iMaC ~• SA:-.: t'HANCIS(;O ~spite :1ti points b y Houston·~ Olis lhrcbong. the University of San Francrsco do minated the board~ :inJ had three players combi ne fnr 72 points a" the unbeaten Dons deCeatt'd Houston 100.85 in a rollf'~e ba:.kctball game Monday Nllhl • f'or'A ard Marlon Rcdmond led tl'tt.' l>on., · .1ttack with ZR poinls. 'teammal(''> J ame-. llardy and Winford Hoynes each !!cored 22. c..,,ars Triuaepla P l ' L L ?\1 A N . W :i 11 h Washtn)tl on Stale Cl'nl~r Steve Puidokas c·onnect ed for 28 points tO lead lhc Cougar:. to a 00-70 v1c· t6ry over Sacramt•nto Stale In a f\t>nconrerl'ncc husketball con· t l Mond ay too good a game to SC<! tl un- dermined in 10 many ways.·· Howsam chose to s~ on a pal hand and not enter 11lto the b1ddma: when 25 players, including his own p1tc hcr. Do n Gull e t t. t h r e w t hemsel ve:: on lbe open market in the recent re.entry draft. l''ourteen of the top free agents picked up a cool $20.5 million. Wh e n t h e New Yo r k Y'ankees paid $2 m1lhon for Gullett and $3 mi!Uon for out fielder Reggie J ackson from the Baltimore Orioles, San Diego shelled out Sl m11l1on each for the /\ 's Gene Tt.1'\at-e Md Rome Ffn1ers and the Calltorrda Angtls dug into Gene Autry 's pockets for S4 3S million for &littering trio. alarm1!>ls saw the pillars coming down on the great American pastim e By lhe Hme another year rolls around, they swd, therti might be p.s ma ny as 100 seek· in&: milUon-dollar contracts and clubs would have to mortgage their souls to stay alive. The only recourse, they added , WO\lld be ton.i•term contracts at exorbitant, Wt· realistic tlgures. A~ Wirepfloto OAKLAND'S CLARENCE.DAVIS ESCAPES TOM CASANOVA. Oakl~nd Romps Stabler, Raiders Praised by Bengals O AKLA ND IA P > -Ken Stahler and the Oakland Haider-; cltd t heir part. m akang beltevers and losers of the Cinc1nnat1 Uengab The re!.t 1s up to th<· Pittsburgh Steelers. "ll 's gettin g c·loo;c• to playoff time, and w e 1 t' 1nsp1rcd , .. Stabler said Mnnd:.iy night afll't' hir. four touchdo" n passe:-. c-om plemented by 228 yards from his running b acks . carried the Rajders to a 35-20 N:it11mJI Foot ball League "1ctory ove r lhe Bengals. There had been LJ.!k. some of 1t by the Stet>lers. th:.it because th1..• Raiders al read v "'l're assured of o playorr herth."thc} would not be emotional!~ up for the Bengals "Thal ta lk "'a s stupid la:.t week and 1l 's stupid now." saad Raiders coach John Madden "This w as " ver) meantn):(ful gam e for us w e·,e been impro" ing every week and we got a chance to m easure our improve ment against a top tea m." The Steele ri;, defending SuJ>('r Bowl cha mpions, ~ot the assist they so de~pcrately needed. By winning, t he Aengals would have been in position to clinch the American Football Conference Central title nex.t weekend and deprive the Steelers of an op· portunaty• to win a third con· secullve NFL crown. Now the Steelers, 9-4. are lied with Cincinnati and Cleveland for the division lead and can claim the playoff berth by beat· uig HousLon Saturday. "l know we're going to the playoffs. :md I couldn't care less about P itlsburfi:h. The fact that the Steelers were watching on television and rooting ror us kind of burned me up, to be honest," said one of Stabler's teammates, offensive tackle John Vella. The Steeler s and 52.430 Oakland Colist'um fans had plen· ty to cheer about m the Raiders' ninth consecutive victor)', which madl' their record 12·1 and as· sured them of the home field ad· vantage in all playoff games. Stabler hit on 16 of 20 passes for 217 v a rds H is f i r s t two touchdown st rikes went to Ught end Dave Casper on plays cover· ing 24 and three yards m the first period, sendlng Oakland into a , 14·6 lead. and in the second half his scoring tosses went 42 yards to 'Chff Branch and seven yar,ds to Jo'red Biletnikoff. Such aueeestLons create horr or 1ceoea in the or garuzed mmd of Howsam, a baseball traditionalist rated one of the keenest executive:. in the business. "The history of long-term contracts ian 't very favora· ble." the fathe rly, soft· spe aking Reds boss said, ·'Once players get that kind or security, they are lnclined not to produce on the field. "The tans are smart. They are the first to noUce when a player is not putting out. 1 always have felt a great ob· ligation to the fans . They l'ceep I 1.11 going. They have a riaht to expeet every man to product: to his maximum " The Boston Red Sox won the American Leaeue pen· nant In 1975. They placed 17 men under long-term con- tracts. The team Called to make a serious move Uus past seuon. Catrish Hunter, the Yankees' S4 million com- modity, had a lacklustre re· cord-of 18·17, hardly com- mensurate with his paycheck. There are other examples. Despite their smiling, pleasant facade , Howsam and bis manager , Sparky An· - derson. run tho lightest slup in the &ame. They PU¥ well They demand supreme effort on the field, gentlemanly ap pearance and behavior of( 1l They are t he most rigid en fOr ce rs or \he cle un ('Ul, jacket-and-lie code. \'ct they enjoy a high es prit de corp:. and fierce toy allies tint ii lust year. when he bent enough to give Johnny Bench a two-year conlruct calling for b e tte r t h a n 5'50,000, Howsam had never in bis nine years ut the Clncln· null helm written more than u one-year contract. De Leeuw's Big Moments Skater Perfomu Tonight, Weds Saturday Diane de Leeuw has nearly done. it all with her figure skating career, having been crowned European c hampion, world champion and s ettling for the silver medal at. the 1.976 Olympic Games. Yet lwo of he r biggest mo· ments on and off the ice are com- ing up this week. The first is tonight when s he makes her Southland pro Ice debut at. Long Beach Arena as a star in Holiday on lee. "I wasn't nervous for n'.ly first pro s how, tbe one at Madison Square Garden," she says . "But I probably will be when I open in U>ng Beach because my friends and family will be there." The 21-year-old starlet has ..,.._~" ~~ WHITE Ol ! HN WH IT( another nervous moment coming up this week. That'll be Saturday morning when she marries her coach, Doug Chapman. A few hours tater she'll be skating in a matinee. Then she returns that night for the evening show. Her signing of a two-year pro contract brought to a close a highly s u ccessful amateur career, one which included six Dutch national championships, a 16th place finish lo the 1972 Olym- pics when s he was 18 yean old, the world championship of 1975 and nn Olympic s ilver medal this year. Be cause s he e njoyed dual citizenship <USA and Holland> de Leeuw decide d to cast her fortunes with The Netherlands when she was 14. "It seemed there was more op· porlunity for me." she s ays. "First, I could skate in European competitions. And secondly, the competition was very tough In the U.S. It was tough just to get into the national championships. And then if you did you had tc contend with Janet Lynn and Julie Holmes." De Leeuw says she never had any fellow skaters, friend.Ir or school mates needle her about nol skating for the U.S. But it was a different story at the 1976 Winter Olympics in Austria, sh e s ays. "Some of the American press made me out to be a traitor," s he adds. "Even some o ( the Dutc h writers began lo pick op the trend and It really gol verv messy publicit y -wise . Meanwhile, Dorothy Hamill (eventual gold medalist from the USA > seemed to have the media behind her." Hamill also had the backing of O l y mpi c jud ge Y vonn e Mc Gowa n, who scuttled de Leeuw with a 5.2 score Jn the short progra m while awarding Hamill a 5.9. De Leeuw doesn't etppear bit· ter about the obviously pre- j ud ici a I judgem ent b y the American woman. "It's bard to s ay why she did it. unless maybe she wanted people to know that Dorothy was her choice for the gold medal," the ta11 (5-7~) de Leeuw says. . De Leeuw says she enjoyed the rigors of training and competi- tion a nd will go into teaching skaters when her pro career is concluded. She feels skating excellence has been considerably upgraded in the p ast decade because performers aren't afraid to de· velop their own style and have mor e interpretation. "Before, people were afraid to try new costumes and routines." she s ays. "That's what I like about skating in the ice show-I can interpret s.o much more than l could as a n amateur. The de Leeuw family is well wrapped up in t he world of ice skat ing. T e n -year -old s ister Marianne is an up and coming yQUng skater. Dlane's mother makes skating costumes and did all the ones Diane used in international com· petition. And what will Diane do when she has children of her own'! · ''That's hard to say," she says. "A lot of parents try lo force their kids lnto skating bul that usll311y doesn't work out. If my kids do it, it will be because they really want to and h ave the drive to do it. .. The d e Leeuw women h ave had a way or making hopes and dream s come true. When Diane's mother was a lit· lie girl she hoped and dreamed that someday she might come to America. And as an e arly teenager, Diane hoped and dreamed of someday being in the Olympics, of carving a niche for herself m s kaUng. DIANNE DE LEEUW PERFORMS IN LONG BEACH TONIGHT. Spans Clipped Slwrt Ex-Edison Star Honored years as head coach al Illinois. Previous to that, he coached at Dartmouth for 16 years. Lalcen Ott T\I Olga , gold med al winner in the 1972 Olympics, sai<t simply, "a boy." tUCI Loses, 75-68 "I don't think anyone could have beaten the m tonight. They looked like Super Uowl wiMcrs to me," said Bengals cornerback Ken Riley, who had Branch well covere d on Stabler's third touchdown pass but came up empty handed, "I caught t hat one off the top of his helmet," said Branch. who tormented the BengaJs' deCense with six catches for J 12 yards and increased his season totals to 11 touchdown catches and 1,106 yards. Vic Ra khsbani. a graduate of Edison High School In Hunt- ington Beach and a freshma n member of the San Jose Stale Spartans lootbull t eam lhl1 season, was selected as first team tight end on the Pacific Coast Athl etic Association ele ven. CJUCAGO -The Los Angeles Lakers tan1 le with the Chicago Bulls here tonight in a National Basketball Association ga me that will be televlsed in Los Angeles on Channel 5 beginning at5:30. Korbut was in St. Louis ove,.. the weekend lo perform in an ex- hibition with other Soviet gym. nasts. SlterriU ao Pitt PULLMAN, Wash. -Jackie Sherrill, one-time assistant hea<l coach for J ohnny Majors at Pit· t&burgh. said Monday hf''s on his way to take over the job vacated by h.ls former boss. •North Dakota University got the early Jump and mode it pay olf Monday night in collegiate basketball. capturing a 75-Qt vic- tory over UC Irvine at the latter 's g~m in non-<:onfer ence action. The invaders took a 14·1 lead at tie outset a nd maintained a Jalthy marg in until 1 :30 re- ained when the host Anteaters coach-Tim Tift rallied lo ~thin four points a.s Terry Lov· ~gier picked up three strailbt f:age Ratingi buckets. Lovmgier, who ted UCI scorinJ{ with 12 points, scored all of his points m the second half. l>avid Dickey and Chris Fahrbach led North Dakota searing with 17 points apiece. UCI. now J ·2, travels to Biota Dee.14. Dickey scored seven of the Sioux' first 14 points and North Dakota, a power in Di vision ll buketball, i mproved its record • to4·1. * * * .,._ Oal!ttl IUI 1 .. 1 uc1rv1~ ''",.'' ''""''' ,.,,.<'II 1 3 ' " ... •IM t ••• Ol'wtltlt t ' I 1 AOClqofO ' 0 s 1 ""*"' ' ' • 11 °''""'"' t 0 4 • 11ou<11 ... o 4 • 4 14 °""'' ) ' 4 • Oltk•y ' ' l 11 Sltlll\eltt • 1 I 10 T!Mlfft ' 0 ' , Ol<lot t 0 t I Kttftlt I 1 t ' .... , t • ' 10 .... ,_ , 0 , • 11 ... ,..11 J J ' . LoVlllQltr • 0 1 12 l(nud-1 0 0 • TtYlt 1'Utt 1' TOie it 2t 16 2' .. Heim-· Noni! Od o4• J6.1'. Cl~lnfwtt ~ , 1 o-10 o.i.1 ... 11 ll 1 ' 7~ Cit! M<O•n1tl .0 P••• ,,,,.,, MOtnon Oll<lo l•llt'dl Olok-<.t\per 14 04\\ l<OM ~-IM.-1\ft ~I<\ I O.lo C••Pt• l IMI" from Sl.oltr "''"'"' """' On F'rllt\ Hull IB•h• """' Otll 1M11u10 l ru11 IMMVl kl<kl o.1o -Br•<><n •h .. , ,,_ \411111 ... 1~ ~"" Clft-Orlfflntl""" 111111>• klclol Otll-&lt.lnlh lf 1 OIU trtl'll St.Oi.< 1-.... lof(.i "-St.All) I ...,..1,a.i.tn '1nt....., n ,. ""'.,....,.,Cit 1).101 ... ,,. P.W ... yertt• fSt tl7 ""'"'" '1'•10• " .. PM~ tH1 l 1 .. U I tit )..41 I' M lo•1 HI o• 1"9t 1•rdi s... N J INOIYIOUALL•AOl•S "llllt41NO Cln<IMtll, Ol1ffln II .... Cl•l'll .. n. O.•l•nll, .. ., l•011<t11 ,.,,., 0«re11 ,..,, °""'' u '° AE(llYINO -Cln(IMllll, Mc~ltl "'°'· C11111l • V o.lfll'WI. 9•*1<11 .. ttt, Cllltf ._.,, I Hflnllooff )..1t • """'"0 -Clflffn,..u, -, .. JH , "1 .,., .. 0..1-.a...,.,.1 .. tJ,rn;•w•M,•. ' , .. Gary Maddocks. also of San J ose and a WeatmJnate r graduate. gainc~ a first team berth al wide receiver. Ste ve Dt8er1 or San Jose Slate, a qua rterback lrom Fullerton, was selected oCCenslve player of the year and Cal State <Fullerton ) Jlne backer Aaron Ball was the top defensive stan· dout. B~lcm•• Pf~ked ITHACA , N .Y . -Bob Blackman, former Uni-ve111lty <1f nu.nots ooacb, was ~lected bead football coach at Cornett Un.lverslty today. Blackman, 58. received a , muJU-year contract to be the 19th coach ln Cornell's 80-yeu {CXJt.- balJ history. Cornell won only throe 1amet and loet 15 during lta lut two seasons under George Se!fttt. Blackman was ll.red after six The Lakers will be trying t.o hold second place in lhe Pacmc Divlslon and at the a.me time win on the road. Loi Angeles is 12·9, bu won s even of lt& last nine buthu a 2· 7 road record. Korlnd t• !ll•rrtl ST. LOUIS-E verybody's darl· int ot the uneven parallel bars, Russian 1ymnaat Olea Korbvt, is apparently ready to tetUe down to married life, aecord.lnt to einployes of a St . Louis County store. Olga, 21. purchued a wedding dreas in Northwest Plata Satur- day and lndlcated she would bo married next year ln Ruasla, aald Edna Welch, bridal cooaul- unt at the store. Asked whom she would marry, Sherrill, 33, was cttrenslve coordinator and assllt.ant head coach during Majors' four years at Pitt before leaving to accept the Washin1ton State job last year. Scott Traded MILWA U KEE -T h e Milwa ukee Bre wers traded Geor1e Scott and Bernie Carbo to the Boston Red Sox Monday fot. fint baseman Cecil Cooper. Scott is o first bnaeman nnd Carbo ls an outfielder. The Brewen also swapped pitcher Jhn Colborn and catcher Darrell Porter tor Kansas City'$ Jamie Qulrlt, an Wielder, and out11eldcr Jlm Wohlford and & player lo be oomed later. · El Toro In 65-59. Setbac_k~ By a DaUy Pilot Wrttu El Toro H1gh's Chargers came w1.Lb111 two points twice In the last mlnute of play Mon· day night. bu,t the Lynwood Knights held on to post a 65-59 dedslon in opening round action at the Westminster-Marina Invitational basketball tourney. Before a sparse crowd al Huntin"-on Beach's Marina High the Chargers of El Toro coach Wendell Will, who were down by as many as 13 ""1th 2 17 Jen Ul the ,...,,,,..~ .... 1 ... I El-"'LIWll-. p; » H..if\11,,....._ 81>tch ., R~~ T..,jflll .. WHl..,lftt l.,. I ,, .... p ... .., C-,,OI\ & ~ -E ........ "' O:lr~•••M.tt third period. crept to 58-57 oa Bob Charles' 1tHooter with 40 seconds left and lo 61-59 on Robin Charles. f OU r . footer from th<.' baseline with 23 secoods to go But the Knights. with free throws from Tyren Naull s and Tom Freeman, pus hed the margin to six in the last II! seconds of piny to qualify for Wednesday's st.•t·ond round. The lcr.;s drops the Charger~ into thP consol ation round and they'll meet the l ose r of tonight 's ~amona -lluntn gton Reach game Wednesday t5:JO > at Marina w.i-...- Tuesday. December 7, 1976 DAILY PILOT •& Gittens Tops Rushers; Rakhshani 8est Passer Fount11in Val l ey High's Willie Gittens wu a double winner ln the Oran1 e Cout area'a final fbotbJall staU.tics, leading all ruahera and scorers as com piled by the Daily Pilot. Gittens averaged 6,1 yards per carry in gain- ing 1,189 yard1. And he scored 86 polqls In help- ing Fountain Valley to a 10-2 record. Edison <Huntington Beach ) High's Steve Rekhshani finished the season as the passing leader. gain in g 1,345 yards with 95 comple· tiona in 177 attempt.s-35 yards more than Foun - tain Valley 's Doug 1bompson. Tl>"ttltUS"tN• le• "" Glllell$. Flft. V•lley IU I, I .. Sof•llr. CdM 1.. 111 ... 6 I 41 \1m'"'4"1 NKllOI• ""-'-'' ,_, Cirlu ·-~ ... l.,ol C•ewiff• ...,.,, hr•rd ,. • 11 • s 70 1 I I t ..... 1 ... II ~ 11 II IS .. I I 0 )I IS II c2 )0 • 0 ll 6 0 Ol u 10 0 10 0 00 0 ·I 0 10 ,. ~ ~' "" "''· ltlkh\Noftl 171 tS IJ 1,lO ,SJI ~i•I• II S 0 1t'1 .JJJ Cra•to•d 2 • 1 o 14 .. , 01,,., SteriAt Mortell JS, Smith U . Co• I, H-y •• CilolM!I 2. Tt-1. a1.TOltO IMI ... 11. • Ol••ltt ,..Ir!><~ .... s. .... , 11 CIMrln OIO 0.1 ... 1 l.aon-0...rrero Ta11or l(fy .......... tc• .,.,. 13 l» .. "' ,. 111 n •• • 33 • u J ti I ·I I ·S 7' ... ..... 1 ... ....... 4• • ) 0 11 ) I 0 II H l6 0 31 0 6 0 0 -10 0 -s.o 0 ·l.J ll ,. ~ 111111 •n 1K1. S.ol•-II 1t 12 Ut ~ , ICty I• 10 • o 40C> j,,,ir!!~I· I Ol•rl•• t O 0 O 000 r Ollwr kfft,.. ~ 11 J1cooo1. T,.,.,, anANCIA 12·6·11 lt11tlllAt ~I09e C M. 11) IOi JlldO. IEolson 1so .._. Olt-•,MV IU ,_., : ~ ll•<•••d SI l•"9Cl•le 3 4 "'-'•""0 tc• "'' ,. )fl 1S 1'1 u 1n ........ S I 14 )I ,. I I 0 ....,.,..., S... Clem uo 41 Ir.,.,..., C M 111 Cl6 ""*''"#_,..,.,.. .. 414 F1111e-.u111 .. rs11y aA d 2 Molllo , Cotll IM .. llS 440 TOPJPAHINO 4.0 =·:cu:· :~ .. __ ,, ;:::: ... "' .... "" "''· OC:llllott AmC>u•e-y .... ,.,," ti SI ., u ts " t > I 1 I 1 4 s 1 ·12 ... "'"' Jl 0 JS 0 ll 0 l 0 II 10 0 10 0 I! 0 -4.0 0 R1kh\h.anl1 Edison Thon-P"'fl, F' v. MoUlc•. 110 es q l.JIO )00 Jtrefl-0 ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~.:o t •:l't .11• O'Brlt11 ,?-' korl•CJ Coote Mtt<t 1 n IO ~ OtAlbil, M411••0.1 Jf:rankt. 114 H 6 711 0 11 l'-IAlll Yll .. y tt•ll e.1 ... et• sc~1!.~ 1• 1s~ o o. G1i1t11• I CiilteM tF'oun1e1n V•ttev).. 1 -...0 OuddrlOO-tCoU• Mru I 16 J, llomlnr 54.,,.,, tFounUtln V•llev I u • lllr l ~ """'° IF'o.,,.taln V•lltY I Ind J.-'""'0-11 tEOlsonl 60 • Molllu l(O>I• Mn.ti Padlll• .. I C-(f:dl\Onl )t I St•t....V Polter• tCdMI » '· illtl F11ller tU..lwrtl· ~~~ lyl-Ac»"'•ISanC .. m•nlellO ~ 1.-SNw C.01-QOltO•U OH. MAii II-JI ""'"'"' tc~ "" ltUSHING le• "" ....... 19S 1,11• •I ,. .. COi •o Ml 31 IU •• • lO .,, • , 11 II .. • , 0 1111 3' 0 l ,. ., 0 4 11 Al II IS 31 O ' 3S • 1 I 0 0 I I 0 0 0 00 0 1' .,. -1 0 I• El Toro made it close. btJt the big difference in the game was the 1·2 punch of Freeman and Naulls. who scored 28 and 25 point!>. MIKE HOLMES OF EL TORO SHOOTS AS MATI SIMPSON WATCHES. Scw•llr SIA$MI i;.,.,..tt rvoc,..,,.,, 1.. '" '1 ,~ ... "'" 4 l ,. H lf> PAHING ~~.,.....,..ll(i. Naull~. a IS-year-old JUntOr and the nephew or former UCLA star Wtlhe Naulls. l'Camed up with Frecmau in the S<.'Cond period to lead a 29-poinl cissau'lt 1n overtaking a 20·1u El Toro advantage The Chaqiers were do· in g wen until Lynwood, the 1976 Cl F 3-A cham pi<m, put on a press and negan attacking of - fensivt'ly, outscoring El Toro. 21·4, to assume a 31·24 lead with I: 25 left in the half. And when the Knights had upped their lead to 13 it looked like lhe Chargers might be swept urr the court, only to rind El Toro battling back Wllh its patience and the excellent outside shoot in~ of Bob Charl<.'!i, v. ho rm1shed the evening with 20poinls. M•f'HHI ~M~ll \<"-"" ---P.H1H" 1 .... " l.lhrel l'I .. • I ) ) ) • 0 >• .,; '" .. I I 10 r 1 I 0 II ,, '" • • " . . ,, I o II W Sc-•yO.WNn .. '" ,, p ... • .,. ,. u •) DH, Uni On Road Two non ll'.agu1• baskt.>tball ~am~ un: <111 tap loni1thl 1n vol\'1n.: South Coa~t I .eal(ue prelJ team:. And both are on the road Dana 11111 ~ l11 gh's Dolphins. under coach Art Jenkin~. a former Monrovia lltgh player. travels to Monrcw1a to duel the Wildcats at 7. And 1n another 7 o'clock tiff the Trojans of University lhgh (lrvme> coach Doug Sorey invade ·rustm. In an afternoon tiff at the Beverly lhlls lnv1ta tlonal the Edison Olunt· ington Be ach> lll~h C harger s met lnftlcwood. Pacing Dana Hills, which won its opener over Torrey Pines, 6:1-54, are David Reeve and Bob Stupin, each who S<'ored 14 points against 'l'orTey Pines. EL TORO'S MARK HILL DRIVE~ FOk A BASKET Banquet R eport Mik e OC'hna wa<. ~lcctPd M\'P of :'.f1sswn V1eJo J-l1 J(h 0'1 sophnm<1rt' foolball ll'::lm al J rCC{'nl sport... 3'4-Jrcls lianquet ~PHOMO"E Ml/r M ,.,_., 0 '°' t hh,. ,,...,.,, Mtt f\ M~u "t f ot.ti1 ;Q1,.. ,,,,...m....n J'"•f'I p.,.,., Baske thaJI WOMf~''> IJASOC:f flUL c.IO.n """I 16111111 C""'" Goldeft Wt\I 8oc "'-" (,.1ru1~ M< '-""" Cil•" l\o•\ Or.nw.tO D\lrrow' Wlnlllopl•O \t•uOf UO" r .. ~., ... ., .. ,,,. lq " ~ ) 1 l 4 4 I ft l 0 I II Q 0 0 0 pl lo 1 11 I 11 s " ., j ' 17 1 1 II I , 1 ,, " u Cio'°"" W••I lS.l• 0 0 NI F'llE~HMPH;OlO ,,,.,..,,. ~) " ,.. 11" , ,., htt\ r. n -.n ~ I tn,. t "'.P'') I, .. ' I ,., 'r-, FAl5HMfiN AE"O MVP f, 'i M r.,'"" 'Wtl I HAlr • t \It lh n, I •1 fff ' t tn.\I ( '"' R .c'lf)1n Ntwoort "•'"'°'Cron GoVf'l'try Vartity (A(lf.t1n Ando; ~1t'nk1,,\. MO\I V••ut1bl1t Don ()""'••II M iJ\t Im •"'""''" bt·n ~n•• JUt'llOf' V•r-1Uy (Apt;i•n Kt1rry ..,.ir.,hrtrd SoPllOMore C"u'"" llovt'I Mr ~lbbln: Mo\t V1lu.•t>1.. O.lltP t).-.. ,,,1n Mo\I 1rn orov.d (,.ordOn Coht-n ,rtthma" C•Pllln ~<Oii l•O•• M01I VAi"" !JI• Aol> ~r•Mllrt MO\I lmpro""°" 8rt!l lludd H""ll•~on l•ac" S.Plto..,ou l'eot&lll "°""' VAtu.>ble 09,.,,. llM«um; CtKto4•4"" S"'*wn (h.tO A'WJ SI',..,, v-,;, M011 lmf)fo .. d Tom"""' Lagunans, MV Roll Laguna Beach High's Art1sb u11d th~ D1ablos of Mission V1eJO were v1('tOr1ous on the road Monday night. The Arlisls or coach Ed Burlingham captured u 73-40 triumph at the G:ird~n Grove High In· v1 tatio nal basketball tourney over Walnut behind the efforts of Ben Bacon. who scored 16 and set a school record with 29 rebounds. Mi ssion V1eJo . me:.inwhlle, came away from Oceanside with a 50-46 non-league victory. kc} ed by Mike Boster's 13 rebounds and the dou- ble figure scoring of Bernie llawkrns (14 off th ~ ben c h ), Pete Deeasas (11) and Boster ( 10). Laguna Beach awaits I h e outc om c o f the Garden Grove-Glendora game and will meet the wmnc•r Thursday night at 8: 15 in the Garden Grove gym. L•qvo• 8Hth 17l I lq fl ... Ip SI 0 E•-. C,.on°"' Sl.,M\ F,-~l'T'IM n...,... &e•u<f\amo C•llhol'\ Me<ry II SI » 46 10 .. I 4 I • IS II 0 Thornp'°" 110 tS t 1.JIO 100 • Cot..,..,_ 11 16 I 441 100 0 -""tt I I 0 1t I 000 I ,, 1 II O Cilll•'I\ I 0 0 0 000 0 SNw I 0 O 0 .000 I ) 1 , lO 10 00 DO 46 0 Ollle•J<fflflt O Sttl""• u . 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Fut1\1t\ So•w-ry Ror V•l~rc1mt1 Spri...,., S.IH ~rettoo FllllOh ~lltt>tll AW\ltlflt tell "" " 0 4 S1 106 0 1)11 •• ll1 18 ., n n 4 I l s I ·• P•nl"9 ........ s l 0 l• • 32 • I 4 1l 16 • I 0 0 II 0 1S 0 -60 0 ,. 1K JWol Oft ll(t. FV RUNNING BACK, WILLIE GITIENS. Otllerkerlo9 ICnowle' b, l(llQorp h 8r•f"don 1 NIAT'Tll tfSl 14 SI ::;.~,, .. , ... , o ... ... °'"'~ o·.-.,,a W1omor"" WC.0#1\ft \aV39f' !0"'1• R"Yl'"' ~'"·'m Sll<>QY• 010.o,on llw•lli"t 1t• ... 76 16• 100 1S• l>(I l U s ~ 79 ,, 1' •ti 11 11 ' n ' 0 1 ·l Pauht9 1(011 1 IY• pt\ '8 , .. H 11 1' ?• II Q 10 " Q '1 , " 61 II I 0 II 10 0 01) 0 II 0 11 )0 6 Poll 1K P"i 111' pct l><••b.o l 14 Ill 6 781 •)I W•omor~ 11 8 1 ~· 1"" O'H••• • I 0 I} 1\ll 0111•• Scorl•t &-tuw\4,.r11'0. Rompro 4 MISSION VIEJO IH I a..~·-· P~tket Sou r -&tum HOOP C.•ffa Broc:•m•n Bowe• s.,w,..,., ltu•"'"' tel> "" , .. ~· S1 ?•S ., ,,, 1] &• I 11 1 IS l ll Jl • l .,.. )1 Cl> ... 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I \I~ HJ 8 II •• YlO M#,,n\m a I) ,. lll LAW041,Qf\ 1 I 1 66 )OIJ 00 .. r S<Ortft• HfJoyill'f 1• Of>l='l'tltO tl J40l'v•tt't ,., 11(1~¥ It 8t11ll•my. f~Al'f"I 1 UNIVEltSITY 11 • II ~"""' ZAl,,•VI( ~ff,., LJliftqmi1tOf Rodoe'\ H••'t9 .t..ndrf"• Estrtll• H•••O<I" Hook O•vl\ Hool< H•l·~Q"" l.n11Qrn•<ln He1t1, ,..,,,,.i,., tel> nn ~· 0\1 .,, .. , SI) IH l • ~· 1• s l \ . lb l• P•\tlft9 0 I 16 )A ., no J>t• SJ » )) k )\ .. ,. 6 ,. . II • '· I) o~ _.,' 10 n 0 7 J .. 11 n P• P< phi nr<i pcl. ,. " l "" ··~ )I ~ l 1111 71~ II \ Q M OS 7 n n Y>O I 1 Q 19 1000 ou .. , Scorlno 0 0 I 1 I 0 I 4 16 0 ' Jucld tc• "" 110 'u II OB ... """ 4 . ~ VilltrU"'P '1 •1 I ~· ,A1'1 FU4'ntes 1 1 o Ml .SO'l Rav Wd'rtJ Lyon~ Mo<Vll P.-quln Corvm Maocl•I RD<lm JS ll> 1 10 10 0 H 0 H 0 20 0 Alrllnf' 1? MH< h•ll 1 1..o~rr 1 0 1 c.."" 4 I JI 1 4 Or•\\~r 11 .. I J 4 f, .... ,, u tf'I• ti,,, r ,,,•Muqh An1J ... ,"°" "'"""' IOI 1th 0 0 ,. \ . " 0 1 0 ,, , u 0 • 11 IJ ScorP tty OV.r1H1 1~ u u ,_ n • t• 11 co M1u1on Vt•i• uo• H tf'-n.'" p °'"' ,.,,,\ ..... ,,," R~rh l(tU'"lf-t roo ,....,... H ....... ln'\ Alfl'ti11"'94'1t lol .. h M1\\1on VI,_ to Oct•d0\•0-- It fl pf IP \ Q • I? I 1 0 A • l l " 0 I 1 l 1 0 0 • 0 0 1 0 ] 1 • I U I 0 0 1 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 10 10 11 SO 10 II 11 1-10 1l 1l 10 .,_ Uni Gal Falls LOS ANGELES- Gloria Fallermeicr of University Hi gh School in Irvine. fe ll lo Anna Lucia F ernandez of Bis· hop Montgomery High School in opening round action of the girts Cl Fin- dividual tennis cham -. pionships at the Los Angeles Tennis Club Monday, 7-S, 6-1. College Basketball USF 100. Hou\ IOI\ IS Stal\IO'd •. Ntv•d" lltt110l l3 Or-St '• weoer St Tl ""°'-"·Jachonvlll• 71 Wl-"l"CJlon St ... SA<r•..-to SI 10 Idaho S6. Au•tr1ll• N•llOl\11\SI N~MUlcoSt ... UTEP~ C.I Sleit II.Ill ... SMU •7 NorttlT .. uSI 11.IC•nH\SI 13 Ollllhon\ISI 11.w ToHSI ,. P.,.Amerlu"n .So Mlllln lppUS TUH~.USC61 8vlterU, l.0Yot1 IC1'lce901 •J Otl'91111J,Ol-llftdU 0 lo-'°· Ir.Oto 11 1Censu1t,Ora1 Aooerh6t ICtnlucky 64. tnol•"I JI M.trouttte 11, W. M lthl9t11 S:1 M i,,,,.,\olt'6. N. Mlc11l91n so Nor1hC.rollMll,Mlcnl91n54 Ill S.rt Jo•• SI. U. 11111 $1 S6 WIKon\111 "· 0.PAul .. A11llll\ PHY II, Old o-•nlon ,. IOT) LSU 100, Samford" Louhvlll•"· If•. Comm-111160 Mlc~l9111 '1, V•rtdtrt>lll1• Ml .. lnlppl 71. So. Oekol• SI. IO Mlsuulppl Sl.11, SW loul1l-'7 NW Lovlsl••• 10, C.nltntfr67 HOiy Cron 111, llvlfllo" AU191rs •>, '-'"lftt N S.lon Hi ii 104, (AllhhlS 1' Vlll-v• ... A_.l<eft U .0 01-1 t1, P..Wyterlen '' S.•~ ~ l 0 16 .1lS Roy 1 0 UIOOO 6 16 • 11 Cage Play Opens Prep Soccer VAllSITY V1lfotl1 UI Ill 01n• Htlls 01l"MI H1lh, QOAh To,,-,., Mttnctot •~ v1,.11v U Oul~I• IJI Ill COtlA ~ Co\ta Mt'• \c.orlrto AQulno t, The San Clemente High buketball tourney, featuring No. 1 s eed Fountain Valley, gets un- der way tonight when Rubidoux of Riverside and Santa Ana collide at 6 :30 and Pacifica of Garden Grove and San Clemente tangle at 8. Dave Brown and the Mis-McltOd 1 Jwolorvor'"' sion Viejo Oiablos of Pat u °"'"11111 111cem11MM Roberts meet al 8. ,,.. .. ,o.io.i"c::~~1~111,11y10<1o11 All games take place ---------- On Wednesday. Costa. Mesa's Mustangs and the Foothill Knight.a of Santa Ana clash at 6:30. Then at 8, the Barons of at San Clemente High. The Barons are heavy favorites to capture the UUe based on non-league results. In two games. t h e B aron s h ave outscored opponents by 38 and 22 points and are led by flas h y guard George Barrios, who tallied 32 Saturday. DECEMBER OCCUPANCY 64,177 so. FT. NEW BUILDING HYIN ADYANYAOIS OUR 'AOIR OFHH that yours moy not! 1 COltlrLnl OlANGI C:OUNTf COVllAGI 1•111411191 Let-..... SM c---. Mletlttt Y!.f•· o-, ..... • ... n .. i.."' ...... _,....,efLA. ... Vikings Shake Loose for 58·48 Win PLUI DOCK•BIGB LOADING, EXPAlfllOlf LAD, PRO'f£ct£D ENVIRONMENT, EAIT l'llEEWJlY &CCIII AMORE. 2 MONTH TO MONTH HNTAL IAJll 3 NO 0-.0SIT UfUIHI ON Arl'lOYD C:Uln By ROGER CARLSON tonight's Long Beach °' 111t 0.11. ""•""'" Wilson-El Modena clash. The Vikings of Hl9\t-In o l her ti er s at ington Beach's Marina We9tmtnster in the 16- Higb School picked up team tournament, Long their first victory of the Beach Milhkan stifled seaaon Monday nigbt in ~Alamitos. 72·59, and dlspos ln1 o f Si m i Westminster torned Valley's Royal, 58-46, on back Warren, 79-60. the winner's floor in the Tony Warren was the first round of the key for Marina Monday WestmJn s ter-M a r lna night as the 6·4 senior tournament. pumped in 20 poLnt.~on 10 1 The triumph, snapping tield goals .. Also .. flitting o two -ga m e losing in double figures were streak. puts the Vlkes ln· ~land Bruce (J 1 > and fie> Wednesday nlcht's Manny Torres (10) as the (8:30) quarterfinals Vlklng-s took the lead in a1aln1t the winner of the flrst period and never trailed thereafter. A 20·8 spurt mid way through the first quarter. keyed by thr~e buckets fro m Torr es, two 18· footers and a tip from Bruce and a couQle of six.fool s hots from War- ren, got the Yikes mov· ing. And when Royal made a gesture early in lbe th.ird quarter. culling the leali to 32-27. It was Bruce inside, Warren with an 18-footer and two from out11tde ·by Dave Gibbs t h at propelled coach Steve Popovlch's ' Marina quintet into a commanding 40-27 lead. Alter that it was mere- ly a matter or wasting away the clock as l'C arina overcame Royal's pressure tactics ~ the latter's attempt to rally. Both teams enjoyed the running came, but Royal's 20 turnovers hurt the Simi Valley crew, which ente red with wins over La Quinta of Garde n Grove and Buena in non -lea1ue ac·. Uon, Marina clicked on 50 ' ..... percent of Its shots (27 of 54). lrwt• "-IM 1(- ICoeller T.,.,., °'* w...,.,. Totll• '-"' H•,.s Hltofl\t Hllllt INIH Moor• ,..,_ Wiii« TOl•lt ~ ...... , ........ S I t 11 t 0 0 I 0 I 0 I I 0 I t • , • It 4 0 , • "' 0 • to " 4 , •• ,.., .. , ... ...... • J 0 IJ I 0 1 J , 0 0 ' 6 ' • u 0 0 I t , 0 0 • 0 0 ' 0 • ' 0 It lO • • • For information on this or other building alternatives. call VOO! broker or Craig Lyon. Manager of Sales & Leasing, at (213) .626-4204, (714) 833-1010. AVAILABLE . NOWATIW~Al COMPLEX 4 ONLY •11 'o rll MONTH TOTAL C:OST r.an111'"4 ,...., 5 Nl'W COltl,ACT UNIT SIU Cl '• I 4 I 1/1) 6 VOICI MUSAOI PAOIU ALSO All AVAILAlll 7 HU FIP MAINTINANCI OrlANGf COUNl¥ RAOl01El.ErHONC SfRVICE '"c ~--1114t H5-uos :. • IO, SA!ffA Ill, SANTA AllA = ~r,~:;,:~ ";:; , .... .._. I I -. ... -... ..,,., MlrlN k-..., ......... U II 11 10 It 14 ...... ,; ... ----------------------------~~------~--~ ........... ·.····-)l·J·J------~ ~ --· , 88 DAIL V PILOT Tuetdey, o.temw 7. 1978 Rock Star • in Concert Bob Marley Returns After Sniper Attack Frona AP Dlspate~ Jamaican rock star Bob Muley gave a free concert, two daya lilt.er he was shot by unidentified snipeu. Marley went on stage at about 10 p.m. in Kingston W'lder heavy s>Qllce secwity at the Na· Uooal Heroos Park in "U)town Kincaton. Police had no clue to the ca.use of the Friday nighl shooting which hosplt~llied Marley's girlfriend, 1denti!1ed oo)y u a1ta. his manager Do• Taylor and band assistant LoWe Griffith. • Tom Snyder, ho6t of NBC-TV's "Tomorrow Show," is leaving as co-anchannan olthe New York City afflllate's evening news show to do prime-Ume network documentariea. a network spokesman said. Snyder will continue doing the "Tomorrow Show" from New York and will depart from t WNBC's "Newscenter 4" pro· gram by June 1. He started on the program just two years ago. when it 1 adopted a two-hour format that • has increased its ratings. * BiJlionaire John D. MacArthur, who takes pleasure in saying that he has no idea how much he is worth, has been ordered lo find out. A Florida District Court of Appeal ruled that MacArthur must divul~e an estimate of has net worth. The ruling came in a $200- million damage suit filed by AdeUoe K . Moffett, once one of the world 's richest women whose fall from immense weaJth climaxed in 1973 when MMAllTHUll MacArthur evactcJ her from an apartment in a bwlding he owns. Mrs. Mortell, 78, is the widow of former Stan· dard Oil board chairman James Moffett. MacArthur, 79, owns a dozen insurance com·· panaes. Included Bankers Life and Casualty Co.,. about 100.000 acres in Florida, banks, radio and television sta· lions and other concerns. • Veteran country music singer Ferlln Husky Is re· cuperating in Seattle, Wash., after undergoing surgery for re- moval of tumors from both feet. friends say. Hus ky, 49, has sold more "u~11Y than 20 million records m a 25. Y<'ar recording carcc:r His best.known hats include PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS llU51NfU NAME STATEMENT ,.,,. tolloi111111nQ f>l"r\oo '" d'1tr\Q bu\t nl' • I\ INT[Qtn.q M'lTIVf \(.fl'""'"' P..11nt I "nt N••...,rtnrt Uf'lt ~ (Al·f(1lf"l·A n .. Nl \•Ill"" r M .u.-.u ·• f ,,,.,,,.,, J.•o.ru \ t,,.,-,..,.WQ11rf t•• .. v f'I ( .;thl '' h t r/~ '"I'\ f,.J'\tf\C'• « ~"•l•I h '1 t y tn '" t11•~•I t llh ~r r M.t1 H 1 Til"•\bu\"W•\wt 'I r1w "'"'" (~.n If (lf'f" it (l' 11'\"JI l ,,,1y >" ,._,0'1 •mtJll"r \ t Hilt PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS llU$1H EU NAME STA TEMIENT The' toUowuHi) Pt'' \0'1 •~ do1n9 bu\f .... ,, ~\ ROLEEN lOOL~ )0~1 1(1llv0<0011~ I n Co•I~ Mt \<I, (A 01/;/6 'toO., rt N MOnfOt".' Jt )OS I • ·••ybtoolltt· .,_,, CU\1 t /1111' ·• CA."1f>U ,,.,j" Dv\ot''" , ,, ton.uuth:d by •nm d v1du•I Rr.bt.'rl N Montff Jr TtH \t41f'tnrnt w-. t1h"d ¥tt0'\ lf\t. Cwiunty Ot'!t' Of °' -1HCJ"' (uut\t'f' on Ho• 'I, 101~ F•l41S , .. 101 J"'Uah •t•d Or '"O"' Co.nl Oiittv t-it101 •9'1bt \h•oJ t]• '""''' c "''' f• 111, ._,,Int f'•Jv JIJ,.,no °'-' 14, •'I, t ,le, 4!J.t• '• ,. .... )l lO 11'\1 ' '' 1'1 11\ '''"' J~ Pl'BLIC NOTICE NOTICE INVITING a10S ••f'lfl(f" •\ '"41E'lrf\Y r, V(llrf tf'\At '"'" 00dr1of Eau<.• o" 1f t~ ~ Mt#>wtJl'lif·M?Si"hiAll)t 1),,.,, tM()Ptn•')' PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS aU51NESS HAMf STATEMENT t~ tollow1n4 pipt\Of\\ ,.,., ncwnq ~· f'\ilt\,\ ., (VERE f T SUlllllAN CA~PE rs. tlM L~n Avr . W•ftf E, (~ht ~'W C..t1f0tntct ~•1• LPO\tew•rt Cir4'riv-I Mp(j.tMM\fWt, ,,_ c,..,,,., V1tw, Or•noc Coltto,rn• .,..s "Wines or a Dove,'' ''Dear John Letter" and "Now She's Gome" * Accused kidnaper •'rederick Newllall Woods petitioned the California Supreme Cour:t In a move to get his trial tranaferroo from Alameda County. The trial of Woods and two other men accused of ludnapmg busload of Chowchilla school· children had been moved lo Alameda County on a change of venue Crom Madera County. Woods' attorney, Herbert Vaaowlta, asked the state high court to order Madera County Superior Court to grant a further wooos hearing on the change or venue in order to support evidence or prejudice in Alameda County. • Jean MaJauskas and three part-time clerkS' are working overtime i.n the Uny post office. They wiil mail 150,000 cards and letters -200,000 Jf Ute . weather slays good -during this busy time of year in the little town or Bethlehem, Conn. "We do as much ln ( three weeks as the rest of the year," said Mrs Ma-· jaus kas: Bethlehem's ~tmistress. PEOPLE'] Thousands of persons vi sit the small town in western Connecticut during the three weeks before Christmas to mail their holiday greetings with the Bethlehem postmark and something extra - seasonal sketches stamped on each envelope. Others send boxes of cards for mailing from Bethlehem. .. Arthur Fiedler. conductor of the Hoston Pops Orchestra, is not only a music lover -he's also a lifelong fire enthusiast. The white·haired baton wielder says his in· terest in blaze-related paraphernalia began with the fire station near his boyhood ,,. A'~ home which bad horse-drawn ': ~ ... fire fighting equipment and ( • friendly firemen. Fiedler has donated most or his extensive and valuable col· lection or fire equipment to the Boston Museum of Transporta· lion, which opened a special ex· hibit with many of FiedJer's treasures on display. . · * 'IEOLl!ll Country music singer Waylon J~lbgs has been made honorary Nashville police chief. Jennings received a certificate from Sgt. J .T. WWlams. . He said be shaved his beard. got a haircut and trimmed his mustache for the presentation. PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS BUSINlcU NAME STATEMENT Tl!~ 10110,.tno "'"'°Mu~ dOil>Q ""'' M"\\ .,. REC.ENT REALTY. RCC.C:NT MOMES REGENT ASSOCIATCS REC.ENT PJIOPERTl(S 6'.19 My'11t Woy 1..tQlm• S-&t 11 C.011101 .;.. '1?~11 "ob•fl J Oononu!' G•n~r•I Pfrlnf'' •>• My,llC W•Y. L•9Ut't0 8r•th, '-•hfOf'f"lta~b)t Phyltt\ J Ko, nhU~. c;~ntr•'' P•rlt\t:'-&>• M yiitlc Wa"I. L•oun• S..C:h C•lltorni• .,t.•i fl\1' l)U\lf'tf'\' .\ (Ondut ft'd 0'( d QeN"r•I DMtf'Wtf\"'IP AOOftfl J OonotHJf" Thi\ 't•tt"mr•" w,,., t ,1,d with tn.i. County''"'" ot Or•noc C.uunty on NUY ombet II 1'7' l'tm1 Pvl>ll\ .... d O••nor C~~\I O••IV P•IOt No• ». )0 •nd Dot ' " "'" ,.,,._h PUBLIC NOTICE l'IC'TtTIOUS BUSINESS NAMI STATEMENT T"~ lollowlno P\lt'IOM •t• CIOll>Q w\I PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS aUSINl!SS NAME UillTEMEHT ,,, .. foilOWlf\Q per\On I\ OOHlCJ OO'l• rw•\\ ~' INTEGqATEO '\V')f(MS AS· ~Ill TfS, , .. ., Tolrdo l• .... El fe><o. CA"1UO Robotl L V llul>Ml 1Hll1 TOl.00 L•"" El Toro CA•>•1'l Thi\ bi.l\1nn'°' t\ <on\Ju(tt"O 01"' '" d1V"•OUAI q-~,, L \f'hUOMI Thi\ \t•t.,.m\"nl W ft\ t111"d w1tn tl'lie Count., (.l~rio. ol OranQt• County on OM. 1, .~,. -Publi'ihf'd Or1tno1· (Oi \t (M•lv p,,ot, 0.-< I, I•. 11 19 l~I• PUBLIC NOTICE '°""h r ''''"'"'• ... , .. ,. , .. ,.., .... ti~ ttto llP fQ •I ").) ; "' "" th ... ~"(My l">f [)ti .. ,...O•H 1•1tt ~• ,~,. uff•rtr rJf w 1<1 ... f'"tOit\1 01\trll'f IM Al .. tt ,itf th/ p;IW'ttn ,, .. Avf'AV"' (O'"tt• M f''A ' ~ll•Otn•a ,., """"" t1m• '•id ntc:J\ w 11 b-" pu0Uct1 rf'w"il.....at .... Ul~t VIPlOAOf~ H •l~n Po\• Cloy d 5~1) E l •Paim.. So•<1t tO). An••H~•m. {.tt1tnrn1A 0'1t01 nt\\ "' Al ,,.,.. ,., .. 1·t fW' n ' •J• ... ,. .-wllft -Jlh'Y" lft\ffU< I '>'"'" .. 'Wt~ ffC.it I .,,.,.. •" " .. ,.,. "<tW ,, I ,, ~It'"""" Oft.I,, t: f tfwo P , "•''"'' O··rc •or , • ..,.,IJ wi f'li('lfl.I t ,,. t tl\1 Pt.ti.,"''·• A#~ '.Jt\I • ~ ~ r •llfOtl"I· • •7") N IC)t .... , M•f .-ittwt' •• "' ~ fOt'" L."''H"t ,. ,,,,. • .., ''"" U • '14'Y\ ··~ ,,.... 11 .. ., ... ~ . .,IM ne>-1Hn•• ,,.., • ...,. Tfw\~''""'''''°"''"0 ..,~ttdbya c;..n.,., p~''",,.,"" 0 ,..,.,,JI C•oy~ "''' ,,.,.,.,..,.... ... , ''''°" •. , .. t .... (·~· rw1• Of Of•no-(OUf\ly Ot'f P+ove~r )\ ·~·· .... ,,, """'''""1> ()ffn.,. Cn•\! D•llv Pllt>I No• )) JO .. nn D•< I 14 1u• ~II I• f~ h JHJ Ut f /Jl,lt 1111"' Of th~ '•t~pntt ~,_. Ut'i•·•ff '-C~t 0•,,,frt<t I--------------,.~,. ......... , ......... 1 ""',,, ... PUBLIC NOTICE I .., '"" Ml .... < .. H .. .,t!t tW .. .,. tM 1 _, • ..,, n 1 ""'1 'o •• .,,,. ,.,., '" '*'""' l---N-0-T-IC_l_T_O_C_ll_l_O_l_T_Oll_S __ '' '*'•"' ff1t••"•"~Out ••~ SU~l•tO•COUlltTOFT'MR l)Al(11 U...•MOr•• "'• STATIO,CALl,OltNIAl'Oll "' W N)l> 1 "'E\A fHI COUNTY OF Olt ... l'fQI '"' 11r O\(u f)()1 O•ST1t1n H• A..., .. I'). ...... (~•"h t A l-1••• "' AMY £Ll(N MARNEY CJt-"ltn•HM•t•r''°"" 4 ~" ~MV E LLIEN O•"'tt!t...!. "u' "•'•""!J U.r" 10' HAA"4E. Y , 0.t •4M0 \\4 1/llO NOft( E l'i MCRl!ltY C.lllCN IO"'°' "'•,n• \Pw-fl fj,~o-tu-.\f ""''" Pt..,. . ,....,.,M, of tM 111oov~ n•mM Oi-<:•t'Wnt f~ "'"D->', t4 ,.,... ,,,., .. tNt •H Otf\Oft~ t\•v•"Q c.IAlm~~''"'' Pl'BLIC NOTICE "OTICf TOCllfOITOll\ 'Ul'f •10a (0\lltT 0' TIU \U,t• 0 , CALll'OlllHlill ,io11 fHl COUNTY OF OaANOI Ho A"'" r .tA••Mt04'9':4Ll lf D11c••~ Nl)f 1(f 1\ MFllF8 .. f.111,.N I<> !ho trfd1tOt\Of IM 4'00•• nun«IOt<~t tM• •t• CJlt't'\°"" tv.•1nq rlfl""' ..-.mt t"t \if'O f1!Kf"CIJ9"1 •r• "''Qu•r#IO fO Mt '""'""• Wltf\. thf f\•C'•\\M'Y ~' M't f"'t .. flit o4 tfW; fl.-O: Of tf\f ~ M M'9d<ourt or to D"••~f\11~,wttfi\t,_ ~f'\\Uf -*• ... "41-f'f te IM U~ 411 .... ott <e ol LEL .. HO HOFl'-N KAUK AND KLEIN Alle><M'f' ... U• ..,W•l<lllf• 81"° &f .. flf Hltl'- CalH0tt>t• '011> wllltn h '""pl•• of IN\l,..n oi ,,.. 111'"°'"11""" In att """ .. " Df'•1•1-lft<I to tM etto1• (14 will cle- rt11tnt w11Mn ''''" ""'"'~' -lltf' lhe '"" D\ll>1•0Hono11n" not•<•. Oot•d No•omt>tr H "" Hll'•Ct 1(•1111 •l\O 8owfly Kalll k Mll'-r C.5W>CVlo,.oHrw Wllloltf\<oobO ... """"" clO<•dont LU.AMO, MOl'l'MA .. , .......... ,, .. A~tlUW .... Wlhlll" I M , ..,,.,,, NMlt. c.-tttU J ,..... ltUl11\.tl11 Alt-Vlltr t.·fJOCWIO" l'ublllM<I Ortll~ Cotn o.lly Pilot, Nov JO,...., 0.<. I 1' 11, 1'16 ~!H• PUBLIC NOTICE 'll'AQtT, llOSt, W&Yllll, HllNH~D 6 tlAl", IN'-........ ,..,.,.,.,,...,.,~. . .1.oM~c•-1 • Allll1 MllH•Y W. NOi.Mn, '"· nQ. ll'll*b!IH Or .. C:.-0..lty ,. ... , Nov.JD,.,.cl O.c 1. l•.11, ttl• *'·I• • ,,,.. u1d dfrc.0.A' •'" ,,.Quirtflld to Mt ,,...,,..."' ••1ft tM M<•\\111ry v(llV(hlt" In ,,_ n0 1c,. Of,._, rttrll ot Uw...,... ~ l·l~•ovr• ortopn'•"' t~ ..,.thttw ,,-.c-.u,ry vo._lf Pwl>t'' 1D th-ul'ldit""'Q1¥'1 •t ,.._ olloO of B"ABARA A MINOIN HILL WYNNE TROOP ANO MEISINC.EA Atl'I•,..'>" •t Low \10 (onhHY PoOf~ Pl••• tllOt C•m""" P••~ E•~t. IO\ A-I•\, C411fntnl• wtlkll" t~ Oflt(ft Of O\lilM'' Of tf'Jft U~ftlQl'W'd t1••ll m•ll••• p.,t•lnll\O 10 ttw .. totf'ol wl<IOK.0-.nt, #llnln 1011• MO'lfll••"•• lr.t ftr\t ~lr•HIW' t)f lhl\ not it .... 0.ld NO...mbet 1•, 1.,b CHARlESFRANCIS HAllNEY E ••hto• nt tM Wiii ot 1"9 •bo.,. n•"'""' ~"'"'11 IAlllA•AA oflNDINot MIU..WYHNI, '"°°" ANDMllSIH0£11 -"'"' ..... Jlt<ltfltWy l'•rto ...... 1e1 C...IWY l'•r11111t \.MA-'"' CA r.1: IJUl U,,.... A_T' ... •1eut~ "'*I"'" Or-OMt•t Deity Pit«, o.t-'· u .11, M. '"' P UBLIC NO'nCE LAC.UNA HILLS REAL E\TATf l..tQUf'M Hllh VIII ,Of!' SMc>Otl\Q (H\t,._r ISMO lA Pu Ro&O L >Qun• Hill'-Cll .,.,, \•'•"' £1tfl0"'" tialf ?lttl ~lf(.tl'N)f'• 4iHV~'•-S0 C•llfOff",. R:oO•n lO\.I•\• M tH loC)Qdn, -))0 FtH"""' St .,.., D1'1JO C.lllOfnlO 'l•Ot Ellt•~tn G•o• M•tOOMIO 113) WU<o' ~t S-1tn Ole(tf), c .. 1u""n4" '7100 lP'lh l')u11.1n&'\\ '' <ondvC1ffl by • QllMr•I pMIMf)l\lr> \.,~,. E "fall TIU\ \t111ltf1\tfnl ""'' fil,.O with lf'W't Gou,_,,.. Ct•r._ ol Or•nQf' CtNntyon Nov -·· .. ,. '071• Put>il\~ ()'"",,_ c.o'"' O~ilt Po"t No•, ll 1l JO •no 0~• I "1• a10 1' I ,• .... • PUBLIC NOftCE S-"7U HOTICI TOClllOITOM -A4'171 5-r1we-1ef ... SltM tf ~If•""• !tr Ulot Cllwllty •f Of•• In , ... MtUtr ol '"• tt' ... of IOLA STE""lNI llOllRTt, •ltoiu....,. ti IOI.AS. ROB EATS, Oece•*· NOll<t I• lwlr.IW IJll("' to <rt<llte><i Mvlnq t lalmi ~aln9f t .. e Yid de<e· Otftt 10 II .. uld ct alms In Ille ot11<e al 11\e cten. 01 tlwl eforew ld COll'1 °' 10 orewnt ,.,.,., lo tlwl 1111<1•<1i0Md •I tl1e otllct o1 MOl.MIS E HOBART, "' t0<ney it i...w. icso WHs111,. 81..i . No 1207 In ,,,. Clly el 1.o\ A-let. In LO'\ 4'/>QtlM County. wlll<" lalftt olll<t I\ llw piece of t>v•lntt• 01 ,,.. """""IOf*I In ell molters perlolnlft<l IO Wld ttt•I•. SllC .. Cltlm• wltll 111• nectUAtY vo...:lle.s mu>I tit flltd or 1>r~vn'"" •• tlore••ld within four montl)o .,,.,. the flrSI -llulkHI OI UllS f'IOH<t. Oeted Nowmbtr 11, "'• H-•tCI Sltt>MM Rotoef'ts E .. c1110t 01 '"" Wiii ol Hid O.<edtn\ MOLMH E H08AllT )oUIWllslttre 81M. -1107 l..ffA-19"CA .... 10 Publts""" <>ronve Co•st o.i1v Pliot No•.••. n. :io,al\O De< 1, ,.,. .,,.,. PUBLIC NOTICE 'ICTITIOUS 8USIHEU HAMI STATIMINT TIM loHowlnQ PffM>I• I• doll>Q Ml· ... ff .. WOllLO WIOE AIUl!>T COOPERAT!Ve. llOI P•rt.vle .. lAnt 11 0 l•vlnt,CA'11tS R-rt A Et>erM>ld, 3801 P•tl<Yl•w !Ant, 11 0 lrvlna. CA•VIS Thi\ l>u~neu I\ COn<IUCltd by"" in· dlVl<l\IOI Rnbert A, EIH!r'loOld T"I• slottm•nt we. lllO<I will\ Ille ~~~Y Clert. ol O<•n9f County on C>e~, , .. ,n Pv1>11\N'd Or•nqe Co.•I l>.,lv PllOt, ~ I, 1•. 11, 19, 1'1• 5091 1• PUBLIC NOTICE FICYITIOUS aUSIH0$ HAMI STATEMENT The lollowtng ""'"°"'•re dolnQ f>v\l· M\.\as: 11 SEA BREEZE KENNEL ON BRl!>TOL, 11 MOME OF ll()H RIT TERGUT C.ERMAN SHIEPHEROS, 11ns E Bt1•tol, San•• An•. CA. Ht•nt •"o h\~boro $ff'f1tt"btft. l'Ut 8ecllard Ave • Ce"''°'· CA .0701 T"'' t>vJIMn h conduct~ br • oener•I CMrtner~tp Heln1 5 s.,,11101>en Tl\1' \JfltM&l\I WO llffd wtll! Ille Countv Clert. ol OrenQe COUlllV on Oe<tmotr 1 •.. , •. ~ Put>HY>ed Ornnoe Coot Dnllv Pllol, Ot<emt>et I, 14, 11, 18. 1916 ~1• PUBLIC NOTICE '· •vauc NOTICE c. P\IBUC N011CE ... CTITIOVI IUltlNIU NAM•tTATlllHNT Tl1e IOllhllnt °"'.01\ It CIOl"IJ ~· ntn••· MAOIC SCVLll'TUllA "MAil$ .. by OllAHO. UU Ore'ICI, ~ ..... A!ll, CA ~· L•h ll•ln• P•w•lt. tOU • .-woy LO"IJB•tCll C' '*l Thi• W~MU I\ (OM\Kloel by ... j,,. "'·-· lol• Powell l'llll tl•t...,.ent wn 111"<1 will! 1M C:.W.IY c ..... ot Ou 110-c...Hlly Oii No• tlf\bet 10, ,.,. ,_ 11\11111\llff Ounoe Co.11 Otlly PllOI Mii• , .. U.>O. al\lil Dec I "1• 41111-lt P VBUC NOTICE "'' .. -1"'90 O<t"V' Cont Oall• Pll04, Nov. n. 10. f"4l O.c >. u . m• ~~,. ,PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS eUSI HISS NAMI STAflMINT n.. 1o1•-•no .,.,...,. '' oa.no ....... "-HH OJIMAR BUOYS VNLIM!TEO. 11eo H•tord ....... WHlmlntter CA ml3 O.tnnv L~• Mar1111. 11SS1 8'-nur~I Jt US H11ntlnQIOI\ &Heh, CA•- Thi\ l>u•lneu ts condutteel by "" In· dl•1du•I. OOMV L Mdttln ™• \W•mMI w•a llleel wltll ttle Counlv Cle•~ ot Ot•l'IOf Courrtv on Nov· ...... , 10, .. , •• -Publ•\M<I Or•~ Coen O..ty p;io1 -... tl.10 .• ..., Ott< 7, ,.,. •13'-1' PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Pl11SLIO N~ PUBLIC NO'liCE fllC'I nou• •llMHIU Nt.11111 STAflMINf Th• loll-• ..... ,_ ., ~ -· l\t\U\ CUl ,.OllNIAN HAN,E4ftC: SEllVICE ~lllnQ AddtH ll P 0 D<tc 11SI. Collt M•u, CA. '2t1t. UU C0<lond.,,Co>l1Meu, CA.,.,. w o11r10 t. a w 11 .... un <Ar'9Nttr. to\l• Mtt•. c .. t1•1• Tiii• bu•lno\\ h <Ollduclef y In· dl•ldllfl W61fridL l Wiik. 1'1\1\ , .... ,...., ..... , • .,.. ""'" ti. Govntv C•e•\ t f 0<•-C0\11\tr en Oc , ..... ,,. .,,. AP17 Publl.,.,... O<tn~ C.att Oetly Piiot Nov. I•, )J, JO, a nd Ot< '. ,.,. '™ •• PVBLl~'MICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE INVITING lllOSOH .. ,M ,000 OINlllALOBLIGATIOH I O .. D$0F lllYtHE UHl'IEO SCHOOL OISTlllCT NOT ICE IS HEREBY C.IVEN tMt ,....l~d llfOOO'\f._ to• I"" PIJ•Cha\" cf s&,!00,000 par value Qt1M'91 ObllQallon -al l•vll\fl UnlfHd SC"°"I 01\trltt of O<•nge Co\>fll~ (~lototnl• wlll bo r•<•lnG l)y 111• Cl•tk al Ille &o.trcl of ~,.1..,..,01 u10 Counlv •t l'-plt<~anduplol""1•,,.. ,,.'-'t>e<'"•d: TIME TutsddV. 0fHml>et )1, 1916,0I II 000 <laO, AM. PLACE O!hc. OI '"" C•tl'll of, .... &cMtd al Suoo••'SO". °'-County ACI· mtn1"r~tiof> BulldlnQ, Roon1 '°I, )IS NOflll Sycomor• "•••I. S...1t A0\41, ulllor"1•. MAILED BIOS 'ctrr\ di·~ 8o~•d of S.-rYl-S, 0..•"'Jt County Ad· montstrilliof> 8u11cllno. Room ~t. >n Mort~ SvCIMOfO St• .. t, s ... 1. ,.,,., Ca11tort\•ct. ISSUE '6.~00.l)O() COMl\1111(1 of 1300 boll<)\, numbl'•ed I lo 1l00, boll\ In· (tU\H,,r, til •~\ d~nornlndtlt>n ot 1.~.ooo fotth, •II 01t1d JanU11'Y 1. 1911 •nd ~ .. s•ontttrtt .. E tt-< t•on ••17. ~rnt' C ' MATURITIES. TN--... 11 m.olurr lnconsecull•t ""'"4!•1<•' O<Clor I~ 1"- amount' fOf' t .. Cf\Of tn. MWt•1 ye•f\ "~fo4to*'\. YEAllO' YIAllO~ MATUlllTY AMOVHY MATUll11''1' AMOUICT J.,.utry7, ,.,, sns.ooo J•nuorv1. n.. sns OOQ Ja,....rvt. 1•11• lU,000 J•'1UotY1, I"' J11,00CI J,_,;,1.1oeo 3H.ooo Jan ... ryt, ,... ns.ooo J.,_...'°11, 1"' :l'H,000 Jtnut•Yt. '"1 ns,ooo J•"""ryJ, 1"1 311.000 Janu•.ryl, 1'91 ns.oo.> Jo""•"''· t'ltl ns,ooo Jonuary 1, 1m :ns.ooo Jo,....ty 1, 1"4 3>S.ooo Jtnu.ry?. 1"' 31S,OOO Jfnuary 7, 1'115 :l'H 000 J•nUA•Y 1, 1m J1S,000 Ja.,...tyl, I-:JH.000 J•n..arYl, 1"6 :115,000 J.....a•v1.19111 Jn.ooo J""""rv1.1"' ns.ooo SIGNATUltlE ON •ON OS: At INslOMof 1"e\19NlUtO)ontlle-•wlll ... ......... lly•lll•eod IHTElllST: Tl!« -.Is \holll ~~lmt•tt4 ....... or ..... lobe"""- ,,. wle l ... rf<>f l)UI ..... IO O t....S I'll. .... --· oay•t>lt .......... ,for, ... llt\I n•r ~ w-m1.-Mf'ually tl\t"r~••tff". l'AYMINT: S.Old l>onck ""' lhe lnter"t !Mr..,.. ere .,.yable In lawful """"'Y of Ille U•lled S1•10 ol Ame<lta at the office of ll'le T, .. ,.,,., Of Ot•llQO County. lll!OISTll ... TtON: Tiie borlds Wiii .. coupon bonds tejjl\ltr•blt OlllY •S to both prlrn:tpal and lnlorMt. HOT CALL.AILI : Tiie l>ondureno4ulln1>1t tJefottm•lUtltV. SIEC\llllTY, S.10 bonCl\ortQ!'-•lobllqallon\al wldKnootCllt1tlct,1>'Jf• ble bofll prlnclp•I eed lntrrest ham ..i •••orem 1uet wn1<11.11n0er"" 'e•• now Ill loru. m•v 1» lt••d wlll10u1 llmll<n-•• 10 ule0< omou111-•11 Of Ille, ... Miit "'-'''· u<•Cll ccr.,lnoor'°""1-"v. l111<11d S<lloOldl•trlct, TlllHISO, SAll IHTIEllEST ltAT1!· , .. C mll••-talt O<d "'-'Y not .. <HCI 7~1Mf' aMUm, .,.,ablt•nnually ,,,. ,,,,, yo•t ....,wml.....,...lly tllerealltt. Eac11 ••t• l>kl Mun t>e•multlpleof 111001 '°"· NoboN.t-lllM•rmor•t,,.,,onelnl., .. trelo,-•11 -of 11M! ••ma m..Wrlly •M ii bu r ow -.mt Ult Ea<l\ bOn<I must .,.., In. 1•~1 •I IM rtlt tP«lfled In I ... bid'""" lhd.ote lo II• 11 .. d,,..tutlly d<l't. Not more'""" lour lnttte>t ••le\ may bo bier. MO t~rt \l\fll nof be• -•all ol ,,,.,,.., 11>.tn 1"1. bot*~" Ille lllOl!e•t -•ow•SI lmer•st '"'''bid. TM n,,.uuon al •ny rate wlll nol lie contl<l!>recl '"" "'~11901 •n o6c11Hontl talt. •••rd: The l>ond• ., ... be \Old f0t <HI! only. All 1>10\ must tit tor not In• t""" .11,,., lhe """"' ~C•MY ottered'"' ...... ..., ucll bid,,, ............. , ... llld· °" olf•rs...,. end <K<rued lnlt<ttl to tl't d<llt o• dOll•el"Y, 1'-e>r.,..l11m, 11.,.,, • -IM 11\lftHI r•te Or r.iu nol 1o ewe-thote •-llHCI llettll\, ff trf\lcft 1 ... -· 011.,, lo buy Miid -Etell l>l<ldPr .,..11 fl••e In"'' blCI tr..10 .. l Ml In· lf'tnt<01t I" dOll•" MCI t-. ·--""' lrtlt•P\I rattdOttrmll\tO ......... Wiik ,. "1•ll l»ton'10trote11mo1mal1veonly • ...,,..,, • .,.rt ol 1'-bld • "' .... '' 9146er: Tl\f> -•Ill"",_.,_ to llltttlQM•I ··ioon~·~ 1114der .... DlcldO" <OMlck;ll\q .... lnl ... ttt fAlf or, ... , -"'" •nd '"" P"Mll-Of• l•ri.cl, II.,..,, Tiie 111Ql1t!\I btd wlll t>e dOte•mlMd l)Y -•Unq Ille-"' ol tt1e Pfff'lllu"' bid (If •ny I l•om tlle tofol o.-.nt 011morHI whltll ,,... 0111rtct -Md bfl n1qut1ed I& HY from IM""'-ol wro ltof\d< to the rt..,.ttl•• mo1ut1ly Claln IMreof •11,,. <ouPOn rate or ul•UC19tllled In'"" Ollt tllel ,,.. ewt•O wlll w "'* ~.~~':! ~o~~~a'!!. ':~:':..~~':.!~1'::'~~: ... ~,'~":,~~':v'~~·,',:J 1111••t<t lrom '"" d•lt 01 '"" -to lhe clet• ol Cl!ollwt y. Tne cost ot prlnttno ti,. -w11t 11e t>or"4! by lne cll•t...i. """' ot lltk<tl..,. The 8-tdol S.-vl.o<lre"'1'vtt tl\t •IOllt, In lftdlnrt• lion, tortlKl .,,Y •n<I au b•d\-lOll\et1!t"11fttl""""blM<lt>y1.t .. towalveany lff"Wlarlty or lnlormallly ln11tybtCI. ,.....,. Awatf• The 8"rd ol ~vl\OM will t•k• t<llon • .,.,.,..,. ti.. bOntft or ••k<tln<a •11 l>ld' not I-tlW\ t-yo\l• '10\IT> •lltr II• nplt0t1011 Of '""HIM ,..,tin P•U«I~ '°' ttw reutp1 al PtoCIOWlt, orov•dtd. 111111,.. •w•f'4 m•Y bt m•cto ,,..,. Ille uplrllloft.of "'--<lllt<I t1mo 11111e l>lddOr •Mii not,. • .,. 111 .. 1119 Mid 8oard nntlce tn wrltlflOOI '"" •ltllelr•w•I o• w<~ P'°""'"'· ll'llJU ot 0.ll•ery l Oollv~ of Mill-wlll bro m"'1• IO Ille Succ ... ful li>IO• .dtr et'"" ofll<o al 1"9 Counly Audlftllr·Gonl101ttt ot Of•"'Ot c;out.ty. .......,. o.11 ... ry. C.•c•llfl• .... Ula Otll• .. ,: II IS UO«ltf tllfl ••kt l>Ond\ will "" tt.llver•d to ll\tl W<c-IUI blclcltr .,ltllln tl11'1y d•Y• frtlfl hw felt of w1t 1-eot Tl\e W((eH'"' ~ \/Wiil M ve Ille rtoM ... ttl' OllllOll. •• ,_,, ti.I contrf(t of pur<lltl\f 11 IM~ ar• not .._,.., ,., etllverv •1111111 tl•ll' clO\ ''°"' 11\e Otlt ol 111e "'"',,,.,..,,,and In tu<tt tYOlll ,,,. 'll<C")lwl 111- shall b .. ntltl<ICI 16 lhc ••turn ol tllt *"""".cc-vino 111• l>ld ,.,"'el•~· l!A<ll l>ld, IGQo17Wr W11fttfltblel Cftf<t.,mu•tbo 111 ....... _ WIOl)e, -•.-..d 10 ,,.. OIWl<t W• .. t1lt '"'"'-~ Ilk! <-'°( 111 ... lrM "Pr-.1 tor tr•I,,. u .. 11i.d !.<llOOI 0111rk1 llOl\O"" aldCM<•: A c•rtllltelo<<•~r'u.twOon• ·~ll!ltbl,,., .,I.Ott om· PMIY '" lht ernount nl l'llo ol lllo 1>tln<lpel •"-' 01 '"' _, P"Y•lllt 16 ,,...,, cl!!• ol lhe County Tru\urtr '""'' __ ,oath p.ooowt al• tv•••nty 11111\ ,,.. bt-r. 11 tl/((f\\IUI, wlll llt(ffd Aflll PIY lo; <•Id -11'1 t<tonltll<t ••Ill lt\ttf!flM of lllt blO. T ... Pft><Mdtof ltwtfllO. atC~tlf'lt fflY _ .... lld _ .. I ""911 M •PP'loel.,,, lf'lt OU~-~ fllf," wc;ft Pf-' It K< .... ~ "°' perlotmH, 111'1.-,f t lKll lalluro of Pll'1«tNllCI -II tit~ by MJ <llCIOt' ....iulonol t,,. dl•l•l<t, '"•11 thelloe '".....,"' wkf TrHWfer fer,..,. tllMfllol l,..dl•trl<t. T11t c11tc-•«-Yll>Q ... Cl'l-<"4""-'wm11trttur!IN ,.,.,.,_ . .,, OtHt111' TH t ........ S-: Al lflY IN....,. fllt '°""' llr't lffldt'°" I~ ,CMtl,..rylheouc<•"'"ltljCldtr_.,_..,.fflrmanClwl-•wllM.,_llltNln• ldrftl tac•lveo bv Pflvat• ~ ff'Olft ~ of tfw ,,._ 1.,,. -CllWM.ttr ""911 ll>t Ot<larecl IO llt tn•llM '-...-,..._ !Mtftl 11\<-le• •-•· ellllef by 1 r11ll"l1 of I,,. Int-I It--~~ or by• Clo<ltlell ol fflY .. ..,., ~our1. or SMll lie Clttle•td lellAIH, or tit ,._,.,.., to bf Wit<\ Into acCMllll Ill ~H"' 1ny .. Cltrtl lllCOIM lllM. byl!W 19M II' lfty fedtfal ~tH l- -l.c! WbWoWfll to ti..e1et .. fllll\ llOllet • .._, o.i-: TM ~lntd OPlnlOll fll O'Mlll"flt t. ""1en, ...,.,..,,, ...,. .... 1no"" ••lldl\y of .,...,_.-.rill Mfllf'ftlltdttlt wcu .. M blMt•l., pfW lo U.. dfl• ot oell.,.ry ef .......... at llW n11tftV .. lltt 8klt1ct. A ctn of ........ oolnl9n <er111 .. d"' the C»unly ,.~ ... "' ,.., fll( ....... .....,._ .... Ill ........ on Ille N CI!. el Mm ...... "'"'1lul _,tit dlt Ml«ftll\11 ~. II •t • .... ln111Uld, • CUllll': C\ISIP _.,.... "-ll9tft ....,ilN,., _,..ff ,_,..."' 1111 ~wr,wlll~trlnttdffllttelictlflllltlll~r'u~ No llfl"'9floll Certltk lltt M "'9 u-Of pa~t W tftd,r1t11...,; ff •If lleNll tllt -CMtf11t blcl<kr "'4fl It fllrlll"'tf Wltlt • ter1lll<f., 111111 ttwff It 119 ....... , ... petlellf!O ••f~llflf '"' ••llClltyot .... _ ' OIVIH llv 0t1Hr of,,,. tlowd ol ~Mn et Ortnlll COllMy, C:.111_, ~-l'lllllf9,t•'•· CS.At.I , , •' ,, •• "' "' "'' .. ,,. .... ••• Ti. BIU •ll MNl<etptxe on tllt Ontll(t co .. 1 Hou1es For Sal~ ............................ •••.....•••••••........ J loesdll'f Dec8!1'1ber 1 1976 r·~ G •• ............. •••• •••• ••• 1 ... •••• • • • •. ••••••••••• DAltY ·PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ~~l;;-~::2d (642•5678) Fas~llA=:~ General 1002 ············••················•••······•••···· COM -16,500 Hou.ea For s• HCMIHJ for S• Ho~'~ f S-' H F s~ ••••••••••••••••• ••... 1 Of' ..... ou,ri or ..-e ••.....•.••.•.......• .. ~:!'! .......... !~.~ ~~~~••••••••••!?.~~ Geaeral I 002 Grneral I 002 ........•...........•.• ············•··•·••···· l::J:'°~ .. · .. -.: :'.· == Beautifully refurbished 2 bdrm home w frplc, new kitchen. bltns. & JP· plianccs + new roor. cpb, and pa111t ....... ;,_ ........ , flnallcW. .. .. . SOOO-*9 7000 7199 CLASSIFIED INDEX eat Estate HouH& For Sal~ •••..•..•••.••.....•...........•••••..•....... 1--------1Gee.rol I 002 ....................... BRORS: .AdnrtiHN -------- COM -DUPLEX $139,500 Recently hit spacious 3 txlrm. 2 bath + balcony owner's unit 2 Bdrm w trrplc & pal to front unit. Walking distance lo s hops & bea<:h. Peacock Hill Spacious t'xccutivc h om e in pre· stigious North Tustin. 3 Bedroom. 3 bath with view from balcony, on lar1:e est~te-si zed lot, near schools and rid ing stable. $102,000. SEE TODAY! Attractivt• 4 bdrm homt' 0 11 t·orrlt'I' lot Bay views from h\ 10~ roo111 & up stain; bedroom $l~.ll(IO Te Plact YMI Ad, CID ~ check their od.i daHy and ,..port er- ron lmmediattly. The DAILY ,ILOT ou&&mes IWMUty for the first ifl· correct inserliOfl only. Sunshine Special Bl LL'GRUNDY"1RE'"A(TOR·~ 642·5678 llOllSU rot sm r.PnH..t " ... _.,,_ a.J..,.. Pf'twlh\111• ~==~~-~\· l-.ltM .. , !_ .... ,.. t tl•e •OtiM1 .. n \·4fik H-.-1~.-... ," ""'" W&""'-.... ""A &...aun• •••Ht. lAIWI• ll-11wotl NIU"-"'''-"I,_ t::c:i:.:,'' "w" Ju•" l •••nl1 .. 1 ~M"""• '4-•t lfc;ul:I '°"\tt lA1w11 ..... , ........ ,, .. , Mullllklktotf"" '4 HAL E$flfl ~;:.~:!!.!.: t:.. ... ~.k­t:!.!~r.~'tt, t .. ~, l.AI' 't ,,b ~=,·.~·.:~,.·~:'• llV$'k "' l ;uh \#~ • ·~· .. t.t~l@"lf ll'lorWOt"flfoP·rt• :~:..l~!X'"r"'' N""41-ttf 111t t't~~ MfNMn f(fttJtl :"h~~.~1· ~'., . ~o,-.;c., .. t.,.,,. k•o<~ t.im· ''"'-' toiul t .1 .. tt\•ll.aiir' R..J l..lMt''tfta..ftl..d RENTALS lkN.!•' t wrn1• hrft Hou\.-· 't1f~1 r11>1'1~d t•\f" )wr-ft 1.r l f\I t~'"'"~"'t titrn . .,.,"''"'••"'·' ,.. TO-ft.._"" t'wtn l'"'~.-.Lnl ·~'"'" •. \fflll tt'.'f"•~:,.t.nt A._., l nfwrn Apbt-..,nwt 1\1 t41"1ft'1 k<.if'Jl' fl!(),.,,. tkA .. t• \t11hl l1W't l~\ .._.n1mir' k11t'.J" \ft<Ml'4lfl M•nt.t .. lltt"l"I ••• lol ~ ... . ... ,.......,.,~ ... ... Uthn H,.M•I ~"'«""\k .. ..-., .. 1 IM1,~1,.•l lt•ftl-.I 'for•.:• K•"t.b"•~ No. Mui1 .. 1 BUSINESS, nlYES T MENT. FINANCE o..;,~,.,~t· HW1t1t.t" -. •• ,r4 lr1u•,ltnf'l'll t~~' \ lf'lt-t4'nf'l4 'lt .fM~t "'"""" t& 11"·.f~ ~·~ .. "' ......... Motli•ff''f TH., ANHOUNCEM£N1S, '11SONAJ.S' lOST' FOUND ""*'""'~' •n·rnt .. '"''""" .... ,.,, .... lo•4 4 t'"'""i , • ., ... ,fl ••• ~-.. t 11,t,.• Tr .. ~··· SUVICfS .,. un• 1J~tflt1•11 EMPlOYM£HT ' rREPil.ATION '-.... 111'1 lrt .lr!.fl ll•ll'I J+.hl4 4111! ,. ll•lt• 'll\,.nh•1 \ii; 4. •1 MERCHANDISE ~:~":";~. ) Av/'ltt• fiftHh!" tt~idffle: \1<1h' .1 C •ftW'ft-• I .. fl• • I t ..... . ..,.. ."" l'• ,,~ •.,mtw .. ... ,_, .. ~,,. 1-... ·~.,,.~ .......... . ,. ..... ,... ... , .. -.. ...... ~ •• ~~f' '4hoffllo11n""' '41\4"•11•, .. ., .. "'fll4 ,, ~W I' •f lro .,._,,,' I ...... , luf~' t lt•I 1 .. ......... ".'-''' "••"• "' ..... 't•••1l'l1 !1Ai>•h "•If,. ... , .... ,.'M ... , '··~ h--~U1t"1'4..h111 tons' MUIH[ £QU1PMOIT ,. ..... ,., t\.J.f "•fWli ... , 'I ' ,.. .• ~. '4f•tl-..... .. tto •• , fJ"Pl't• f'&.t. ,,, ... ~ ,..,, •• ........... 1 .,., ..... ~ ...... "-tM•"C.M'P4f 6''*'• ........... ., .... TRAllSPOIT & TION -'•tr"t•fll ' ....... '1.-J< ,..,., ., .... '"'' "' =·~:.-c: 1 \l-1"'1tot• \ilvi,, .. ~~ , ...... .., ,, .... , ,,., .. ,, ..... ,, t tt1ol:t ""'•).1 • I• • AUTOMOBlll "'""'•' " ... ,,..,,. ~~ .. ;':i ': .... ... ,.,,,.,. l>t .... ft eU ,..._,,.. .\.>f•1W••f1., Avt'"'"' •"'' ~ &UJQS, IMPOtlEO ,.._, ....... "" '"" \ .... ft,_ ........ ..... ~r- 11.4'•-" ~rft•l .... U.w'l• ,. 4...t ,,_ ~"' .... "°''' ·-"""' ... ," .. M•t•,,....• ....,"' ~·· ...... ('r r·"'· • . " ....... tW,flW lttfUo.I\\ M1Mh~M'' ·~ .. ..... -""'~"'" fo)ot111 ft''"""" , ....... , .... \oh.:> c ..... , U"""t•I ~II~ tM.• •H1'lf AUTOS, IKW AUTOS, USlD \ .......... t~f'Ok• ~·h•y~•,, C:o"'"' c.: ....... ~,.1 ......... • .:r. .. ~ ...... 1_.. .. U~'OI" • M.unc\ Mtrt1111") .... ,. ..... _ .. ,, ... ~~'1l'.l"~ T-"'lf v .. u ........ '"" Nf "61 • I •-""' IV 11\lt '"" ..... 1•1&.: .... .... -..... I• o ,,, . .., ,,,, .... In• ..... .... , ..... ,, -.... ... '"' '''w nH1f. 1w .... n1riwt11u: lhruoul;. 11c•"-ilnH'" ,I\, .,. • .,.. p<1111t 111,\(j(' ancJ out ' t .... II J t I Cl , n l' \~ I 11 n U " 1-.q11 11 g , 0 I. I J s t-;1.1.1m. , ., i-------&64" 'r~~,·· rublisher's Hoticc·: O·tsts 11 1\ll 1<·,1l c".l.11t· .llh <'rll'•'" ANYTIMc ID lhL'> llt'\\ 'llJl>CI °' UIJ I; j•·•• 111 tlw I •ti• 1.11 1 .. ir ----------i lluu 111).! \• t 111 1~11.K wt11d1 111.1kc·-II 11lt•i;.lt Ill .t1l\1·1l1.,, .. n.\ 111•· lt•H•nc1• !1111\i.1(11111 Ill llL\1111111111111111 l11Jw.t1111 ran'. l't1l111 11'11.:1•m. 'i\'\ 111· llotturn,ol on1:1n or .111 1nli'n111111 1•1 111.1k1· 11n\ :>Ul h 111 < It ll'llll! l1m11,. lluu, or ch '1111111 ... 111111 Tlih Ill''' 'l'•ll"'r 1\lll nut kllto\4 111.:h ... t t pt ·"" ad',., 11,111 • 1111 1 ... o1 t•,tJll' .... hit 11 I> Ill \ 1111,1 1J11n ol th1 l.m Houses for Sale .•..•.................. CHARMIMG OLDER HOME <'h111c ,. l!..1 ~h ttll' C'1 lrn .1!1•111. l.,:1· -.tune I 1 ph- :1 too, ilhl tll•t;u·ht·LI ~ar 1111! hurnc w ll(c H :! liwlt.lalJlc lut l.1~tl·1l ul ~i:!,500 S45 lll\11 •1 ~·:~ General 1002 ZONED INDUSTRIAL ,.,, '"' .. .. '. •• • • • • • •• •• • • • • •• • • • •• • l •-.---------.i Older hurnt• lll'Jtt•d 111 111 ,. c1t1 .. tro:.t Jll'H ur l'11,tc1 ~ll''·' l'ouhl tw U'il'fl ,,,., ~!fR5ALY 675-2311 General I 1002 General 1002 •.....••....••.•............•....••.••.••..... WESLEY N . ~ TAYLOR CO. REAL TORS sinet..· 1B4fi BEAUTIFUL SHORECLtFFS! New exrlu~ive! Quality rustic :\ BH home w /pool. 1-"\nc detail. loads or charm. Ocean v1cw from upstairs mslr BR. 4th BR could be added $235,000 21 I I San Joacpn Hllb Rood MEWPORT CEHTI:R. H.I. 644-4910 GeMrot CALL NOW 752-7315 DONALD M . BIRD Associates, Re altors 1002 .....•••.••.•..•.................•••.........• OFFICE UUILDI:--J<: FOR HOUSE? 11 you h ave a s pare 4 bdrm. or better house, with pool. & would like to ex· Change it for income propePty, n ow IS your chance. Call·: 673-4400 Di•ision of Harbor ln•Hhnent Co. ·' ,,. -~ 341 Boy~ode 011ve . N B. ' 675· 6161,.'; GHeral I 0021Gett~ral 1002 ••••.••..•••...........•...••..............•.. CLASSY COHDO -REOUCCD Tastefully dct"oralcd & up~r;uh.d lhruout , this air-<•ond1t1orh'<I .i t>.:droom in m·al ft;rncho Sau .Jo:1q111n ts close lo the UOJ\crsit\. not fJr from the Irvine lndu:-.lnal P~rk und d1rc1 l ly adjacent l o a bc<.1ut1rul pool & jacuzzi area. The view of tht• htlls ,., an added fcalttrl' or lht:-. l'la-.sy ('l)lldo price r educed nL·arly $8(MJO. tu' JO ~n:-.' ious $104.!JOO U,_.l()UI· I tt).~tl S . .., ,. CUL-DE-SAC \tlcll'll IJrJ!•' l.1m1I• room .... 111 t ....... ., ..... l.1hlt· \\ llh .ill 111\l'"l 01<'11t lll "' ·' 1·oml1111;tl111n honw <1110 l11"1nl''' \l,1n\ .tf•.HI mt•nh lulJh•tl t lu-." IJ\ CJll lw tlt•l<11b ;::,1 :11111 General ! 0021G~neral I 002 Get1eral 1002 G~rol 1001 REAL TORS , 61& uOOO ... .. 1111 I io ... .... ~ ... •·u-..ei Cu''''"' f1,.1n"· .._ u1·;11111·d , 1·t11n1:' r :i l.1t·1Jr111 • .' l11t1h t-u1-cd In 11 I.. I 11 q1l.11·1 ' I o.wl~ t•I t h.11 tn COVIHGTOM 4-PLEX 'S 123.500 li•M1 ~11 II ""111·r .ucl.t: \\ 1111 ... , ··1111 ' """ ''" "' htis:\ lw11t tKllll Tl111•0 . ho•tlHKllll. ' li.ilh ;q1,11 I rnc•nf ' ·' ' " l ·'' .1>''' 0.•,1 bu' 111 th" \ F It\ popul.11 111utl• I t .di to th1v "-If• ~1.1 1•., C:::SELECT t PROPERTIES POOL PLAYERS PARADISE Sp.1t·1 11u ~ l.1m humt· v. hui.:e wp rum11u-. t rn t11 ,1,·c·cnnmrnl.1l•' \11ur 11<10! tJblt· v. 1 m lo -..:, .. r .. 1.~., litlrm' d1t·1·1tul ltph ..\. lttlll\ lml" p.t Cini> ~<! • .'.AHi :; 1:; !11!11. I '1111 i ....................... ..................••... NEWPORT ISLAND DUPLEX New Ltsting in a prime rental area. 7 Ye ar old duplex shows pride-or. ownership thruoul. 3 Bdrms .. 2 baths each. Waler sports arc a few feet away. $162,000. CORONA DEL MAR • 675·3000 EAST SIDE IGeMral I 0021GeM"ral I 002 ...•••.•.•••..••....... •••...••••....•.•.... ,. COSTA MESA 111i.:11 t1t"mJ11cl r. 111.11 VA Almost Nu :11 c J l'r1·.,<'nt "" nt·r " Will i.:o \'\on nc·w ilrea. 3 11111111• 1" d1.1rm111i: :1 hr, 2 ha. mam •·i.tra~. ltt•clroom l loalh "'II h t.i:i• r><><•l .,1fl•d hac-k, ,11 ti 111«·111.u" J1H1 lk•nl l1rt'.1t ll1>1•n llow<C' l>a ily · "'"111 111\ 1·,tnwnl c '.ill;,;,., :!f1t.O 111 !'> pm . 2;130 w Fll>rJ c;::SELECT 0HW<1111l'r Fast Action and Cash Talk! :J lll•clrm . 2 bJth. kit " har dble i:ar <;n·dt l'ttriwr h>l':.tll•m A~lo.ing $51 ,()00 J'i IS. .......••••••.......... JASMINE CREEK! E-cc1tm1: two ... torv homl· with oc1-:,,:-. \·11-:w many tiu1lt·m fcJlUl'l'' bcau11r111 mirror .... threl' bedruoms & famil) rlH•m. sndu•lt·s :!I hr ..........•.•••..••.... Squeaky Clean Don't m111~ th1). '.11·.111t. 2443 E.1~1 Cna\t H.q11w.1v. t oou"'' d1 t l\1Jt t~ .o 1n f\11 , \ t , d 11 1.1 h..1 ttf I ) hkt· rww -I IH·drrn. 4! hath. General I 002 tJ1n1l)' roon'l Nt·W plu:-.h ••••• •••••• •••••••••• •• carpet:. lrt's h J>Jlnt and l'' l' q l h 1 n ~ r l'.1 d ~ t u mo\c rn <in:;)t l'u~l" '1l'sa locat111n n1·.Jt ~d1oob 1\-.km.: ~ill.:>110 t..:JllS-10 1151 ~HERITAGE REALTORS Freshly Painted General 1001 ...........••••........ NEWPORT HG TS '11•1 t'\ll.'11tl olil• 111 111• 1 11l11hd .... "·"""ti tit . 11.\ll \\ \\ 1 pl" J-' \I II• I 'Jl.1111 h , .. ,\\111• ''"t ... I..: trt'l, ,\ t11t ,.,, Ind·• I• I 1111 I.oh ul 1111 tor \I I t '..t111 to" 1 cit.I I'·" ,~~, uoo nr .. 1 r i:uartl, g:.ill'll .... nlry . ---------- Huntington Beach lh • ..i 11 l' JI u 111 t• <'It " 11 lll'al. ~ h••ohm. IJJll 1111. l'l'l'!'lltly p.lllllt•d Ill .111tl cull koal d1HJ1 p.11 10 I!•• lo.u:k ) Jrtl Xlnl I 111111\ horn!' 01 trrMi Jt .1 lo1\\ $60 StJO llu1 ry u11 lht' un~· • JACOBS REAL TY 67S-6670 C'luuhuu''" 1.1t>i1I '"' , ... ·u111 .111d TE~:'\IS l'OllHTS lkml'mbt•1. I 11\c 111 Ja-.mino l'n·ek und 1t ,., 1usl i.:1 •·al' COLE OF NEWPORT IU;, \ L TO llS 251 ~ I·. l'-.t llv. ~ ( \L\1 675-5511 EASTSIDE R-2 BEACH RETRE.A T S41.3SO A3 Slel'lt ltt 1)(1unch11g 'url UPERB .11.tl l:ry,t.il """''! Hat•k QMES )ttril 1s PJ\ an·u pla, l!ro11nd Wmdmg w11od1·n ~• •• ' '" \\Jlkv.,l\,toscdt1tlnlc·n ISSSW 6ake• C M ti) l Gc.•UI ml'l kildu•n Neil lo Mari.~161Hlo.tl I.a\ ish Ii\ run111 .... 11h ---•5•4•9•·•8•6•55 ___ _ step-tlov. 11 <'1111\ 1•r ... 11111n ,1 r l.' J *' l II I td ,ll' 1" Sun:.h1n1· h1 t•akt .1 ... 1 pullo 1'0111 · .J.wu111 \olh·vl>Jll m.11..t' tl11., l!Jrdl'll IJ11n11 .It It', rtnesl Won l la:.l C.111 K-17 -GOIH 9 UHITS..OCEAH PRIME AREA SI 68,500 BEST VALUE IN '3LUfFS1 fftotltl\ t" ,1111~~1 ' II\\ \\oll , "" "' ltl 11 1t1 l1th111· ....... '\. I \I • pi 1 \ ••• ,. u t I' I I " p .. t I .. ,.rn ,Jt·1.n1\~ ·11 r \\t .1lht\\ tnl ,,, H th·• 111 • 1111: rl1t1I. Iii I I c'.11tlu 11 C. F. Colesworthv REAL TORS 640-00l') DRAW A BIG .. .. . .. 1ihl1 .. .. tH'., .... ~, ., ... . ... ... .... ... T PROPERTIES 645-3474 l•[-~ __ ,_e ___ l·_l_.1 , ,, ".,:.~~~{.?0, lut. 2 a·1...,~-1-- h.1 lrpk 1..:1· prnate l.;:~!~:E!!!!~ 1l.1n· huildahl<' H :! lot Charm111g older homl· n • t·cntly l'rplcl, cl1 pcl , •'< p .i n c I e d II u 1: c I, H w1cornl'r stone frpll· Scparale huhhy rm . llarhor 111 Build a u1111 for >.l1 a 1m·nm•· Our l'\ tlUS l\l' 6 lti i7 ll 01 ~U·R!l-11 ---~ •11 '. . ·. :! 'hOrt IJllll I." [h l>I I .Ill Ill !Hid<' etf 0\\ llt'I lt1I• lll'll!hhnrhnud ll1)!h , .. , hi;: 111l'lltlll' \\ 11 l l·hH\\ l'J'h llow with m11icmc11·1 n·riwn·d tlov.n p.1\1111 nl I h1rr)' ( ".111 tur 1·11111plt·I• drtalls a11tl pn•vtt I\ nt this unu1111· 0111H11t111111 \ t..:J ti 96:1 7KK I CIRCLE~ I hi I \\ h ti ( .... I f I• 1111tl '\1 11 '\1·\\ I'"' It.Ith 11 •• \' ·' lot ht•tlftli!IJll l,t1U11\ fOt1IJI Ill• pl.1H' I h 1lh .ol 111 . ... ..• VA Buyers Call Now '·11nn11t\ 110\\11 '.\IJ11 11• I hlOll"' lfl•lll 1',dl fUI p.1110 N!'<1r prn1I HELENS.DOWD REALTOR 644-0134 PRICE REOUCTtOH ASSUMAILE LO.AH I.Jr!(<: lhrcl· bl·drnom ----------I homt plu" formal rlrn1111: rnum or d1·n \1a~!llvt' .~. . ,, ·-- 111111 ..... ... ... . • l~ SP AMISH MAMSIOH OM HILL POOL + BEACH SSlf.250 :.....·1 1uck1l 'llUl l \.11 ti I'll Ir\ 111 rot.I 'll<ill'• Ill I 1111•1 t.1111<·r·, l" nC huu-.1 \ .11111 t~I t·t'1ftn1· t<lof .f1 IHI 1 lo .11t 1 •ti• • lllll llt11'l' ll11u1 tu I I 111111 I I ,H lo.h11.: t1r••5•l.u t' • '""' 1111·t puh k I I t' h • II \1 .1 I \ 1• ft1tlt0.•\o\.t\ rtl.t"lt11 \Ult t ~~tH "l qu,11 lt'I' l l t f •" t' 1)\1111 ... ~ •• p.11kli111• 1>11111 .\ ,:111u111I -I .~I I , 1------------1 ;,. NEWPORT SHORES •>< " 'lnrv \ Ir 11n1· ~n11•I :1~ 1tc·am1·•I •. t11H1 1 :: : b •I 1 ru ' I h ·• l t• ' ~~. ~t't·hll1t•tl p.1tcu w .ilk lit • • l~'.1d1. 1~, .. 1, ~ ll·nm .. llt-dutl'•l 111 SllJ ·~"I .. ' .. ••• .... .. -.; ." •·Oil .,.., •·14 -.,Mi ... ~ ~)J •fll ..... .... li'il :tt~i:I l•l:l l25J 1-;v('!> associated llROKERS -llEAl ro11s l ~H >N lolboo 61 1 fUl HFW,OllT liACH LUXURY floor 111 ct•1hn1: hnrk 1111 plJt l' 111 1>u11kcn In 11111 ru" 111 ~: \t't' ll l' 111 fl II ll>'ll l Ullll' I u ,1,.:-,11 Ill<' t " 1~1111.: loJO "1\ll luv. tlo" n I'·" rnt•nt t .ti I H ll ;e,.1!, . . ' Excha1iv~ Tustin ~ s re II!)' ~ llr ( '11111)11 v. Fr pit ~ \11 • 11ntl l omm pn••I •·n• I .! c .1r Jo:·'' I\ p.1t10 s.1:1:1:.cr THE HOMESELLERS Coll 752-5353 \'1111 tlnn't n1•1.,1 .1 ~·1111 to th·'"' 1;,,,. \\ ,..... '"" plalt ,111 .1d Ill ll11 II.1th 1'1l11t \\.ml ,\11'' Cull""" t,.1'' ;~•iK .... '®li*41M• ''"" """ ·-.... ' .:::! ' ""' II<'~ buy 1n Ra)•<"rt>ll'l! '2500 Sq. ft O( J)\ITC Clll~S ! .f'ow mui1.,1\eiol~r4IOms. watn sctluclcrl m a!ltcr wini( .• Su nny clJUntr,y k.llchen w1lh all 11cw :.I.I\· '---------..J phance1. 1n<'lod1ni;: Inuit ·-~ ~ ,. .. ..~ ~~ .,..) .., ,. 1n ml~rowavc Clvt'n 2 \,11rgc walC'I" hca~ur,s + + + dN•oralor " ci t>· light Don L mtsi1 ull this rot nnl> StJ:J.500 Call tl46-717 \. •• .............. ; M .~~SS: ,. ~=i HIGH • ,. ----· FASHIOH7 : .. .. .. . » tr II I , \OU 'llould NH•. WES TC LIFF DUPLEX <! B<-drm each ~•de Cpls, drp:o. Ohle ~Jr • S72.5UCI Roy McCardle Realtor 181 0 Newport Costa Mesa 548·7729 Counlr v r1a,11r cxpantlt"cl !1 tx•nrm. !amt I) ruortt l11Ht1l' T:.i~ttdull) 1nv1l111!! with lovl'tv wallpOIJll'rS, WflOds Jll;I lilt'~ ':I run plJle lo llH•' .\nd on a 'edU<lt'<I ~lrl·l'l l•---------away I ro m t r aft I!· si:n.wo PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 642-5200 Mesa del Mar OCE.AHVIEW North Laguna Beat•h Condu Lari(<' I lwdrm, I 12 halh. ltrcplace Ei. ICll'il\l' 'undt'l'k w 1r.in t<i1-t11 'll'W 1-,,llu ... 1\ l' ~.5("1 li-1 I 72711 .rlu.dt~S~ ti"~ REALTORS -.--- LIDO ISLE s 135~000 . Charm1111?, µnv:1tc bea<'h retre<tl Ill l'Xl"IUsl\'l' arcu Btfl palm <irc:i lt1r lhnse warm days & dwC'rfUI ('07.Y frµlc for l'OJUY lllJ.: lhl• l'OOlt•r t I JnC!>. J ll~t lt::.kd. 1.11. 7711 R11 OW MER LIQUIDA TIMG 43 S. LAKE TAHOE "CONDOS " Solid ("()nt.~fl'll' JBll 2ba condo::. w/fp nr lfoaH•nlv Vallt"y :-k1 art' a I 11(1', rcnov u lcd l'r11·1·' ::.wrt S:l!l.950 T\•rm' 642-9604 916-541-8191 2000 Sq.ft. 4 BEDROOM Co~la Mesa 4 twclroom. 2 + DEN bath home llCJvy ~hakt· + GAME ROOM roor. ti.land k1lchen, ,,,t, MESA VERDE Oecoralor ·~ ,. 111111 ,. Sup;.•r 3 hl·fl1 m + dl·n 1'\.,1turrn1: l l 1n·pl.11·c· ... 1 o t ~ o t I' a n ti I 1 11 ~ w;,llpJJll'r plu'h 1 1 pt . lge b1:Jrm;. .Ju .. l lhli·cl' Oon l mi~:. 1t' 1•111 1•tl fin ly 588,000 l.Ol':tl••tl Ill :\1 t• s a V l' r ti l' . t · a I I 5'-16 5lll!(J ~HERITAGE REALTORS , I ~111 I ho t ttol 111 'l 11\11th•11tll' 11•• hut. 11 '' 111· J•ll'lll/1, 1111111 , ·'"'' I 1llo.11ol ,\Ii"'·"'' p.11 (I' \1, 1\'\ Balboa P-:ninsula 1007 ············~·········· II\ O\\"-l 11 ch111 , 111 I .111I111111 I' I" l"', I I • lll"-rd ' A. ll!'-1 111.I l!lhl Corona del M or 1022 Pool Home ~ ll(>1lrokllll 01 ii 't1CI llrl' fer :I ht'<.lrcoom < CormJI d1111111ot f':t 111.1 .. lll' p111>I w 1111·11 1.11, •1uttl11t11 lit' .ti 1 r"' . .: 11 ~ B II t> 1-,111·111..i•cl t 111111 l'ou rt '.trd a 1 , •• 1 \\ 11 h 11111•nt ,ii s.:a11l1·11 .. 1ul f1,h po11d ~~· lh1s uniq111· horn" 111 <il)J)r\·c iall' '\7to.:ltl0 beautiful fireplace, UOOsq II of ltv1ng MCa _:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::,I form.ii d tning & lariw rn thb i.111gl1• i.tory home· ---------- l'O"cn•d patio VJcant localC'd on '• J<'r<' l''tate Rack l'a'l owner "ant:. on a sel'luclt"d ln't" hnt:d PRIVATE BEACH ACCESS 4 BR Reduced to SI 09,500. 11 ... 640-6161 ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE , INC. qwck ~.tll• Qull'l 1•ul ik i-treel M.1ny cu~tom MEREDITH i.ac. pr1cctl only SGB.000 tt•1J turcs 1nclud1n1: a GARDENS ESTATE Call 54G·58!IO llrcplJl"l' 111 mu ~ll'r ).llltl" Form.ii cntr~ 1nt11 hui:e Try ~.5110 do" n lor lks., ll\ mg ro<Jm Formal din II ll I q u c r Ind (' J 11 Jiii! ruum Cuurmrl !lG3·liiti7 ktU:ht•n "sth hreJkfast Oi''"'""'.,' ''''"tl"'"·'d' .1n•;i llui.:e f.1m1lv mom -------i[® IB' I \\Ith t·ra<'khng l111•plt11·1· MUST SELL! • , W.tlk 111 rloi-1'1 10 mai.ter .. ustt· Ownt"r will hl·lp OWNER ANXIOUS flOJlll <' Trv S!UICJO down Largl' :t tx-droom + den C;oll !Wi:t 6767 home on ()Wt"I lrt"l'·hned ' . ,,,t , ,,, ,.,,, ,, OUTST .ANDING LIDO LOCATION Ch~rmrnµ :i Udrm 1 lnml' I n The T r at.ltt 1e111 ol Spain. 1-'rC'i.h &. N!'w 1lc .1,~~J'L' -... _ J-- SEA BREEZES will em·ompa,.., \Oii 1f you buy thh c-ustorn lwtlt 4 lkflruum. 2 ll.1111 l'l'l1I0!.11l.1 h1lm1• c; 1 c·.11 for informal II\ 111~ hun µ:Jt10. t1n·plJl't• .1ocl 11111 tN11'ti hv nur I )'c.•1' w.1r r,usl) $J :l".OO~ Call 640-9900 :y~.flml hlnlr .~,,.., Valley Realty OPEH HOUSE Ft-I /Sat /S4Jn/Mon ~'1~Ml l.11;hlht1u'.'>1• I ,J Harb Vu Broodmoor 1 flt .!1 h,1 II lllHll I.I Im m ... horn" It• CIJ!.,.,Hacd i\d:1 "ell h11( ttl'mi., s mall items tir any 1lcm . r>42 567K. !.lrecl. l1rofc:.~1onally lund~r;iped. ovcrK1icLI lot Custom drcnra Lor drJpei.. no "ax Clo11r1- and h<·.1ot1ful. rww plush ('arp(•ting. ~cc llus homt' 1mml'fl1ately! Call 842-2535 cor m and o ul St1!1 l1mP J•---------p.illll . flt•W plu-.h I oll j thrucout l';1111'11•d 1.11111 rrn. l 1·1.,1dd111g Ip. I' 111 Mil' J:l\'111 II f.. I u't I" SIG.l,!l,1CI Wdton & I hi'.> t:l(HI ------- GtMrol I 002 Getierol 1002 IBDllB ILllNS CO. OVER .SO YEAFIS OF SCRVICE llG CANYON MEW OM MAit.KiT! to cho!le your rolors ol <'lll'J>Cl :rntl apph.11H't"s $156,:;<IO - WATrJll RONT .llC>MI ~ REAL ESTATE 631-1400 St:LL l~lc it.e.ms with a Try 8 Dnll'j Pilot Daily I 1lol Clai.s1f1ed Ad. Classificn Ad lo buy, H'll 64.2-56711 or renl somelhini:: ---'---- GtMrol 1002 GeMrol 1002 •····•·······•••·•·•·•• ...................... . DEAMI 4 llDIOOM c lla\l" ~omt'lhm~ \1111 .... ant to sell .. Cl,1ss1rte1I .i tl:. clo ll w1•ll (i.12 5678. I 002 General 1002 ........•••.•........•. ...........•....•...... macnab I Irvine realty INVESTORS! TWO OF A KIND! AMO IOTH GREAT! :. .._ .................. ... • '" .ut und~I ! ht.' ,. : DAfL Y '1LOT It Bubb).ing Fountain Greets You at H~e Front Courtyard in this 4 Br, Broa<lmoor III. Decorative Ma~onry. ~e.-med CeilingsL Sliding 'Walls of Tempered GJaqs to Patio & Gardens. Fonnal Living & Dining Garden Kitchen w /Pass Thru Bar to J>c)ol Ar~a. Mstr Br Has Adjacent Beautiful Tiled Jacuzzi. $295,000. Very popular Kensington model in University Park's Deane homes. Family &. din. r m s., 3 baths . Beauutulll!: decorated in earth tones &. attr. Jndscpg. Near tennis courts &. pool. $116,500 • A really super duplex 11-:i blocks from beach. Great potcntrnl for weekly rental during season. FeP land &. well priced al $125.000 Bob Owens 642 -8235 (1'69) (f ... .... ,.,. .. To place your mt~ffge beCor.e the reading pubhc-, phone ' Doll.)' Pilot Cla~smt<t, 64~9 • • Christmos Trtt ,. __ ... _______ , ,. It HEWPO-H·rs. • 11\ir Ch11•111•11• lre:" ... 111 ,.. "'1 ,. I'll/I r»<-111 hur.t.1~ (rnm i\ dell f.?hl to it ho w • • f.•w 11u1thru llu• 111111 • ~ b ,. ll~n ,11,m,10~ lime• It t''°US 3 llR. 3 ,1 • pool '-" .,.. .. 1.,,.11 • nae. 2 t'rpk~ .. sulldl'ck • TI!(' \lfjltt'. 1"" tW'I • over garul((l with ON'.ID ; 'lllt't,t:"'-"'>"111•1w • vtew t1J®.:,()()t • • •-• • ('~II IOI' ~17M & •"11 )t1t11 >t 1lie rastest drow In lhc 1M11boa hy#rop. • C'hn.inn• \of \1~~ l•1r ,.. W l P II Pl' t I RealtCM"S ,. .,,,.,., rnr .. rm1111011 II 10.., es . . .1 a Y o 1t 11.11-.· )oor ••I .. Classified Ad. Phon * &75·7~0 * ,. 1 • FIRST Offll.IHG 1• IM THI OllGfMAL ll.UFFS Shal'p end unit ''Trina'' model. 3 Bedroom. 2'h bath, park-like set· ting. $103,000. 881 DOVER DRIV£ 631-1800 A COlDWIU. 1At41C• CO. 644-1766 2161 llANJOAOUIHHILLS .. O. IN HEWPO .. T Ct:NTI!,_ llST IASTSIDI LOCATION 3 Bedroom home + garage studio apt. Corner R 2 lot. Better hurrv ut $61,950. Lois Muter 6'\2-8235 <'M0°) '42·t23S 644·6200 901 Dover Orlw Harbor V•ew c;l'ntrr I rvlne •t Cam PUS V.1tley Center 752-1414 _642-5678, __ ... _______ , ... ,.. • * ••••••• : .1.:.:=:::!:....-=====::.:==:.l-=::::=:~.::::======:.i.:_....:..~::....:....::..::...:..:..::...:~..L~~.:....~~~~~"-~.-..~--.~:-~~-~-J_.::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::.1.:::::::~~~================~:::~=======-. " • > .. .. DAILY PILOT HC*tttForS. Tuesday, December 1, 1916 Haus~' For S• House1 For S. Ho.,,., For Sale OtfM.r Rral b tot« Mou"' fut'fti•l.._.-d Hott-., Uft'fw.ilhed ···············•······· .......•............... ·•••·············•····· ....•••.••.........•.•. •·········•••·••·••·•· •··•·•·•·•·•·········· ·•····•••·•••··•·•··•·· ····················•·· .•.....•............•.. CorOfto de'~-I 022 Fowto1w YaU•y I OJ4 ~CHI Beach I 040 1,..w,. I 044 Newport leach I 069 Newport ltocJ. I 069 McOfnl 'roperty 2000 Cotta MHa l I %4 Cotta Mno J2J4 ...................................................................... ···············•···•••• ....•..•..........••••• ····••··········•···•·· •••••••...•............ ·••···•··•··········•·• ••••••············•·••· WOODIRIDGE W~rm1n.1.!l11n Modl'I B cownhornc '<Int ltx:.itmn l"hlJO!I<' L,llo;l ,1111·' 1111"' C'.Jll ~l••\1· 1.!l 1111;!.! IObl! ur 1714 1:.:,J ICPO FUD THE DUCKS rr o m lhl' ll(e watt•rfrunt deck • l i.ty. 5 Bit & playrm , 3 bu Xlnt rond Walk to poo~. le1UU5 & ocean S9ti.SOO CAYWOOD REALTY f'Um Uttlt-Oltl llou&t! Con1er J hr 2 w. encl UUI piud Mnt11rt• or r1• v1.111u, fprlc . ooattlrlr l1rt"<I male only No •cces $42$ d\O 844.ITOO rtuldttn or tJt"b. $225 mu BRAND HEW 4BR +den tht-1~·111 C'<llllUlrlJtlOll I I a new h11111l' 111 ... 11 ,. !> I • b I I ' 11 1· ti ne11(hb11rhoo1I ll•.1tu1111i.: all thl' l.ikbl kill h•·n •'II pointm1·nh. 11\1•r\11od ~ar.11w l,lfl!l' roon" :I bath~ ''''II tl1Jwn w1·1 l>iir. m11111x·1·an \ u•w \II Willk1ni,: d "l ·llH't' lt/ priv;lt<' 1Je1uh Onl.)< sui.s.ooo fc1• Call 644-7211 ~Nl[1(L · [}AILEY E., A5SUC1Af[5 s 1101n;n.w1 .., Oc!'an ,'l Jl'l I\ \ 11·w l'r11 b.•a r h l.J1 .:•· lot F1•1· 640 ~7 Ii l.»111'.l 1 "'"" J Bit & t; \H \l'T 2 t'•n PJlHA'>, nu "" furn. So of H"'y Onh ~107,WQ /\.,:t 675 JU! CostaMHa 1024 AFOUMTAIN COURTYARD 11. 1111' \ u v. I ru Ill 111<· "Pal"lllUll rn.1 11•1 'Utlt' , ,( lh1·. ,ll11't1".11l) d1•1111 .• 1 1'\J hmm• f h1• 'lloH"lllU' r 1·(' rt>trt ion r oom A dJlll'l fluor '1111111111 11Jl1u Jft' uh·.11 lur 11111 1 !Jrnm~ Fm·n•' '<I' 111i.: 11.•" k tl dll'll .11ttl t·Chllt-·' 1·•trn lt>atua · .. /\t lin.·~111 \OU 'huulcl M'I' th1, fuw humt• l'UIM Y' 531 SHOO lntemotional Reol &tote H•tworlc Huntinqton Buch I 040 .•..........•••....•... OWN 1.;1{ c;o"i I·: v .11 1111 m n\ ,. 111 1· l1,,11 ' !> hl.'IJ11111111 l1li11111.11 1·1.1111 llt'Wl) p,111110·,j ,\I 1111<1 1•11 llr1·.cl..1,1 I ''"'''-• thn1rw 1 ••11lt , , , 11 ,, '" '' l.n 1111! r•,.•111 !111 pf ... •• f7!i.~I 1'.1r1 .. II It• tlt11c , M21SK..~l GREETINGS" 1"111 ~ .1 .1111 11rci.t Ht> I ht '' ,j SI ·11 ll·f 11111111·' \\t 11111.tllll 11111·11 Ill 1011·11 tlo 1~:hl~ll"h11111!· I '11i.:r.11!t·1l w1tt1 lt·.111111•\ It 111r1 1·111111 1 l1tl l tt 11.tlur.11 ..,..,ml, to mln1 l1lmd Xl111 , 1111111 ,\ ,1111111>111..; llt·.11 h\ .11) ' ,\, l;1w$W\ 1°11 \~1k ll~>h YULE BELIEVE '" !').1nl,1 l 1.u1 \\lh'f1 )t>U •It lh1• t'C IC 1• ltU lhi '1. 'toe\ t,,1111l't ht•ltH' J. I f I t• I I I" I I II I' llc•htl,1 h l • 1W I.OW ti II H ,. ,1 d > I 11 1"1 t I f,1.t •un HO!HO!H01 4 IR · S88,SOO IB.OW MARKET * 548-1290 • I 111 tl1111d1 '""''lnwnt "l'YGl ... \S~ HILL. Vu. 3 lt.ir).!.1111 \Pl"·"'' ti .it Ur;! B.i IJSI brand new SJtl cu 1 :-.0•111·1 l111u1cJ.1lml( hotu1• b) owner 640-1751 .JI SHH .11111 I th-1·11tq s11J111~h hnrk llri•phHT 1-·11, Ill<• I tlinml( fo\11n1ly ri•1111 N.•dud1•d m.istcr win~ Air l"OllUll1uneu ";z ran· )urlJ !wllt·r \ ··ry .1n\11lu-. • 1-'1 t·~hly p.11nli·1l 111~icl1• Suhm11 11111•1 lml.1~ t '.tlf now 7'..:! I 7CMI ' J f'I f{ A I< I·. t " I V f> A R K c'han<l'llor I llll. 21'> Ha , r 1rn rm tlin rm many upi;r .111, 1tfl 1·ul tll" 'J l S7:i .~uu ,\pµl o nl; ~t.,,,, ------ IYOWHIEtt Bayfruqt llK Coll.mi. 1!..lc Trad t' ur fc11ant'e S308,000 673 7770 o r 558 8723 ------Newport· $87,500 224 SUPER UNITS 2 yrs olcl Comr>lt'tt• rt'<· Broudmoor Sci.l\Ct'W Plan r.u·rlilt1'' l'rit·cd ,H 4 $16:1.000 -tbr. fom rcn. I ~>.!IOO l>''r umt. ba. vcew 12131007 5440 "E;\.'iTBJ.Uf"F fir & t"Jm r m 14 llh 111ew By o wn\!r l'nn un I y t:a 11 lllJ !H Ill ---- 1076 ····•·················• l.P9QuaH l liilPlac• Pra ... tt •• p 7S2-1920 1400 QUAil \I NlW~I tfAC14 TtU !'LEX Jo: SIUl::CM l!J25 An .. h u1m Ave Greol loc.' lotC .. ya.a.cbls :i4ll 37:it; <ihopng J lir. 2 ba, dbl ~ar Pool Townbow.• ~OfllHch l1 40 8473563or"7 211!1 ..................•.•.. W U l lll µti 2 br Al ti l't•I ok Fe'{' M tl!U tkntab. :,.ao mo IUDS, ,ETS OI( 1:-:.11wd•2Dr, $2'J~ 675 ll268 Newport S.och l 169 N1•w to: "de, lge delu"v •••••••••••••••••• •• ••• tnvkx, 2 DR, 1"" htt . lle urh rot taw1• I br S I n I( I t• S I o u ' S2 0 0 Ut-ud1com1>t:r. fn· $1~ frpl &. pr! v r(•ar yu "'rom S3iiO mo Al(l •h1y~ ~ 7000. nl.ihl!I Ml t.1)07 6.11 2011. ~7 2501 1o:a.,Lo.1dt• 3 Br cm '" Ac1 ~'. HACH EL.OH DUPLEX w/J t!lhcr un1l.~ 1310 incl $1~ mo yrly 645 !14113 ulll 64211674 aner6pin ur wkn~ ";;ist~tdt> 1 flf( t'OllAJf\'. l'rph. llltn~ $225 l':nc1 ~ Unfumlshed y1m1 f..U 6243 **•J UST P l-:HFfo;("f Im rn j "•i 1.1 t ,. h 1• ,, 111 v wt38lt :!U/\. c harn1t111t frplr .... h Jkt• r oof l !Jr" all' pat 10... o n tlw prelW"I ('t1rll1·r Jtl town O:vt.Y $7:!.SOO 177'J Wt·~lmlnt~l~r ••••••••••••••••••••••• $00,0UO ss7 &ns ~ 12oz l Hr. I hath !)pill Nt!wly • BERTHA 111-:Nnv . REALTOR~ 4!12 1121 2U Del Mar. San C:lem _ _ ___ ••••••••••••••••••••••• l·Pl d , tlritpl·~ b tt1ns S30ll WI 3Q t I 4 UNITS COSTAMES4 Ju.,\ hMt'<I Two 1 lwlrm . l bath and twn 3 hd1 m 2 bath Sl2U.UW Will 1·t. C'han.it: m :t.MONT !->llOH ~;s On tht-w atl."r. l <,ty l'n1lt' Cod. 3 br l b.i. ram rm. rrpl sun<.lt•t·k l car l(ar S601Jmu ..\vi Jan 43:1 SO':l3 l':a!ll :-cctc:? h<lrm $275 Pelsok 642 2i>J!l 11r 546 7945 ···•··················· !"me Mc~.1 Verdi· .! Sl111 \ S Hr . ~ , h .1 m 1 11 \ amen1l11·' ~\lit 71111 l'lt 7~l J!l:JO pnn uni~ BYOWHER l..3nd111.11 k I llH ·" r.1m rm hu.11 1 .ll• l .111 '.!IOI! hlll'r t7.! 't.111 ff(• \tJUr rhHI .... 11ll,1 ,t Id tr1•a1 \ '"'''' 11 ho rn.1 II\ ..,,.,,,., uf h.1p1•1u•·~, i11,1u1 tlllt , 1,1111 1111 LOCJU11a Beach I 048 JaR + IOMUS Qwet hillside cul de sac Portico entry. H ugt· hv r m . •> r 1 " k r r p I l· Sµacrou'I rt•al t·ountry kitchen brealtra~t Orea. MaKntCccent UONUS · FAMILY ROOM. over 700 sq ft -ra1!>td hearth frplc luo ' C<Jthedral bcam1.>d cc1l In~ 12 rt \t. e t tJ.H w /r e frig Secluded master Tie~ redwood ~ked lanai pauo 2200 ~q. fl Plus -murh more• Call fasl 752 1700 R Y 0 W N I': I< l 6 7 W Avf!ruda Alc:-".indro. nr Com'Cln:l•a S61.9tl0 Im mac l br + dl.'n, /rpl pJllO For J f>IJI 4!14! ~ pnn onl> 8aCboo P...;11M11a .! hr l:: Side New C'llh Paint S30o mo Av111I 3207 12 lS s.t9 31147 or ffJH 7714! I jGuail ~ ;·;;~·;;~.-~-~1~;·;J· OanoPolm 1226 SALE BY OWNER EASTSIU~; LOC1\ 1111" l l:k . 2 ba rumµu~ 1111 extra lar)!1' lot t< V i>rk i;: SW,500 l'h 1;.1:! 5;."J!I ~~r~~~t~,1~\1* $5!1.~J Ai.,rt ~Ii 3166 HOT A CREATURE ISSTIRRIHG Xtras Galore 1111 hf\ \lllJ.'I .1111111 .. 11 I I 'rttlKlt t • I rul\ '" .1111 1l11i 11u1th I ~ill 11111 l"\LI,'••..' 11.,1 INTERNATIONAL REAL ESTATE NETWORk Public Notice Government AnumabJe Loans pr t •Uh ;.-. • ' t4MI \\•I h •••• • • •• • • •• •• ••• •••• •• ,,,,,, 11 , ·• • , ""'' • StOtYboolr Cott~ 898·7855 540-3666 ,, . ..,.,, II ll\111!1 lt•1I l "'',\!\ t•,11 S'I \LL l l'I l•:X SN1rwu' 11w11n~ unit h:" ft ph Ii.di llilll.'~. IJ.llllt 1'111'1 g;ir . plu'h t•ar1w1 1n.: llf..r :i:111 11>1 I tH •,)I, 3X05 3 BR Starter hurn1· ~ti 1111 ""'r ••'\ n CU•ft h t.'fljU\ tlll! Ult lll hll"l'/I' "11.l (l" '"' • .11111• 1 11r ho,ol 111 111.j lltlr Ill l.111111 JU..t .1 lt•V. ltloc k' l111cn lhc bt>ach llrt)!ht & .11r} room ,. 0<·1·Jn \ 11:w & IJrge yard Wl «OI HOR IMS REAL TY • 494-8057. ~cl&aded Oceon Vu I llH '" i!', hJth v.1th (1rt·1il.1t·1· amt 11(1• tlhle i..tralo;(' l~'-lnvon pnv.1cy Slilti,!'410 /\gt•nt li73 4~5 MYSTIC HILLS , hr .! 1.,, ..... 11111;1 ~rw" t .. 1 U)Jr I II gl I ,ti h\t'l" h•11111• ~1:1~1 111111 c 11wn 111111 ,. Su 11 I > I t :J:S c 11r.1I \gl lii'I it.01 '""' 11 llu11l111 11111 I~ i.ll It l•---------K~t Ro~~ R~alty 848-8 300 Irvin~ ····•··············•••· 1044 ~ltUt REAl ESTATE ».If•. "• ,, \ i -. t I t,• I HOUSE OF GUSS Plac• . l\.Jds pets sni:ls ok I"~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prapwti•• \'IJm H1•ntal5 MO mo l::.11t'<' h(lmt• <lt'ean & c,1 1400 ou•~ss~-~~~~ auc14 Corona de' Mor 3222 nyon Views Brand new. ••••••••••••••••••••••• upgrd ·c1 thru oul lBr. U·Plao Condo 2 Ur. 11'°1 hi.I, t BR how.e, 2 an hOUM' & ocean \i1ew. pool. nr ji:oU dupl('ll Custa M.,:.a <~>Ul'l'>t' SW.500 Pvt l>tY $155.!XX!. Owner 6-1!1 711 7 675·3587 Beaut nu hmc, Ja~mme C1l•t·k, :I hr fam rm, ZllX ~ti ft nu Isl' r t'4 'd 644-&149 2ba. d1nin1. (am rm .) c ar i.:ar $S75/m u 493 72'7K lOUNITS THE VIEW UNDER 7• GROSS L>upll·x 2 lir t b.J Atlulu B Toro ALON~; I S WOHTll only. No pcl~ $350 c.;a11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l2J2 $115,000 Move 1n now S 12,500 per unit 673-9251 NEW J Hr, 2 ba ON tht· Royal Reotton Spar1ou::. a nd we ll main· lakt! w /fnntash r "'"""' 26949Cammode 1-:~trl'llll lauwtl. nc.ir 1-1ark "1l'X•· :! Bedmoms. largl• OJ>i.!n Cor lol, /\IG & all xtra& Capo lkh 4!13·i!l43 blc t erm:. Will ex · bl'am l.'d llv1nJil r oom . ~ t7Mlllfi23614 t•hant:c. large ram1ly or <.luunR r......__.._1_ v...u-On channel in Newport Santo Ano 1080 r oom . d is hwasher & .._mnn vncy ll<'ar h Spac· 4 br. 3 ba ........................ I •~ra~i! l hu1 I l 10 s. f I ri· 11 I u re ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3234 tl•·n & gamt· rm .QWNR 2br.goodlocau o n, W.is ht.'r & tlrver 10 F/\MILY11omc4br.dl'n. c iouc ml'I k1t ch. brkr:.t newh d1•rnr"ld tol!I So r luded Gootl 1iwlllwn pool & rt'dwood pat111 n•1ok &. frml din rm 011k St s:it;.~10 551; 1200 Prapffti•a i.5()1) munlh 640 H:lSH S4 60 mu !160 JOH. Oi.x·n Suntl.iy 12 5. 22!1 752-1920 1 640 2'171 Ca11.il St . S97.SOO A~ H y o w n l' r 3 II 1400 O\JAIL$1 NIWl'OU llAC14 SpJt111u~. 111'"' 2 hr. 2 '·' mJ 71i-OI t<>wnhouse nost 111 tu bltru., fplc. :i • Jf itar S Redt'l' 3 hr 2 ha. nu cpls, ------occ & Soulh (.;oJi-.t 18NEWUMITS orll .... )$38Smo 67S 6()0(1 drµ ... r11l l0• 1.'nl'I patio PlatJ Adulb Rt•nt 1.,., on•uGE L:mque HOmt:.'s S 37!1 m11 9/lJ 456!1 LIDO ISLE Or Buy SJ!.l.!150 Im m1-tl ""'" \'u~~ St 28 r re1tr SJI 9545 ARt No rl'c Ch<irmcng hou;.c on l(r<'JI IJCJN.eMi1on C.11646 63(111 COUNTY h;,e Perfect ror cp ._ or Uonu.' trn :? M y. rlcan. J f)W\111 \.,_\IOl:O. 11 1 l1<11wh1 .111111h1 r hnm,• \ c)l,1 I 11111111 1 ht dt11ont-. 1----------·1 900 Glenneyrt• !.t 494 •47) • \49 03111 'tre{'I FTl•!>h & l'll.';Jfl Westminster I 098 Stell II mt• to rhooi.e rttlt>f'I r .. mtl) "' I l"hlld G73 06lllJ br. :! ha, ow. fp. Cpls Brtl k (rplc lot:. o f ••••••••••••••••••••••• und opt111n<; Ex<'l'llc11t .tft2pm drµ,, S42S 91il ·olSll!I pan e I 1 n a.:. up cl a t c ti , Jre.1 W1ll l.'Arhan.:1· ---""I ""HA ,, r k itchen :i Bdrm,, . ;i $44,7!JO VJcu11t I l1<lrm .... .,.,.,, II•. no ee. HUR BACK BAY I h.•lh· Ii.""' h1111t BUTTER SECLUDED baths $147 000 h<>U.'>e nn Ir.: Nor 1111 ,, Costa Mtta 3224 Shdrp. IRt: 3 br. 2 b11. 1 hr. 1len :!t .. bJ .: I' C n n d u <i .1., Ir 11 I 1~·.1utcru1 Wo11d 111 .1111. 111> I ,trpf'I tic ,q11•\ , ......... 11111 di t-1111 pr111 JU I :O.IH ~Ml I tll l.11 hdl ltl'.lllill ~ Kl. 1,WI LIDO REALTY :n;·; \i.i.l.i1I ... '\.U. New PJmt c rpb likr Place . 3 br. E Sldl.' Nt.'w paint & 1lhl l(Jrai:t• Watt·r pd MO OM5 Prap..-tl-r pts. frplc . f(ar S400 !\Ir Mill-SQuan· Park. hv o wn1·r ~1,11,01111 fjJI (Hl!S "-') ~>ul I hc•rt· t IJ.1 rquc•t 111 ltw k1tdu-'11 ~ forn1ll 1 r11 1r1•.1 I ht> • h··•h 111 I 1 1,.11 It lt111111 • "I " h.1s lf.ol1.11111t,. •lllr\ ,\· ...... Wooch t ·c" c hom•· on cl.111l11t· 1111 1;,, . .,1 i,:.1r1Jc.n .111,1 11, ...... <lt•f"k vu. /Hl 1 ,I( \ ,<. 14 .ell. Ill tM •;.t('h , .! l"lrnh ~rt 1:,.1 • m1 t.o We-.tm•n:.h•r \foll I PjQuail ~ ••••••••• •••• , •••• ••••• <luµlt?x lA>iy h rt•plac<·. * 673-7300 * ow-.Jo:it ..,\l llfl-'11 I·.' do1< pl.1111.r ll•.oul1lul L•1v.• ,\ pr11 • d • 111ttl•1 ..:r•·• u ht u J,,, d 1q11 l•h• 1----------•1·---------• G Buy S i I 752-1920 mo Avail L2 15 ~!l 3847 Only S345 962 l<ft.24 I en pee a t•oo ou.1.1l u NIW_, atAOt •>r ~ 7712 FIXER UPPER 1111111111 .! , ... .ir .... tll l.ollq1J1 ~ t·11u111r1 • h.11111 ... ,1 I •" 1(1·1! 1·.11 1,, 1 1(1.,dt 1r-L~aHllli 1050 REDUCED $2,500 JkJut1fully dccor'd. 2br & 11l>n home in Nwpt Shores Uwncr anxmu:.. a~ 631 ·~0!:_~6 741 t 3 BEDROO -Tlbumn J llr, ll'> Condo M Loh for SOS. 2200 3 Rr 2ba l'11nd11 ";ncl RcfnH. clllhws hr. slOVl' In ntl'c• 111•1..:hh11rl1111 11I Bnn)! } our p .. 111t & 11 I $1<0,0011 .1r1 ;J a .. k111 ,: $aJ,ll50 1\1-rt m:i 11>111 1 1•,111111: II•' t I II "'•' k. I f"NI ll•'.IUt J lie 'nl 1 I .11r hlll{l' r1111n1 p.tl''' h ii• 11n' ----------1 ..........•............ BEAUTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio, !(or, adult:-. unly hltnl>. poul. 11r1vilc~es, .---------•! No pc~. 581 sg51, eve• $375 mo. 963 3426 o r f)5t; 7627 !lli2 651~ 1·1u1o ht 1111 11 111 h i.:.11 . lq11!-. 'l"kl r ~. 1111-.l• WESTSIDE REALT.V Marlboro Country Jl.111111(1 1·.11 h··ll 1(1 clt1 I SUPERB!! ltt ~1111•"· :-1 lllklh, fl""'> t•.111114.! :!!.11°1 lir t•111ltnc•1ir I 111 I l1·rnc ~ 5'l7 11:.!!> a nyt ime 0 INC. ' 848-2323 llor~c ln\'cr'> hen· 1t 1" • 'l•---------1Hunt;nqt0fl leoc:h 3240 Scttri'l' B111 k 11,1y 11Jn 1nt Rentals/Ho fee/ Agt ••••••••••••••••••••••• YULE BELIEVE 111 SJnt.i 1·1.111 ... 1411Nt l-________ _ you "'"1• I tw pc I<''" on 1111, 2 st11ry f.Hl11h lt1n111· l'1•rl 1·t·t for I h1 lloholu)' 1. .. w 1.,,., 1111 n~acly ,,, I'll·•' $.1.1 '11111 HO!HO!HO! n,. , 11111 ''""" ..., 1111 .• ·"•'I lrt .11 \tllll "11 111 111 111' 'r' 111° l1.1pp111t 11< .u c 11111 • f.1m r r1 I'\"• 11 uni\ $l.! .J4't '' •' h I•~·'"' tnl'. .r 'J•ur ,,,,. n h•t"'• ~~·3666 SPECIAL J11,l 111 tcrr11 1111 1111 hotll•l.I\ .l IJ.•llrn1 . I I lmth I• Mil It"' 111 1 1, 11 11th to Ill"\ l R~dC~t 18 I 0 I Moqnolia at Tol~rl. ftn Vlly 962-4495 "" 1 I h • J ,. 1 I ,. d Lil\ EL\' ;• Hr & Ul·n 2 w .tll11 II" 1 111,h II .1 th \11•w <"ontlo l.t1toJ·,1·.q,,11 • I 11111 I ~Lit~I Ow11••1 51<1 70.14 "'h 111~ n I ll11111t. 1.1111111 1111 ;):,., ''"' LOCJla"CI Higuel 1052 552·70~0 t Hl \ IU.\CI . k t ,\l TOH<-i ..............•...•.••• FIX & SAVE .IBtlrm 1 l1.11h acr ronJ ('11r 1111 I rn m1-1\ ot·rup titBOND RE.Al TY * <;dll<•n 11(llom 1•., 1714)831-9411 SEA TERRACE POOL HOME ~Real &tot~ lla rhor View Homes. J ••••••••• •• •••• •• •••• •• bdrm plus bonu:. r oo m Mobi~ Homu with luft and buth, plus For Sale 1100 µuol 2700 sq ft , vacant. ••••••••• ••••••• ••••• •• lol f>lix:llMI Zu111·tl ,\ 1. NR SHOPPING I BR, l Im, 2·slory. with rully fconn·1I. .t~k111~ only 41.ir 2bai S..~5 mo tst. htll(l' pul10 & bal'k yard SSS.600 Cull540 1151. + la:.l&st•cunly Gn11d Ol'l.l(htxirhood 7 COST A MESA Yr-. 11lcl S420 mn Agt ~HERITAGE ... ~ REALTORS 1-'r 4\ri3br,2ha,1t:onrlo 9C3 5678, /\sk fo r D~k S3351tst1 lai.llset' c tn Cati 549-8655 S750rmo. Uruque llomes, Mob1ll'. Modula r Home & ---------•! Realton,67S-WOO Bwldmse l>cl1very. Set l••---·~~·------111 f'OH LEJ\SE 3 ~drm, 2 li.1. brand new, 17001q.fl LandinR hnme w /l ur gar S~l51mo incldi< ..:ardener Nca p..•t" up. & Ser vice 67~ 7570 for f~ l'Sl or Info 8x-W 2 hr !"11sla Ml·S:l at.lull part S2~1 !)411 6173 Loh--Costa Me1<1 3 br . fa mily home Kuh 2 -..a r anl I w older ok . rl'fnJI. . $325 mu huu•1·. met tloor 1s newer t>tli 2022 or 6iS IJOZ:J t'On::.t C:<in he l:w>uJl,ht as a ---- - packal(t· or separate Ru,,11c 2 br s:.!5-0 l 't1I 1><1 Call rur mnrc inror A),'1. Kuh. pets "nl!I'> ~·e,_ Ac~ for sal~ 1200 &13 iGOI \1a1n Rentals ~II 53711 l u~A::~1u~~~~! "" I .... •J• it I ltlUl-t I fl• /\ ' hl1'•· I,. ' I ~' It Utltlt,! • ~~~~gj •nl l11n 1111 :> 'I Jiii l'h I r 1, 1,1 I 111111 I •1111 Pric~d to S~ll! ("I\ r I< ,1 n I' \II" 1. 11 tlu1 ll1•nw 1'1.rn J 11\r, f:im rm . .! h w I' ri 11 I Pr I n o n I y ••••••••••• ••••• •• •••• • Mountain D rt Hedec 3 BR. I CA. nu HO mobile II~ P arrt>ageo; RHort ~ff '2400 k1l1·hcn. µa1nt. c pls near Salton S<-11 lk.wh ••••••••••••• ••••••• ••. drps S32S m u . !lti3-456!1 t'Olt Lf-:1\.':>E 3 bt!drm. 2 b.1. l>rantl new 1900 sq fl L.1nd1n~ home w formitl dm rm . fam rm. Wl!l bJr S57!> I mo incl<lg gardener No pet, ' ~ • ,) 1 ... i t .. ( lt• \thl ful\, CI\. th fll i}; , _________ , ~ t..1 I• 11\otl I l.tf11 ~1~:1 , •• , 1'11 'l!t:!.") TWO-STORY Nl<;tlEI. Sll<HU:.1.i ... ~RT SHORES $16.000 F .P ,., l'a5h S319u~ \"' N r """'"''""" 645-l(IJ4 Green Vullcy lot P <wt'<I . ..,..,,,,.. o ee Roberts Reatty 848·1611 cm 1111• ltll tt F \ '" tt We're here to help! DOLL HOUSE , 1 .. , ..... 1r., rin "a1111 t1111t l ft tL1 PRIME lOC A TION 1!11 ...... 1111 Ill " 111 Ii" "l'I ~· ·~ I '"' 11 I t t"" I I Hr .c!IJd , Jd)JI 1·111 111 " • II lo1 11.trt • I rJdt: "hu11I '>, ..., II 1111l I 111·lrl 1111 ·' n """" rach~enmyer I llt·clrc ~1m plu., dt•n !-:'( , I 11•,I\.. i.: ,JI e i.: Ul.I rrlc·d ~I 2'J.SOO JAY W Yt::/\TS Charm1 n1t ho me on road \ICw walk lo Ski bl'aut1fully landscped Business Pro-...., 1400 ::.lo~ S3.o00 Family home·. 3 br. kids 1ot 2 patios, lg sundeck & ••••••••••••~;;:...... 9fi8·992:3 aflt:rGPM pell. S295 &achro mb<·r. tBr 2ba 4 blks Crom \sew of ocean P vt -ft·e S IS. 63 1 201 I • W~lmnstr Mall, l btk lu dnvewoy provides am The Mohl MIUl(ht oflt•r Out of Stat~ 54"; 2501 iichl'i, cul d sac. Kid" -1 . k ' W lk I p.irt or W1l:1h1rr Rlvcl. tn p__-. 2600 -OK $415 Ph MB 9427 pepar g a lopoo::., "·· t•rl Hiiis 1 ''"r" . ..,..... .. , :!Br.lba.ncw rpt.fr1·shly ----lrnms & beach $69 !ISO ex v Y J •••••• • • • • • • • •• • • ••• •• • 11111nl1•1I 111 ,1ol1 fr1111 11·· ""'' I• •I" 111~ ~ tr~., l'n1111nl) l-.11 "' I• 1111I•Hilt•""1lh CoaitffM R~alty 1'. 1••·1 11" 1 • \'1.u Ii 1\:11 l~lf1 II'\\ 1111 th1• '4tll1d 111111 E" Sult· fo r \11lt· h~ ""' 111 I tir 2•.,. h11 ld ·-~· I\\ -ljllJI 11nl~ I II, Id l'I l'HIN 0-.1' O..aPolnt 1026 ••.•.........••.••••... Oc•an Ylot Di.pl•• Hr Dano Pt. Manna .! \ l'llr'i lll'W ;• 111 d 1 m' th·n l , ti.1th f1rt•1Jl 1H l' I'·"'"" SI 12.:,00 Worid Wide lrok""$ lolboo 6 73.4 s 4S l<us111 \ l-r.11n1· "'•lh tl('C'lln \lt'V. l"lt•,tf \1 JI Ill.I :1 lkdrooin 2• > h 1lh sro.wu AHCHOIAGI INYHTMINTS 17141 4'6-771 I Uana Poml ncv. l'U.~tom res ldenrt· SI t 5.UUll Webb Renlly 831 2 170 l•fll'\.. "I t' !h i llJ• l•M°l \llllf ) CLASSIC BY THE SEA Or 1 111 t.11·1• 11•, Iii , I \lrnc '"'''lo:,,, 11un1t lt11' I lt1tlrm.:•11t l'lu"h I i<flldl>, JU•h j,11111• I I'~ o\ 'UI• r1. 1lt "' m 1!.1 th1' .111 , '' 1'111•t1 .. n.t1 '"'J .1t F, I 'fall a Roberts Realty .. ·~, .... , ...... ., le•U~f\t" M,. .ti ft !-.f•I' W"hJI ' Untli•r •ltlf l>i\11. \ I' 11.rtT ClllUSl''.\11\." I lff h "''''" Thur"'·'" 'V th1· Cl;i•<'1f11•cl \t'I lion ,...,,, 111f11c·.cll11ur C"hrt~tm.1~ /\.I V1,t·r M:? smx SlllC & ,INlf LONDON W K E G G I B N W 0 K R A W H T U 0 5 L R P A L W A W E S T M I N S T ( R Y D A I R L H R P 0 B H 0 X f 0 R 0 R 0 0 P C [ 0 E A I T A G I L R A P I W 0 L E C G Y N P C l N C t R E M A N E 0 A 0 A 0 0 I T H A M E f 8 I f T N S M f Y D I S A S R P I C M R Y R B 0 T N S H L R L P I B A Y W ( A 0 A f S M E T 0 0 B A T A G C f 0 M L I P T L I T P L H R M S P I C C A 0 I L L Y E H A A M 0 E B E l 8 M A Y l N I M R H E B U £ 0 W E W D 0 W H l H G S T L A R T L R N 0 T R A f A L G R R A E W S P R S W C T H N T H A M E S T G R H R A [ D M R 0 V E G H I R A H C A D E S D L lnttNctlont Hidden WOfOt btlow IPC>tW forw11d, btcl< """11. up, d~ Of dlegontnv r!11d ttdl •11<1 bolC II In. ~ Bfg Ben Mayfair Thames Down1n9 St. Per114ment Tower Br1dqe j ~)'de Pork Pfccodflly Trafalqar Q Lloyd's St. Paul ts Westminster T0cn0rrow · The Kings , · ' building t cn1•1.1:in111e . painted 11vt t>ncl yd nE-;AUT. 3 Br . n r w 11k" f'l!.t G73 7~----Totaling 55()() sq It /\<ltlt f'londa La~d Fur Sall/. S2501mo :>46·316(; cpl!. & llrp:,, Just painted BUCH HOUSE t1onal 2000 !IQ rt. IJlu.: -r;rudc Or 1'.xch:ingc, tr.is --S360 Snl(b, rh1ldrcn, . R.•ltor . IU:/\ LTOllS 1~1·:!237 l ... VESTORS ~··per 2 br +den home. 11.900 sq fl land OooJ G ood Market Value Mesa Vnrlt• 3 BH. ~~{a . pets.OK Nofce.~.f.61U " ""' park1n)! Ft>r <>a lt• h~ 003.3933 ncw rrpts & drps Set tu or A•" 673·5744 SM·SJJ'.i W db •d SEETHIS w,t'OlY frplc, l!Ourmet J h G · 11 , ---appreciate $<1 51) m o ,.. · __ ·-00 n qe .I B1•tlroorn,. ;1 hath'I, kltC'hcn & IOL'I of Rlass ~~~;~fl .1rn I e Rflllw!!!!!.e 642·!!tl26 days, 7Sl 318 3 IJR. 2 ba . jlllr dr Brand H~w <t Bdrm "ll·ll'IOU' rooms, ~ f.ir,l(l' Pnde of ownership for -~ mmrv 2900 cv1·:-Ol)t'ncr . cpt/drp. Child r."J"~ .111 • onil 111 .. 111 " lll·l ki-., doulilc g,1rJ.l(C, only $72,000 Won 't last' COllllNrclol ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----OK. S37S mo 962 3170 1°t111f1111 tlr.1111.1111 "'"" 1,,undr> room Newer Call 642 ~. Property Property 160 l'vt Pty IOC1k1ctl! for Pnde 4BR 2R/\, move m rond 1 t• ·.t •Ir-. It• .•1111 'l••I 1 huilducl( Walk to Oana House •••••••••••••••••••••• of Owm'r°'tup lnrnmc un Kuis OK_ ~~· PILOT Brand new 4 Br + f'H., t \1".1111>· 11111111, p,t1 lhlb llil(h All this & MB>/DMTLBLDG 1t<;,Ornnl(<'C11 only To REALEST/\fES400S·SS DK +2'.., Dn ,$MO 3 Br ,1,11 1 ,.,.,,, /\. l•I It 1 .. , .. , One of a kind Muna ro 10 "'lllll 000 Or woultl nm --2 \1 & S375 3 Ur 2 DD ' CM.l'lll"I vu·w lo., $85.000 f!Jrhor Vcew llomes Xlnt tn\es tml '5()(),000 " · , :? hr houw. hug1..· hv rm ' ' '·•fl>"h 1 '" 1 '' "'111111 Everything upgraded Owner will finance 9', ''lll'r vacant prop, rty frplc & hearth. hit S4SO 962 7KS!I ri"'111 • 1 ' 11 tll\ •lt lu,.. Beauufully Jandl.caped inl Prin Ol"lly, CVl' TAmt>dfor s&me KJO 17111 1\.~/FM radw & 111 J Hr. nr schb. parks, b<'h, k1td1c11 l'11\.1lc· 111.1~1 .. r ,. 1 "'ee. Owner Open Slit & 644 1917 R__.afs t c r r o m '""om P re lClnt C'Ond Fplc, $435 mo 111 """' 111 ~ •n ' 1 11 496-7222 831-0836 "··n.•w•""n '""" modcll'(j Ch1ldorpctolt (~irol,6424000 •• 11 I 1 ' 11 ""' '""""""""' lnconii. P~ 200 •••••••••••••• •••••• ••• $395 mo !163·~ TARBELL W cs t r I 1 f f H a r b o r ••••••••• •• ••• •••• •••• ~ fvntiJhed Miuion Yiejo I 067 Jlil(hlands, t.eaultful 4 Lev-w I 100/o On ••••••••••••••••••••••• Monl1C'ello Townhoml'. nu ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR. 2 BA. family rm. up -·DUPLEX 8ai)oa llland 3106 r rpts, drps & pacnt J BR. "#I In California" HEW 0Ff£1UHG ~adl.'d laundry rm. new Zoned for one more Untl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BA. $335 mo Un1qu1: '\l1t:<'1.1I 111 every wJyt custom ktlchen Approx :!llOUSESon 1 Lol 3Rr . '1t•n, rq1lc pat1u. HomM.!>46·!1990 Nf:WEll HOME lmmur. spac 4 br. J hft, J car g Walk to schools & :,hopping IJargam pn cc of $475 ~411 !J427 o r 963 !2)17 TURTLE ROCK GLEH ·HEW l 8R .-F.AMIL Y RM. t1"1crwcl1 111· •1<·1 up.1111) n11 1111. p,1rl.o lc111· r11·" l'l,111 le' 1111111 "''''•l!llJU' .11t·,1 111 lurll•· 11111·1< I ai·n \ ~UIJ•·r f ti.111 p l.111 tlt ,11'1t••d f.,r 1 .. ,111 f111m.1 I ,\ 1111111 m.tl lt11111! Loc·,11 1·tl 1111 i.:• •·.Jl ~reenlwll l111.·al11111 ,1rHI pnced un h1•h1•vul1I) ttl Sl25.000 ·red hill ~:.:. 552-7500 GREAT FAMILY HOME In TllE WILLOWS J RtodnK>m!\, 2 h11111 ... 1111 unu~u.111\' l..Hl!l" lot 1'1·rl1·1 t fiir tlw 1•nt1re f.1m1I) llH 'nJ•» Jl.2,$00 'f523 CAMPUSDa·IRVIHE W'l'~N 01\11. V Kl\ M TOG P l\f ;!'\lory l.1m1ly cmcntC'd 2.<XXI sq ft Pnnc unly Beaut cw.lorn bit home partly rum Lf:l\s~: 2 fir. 1 ba. f11>lc. Pillco Nt1Yll" wtth •, l~lrm:.. J Call 542 77Z7 for appl ~1 1.,e rumpu~ rm + ~75 /\dulls. no pets •. ,., 2 -"" Wk I 213 J 1 111 Garagt:.' .. 1(1(1 rx-r mu '"' • Ur. 2 s ty 2..., Ba, bltn,, l1,1tll'•, for rrl.11 d1111n1<. 2 Al<t smalle r h11m" bt>h1nd < ays · 1 ti O · Pl ••7 • 9 ~ k I 7 um .. r ...., -4 .. 7 w/w rpt. fom rm, $49!1 r11th, coty l.11111ly r m -Live '" one. rent uul the w l.'n1 s 11 1175 J!i2·t t1.11d1•11 k1tth1•e1 & u de· LIDOISLE·Oyowner other f"OUllPl.l•:X !>llmt Ntlt•s mS241>1 3 Br. + fa m ~.-frpk. Ph 0029571 lcl(htrul 'I'·"'"'")> yo rd 2 Br. den. 2 Ba. lg . palto terms . All II B lor Balboa Peninsula 3107 11allo, neor ~chis, J:l'JS TWO Sty home 4 hr, 3 bll & w11h h.1mhor111• 1·11vl'r('tl SISO,OOO S7J..lalO Kent Ro~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• MO 1542. 54li !116() fffm rm, 3 yrs old Beaut fl 111111 1 ' ir1t 1 ' 1 111 ''-' at NOWISTHETIME Rfffty848-8300 SJOO Penn Pl Nr Huy & w.::-r~;:-Gnr~cd yd ..... ~51 3755• 1168·272o. $!Y.i.CMMI (or job !leekers to rh!'rk ----occ·an 2 Br unlll Ju111: pllllo, mature :idlts . ref. OOJ..,,.)8 m.A.._,,A-n:>..-.. the Daily Pilol H elp 78RANDMEW 121:!12435316 $225.64G·HY7K /\ffordahle2 hr$215 Kids. .u u Lk::lu c.> Wantf'd classification. If UNITS -,-.--111:ts 11k l'ee ~1lW the Job you want is not E·S1de3Br, 2 bit, 1tar. end Mnln fit!nlals. 540 SJ70 499·2800 there you m1ghl con11ider E/Side Costo Mesa llaw MJmcth1ng tu ~ell? yd, 2 kids OK, nu JH•ls ----o(fcnng your services Deluxt• n1•w 1rn1b Still Cl:i~s1f1edadsdo1lw1·~I $360.641>3420 S290 JbrT II Klllll&pet.t The faste:.t draw in the with an utl 111 the J ob time to l'hOO-.t n1l•>r'> anti ----ok F~ Wt•st . ,, Un11y P1lol Wanted category. Phone options $©1\.~~-cl££~S• Muml!ent11l11.54(}SJ70 Ch1s:,1f1ed Ad 642 5678. _oo_-567_8______ Ttat lntrittuinn Word Gome with o Cli11d.le 2 Br. nl•wly d1•crt 'd, pool g jQuall ~ n .,, .,, lmmcct ncrpy. S32S/mo I I ' ' • p~ ----"'"" .. CU.•. rol&NI lf.lt M61160'.l.1162 7781l Prapwti-O~:'°::'m1>'i:"'wor:. I:: t:lcan. 3 br 2 b11. RIO. 757-1920 '-"' '""",_""'Pio...,.,,. cpls, drps, 2 car l(ar MOO OUAIUl HIW~T llACH SJ45 !){jJ 4569 531 l/~4!1 IUHITS Sllnta Ana Jo'lve 2 bdrm & 3 l •bdrm. Prime pro party. StZ$.OOO. U'~ down llLLGRUHDY REALTOR 6754161 I SAM l I 0 Agt.nort·~ __ _ 1 I 1 I I I I S Shore home 3 BR, 2 ba, nu pamt. epWI. drps '335 I S U S 0 E I ' !J63-4!iQj SJI 9~ Agt No 1 l I I J '~ ll U NTINGT O N I C O T I H I ! Two kanpa100& -. ••II<· llARBOU(t /\REA. J BR. I I' I* I •!IQ to etch ott.. One Mid, 2 BA w/huge famlly • • • • ·1~11 doetn'1 •ttn todty r oom & frplc. n enr I "-'« ,, w~ !ti. tholdr.., schools $425/mo CALL I T O p N E T I Plov -. -• u , T 0 B I N R lo: A L T Y .__..,..., ---9-, -... 1, ........ 1 _1r--1 ft c~ ,.._ctr.ale~ RotG·\371 .•. WE Al.SO _ . v by ""'"9 '" ,.... .... ....., "°"' HAVE other pro pertle? ._....,__..___....., __ _. ¥<>v ~,._"'""No J .,_..... for rcnl, Homes. Apts ~ • "''~lsl~~~sltrms IN I' r 1: r I' r I ~~ -A. • F'lve bdrm $450 m o. rw e u~~'o"'tfe~N~~~f tmm I I I I I I I N t w I I n d I p ll c c !\'\ - . - - - -· lll(hwny, avnil. ~e otlh imam. SCRAM-LETS Aetw.n In Clcntfffc.affoe 5 ... I, c ~ U•fwnlidled HwMf U•i'llniahed Hous.n U!lfwW~ HcMnH U•Nnlitohed ~· fW'fti.a.d ApClll fMCnh IJwfwi.. Tueadey, Dec.mbef 7. 1978 DAIL V PtLOT f!9 ;;:.kj~·;;:c;. .. ;;~~ '": ............ ~;~~ ;;;: ............. ;;~·4 ;:;;~~ .... ·;;·;, ;;:;;;;c::~···;·;;~ ...................... ..,.._ ... u.funL f• l••h u.fw.. .,....... u..... ······ . . ......................................•...... c... .. MS' lt21 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• ••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• , • ............................ •••••••••• u••••••••••u••••••••• NEW CONDO Lee 28r, 2ba, frplc. gar, •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Cotto Meto 3124 Cotto Meta ll24' Mew~ le«h l86' lAHDM.AIU( Cl> 2 bdrm. l"-batb CcSlorly 3 IH. 2 a,., now lllir, llbla, Pool, $325. peoo S3SO ~-6'1U1~ot 3BR. 21ll\, 1t•r Vft'I ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••-•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Ur. 2• .. ba 2 Story \n Condo• 1.110 monlh rrpla ~int. romm pool. Ph Ml 1364 67S·lOSll 1opar1ou11 Av .. 1 Im co"E HOME TO PARK NEWftOIT pl1• llJr lrf>lr 1J11t111 l::vl'll.~~ lconii. Nu PN~ S395 mcd1alely. 14115 mo M A'ARTMEHTS i:d1ioon II S $47!1 mu 833-2048"'kndl>ur.irt 6 :YBR.2 BAwtfrpl.nntto ~ FOX HOLLOW VILI •GE J(1rlllrdmnm,;iml St..in !168 7JIJ7 R.,...T.LS • pool & r~ area '375 IHT l..'8l I h • ....,. ~ U>VEL y 2 sty 4 b1. 2'• 17141~ ~al\ 61'M IUY Sub 1.&e. 11etllnll murned c.--u..~ Wai ed own 011"'' I BK l'ondu 11001. I <•nn1 <!Bil 2' Un $525 l>hc 2 br w tfrplc & pvt --.. , • ~'I um \~!>'I ~I • " • · · · ba. IJm rm. cpt 11r1111 ,._ •·-1 1t--= T__.. ,1,,..11 , •· 1> ·ii> htindhull & h<il>k\'lh.111 I Ur. den. 2 bJ $47S thruout. grdnr rod ti ;illlll'I -~mr Pl'<>P l' s11y )t>U 1tet 1Jt-t-k Duy11, 7~1 &HO Aft ,..._-""" ,,.. "., u ~mo !li'I 7~ I. !"m. Phan A. SS00 540-0074 Cepktrw.o 3278 wh11t )Ou puy for• We ul G ~I lWti 1..JVC On your Own pn vate Street \n U 2 ~p.-rooll> Tt•r1111. 3 UH 2 a,1 $456 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fer more And thl'pncc ~ ---bedroom townhOU."ie wtth yard & large An•>" 11 um t'•••h•"n ti H 3 Ut 2 ,lor). :o.uj)('r tlJtt• to"' nht1U.'\\' $340 I tli!p1»>1l 114.;! 21132 VACANT' :J llr <! B.i hltn' rpl' 1lrp,,, new p111nt . SJll:i IU? ~700 dft ~PM 2 lllf &d~·n $4SO IN CHARMING less Memt>er:.h1µ 111 .-Cotto Mna 3124 ood b · f I & t 1~1.intl at J111t1ll(.l1c'' '"' 3 Br. t'K. 2 U.. $4~ LoCJ1Mo leach l241 OLD SAH JUAH Health Club A tl'nnl~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio, w umLOTSmg OtFrepiOOac~M FOaR i:, .. 111Jo.iiJwn11111'> lluinl SJ11 Lw11 Hey $625 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rlub Fr~ le~m) lt·•11on11 WHY MOT? tached garage. · R (7141644.1900 1BR,f'fl... SS5C11uR.lBR&Jbr IK'hfrnt !_~~·>0;,h2•~3rnlh•~ad'-'~ Hilhards Swimminrt STORAGEANOHOBBlES! 41lll $47!i on Cliff llr 4942033, vov Golf l>rl\11111 Range Sunkl'nlivm11room Adults.$375 I UH. ncn S3IS5 <2l3JIH6 2723evcl> home has plwih ca111et S;iuna:. + .ire at ac QitlM'dral ce1lmi-: 62 I W .W.... Cos .. ~ 3 UR $-i2."> _ ___ 11111. C1repl11rl', bwll ins & Uvtttes Sllnday BOQs 2 bedroom11, It,; b11th'j 64 6- 20 I 0 :>.UH, f'H $650 Rf:NTAL 2 car 11urt1i;c•. Won't lffl>l Parties with live bands Attachedflur¥11t' • •GU"' .a. I"' "'CH Ion&' Call 646 21S8 day:; t'r«' SUt1d11)' brunch Wubhcr dr)'l'r hook· uv -""~ 10A 493 05811 uvt!nlnKli & Pvtyanl with 1>.1lln 3 BDRM newl'r horn,· weekends Your renl cJolliirs KO even Adullll, $375 mo. Joc.-utcd 10 Port~f•no -furtht.>r•••A l<'• r'fH.~ ft•<)XJIOLLOW Jed hill ·~ ... : ..., 552-7500 ~~ ....... ~~~,~~~ ....... ?~!.~ J ·n tl!W 1•011cl11 frpl lndr) stv rni: tnr<I 1>.1!111 lt•llfllK 3 nu to h1 h Nr mrktio .11 llrkhur~I k \OJrlh flll3 IW17~ '!7r1 ll!J:!:\ Lf 11g,un11 . 2 lhth s . ~;~~1~f2~~r~d~~~~~~: muinlenanrc crl'W. iiro VILLAOl!: r._ _________ , ire_p oce. vce11n view " filss1onal manaitemcnt ti21 W. Wilson, C.M. ,. Exct'llent r.im1I)' hornc drpe. frpl(', pool & Jue I :1tarr that cares, 11nd 646-20\0 5MflSt11M(j/ •DELUXf• t-:.1,thlull J hr, 2 li.1 l"111•w llwl J\fli.C' m11~ti·r i.ullt!, tllll r n\ & ti hi >: a r .i 11 t-/\ u I 11 11 o" • 0111·n1·r ·" 1111 Pool <'ii n.•1•n.•11l lt)I) Uf<'U l\clttlho uni)' No 1wt~ .. 'rom S:klo IUI.., Am1.:01. Wav M1rnt11tP1l hv 1242 ..........•...•..•.•••. 3 B•. J liJ to;I' nhm" ~11arkling nt"' 1·onll $ n 11 I' J 11 I. d ,, Mli I :171 ur Holli ~>1;111 n e' 3244 ....•...•....•...••.•.. LE \.<.,t-::-\V \11 \Ill.I': (.J\ l' Ill l 1 \ Hll' \ 1111•>:•· w,. hJ\1· hom~,, "'.iii 101 ICdbt' If\ •• W.t111ut :-..1u.1r1· H;;nth L.11 1101111·~ IM·rl•l'ltl 11111\ l'k l'uhl·nl,1'" t ul l'.1rk Turi It• Hol'k 2 Udrm. \our c·hnlt'l' 111 3 from $J.11t tu ~Im :1 hdrm. )uur l'h•i1n· ,,r 11 I rum $33.'t to ~n;, I hclrrn your 1·h1111•1· 11( h r rom s.ir~) 10 $5511 Nu fo,t1t11-. RANCH REAL TY SS 1-2000 ~un,hllll'} ~lrnr-11 End Cundc• :!B1 Jll hltn' (oinm pool clll'l' 111 (r"' ,., :-.Oo l,l' SJ;!,, ti7!> fl.1HX Wo•"llimli.1.' f.,.11hm1• ·1 Hr :! Ha . \ t up~· r JCIC'·. l.Jkt tit IJl•llf ''"' l•lll l!f>.l:! :1 llr ~ U.1 on 1·ul tit• ,,11· l~e \ti. 1 low to '<'hb & 111.. ~·1•1 1 .1;,l OIJ O all 71'\I :! Bk. l1t·11 1•.1tw hornl., l)<'1•rf11·ld. I'll\ lo,11111 .,. hlln 1..1~ Biil) 111•\I tu 1ommun111 P•H•I l drrld LEASES J4. V AIL.teLE :>RR, I Ba 6!HH.1 Hu l Hll 2 ll.1 2 till. 2 Ba :!IHI.;! Ila <!Bit 2 B.1 :! llll. 2 HJ 2 UH :! ll.i :! IHl.2 B.r :1 utt . .!U.; JUlt . .!1,B.i '.I BH, 2 Bet :\AH 2 HJ :1 I llt. 2 Ila :JOr -t Hr. 2'' ha J BR,:!' • IS.1 J 1rn, 6!', llJ :1 Hit. 2°, lt<t ~1 llH. 21 1 llJ 3 UH. <!1-. Uu :I BH.2•, H11 Jun. 212 Da . 3 llH. 2 ll.1 . I llH. 21 > Ila ·1 llll. l 1, Ha I HH.:!1 ~ 1 LIH.:!1:; RJ al •• ..,, m<)nlh m1 l>1.1na llbr, sme pt.io ....,., ""· ....... 4"3 4,""' friendly ne1ghbor1:1 • _, , MISSION Ii.ALTY ,,,. ~ " """ Models open daily 10 7 Spat' 2 br ga1uen apl PL---494 0731 l Sorry. n Pool & rec All olll pd ,_ • s-t-o Ano 280 o one under 21 & Al.lulls 00 pell> 1225 Mo •--Hlltt 3250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• no pets. Hoomm11ll' Inc refng. ::'r.:':•••••••••••••••• ) tlr. frplc. )'3rd $JOO per scrvl('C avnllablt• Mon E:I Pwrio M4tM J BR Xlnt t'nn<I dos" to A• mo 499 29116. 918 N th lo month occupancy 1959 :4.t: •we, CM hi & .. _ ... , .a Bn~lol. S A 64 505 S.12!1 sc s Sr"•P It c.r ....,., OakwoodGanJl'O Apts $J:',(I ~ 4\M--0122 SouHt locjuno 3286 S375 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SJM5 FAMILY ()('hght 1 hr. 2 2 Ur 31W4 9th A•e. fncd 880 I rvtnc <al llllh} (714 >645-00.SO $435 ba C:all £or dNaihl ~ )d. I.Kean \llt:w walk hJ ~50 838407583346711 P•I be.ich $400 121JI 170016lhSt1atl..>o\er1 S.lll5 • --Nl-...a 3 252 7111).3339 1714>642·8170 Brand new H plex, 3 Br, :i Ba. ownrs unit. also 1& 2 Br apt.s. no pets. 1714) 827·2479 or ~-8077 A winning combination ot adult oportment llomes wlltl luxury appointments ond superb recreoJlon at o premium locollon Tennis • gym • lfle1opv spo • swimming • billiards One & l'wo Bedrooms. One Bolfl JI!..~ from '230. P.:iN< Mesc\, \/illAQ. ~ G> :::-· ' ., -• • ,. .,.- 550 Poulortno Ave .• Costa Melo-7'1·ti95 (; 1 .1n,111.J M11m1 \.'11 l'\lWJll I ~ht'><. ~ hr 2 h,1 ~)rb l(JJllltitl.llulh, 64t. H47'J l'WS'\4 kllll1! BEACH 2 hlk'I. m•w 1>.11111 3 Br 2 lln rtplx, 1111< bllrl'I. l>U~IO. at11r 'u 111.·i.. $4()11 yrly fi4~ Ifill:! Sl'Al:IOl s 4 llr .!l1 II 1, 1•nd put111 I !JI!. 111 hd1 Yrly 673 171111 ====-==-=·-~:::...,='=:==:==----Compac·t 2 lt>,rl :llni:I• 5 --r'-.,.... 3 BR. 2 83. patio. <'h1ldn!n ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• w ... &...-.1-stff 91 S2 S.\25 New 3 br. 2•, ha Twnhse :i ,..."""' 32 Son C~ftte 37 7 6 ok. no peti. 65 mo Apomwtetth u.fwa. Apa! t•Hh u.funt. SJ9S min from Dana Point ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 546--~or~ •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• $2SU indutlt· .. utd Ill II arbor v1 .. w llfll1ll'. Adll~ no prt~ fl.10 Cl'~ S4i.!5 Manna $475 + Dep Clean. 3 BR.2BA. cpts, 1 blf::b!io:c~P~135 L.rg 2BR. bepme<.I clngi. Costo MftG l824 HiintlogtOft leoch 3840 ~50 t: .1 I I Hob. e v c' drps, RIO, 2 c<ir gar sngl stry. no pets. $200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I l>r trl J>IP~ 12•·~ > r l.1 tll1I pd Call uftl.'r S pm 2 Br. 2 &. bllns, pulln, no (714 )682 3500 S450 t714184~2Ul6 i$325 l mo 9 6J 156!1 Adu!ts.49B·03:ll 20 4 9-D Watla t't ~~~ For-Le-as~ in a-d-ul-1 l .. -,m-m-531 954.S Agt ~o fee -South LGCJIMCI 3786 _~ ___ p_m ____ _ ~~"'• 2 Br & den con<lu Fan-2 Sly, 4 br, 2 ha. nu c1>ts, ~·a••R••2••b••••••,•h•••••••• •M""o Verd4 2br, Iba up .......,. d,.,_ ... -, fpk, o,w $4351mo """·m· ..., a on e ocean "'~ ..-$51;(> Last1c view l.:lubh11e & .,.... ru .,.oo. unfurn $600 pt.'r Garaitc avail • pool SS25. l'\'l owner 963·"500 5JJ 9~5 /\t,'t No Tot.al secun ty elevators. Adults. $225 No pets Kefer to Monarch Sum h.-c __ _ -rec. fac1ht1es. 499·2835 83.l~!J74 NEWPORT APARTMENTS l UR $14~ + UTIL Adult! only No pets 2ASO Newport Hlvd. CM 642· 7678 before 6 pm nut. 493.0331 eo..domlnlums ~wts C/\S_A_v_i_CT_o_n _t/\-- Rec»c Dollhoute •• ~1:~.~ •••• ~~.~~ •• ~~':~.~••••••••• l ~re·~ u~~l:~.r~~n~~11 •V~~ ~~~* pets, J C'h1ld nk Nr a;rhli> S2SO mo 546 3710 nrt Spm 2 Br. l Ba. encl 1wr , $:.!llO mo 1oos t\l.1b11ma , 544 5701 after S: JO. $'180 2 br. ~an.11w. i>WI NEWl'OHT ~ll<Htt-;S 2Br. 213a . .i.1r. IJlk:. '" (l('t.'an. no vets, \Tly I"· S32!i mo fi4S JJ!O . fi37 725S Kids ok Fl!c San Clemtnte JS 7 6 Main Rental11. 540 S370 •••••• ••• •• ••••• •• ••••• 4Hr.2ha,v1ews-1~1 mo ~• 2b 11 t b h .,.. & Gold keoltv ~t·w r, ., >n. nr c Gefteral 3802 Pool, rec rm, M!<' "ale. Lower upper 495.4653 1!31.2700 Pvt patio. frvll' • 1)1101, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 525 V1ctona 642 8!170 Enclosed Cara~es Near beach $160 1 br, OCl::AN ~·tt()NT LU"U" ' 'launa, tenn1:.. club NEEUA RENT/\I." Ga.s&watcrpa1d. Mo lo chHdc>k. FL'C br. dl'O. rr(ll. P\l :>lc~ 111 Mluion Viejo l26 7 house. n r ~ c hoo h. & we hav~ lhem 2 Bil. I ba. ch1ldrt'll & pets Mo ltcntals $250·$260 Mam Rentnls. 540 5370 bt·h $Sll.5 4W lXl17 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~hop'g ~ 84-0 ~ 1 tt>4 br's OK. nr So CM Plau t1ULDREN WELCOME • V . KIDS&PETS <.:<i_l_l!.!l_l'_1_1pp_1 !17_!11877 __ m!Elden/\ve.l!.33-24110 NEW l br. frpk. l~am PC'rfect for one ••" Llkenewb1~Jbr.famrm. f'ounuan Valley 2 'ltory -_______ --ceil. bltns. pool. volley Short wulk to bc111'11 2 ha. fp~k. bltn:.. 2 rnr <'Ondo 2 hr p, bn WELCOME Adult Es1dc 2 br. rnrl 2BR,2 BATownhouSl' ball.gar '235 842m34 $17~ mo Incl ut1I l(ar Lge fncd yd 1\11.ls dshwbhr, gn r • cpt s , NEW ER\ RENTALS l(ar. puuo Like new. N $2~t mo Cull 644·9548 -4~Yl 1\159 ur4!l2 ~'.Ill ok No ree $375 mo ls drps, pool S32S mo 63I 2800 FEE 1138 R300 pets 1;.w.®e. 2 Br. 1 1~ b a ~ V 1 c .l'loneer Rlty. K42·4421 evenings G<ildenwest & Warner Soufft LCICJ""O 3886 ' -------Very ntce ~ ~ -lc6oo lsbtd 3806 STUNNING l"c l Br 2 Ba 2 1• 2 1' · fpl rvv I 2 •tv $2 .. 0 mo . Ari• 3720 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.._ rt•-h 3269 ·,··a·R·•.••3••b·a··.··:u·n·d·~~·k·. "' . ,r "'· c. ,.,.,.1 ., . " ...... ....... wpo _.oc "'WPT CREST dclu~\' , q w,paneled den. S:rdn a'!t E S1dl' Childrt'n OK ~-m&after~pm ~~. 11we1, luxunoub t"\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Hrt :!RA "'' dtn. pool. frplr . v.•ashcr & dry<'r Pool. $265 7l0 W 18th Sl S290 5i-'8 O'J16 -t•t· .! hr :! hu a &*t lf523 CAMPUSDl·IRVl~E IWl';N l>AlLY II 1\ R U T 0 F I N U 1 •nm~"""> 1>45.•ofl7 _.... y I sr.oorr dtl>O!>ll w ad -----1 Sftlt.MISH STYLE Elt•\ .ilvr lo M'1'n11• 11r" blu! (C h ,,_.,. 'OQ -ear y, 2 nr 2 Ba, ,"A•,-• "erde E.1M I r:'l't' lllllC 1---------~ w1w·M WINTON "1'-·•U .. 3 BK. 2 s tory W/f ..... lc. bth !'Ort) & i.tame room b 2b r ..... ,. A I .. 2 Br. I Ra, dshwshr orna. En~! Rar. n"W ~pts. . .. 4 r. J, .im rm • .,., ro~L-·--R I c-. 675 3331 .,.. " ~ • • balcony, patio. plush lOlal 11et• Perfect llVllll! " l .1 ~ ea cnlalt' slOve drps. new cpls & ru•\nl ...u. • .,, 7"'"' t I waler 'cw crp s. ufP:>, UnfurniWd 3525 ,,.. ....,., ....., """ crpt·ll & dbl cnrl i.inr or wknd rctrf'llt or I 11• HA \1 'f()fi I' ~1 runlt•nx k :lllr 2h.1 Jlllo 'prt..fr, 1111 II 'J' M!I~ I"' 7~10! IH2K p.unl Walk lo srhool:.. I BH. carp, blt·1n:i. vnv parnl thruoul, carpart. ---------r Pet-d11ldrcn OK Ukr .1'1v,•nturnu' .1dull $:'11:i :.hopto. ten nu dub ••••••••••••:•••••:•••• dc•rk Ga rag._. Yl•ar fnt'd )d. wtr & lnil>h pd. 2 Ur apts from $2QO Cpts. 536-4510 I I 499 :!)135 $iSO mo Lse Hers 'Je.irSoulh<.:oast 11ua. tcaseonly.S300mo Bkr S22Smo Noch1ldrenor drps.cncl yd K1dl>ok i4114 or1147 ewa ~yry i.c · _ 1.10-fi775or615 22411 Orndford TnhSl'. J HR. 644-2343 Mon thru 1''n , !I pets 675·3436 Nopels 548 0483 WI\ I.\• !:SJ, 6 blk:. l11 Heh Apartments fvrnished Oh. ,h._,11 ••It .IJ11 I ~&S hull! L'olll'l.:l' f'.1 rk ~l:)jl 0111 """''' [Ml :!7Kl 111111 hou-.c• lmm.tl .I hr. 11, I~. new Iv decoratctl < N ~hoots & h I fl • .., Un.&.-15L-d 3°00 , ln" l..A.RG F. 2br, 2 ha $2:?5 In F..astslde l HR r s.. :. 0 11 11 11 ....... TISTit _. .., • HOW AV All. • l'oul. li;e 1>~1lio. rh1ld OK $260. SJ6-383S. SJ6· l414 ••• •••••• ••••• •• •••. • •• TJIE l'l.lJL'F'S, .,uw1 to S330 mo 556 1!177 8ofboo Pet1imula 3807 Cant & sm pet Ok l'all crpt..'I. drps. bllns. _ _ • C ~· -' -r """" •••I'••••••••••••••••••• 642 6612 for llPPl lal-S. 642·6243 4 PLEX. 2----!ir-i tta. cpl" Till', EX IT1.,1; $7!.>S p<•r month BRANUNEWJUr2'~ Ua. B B y I St t ------,. PALMMESAAPT5. F111cf 11. h.11 1110 want 111 2 h.1, ~n~. ";w, 1;.io 1r.:111 lh11I~ I '1lol <..l.1;,,~111rrl!> Want ad n·~ults _ 64_2_56_'78 Ht <: <.:AN YON. S7W I f"lt· . ., m1 rrom l>ohl'nC." J r. 2 :i • eburhy '1·!.'ps1c" BRANO New dlx 2 br, 2 "'--38 df1)6. clt•an S215 . .:all MI NUTF:S TO Nl'T ""'IS m lh ,.. , tennis "' t' , rp , "'. '"/"ar, adult~.·. no -Poiftt 26 963-2532orS36·1461 ""' per 00 ~I llch & 011 na Wharf patio. chshwu-;h\•r A1Jlt~. uu ~ ,. " •••••• •••••••••••••••• CCII. HASTIHGS&CO. MSo pt•r mo li:l4H21i2. no pct~. S<IOO ino pets $265 & '295 1!112 • NEW luxury upl. 2 Br 4! Barh,l&2UH R~ ,, 1~ 1111• w-tm!11 .. 1 lft1\ li•f cull.11cd 1.te~~t 1w1r.c u cory. lw1ce u Q••''' In c "''h't II \ w•1rli•I! Yotl~ 'l 'ol•.111d1 WOt\ll'd wt1Rhl \ynlhetoc 14111 Comhu\~ ? col Of\ l"~ll1·1n f II~ dltPC!llln\ tor "'" 8 I 8 included Ho Waist Seam! . . . ..., . 9315 8-18 "" 11f ,_,.,_ rTfc ... -T ..... HcallOrs 640-556( 1151'M, Sl.l 10121.::vs 640-9335 Wallace. 645-3356 Ex. lgc 2 br. 2 hn, rrplc, 8a I mile fr bench $275 rrom $1!1~1 dressing rm. Adults + I mO 840-36J3 Adulli-. :-.;0 f'•·t-. JJV Ihm .. Curmt•I :l B A~nhfvrnlshed SllXI Ulll pd S,tv & rl'fng teenager. From S2!JS lSl\I ~k .... i lh' ~PH nr park & ~thool ......-... -Near water l'c•t• Gas&waterpd 496-7379 2 BR PatlO Apl. I Ml l<i ···Ill'~ • .-,.1•. liir''" .. l"llt ""'" n1<1 fi'·._. 7770 • • ••••• •• • • ••• • • • •• • • • • --"--I " blk 'u "~ "' ' ~ ~ ......,., _!"' _ __ ._.__0 Is•-~ 3706 _M~~Hl'ntals. 5'10 ~370 Su kl I '"'h. Love y par .. I lllvrl I _ ._ nny spar 1011 c ean S22S Nn pets M6 8640 s.tli !IXlill ~ew(>Ort ::ih11rt.>:. :1 IJH. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br duplex Crns:. :.l tn 2Br, bllns, gar. balc:ony - -- llJ, nrur heh & tennis, 2 BR Winll•r Rcntnl, S22S bt•arh Yrl_v l'•·t party Adlti.. no vets $235. 2 BR Apt & Rachelor /\pt Rooms 4oqo hcarns. fqik in fam rm. mo NOl*t~ S5!1!l2!llorti73-l204 4.93·7231 Uurnl Adults only. Utll ••••••••••••••••••••••• lease $450 mn Lntqut 675 5217 -pd Nr ocean. $210 & HOOMS ~5 wk up l'llh llomt.'S. 675 6000 Corona c:WI Mar l822 Hwit5"'1on leoch 3840 tl50. 536-2914 _ kitchl·n. SJ7 50 wk up ----lol»oaPeni1u.4llo 3707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• JP' .. c.Au 97~ .. "or&t5 39r.7 Bluffs 1 leH·I :I 1111. 2 ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------• .., ....., ~ J..ovd) 11rN•nhelt & pool 1,.::;;--.;._ _ __; ___ _, Brand new tux 2Br. Iba. frvi11e 3844 --- St.'>11 \1!1 t»-1 1133 Lile Studio. yrd. gar I Blk ~ ol Orooge Coonl'(s blhns S27S1mo Chld. sm ••••••••••••••••••• ••• • GuHt Homr 4 1 50 Harbor Vw Home. 3 Hr. ba (.Alrml'I $575 per mu l>+I 7t.5S W1\TEKFRONT Condo w a.i · :11lp :i br, J ba, 1lh l(ar w opnr. bl· or b opt f'40-!H19 ---------1 IA> boy & <><'ean 3l3 E ~ ~ ~ moslbeOulltu!OpotTrnenf petOK. l-826~16. WOODBRIDGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8ay,fl75-3013aft 6 'll.. /,<'"res ......... • etomg -PlNESAl'TS Lovlrlll t'Jrt' 2<t hr-;. "-·tau~a 3724 ~ commu,..,"""',,r New owne r s or I 2 6. 3 bd m t to.11011l·1•cl dll·t' l'\I ~ .._. sel!lngWlflShOms, Rt'arhwood Apt~. 19132 · "' r uni 'I CORONAOELMAH wotertolS mojeSftc M.1gnoht1.ll B .offera2 Designed like cJrly room,p.i!'Oli ~.111:13 $40.00 WEB & UP 2 Br Townhouse. rrptc trees Feoiti°: pools br. 2 ba. 1000 sq. fl California bungalow:. VocatiOft Retttab 4250 ·~udJo & I BR AplS Pool. tenni!I, continental • :.ticurrty apl w /pool. Fr 0 m S 2 7 0 1 1 5 ••••••••••• •••••••••••• Jocuut.souno,bllords. • h Pinestone ore hrs 3 5 30 . .. •IV & Mu1d Serv Avail breakfu l. Some on~an & JaCUZll, A /t;, nshw r wkdays, 9-~.30 wknds Uiit Beur <.:a bin fir • PhoneServ, Htd pool Catallna view~ Clrn.c to and exciting clubhouse Adults only. Nu pets. 552_0400 frpk. cvL~ ~111& 8 WN·k 2376 Newport Hlvr1, CM shopping & hne beach. Wfttl SOdOlevenlS. Tennis, $2.W Call new Mgr at ur wkndi; &lO 5~ .•.•..•.........•...... s.i8·97M or 645·3967 &w-2lU 1 gym. and YOleybol OI 962· 1800 LU)(~:::N~~&~~kn SUS CASITAS :::::v~~:~g 2 br. Cpt.'I., pool, play yd .. ~.~~ ••••• ~~.~~~~!'!!!:.~~:'::.~ .. !!.~~ "~ l'r 4!5uv •111 It u Minutes lo N 8 I BR 2 Br, bllns. frptc pool. lor FumlllJre IS OVOIOble. no P e I s ~ O 8 A · Brand new 2 Or 2 Ba dµlx WOMt\~ O\<'r (Ir, w/('ar I 1• I l:f'IM ,\Ti: lr•in).! ~·111 furn /\dults, no pets putm.sundk. $295. Adll.!i. Delawure."6-v:ioS9. lots of redwood & glasi.' i.IH <'cJM home w1:.am1• 'l'l'unty. un'1l'r~round 2110N,•w1.111rt ntvtl CM no JXJlS Avail apvrox. Oneand~Bedroom He-arlakePartt Great Oen Vu. s500 lt111tlmar1J & nom111 .11 l•.1rk111g&dockillo:l'<•'•11I 12 /1 2 673 -14111 Adu•LMng. .,.,.,,,,, 7t ,., 111 rr"ht pcrs'ln fl I " Deluxe 3 br, 2.,,. ba. att ......-v1 ll < 4 > ' " ~11:; Per mo . )e.ir:. ll"•~e $175 Uuchclor, a ut1 evcslwknds.·_. _____ 11 Offices open 9-00 ... S:OO. Niuhl or th" 1~11 073 ,172·> Wont A F1sh POftd7 P a L i n • 11 c I -•v dbl gur , pauo. rrplc. 1713 ., ' ·' -· Lowl\I 1 ~torv homP wilh llt-uchcomner . rec. SIS EXTHA 111. duplx. 2br. Now renllng, Alabama. 536·3·465 or LacpMo Mlpl 3852 cut down ,J lxlrms & a i1w 1111nl'h'<I b31·2011. !'>47 2:Kll 2ba. occao vu. beamed 536·171K ••••••••••••••••••••••• Li•inn Expe-nses! " ce11'gi1. frpl. 2 car gar. "7 hm1us rm t.n1IM'IK1 IJ;1c.-l'ut) 1 br. polio, pi.>ol. pvt bch pnvl. $WS, yrly ---------· LG. 2 br. 2'-'i ba Condo Sh.in• ,J homcl)r aptmcnt \ard with lu:.h ~n·1•n. ,10 ,.lcl> tik s 175 .,...5,3203 ••-MewAph• Oceanvu. lrpl. 111 h .w.• ,....) TY---·· I 'h I• net •· 111\-. 11 " 0 ' --r t~amed ~1l'u. l'r •nd riu ~f·•.i ATt.S UNUMrrtl) I di • \'\{ Bt•achcnmber. rec SIS I 2·3 bedroom. children _... " " ~ u J!M\Jl" toll\t.'llll'nl 1' h312011.547 250t I RR, stv t refrlg , ok. pet's considered. '495.4116·7437 Uk·i~~'NJ:>\.ot ~,..,. ..:m<l ,.rhool~"" ~hopptn~ cpttdrpi;. Gar. no pell> d111hw1.1 shrr1. carpet&. '•' ,,.~ ho"to"'...._. IAY&IUCH HulltlngtonS.ach 3 740 $2711 f\03 Man gold. drape:., ch1scd .:ara..:e. Hewporfleoch 3869 f'urov1·r:1tr' 11:124131 REAL.TY 675·300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5'18·2778 close le) bc.·hools, super ••••••••••••••••••••••• , _________ ._.,Br adll i;rcln apl wtpnol nice 4 pk•xs. rum1turc WATERFRONT New1l0rt Crl•.,l lkaul\ Clci:.c UI Ix h $175 mo Nu 2 Br. I ba. sep_ l ·car av a I I a b I c Ca I I NEW 2 br & 2 br • CJ..· \.U, rm w1adJ b.1 $.!IHr ''4-" part Shorl''> 3 hr. ll:l' pelb 1035 12th St. 536-9626 garage, xlnl location No 1714 >SW? •1566_ IOa m·Spm. luxury apL'i den 213 4111 i030, 642 ~;on lam rm bch. ll'nni" ------pell> 1325/mo 6«-6397 NEW beaut upt.s. l & 7da)'3 •Bwlt1n..c; pool 328 l'rospcl'l $tiS l.o9uno leoch 3748 '\gt BR /\pph{·ottons heinl( •Trash Compactor . 1162-ft>64 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •·'-nn 1''°" /\nuhc1m St ----h d 2 Br Townhouse apt. l \.'t ........ • ""'' •Wet bar Crazy Chnst1un 5tud1•111 film mokcr !>l•ek'> cra1v C'rea11v1• Christian tu :.h.1n· .! llr hou~e ~9 5'111~ Humes for l<'Jl>t' 2br. 2 ba, Nort en I 08 frpl<' encl patio I C M. 9am·4pm dally 2 Br. en~I l(ar. patio, b~ •Fireplace ,,..,,,...,.000 mci ,"o r .. e Occnnfronl. gar , Inc hlk.tobcb&sho"" sJ2s 54:>3229 Ill ieac ,nopels 205 15 •Pnvatebearh ~... .~ , ut1l Pvt pool. adults. ..... Sl 536-8T29orSJ6..1718 G-s for R~ 4350 A"ilnl ''-ll 673-tn40ev••ll 6~ to yr •-a •f17-J"•7 673-7183 Garden Apl. 2 BR, 1 Ila •l'lextl{lass enrl pollf•J --"7· """' \..od 11~ ut~ • "" •Smoke dctttrtonc • ••• •• • • • • • • • •• • • • • •• • • ,,.__...._ __ _......__..._...,_..~Reach 1l! 5200. Ul1I paid 3 BR. 2 ba. serv rm• encl gar.; no kids $23() ••••••••• •Shpsava1l tolennnl!> ONPf.:-JINSULA Ft'C: patio.cpta.drps, 1750sq mo 5487529__ ~198ays1dc Ur,fl73 Ml4 Garage iopacl' uvzail nr Haker & flarhor, C M S251rno '.>57 :1!.ll>I RJ1c1t1ng 3 Bdrm hom1• Main llt!nlals, ~"70 ft _644-2251 LAROE 2 br '210. no Pl'la BE HQM[ LIDO 1 SL E w ,\ T t-; It w beach & water '1C'flr.l1> -Zlf'fJ O Mar>ll• 540 4484 th1· 111.recl '490/mo IM• STEPS TO OCEAN New JBr, 2ba. frplc. dec-k. · · . . ' FRONT 3 BH • f700 mo Offlu Rtntal 4400 1-:.-;PEtlALLYLAltGE Vh·w, frpl. 11ur. I br. garage. MSO mo. Call &lirl442 IYCHRISTMAS Lease 67381186art.61lm ••••••••••••••••••••••• '1 Udrm & dt'n Front S285 41M·~184 673-20!l9af't 7 PM 2 Ur w ~nr 12:w Ne STEPSTOOCF./\N 11-.1~~11·1·1 wtvlew of watl'r. ooots & --XTRA tge. 2 Br 2 Ba up crvt.11(1! fncd yd wtpullu ~.only a few left! Deluxe Nwpl Shore~ 2 . f :. j .I Spyglal\slltll S-575/mo Lower Duplex. 2n r . rum 11t..n1rs opt swve refng Water pd. 2224 "U ' 2 BRfrom$200 hr.dplx.714·1170-!120_3_ -~------".!-. Al!1 f\31 1400 I \.'J ba Forced air hcnt. dshwshr dbl ga; wtr & Placentia. C'Oll betwn 1 . 3 UH, fple, 2 ba $.175 "" c-"""""9 cpt'd, encl 11ar. Lg pvt ' •h'' 63&-4120 BEACH 100 V/\RUS ~c .... .-.-..... S 1.00 for t~ch 11~1tern Ad<l 35f each PJltem lor l1r~t rlu\ ••rmall and h8ndlin~ Sud lo· --------pnllo paved. North end, gas pd. No c ildren or ----------1 S 4 ::--Muoi( r.,•ntt• ... nllv llow 111, h•lll· ~~ ctoee'w bch. Wall ~e. nu pct..c; 675 9216 $195. 2 br. kids ok. Stove Children OK bedV 8 a r 1 Y :, b 11 5 ON a ,v..-' ' " " r F See lhelle lov('ly rooms, ~ 11 \5. 1•nr ... ,'"" --11111n~ Ion~,, lh4> ,011 <11!131 •\ ON THEW/\ TER dOl:ll. Call 494·9601 2 BR, 2 ba. Swedish frpl. re rig ee 2 & 3 BR apartmNits n e w S u n d o c I< 11 • ~ = == - .... 1 1111 hy v nMkhnl' ~n!I v Park your Bay boat oul ,.__ w~• Co cov'd . patio. no child or Main Rent11l11. MO-S370 ii,ey are close to Central fireplace. bu1llmi. No ,~. Ahce Brook.-. "''" ~ .. 1.,.1 Vr•y \•ITIPlt -no side )'our door of this lov On""' water ,,.,...a ve .-• ..,..... 640-7266 p ... ho l 127 46lh Strent " Need•e<:1a11 Deor !05 "''~' )~om' cly J Rr twmc wtslained Area. Quaint lBr, rrplc. r--· ..-.. 1 br. Bllns .. DIW, cpl.a ar .. , recreation. !'I p pc s " • C11ll Mt. HOWiltd De•ly P1101 P11M~d P;11~111 ?Jl5 Mrnt~· Klass ooum~ warmth & S300mo. Utll pd, 831·1fl76 3 br 2 story SQ. of Hwy d rps .. gar , adult• n pmg. fre41way11 Bike LO _114H __ l_<X2 ______ _ Box 163 01<1 Ch11r, .. ,. "'a S•tt\ II 10 11. 14. 16. II! supe; decor'. S6951mo, "-Aanlront 1br areal vu oW. F'P, Adults-no pets. pel.5 548-4291 or64$-0527 beW1ac•h~--.__• ............_ ------ New York NV 1()()11 Pint 5,,,. 12 ll!u\I 3'11 ta'r\ 2"tt """ •" E aH..0•7 _.,.. .. __.... OC1t.a.1Jl!&O"'T •lM()f'uEER"''NT yearly lse S295 util pd. 536·0321. ves • .,..........., BEAt.rr. brand new 2 br. ,._""' "" " • r. • ~:.~r~N~~~.vss lop ;:~~sri"oon,;,ab~h oattern 1-'ENINSUL/\POINT 494-0687 2BR bit ba.bvrm,dmrm.frplc .... lwfttloccrtkMttl 2BR .. 2ba.SSOO 123 nm omcei. !rdom 64!5:6101 -• 4 Bdrms W/bukon&l'S . carp.. -ms. pnv. o-..am ne1I bltna. jecuzz·. 1·y-o..-HOME $125 per mo. ,. J MORE tlun ever btfortl 20Q AOtl JSc lor uch pallern to· "'--k garaae Vear tease .,,.. • • • A "' "' A 11 1'ot 1 N I dlsl171,plU1JfrHprlnttd ln· f<r\t tin\''"'"· 01ndhn1t ·~ .,.... r-on so mo r ., 'I' ,,_ "_,. ·-·r 38R 2b., S2000 Moyrly S33l223T I I .. , .... ~u~·,.. .• wood mtr & Mission Vie&... 3767 un:1 · 12 .. · Bl< ... or """ean vu 642 7"""' .,_... Rz; R~ 1rpo er -. e . o enw ''de H(W 1976 NEEDLCCl!An Su• lo· i•xlr, nms &. warmU\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Y. . . I .alOO S..._S TO l!ACH req . I noon CAT~OC' ltn tveryttuns. 7St M1111an Marton SOOOyrl)t )!lt'o Ali.lo VLllH, 2 Or. "" Ba ~2:343 ldon. \hru Prt . 9 NICE I br frplc. pool. • 3 BR 2 b8 unf ~ 60< P'ltl sq FT Crochttwltll Sq111re1 Sl.OO Pa1temOept 442 WATERFR NT UOM~ conoo, oparaded crpl & _ _..:_ __ ..-. adults,nopela.'230.mo ••••••• • aBR.2b .. f $400 1617 W .. ;$TCLJFFNB Crochet 1 Wanlrtk $1.00 Daily Pilot 631-1400 drl)I, Nlceloc. S81·272fi "'-~ 548-4757or646·37118 ----• 8 • un · AGT :WI 5032 Nifty fitly Qllllls $1.00 232 Wttt 101n SI ,.._ r-''"~~~~~~~I CUTE b Brtnd new, 3 bdrm apt.a, ---- 111,.11 Crtehtt _$1.00 Yor11 NY 10011 Pr•nt • Hewportleoch 3769 Slucho2 r. l ~ ba, pat.lo. !lludlo & conventional, 1501 W fclfffDr St•+ llnlt hell $1.25 BLUFFSTWNIL'U: ••••••••••••••••••••••• One bedroom. one hath drpstcpt, ulil pd, qulel. Xmas m ove in 11 1. ft . Ntt41t,.1111 .. o11 St DO NAME ADDRESS ZIP 3 Br. 2 Ba. nicety de· 2 br, wmter rental PlO a~rtmonts . South or n o k1dst peL1 S225 lowance,2 wksfree r ent. Ncwp0rtFlnanclalCtr flowtl' Crte~tl lttlt $1.00 S 1 Z E en Cl ST y LE l d S~OO Cl be h 5'5-2825 t\6 m "•lrpf1t Crochet loolt Sl.OO NUMBER cora e • m o <213) 44~·5963 or l213) way. ose lO ac a P 1714 ) 8-47·75il6. lOam· ~Office Spoc~ tastt111 Croct111 l oot ~l.00 0, -· ............ pt • 752•0917 4419443 aad •hops · S2SO .P9 1r 2 BR no RM• Aoulta pref Spm Coll on S1l1• Mannfler ,.. .... ... ... monlh Ask for M1111 . ' .,...... l114Hl42 3111 t 246 lltstant Mier''"' look 1.00 ,.n1111 frtt7 St11• ... fer 3 Br. 2 Ba. Har bor View, BEACHFRONT 1 Br for f7~2alt. Refrlg & Stove lncld 1 BR. pets<*. SUO mo. 3 -ex fllaqllt lllo1ttJ Ito-1.00 '"' 11t• ran·Wi11t1r '•tt•r11 adlt.s, ~ mo. 644·42ll mature adlta 1225 m o . .-------Sl.8S. mo. 968-.8064 Blks beach 328·13lh St WESTCUFF l&i2 bdrma, If You Need /\ Staffed & C••111ltt1 llfft look 1.00 Clblltt~•I• et•JO• 11.i• ftr message 1 • -... ...---..~.A . .WJL.-• " mature ed\1.11.6 no pct11 l Co1111ltttAf1~m ll4 1.00 1,.. -"•"'ti Yt" elltlce. Av 12/l M I0.676-...,... Su.nn.ylowerZBr 188:~ tBd, alv/r efr/crp/drp. llOM832or213-43l·'618 btl23S.2 br$2M.lnqwre Furntah~d Of!•ce. cnl! U Pritt Afrll.tu 111 so, SN '1s, ... , Eostblutr 3 bdrm. 2ba BALBOA Bay Club Bach. kilch. !pie. S27s'. All utll UlU pd. Aduit.s, no pets. DELUXE 1 br frpl full ITOO WestcUrt Or . ept UI. iSi~E Ii.~ E ~ ~ T 1 l ~ •· loelt of II Qwllts 11 so, Sew + ltalt lttk i''" bor mel bwl/dlbl 11otr •• _pdallo, apt, avl. 12/23/ $tOO mo. pd. /\dltaonl)'.873-3216 EJW.BayS210.S48·9S16 amenities wi rut1 'rec. 1•_,, B l'k o a ""··n'--e f/tlmo :...<'"errn· Pnhronue "•., M11t•111 Quirt .... 12 _&0• l•ltaat .... " Crlfls 1.00 rp c, t· na. cp "' rps. 642"4097 INO E 2 b faclla &!o Lo believe• ._ r. .... ua • ... '"' "' • "' 11 Qlllltt ftr Ttdly 11 -IO• lut11t r ... , .. lttl 1.00 wahrtdryt:r, mo lsc. No 2 Br 1 Sa . gar stove, CHARM /side r . 847~ · style. t>ltns, cpu, drps, m1.11I ~ ... rv. "~" u\11 & Joolt 01 18 llffy lturs !IGc l1ttsftt Stwl111 ht' 1.110 pets. greenbelt view. OCEANFRONT Ruc h refrtf· no children, pets. 2 ba on qulel drive. La. Ind . Pallo, hcn\4'Ct pool Jonilonal &>cy' & nfr reftfg, dshwr, POOi acs. ep<, kltch & beth, utJI pd, /\val . t/2m $300 mo. pvt. patio, frpl, encl 1er SELL Idle Items with a Adlt.&. no pct.a. $185 • equip nu1l. Newpo1 t Owner 630-7300 $130mo 873 latt m-Olal or840-0789 $265. 548·21834 orMS-2'181 Dally Pilot Clantned Ad. $23$. 548·2682 Cent.er. ~5470 I 1' I flJO DAIL V PILOT T~•Y peoe mt>et 7 1978 j~6d it...Bu1ld 1t .0.Jf)f'r 1t.. Hammer 1t .. Carpet l'1t ... Cement 11 .. Wire il. .. Hoe 11...Clean 1t. .. M ove SERVICE DIRECTORY J.Jlumb 1t...Pa tch 1t t-'tpe it 1-<emooe1 ll ~, Roof 1t...Landscape it. .Tile it .. Tnm 1t. Sew 1t Haul 1t... Add it ... Plant it. .. Alter 1t .Learn it. ~ ... Press 1t. .. Pa1nt 1l . Nail 1t. .Plaster It F-1x 11 .. ,,...Cllte• Repair C<llpeflht ecrp.t Ser•lce &icJiflHrirHJ General S..-•lus ~ Masonry ,~,.aptfiftCJ P'tumbfnCJ ....................... ·············•··•···•·· ..............•.....•..•.•...••••............•...............•.••.........••..•....•••......•...............................................••.......•........... APPLIANCJ-; ltl-.l'AIH 1-,INISll, llf:MOl>l-:1. & llm.llJ/\Y !'>l'f>.("f,\I. STttl Cl'l1k -\I tla11tJyman&C:a~nlt!r llOUSJ.:t:L.t:A N I NG 1, t'1repl.iccll Pllinlcri. p,,mtJng IOI t.::irt Hu' l'l.l Mllf>:H Hi·p,111 1 , $10 ~t,in•t.111 R<1r Sm.ill J(•hi. UK Sl1ampoo11rsi. ... mt'l1·nn lJ\<..IN~;f:H1:-.ic; A11y&AJlhoml'rl'pa1r.. Our 8U\1n1•"' <.: II Bn<'k Conrn:·l~l'ollo d~l)t.'ndable t'rcl' t'lll 111111·, 111 .. 11111.it ion 1714J~!l2'1:!'..! ltl'.I'> 'J7V037'J 2 fim11 h.111 ur h,11h ('ONSl l.T,"'T ft\070~1 l''reeest !.4110-11!1 Jaru<.'e·s Ha1u1t'dy Anru BlockW1tll11 U8QP1ls Qjll J11y &U700S •t·r\ll't'' (; t;11Jln , Nchltectval ---$1 :, 'I ~ :,,17 1J!lli •H GardHlnq Grodinq at67)~ _ fft<f.~t:.~°'64 l>l:.'!IJI~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1~J.r...::~.>rr()~~ N ~ • .t ~ JJK:! •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• Xlnt houst'<'leanmjO? done t'ree l'tt SIUmll!llonc, llle, £~~~\. N~~n':~ 5~.~':c~~ T••l,lon R•poir l\rC'lllt~1.·turul ~ S111w 1lea.~11n<1hll'li73 130'J Cement/Concl"t't• ~~11r1J ll.1l411.111 i:;1rt1t.•n"r Slpploadt<r. dump truck. by lady w14ncpr' dc ven blockwulls, bnck, plan m clf\ol.J.:i & old foshion\'<I ••••••••••••••••••••••• lurul 1'1;111~ Umdl & 11r --••••••••••••••••••••••• Y1I l'll•,111up.•<. tnmnHn11. huult1111. lr l't.' wk, Grad dable. own trimtdM7 3637 ten <,>uuhty work bl re fll"ldt• l.!!t me show yuu t'ANOl'Y TV SVl · 1 ·u ncw roni,lruclloo R1·,1d lCC111MttW•ic• UObSl·urn;1L\111nl'lt•lm 11r un111.: Ll ll nul I< lnl(, cl t:'m11l1l1vn.t•l c ---M 11ncet1 ~b 75o-113.~ whymyworlcislht:'IJl!sl lictUatt•S.·ni«' .. 1 Comm • 1 • I n d 'I r .1 I •••••••••••••••••••• ••• Gl't1t:'rul 1.·m1t'll'lt• work MS Qm7 7!.I 39:!0 General ll<>u•ecleanmg 960-~ Call l'Mllcu83G ~ nl lo'air l'n<·cs llOo 11l3J &M'J 7020 ~wm.,o<• & ,tt·am rl,.an Commcrual ll1·~111 .. nt1.1I u-..._ -There':. 2 l•r us. so we'rt IPlt t'olur hni.:hlt>ni·r"I, <CM Oil:>'.! I 11 :!;!l~~l f';llfW1 ll'rtcuJ G ardl•nrni.: • -.., twice a.s fm.t Call Debbu Mo•lftg Workmuo~hip tiuarn d Tiie labylftffnc:J 'ti.ht c. .. Jrpl'\ 10 mtn !'ll•r\lt.'t.' & lh•uuuu~ •••••••••••••••••••••••or Joan. 4!133!168 01 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnlcr Exll·r .. 'ret.·4:~l ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• blc.i('h ('11.·.in h" rm. d in 51-.l'lllllTY Ill 11 Ul-.H!'> ~11.111 l> W vr k l\11 kll VOil HAVE IT k EAl>Y 494_:~9-----Fnl'ndly Mo\\nll Co Etfi ~'\'rt; <'XP &42 02!15 n·:lt/\M IC' fill· l\i•w 11r LOVI NG {.'A Jtto: llot lunchl'<i Lu· d with r;·h mi & hall SIS t\ V" rm A II ph.; H·i. run 1• rt• 11· !.411 :!04!1 I 'LL 11/\UL IT A WAY l'OUSL'CLL:ANIN(', c 1cnl, fn~ndly i.erv1ce rmtll t-'r t·M . 'lnl 11111,. .. "I k II I ·r1 M HO.,..,.., ~ "" c_ L l •CUSTOM l'AINTINll • S750,t·ouc·hSlll,('h,11r$5 .,11<' w.t JOI l'Uxt11m Y/\RLJ''l,L',i\". 11w.· "''°"""" B ,, o w esl poss ra ca wi·l<'oml·~z.l~art ~ G 1 1 Jd l' 1 bru·k work L.1cl'1tSloU .;ml ~ '" ,, '' -'Y rcual>ll' rouplt'. IW7 0992 lnlr/Extr · !teas Hstu __ i:ar c tm II<' • m rp 1 I 't.I 1 2!1:SI M11w & l'<l~t· l'<1ll Hon ~ny & Jer Ft-cl' h11ul Rer·s 003 581: -Call RrU('c 546·07a<ll'v1•s Tf'ff Ser.Ice repair I~ Y'" l'Xpr l>o •1m 1 ;.i:i ~.:.7 ll711.I In", rleunup. l ret• work ----111-1-"-../P~ --- &t252!1!1 lnlr1 !o:xt l'a111tin~ ,\~to: k tr H r "' Janitorial 't.. • _.,...., ........... 9 SUPF.RIOR PAINTING & ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm $35, all 1,,.,., . ., m\'I 11tor 111.l'!>1' •· ;, Contractor 11 -M--for us<1l>lc llcmi. f'i•n ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • 1, 1 1 1 r 1 ~I UHll •• ••• ••• •• •• •• •• •••. ••• lfo 1 ()u;.l a1ntcn11nr<' cl''\ 1 0 1 d & s r 11 m 0 v I:' d •••••• •••••• •••• •• ••••• P l Wullcovcrrn.:s RcC':. , 1• 1111 v J s 111 1111111: p.;ml f're .. l':-.t 1,i:!;tl!ll --. (lo.•lil\lu ... n l'ure ..:,pr1 5.572005 M.arned CQuph• w/K ~rs atnt l epalr35 yrs 10 96358d ·· i1rnmn.:. lr1·1· , . .,, l.wil Carpe~et" (.'.;irpcl ~an will I .. ~ yuur. I.,.,. M J 1\R\ I!'> ln-t wurl. .;L rt:'a'> pnt.'l':-. _ exper Rl'llld & romm .1 area. work mans h 11• fo\ill) utsut l'tt 6t2 211.2~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11r mint· H1•p.11 r, ~ '.~JtJ11!""" & n~m111~1·1m,1:. l-'rr~t:-. 'ltiJ 1341 llJuhnii. movm,R, rlesnup Reas rail's 646 2558 guar Take advalll or m) Ptcnftor /R~r u 1'\camn1: lOll' (;u,1r v.mk .. ~ .~.J I.I< 317X:.t. ---S7 up Tre<!v.ork tteus. ----cxpcr ~70SG ••••••••••••••••••••••• nl'll\\I\ 111.: trimm111~ ••Georg"' l'ilmc>r & !'\4111~ /\dds Hmdl l'Jml l'l.1J1~ Sml 101). .. I.11.· fl~)!i7 w :12 Jlbi~K<'r:..;\lll)('> l''i e'' • --Genera!Senlces fast.rreeest842 4Sir7 l.aldlcapifte) ---l'ATCHPLASTt.;RIN<; lopµin.: lu,·11 lie, '""6Jo.l6 Bedn'al ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------••••••••••••••••••••••• , .. Your Costte • •ALLTYPt:S• • t>on1k1I Wtnll•r rJtl'' -••••••••••••••••••••••• E d Avnt Extr tSty $345 L'--·· L's·i .... 111,.,.,. 1i4r. 512t Wt·Can•Canw•t Clt·ancr::. •1 l ,.11 ltt>tllt'llS!-donJ.1\r111ou HouM-c:i.c..4ftCJ xpr ' Lanl.lscapl'rs 25 S4&l rn;.:iu .,,., .._, MINORllO."l•.'l' ... '1'1\lf( ·. 'I.,..· El"l't1'"·1 ~nu·i•,_;,,. 11lt•w11lhu11-.1••1tll.c•·1n•••••••••••••••••••••••• Sprmklers.lnstall&re ·ly ,ntr$4!>rm --Uhlt Cl I ,., ' Sll'aml:t•annr Shampo11 $Vi 1 11· (")ll'Wil:l2 ('all ' Cu h Pnces ml'lmtr'lt labor V~:HVNEATl'Al\'11 p OS ery e onnq <;<Jrpentry. l'l11mb1n1: ~ A:::.o Uphobll'ry /\II work ~1;, ~I . . Cur Jl\.'ls & 111<1111,, m11111h Wunt a H EALl.Y ( 'l.l'./\N pair ncrc le & n ck Guar. msrd, rr.,e est J OllS & TEX TU Ht.: ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'.t<rnm1c1'tl1·~ .. 10~.:11AI <jUdr Ht'C.v Ml' Frt·t·e~l ~ ' nl l>i•t• 111.-f, ·1'Jll llOUSE'' Call (;111f(hum ;vork 645·7978 M a~ Ted6367<MJ.5or5)2·0134 F'r~~l 8931~3!1 U,\VENl'OR'l'&("ll\llt --Heu' Hah""' t~5 Jllfi t ... 1~ .&!t~7 (,,rl t'ree ~-sl~. 645 ~l~. ---Pn>fl•,,1on.1l h e·lt•t.Htt•tl Tr v ;1 U ,, 1 I' I' 1I111 --c1 .1,~1f11•tl '"' -.1•11 1111.: SF.lJ. idle 1tem11 with a P~EHS PAINTING Ila\•£• !IOml'lhmt: you want for S..15 Ph ~i0 4111.~ .-ij,,1f•1-d i\tl 111 1101 ,t'fl SELi. 1dll· 1t1•mc; ''II h " 1t1•1t1:-. •. m.il I 1t"m" 1.1 Fmtl wh,11 1 ou ""ant 111 ll.11 e ~r>ml'thmi; lo &t<ll • Daily Pilot Clai.111C1~d i\d Ex pr. d reas rates, fre< lo '>t!ll • Cl.is,iflcd alb do •>r n•nl '><1ml'lh111i: C,a1I~ 1'11111 t fo::.-.1fled At.I .in) ILl·m 1,\;! '>fii>I IJ,,11\ l'rlol h .. ,,,.1f11·.J,. Cla-.:.1f1l.'tl ad-. do 1l wl'll 6"2.:_!'1678 est Call Gene 552·0458 ,1 well &\2 5671( Sl-ll ulle llt'ms f.42 %78 .<?!!!~~-~~~~ •..• ~~.~~ ~~!!.~~~~~ ... !~.~~ ~ity 5005 ~.~.~~!! ... ~!.~~ ~~: ......... ~!.~~ ~~~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~ ..... !!~~ ~p Wanted 7100 Hefp Wont~ 7100 <.:1>M cJlx"111t~,r11101 SIJ1l 711011 Sri ft Com "••••••••••••••••••••• f\HTIS'l'S ~ l"1afl ~lfl<'•l XnmsPortyTlme ATIEHTIOH BOOKS ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lJl1I inrllf. \ {. :irntill' m1·t1.'IJI Wort•hou~r hldg ume nt•t•rll·tl for Wl'l'kt•lld Add Comtdion s~ CLEJlK TYPIST pk1e.J.initur1.o1si~io r-W l!llhSt.t:l\1 W1thl MUNEYMA~ER t'rJrt:-..11t•atMaJor~hu1> •Gills.GUYS• Sal1•s Uept exp~r a,· stora~l' drl'11 bdunll • 111111• 1'1·n1t·r )5 per 1l 1y BUSTER BROWN TRAYS. Housewi•H & hc•lpful Mul>t lYPl' 4S 50 Pnm1· hll'JlllHI 111 llunl Suitable fur rnlllm I & l..Jundrom.;t in flll' Co,la C.111 Utlk "l li'l 11:-,.10 V.tt• Of 1929 lo )'OUr l)arly Are you 18 & over & free MooftMqhten wpm & bt> p rofH'lt•nl 1n!!lo11 11 •· .1 c h on w~e us1· S700 p;·r mo ~'SJ lo~allon for nol\ all•· Piii Dplans. Small or IJrl!e lo travel w/sharp young M 1 ll1on l>ollar corp "' fll(Ul'l.'' lO Key addl'r DIET CLERK r art llml·. Monl.\:)ty tAru 'fhur..du}, 11 :IOam t\11111 No e x wrll'n1'1• rPqw 1 t•tl Brookhurl>l, llOO "'lll,•r" lmmed or('up a nr y $16.00IJ ~ w.J'-ht" .1011 • p.;rt1cs for. adulti.. group (O Hawa11, F1a & ne«ls men & women of hy tOU<'h lnCormJI ofr, ft.~l S1ni:l•'. 1:a1dl•n lYlll' llt-.1vv front traffH· llJ dry•". ~or 'pel'ifi1.· C r i·ilil Union lwins: Nt•wportcr ... ntntain lhruoul the USA No ex· any al(e who enjoy(; M Call Bevi·rly "lure fir off1n· ( :oud ,.,.. l'h• n • fi 12 4210 a~k for t::d krm.H·all 117.l HS~I frn rn1.·1I 1111 II II ,m,1 II n: 1-:ntcrpns•·s. ti 12 1179SCxl pr necessary w 12 wk ex· speak in>: w /olh<'rs & who 6'15 Sl!()O cxl 3 aft IUA M. I"~. ur·· •. Sl"0""" 11•11 kin•' "uc'k~> )' . '" '. ' ' " tJil. & 111dustrt.JI llU'\I ~l J!.k ror J ack C11lhns "''ns" "~Id tr··1n1ng pro· bo ... h BEVERLY MANOR ~~ ~ " u.,, "' u ' [ I W f ---r-~ .-u u are rt.>u w /l .c avt-rage Cook Urcakrasl. $2 llr Call Mr Plumme r ----~ 1!~~·1~·~1 ll<'S'I'' ant 11 rtO!!l' "ram Almve avcraga runo!l.hemillJObs 963 671;7 .' • brn••llt for }our,t:lt & L>nnkm~ prohl{'m' .. ~ · 1<:xJll'r req'd N U. Call lndustriolRMtof 4500' ; }llUI •·mplt•}'l'l'S? Cun Cafli\lrohol llelphne earnings thereafter ! All N ti42K47~or6416680 APPHOXl:IOO '>tifl.C:!al ....................... --·-••••• lJt.'lflohllallJrd&D i\rt 2-lhrsadayllJSJBJO tranp furmshcd Appli o actual selltn1: rn --- ---ranls should be neat, volv~ & no setting ap 1----------Convalcsrtint J111w1tal 24452 Via t::stralla l.ui:una ll1lb 71 t 83'1 8001 Equ.;I Oppor1ur11ty t-;mployer M ~· IJO l-: l7lhM .~Jmo MFGSTfElFJt.8. 7t.JLLor.:t·l'rK4iK671 PREG'llANT• -;ingle&abll'tolcavelM pa111tmcnt11 Workw/one Uoyle54S-~~ ONE YEAR OLD $151lOll mo .:r Xlnt n..t Lost&Found 5100 Caring 1·onf1d.,nt1a l M E UIATELY F o r or lhe most popular & COOKS D"'' UXE OFFICES lifl!IO :-,11 fl ,.. 11 11 .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• C'•JUn~elm,!! & rl'f<•rr11l j)l'rsonal 111terv1ew con· socrl'Ssful products un g. 41511 S11 fl 1ndustr1al , At d t M. t ct u Bl T h th k ttod /\ ("'IJl"I"' .. 1 .. 1w1ivt•rltt···il FOllNL> ~th1.·i1.;o llu~ky mrlron, a up w n "' a m .S Ul'. ucs I ru e mar c ay n 1n l::x1>ent•n1.·l.' Preftirrl'<I, Bui Nol Nc<'l'i>sary Oay & Nil<' Shirt::. /\11ailablc l>l!'\llWAS llEH K1t r hl•n llcl1wr See lhl' l'hd. llc·n llrnwn 'l>, 31 lOG S Ci.l llwy , ~o . La g una . 4\1!1 2271 Comml & inchtl 'l'•H'I.'" 2m to 20fl(J sq It i\!. low <i;; 35' ~4 ft LJI! N11:11l·I & M1,,!.I01J Vll'JO ;in·a~ ll.1ntly lo 'i U Frwy Call ~I MOO SllJ<'l' fur lt•ai.l' l,1)(';i t~1( ·• "' " u k L' lO AM l s p M od .. · t:.111 fur dlla1b Xlnl tiuy F 1·111.ilP l>t-l;iwar,· t. l"l'p1ni: c rt. n . expensive pr ucl w.,o s arrni.'> l>ltl'l'l from "'-4. 7 51 _3741 t:arl1t·lll, II Ii 111.,1 col /\PCl\n .. : 547 2S63 Goltlen Forelll Inn. 1050 name 1s a h ouseho ld l\oll lrvmc f'1•1lll'r Nr "'-r W Kau•lla 1acn111~ from word thruoul lhe world . llC 1\1rrort $l!CKl•mo 1·'' !!l.l.Kn3 62£C• •SHAROLl'S* Dis n eyland > or call Work 10 u youthr ur. ED RIDDLE PLANTS & FLOWERS fOUNl> f\•m <;mooth "" 776-7910. ext 202 Parents Tne ndly atmosphl'rn & EXEC. SECRETARY REALTOR 646-8811 Nl'h S.'lSIMI Mu h.ur l 'olh1· V1r lll·ll <'II Ol.JTCALL MASSAC E wekome al lntl.'rv1ew have Cun while you earn WfST'CLIFf'f''urncl 11fr,l•---------llf s''11 1-'r.rnn-.<o '1)11' .. AJwimh 1111 H-17115!1', 4911 !~ ---top pay You receive a llu.'v m;i II lrn .11 11111 'l.o !\uto-"' IVl' guarunt•w0-' ~alary + Ax /\pply In Person Snock Shop Mo. 9 3446E Cst Hwy,Cd M 1-;qual Oppar Employl•r Matur<• f.xp~·r ne1• l'rof11.·11•nl'y w I 1.:uri•, lnCo1 rn;1I nfr, I' \1. <'Jll l~•\l•rly, 1).1~ 5800 C'tl J tifl IOum it~mo ··nu-: EXPF.RIENCE" '"'" .. ~,, ~ "' ,..2 11J,7 Rentals Wonted 4600 "'"1rh'\o 111111111 l1lion~ 1.11.S I' F1· m m 111 New Detail Shop needs l remely llbt!ral com ,... " I' I 1 (' l /\1lull mot"I (.'lo~.,tJ .. I --••••••••••••••••••••••• .illnt'f' 1111 'II II •11111 ~h0,111/<'t" .'>llll /Ii: ll''ll nC P m1ss1on & bonuses (;Qn II II ore $35. mu l ndudt·~ Shldiu ur :-.m.111 1 flit "nl. ll'fnh \1!1 itn l:!IMI 1wr 1l1•wan1 • 1.1 ll 1775 c·ircwt TV For Hei.l'rva Top wa~e11 paid Engln~ tests & other in~"nlivos Mature ~rsoM, Jt<I()(\ COOKS "'' -twos, ~-975.5 .,, l H ~ hen f ts Ad Jt d ulll Pvt&11w~l Gdk mCd~.~11rc·t1n«11ady COCKTAILS lm'·"'':.!~il\<Kln·\ --.-,.eamen.<'nl(pa n ten , X l nt adv3 n cemen l t'I u rcll EX s 1-;itVIC~;MI·;~ l'h 5361857 r;in tw Ol'l•f t·hildn•n 1;,,.,~~l ~IMMI \.!11 • FolJNll '11110,1! f•·mall• *KARELl'S * bu!rers & polisher s. up· po!>S1b1Ltllcsforbothml'n rnrct.'l'nlcr 63_1 ·~ W IT ll i.:u•HI 1 ~1·0111, --f;.ton4X M1 ... 1l11 l;iH111· 1111,h.1111! /St lllk l..1h, wl.,I of I)(' " holsll'ry !lhampooers, &women Cm1plt', t!llll'rly nccdl'tJ lll't'(ll'd (fir ll~l>li(lllllC'nh ;..\ <Hn't'ALLMASSAGF. l'hl'ck out, Jll('k up & de 1mml-O lt1 care for ultl1•r 111 lh1• ,11·t1H· /\rrny Deluxe Offic~ Buildi11q TWOSTOHY "''"port P1.•11111~ul.1 ~~18(1 l''\t'ol f.'l11rn t\1rI'nml1111101'<1 Walnut PJ1Wll«I ()fru:t.'!I El~v:1tor l'nviJtt• f'Jrk•nl! Jul\llun.;I S<•n IN'' l llfllfp<; fi73 SWU dfll'r I JO 211 yr 11111 fl•ma It• ..,,.,.k, fl'm:il1• r111>mm..1t•· t»-1 :1.~~ 11r :17!1 w:i.'> o\m(•nt«H) family want» lo rent or tr;11ll· 11ur h11m.1· 111 !'t1t')\ll.'O ('II~ ftlr ht1U~t' un or H•ry m•Jr bt'.H h ror month July 2.1 /\u.: 21 '" lherrahoub l'unl;ic•I W f.mdlll'rl-( 121:111i/i!l li-1~~ nr li.50-~9 lusineu/lnveif / Fiftanc:e w1l1• '1'·•11•111! "-•·•·<" A1rµm1 .• :.; r !ti til'~ 21\M lj:J>t 17RO hvery Apply .11 No exper nee You re m;in. !>cmi in'vahd, in l'X 11,1.,11• lrainm•• not n· •11•od •l'"'I ;1t11r SIJ•"'<''l f, ''"'"0 llarbor Bl CM ( 11 h 1 "· " .. "' "" '"""' · ce1vt• u PJY w '•·..,.•mg chn" for rm & tx111N1 111 'IUHl'd 111 m.111y 1·:"l'' i\ \l o11«111n~· .1 ... nu "'"II SCRAM LETS ABORTION 64~ 1000 l ~ y k .. 11l'l1llun .11 1.,1 l..11" !fown • --ram llU l'Jn wor knel)' hmm San Dwi.:u ('11nt.1C I }11111 \rmy t oun:-.ehng & •frf.,rral rnom1nR or eve hrs On Pe rm pos1t 111n l1leJ~t· lt1•rrw11·r pJ} nw111 '" q11.1llf1.·.t ANSWERS 1 10 1 L• r "' bU.)l'r \~'1 '.flfri l.!00 l'rei: t~sl avail wkncii. y mm Jy rwy rom l'.ill Mrs An1krl>11n l·:ITor11 71a4 ~1:'..11 f>1,rn.ll :-..111'" 2A llr_llel~hnc ~17 \HU~ AYON all l>Urround1111: com 1\4 2 4 I 7 4 b ~ l w cc n Coi.la M.-s a ~"° 102~ mun1t1l'" You owe 1t to (lam lpm 1525 Ml·sa Vt•nll• E 'l'11n11' l'ttll'lll Personal Senlces 5160 yourst'lr lo al lcast 10------- 1 NSllH·: ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chri1tmas Earnlft91 vc!>l1i.tal~ this unusual CPL ,\dull, no chrltlrcn or 1-: X T ll A 0 n I> IN/\ RY l'w1o kanl(<lfCl(I)> Wl·r·· 111 d .__. ""ow oppor. Contact Rene~ IJCL'I ~X""'r'c1 to mn" 12 J()llS Ill t>:urO""' fnr llS 1alkmg lu t•ach olhn f(1·l1Jhfro. m11 1 l' Jl(l' ... .,in"' ~ ,. r- 111111 'mokml! cuupll· will f« AYOM Rossi,833~ uruLc;, unr. C M 2 !Jr hi.1· d111l11m.1 l(rad-. Once you Onl' sat1I "I hn1it• ll bJhy:o.il .)•>Ur huml• 1n n"""'RES~T ... TIVES exrh m,11ml & yanJ work qu11hfy. rcserv1• lr:unm~ cl~otr<i111tndav l hah• tu:;T K;n ~ BOYSANDGIRLS Ownr532-5939 11f uour 1.·ho1r1· anti h lh h Id I "11ur "h~l'nt't• lfrh upon Best lime to l'Stabhsh ' it w en l' c 1 ren I' a} n .oque'\t 1 H:J:.! 021 1 10 lo IS yC'ars Earn ---~;urc•pe a~s1 .:n ment Homburqer Stand Lu1:un.1 llcal'l1 .. ____ .. ___ ,.... ...•.•.....•....•...... f'rl't• 't.;111/1111: 11111 lc1111~ ... 1th ph·n•> 111 pJ1k11111 Hwiv v1•ar rounil 1;'""' 1ni: St!! IMlll nw 1w" Will St'll fur ~"J , do"' n 1\~l ~ 120ll l'lSll>I·: t·ustoml'~ lntt-~ted ~ Chr1i;tm11smoney ·S20W CUSTOMU:iERV. Some ""'1"l<'t''\ may <.:all s.io 704 I or Zenith ..... k 11 b .. L' 1 c r ...... Or.111111• Coull I\ \ 1r11orl nr Fw) ~~I "I ft 11000 "I It qu;1hlv 11flo n11ly 1;>' 'q ll [!._ .. ,, th·.11 111 \111' II \,k lor k.11n l.111~ nd•·, \ ·•'" \ lt1·.tll \ BEDROOM EXECUTIVES! \\"int Ill OlttH• \flllr t1f111•1• 11111 ul ll'l• h..ilr.•"m t.. 1111• ltr• 'l11ot1111J. '''" pur t l c fllt•r JI ,1 fr 11·l wn 111 lh1 t \pl'( ··~l l'l"l . 1111 Jo.,,., Ull\I °'<Jilt· h.1·, lht ·'"'*tr \11u1 111111•· r1·111 111 1.· I u 11 t•, r ,. 1 ,. 111 1" 1 ~ t· r' 11 1· 1 "n I "r 1• 111 1 r11om 111•1 '"'" 11111•.t td1•vhom• 1 "' ,., .11 .. 111.111 h.1111ll1n.,: untl• q r11un1 1i.1r k1111t Ji<r11111r ,,.n 11 t' .. 11ul1ht1t"•1•\1 "l>I 11hon1• l.1 II 7 11 I •Ill ~.1.11 I II f; t-. '\ f. I ' l I I \ ~ '>l I 1 t: m -. .. n .'-11·111," l>t . 1'u1ll ll•i :"j('W!)l •tl lk'.H'h ( ',1 )I~ fu63ll~11.m f1•1•t lfl.,,11 tnr • iu-.11 El.lull• Umk1•r • 1\llomey • \('t'OUnl,11ll <:00<1 l>Jrklll)ol Highway l'Xl)C>.,.urr lltlhl' M1.·Corm,1rk k e.;lly ...... 7$~1 l>urk r oom ror rt•nl l.;1RUO:I l\t-111.·h an•,1 $.'ii> ~ 41H 1396 aft 6pm BusinHs Opportunity 5005 ....•...•••.•..•••.•... Considerin9 o lus7 Cl\<'I ~lll,H'l l\t• l11t'JI hu' lt'lllllo!' l'lt•J'•' 1·,111 or '>ll•p h\ for (r,.,. 1nf11 ,\II C'dll'.:nn1·' & l~I"-' w.~ 1:udrdnll't' tv 111t•J'l vou 751·3741 t':'l1Tt-:111rn:-.1s1-:ss I'\;\ EST\11-. .... r:-. I~ M1·,,1 V1•rth-1)1 1-; !.•er•"'" from k.111111 l.11,1 SUllt• 11•1 l '1"t.1 M1·,,1 l't\I l'.lill'n7cl.t\" -,..OUN !>· Rrwn & whlll' fmploym.nt & _,per Wt'l' i.e mg su ... aturc . .-4xper nl-'<'ess (IUJ 1 y o r up lo -..oo Munfff·R~toil mJI(• Spnniwr Spumt•I PrTporotion 1 1359· srnpuons to the Doily Fe male. Must type• i.omc l.'a~h bonus . Call yuur Primi•c•no,,l:illot'oillollm t"J l'hetkl'collar.~ZH;Wot ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ --Pilot Transportation & be pr11f1 c 1c n l /\rmyfll'crwtcr St1uth o1 arigi· t 'ounl \ -Schools & BABYSITTElt who can prov1d('CJ No dehvenes w /h"ures. 10 Key adder El Toro 71111 !i25 1 o .. m•r-. 111111.,~ ''"'>' n · V11u111l I n~h St'lter Puppy, Instruction 7005 I 0 v~ !I m 0 nth 0 Id or rolll'l.'t 1111< Phon e by touch Informal ofc. Cl"'ta M1•sa s Ill lll:!ti ;1s1in ,111111 f111 ... oil' Mu~t V 11 II 11nn 1 n ~ & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mature. reliable. rny 5.'16-!1712 C M Call Beve rly , l~'\M1·.,~1 V«r1ti-~: ""' l•> .1111m·1·1.11t· c ;,,.1(1 11.1011l1on, II B '.!f>2 SAAi ME,"l WOMEN home 2' i day!< " we1.•k. IOYS AHO GIRLS 645 5AOOul 2 ~ IOAM -Gettttol Office ~~~Ml 1 ·""' 11001 _"._'I 1.,1;~:1smi"111~'.,~ ~c~11J;~1 a~:~:G ~h~~at~n~ri Uolsa ~:~100E~~~o ;0~; ~':~ DATA ENTRY ~l':,~t'~1'~111!'~r~,~:;r.~·r 1,;..1t 1"1o1f,41,10 _ TWO WEF:K CLASS B 1\ BYS ITT ER r o r money ::.elhng subscn p -OPEa.ATOR rnrp ~laHm~ nt•w 11C.• 111 5025 "'/\TION-WIDE JOH teacher My home. lgt lions after school f'or in The Jolly Roger . Inc u I rv 1 n ~. N c" 11 ,. n Motwyto Loan 1-0ll NIJ ornnl(l' Scori. '' f l 11"?"(19 .. l •••••••••••••••••••• •• • 11 1 I) I' LAC E M ENT ~kpl(. Re fi. 114<>-38SH orma 100. co .,...,. 13 takmR appheatroos for "' t 11us 1as t1 c. f)o:-1 1 1 v c ICH .. wnr contat'\ ASSISTAN\F. ---------Dale Entry Operator mmdl•d P«Oplc to tn SCASH$ l.nJ.Cwiu llch l'ohce l>e11t liOODJOB Habysitter wanted in my Busin ess mnn Sei!ks part Mm. of 1 yrs cxpt>r. ~ 1roouc>c mcxperui1v1• 11,1 •l!~l l124DRR76-l.lfil21 OPPORTUNITIJ-;S Wt:stc hff hom e . 2·5. time a ssoctnle. Earn ~IBM J74lOC'J74213 rt•· lion.illy known prtlllU('h llOMfo. OWN Jo.HS h41rrnw FOL'N D nlark L11h Pup AMERICAN Matur" ~en ~ SSOOper mo.MS 1182 qui r ed Permn n.,n1 from our ore 1-'rl'l' park .1t1'"1w h.d1nk1 i .111·' 111 rnn 11> wcanoi: r,-tl coll.1r I A R T E N D E R S BARTEHDER CAI DRIVERS r1ume day atuJ'\. Adva1> m.: & other benl•r1h •t\Jm111m·&l'l¥wd>t1I.: :-.<l 1c.111 l'Jl1>.Vt1)la xel> Mt',a d~I Mar, C:M c"menl t o compute r pl1.•asantsurroundtnt.:'& • 1-ulw' w,.,,, I fl CIJ:.~ • 1.ikt' .1 va1.·al11111 room ~ lJ'77 SCHOOL &-er & wine m,11hts. e x-Men or Women operato r p ossiole fo r ii-faxed atmosphtr1· No • HOO")';'fllf(,. Jdtl1lron. ~"' 1m ""''I pny - _ 11<» E mh St . SA per'd , call ~II 9446 a n Muat be 2S or over nAhl mdiv. Pay will 00 ex per nee & no w lhm: •IHt.\l'I' HY Wl\lt M off 1'\"ttnl( :!nrl 11r .111y IJ >ST fo'<'~lc Uobcrmnn 834 1960 6PM. Apply In Person base<! on exl)tr. level involvt•d Xl11l oppor £111 •Ill lr l l'lll.l'h"1nf'r llUr'J>CM'":,.H"' ... ICS 11111,11 1•ar ... 1215 Would S<'hoolsCoastToCoa!\I BeauUcian/Huir Sl y hs• Y.-OwCab Apply 111 person l!AM· adv;rncement. C;lll •l'l H'.'l'f\lltt-:ltrrrn s;v "'" 11 pprt'l'lall' her return . JobfrWant&d.-7075 wanled wt rollowinJi t~ ll251Slater Avenue Sl'M Monday lhru F'ri 1133 110\IS , T1m1•ltr .. l onlal·t t\11111 !-,Jni c 'ram• to&Jt.TIOMAL Bit.HK 11•warll V1r ll:irhrir & ••••••••••••••••••••••• rent booth cabaret Coif, ..-ounta1n Valley duy, 17042 Gillette Ave. Llbranf's, Inc fo~11ual 011 171-1 >MS 11111 ~>-llJ Ol;oH l7 I 416l8-l9S4 l111m11ton, CM ~6 375!# "M1s5 All Amun<I Artist .. fun>s,!'~r_847 3422 Carel<.1kers. Cuuple, rel or Irvine por Employer M1 ~· nA va. AGENCY Rl>warrt, lo-.l small l1muJ I flo it lllcc you "''Ont 11 •autidOM s e m 1 ·r e t 1 r ed for General Office l'nml 1111• 1\/1.•b s:i:rot> •Money Problems • blk 1111~ w/wht t•ht•i.t , Ex per 1n pask up & emergency hse for water Dellnryf'H-wtpapef' PstSOHNEl CLE~K 111<1 l.n,.,.,.·d ~ OfllJ m11 Gel Ca$h Fast 'iklnny le.:i.. male. Vlr IJyuul or ncws leltl'rs, 495-<>161 t'O S45 1060 Permanent part-tlm~ Job Ousy personnel ofr , ... 1.11~ 751·3741 <.:n .'t.111 Not lmportJnl Tu.'\lln & 15th. C M I m m a g a z ' n I.' a d ~ & BEAUTY OPEaATOR CARPENTER. f'/T. any dehvenn,11 early mornin" a versatile md1v Oul11'' \ -..111.;u lllfSl"lt:ss 752-7167 he.irtbrukcn, please call br(')('hures ft7S 0653 x .. _ LA Time!\ to homes in 1nt'lut.le rorrei.µ. f1l1111o! INVES1M1'~N f' ll42l:JOJaftSpm HetpWanttd 7100 s::;~1~~~~iwB~s;a~lal7~~ ~~~~:"1~ix~osv.e ~1111l Irvine/NH areas. Must "ruup tns., workm.111' 1525 M1•i,;1 V1•rd1· Ur E All• f Ho>"-· l 11• ( ' LOST Pe r s la n c 8 1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• leaslnl(. Salon cslab'I 12 ma tennis & t.'<'I WP furn. be relia ble & have depe n comp r·~ porl". h1" v i.writt.\ tr11m 211\l & 3rll ·1 I> 1 .. 1am. cn•nm, needs m cdica , ANSWERING SERY. yn; in CdM. C,;all 1173·0968 Mus t h 3 v e ti x p ll r dablc lransporlnl1on phones, payroll t'x111•1 K11nu l;Ulll'"'' u~ W t d 5030 11110 Ncur Oakwood T L' , 'd eves w/router 646·5200 Salary $275/mo. 546 02.15 h(•lpful Hcq 'I 1y111n1 Su1tc l1Jll,\•~l.1 ~1·~.1 ,_.,,.y an• A>t" NI} ~2933 Deb elepbone opr c.Xpcr -------55+ wpm 1-;·qwr 111 l'HI l)J"'n 7d.o\' ••••••••••••••••••••••• bi~· only SJ Hr 22M Fore11l Beauty Opr1CO!lmet. he CAR WASHHE:LP OELJVEllY Man '°' car personnel work .; 11lu' 1 00/o l~st 1\v«. l.aguna Brh wanted lAJ tram In skin F/Ume. P/llme. ly AM l.J\ Times hum~ Inle rv1cw1ni.: I 11"' GIFTS-HALLMARI( SIS 000 nl'l'llctl Will P 1 5 AM -;,-Se 0 -cure HairslyhnR not 1n Over Its. /\II positions del mute. Adults only. 2 Wet.J • & Thu• •1,1111 l'r1•,t1i.:1· l"r :>11·1, .,,1.t·uri·wi2ntl'fl>un L·,··.~I enoncs 350 we nR r v ,Pr. volved642·4912642-'911 ("J '--aiions hrs.per day Mu:t1t have 330pm Appl)' N.1111111,il r u • • • Exner req 11 full & ---... '-""" ""''n ~a N I l $:10.IMIO ~r l'lu' olht·r-. to !-ouli· t ' \I f1om" Xlnl •••••••• •••• ••• ••••• ,. METRO CAR w ASH ~,., ~ r. o so 1c1 lllJ.C Syswms Corµ, ·IJl,I 1111 d1 dl411.iw from !"lime . All r.h1rt11 avail &!auty S hop Assistant or colll'cl 'g. Wti~Lm 1n St. N B IOC'Jll•Jll 1•oml cqwt)' .inda, 644 7050. needed. $l2S guaranteed 2950 Ha rbor Blvd. CM slcr . Hunt. lJch ureas 751-3741 J ohn 01Fr .1n1.·•·sro. MASSAGE - -k M 1 Ii 'd A 1 63HOl2G Gl'nerul0f£i('I' t1NITf:IJBIJSlNl':ss IW~t .64fits!'l7K FtGUREMODELS APT MGR w . ust ll' t . PPY Cashier , Cafeteria Help. ---REC.,.....IOHIST INVf';.';TM E:-IT --• • 10 person, 326 Ma rini.' 7AM-3PM /\pply betwn Del dn ii::r, Morfnnt»s, Tn1sf ESCORTS 2fl UmL~ C M Hef, rcq Ave. Ba I boa Is Io n d ft A M 8 : 4 o i\ M • c o O • ivcry ver, full t1m. I.' Work m lovd" 111•w .. 1, 1525 Me~a Vt•td1• Ur I'. -r:-r-n •tt"" 0 ,.., " .., 00 hr to ct~rt '' 11 J "'-"'.L: 5035 ti4.'>-110Jor.,...,..,.i •11~0 "'··""nor/\ve. Nwnt Bch 642..., ....,,,., ~ u ~J L·x,. ... r 1 n 11ul•1• •y•l1111 (a('fll~'I from Kuna Lni. I ••• ~ ••• ••••••••• •••• •• • • , OUTCALL Oto&l y - ---"""""" v ~ ,., ..-1 ' ' ' · l.,. (' ··r --l'HX hel1>f111 :-.i1m1• t1o11 ~·"'" '"'· •1 .. 111 .•t'"" 631·1811 ASSEMllERS IUUTYO,UATOR CL-IC"'L UBI ) 7 ·1 ""' A Demonstra tors part-ltm" tn,11 r cq'd APIJI)' N.i ' l pc·n uJ)'' LOANS 93 N1.•0 1l··d for un1nu1• •. L·111·m .. 11~1rc uller So r f'd ~. I s (' • ~ " "' ,. ~ u me o c t'xpcr. pre 2 & 3 d1.1ys ,..Olxl, .ip t1onA • y'lt1•m' 11r11 • fo'ort>rgn CJ r Hi•µ.ior llu,1 m1·dl<'J I prod ut•l Lile Stylist Must have some Neat handwntlng, type p 11 an cc11 . j c w l' Irv . 431;1 fllrC'h st N 11 II~!\ for .,al1• Will M'll Alw 2nd TD loOfts Hynno1·~Therapv l'lcun work. ~mull grow follow1nl(. Bu~y !lalo n. 40+ wpm. Interesting coupans ts.1011134 or col _.... ~ --...--...- purts A-i·quip Ch•·upfor Fa1n.~.1Tcrmi;,anrt•l'l4ll r.· 1 , mA 1·0. k ett'!> no l!Xper. fllchardOu<.'lll'lteSalon, pai.rtlon , good worklnl( lc<1.IZIJ>2tl0 7000 ~. ~, MewportCetthr tflllck~nh•54l<l3$4 Scrttt.rMtCJ.CO. Wt•il(k h l. 11>,t•iirl'~!-.IOll ,I hul good dc·xH•r1ly lo 200 Newport <.:tr l>r, ronds&ro.beneCilS.l\p· -___ (rcnlOfc/RN.1•pl 111S1.i0 l'RIMEO"''"''ICF.~P/\('E -642,.2171 545-0611 :-.mo mi:. ,lln, .c"ua hund lc s m a ll parls NwptBch. p ly Nationnl Syste m s DENTAl, fo:xp er'd ~1·1•ountin11tlk to$1i!'!I Sell fdle items D • Auto R-ir Shop 1•r11bll'lfl'I, (•11· lkht Ed Mil 190S. Corp., 4361 Birch Sl. N D. Orthodontic Asst. wunl !-it.'<'~flunt':o1 111 $112 .. es1nn Pla1a -r-SAVE$$ lnj(l'r II H ~>4!1 264.i'l IKKPR/ASSIST cd Toµ llnY for rl'•hl I h.'U!'IC l'all for 1.1111>l A I bl.7.1" d I.ease l t1ol ~ l'<t ul f> A.-....ocinte Rep Mature. Con!llruct1on of CLERK BOOKSTORE " Ir n I' rs11nnC'I 'lo!l'n('y vo1a c mme h•lt:'IY ""rts C'.apl'trun1>flc•ut•h PnvJlt:purty w1ll huy •~l'IHJ'l'UAl.IU·:A 1>fo:n 180ROV"'n person C M 546-5170 \'I,. t•. 49SSq 1-'t S300 ..... 2ndTD C..123573 ""' Cice. Newport Heh Ex· M ust b~ uclting & ------41111t;l7thl'oo.t11l'tfr~n Call673·314R Ideal one m.in opt•ration your t\illy l.i1.·i•n!-.l'CI HO EXPat. NEC. pr'd only 17141540-~ dynamu: lo work Thurs & De nt a I /\"Is l , ch r Stl. SU1l('22-1 IH2 I \71> ~~~~~~~~--1 493-91711.irt 7PM -I t& "'-""'L IHl55 1-:1 Camion k l'HI f'rl 67S-11595 I p/lim". x r oys . "'.v1« ..-------~~ ..... ,...._ .... _ ---• """" OOflS SJ1n Clem1·nte t'11r 111.11Jt IOAT MFG CO So '" • " " -··-l-....·-............ ... u I I y to: II u I p • d lrvlO(' Pac1 f1r F1na11l'1UI •l{r.! 0034 l!I:! 7l00 If you're new to ()t&ngc __!!'e SalS, 118. 846-3!!4~ ft.IRL FRIDA y -"""uo 4450 Re!ltauranl, fnr lease . __ Company. 64011292 ---Co., tc>msiorarily dtscon Seeking line leode r boal "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• (~ta Mesa !iS7·~ OVERWF.IGllT ? 1m111n1< your l'ducotion, assembly. All phases of CLERK Dental Al!!'ll!'lt·Recept. t:it Challl'n1:1n1ot JlOll rl Iii ----E/\RNlO«{onlO<'alTD'"I <:usmrnll.'t.'<I 1112:> lt)R, JU rl•Ce nlly d1 ach a q ced boat nsaumbly. B l per. P/T lme & P /llml' w1ra~1 ..:1owi111oit•omp11r NEWPORTRCllSTORE Heal 1-;stn ll' or ri ce BILLllAIH>f.S'l'V days l.osc: urcumulatt.><I from the service or for bngual helpful, but not TYPIST ~I Toro. l.aR Hills area vunt>d duties. 1n('lud11 • 2630 /\von Sl $270 Mo Compll't~ly furnished, Realtor 67S ~ Cal & 1n c he~. rap 1d nny reason seek1ni;i tcm mandatory. Salsry open 830-1130 hlt> bookc>ecpmg & l> ~ Jerry Wynn 1213)477-7701 good location llntl( Brh ------ti11hll.'mnu or ~km, 111 parary or career em nlc>y CLIPPER MARINE Order Control Dept ~nt l n1 ~ •t 1 I nit S.tlary b~i1td llfl " 2nd T 1> bUy t:'r has ... ,. CORPORATION ....., a vrl' rramec . ., us ub'llly".,... ll39f"ruppl I COMMERCIAL STORE Por salt' or I rove for ue1111ed l'ncrRy Saft>. mcnl, consider this uni Sales & Mnrketlng ex h:.ive some exper as den • ~ '' • LAGUNA REA<'ll eqU1ty 7SI 44211 . $100.000 lo IO\l'St p P. nU1nllous No drugs S:W QUQoppur You can \'nrn 1919 E. 0c<'1c1ental Sl per helpful '" Sales or tal a.ss111t Ellt abbshl"d &fGirl ,.'r1day. pcrmancr~, /\ ----968-6842 IT73 OTT() Sant& Ana. Ctt der Pn><:etSLn" " IDVOIC· II I led of s I r II ,. I pprox 80(> 3q fl + G'anJl.'nini;ltouu• .,.,,, Sl96 _..W.,_ Ina. Cuatom;r contact we oca c a ury u time. ~on!l u ti n larie storage lof\ llss 2 Truck&~wp.rorsole PVT P'fY. Dc•s1res T D 1 EvCll (;olhn!! nnd l>ovid r""' ~ ,. ®en. Non smoker. S<·nd firm need~ Sr lev I -nn"""mg rtl(lm•. One 4,.."""" loan on r1•!11denrc 1n r ~ q 'd PI~••• n t resume lo Ad f7~. D11Hy ""l"SOO to handle tolul o ~v ""' 0 ...,.."""" K Collrn11, will not be lit T •o .-has fire ploc('. l\mple Nwpt Bch 642 1690cves T't't'pnnsll)le for any debh Based on your prod~ IOYS AMD GIRLS persona Y ype v Pilot, ~x 1560, (;01110 rc~ponslb1llt1c11 Xlllt parking. Lease at $.'WlO Wa nl lo buy F i rt1 & ,.,:::;:._--:;;:.,_._1 10 I' u rrc d by E vcs • 8 t 1 v It y . Co m m + for Daily Pilot routea In ~.~1·1 ,,. • . t Ml'f!O, · 92626 typ1n1t & phone h11mll mooth. All uUI. paid by Casualty Inaurancl' ~-:;-/""' lncenUVC"tl & extra profit "'° r or"ppOtn meat in1t. Li"ht AIR & 1\1{' landJord Aitency LarRt' or a mall r.....--s Doi:bou~e or Dales Do~ 11hanng bonut1 On lht:' Joh Arch lie a ch area of lrtrl1.11\l'lal Relallona DENT AL/ A.1l1t wurk SubmJt r~ume ~ MISSION 494.0731 Will~ In L&l(unu N11otu\'I Lott & FoWtd llouse, 2172 S. E Bn!llol. traanmg. T remendous Lal(una &inch. Mutt be El NIC/ 2 Pos It Ion ' ope• n lt>1tc r 11f qu11llrtrn11on.~ -Dec 20th H inlcreslcd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Santa Ana, on or after pot enlia 1 t o reach at leat1t lO yeara old J 0 Chel,..ide & Ch11r11de Rox •773, Daily P.lot, P MARJNEORIENTED wntr J Claude Whlllle.•••HlwteetMfth 5100 thisdateOec 2·11n8 supervisory & mnnegc Phone 6424321• asll for w /huur•n<'e expr . Ex 8ox l560,C.M 928~'6 _L Speceavl ~11q n S27S 24262 Lil H e rmosa ••••••••••••••••••••••• ment PC>!lillc>n3. Must be CirculeUon. ALTAIR pcne n ce necessary - mo. Lo( 000 W coast Lugun:1N11tuel,926TI Hcrbun L. Car lton M D IF YOU pet'80Nlble & a mbltlout LAGUHA llACH Busy vrl'ctlce . Sborl I GIRL 0FflCEit1 Hwy. 10 Newport M11nnr Announces the o~nm,I! h11vr a !K'rvlce to offer or Por a ppointment only You don'1 need 1 trun to ,714, 494 9401 work wee.le. Bener1t1. GoodODrr:rt.. Ctr Call f<nn Witzel Applrucc Repa ir by o<tuao(rforthe prQctlCi.I aoochlll!1cll,rl•cean 11d call "draw rlllt" wh•n you • Huntlngt.onlJch.R47·6076 TURI-IL"-I 714-M~ 1111 ownr. W.ISO. mo gn>!ls of FBmlly Ml'l'flcinl' In llho D a \y Pi Io t place an ad In the Deily Equal Oppor Employer rr·"';J • ....., $33,500 FP. Cull pr1re 1782ll lich 81 vd Ste136 Cluslfled Section . Slf·lllJ PilotWantAdatCallnowl~~~~~~~~~lnave tomelhing to sell? fuUTime _J 64Z.5618 ~19ll. It B Mll-03M Phone 842·5678. 842·5678. Want ad rt1u.IU -·-·-C1ualned ad.a do It well 64S..Z444 ) I H~'p\.'~r.ttd 71001'1•1p Wut.ct 71CiOHelpWo.hd 7I001H.tpWOftfed 71 0C Hd pWon1.cf 7100 Aff"CllKu 1010 ·•·••······••········•· ......•.•••..........•. ···•···••·•······•••··· ·•••·•················· ······················· .••..........••.•••••.• Tueedey. December 7 1976 OAol ¥ f'ILOI BJ J GUARDS CottoMno l'ermanftlt f\111 & Part ume Phone &. lran!tlp n• q'd Retired wl'1com1• Call~ 0274, ofr hrt. ao l CIOl'M.!d Wednt'~ .. > Ha trdr"''""r & Marucunst Busy ~.1lon Xlnl loc <.:all 548 417!.I LA-11ul Trainee Brlaht, NURSlS AtDIS 1--------•IV 1 S IT r RAN CI::. O t; .t:ltt Dr)'er Hotpo\nl t:w.nllw+ 805( ' OS xlnt lyµln.i iskilh1 for II.JI Shlru l!;xper . pro.'f'd RETAIL ENGLAND. lt:ily Sp11ln Gu D er .ti 'Kenmore ••••••••••••••••••••••• (i,~ Salt • 80SSGc:rGCJ1t Sal• 8 5 earl't'r opport on MAC 11 WllJ lraln if nee "2 2410 on Wt'Ckcnd po~ea when ry •••••• • •• •• • •• • •• ••• •• • • • • • • •• • •• • • • • • • • • •• • • • t "" t*'r in Nn~rv•rt •h A h W a I h c r S 1 S e a * *I BUY* * .------~ ~ Ah y"'wn, ,_,... you )0111, e rmy wit Cuar/del W-8612 ~.-.rw~ ---~ lk-arh. t-11lnll' plannlng. N\JKSlNG ASST MANAGEI 11u11ranteed a11s1ttnmc-nl -Good U!lt"d 1-'urnllu.r<• & '">rporau~ law pral'llce AIDIS&OIU>EaUES &o t.:uro~ HS dlplom1t Refrla. Coppertone Apphunce!I OK I will MA<; ti exJ)l.'r prdt.'rr~. AJI shins Call or apply °'"MG•TRHE Ptt.'ff'rrc-d Up to WOO Froalfree Cd C()nd &f'llorSF.Ll.for You but will tr.i1n <..all bctwn9am spm Po111lionJ w national Jr C115h bonui. µ111d to Sl25tbslolr 97'46911\M MASTE:R$AUCTIOM i 1111833 !l'J8.'I Udo Conv Cenlt!r Sporu~ear r h11111 5l0f<'b quaUflt!d enh!ltc-c•i. C.11 7St 1139 F.vs 646-1686 & 83).9625 L1•1uo1 Stort Clerk 1'' Unit' t'l(pr'd, matu"° ~Supenor Avt· Salary cunlmt'111urat1o your Army f<crru1tt'r -------- - "lwl)l Ekh l>lli 771>1 w1exper Xlnt ~nd1t!> El Toro 71)tj ~I GE Ref!1l· Freezer, l! SAVE' New & ui.ed furn. HAIROKF.SSErt hond.illll• Apply Ill UCc clearun~. port lime 4:1-15()77 pcr:.on ~ W. 1~ Sl. l!:\Cll N~wport t'1i...t11 Oppurtun1ty for ndvanct· t:osui Mesa ~o 1026 cu t'l Good cond Auto appl'~. miisc w 1 bon ·~ ment Apply in pcr11on. __ 1S2S_ Mei.a Vt•rtlt• E defrQSl s::z:25 tl28 u.·raain Nook. Now 2 J•ETlt l t-: s. 117 °'" GARAG ~ & ESTATE SALE Lovely Chn:.tmas J!1fl~ ror yuur df or your loved ones One of d kmtl 1t •tn:. l.ike new 270 nn(•, 11 > 30 ;)() nflt'. 22 r1ne w /scope. 8mm MJu:.err Anl1qut· combat rtrlc· w /o,IH.•lh. old ~old watches, ht amethyst nni:. old c-;rnwo rmg & earrings. pon·cla111 11ct·kl.1c·es. bracelets. genuine turqum:.t• t•arrll\J.:'< rin~s & l ar,~e pendant < rar<» (old pawn>. 3 pieces rart• Clo1sonn(•, I Chinese ru~ 9x 12. nl'w Wttlh~1n· st<'rl ing silver. over 50 p1e<'t?s. prtt'l'<I bt•ll)w mkt. 2 children's btkP~. :mtJquL·:.. H drawer walnut dressC"r . olcl sewtni.: machine. o ld mctl1rlnt" t·ab1nf!ts w /mir rors. hand dt·<.·or;.H<:d por<·Pl:un plates. steins. Courier & l vl.'s wrntcr scenes in CopenhaJ.!<m Blul' & cold trim. l NI set s, Ship d11C·k~. Huval Ooulton china. Overhead htc.;;, :.pot lites, night lites. much more. 4127 C Hilaria Way, N B. <near lloa~ llosp & Westminster Mull. W a n ted liousew1ve l!. Will buy e refn&. ap ~es -~s & IU4 W Westmm.stt'r p.ume dell~ery for den plrnn~. working or nol. l:Jlh. C M 642 7930 & Lagun11 Bcut·h CM M~11 areas E"pcr adult -----only SJ .OU hr + Ha.·r Styli.st LNDSP /DnlCJl'er 12131m-0rn l''ull ltmt' SGOO lo ----- lmmed1at•· Opt.'111111(. ap11 $SOO/m() C:.ill Marl(1t! for 0 1-'F'lCE HF.l,P, pn~lt1on ly In J>C11i0n Mter 1-'afur ••PJ.lt. 646 1'\'\I. Drufl1n,R avail In Newport Beh llegL, lla1r Stylml(, :1:1:1:1 rnu•kl(mund & knowlt•di.:1• firm. lllVOl\1111.1( II varwty Sc> Brls col. Sn l."•JU"l of plant m<1terrnl ner or work ul"l1vltlt!11 Muth Plaza M:.ill. CM ~10 llllHll l·---------1 blicki(round a Ion..: w 1111 ---------11allab 646S068. UIM111rrupmetal676~ ~326!. WEUUY W e a t h c r s t r 1 p lkydn 8020 THE COHNECT10H Honest, dcpe11d11bll• llvt• 111 to aide 111 yr old Quad r 111I1• i.:i c• & d 11 domestic work l.1rt 1ni:" req'd ASl\1' rell.'aw from ho,pltal ll\'t' l:lth Work'g h~. M2 ·llSI Ml 6pm . 837 3'112 Hohl Desi& Clfflc Must tw 1·.t1~r·11 NCR 000 Wkncl-. & ev1·~ Please call for mh·n1\·w. 645-5000, 1•xt S20 Housekt.'Cpcr. <.'h11tk .. re hvl' 1n w1•ckn11, 11ff Spant!>h 01'. rm. ·1 V 751 1:147 HousttH,,.r /Cook ~ull C'hur1:1" Mon .. r1 12 JOO In K JO 1-"of prof cple. rrullure t;ni.: s1~·uk mi.: w lrall!\JI ~l.irllllll salury. SllMI wk rtof rl'IJ f..i5·00'.l3 li-W !Y~ M r, 1\1 len How.ekeCP\•r,, 1iun l1mt• THE BALBOA INN. 111:. Main St ll75·H7 IO II 0 U S E K E E I' I.:: H P 'Time 3 udult' Vw Newporl/Sanl;i 1,ah1·I CM 646-83().1 HOUSEICEEPER 5 Oay:. per wk 3 llrs Pl'r duy Own lran:.11 Lulu bland 7Si:! M31 ----ln:;ur;i111·1· HOT PRODUCT I.tr 1n:.u r a n1•1· ·• lll'n I ll·omm only I l'lt•a!>l' l Jlt :>l!J 1767 lntenor hvc pl .. nl m .11nl ll'ch Musi hJ\C N.twr & )I.Int dnv1ng rernrcl ... oil timt' (;1111 Marl(<Jr"I 7RIHXW1 MAIDS Wanted , Harbor Inn MOt\•I, 11100 w Balbo11 Ulvd , N B 675 3463 MAINTENANCE Part t1ml'. over lll yr flld Hd:.. r\pts Lagu11.1 11111-. 51!1 6151ur51!1 6130 --- Maintenanu Point~r i1tt:11dy work Nwpl Bch Phtm1• 1;.w Of.CJ(l MANICURIST F um .. \lu't h,l\e i.orn~ fo llow1ni.: l<1C'h.ird Ouettclle Satnn. 201 '''"'1'1>rt Ctr Or. I-. II_ MASSEUSE 111! 2111 lur lcj!lllmak rull t 1 m1· pu, 1t11111 1 n \1ui.sui.:t• No l'XIJ net ~1· tr.i111 L'Jll i52 !Jani 1.!lhr' 1 211.! ll.1 rh11r. l M :rn:IO W l'..11·1111 r ·uu:.t flwy N ll MA nm..: l'J-:nsoN to s11 with eldl!rly itentlcman /\ pprox Noon to 7 I'M 'l'uct> thru Sul llri. ma~ vury 61 t 21179 ~kchunu· to work un -.m truc·k., iJJll time lJrnfl!\m,111 i 1Jrl lune. :HI\ moo .\IE~. perm 11111nt• lor I.A Tirnf'!> h111n1• dl'lr\'l'n in N .. w11or1 <: Mc·~a Mui.t huvt• derwnl1ablc tor & ~ rdlJblt· $215 It ~mo ~ut 1741J k<'Y exjM!r l~ deslrahle RH l ·l I Chariw Nuri.r p/llme- Journeyman o r Tram~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• FURNITUllt;TllAT IS t-'ull or Union shop Call Cor USt-;U, lt l':BUILT & lhdt•llhctl~ from S1SO <!ppt. 171417Sl·5S42 Gu11rantt'OO All tyJX!!I , Wood l(Umc •wb from LVH 3-11 Med11•11 t1ons Full nr p /t1 mc Mesa Verde Qlflv 1 losµ, 661 Center St, C M S41!-~ -------parts. rt>J)ulrs. Trade ms S3t!.S. und mlK'h more WOMr\N /Mutorc for 8t'ct'pled6312101 "rhe Little Warehouse vaned work in attrurl1ve ----that under 11t1ll!I the Sundw11:h Shop Aft~ •NEW·USED BIKES• ;storl'b that won·1 be un llflOn/ ~V(.'S SJ6..2'M8 Ruy· Sell Trade dt•r :>Old .. -----Purts & ltepairs 7~1 lleil, Umt L llll Will t nun for c·omputl'.'r on,·nlL'<.I procedures Co p,ud benefits Sal11 ry 1>1>l'll Call 7141646-5006 ~niw Ball. Inc. ~al1•s; F.xh1b11 Spul'l' ---------Sale11 R<'p's for MaJnr WOMl\N over 6S w 1·ar to Sllateboarcb Sal & Sun 12 ~ !>hr C:dM home w1.samt• Cycle&Co.~Newpor1 842 1244 llmt board & nominal Blvd. C M ~·7910 -----Of't"ICE lmmed opcntnK Consumer Hort1cullural in A c c 0 u n t 1 n i.: r 0 r & Handy Craflt, Show General Clerk. A variety LA Area 1977 Xlnt i.ho~ of duties tnrludmg hllng. & coop Nood i..1111.'!t n:p s typing & sw1tchbrd re l. i\ & 0 r tinge <.: o hcf Apply m person, 714·!134 9009 s11l to right person . ----7 ' brand new couch Night or day ph. 673-472S Mens 10.speed bike 27' Custom Jtus L bm Ask copper rolor. looks new. ing S750/bst or r 840 3327 Women needed for house J a p a n e s e m a d e -- -~leaning service. cull l..ut'ky 1 SIU 4336 If Gold Rnd revl'rs1ble Park Lido Med. Center.) 646-7638 Anabolic Corp. 17802 ~l('S lady W/lllllt or <'Xpcr Gillette 1\\c. l n1ne immcd l'art lime, n() 546-3901 high :.chool stud~nts R~~~~7Mop loy'1S~~ke ~~ ~ ~w ~ f';~I ~~ ....._ .. _~s.. S2S Cal ~ 235f Antq cbe~t.s S40 to $60, ui • ..-___ 8080 MiKfllGM<Mas 808 0 ~-"' G I' ... Antq sew g mach. $1 ~ ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •r s.-:Jolangray Btke & many otht-r alems ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,...... 8005 $35 Exrellentcond M92488 WANTED Form11·.1 r11•1111• T.11111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call~·2356 w l11:nd1t' I\ 12 If\\ OPERATIONSMGR. Cat1 49'1·2!>IO __ Tl.'mprcso; M 1t·roelec tromcs. Garden t:rove Plunt, 1s l0t1kmg for .in operauons 1TU1na.l!et who ~•II be resp for all manur operation!> m duding production con trol, purchastnll & ;,to r e' Produl·t manufal'tun•d 1s !>l•m1 cond U(' lor prod U<' ll 11n eqwp for wet wafer 1>ro l'l.'SSing Nu mb~r or employees less than 100 Qualif1c·at1ons req'cl Several frs of s1gn1f1cant expcr. m !>lm1lur t ype or PoStllon. Send resume lo TcmprE:l>S M1 r rot•ler lftlnll"S, 12812 Knoll Sl. Uarden Grove. C111lf !12641. Atlcntwn Huy Tiwmpson EU E SALES PART-TIME FRI.SAT & SUH. AFTBlHOONS Cats 8035 F'or Sale Captain Nemc TOP CASH UOl.Li\R UUl\ \<l•lk 11< rll'h II'~ I Won,.j-rtand Water bed, Like n;:w p A I 0 ... 0 R y () l • n ~ '" 11111 .. , ...... I 11.·1L !It''" ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 960-1193 JEWELRY. WATC'llf-:S y I ·' " Of Antiquesl Himalayan Kittens. most ART OBJl::CTS. GOl.l> " '" t.4~ •• 101h''"•1>m Our iJl1>gnim I!> rtell.ihl~ • colors. CFA Rel(. Adult U Ill IQ U E w 1 ck er cl e S 11. VER SE I< V H' f. '".· ·h'"lllll tl1k•·, ll'"t.il r.1, you can work port lime II U G E w a r ehouse fem S75 & up 7684776 l h d ..__. ; -~ -' • " ~ nc.ir home m .i maJor crammed with over 500 cora orrouc / ay""" F'INE FURN & AN 5,µ11. \1111 1·1111d s,. depl ~ton• & still pursul' mubtl' boxes. n1ckelo Siamese Kilt.ens for sale ft by JO.., fl 4 poster de-TIQUES 645-2200 1;1r1' n1·1·1h. r.-11a1r SIU Q u ls 1 de "r I 1v1t1 v :i deon pianos. circus or· purebred Blue Po int sign w ith full Wt<'ker -<.:.ir~nt1·r., N 111umtwr•. ~monstrat<' a n.•\nlu l(ans . wall rlocks , 492~nft6PM canopy Grecnandwhlle LUGGAGETAGS lilt1~ll1Mil-. !\kllM>l.ll''"' l1onur:> cook1ni.:utl•n..,1l lrl l(ran<lfather docks . cotton pnnt <'ushion ~ fromyourbu&11H16sc11rd 7 & •1 °S!ll Sk1!> St!> M1111 a store near you $4 ~ fascmatmg antiques Dogs 104Cl 111 polturelhane Use OD· send one card for each l11kt• fr.11111• l>:~u Mhllo per hr + honu;. I n UverSl.000.000 Worth ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly a!I. lsplay piece Must tag plus one 11pu~ We ov11l, lrv1n1• ~5\f 5471 tcrvlewmg W(.'(i, l>l'c. II American International Irish Setter Pupi. /\KC see Cost S350 ·m ust sell return permane.ntly Call <2131 477·85011 l)r Gallcnes. lll02-T Kelter $50 & up M&f>' Cham1 S200/ofr. 640·28llG even· sealed oltr11ct1vc lag & Orn•nt.11 I lll! 1 '\l~h.111 17141673·5348aft6PM 1ng S t . I rvine. Tel hnes. 496·7819 eves 4 lngsandwookends. strap, meeltnJo! airline Bnkh111.11 K'lll llurttun•h ----7:>4-ln7 Open Wed thru wknd.s. CONFISCATED-A stock I D. reqwrements Pre t11m•' ~7'~1 '"''~ 11;111 SECRET ARIES Sat 9 AM lo 4 PM Vlstl' of i.o<as & loveseats & vent loss & theft! t'or .i Legal· Many to $900 POODLES-A.PEOPLE s leepers & i:amc.' ~elo; All personal.lied taR enclose Ml.c:.tlGMOUs Bookkeeper toS1100V I CTROLA · 1918 All clrst714>~·28411 Below Wholesale Must wallpaper, rabnr or Want~ 8081 Employers Puy All 1''ces Bruni.wick two needle Sell 842 1244 "l)ay Glo" paper &. w1• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Liz Remdel'b Agency noor model. llas storage Afghan r\KC 1 mo sho" THE CONNECTION will back & trim )our 4()20BirchSt.Stel04 space for records Ai.k quahty,$l50orbest orre1 7~1 UnllL. tags. Or try twu lJrrb Newport Beach 8331S190 in ~ S200 00 Phone 548·0218 lll'1IAve H B ba.cktoback ORIENT AL RUGS <.:all for Appl1Es1ab '65 GJ1 .J149 PRICl::s Telephone survey. uur Doberman Pinscher Pup SUPEK BUY' 11· Couch. S2eaor3/$5 ofhce CdM 10·3. ideal for SECRETARY /Girl t'n Anl.Jque table w leaf & 4 pies AKC registered I ROod <'ond Only $60 4/5tags Sl 60t·a PART TIME WA'IT l'1·r,11111 ~ ('h11ww .1ho T;1pt·~try I'\ 1 Ph" "nlv tao ;011 day Import U1stn b utor chairs. Sl2.S GDOd <'ond Weeks old. Black & ru~l k mother of o;c;hool age n<>,,.. 9 Coll St50 ea11 ... 3 7.,,1 Rlac Naug recliner, Ii 9tags S1 50t•.r ~Fli. lll'l'th In.uni'<'' & rh1ld C:.ill Jfl llam Slan S6SOmo 537-8621 ...._...i een '"' "" llkt.-new. hardly ustod. lOormoreSl '\Ol'J l'Xl)l'r wurkl'I for Wood 67S-83RO SECRET A It y . p l I mt Applianctt 80 I 0 S'7S Maple swivel rocke r Sales Tax lnC'l11'11•ll $$1 l\Sll H>H li•J111I uwd furn rdn~· frll' °'"lll\t'\ ·~11; U76K Sh ( • 11 "-H 7"' -8 ~"am to l pm S k 111• ••••••••••••••••• •• •• •• Free to YCMll 8045 S4.s Call 64>16611 NO Ci\RI>'' S11t• I' 2 11 l' ht11 k1•\ ,k.\11'' • "" " ...,., "'"';i _ PART·TIME S·9PM Xlnl "" "' needed Start $.150 per REFRIGERATORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• H' Sol & d In Uraw your own 01 St'nd in i.:11od 1·11111111 11111 •11111 rl MJ,lml Tml'. perm t-::irn Pay to $4 hr. 67~·71116 hr 21.40 SJC 493 2571 WA.SHEHS-DRYE KS FREE to Good Home rond~llon •rung set, ~ l name. addn.•ss. phone & 1sonahl> 11r11 •·ti l'hor1L $175 $:?00 wk F'u lier Day 831·3656 eves ---Ret-ondll1oni. Repros & Beautiful part German Ssl 1741 we'll make one ram per 6:11 Jt 1•1 Hru.,hS.t11·-..~ 7851 1·---------1 SECRETARY/Re~ f'rgt Damage Guar!Dcl Shepherd male puppy t.1g i\dd2:'/'each -J .C ............. EY CO Const ruct ion of 1cl' 29 Yrs in Orange Co i\pprox 6 weeks. 54IS IS99C S Pr Walnut bdrm set. Send chel·k or money or WJntl-<I 111 lou\ ,,,.,11 .. • ----------1Mothl.'r-. llt•lµt•r , ltlt ......... " d t Urt>,dl'fl I<•"" l l11n.1 11't.•kpn•• own lrans 24~ionldand Nwpl Bch Expr'd only DU ... LAP'S orS3l·2164 king hdbrd , twn mat-erPlo 673 3'JJH Mr ... 11 ,,11h J .C . PENNEY CO 24 Foshioft litand Newport lleoch ,.. neeci apply (7141 " trt>Sses. hke new SJSO LOTPRIMTIHG mu~l "IJCUk F.ni:ll'h H•wporl ~ach un UU\<C 181S Newp()rt 81. CM ... Springer & ... , Alu1 23" HCA console TV. an p 0 I.lox 1560 ~SO hr l\~µl tkh area .,..,.~ '"i\LL••0 7780 \ l I Sh -----" .....,. _ / usoodra ho1an 646ep vYlup111e1 l1que whl. 23" + ~le....,, Costa Mesa, Ca . 9262.fl .... _,.cal MO IZIO II () F l 115 ·~v ....,. I lu~ An Opcnm~ For w1 t.H•111n1o: ur Serv1rt• Station Allen National electric home o~ ~ . -AMrFM re<'ord player. -,-' ' , lnttrumlfrth 8083 danl. l'Xper'd Uuy &. food sll<.'er. lhickness Beaul.Jful She~hcrd p111>Pl S2SO ~2 ~ Aerofe~~~r3.ftnc~~h~l1d.s111d • .. ~uut'I! •.••••••••••••••••••••• COFFEE SHOP COOK Approx 30 I lr11 pc;r Wk Xlnl w11rk111i.: t•oruls Outstllru1mi.: lkncht~ Apply In l'l'r'lon Mon thru Sal. 1Uam 4r>m t:qual Oppor l'.:mpluycr Kt-:Vl'UNCll DA.TAEHTRY Of'E:RATOR ~ Jolly ltol(l'r 1111 ,., tukm.: ;ipphtat111n ... fur ,1 I> ala Entry Ov..r J tur Min ur I YI"!> l'Xper ''"the Ill \t Ji II nr :r.12 " ri- •1111 re cJ l'c-rm .. 111•11l r lime duy ~h1Ct \11\ an NEED CHRISTMAS $$'s? Tl-~~POJIAS OPJo::'ll:'J(;S FOH keypunch Operators Dictapflotte S.cy's PIX Operator-. S.CretariH w /sh Typists Accoetinq Ci.rlu '"Ev1-:rt A n :F: l..OC'UI i\re.i:. Tl:':MPO Tc mJ>l)rary Help 17MSky Park Irvine Cati 540.4455 l~1u..il Oppor Employer cement In < ()m1>uter N\..RSE SEAMSTRESS hperi~nced Approx 30 llrs per wk Xlnt working cond;. Outstanding Benefits Apply in J)l.'rson Mon Lhru Sat. 10am-4pm Equal Qpp()r Employer PEOPLE PERSON Exe« needs p;llme as 50(' IO whslt• iiUJ)pfy f\11 ly cap1lah.ced t.73·2223 _ PHONE SALES 'lPt!rator po.,...ihle fur RM or LYN nl(hl md1" t•u)' will ""' t'har~e Nu,.,t' l 11 'Cini hued on u~r lt•H•I l><IY Xlnt l.tt-111.'f1b Aflfll)' tn llt'r'l11n HAM Park l.1do ~·vnv Center Phone Sales peoplt>. male or female. 16 lo 6S yean of lll(c Guaranteed w.age-o; or rom m lllSmns ZSU East 17th Street Suite 0 . Cost.1 Mesa, bl!lW~'fl S Oil & IS 30 I> m ~4223 Equ:tl Oµpnrtuml)' Employer Sl'\1 Mondu> lhru 1' r1 Nt-wport Reh 642-1!~)'4 1J.1y 171>12 (;11ldt1· ,., -- Irv me LEGAL ADVERTISING CLERK NURSES AIDE S35 1•n,.,1t1· Duh I ""' Ft•t•\ $32 I i1•n,.r.ol 1l1 "I' !'ll:.ilf Hd1t f "" fo t•1.·,. I 1 !>louh1• \11-.Jir.11 !'M·r \ II \'' ~.11111 r11t.ll IM.:". U • l',11 I. l 1U.1 \tt'!l llld~t I ,\uv" I r•rn1 ll11..t1< llo'p 642·9955 CM' 540.9954 . l'M1l111n now .. ~.1ilahlt lor IJ_.I'\ l 1 ml' .t'111,t .111\ lo ~l!UI Advt'f'lllllllJ.: llln·1· tor :!!I hour~ 1w·r V.l'l'k mm1m1Jm "•-•II 111 '.. tl(J l'M """ 1-'rt 1.1·nrrJI 111 h11• h11• i....:111u11d .ind ll14hl l)IHllJ.: 'lk llb J"> 40 wpm 1 ""1u1r1•1I 11•m ph.111~ on .11 1 ur.11 ~ 'T>rr11n11 11 '1 1111 111\I S\'11•<'tri1· .. 111 111· .ill ,_ _________ _ min1~tl'rt.'<J .,, .• 11 ,,,.,,1, r11nt ... \ul11mut1ill' nc:'\'t">'d!') (111 11< l'.1'11111,;I f()('UI 1ln' mi.: 1':,t1•llrn1 n1mp11n~ 11 .. n,.fll~ \pph al rront dhk DAILY PILOT 330 W. lay St., CcntoMffo 642-4321 t;quul Opportunlf y Employer ---- St~Ll. it.Ill' 1l<'mll w1lh !I Umly f•1lol Cla11S1f1r>d Atl. 642 5678. NURSES AIDES ... , ll"'' µr1 · r 11 11.1 ~ \ w .... """' "'"'' .•o!.S l'bunn ,,, I "' MJ 3SO.~ USI THI DAILY PILOT "FAST llSULT" SllVICI DIRECTORY For Result Service Call PLUMIER, REPAIR ~"ume !i Year' mm ex µer ~·all SJ6 '!:'>2 __ _ PaOOUCT MGR. 'f'('mprc,., M lt'r Cit' It•(' lrt1n11·s, G11rl1!'n c; ruv1• pl,•nl l<J looking for u pro 1Jul'l muna.ier 10 prn nH>lt; & l'slab 11rndu11 hn1· of Tcfhin '.II"'" & 11111n"" Dulle11 "111 in t' I u d l' e s l a b I 1 i. h 1 n i: n•spresent11t1 v1• i.,1 ll'' fon-c-. expand1n11 prooui t l}OM' & 11~n I !>Ult•' pm rnollon ol the pmdurt~ Xlnl upl)Or ~IJ drv1s11m '" a well e-slah'I NVst-; m tNalincat101l& Hcti d U.i r ki(round m e111<1rwt·r Ill~ & mktng or mdWllnal µr<MIUCL'l Send rc!>umc Lo Tcmpr~s M1croelec lronlcs. l28l2 Knott St, Garden Grove, Ca 92641 Att(>nt1on R ay Thompson. E.O.E Pit Sales, $4().$70 wk up Mt'n. la dies. i.ludcntt1 t.:vu/Sat. 5S1$·7115 1, 83!}.7fl>6. RECEPTIONIST 642-5678 ht.JU Attractive. over IA, for HEALTH SPI\. We will 64N6:!.! ________ .. train right person for ' ........_ W...W 7IOOu....t... Waaf.cf 7100 easy f\ln Job. Mr Ginr ·~ •-..... russo, <.24hrs > 752·9561 .............................................. 1-----------t ,-----------------RECEPT I ON I ST (or mcdlcol ok Temp ror 2 •• Nurses e STAFF PosmoN AACN -RegllhndH_... -loc ...... '1D..- -2 ,,... ..... CrfHc.al c ... &,.n..,. Excellent professional career op- portun.lty. Irvine location. Send ro-sume to: A~-Auodallo. of Crltfclll-Ccn Mines 11tJ Mwtt.. Wt. JOO,...,...., CA t:.JM m o3, P 088 P I T lheN'arter. Exper pre f,.. d 640-2023. RECl!PTIONIST For Bea uty Salon. At tractive, personable Ca 11645-0311 RecoepUonlst. full/part time. NewpQrt Y acht Broker.s. Inte r viewing Wed, Dec 8. 8am ·l08m. & 3pm-5pm . Thurs, De<' 9. 8-12. 673-3511. Retail sales In Minion Viejo, approx 20 hni per wk • no expcr nee .. muat be 11v11ll bel lOam & ?pen. Apply at Photomat Corp .• 768-4171. Cl..ASslFJED wlll aetl ll. I , . • t:ws Full & p1Uml' Ap """ ~ ' ""' ( M ) M I ply,ShellStat1on. l7lh& cllal. 7'" blade $40 free to gd ome w1t11q .. :R I BS . Infant Bed. 673·~6.Callafltti\M or111' m< 'at1c 1·1•1 11 979-2342 arter6.00. yard. Ph !)46.2330 dresser. nitu s ta nd & or11an, 1•x1•1·lll'nt 1•1111111 rvtnc. Ill B - ---------bab h ""~ ,,...,., IAIBLIHG BROOKS lion. $1iOt1, I' I' :;:12 1:i:1tt Kenmore wa~hcr & gas I year old male Gt'rmar ~nRer -..-voc.n SERVICE STATION. 1-'ull d I d •<" Sh Ai ed I I ----·-Ideal for Ill H1sti apts. Sll. .. 'l·',T S••lnwr Sil\"' &. rt t A 1 990 ryer. x nt con ..,.., ea. ept r a e. very ov r--Sale 8055 11 E •• pa 1me PP Y MS-4264 eable. 968-8684 ;:;.:;t:................ sma patios, etc. 11111y 1-1uk Ol'ri•a East Coa!>l llwy. Nwµl your own l(Drdl'n 4!ll:!.'.IO!.o Bch _ Tappan Obi Oven selr Furn~ 8 0S0 GARAGE SALE -IOr\M walerfall lhlS ChrL~lma:. Cl u Co lo 4PM 3028 Warren bn. 548·144'\ Bu.~rh••r S1l-.1·r c 1111•1•1<1 SOCIABLl': l\SSOC earunl'( n8nRc pper ••••••••••••••••••••••• , d b 4 yrs old Xlnl $250 CM <Halecresll Furn. K 22, --11 '"'t" , ... xoµtiorw t\11 m•w pad• nee ed y EX EC 1 n 831 0997 l.rtrRt' oval rosl' shai: rug <'lotheis. ctr Cash only enmore .1 vo . ...,,,, $>15 !'>4!1 l ll:I whsle 1-'ully cap1tah1.NI __ Upnghl Hoover VJt'vum w a t l e I(' c:I n t' room --- 'up p I y I' time RA:!fng.mirror.end thb.Horwt 8060 h1•ater w /fan . .111111 <:ZIJ)Ml:.?·3295 Sc•llmg .mythini: with 3 rrusc. 645 4832 ••••••••••••••••••••••• thermostat Perfct·t fo1 Office f,,,,,itur~ & ---------Dally P1lnl l'lass1f1l•1I \d -For Sale 2 Pomes & show off1C'e or small apl $.541 ~~nt 8085 Stock Clerk Janitor, s2 SO 1:-. J -;1mpll· malll'I Lido Couple sel hn~ qu;,ih quarterhorse !n9-2342after6 00 •••••••••••••••••••••• hr 4hrs a day. s days 0 JUSt call642 StiiH ly rum l ~lJmt•d i.:la5!> Call847 1091 NatJonal nf••"lrl" hom"• l'omt>ll'll' offlr(' 'l'l tl(I ~k Apply in pero;on --------v.1ndows, couch. l'nd ----~ .... • • I t 1 s_torer Cab!e TV. 27392 Want Ads Callf>12567R tbl!> &lamps 87S24SI Shetland Pony & Morgan food slicer. lhll'kn1· ... ~ "111 '11'"1 ''''k'~~ "11r' lam1no < ap1slrano -------------Arnb1an l0XlO'Ut1l Lack tl1al. 7" hlade $40 "Wl\I J.. •11 '11 tu'i 3001' Laguna NI Ruel ;204 rm. Bsl otr 496-7946 979-2342 after r, 00 Ha~ & lit-111'11 Hit> ~ual o~r C_!"IPIO~ hwMy 8070 T•P"°'" Soac"°"' Cou11f f fav _;;:}' ..................... .. HEMODELING 3 h<;,~ St-ver.il St t-. of i':xecull\• 1n CdM C:dbln•·tr.). Ut-~k" anti 11phol,f1•r1·1l appl's. gar drs, fir cov lhau~ w ('J'llt'r .... \ 1•n erings, etr All to lo(O' i.:110~ t·ond s1·J., up WOl'lt from your home blf*ssi11gs T~ WA ... TED Wiii train M en or · ....._ " 673-2638 or eves 673 2430 fi.l2 :12!m women S47 5.594 Hf)U h(lt~«* ·, ' ' , TOP C AS H OOLLr\H --D l'AID ..-oR YOUR --------EX Jo; t' l 'f' I V 1-; TELLER START NOW•'' F:ll.rcllenl opp11r for In di\/ W/MlVlllGS & loun & n1~w accounts uxpcr fl/limo tong term ui.· :i.11otnmcnl NcH·r 1\ Fee 1\l Tempo O tempo 1"1::MPORAHY Hf:LP Call 540-4455 Equal Oppor 1-;mployer TB.LB/P /TIME Hr.inch ofr '!e~:ks bonda· hll· Teller 10 work pt llml' Exi>cr pref'd. Contact IUldu Terranove 17141644 725..'> Western Foocral Savm1es 2744 E. Coai.t llwy, CdM Equal Opp()r Employer TB.UR, P /TIME Busy NewPort Ctr Ole. Mon thr u 1-'rl. t0{1m :1 lOpm 1'cller u per pref'<! Cull Dom Cro><on ll'l'lptri al Sa•htcp SSO NewPort Ctr Dr, NB 6'4-1461 Equal Opp Employer M/F TRAINEES Vancty of jobs & "hlfts N"'Cd c:•r & phone No ci1 · per. req'd. ShOrt & Ions term asslgnmenta. Never A Fee At Tempo a tempo TEMPORARY llELP Cal54M455 F.quaJ Oppor Employer TYPIST wt xlnt •k#lls needed ror prorcu. firm P lease reply. PO Box 424 . Balbo• Island. UTOTIM RETAILCLF.RKS Wanted OpPortunltlea for •dvan~cnent avail. Opehlnp In Coeta Mesa. Ana~lm, Oarden Grove Ii Weatmlnater 64Z.770Z ff) f)ff••r! ., JEWELRY. WATCHES,-------~ CONFF:Hl-:Nn: l>ESK ART OBJECTS, GOLD. WOVEN WOODS 77 ",4,J . )JOU U!>l 011 :, •***********• « ~ Christmos • • ~ Gifts For « : Everyone : « "h11t ..iv. on1lt·rf1•I '"" tu « • 'ell \IHlr .:111Hlll"• l ut '9' l'hn~1 n1,,.. f1i.:h1 11111 « • ln11n1111dl•ro111 • • 1..·1m 1sl"\.'-'l'H ~.I-' « ***** •****** .. ············ • JrJ} IF YOUR • • 8USIHESS ii • IS « tr , ; n·r-. I'll, " • tr Sl 'l>HTI"· 1,001>-. « « l'l.llTlll'\1; 1'<11"1'111\ • « JI-:\\ r:l.11\ II \Ill « « \ll:..1(.' ~l l1'111 llF « • \\Tl<.Jl ;:... 1111111111-.:-. • « llCXll\.:-t \1'1'1.1 \ '\( .... :... to • 1111 \Th 111 to.~.:... « \l TO\IOHll ... :-, tr « :-.l'lt lh1•m lhl' .. 1ni1•ll• tr .. J II II ...... \ " .i \ I 1 "Ill tr 11nil1·1 11111 • « t'll l<IST\I \S 'Ill H « ************• 'rwc-. ....... .ct IM• MU forU,00 ••Dd ........ for S7.IO cS.. h9r ..... ClllJtadtl ""-... ,.. _..,......, ..... Die. I ...... •_, __ ,.. .... _ .. _..,_,. .. ._ Y9ll ..,ti c• MM611 • .. ,... a..w.nai. A•YIMr ... _.. .. ,._._ ... ...... ,... ... Sil.VER SERVICE. 500/oto800/o 0ff ~77970duy-. F INE FUR N & AN •DELIVP.RY• TIQUES.6"5-2200 •BEFORf~ Smith l'mu11:1 l-.h·1 CHR ISTMAS• t~r,.·wrni•r ,>RuXt. U¥Htock 8075 64S-8950 833.9770 I mo $1th> 11·,:, !101,:1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reg. Morgan m are, broke to ride & drive. blk parade Morgan gl!lding, EnR . Western 1714) 338·1011 MochiMty 8078 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 500 lb elec hoist. 50' weld· Ing hose. 6-71 GM blower 642-4610 --------~s 8080 • •••••••••••••••••••••• PICKETT 48" prof draft· 1og t able Adjustable steel frame Cost $80. must sell $40 640·2806 ~1ng1111nd weekends. UNIQUE w i cker de· t'Orator couch/day bed. 7 rt by 3~ fl 4 poster de· s111n with full wlckN canopy Grel.'n and whit!' rotl<>n print cushion I! in polyurelhane. Use on ly us display piece. Must 11ee Qlst $350. must sell 1200/ofr. 640-2806 even· ings and weekends . Alm o~t new M aytag washer & dryer. 4 Karaslan be •He rugs. 673 1197 WATERBEDS Prom S119.81 complete Frame/ n ser I mat/liner Wlt.h heater & delivery every style discounted Aqua Heaven 830-7062 DYNA G YM Like new. OriR S380. Must sell S250 Ph752 1120 -Pe-ts 8087 F1rewood for sale rn>m ••••••••••••••••••• "" ••• o live tree Call uhl·r • , 8PM.M7-8393 A~c; h'malr-, M1n1.1tu.r•· ----------4 Sdmau11·r ~rm.ill• C:h1 2 round tbls. SS & $25 2 l'hamp. bt•Jul l'er ~1.111~ bar chairs SIO 2 tent!<. 541 :IO'Ji! $10 <pup I 4< $50 Pnn lypewrllcr Siii 3 TV 1\tlor.1hh.• C'11clllly l.h.1 1 trays $!). 17 " H&W port /\Jl'·~' 11~1 pµ11·.,. II .~k ... TV $75 Oi l paint ·g~ l>:.l A.Kt: S250 $.11)0 Slit t;4o711 ofr 642 9351_ Pianos & OMJOn' 8090 DUYER S15, Roa,tr•r & ••••••••••••••••• •••••• Gnll telec I $12 Both ex II \MM l) Nu. I' I I' .. ; H re l lent eond1I 'on Oftl.J\N w l ntit· lh•d 6464757 Xlnt Mnd ~· l!J5-47 I:! POOL TABLE. Cue' & Rack. Gd cond S12.'I l'h 552.7723 Scars noor model s un lamp with new ultra violet bulb llus heJt lamp as w1•ll nml hmr r built in 1<:xc1•llcnl t•ondt GlveA Gift Of Music ~ .. 1r ·• "IJIOt'I 1Jt 11w11 ·• k1•y hcJdrd. d1ortl pt'<l.11, L1kti lll'W 1•onlltt11111 Mov1'(.( lo ~mull honw. rw{'(J mun• room s:JOl1 5:1:.! 7~S~' t 1on. $20 uu l'hont: K1rntx·ll Oru.i11. b111111 631·3149. lamer <!Oil I yr old :-.11 .. Chest freezer. old but SM<> /\rt 5• 94~ :i!IJ8 works $50. Kin~ :111.ed S.wfng Machines 8091 walcrbcd $115 Wa11her & ••••••••••••••••••••••• e lectr ic dryer $125 SIHG.ERFREEARM Relrigerator S7S. D1111l)lc u L'ST GI'' A I' I) I' 1 v L' sofa bed $50 Call 002 8!M8 ".... . l \ r. or98J..B7!l8 rt-0 r 61,M Nt·wc•111 mu th'. I < u~t·<l -----" ~I 1 .: h l I y I !'i t r l' I 1· h DRILL P1tf.;ss1-;~ llt1t c•h.-<1, uolumJtw 11111 Brand Nl•w tonholl''" lihml h1·m ... , I~<! Heuvy Duty twtodh• 1foC'Orat1v1-. l'll' • Half price all models SI« Ph M7 00!'>3 Santa f c SporliftcJ G.oodt 8094 Freight Salvage ••••••••••••••• •• •• •• •• J838Santa Pel\vc ·LA New IOOCm :1k111. down ___ 2_13_·_S88_·_1.2M ____ 1 juc:kc•t, :mr 12. bol>t:. SI:! Sofas. xtra chairs. ore 1407 G Colle M1rn1lol0, furn. ottomans, teak end San Clemente. tove11 tables, lamJM' & more TY lodto - from lrg home on E l J~. • BUY MY N1&uel Golf Course "'Ff• Sttt"eO 8098 Grt't'n & OT'onge Antique '9S-l490 ••••••••• ••• • • •• • ••• • • • Horse Drawn W:.iter ---------zenith 2:'1 " ·rv '"'"J Wagon for an Unusuul For sale. l2X20 RuR Ru~t w.1ln11t \'Jb1ne1. punrl Chriatnua" Gift . M11kes 11 rolor. new cond , SI~ door~. r1•m11h• t•ontrol f'antutlc Sip 552-7091 67!1-~. SlG.5 f1m1 1)73-1036 lee'$ bel1Je <:pt, lOO yds RCA 2S" colored TV 11111· $80, hand braid rug 9xl2. mdl. CO!lt $1m; nskinM 1125. 812l<A>Opal Cr. ~ 171411146 !!094 H.8 .<BC'h"Sl•terl. -- IRVlNE COAST COUN Dix Outdoor Shed 11~ ~k Stereo t'8l>lnet, .t1lnt T R y C L 8 0 0 L F worth $250 new. &y :i 1 ond Com pl w, Fisher ME MBERS HIP SOO. bib. 3 spd, $20. 12xl4' tuner. l>ual C'h,lnl(1·r & fWO..U47 green cpt $30, Massaice speaker" S350 1o(r ---------t I.able $.1$ 644·M47 !•18-6024 . ·-.. -. CJ2 DAILY PILOT Tvt1v.l1y Dec~bef 7 l976 Vans 9570 Ailtot. l"'porhd ~to1, lmpcrtcd Autoa. l~porhd 1A.lltoa, UHd Autot, Ua~d ....................... ······· ··············· ······· .. .. ... ........ ...... ................ ..... .. .... ........... . ......... ············ 'f:,.~~ne ~.~.~~~ ........ !~~~ MotS::f..~1 9150 ·~.~·vm~a"x1~r<'i~~ ~ ............ !?.'.~ ~ .......... , ... !?.~~ ~°':!'......... 977~ ~~ .......... !~.'.~ .................. !~.l-~ ••••••••••:•••••••••••• llOlllF. ttl with Tri.Iller ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1~ Ph962 ~ loots... Manne lllut> While" Xlnt i·cmd 1973 Hood ~ XL din lt7l CAPRI tJnrl'slorrd SH MG Equipment 9030 s1450 ofr 835 OWti Kim bikl'. bit.a fully ~~I.Id ''72 fo'ord, 3 i.pd, 6 cyl, COUPE 4 spe~ with Magoelle.1 4. dr <>Nfnn •••• •••••• •• ••• • •• • • •• • ss:;o 673 26311 or E':. cu." tom in tenor $2300 radio tSl'7J LU) Runs &ood ltiOO ~ Ill Ob Johniion2:>hpll 11 .. 1rd PJrtfir Catolmaran Mu!>l 673-3430 499 2792 or 4~ ONLY $1695 "74 MG t\idRel. xlnl cond •·· vi t I 'Ill Bt•i.l offt'r 631 !JiJ6 --------mu...,r "n ""'' ult 5 MU!>"TSELL '76 U()(il(e V11n Surfe r MA.ll9UIS TO YOTA AM l''M ritd10, Vt·ry I<> ~ JW7 1975 Yamah;, 175 Dix MJny l'Xlrn' ~Ullk MlSSlON Vl~O nu. must bell S26SOtl>iil 8oah. Pow~ 9040 llohw 111 Whlll' w blue SS.SO Aft 5pm. ~7 ·!511 i.alc Mu~l 'i\'11 by Thurs 8 l l·lll0 495-1 210 ofr 963 21<10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tramp lilu« &-"'ht .,,ob ----SM 4~ __ ft....&..._ 9 720 MGI ShJrp Sl 200 171 l 1 f'or Sale. 73 Ka,,.ai..ik ..,__. 675 1764 or C;!l:l14W .i!2llt; 400. good Nind '69 Font VJn '.-lon Vl'r) ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9744 :10 J E 1-' 1" ltl .. :s ~1> hnd..:1· Sportf1,hrr t-•n·~h w.it1.•1 IWll v II'-; •\!>:.um loun A YIHh 96() 1193 <'lean. 100.000 m1 . Sl275 5dt$ & 1 -'--• 12 M C I\ ll o o d 11 ' '' r Mw.t 'di' •W l\lotor S:ull'r 675 2-ltH bN6& I< -~ AM FM H lri.H'k. cwitom Nl•w lhe11el l'n~ <.:.111 KAWASAKl90C<.: TOPOollarPaid hHtdlop $211110 Ph l'Vl''. 673 ~ Dirt Bike AYlo L..cKlng 9 580 On 1\1.L Trat1e 11111 l!ltl lllG4 33· o~l'" s1111ttl1'hl·r look, Slipj/ S22Sor bst :>57 4:JGll •••••••••••••••••••••• • NEWPORT DATSUN ---- HEW '76 818 Do·.-Street Opel 9746 'upnbly ••11u111'tl . 11n" Doell• 90 70 1i1y. 1dl•.il 1111 hurhn •••••••••••••••••••••••MotorHoftws l·rw:.c~ 111 '11<>".f!:-.111n1:. '>1111 or !.1J l' Tw wuntl'd In Sale/Rent ' 9160 >.Int 1·1rnd $~.I .Jilli "',j , r1 ~· 1 1 · L fi44 4!..f.i2 ~let !iHl I t wpo ~•u )O,A •••••••••••••• ••••••••• • · · Uill 11311 !).195, ~ IA~U lk nut 28 · U1 p In mat 1\VON SIOO , ~.\ 1nruclt SI II' up to JO' bt'autiful Moto r Home fo r rl'Of .i5111'. Sl5UCl firm · 1;H'Jt1Un 111 ·Nl·wirnrl Ui.11ly. wkly. mlhly Sip~ 1;.15 M:k1 l'k•ill'h c75 Ol!27 lO llas sll.'reo, ;ur rnnd. nw~l' control 768 <Y754 '\ I(; I J s I' a ( 1• m i.I k l' Crwscr nt•w 1•n1t :J I 'upcr t•11ncJ. ,,11·•·1>' 4 644 0011 1!1511 CIJ,,ll' Chn,,n;ift MahCJl(Jrl)' s.!700 Xln wnd H:LS 01113 aocrts. sm1 9060 T ransportatlOfl ........................ Motorcycles/ 5'ooten 9 1 SO ••...•...•......•.....• 2li' GMC MOTORllOM t; Sips fi Wntr rates Pvt pty 83.1·2616. 642-4097 !'llWpl Rent New 23· Fireball. llondJ 25() El!>inorr Kini w lf t•onl. load:, or "'m t·ond Usl.'d only orll'I.'. dow'i & t·ounll'r '-P'-'ll' S.1~ firm 673 1195 645 22J4J --------~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• CZ254.I MX '7 1. !>l'ldom nd l;.\1C Lale 73. xlnt cond . lli1lil<' It. trlr nt·14 lr.111' tit 1!t·n 11tr:i:-. Off1.·r-1 IJu,., '>I p:, 6, St!l,200 12311 m11ri· 'I t.!:1 t..Jt, h.!~1,'1 ••I ~II 3.'lllJ. EH·-.1)75 .t!l!i-1. Polans. NH 833 2616 CAPRI 11 MPG Near Moci\rthur ••••••••••••••••••••••• CQmpletc with front dlh<' &Jamborl't.' Roads 19700pcl Wagon lirukci.. Sll'el l.>e lll't1 833·1300 i\ulo,el'onom1 cal$8SO rud1als, 11tyll•d ll ll't•I ---------49-13.J~ 494 0628 wheel covers. rDl'k Ai DRIVE A PONCtt. 9750 11inon stet>nng. rt·rlrnrn.: bll<'ket seats. fold down LITILE •.• benrh seat.-i. vlnylto1> SAVE A LOT $108.17 Mo. With on!y tax & lie down SllOP&COMPARI': ••••••••••••••••••••••• '65 9l2 S i.l.ld . Ovl'rull SS' I retitort.'tl Nt'w cnl( .. rart> Item $3!1!!5 (1rm 400 762(1 or 496 l»'JZ tS326 341 ror 411 month!! BARWICK DA TSUM on approval of your R San Juan Capistr ano '72 !114 t:x t•o nd ~m credit Tota l c·a:.h pnc 8ll-ll 75 493.3 375 ~:!, i.~es~l~~~;nimb~~; mcl lax & llr $4315 Uefl'rred payml'nt pnc TOP BUYER _552_4._24_6 _____ _ mt'ludmg t ux. he & in Stt us fi1"11l, & la:.t' Top Roh Royce 9 756 lerelll $5S52 Ann ua dollarpa1dfor1mports ••••••••••••••••••••••• pem•ntage rate 12 96'~ COSTA MESA •t DEALER IN U.S.A. Ser GAECiK24S42 DA TSUM ROY ·GUSTAFSON lAt.ta Me5a 540 6410 AOLLS·ROYCC ;.i111 ;·,.,., 28-IS Haroor Bh·d ~ CARVER 71 'r'i.lll\JhJ l:!S Endurn Dale'!> RV RL•ntJh 1MOJ•mbo, .. l..1 ,, 1 i: 111x:.1 rd>ll L'ng run~ ~oud s •\l'rc:. '751 11; modl'ls 1935 Chevy truck Xlnl 1trwpor1114>•ch LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 1: ••• 1l 111111liw111 Uc:.t urfor G73 617!1 In me 55!1444fi rond SI500 Firm <.:all _...... $7~1 II II• l 11>1 ---492·8374 ClOSfD DAYS . 942:9944 . ·73 \1ontl">S3 Cola ~5 lnJI~ For rent 20· Mini Motor Autos WClft~ 9590 -. __ \UN b1kl• 50lT Xlnl l'Ond $2:!5 Home. comp eqwp •••••••••••••••••••••• 197t W:agon, :ur. radtJI:. Toyoh . 9765 l.1\.'> ~;It :'-111 I :!W'l . l(.11·1· S5ti 6468 Very clean 962·6103 CASH FOR CARS! roof r ack. rad11~, ?"R •••••••• •••••• ••••• •• • • ,.111111,111.ct 1 l'C, tll ------T $"'·II $ df own,xlntf12S09624011 $750 l'h 1~11. 11111•1 Twu llONl>I\ Tri.111 OO's, Trailen, Travel 9 170 • 0~ u.> ar Pi.II, or . --. le-.:-. than IOOO m1 on each ••••••••••••••••••••••• t:}eun Ul>~ l':J~:., trucks 12 Uutsun 1200. 51!.000 n11 . '77 TOYOTAs F.Ht1·soN :!'1 full~ cuch ca11 54o.7744 •59 AIRSTREAM Gd ~rvetles A:sk for Paul nurad1alb.AM1~M.runs •ru1!>1• r.11··· ~'11 .11011 uf or4!W urn7 cond MuH sec 1l to OHNOeW•ll "RD CL-rol t ~~~-$1.599. G75·0686 hd . f i-r Ii 75 I H:Jll "1 , • ., & • believe 1l' $2250 646·3051 "' """" e 4! . ....,.,m wkiub MustSCll i5 V;.imaha lOC ---Ol>vt'&Qu111I Sts Enlluro St lcitill. i;d Auto Senlce,Pcrh NEWPORT BEACH 11· Fe; :-..11lho 11 wtrlr C'Ond$3501()frti73:1234 &Accenories 9400 \11\.t'f •• alunl 'i>••r '\ -••••••••••••••••••••••• ,1.,11 ,. fl 1,11, 11111 \ '75 llu~dJ 250 XL Xlnt SAVE WITH i·11u111 <I l'h1·1."' Wrllr l·1.md S:'IO(! ., USED& R EBUILT 11111PSI 1~°')11 'lf~l llilt <•75 .. '>9t ___ f'OREIGNCAR PARTS .rMechamcl .r F:lectncal .r Dody Parts WE PAY TOP DOLLAll F'ORTOPUSEDCAHS t'OREIGN. UOMESTIC or CLASSICS If your rar 1s cxlrn clea l>l'e us firi,t BAUERIUICK 292S llarbor Bhd ·74 260Z Xlnt rorid . AM/l''M, Jlr Must St'll, 979 3171 nr a rt 6, 4~3·6.."l2S HERE MOW •NEW COLORS Ferrari 97 23 •NEW MODELS .............•..•.•.... Ferran ·54 330 GT. Xl11t Ne w Borran1 wi re wheels 64-1 9388/642·0054 Huge S;,v1ngi. ''"ALL re ma1 n1nl: ne w 76i; Demos IMPORT AUTO SUPPLY 101 N. Manchester. C<>Sta Mesa 97~ _ fiat 9725 The Better llnr1<nin MARQUIS TOY OT A MISSION Vll::JO 8J 1·2880 495-1lI0 - Anaheim 776 9900 A.utoi for Sde ....................... Antici-s/ Classics 9 520 ....................... •OVER 70CARS• lN INV ENTOltY ANTIQUES & CLASSICS rrom Fordi. tu Rolls Hnycl.'s, from $500 tu s.50.000 l'i.lr:. 13UY SELL TRAl>E ELZ FARGO&CO fl.'lOS Main Sanlu Ani.I 1Uto6. :\1on S,1t Closed Sunday~ .. 547-9709 . MODEL A WE BUY ·U~EOCARS& TRUCKS• Com1: m or Call FttEE Approltal Groth Chevrolet 18211 Beach Ulvd Hunun1o,rton !Wach 847-6087 .. 549-l ll 1 TOP DOLLAR PAIU IMM EDIATELY FOR ALL FOHEIGN Ctd tS CALI. OH COME IN TOSl':E US NEWPORT IMPOR': S 31UO W CslHwy.NB 642-9405 .......•••............. '68 Fiat IZ.l Cpe Good cond , l''M t Cassl'ltt' $950 494-8566 Kent '76 Toyota Corolla S1 Iver. xlnl cond Must sell S2600 (7 14 )49-1 7138 ~.~ ............ !?~~ Toyoto 9765 Brand Mew '7 6 HONDA Cars OVER 100 To Choose From! ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Cehra. good rond, new brks, vinyl uphl, $2~ g.i7 <W65 a rt 6PM UNIVERSITY ~~~~~ ••••••• !??.~ Olcbmobile 75 s,·1rocrn. '.I.Int nind. Honda Can • GMC n c e d s 111• w o w n l' r Trucks 642 ~II or 64f!_.1502 2850 Harbor Blvd '&I VW S<1bl'k xlnt l'und Costa M~a 540-!tf~O Lhru out , 13.0l)O m1 on -rebll l'ng $!150 <1!14 2145 Jaguar 9730 ........•.............. '7l VWlug Xlnt <'ond1llon. int & l'Xl S2300or hc:.t offer 673 2319 71 Cwl.IC L>e Ville $1c>SO WI~ --- 1913 Duda• Sf)(irt~m.sn Cu.'ltom, .s.ooo m•. t}f"' 'JZV f.3!JOO or 00111 o 1 5411 34!13 11ft 6P t4 , '76 S~Ville Lo Jdt'd . Ma-IOOl $!2.~ or .:u~h t1own as --....__ •SALES 'SERVICE •&.USING O•enea5 sume I.st' 111 mu.-. Pl' Ford 9940 64$--3533 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DeU••ry S<'rv1ce & pam now open on Sat's II to 4 lor your conv~rucncc. 9917 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '68 Camnro. R&ll Jll ('(ind Rally Sprt \ 11\ top 327 Eng Spokt• v. ht:. Runs perr Gd 11 rr" $1250 aft s. ij42 ~ 7J T11nn11, .. uto, I'S. Jlr l'llllll. SI 1110 ur 11lr1•r ~ 01~1 or ~·I ~ IOW Fc>N SOOXL. 11d run lllnK l'OllU • :ilm5l Ou lltt:!I & hrk!\ lhnable 673 11037 1!1'7:1 I.TO !I Pass Countrr Squire Nt1w llrc•i., A <.:. a..,.,... 9910 I' S. I' Ii. ~lnl <'Ond •••••• ••• ••• •• • •• •• •• • • J\.1k ·.: ~:>9:,, ~ 1586 1975 CHEVROLET fiir Sulc ·m For<1 I.TO. MOMTECARLO J> s. l'1U, u11 SVSO Cull 191;4 Hurhot ( M 6•t. YJOl F11ctory u1r eon<I . 1111 !162·3097 1971 VOLVO wheel. vinyl C.ibt 111ll't . •• I-Op, etc. (403LPQ 1 711 Mavt•ntk Aull• . runs wt•ll, i:ood Uri':. & brukl•s. 4 ryl coupe w /o\lerdn ve & IPather 1nter1o r t33WNG 1 This economy c·ar can now be boughl for 41-Vl•ry tlt•an <'Jr Asking Haiaetl Cadillcn: $11ix111.i~Hst1 2'11 ......... 4. Mercury 9950 ONLYS2498 MAR9UIS VOLVO MISSJON VIEJO 8 3 1-1880 4 95-1210 1974 VOLVO 164 SEL>AN Auto m atll·. pwr !>lcenng. u1r cond & stereo l::xlremely low mlleal(e (061KT~l ONLYS4998 MAR9UIS VOLVO MISSION VIEJO 8ll·2880 49S·lll0 1972 VOLVO 145WAGOM Automallc. AM /FM. roof c... ... *"°° Doa't See Us First ... M See Us Last!!! '1f You Don't luyFrom COHHEU.. You"nPaying Too Much!" CONNELL CHEVROLET 2.828 Ha rbor Blvd ·coSTA MESA • 546·12011 ---· rack. l796GIU I. Has un· MAKE OFFER believable low mileage. '72 Monll' C:trlu P /S , m unbelievable eond1hon P/8, factory nir, tilt whl dt at an u nbehevable 1owner.640 063J pnce• --------OHL Y $3998 '73 Blaier AC. PS, PB, MA.RqUIS VOLVO Suspension. tires. all ac MISSION Vl~JO cess. XJnt cond 492 4100 831·1180495-1110 '75 Vega Estate Wa.:on ---------/\IC. AM I FM stereo. roof .....•.•....••.••••.... ···••··•·•········•·•·• rack. disc brks, radial ures Xlnt <'ond. $2450 Ph 552-309'.! 1976 ECOHOMY CHEV£TTE With only 11 000 miles tl986241 Must sell th1" weekend .it ONLY $2498 MARQUIS TOY OT A MISSION vn;JI) Bll-28 80 495-1210 76 AMC GREMLIM I~ Impala. loaded SS!IS complelt• with 6 cylinder. Rood work t•ar, abo up Julomullc, JlOWCr steer· ~-~~ianu. h~I ofr 1nii. 11lr condHLonlng, ~ radio, healer, roof rack. ·75 Monte C.irlu Low $89.89 per lllO miles. vinyl top, l'lc with only Sl!lll. Dn for 48 $4295. 645 7~---_ ~on approval or your 1975 CHEVROLET K<KXI nc..-d 1l. Tota I c 11sh price i nc l tu & lie IMPALA WA.GOH $3235 16 deferred pay-9 P a s s e n It c r m!'nt Price 1n<'luding De luxe-60/40 sea t. t ax. l1r & f in ance AM1F'M s tereo, factory ..........•............ MUST S E.LL \k11· Montl'rl.') C1>tm IIT. full 1.1wr & an er.. 1·11trl Jlr ndt', n••w ,11 b 11 d l I r l' ' . I 0 m I $2!.Pl't b'>t ofr l'h ~ titrt 73 :'tfonll20 <.;T M1111 "'\Jib .-qpd On.: uv.m•r $3500 l'h &lo 4332 da)'" 673 ~JIJ e\ e' 9952 ............••.••.•.••• '75 MUST A.MG II 4 spc'Cd. 1 JU lo dt ht'uler U 1027S 1. Chcl·k lhu1 pnce Jt OHLYS2598 MAR9UlS VOLVO MISSION VIEJO 8 3 1-2880 495-1210 'G6 Mu.stBng convert1bl1:, cmplly ,restored Coll t'r· tor. 1lem Trans & 1'n1?. ovrhal.-d, new painl & top Sl ~95 t be s l olr 9ti2·S3'74 ·74 Mustang 11. 2 + 2.. JUto • only 20,000 m1 Xlnl cond $2450 Eve!> 675 13tH 611 fo'ord Mu:.tanR ~ C;JllTnni A M 'o; S<UI ~33 ''7 1 lih1a VH, JUlo trun' PS, 1"8, air. stereo ~7:, Pl'640 1151 Oldsmobile 9955 •..........••••••.....• '73 Cutlass Soprcml.'. air cond . xlnl rond. $3()00. GiS !f.117 ilfl 5PM 'fl!.I Cutlui.s Stn Wi:n SI 050 12131 S\M 21!117 day11, (714) \162·4673 H l' -Pinto 9957 ······················· '73 Pinto Sl n Wr,n. AC . very xlnt <'Ond. Asking SHOO 968·24 71 9960 1931 Mode l A 5 Window Cou~ w rumble i.l·ul New rnoc.lel A eni: Run n1ng itood, hut need~ wmt' work 52500 MlN 5 :!Clpm 1· J II 963 Hr.is or 49,') 3()35 TOP DOLLAR PAID FOttCLEAN IMPORT CARS All MODELS Silver Dc;.iuty 3 8 Sedan w dtol b G ri II SJ!JOU 536 2248 -ch31lleS $4513 72 a nnual wr cond. & luggal(e rack ·oo VW Con\crt Mag11. pereent.aRC rate 18 4.2,..o Loaded' t847MCA> radials, lapc dc<'k, \ery Ser ;z AGM6SE1863SO ....................... '76 rty"90Uttt fvry Got t h ree French hens you want to move by Christmas? Mo\ c uu.·na under our tree. On each T hursday through Dece mber 16th, the Daily Pilot will publish special pages to make it easier for you to convert your saleable Ite ms to Christmas cash. Bu} a box under our t ree & sel l your toys , sports equipme n t . l u gg ag • applia n ces, fur n itu r e, antiques, ha ndmade & unique gifts and no matter what your buslnrs -we have a box for you! Putting a box under our tree Is easy and inexpe nsive. Rates a r e $4 .00 for the s malle r box to $22.50 for the larges t bo x . BIG , BIG SAVINGS if you run more than one time. For m or e inf ormatlon and to place y ou r ad jus t c all 642·5678 and a s k for your Christmas Ad-Viser for more information. Your credit is good with us. we·u bill you or you can charge your ad to y our Mas t e r Charge or BankAmer lcard. : i>AllY Pl LOT . ~,. .. . . 642-5678 ------- 4 Wheel Drivtt 955 0 ..........•....••.•.•.• 9 732 ....................... 1974 112 JENSEN HEALEY ('l(.>an $1950 675 JOSH l!l66VW BUG Nt·w <>cal~ $1;(11) 1714 J 71i8 3705 Jft Ii GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY _ 115800 Beach Blvd · Hur.'•riqton Beach Grand lrouqhom SedJn Spilt pwr seat . air cond • stereo rad111. pwr windows & c:rw'>l' 1.'onlrol t072POL I 1970 TOYOTA LAHDCRUISER Stn·k ~h1rt . r ud10 & h1·11tcr Compll'l<'IY ttVl'r hJ ult.'<l c853KXVI ~ 1883!1 Bf ACH Bl VD ~4UNTING TON BEACH &42-7781 -~40-0442 • $4995 -• 842·8844 . • CONVERTIBLE 5 s pe!'d with A M FM '70 VW Rl'bll l'njt . nl'14 -- l>lereo tape lmmaculJtl' seal CO\l'ri. Run :. a..ick 9910 CHEVY SAL! thruout' (99SNKK> perfrclly Bought ne~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1966 BelA1r SedJn MARQUIS VOLVO Alfa $llOO !'>52 Ml3 '37 Owck. 11 door. side· <SYSS721. Now Nabers Cadilac 2.600 ......... ""4. OHLYS2998 MAR9UIS TOY OT A MIS)ION Vlt;JO 831-2880 495.1210 IBUYJUNl\CAHS MLSSlONVIF.JO '75VWSopcrCh•un1 Xlnl mount:. $2500 8466S05 OHLY$599 IJSt:L> AUTO l'A RTS 831-2880 495-1210 cond 6000 mt $3151.1. Ph art er 6pm wkdys C..to MCllD 540 9IOO :)<M).5L2S 1147 !1637 960-2680 -----KcrmaM Ghio 9735 ---'73 Ct!nlW')' Luxus. 2dr .. 1963 Impala Super SJ)Ort (PPV279) Now MECllANIC w:inti. run ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'OO VW STATIONWGN IIT, fully eqpd .. red ml .. OHLY $499 ATLAS IITT3 ... ord f• 2.')(). l xil Au1otro.1n~. pwr t)rakei. 17J.1111'17 1002 n1ng rc•pairablc or 'G8Gllll\ Xlnl cond $1200 wht ext .. immac .. like wrecked rar~ K47 4!195 Xlnt couu. v .. ry lo mi 4!14·2305 n1:w rood lhruout. S2650 Chrysler /Ptymovth WAMTED $1500. 4!l7 3!.165 Pr Ply. 17141833·1918. ___ _ '70 VW C<1mpc::r Con Mewportet" MotON l!Jm Harbor lllvcl.. C M Open Uo1ly & Sur\ 't1I 10 P~1 7 2 I n t 1· r n a l 1 o n 1J I 1 r J vt-11111 4X4 , ;.iutn tr11n11. 1letuxl' :197 Ill'. VII. lhiy'I lJilllUun Ull l'O nd h1·i.1lt•r , W nr n 68or 'Ill ~I Cuminu. Cle.in, ltea sonal>lc. 642·2073 $l200 Karmann Ghia . Version, nl'w rcblt L'nl:?. CadlUac 9915 1967 Need:. Mmor re· under warrunty $1 ,7115. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ___ 6_4_2_-0_7_9 5 2929 llarbor Blv<I . Costa Me11t1. Will c11ns1dl•r P U puir Will trade u p . 646·31\58 642.2627 '66VW BUS All windows '66 Europea n Karmann w1•nt'h lrlr hllC'h, foi: A.alto$. Imported Ghia, limited ed1t1on, h~hL' :1 Jo:ll'> I.inks, mu~I ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnt cond. 499 384H Ca II 499·40o19 «di Only s;w10 1;45 0244 Audi 9707 _ _ _ '65 VW HUS 25 window ••••••••••••••••••••••• Kannan11 Ghio s nrf . rblt en11 1t ran$ U Ch~\ y Hl.11Pr ~ V8, JUltl lull pwr AM FM ~ lrk. mi.In)' ~tr.1-. S4500 ·73 Aoc.11. 'unroof. -,tcreo. ~ 536 6149 rad1a~l37S ~·~7 lo m1 Kint rond, S3500 -VW '72 Transporter l'eJOIY liil~l 1~:11, li:ll 1400 Mcnda 9738 pass . wht & gold. AC ---••••••••••••••••••••••• AM radio. xln\ cond TN:ks 9 560 BMW 97 12 '74 Mazdd llXJ Coupe. •I SJS.l.177 S..51 14?A •••• •• •• •• • • • • • • • • •• •• • •••• • • • • • • • •• ••• •• •• • • • spd. under wmt y. very 73 DaL~un Pl f.8 000 m1 dcanR37·3202 I 97l VW Ghio C0tt'1. new ~hock!> 1:oo<1 ron<I Merc-_.--,-14t-n_l __ 9_7_4_0 768 1.296 S3200 I' p 541 llOOfl SADDLEBACK ~Chevy P U with \hdl V8. AT. I'S. l'B. Al'. new t1rt's, 011r s l\111 k,, Sl20010e:.tofr 11:$1 2053or 497 2451 '51'1 El <.:am ino. ll <·yl. -t spd tran.sm1:.:.111n Rill Hunb r eal good $1iOO Ph 547 3182 Ell El Camino. <tspd • 35<' enit . AC. Camper i;holl sum. 831 2396 75 Chevy ~. T. PS. PB. AC. AT, new llrL'S, 2!1,000 nu963 5891 ·73 Ford Ranchero GT Auto. PIS, 111r, P 1dlac BMW. '11 BMWs HERE NOW SEE THEALL MEW 320l TODAY SADDLEIACIC VALLEY IMPORTS 831·1040 495-4949 CREVIER brlts. AM/F M. 351 ena. &1 sr ,. .. OAOWAY new tires & s hock.,. S2800 Call dys 97S·4281. art IAHIA AHA Spm ,962-3705 835·3171 ---------1 THI UlflttlATW 0114VlllO MACMINl i3 Dal.sun PU. xlnt. F'tG u~&ft IMW· shell, wide whlll, xtras * ~ I* ......., 54().•·a" ·73 Bavana·1906LVV / _........ ...._ iS2002 1629NDK> 'fl} Dodge ,,, T II' bed. lo '762002A (0499 ) nu. Sl500 or best oHer ao..d Ow S.•dllYI Call 548-4728. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71 C()nvert . xlnl cond le UCIM m1, S2800or trade for lah .... _ U d model pick up truck nwW• M ~!IS OVER 100 MERCEDES OMDl5PLAY House of lmoorts AUTIWRIZkD MERCED~ DEALl-:R 6862 Manchester , Buena Park 521-7250 On the Santa Ano l"wy. 1965 Mercedes 190. Auto, 4 ryl, econr l Xlnt. SlSOO 494·3197 ; 494-0628 CLASSIC MIRCEDES IEHZ 1 970 280SL Cpet Roadster Loaded Orig owner. restored lo rrunt cond $14,500 Firm Mr Tom Thompson , 1714) 783-0021. '7S 2805. 22K m1 , loaded. s unroor. e tc. cream St3,995. Pvt ply 7S2· 7866 '60 VW BuR Run~ i:reat Good tran~p $450/blll 751 :.M02 '68 VW Van Rcbll en~ . radio. <.~II ul'\ Spm, 497 3Wl 9772 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 VOLVO HERE NOW •HEW COLORS •NEWMODB.S Huge savm~ on 1111 re malotng ne w 76& & Oel1l0ll in stock. MAR9UIS VOLVO MISSION VIEJO ll 1·1110 495-1210 ® Nabers Cadillac Quality and Price Luaranreed le 1\lnl( ~p1·t1.1ll\t' P1dutl'd ~.He' I .lr-'\l'SI ~l'ICl l•Url 111 New &. U1oed C.1C11ll.1t, 111 01 Jll~c C.oorlly Orwn 'iundJy Cadillac Master Dealer 2600 H.irhor Blvd. C.o\IJ Mu~J 540·9 I 00 Nabers Cadillac ~~ t hev PtU 4 s fxt , m1 Pcrf cond . Eve 96311259 t 9927 C-Omet 2dr . auto lruns , $\50. luoks & runs good 002-8068. 546-1934 16 Volure 2 dr. 11t1ck s hift. rt & II Only 3.000 mi on car 0eslJ('n1tc, mu:.l sc•ll $31110 Wd l tr.idc S48 1487 POfttioc 9 965 ...............•....... 99)0 1972 Pontiac Ll.'Man,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• w1cverylh1nJ!. lo m1 . '75 MARK IV good rubber. Kint conil F'ull power includ1nR S2SOO (;all!i:Mi lil>22 lealher intenor. AM FM stereo. crwscontrol. tilt wheel. u1r cond1llonini;: l412Mf'CI $8686. GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERC\JRY 16800 Beach Blvd · Hunllngto n Be ach '66 IA! Mans lllvl' Owne<l b .Y rn 1• d1 a n 1 r It u n ' great A h11rl(a111 at $375 837·1341 Pontiac '65 Cbt11hn:i 2 dr . radio. u1r. deun Runs l(ood S295 S48 32!17 'ThunclertHrd 9 910 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 842·8844 -• T-llRD SALE eoo1 ·14. ~,z •. d;-x1n1 1008 · (Xwlo;m> rond. $6200. OML Y $I 099 Ca I I 644-S927 Lincoln 4dr, 1972. Lcst1 than Blue book. T om Welch, 847·2&S 99ll 1966 ISOM6021 OMLY$899 tll61 <FWJ®JI ONLYS699 '76 Sedan De Ville, under ••••••••••••••••••••• •• 15,000 m1. xlnl l'ond '(I) Cougar. Full pwr , Newport« Moton Loaded 640·9400 o r AC. SISOOtbsl orr 1900 Harbor Rlvd .C .M . 644 5964 leave message. fi.44; 1774 642·0795 '75 ELDO Cad Con v '71 XR7 Cougar Had1als, '60 T·B1rd completely re w/mags plu!! all extras P1S. PIO. AC. lm mac bwlt Nu paint Job. et<' Whtw1red1nt.673·645l thruoul' S2500. 646·9267. F'or m ore info Call 548 56l3 846-$1.Sll 73ElDO~DO Only \9.000 ml, Just hke 'Ell Dodge, Kint Interior. f90 9974 new. Michelin Tires fair exle nor . atr, power •••••••••••••••••••••• Ablolutely perfect cl\I'. steering. brakes. 49S·IS1S 1a Veaa CT wire·a S5 ,SOO f irm I L1c "-'"-9935 cream puff. 3SM m1l1s. OHJSM > 644·84 IS o r ---r All extru Wide whls OllAMGt COUMTY 840-5851 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eves 64(} 1538 YOLYO 1974DODGtDA.aT 1~~--'-..;..;;._~~- ~I COUNTY'S 'r>7 190SL. Completely OLDEST Restored . Both tops. MUSTSB.L 1972 ~ Ton Dodge. Lg EXCLUSrYELY VOLVO i'3 S«to.n De Ville, orig SPORT COUPI '73 Vel(a GT waaon, clean, LargeatVolvoO.,aler owne r . mou extr as. 2 To C hoose From . lo w miles, AM/FM, inOranaeCounty' S3,000 Ml. $4200. 831 1600 Automatic . small Vlf, maaa Slal>S. 642 1554, BUY or LEASE <B-5 wkdays > radio, heater, pwr ateer S38-l484 _____ _ DIRECT Cod '72 Cpe De VIile. full Ing + brakes, air cond. & Vega Hatchb11ck, &Jr. ·~mCf :~~~:i::1~t~~~ <~~[~ ;;~;ss1 ... ~-a-~-'-~a_· _ •. _,e_a_1e_r_._•1_·0_0. ,,_~-~ ~,__ '72 Ve 11a . ,\M I FM 2025 S Mane '70EI [)()r11do MARQUIS TOYOTA cassette. new Uru. Must sell. 111600. MIAstON Vl ~JO t.un"Up runt .. ~• .... 1*t A(\aheim 750-2011 w.nl2 83 I ·2880 495-12 Io icnc~ ~. 631 i'7i2 ... t .. '73t-0599 or 213/699·1343. wip, 6 cyl auto, new ~ ure., lo ml. a•ll or lrd. 'fil!I '70 280Sf:, brown/cognac, St79S1 bst orr. Ph : rur, auto, ami rm. Pvt 640-4789. Sales-Service-Leasing pl). .t94-3LM ____ _ Ford Pkup, wtrampcr low C ... tr,btc. 'ff't MRZ bre 300 SEL. & air rond. Xlnt cond. Rolla fto1ce BMW t'ull Pwr. Sharp & clean. _114_7_·3.194 __ a_n_a_P_M ____ , 1540Jamboree Best offer. $47-5801 •73 D •· PU Ch Newport. Beach 640-6444 , a ... un erry i3 MBZ. Silv"r 450 SEL. :1~~g !~~~ ::e1• '70 BMW 2002 Sliver, Full pwr. 46,000 mi, good lllnl cond. cood. ma 11 e off er ~ 1703 home I (714) 673-1521 54'7-5901 ' I ' ' D~t~_gto':' Beach Fountain Valley ED ITI ON Afternoo11 . N.Y.Stocks VOL. 69, NO. 342, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1976 ' TEN CENTS .Bonfa Pay Hike Nixed Stormy Vote • m Huntington Beach City Council i;nembers vetoed a pay raise for City Attorney Don Bonfa on a 3 to 3 vote in a stormy session Mon· day night. Mayor Pro Tem Ron Pattinson and Ron Shenkman voted against the increase along with Richard Siebert who said he was unhappy with the quality of Bonfa's work. Siebert a lso questioned some of Bonfa ·s legal opinions. Mayor Harriett Wieder, Ted Bartlett and Al Coen voted in favor of extending the same 7 percent salary hike to Bonfa that was granted last month to 12 other department heads. Norma Gibbs was absent. Siebert brought a number of complaints against Bonfa which 1 were vehemently and often emo- tionally denied by the city at- torney. Siebert said he questioned Bon- fa's membership in a bargaining unit as an elected official. He said he also had questions about travel expenses incurred by the attorney along with the amount of legal services contracted to firms outside the city. Siebert also said that there was dissatisfaction with Bonfa's work on the part of t he Public Facilities Corporation. Siebert also charged that Bon· Ca 's legal opinion came six months late in action by the city to institute a public employes re· tirement system (PERS> "that cost $2 million." Bonfa said the charges were false, distorted and absurd. He said the attack was plire harassment and a slap in the face to all the people of the city. "I am an elected official just as Siebert ls.•· he said. .. People want toe lo be responsive to them and not mere· ly a lackey· of the city council," he said. Bonfa said he was a member of the Executive Mana1ement Team and the Munaclpal Employes Organization but. wu not represented by tt\em in salary bargaining. ~ He heatedly denied that 'be overstepped any travel al· lowances IUld bad followed the same practice as other depart- ment heads. He said trips were approved in the city budaet. He .afao sai<l his office bad never hired an O\.ltside eounsel on hia own motion and that all such servi~es had been approved by the city cot.m~iJ. Bonfa said ~omplaints against <See BONI' A, Page AZ) Slaying BB Police Hunt Man • Ill Exeeution Out Rulings Bar Death Penalty SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -'The California Supreme Court ruled today that the state's death penalty is unconstitutional in Light of recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions. L The unanimous decision. writ- 1,en by Chier Justice Donald R. Wright, held that California's capital punishment law is invalid since it violates current U.S. Supreme Court guidelines re- garding imposition of the death "penalty. It said the law improperly re· quires the death penalty under specified instances without pro· viding for consideration of mitigating circumstances. The decision said the state's death penalty law makes "death a mandatory punis hment for those categories of first-degree murder encompassed by the special circumstances" section of the law "without provision or consideration of evidence of mitigating circumstances ... " Bois a Chica Area Trustees Review New School Need · Ocean View School District of· ~cials said Monday they will not cohstruct a new campus in the Bolsa "ehica area for at least another two years. Trustees said they will review the need for a new school in the Bolsa Chica area again next spr- ing. Huntington Beach has pro· posed to annex the 1,603-acre Bolsa Chica area. The next Local Agency Formation Committee meeting on the proposed annexa· lion is scheduled for March 2.1, 1!117. Possible residential develop· rnent in the area is not expected to begin for another two years, officials said. Declinin~ district enrollment. wilh fewer than 200 new students anticipated from the Bolsa Clura · area and possible land acquis1· lions by the state have prevented the school d1strirt staff from re· commending a new campus, said Woody Chaddick, assistant superintendent Chaddick said district kin· dergarten enrollment hi.s dttlined hy about 200 students Crom last year Kindeq~arten enrollments are the lowc1't tn the past 11 year.it, he said. Kindergarten lhrouy,h GWC Singers Set Concert • Christmas music-lovers are in- ~9ted to attend Wednesday night when the Golden West College Singers and Madrigal Ensemble performs a free 8 p.m. concert at Ule Huntington Beach campus. • "An Evening or Christmas ··Delights," is the title selected by ,.tie 45-m e mber group under choral director Henrlelta Cfl.rler. The GWC Auditorium is the loca- 'tion. ' Presentations include classic -medieval carols created original· l>' to entertain Europe's crowned lieads and haunting new contem· porary works. l'M WRITING TO SAMTA. ONLV 17 SHOPPING 0.--VS LEFT •1 fourth grade combined enroll- ments are the second lowest in the past 10 years, Chaddick added. A 41-acre parcel of land owned by the Kendall Development Company appears to be the first section of the Bolsa Chica area which may affect Ocean View School District, Chaddick said. The Kendall property is local· ed near Graham Street and Slater Avenue in an area of homes known as the Landing. "The Kendall land is next to much of that On which they arc presently building,'· the ass is· tant superintendent said. "Since thl!re is no city master plan re· ady for this area, this builder may not be able to start much be.lore July of 1978." Present company plans call for about 165 homes in this section of Bolsa Chica, the school offirial noted. ··At the present rate of childrht per home." said Chaddick. Ocean View School District can expect some 66 school-age children from the Kendall pro· perty area." Most of the Bolsa Chica area within Ocean View's boundaries is under the jurisdiction of lhe state Coastal Zone Commission. Any construction in the area will require approval by the com· mission before construction can begin, Chaddick explained. Probation Set In.2 Deaths RJVF.RSIDE (AP) -An 18· year-old youth has been placed on three years' probation after he W-5 found guilty of Involuntary· manslau1bter in the deaths or two friends. Tha sentence was pronoupced against Raymond Robison or Rubi'doux by Riv~rside Superior Jud~e Ernest Looez. ni, ~ase involved the death or Rollin Steeg, 17. and John Stevena, 15, who died July 5 after inballn1 wbJte powder laced with strychnine. HD.Police Sell~ Tbc HunUQJton Beach Police Department will auction elf on· claltntd property Saturday at 10 a.m. in the Civic Center parkin& lot, Main and Mansion Streets. The list of auction Items in.' eludes 46 bicycles, assorted tape decks, watches. bill/olds and othor mlscellaneOWt items ac· cumulat~ durina the past three l'n()Dt.ht • Police officials will accept only cub u payment for the auction Ii.ma. o.lly Pl ... -lly by ltlre~ POLICE SWAT TEAM MEMBERS GATHER FOR CAR TOP STRATEGY SESSION Huntington Beach Murder Suspect Apparently Left Behind Warm TV, a Beer end Hla Luggage Huntington Driver J a¥ed Over Crash 'Shooting ·crows' A Huntin~ton Beach man who admitted m court that he was drunk behind the wheel or hi s car when it smashed head-on into another auto on West Coast Highway in Newport Beach has been sentenced to mne months in Orange County Jail and placed on three years probation. Sniper Siupect Remains in Jail Superior Court Judge James H. Walsworth further ordernd Mike Lee Gree n, 21, to stay away from alcohol and make rull restitution to a woman who was seriously injured in the crash. The woman was identified as Rosemary Trotta, 32, who was seriously injuted when Lee's car crossed a double yellow line and rammed her ~uto Sept. 11. Lee later pleaded guilty to charges of drunken driving. A passenger in Lee's car, Shevawn Green, 19, also was tn· jured ~n the collision. Koala Autopsy SAN DIEGO (AP> -The San Diego Zoo says the death of one of the koalas donated by Australia for the Bicentennial resulted from an intestinal inflammation coupled with a virus infection in the liver. A young Huntington Beach oil field worker who insists he was only target· shooting at crows Tc· mained jailed today, as detec- tives and the District Attorney's Office assessed his case. Mark Allen Smith. 21, of 2601 F1orida St.. is held in lieu of $10,000 oail on a charge or assault with a deadly weapon. Collector's Coins Stolen A burglar who evidently gained entry via an unlocked re· ar kitchen door has stolen an ex· tensive coin collection valued at $3,500 from a Huntington Beach home, police said today. Steve Curti s, of 9276 Brookhaven Circle, discovered the valuable assortment missing when he went to examine it, in· vestigators said. The victim reported he last saw it in its regular security hid· ing place about one week before 'it was discovered vanished from the home. Olga to Wed Gowne~ S~;s Mum on Mate ST. LOUIS (AP> -Everybody's darling of the un- even parallel bars, Russian gymnast Olga Korbut, ap- parently is getting ready to settle down to matried life. Miss Korbut, 21. bought a wedding dress at a J C Penney store over the weekend and in· dicated she would be married next year in Russia, said Edna Welch, the store's bridal consul· tunt. Asked whom s h e would marry, the gold medal winner in the 1972 Olympics, said only, "A «OHUT boy.'' . Miss Korbul was in St. Louis to perform in nn exhibition with other Soviet gym. nasts. The dress cost $1T7. She aJso bought a $55 fingertip veil and paid for the purchases with three $100 bllls. store employcs said . • •• ..,.., ! ......... , The Huntington Beach police SWAT unit responded to the call about noon Monday when the re· port came in that a sniper was firing on a city work crew. Smith, a well-puller. was ar· rested without incident at his apartment after police said two shots he fired narrowly missed a trio of city surveyors working in the area of Hunlin&ton and 17th Streets. "One round passed so close they heard it and then after they r an a considerable distance another round passed quite close by," a police spokesman said to- day. "T h ey f elt , under the circumstances, they bad ade· quate reason to believe he may have had more than crows on his mind,·' the officer continued. The older. rural area of central Huntingtoan Beach ls infested with crows. Investigators say whatever the outcome, at the very least Smith is expe~t~ to be charged with discharging a firearm inside city Um Its. None or the three surveyors in the team that came under tire - or feel they did -was hit, but all are a bit sore today from their frantic dives for cover. Skiploader Skips Site Someone who loaded up a $4,000 skiploader and skipped from a Huntington Beach con· atrucUon site wTth it is sought by police today on grand theft choraes. Job foreman 8111 Miller called omcera Monday mon'lln1 when · workmen arrived at l:dln1er Avenue and SprinCdaJe Street to find th• bla machlne mllllinl• InvatJgatora aaid they bavo information that someone report. ed seeln1 it methodically being loaded aboard a traller and towed off down McFadden AvenHSUnda1 n!abl • Relative Killed .· In Horne By ROBERT BARKER Ot Ille D•llY Piiot SUlf Police combed Huntington Beach today for a 23-year-old man they suspect of slaying his mother-in-law Monday after- noon. Detective Dick l'{plen said Mrs. Muriel Nort-0n. 50, was found shot to death in her home at 15161 Davis Lane, Huntington Beach, at2:30p.m . Wanted for q uestioning is Daniel Buy her, 23, of 5441 Hen- dricksen Drive. Officers said that police rushed to the Norton home a fter neighbors reported that Mrs. Norton and Buyher had engaged in a loud argument. Police said n eighbors told them Buyher was trying to force Mrs. Norton lo tell him the whereabouts of his estraaged wife, Linda. A neighbor woman said she couJd hear Mrs. Norton say, "I wish you could get it through your thick skull ... She said she then heard Mrs. Norton scream and the front door slam violently . Witnesses s;:tld they then saw a youn g man running down the street to the residence or 5441 Hendricksen. Buyher reportedly resided there with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ferguson. Police cordoned off the area. but Buyher eithe r slipped through the dragnet or had fled the scene before authorities ar- rived. Buyher is described as 6 feet tall and weighing about 200 pounds, with blond, curly hair. Nolen said the weapon used in Mrs. Norton's death was a small caliber handgun. He said the victim was shot in the temple. Nolen said that Buyher had no car and apparently had fled on foot. <See SUSPECT, Page A2) Marina High School Plans Yule Concert The music department of Marina High School. Huntington Beach, will present a Christmas concert Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Huntington Beach Hi gh School auditorium. The free concert is open to the public. The s bQW will Include performan~es by the Marina High School orchestra, girl's glee club, concert choir, Mariners and Madrigals. Coast Weather Fair but hazy weather expected through Wednes· day with cbllly nights in· the low ~. bigbs of 7(). 75. INSIDE TODA V NftD Yorlc ,audience givet Btng Cro1b11 .a rousing wtlcome .and tonight the vetera11. · croontr opeu on . BroodwoJI. StQ1"11, A3. lade~ MY-~ AM .....,.,.... -.-~-•1 .... " ......... .,. .. ,.,.,...,_, ~· Al ~llttw' OeHltlW .,., ....... """". a.k~ . ., ..... ~ ., ....... 0..-MMkft M 11*11~ ............. "'~ ..... • ..... 1~"'-"" ~ ~ ., .. ,.,~ =~· r. ...,. ..... . r· ·- A2 DAILY PILOT H/F Tuesday Oecember7 1976 ~~~~~~~_.;.."---'"'-~'--~~~---'"" KLAN NATIONAL DIRECTOR COVERS HEAD FOLLOWING ATTACK BY PROTESTER KKK's Oavlct Duke, right In llght suit, Tangles Under Attack a t M1rlne 8 11e Marines Continue Probe 14 Face Courts-martial in Assault Charge Jlv P lllLI I' ROSMARIN 01 tll• O•llY Pt let ~~It Aftf"" .i rm·k \ ... t.11 t l\trmrl.t\ th•• :'ll .1rin1• <'i.1 ,,.., , , • ..,11rn1·tl ,1 fact finding 111 \ cst1gul1on loda\ to d ctt.•rrn1ne w hl'lh('r 14 black Camp P<'ndlptnn mar rnf's will :,land niurh m,1rl1.1I on 1·h.11 gt·' ti r a .. !> a u I t I n g .., I "( w h I l ,. "'"' hl.'rn<'ck.., Cun•rnml•nl pro ... l•C'ulor J,1mt·' Patrick Mr lll.'nr) oµt•n1•d lhl' µo..,s1b1hty of am(•11<11ng thilrgt'" to mcludt• t•un"I"' an lo tommtl murdl·r and .1tt1·mptnl mun..11.'r lh1!> morning Major Mcll1•nr,i. ..,;ml whl.'lht•r the chargt•s .ir1· 1n1·ludt;.'fl ;,t an} possible court martial I!> up lo the mn•..,t 1gat1ng ofrtc ,.,.., t•om.lu<"l1ng the ht.>anng Acrorcltng lo thl' 111 oM·rulllrs tht• \ tt'tlm..,, Ortl' of whom n• mains hosp1t.1l11.l·d. \H'rt' ,11 tacked hv hi;1ek serv1c·Nnt•11 i\:ov 1:1 who b.C'l1e' cd a mt·t•ting 11f tht· Ku Klux Klan w ""twin.I( ht'ld Thi· \ 11·t1 m ..,, ~t.d.>ht•d and beaten, had .H·tuall} lrc>t'll in Lht• m1ddlt: of ,JO unauthon.tt'<I hl'l.'r drink1n,.i 1>(',,11111 .• iulhor 1ta·~ i.a1d . and w l'l'l' nul 1·onnc:ttt·d \dlh lhl' Id.in J'Pndldon of f1 Cli1IS, .tflt•r (1r't 1kn~ 1ng all\ kl.111 ,11'11\ 1tu·.., on th1 · hJ"I l,tll'r adrn1llt <I th.11 lht•rt• hud IH•c•n ,, h.Kh. nwo t1111-in th1· hJrrJc·k., hut in ;tnolhl'r room l'cndlt•tnn < •>m mJlllll'f' mJrl1·· ,1 lt1·l .. 11·1I .1111 mpl tn hrt'.•k up lh•· hJ-.l' KJ..h. c·h.1pll•r h\ tran..,fc r nni.: tl!> m1 ml.ier-. t1111thn ha-.c.., lli·arin.:' to rl1'11•1 mint• lh1· I'\ 1dl'rH'l' .tl;lJlll'ol tht• 11 Jl'<'ll"E'<I hl Jck nLllllll'!'. :Jrt' .,dll'<IUl!'il lhl.., \\l•t•I.. 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' <1uir kl} d1!-1)('r'it'CI the: rnl'l1•t'. .!IW ' tnlittnJ: ht>,I\' cl11ty baton., Thc:rr • wen· no reported m 1uncs Tht' protc!ltt•r c, "t•re hu.,tll'<l off ~ thP hr1st• Th<' KKK rortc:~l' was .illowed lo n·m:.11n. thou~h Ml'i. " i;:rumy or<IPrl'd r>uk<•'' l><'<Jllll' to : put aw uy their flJI! I ) , ORANOI! COAST .. , DAILY PILOT ,.,. l)t.-"O" (#'If' I 04 ./ J' "' • ,., """ f '\ ""' b f'W-'1trw Nlllt111t rt .. , '"''' '-ft,, I,_.~·~ '°""'' ~bt•'t'HfWJ r """ , .. ., ..._..,.,. ~,,_, ,., .. : :tt•;'~." ... :~~~.:·. ~"' ;.~oJ\~ :l;...:.·:. :": f"'~," \ '"" v .. , ... ., ,, '.,~ ""• 1it .... -"'" '" 111•·•1 , : ~'"" :;:·j~~ ~~~:., •. ::':.::-~:·· "· 1 • ... rut "'"''• 11'11•"'1 N•"'' ., ,,,. Yi .,._"t u., ,.,_, tt\I• Ww'• (.-•1hn" •'1'-"" I ' , '\ I ' ~ ' " \ ' ! \ .... ,," .... 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"'IHtaty el'\l•"'1*"'P •~"'' ,,,,,~~~~~~~~~~---- O•t ly P0o1 Sl•ff PhO•o REPORTER TALKS WITH PICKETERS AT CAMP PENDLETON Protesters Carry Sfgns Against Ku Klux Klan t:11!ltl lo ten M 1 •.., ~tool.I v1g1 I 11uts1dt• hl'aOqlH1rler' lo<l a~ In the hear1n l{..,, ('hid Govrrn menl Prosecut or J<imt•t., Putnth Mdlenrv rt"-\ ealed the Manni· Corp:; \\111 st•ek sl1fre1 c·hargt•s than those lodge<J a~·;unM tht· ac cu!>ed mc>n. Tht· pro.,l'cul 11in h.1-. rncl1<·al1·rl al lt•a,t thrl't' 111 th1· lllJllt t•cl marine'> suffen•d rollJp-,!'d lung from deC'p stnb "oundo; The ra-.es a~amst Sl!t Wilham !-\pencer. 23, of l11 1!h J>oml ~ C and PFC' Donalrl rt lluntt.•r 2.1, of Winston Salc·m. '(' "''rt' 1.·on unut•tl for ;1 "l't'lo. '" I c·.,l1 m111t) was heard S~ncrr w a.., lo o.,N'k n·rr1'St'n talion by anothC'r m1l1t:iry lawy<'r . Capt Willhelm l\('nnett llunter's counsf'I tolcl fO\ 1•st1i:nl mg Officer Thoma.., F. Smith h{' needed more lime to review lhl' evidenrP Aft('r accepting \\r1llt•n testtmony from the v1tt1m:-. of the attack about their 1nJ11ncs, Caµt Daniel II. Koenig. attorney Cor Lance Cpl. Bobby R. Bishop. asked and received a postponr mt'nl of Lhe case unt1l 'l1wr..,day Today three m ore of the ar cused marines were scheduled to be heard. They arc Lance Cpl Gregory A. Coffee, 21. of St Louis. Mo ., Lance Cpl. Ricky C'. McG1Jvery. 19, of Dallas. Tex . and Sgt. Herman f'lelchc:r. 2.:1, of High Point, N.C. MeGilvery's case was con· lmued after the Manne ns kNI to be represented by El Toro Capt S. B. Ray . McGilvery's current coun se l Capt. Daniel C. "Stanhope, said "we'd proceed un· der a very stron~ objection" w he n investigating officer Wtlliam Halsey denied request for add itional counsel, beside Ray. Stanhope argu ed that his client was entitled to an extra attorney, since the government hod aa- alened two men-to handle the case a•alnst McGllvery. P e rry Parka, an aide to Congr esswoman Yvonne Braithwaite Bur.ke, wu a spec- tator at Monday's hearlnJ. Other spectators included Car· rel Reavis. prealdent of the • Montford Point Marines f\SSocia- l11J11, retired veterans of the first ~roup of black marines admitted Into thc eorps : and Joe Stone and Myon1a Gtbb!I of the San Diego l 'rbu11 t .l'a~ue. which first ex- po!-,•d KKK Jct1v1ty at Camp J'1•ndlt•to11 SUS PECT • • Tht• I lunt1ngton Beach police Special Weapons and Tactics <SWAT! unit moved into the housi· !>hortly before dark. The m•1ghborhood is bctwen Bolsa Chica and Graham Streets, just :;oulh of Edinl.!er A venue. When SWAT team members l'mer~cd, they said Ute television wai; playing and a can of beer had been opened and partially drunk. They r eported that Utey found what was believed lo be the sus· pcc l ·s hags pac ked in the bc<iroom. Police said they were seeking murder warrants from lhe dis- t ricl attor~ey's office today. Man Shoots Intruder, Self CATHEDRAL c rTY <AP) -A man apparently angered over beer drinkers In front of his home killed one of the intruders with his high-powered rifle. then killed himself, R iverside County sheriff's deputies said. DeWitt Woodford, 56, had called de'puties to complain in the · past about a group of people in a pickup truck drinking in front of his home, investigators said. Sunday night he didn't call. Instead, he took his gun, went out on hls front lawn and fired one shot that killed Alberto Can(u, 211 of Cathedral City, and woundea Richard Navarro, 24, whose ad· dress was unknown, said sher1U'1 set. David Weak!)'. Arizona /flenaorial Made Ready Workmen al the Arizona state capitol lower the anchor of the US.S Arizona onto a pedestal which will be the focal point of a memorial which commemorates the sink· ing of the ship in Pearl H arbor 35 years ago today. The memorial honors the 1,107 crewmen killed during thc attack. . E',....P"fl*!AI BONFA • .-. him in regard to the P ublic Facilities Corporation were com· pletely distorted and that he In fact saved that group $50,000 10 a legal settlement. Bonfa said he was not involved in lhe plan for employe retire . ment benefits and nol connected wilh it until •atter the "s-hU the fan." Shenkman said that he feels there is turmoil, unrest and lack of confidence in lhe legal depart ment on behalf of the city coun cil. "My only way to reflect this lack of confidence is to vote no on lhe pay raise,'' he said. Bartlett favored i::ranting th{' pay raise. "If the people don't like the way the office is being run they could vote him (Bonla) out of of· fiee," he s aid. Mayor Wieder said, "It is tn cumbenl on us to grant Bonfa tht pay raise. "The fault, .. s he said, "lies 1n the city charter. lie 1s M•rvtn~ two masters, the city council and the electorate." Bonfa's Position is elected and not appointed although there have been studies m the pa!>t to change the charter to makt• 1t ap poinllvc. New Slay ing Trial, Opem SA LINAS (AP} ·-Jury selcc· lion is under way In the retrial of Inez Garcia In the ratal .!!hooting of D 300-pound man she says helped rape her. A panel of 89 prospective jurors was polled Monday before Mon· terey County Superior Court Judge Nat A. Aglinno at the start of the sesion. Mrs. Garcia was convicted Oct. 4, 1974, of S('('Ond·degree murder in the shooting dealh of Miguel Jiminez Her conviction was overturned by the state Court oC Appeal. After the last column which was 9boul natural and cullured pearls. I have had many readers ask about the other types of pearls too. lt"s gratifying to ltnd so many people who are reading the column and find 11 atlmulallng their Interest 1n gems Lake Blwa (Bee-wah) Japan is tl)e most proflf1c source of fresh water pearls that are grown In a mollusc 11ml• to the sall water vsfiety These pearls are irregular rn shaoe (baroque) and color Their vwy difference from the norm mal$ea them attractive and Interesting. We found s n unusual 81wa l hat had developed In the shape of a cross. It 1s approxlmately one and •Quarter Inches tong and three Quarters of an Inch wide Our jeweler has fashioned 11 Into a dramatic pendant. The large BI WI S m•k• UP beautifully as rlng1 elao. Our own Mlsslulppl River bed Is the aoure.-of .some vwv pretty color•d pHrtl -111 fhldes of pastel• 'end even tome brown and blaci<a. These differ from th• Japanes' variety In that th•Y ere natural. an accident of neture. The onH from Lake Blw• ere Official Threatens Ticketing 'Revenge' SACRAMENTO CAP) Rep Leo Ryan was :.o irkl'<i by a SS parking ticket h e got al Sac rament o M etropol1lan Airport that he threatened to lrv to restrict revenue.sharing funds, the Sacramento Bee says. The news paper reported Mon- day that Ry<in . a South San Fran· c1sco Democrat. romplamc'<l that he was the vil't1m of "harass- ment" and wrote letter.., com- plammg about the l1ckl'l to a counly supervisor and a Judge. In the letter to Sacramento County Suµervi sor Sandra Smoley, Ryan noted that he !>erves on a congressional c<,m mitlee that handles revenue sharing. He said he has always fought lo give local governml'nls as much money as possihlc with no strings alt ached. But this concept may have to be re·exammed. Ryan added. 1f the county can afford to let tv.o sheriff's deputies "pas:. the t1m{' of day m the sunshjne" wnltni:! tickets when law enforcement agencies arc complaining about light budgets. the newspaper re· ported In his Jetter to Municipal Court Judge Lawrence Marvin Jr . Ryan said he was harassed by "hat he railed idle traffic 11f ficers with nothing better to do. He said he parked his car Nov :io al a five.minute curbside zone for Jess than 15 minutes while he unloade'<:t tt.,pieces of baggage to ship to Wa~inglon, after his marr iage l o~-Sacramento woman. He said it w uJd llavc been virtually impossible for him to move that much luggage from a parking lot to the termmal "Of course. I might have asked the offieers to a ssist." Ryan wrote the judge. "They hardly seemed pressed for time because there was only one other car parked against either curb for at least 100 yards in front of the en tire airport building. In fact. the ® EiEM WISE Mary Barr, Certified Gemologist AccrllltM G- L1tn ... , ''"'' '"""'• w ttttcllff "tn• Mewporl .. 9'h place seemt!d almost empty of norm al passenger traiftr " Ryan said he did not identify himself as a congrc!>sman lo thl' officers I\ copy of the Jetter sent to thl• Judge also went lo Mr">. Smoley and Sheriff lh~anc Lowe, the ncwsp<iper said Shenff'i; spoke:,,man Bill Miller :-.aid the letter had not arnved but added: "ll 's not too uncommon for polit1 cwns to ('Omplatn about rec<'1ving tie kt:ls. If he left his car parked 1n a loadmg zone for 12 minules, he violatc<.I the law. Anybody who docs lhal 1s goini.: lo gel a tlr kcl "If he ll•aves his car there overtime parked agrun, he'll gtil another tick rt," Mtlll'r .. aid. ID Program Draws 'Nay' WASlllNGTON CAP) - A federal ad.,.1sory panel \'Oiced .!ltrong opposition this afternoon to any system of national idenl1ty cards for Am enc ans. The Federal Advisory Committee on False Iden- tification studied the na-• tional ID-card proposal in its 18·month s ear eh for ways to c urb lhc ' fraudulent use of fulsc ' identification documents such as driver's licenses, birth certifi cates and credit cards. The committee's 800· page report s aid it "op- poses any so -called 'na- tional ID card ' " and "strongly opposes any new type of state or local gov- ernment issued ID in- tended lo s upersede exist- ing documents." cultured. The fresh waler pearls from the Mlss1sslpp1 ere not as abundant a'I tho 81was and 11re rougher In 1extur9 The Mobe fmah·bay) peert la cultured snd 1s produced byi plac1no an ob1ect. usually a hemisphere ol mother-ol-pearh in the shell ol a fresh watel') mussel whore 11 1, coaled with nacre They are cut from the shell and pegged tor selling I usually In earnnos. I Wilh the Infinite variety of pe1rl1, nature! and cultured. I fresh and 1111 water. thefe Is alwaya one that will rnake a tasting and memorable gift Jlftt nght for someone aotetll to YoU ) .. Irvine VOL 69, NO. 342, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNtA ' Today's Closing. ·· N. Y. Stocks TUESDAY, OECEMBER 7, 1976 TEN CENTS1~ Marines Continue Assftidl Probe By PHILIP ROSMARIN Of IN O•lly ~llol SCAif After a rocky start Monday, the Marine Corps resumed a fact-finding investigation today to determine whether 14 black Camp Pendleton marines wHI stand courts-martial on charges of assaulting six white leathernecks. Government prosecutor James Patrick McHenry opened the possibility of amending charges to include conspiracy to commit murder and attempted murder this morning. Major Mcllenry said whether the charges are included at any possible court martial is up to the investigating officers conducting the hearing. According t6 the prosecutors. the victims, one of whom re- mains hospitalized, were at- tacked by black servicemen Nov. 13 who believed a meeting of the Ku Klux Klan was being held. The victims, stabbed and beaten, had actually been in lbe middle of an unauthorized beer drinking session, authorities said, and were not connected with the klan. Pendleton of- ficials, after first denying any klan act.i vi ties on the base, later admitted that there bad been a KKK meeting in the barracks, (See KLAN, Page A2) ,. . .. Execution Ruled IDegal by Co111·t Current Guideline Violated SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The California Supreme Court ruled today that the state's death penalty is unconstitutional in lieht of recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions. The un animous decision. writ- ten by Chief Justice Donald R. Wright. held that California's capital punishment law is invalid since it violates current . U.S. Supreme Court guidelines re- garding imposition of lhe death penalty. It said the law improperly re· quires the death penalty under •pecified instances without pro· ~iding for consideration of mitigating cir<'umstances. The decision said the state's death penalty law makes "death a mandator y punishment for those categories or first-degree murder encompassed by the special circumstances" section of the law "without provision or cons ideration of evidence of mitigating cir<'umstances .•. " Chief Justice Wright in 1972 wrote the decision striking down the old death penalty law but voters and the Legislature ap- proved a new law that went into effect Jan. 1, 1974. There have been no executions Wlder the new law and none is scheduled. The old law was abolished in a decision saying that the death (See DEATH. PageA2) Teens Invited To View Show Teens in Irvine are invited to take a trip to Burbank Friday af. lemoon to -qjew a taping of the "All in the Family" television show. The teens will be part of the live studio aud ience for tapings of Archie Bunker's show. The trip is limited to SS persons. 16-years·old or older. Cost or the trip is S2. Buses will leave from SELF High School at 1:30 p.m. and from University HJgh at 2 p .m . The expected re· tum time is 9 p .m. For further information and reservations, phone the Youth Servkes Division al city hall, 754-3635. . Coast Weather Fair but bat)' weather expected through Wednes- day with chilly nights in the low 50s, highs or 70-75. INSIDE TOD"~ NftD Yorlc ,m.dfnu gfoea Bing Cr o1b11 .o ro.,ting welcome ,ond tonight the veteran croonu OJ)Cftf on Broodwo11. St0f1/, A3. tndex AU Alt AU A4 .. I M ..... AU Alt A11 A4 ,.. ·4 .. ~ CHINA VETO OVERRULED U.N. 's Kurt Waldheim Re-election Of Waldheim Supported UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP> -Kurt Waldheim was re- commended for re-election as U.N. secretary-general by ' the Security Council today after an initial veto by China. The General Assembly will make the final decis ion, but it is a formality. Diplomats emerging from the closed meeting said the second- round vote was 14-0 with one abstention to elect the 57-year- old Austrian diplomat to another term as head of the world body. He is completing a five-year term lo which he was elected in 1971 on the retirement of the late U Thant. The job pays $119,580 a year. China, which has wanted so- meone from the Third World as secretary,-general, vetoed Waldheim in the first round in or- der to support former Mexican President Luis Echeverria, the diplomats said. The Chinese abs- tained on the decisive baJiot, they said. China's first-round veto had <See VOTE. PageA2) Cyclist Sues Tavern Pair Over Injuries A motor~yclist who claiw that the operators of an Irvine·area tavern are responsible for the al- legedl)' drunken tond.IUon or a motorist be names as co· defendant demanded $500,000 in damages Monday ln Orange Count)' Superior Court. Laxne EdwaQl Guile claims that Richard Thom• Uben was drunk at tbe wheel of bll cu Oct. 2 when the car and Guise's motore?rcte cotllded near the in· tersectioo of University Drive andCampu! Drive. Gulae c'lalms Ulat Ube.rt had been served drinks earlier at Lit· tle John's Inn, 20072 Santa Ana A.e., despite the fact that CJS)fratora ot the tavem knew he was not fit to drive. 11te tavern operators are iden· tltied as John J . and Carma KUbne. Gutae states he autferec\ .-tom il\furiu In tbecollilioo. APWlrtp!lolo Slaying SU3pect Hunted KLAN NATIONAL DIRECTOR COVERS HEAD FOUOWING ATTACK BY PROTESTER KKK's David Duke, right In light suit, Tangles Under Attack at Merine Base By ROBERT BARKER 0111\e O•llY Piiot Sl.tlf Swine Flu Confirmed Police combed Huntington Beach today for a 23·year·old man they suspect of slaying his mother-in-law Monday after- noon. Wisconsin Cme Supported by Govenunent Detective Dick Nolen said Mrs. Muriel Norton. 50, was found shot to death in her home at 15161 Davis Lane. Hunttnetoo Beacb, at2:30p.m. Wanted for questioning is DanieLBuyher, 23, of 5441 Hen- dricksen Drive. Officers said that police rushed to the Norton home after neighbors reported that Mrs. Norton and Buyher had engaged in a loud argument. Police said neighbors toJd them Buyher was trying to fofce Mrs. Norton to tell him the whereabouts of his estranged wife, Linda. A neighbor woman said she could hear Mrs.· Norton say, "I wish you could get it through your thick skull. .. She said she then heard Mrs. Norton scream and the front door slam violently. Witnesses s aid they then saw a young man running down the street to the residence of 5441 Hendricksen. Buyher reportedly resided there with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ferguson. Police cordoned off the area, but Buyher either s lipped through the dragnet or had fled the scene before authorities ar- rived. ATLANTA <AP> -Govern· ment scientists have made the first confi rma t ion that a Wisconsin man suffered from swine nu. a spokesman for the national Center for Disease Con· trol said today. · "Material testing by the CDC is positive for swine influenza A· New Jersey-76," said inform a· tion officer Don Berreth. "Further investigation is n ecessary before th e significance of the swine nu can be assessed,·· he said. Officials in Wisconsin indicat- ed last weekend that Don Harris, a Brodhead farm worker, had contracted swine nu. His case is the first confirmed .this fall by analysis of throat cultures. Berreth said. A Concordia, Mo., telephone lineman, Larry Hardison. is believed to have suffered the dis· ease in late October, but throat cultures that might have shown viral infection could not be taken because Hardison recovered before it was suspected he had swine flu. Berreth said. Tests on Hardison's blood showed a rise in antibodies against swine flu, an increase consistent with having suffered the disease, Berreth said. Tests on Harris· blood have not shown the presence of swine flu antibodies, but Berreth said that is not necess arily contradictory to the throat culture finding because the antibodies build only gradually after the illness oc- curs. Three CDC epidemiologists have gone from Concordia to Brohead, a small south-central Wisconsin town, to check Harris and other area persons who have shown symptoms of respiratory illness. Berreth said. "There is, however, no indiea· lion that there is extensive upper respiratory illness in that area," he said. Recent blood specimens from the farm worker are being tested al the CDC, and a blood sample taken while he was ill is on its way to Atlanta, Berreth said. The swine flu case suffered by Harris, 23. was diagnosied by Dr. Bernard Easterday, a University of Wisconsin influenza expert who bad gone to the Brodhead farm to check an outbreak of swine flu among hogs there, Ber- reth said. Easterday confirmed that j several hogs contracted the dis-, ease. Some Wisconsin officials speculated that Harris caught the disease by working with the I hogs, but the source or his swine flu case has not been positively determined, Berreth said. The source .of the Missouri telephone lineman's apparent <See FLU BUG, Page A2) Nessie Gets Name But Still in Hiding NEW YORK <AP) -They're going to name · it "Nessiterris Rhombopleryx" -tfthey find it. "It" is the Loch Ness monster, or Nessie as it is known to Scotland's schoolchildren. Dr. Robert H. Rines, dean of the Franklin Pierce Law Center in Concord, N.H., and leader of the 1976 Loch Ness photographic expedition, claims to have seen the legendary monster in the Scottish lake in 197,2: Buyher is described as 6 feet tall and we\gbing about 200 pounds, with blond, curly hair. Nolen said the weapon used in Mrs. Norton's death was a small caliber handgun. He said the victim was shot in the temple. Nolen said that Buyher had no car and apparently had fled on foot. University Drive Traffic Talk Due Before addressing the Mass achusetts Institute of Technology Club here, be told r e· 1 porters Monday: "I'm absolutely convinced the monster exists. We know there are more than one down there." . The problem is finding Nessie -or some part of its remains. During a slide presentation. Rines and three other Americans who accompanied him explained the major difficulty in locating "the wonder of Loch Ness with the diamond shaped flipper." The Huntington Beach police Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) unit moved into the house shortly before dark. The neighborhood is betwen Bolsa Chica and Graham Streets, just Irvine Transportation Com- missioners will meet tonight to discuss better lrarnc cont.rots on University Drive. The meetlng, which is public, will begin at 7:30 o'clock in the new City Council chambers, 17200Jamboree Road. • south of Edinger A venue. When SWAT "team members (See SUSPECI', Page A2> Olga to Wed Gowne~ She's Mum on Mate ST.LOUIS <AP)-Everybody'sdarllngoftheun·. even parallel bars, Russian gymnast Olga Korbut, ap· parenUy is getting ready to settle down to married life. · Miss Korbut, 21, bought a wedding dress at a J C Penney store over the weekend anti in· dicated she would be married next year tn Russia, said Edna Welch, the store's bridal consul· tant. " · · Asked whom she would matry, the gold medal winner in the 1972 Olympics, said only, "A boy." . Miss Korbut was in St. Louis to perform ln an exhibition with other Sovi~ gym. nasts. The dress cost $177. Sbe also bought a $SS fingertip veil and paid for the purchases wttb three $100 b~lls, store emplo~es said. Several City Council members have asked aides to look into lowering the speed Ii.mil on University Drive, between Culver Drive and the San Diego Freeway. They claim the 50 mile per hour speed limit is too fast, earf.icularly when motorists are trying to ente'r University Drlve from residential streets within Universit:v Park. The city engln~. however. bas said that the 50 mile per hour speed liQ\lt is correct. But city aides have suggested ways to improve traffic control on the stre•ch of University Drive, includine: -lnatalUng a right tum only lane for southbound University Drive traffic at Michelson Drive. -Reviewing proposed landscaplng plans at University Drive aocl Golden Glow, ao that m*tists ~"1Unc ~den Glow will have ~tter visibility. Also, trlmm{ng exlatlng trees and ahrub-s et Unl-ver.sity and M:lche~ Drives atMl U,u.verslty at tM ibol>pinC center Uita I~ better VSsi6tutf. -1Aten$lfy radar ent'Ql'Cement ol tbe 'exlltloa •l)eed· limit. ort Unlverllty Drjve • TrantportatJon comrnisslOners wlll be ulted to make r~otn­meftdatioq•~ which will be forwarded lo Ulo ~ council Dec.14 • ·-- The lake, 24 miles long and 900 feet deep, is filled with murky water and surrounded by high craggy walls which make up the sides. It provides miles of hiding places for unsociable monsters. But Rines and others are already at work trying to con- vince the owners of small re· search submarines to lend them equipment so they can travel along the bottom and examine what they believe are the s k eletons or carcasses of Nessie's forebears. I 'M WflllTit-IG TO SANTA. ONLY J1 SHOPPING ~vs LEFT'.' - I AZ DAIL y PILOT Wo1nan . (:barges . . Assault A young Dana Poml woman told an Orange County Superior Court jury today that her family doctor repeatedly raped her and forced her to participate in acts of sexual perversion while treat· ing her in his South Laguna office last Jan. 1. Obviously distressed and fre· quently covering her race with her hands. the 22.year-old wit· ness testified that Dr. Ross Todd McClure gave her an inJcCllon shortly after she disrobed in his office for a back examination. The witness testified lhal she had consulted Dr. McClure, 54, on several previous occasions in his office at 31S42 S. Coast Highway without any im· proprieties t aking place. But she told the jury today that Ute doctor removed her examina· lion gown and underpants last Jan. 7 after giving her an injec· lion. She said she was powerless to prevent what s he claims took place .. "I was confused and dizzy and I felt like a vegetable," the wit· ness said. ··1 was placed In several positions by the doctor while sex acts took place and there was nothing I could do about It." Dr. McClure is being tried in Judge Kenneth E. Lae's courtroom on charges or rape and sex perversion. It is alleged that •.he act.8 took place while he was treating his patient for a back injury suffered in a CaU at her Dana·Point apart· ment building. Dr. McClure was arrested by sherif('s officers alter the wit · ness was examined at South Coast Community llosp1tal short- ly after the alleged mcidenls look place. The witness testified today that Dr. McClure used both a massager and a vibrator on her body in what the prosecution claims was an attempt to sexual· ly stimulate her pnor to sexual intercourse. From Page Al VOTE ... been expected. ll is customary lo conduct as ' many ballots as necessary until a candidate receives at least nine of the 15 council votes without a negative vote from any of the rive permanent powers China. United States. Soviet Union, Bn lain and France D!plomat.s said the first ballot vote for Waldheim was 13·1 with l abstention presumably Panama Tht> vote for Ecbcvem a 'A ru. 4 4 with 7 abslcntaons in the ftr~l round and J ·S m the second ballot They gave no c1cta1led breakdo" n .on the former M <'XI<' an leodt·r ''ho has long \\anted the\.:"\ l!Oi.t W;,1ldheim. who was drafted m· to the German army 1during World War 11 , rose in thl' d1plomat1c !'er vice after the w:1r. becomin~ ambassador to the L.n1ted Nations and foreq:tn. minister. He ran unsuC'cessfully (Or president or Austria in the spnng of 1971 Joint Water ·Meet Reset The joint meeting between the )rvlne City Council and the Irvine Ranch W atcr Distnct th al was set ror tonight has been rescheduled to Dec. 16. • lRWD officials said they could . not attend the meeting at city ~all and asked that it be planned I for another date. ; Members of the City Council I and directors of the water dis· ,net are trying to meet to open up ) communications between I.be two .,agencies. ., 0,.AHOf COAST DAILY PILOT ~.=~~'~'·-r,::::.:.:=;;,: l. ~ .. :,~:e·:.':r~:::"'~::'.;~::,"7.~: #1.\.A Nfi...,-t ••<"• MvMl~ "'-<"' -~ '• t·~·~;·._~~c!~:-~=,=:;' 1!i9ft i\ ~IVW-• \.e1~r•at\ -.cl ~ ,,_. '• ~~~~~:"~:1.~i'~•~'~no ... , tk• ·-·-~ntOf"' MIO "*I._. ~tt•• C-V•<• Pfnl>Ot'"t atld 0.ftff .. Ml,_.., '"'-t•ll-lld<tor .,_ .•. _...... MIMfl .. a<liW ~ .. '----~ ..... A\\hlotm Mo~o.i ... r:•w. OftlcH (MlaMo-. .. W.\!llrl$1-U_&t .. ~ "'"C>to-.,,..\1,.t """'i...i ....... ~ .,.,, .... ft-•""' s-r..-1 Y•llo• tf'Q1 ... ""' 11-AI S.~ 0 .... P•-1 T11epMt11 (714)'4Mn1 · CIHtlflM Ad,,ertltlnt~-Mn i--· YAtltY-Oftl<• u1.a10 r.-s...c1t-4K-OUO '""''t: ""Or~ ~!'.!!!'..'!"'°" ~ ::;r ...•• --~.:~r.~:... ~ =~: .......... •ti--··· _ ..... .-.. ,_...,__, ' SH-tleU 9"Ur. ••14 t i 0..lt .. ._ ~111., .. 1. Jo;•u• '':f' '" u ,.1., ~J .. :.::.i....-:..:~,. _,,,,fl ..... .,, REPORTER TALKS WITH PICKETERS AT CAMP PENDLETON Protesters Carry S&gna Agalnat Ku Klux Klan Fr.-PageAJ KLAN INVESTIGATION •.. but in another room Pendleton commanders made a belated attempt to break up lhe base KKK chapter by transfer nng 11.s members to other base~ Hearings to det ermine the evidence against the H accu:.cd black marines are scheduled this ":eek and next ·r hrec of th(' ml•n were scrutinized Monday, and each of their cases continued. The real action came dunng a break in the proceedings, when Ku Klux Kktn Grand Dra~on Da\'id Duke of LoUJ~iana ap· pearei_oulside the hearing room. A ba~ or about 20 persons pro testing the detention of th•• marines spotted Duke and four ur his klansmen who unfurled :i KKK flag. The group, calling itself th(• Committee Aga1n!>t Rac1!'.m, mobbed the klansmen. and a violent fight startC'd wht>n .1 woman picketer brought down hn sign with force alup Uukc .., blond. blue-t'\ ed head Se,eral ·blO\\!I \\NC ex chanJ?ed "1th <1l lea't OlH' KKK membt•r striking lht' \\Oman picketer Pendleton m 1l1tciry pr,lacc• qu1ckl\ Cl1!>pt•1 ,t>d th<' ml'lcC'. s" mging hea" y d Ill) baton~ Thf'n• \\ere no reportt'd in1une~ The protesters were lu.~lled oH lhe base The KKK l'Ortt•gc wao; allo"cd to remain. !hough Ml'' J:rurn~ ordered Dukes ix·oplt• lo put away rhcir flag Eight to ten MPs stood vigil outside headquarters today. In the hearings. C'hief Govern mcot Prosecutor .James Patnck McHenry revealed the Marim• Corps will seek stiffcr charges than those lodgect agarnsl lhc ac . rused men The prosecution ha, indicated at least three of the inJured marines suffered collapsed lungs from deep slab wounds The cases against Sgt William SJ>('ncer , 23. of High Point, NC , and PFC Donald R lluntcr 23, of Winston·Salem, N.C., were con- tinued for a week. No testimony was heard. Spencer \\a~ to ~eek rcpresen· talion by another military lawyer. Capt Willhelm Bennett. llunter's counsel told lnvesllgat· mg Officer Thom as F Smith he nt'roed more tame to re\'1ew the c·v1dcncc After accept ing writte n testimony from the victims of the attack about thc1 r injuries, Capt. Oanicl II. Koenig, attorney for Lance Cpl. Bobby R. Bishop, asked and received a postpone- ment of the c asc until Thursday. Today three more of the ac- rused marines were scheduled to be heard. They arc Lance Cpl. Gregory A. Coffee, 21, of St. Louis, Mo., Lance Cpl. Ricky C. McG1lvC'l'), 19. of Dallas. Tex .. and Sgt Herman Fletcher, 23, of lllgh Point, N C McG1lver) 's case was con· tinuC'd after the Manne asked to he represented by El Toro Capt St H Hay. McC1lvery's current counsel Ca pt. Daniel C Stanhope. said "we'd procei!d un- der a -.cry strong objection·• "hen 1nvest1gattng officer Wilham Hulsey rleOJed request for add1t1onal counsel, beside Hay Stanhope argued Utat his client was cnlllled to an extra attorney. since the government had as· s11tned two men lo handle the case against McGilvery. Perry Parks. an aide to Congresswoman Yvonne Braithwaite Burke, was a spec· tator at Monday's hearing. Other spectators included Car· rel Reavis. president of the Montford Point Marines Associa· taon. retired veterans of the first group of black marines admitted mto the corps: and Joe Stone and Myonia Gibbs of the San Diego Urban Leagu~. which first ex· posed KKK activity at Camp l'cndlC'ton 'I'll Cut Your Funds' • Parking Ti~ket Angers Solon SACRAMENTO (AP) -Rep Leo Ryan was so irkc<l by a $S p;lrking ticket he got at Sacramen to Metropolitan Airport that he threatened to try 'to restrict revenue·sharing funds, the Sacramento Bee says The newspaper repc>rted Mon· day that Ryan, a South San Fran- cisco Democrat, complained lhal be was the victim of "harass ·ment" and wrote letters com- plaining about the ticket to a county supervisor and a judge. In the letter lo Sacramento County Super visor S::indra Smoley, Ryan noted that he serves on a congressional com· millee that bandies revenue sharing. He said he has alway~ fought to give local governments as much money as possible with no strings attached. But this concept may have to be re-examined, Ryan added, if • the county can afford to let two sheriff's deputies "pass the time or day in the sunshine" writing tickets when law enforcement agencies are complaining about tight budgets, the newspaper re· ported. In his letter to Municipal Court Judge Lawrence Marvin Jr., Ryan said be was harassed by what he called idle traffic or- ficers with nothing better to do. He said he parked his car Nov. ~al a five·minute curbside ione for less than 15 minutes while he unloaded 11 pieces or baggage to ship to Washington, after his marriage to a Sacramento woman. He said it would have been \'irtually impossible for him to move that much luggage Crom a parking lot to the terminal. "Or course, I might have askeo the orfieers to assist." Ryan wrote the Judge. "They hardly seemed pressed ror timebecau~e there was only one otbcr car parked agaln/t either curb for at least 100 yards In front ot the en· tire airport building. ln fact, the place seemed almost empty or normal passenger traffic." · Ryan said he did not idrnllfy himsell as a congressman to the officers. Carter to China? BOSTON (AP) -President elect Carter has been invited to visit China as soon after bis In auguration as possible, but he would rather have ttre Ctuoese visit him first, The Boston Herald American reported to· day JDPr~gram Drmm 'Nay' WASHINGTON CAP) - A federal advisory panel voiced strong opposition this afternoon to any system of national identity cards for Americans. The Federal Advisory Commitlee·on False Iden· tiCication studied lhe na- tional ID-card proposal in its 18·month search for ways to cu rb the fraudulent use or raise identilic~tion documents such es ctriver's JicenteS, birth certificates and · credit cards. The committee's 800· page report said it "op· poses any so·called 'na· tional ID card' " and. "strongly opposes any new type of state or local gov: ernment-i.ssued IP· in- tended to supersede exist· ing docu~ents. '' 'Shooting Crows.' Sniper s~pect Remains in Jail A young Huntington Beach oil field worker who insists he was only targel·shooting at crows re· mained jailed today, as detec· lives and the District Attorney·s Office assessed his case. Mark Allen Smith, 21, or 2601 F1orida St . is held in lieu of St0.000 bail on a charge or assault with a deadly weapon. The Huntington Beach police SWAT unit respondecl lo the call about noon Monday when the re· port came in lhal a sniper was f1rmg on a city work crew. Smith, a well-puller, was ar- rested without incident al his apartment after police said two shots he fired narrowly missed a trio or city surveyors working in Fro•P~AJ DEATH ••• penalty violated the ~late eon- atltullon 'a prohibition qalnst "cruet and unusual punish· mcnt" There are 65 men and two women on death row tn California pm;ona. The 1974 deJlh penally law re· quired the dealh penalty if a jury or judge found that lhe crime In· volved r illed certain circumstanres surh as multiple ll\Ufders or rtrs L·dCtree mun!~ during a robbery, burglary, rape or kidnaplng. Under Ute law, 1a jury or judge would first d~· termine guilt or iMocence and lhen, If guilty, determine ir lhe death penalty Cit the case. Today's decision involved U1e case or S teven Dougllfi Rockwell, 25, or Sepulveda, wttb was convicted an Ventura County Superior Court or lhe murder. kidnaping and rape of Unda Be\h Coverly on May 11 . I. Following his conviction, lhe Jury failed to reach a verdict in the penalty phase of the tria,I Rockwell then asked the sta• Supreme Court to bar a retrial on the second phase in which lhe ag- gravating circumstances were brou&bt out. · He contended retrial was Im• proper because the law providing the death penalty upon a finding or aggravating circumstances is unconstitution ::i I. The stale alleged the victim was killed to prevent testimony as a witness, that the sluying was committed during a k.idnapi.nc and during a rape. California law imposed the mandatory death penally for persons conviclcd or murder under such circumstances. 1 The tribunal agreed to review the petition and barred the second phase retrial. ' The court pointed out that a sentence of hfe imprisonmeM was proper in such a case since the death penalty could not be imposed, The court noted that the U.S. Supreme Court's dedsion in a Georgia case providing for the death penalty may neither make that penalty mandatory nor give that jury or judge ab6olute d~ cretion in the choice or life or dq· ath. However. the slate court said that the rulings directed that standards be required so that thb sentencing authority would "focus th e particulariie~ circumstances of the crime ana the derendant." F,....PageAl SUSPECT • • emerged, they said the televisioo was playing and a can of ~ had been opened and partiaJl~ drunk. They reported that they found what was believed to be the sus· peel 's bags packed in the bedroom. Front Page Al ~~e!~.a or Huntington and mh Man Shoots "One round passed so close FLU BUG •.. they heard it and then after they In d S ran a considerable distance tru er, elf another round passed quite close by." a police spokesman said lo· CATHEDRAL CITY (AP)_..,_ case also is undetermined, Ber· day. man apparently angered over' reth said. · 'They f e It. under th e beer drinkers in front of his home Slightly more than JO million circumstances. they had ade· killed one or the intruders with Americans had been inoculated quate reason to believe he may his h igh.powered rifle, then against swine flu by Nov. Z7, the have had more than crows on his killed himself, Riverside County latest national fi gures available mind.'' the oCficer continued. sheriff's deputies said. throughtheCDC. -Theolder,rural areaor central DeWitt Woodford, 56, had The number or inoculations In· lluntingtoan Beach is infested called deputies to complain in tho creased the week after withcrows. past about a group or people in a Hardison 's apparent swine Ou Investigators say whatever the pickup truck drinking in front of case was reported but dropped, outcome, at the very least Smith tus home, investigators said. back the next week. lS expected to be charged with Sunday ni ght he didn't call. Federal officials hoped to in· discharging a firearm inside city Instead, he took his gun, went out oculate all American~ 18 years limits. on his front lawn and fired one and older in a $135 million na-None of the lhree surveyors in shot that killed Alberto Cantu, 21 . lional immunization program the team that came under fire -o( Cathedral City, and wounded begun after the disease struck or reel they did -was hit, but all Richard Navarro, 24, whose ad· P C Army recruits at Ft. Dix.NJ . are a bit sore today from their dress was u nknown, said re~ancy over~e _ta_s_tM-·n_~_r_,_k_il-lin_g_oo_e_. _____ r_~_n_t_ic_d_iv_e_s_r_or_c_o_v_~_. _____ s_b_e_rl_U_~_S_g_t._D_a_v_id_W_e_~_l_Y_· __ Ruled as Optional WASHINGTON (AP> Employers do not have to cover pregnancy-related costs in their health plans for employes. the U.S. Supreme Court ruled to· day. In a 6·3 decision. lhe court said lhe Gener al Electric Co. did not violate the federal Civil Rights Act by excluding pregnancy from Its dl1ability insurance pro· jlram. The decision stri1<es down a policy of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which said GE and other employer11 must provide for sick leave and pregnant women ir they provide such be11efits for other dis- abilities. The opinion, written by Justice WUUam H. Rehnquist, reversed a ruling by the 4th U.S. CircuJt Court of Appeals in favor of 43 women employes of GE who worlt in plants at Rkhmond, Portsmouth and Salem, Va., Tyler, Tex., Ft. Wayne and Tell City, Ind., and PhUadelpbJa. The women had !11ed a class· action suit on b~half ol more than 100,000 female employet o( QE. "The plan, in effect is nothing m~ than an insurance package which covers some riakl but ex· eludes others," the hl&h court t aid. .. . . • There it no ruk from wblcb inftl are protected and W'Omlft are not. Ulewile, there II ao risk fJOlll •hldl womea are protected and men arenol." Chier Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices Potter Stewart. Byron R. White and Lewis F. Powell Jr. joined in Rehnquist 's m ojorlty opinion. Justice Harry A. nlackmun con· curred in part. Justices Wiiliam .J . Brennan .Jr., Thurgood Marshall and John Paul Stevens dissented . Hughes Will Witness Due LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two former close aides lo the lat~ Howard Hughes have been or· dered to answer atl quesUons l>Ut to them by attorneys trying to prove the aulhenticlty of a purported Hughes will lound by the Mormon churcb. Superior Court Judge Neil Lake on Monday ordered John Holmes of Los Angeles and Roy Crawford of Encino to appear in court Friday for depotdtlons to be taken by Harold Rhodes. a t· torney for Noah Dietrich. Dietrich , a nother long·tim~ Jlugbet aide, WH named ex- ecutor ot lhc.bUUo"aln)'1 fortune in Ulo document found by lhe Church or Latter·Day Salnt.t (Mormon) in Salt Lake City ahortly •tter Hu1be1• death Apdl ~ . . Alter the last column which was about natural and cultured pearls, I have had m11ny readers ask about the other types of pearls too lt'11 gratifying to 11nd so many people who are reading lhe column and llnd It stlmulahng their interest In gems. Lake Biwa (Bee-wah) Japan is the most prolific source ol lresh waler pearls lhat are grown In a mollusc Slmtl• to the salt water variety. The9e pearls are Irregular in sh11oe (baroque) and color. Their very difference from the norm makes them allractlve and Interesting We found ll'l unuaual Biwa that had developed In the shape of 1 crota. It 1s BOPfOxlmattfv one and a Quarter lnchn long and Hwee Quartert of an Inch wide Our JewelG( haa fuhloned It Into a dramatic Pt~. n,. taro• e1wa1 make up beautlfulty u rlno• aleo. Our own Mlulaalppl Rt"9f bed la the source of .tome VftlY ptetty colored pearls -all lhades ol p11tel1 and even 90fne brown and blaci<.9. These differ from the Japaneao VIMty In thAt they are natural, .,, aecldenl of nature. The onea from Lake · Blwa are @ . .. . . 6EMWl5E MlllY a.r. Oefttlled Gemologist CHARLES H. BARR ~ .. A9f4e• Chm S-lety A~Chm ~ .. , cultured. The fresh water pearls from the Mississippi are not as abundant as the Blwas and are rougher In texture. The Mobe (moh·bay) pearl la cultured and 1s produced by placing an ob1ect, usually a hemisphere of mother-ol-pearl In the shell of a lresh water mussel where 11 Is coated wtttt nacre They are cut from the 'hell and pegged lor setting - usually 1n earrings. With the tnflnfto vat1ety of pearta. natural and c:ult\.n(S. fresh and ult water, there ti elW8YI one th1I wlll fNlf<e a lasting and memorable gift luit nght 10< eomeone apeolal to you • T uesday's Closing Prices NYSE COMPOSITE . TRANSACTIONS 0...olel-\ Include lreOt\"' llw l'Nw YMI< MU-ti, Pec:lllc, PIW, -... Oolroll-(IMIMell •l0<- ••<"""9n-r_...ib,the Het-.1A>-i.ll•••• SoK..,11,..0o•ten •"" 11"1 .... 1 . '• TUOldey. December'! 1978 1/N \.DAILY PILOT A 13 Taglor Wines Coke Purchase I Spreads Waves By MILTON MOSKOWIT'l BBDO, lhe nuhon's fourth largest udverllsing a&l'ncy, last month resigned the account of the Taylor Wine Com- pany While not a hutie account, it's not ms ubstantlul, representing about $1 8 million of advertising a year Taylor ia the premier producer or wines m New York and it's the nation's largest producer of champagne under the Taylor and Great Western labels It's not a client an advertising agency likes to part wilh. So why did BBOO throw it out" Money Tree The answer 1s that 8800 handles the ad· vertismg for Pepsi Cola And Taylor Wfoe, whose history goes 'back more than 200 years, 1s about to be acquired by Pepsi's archrival. the Coca Cola Company. IN THE ADVER11SING AGENCY business. that poses a conflict of interest No agency handling a Ford Motor ear would be selected to prepare advertising for Fngldaire, a diVlSIOfl or General Motors Yes, the giant Coca·Cola Company or Atlanta IS about to gel mto the wine business They used lo Joke m France about Coke being the Ylft ordinatre or Ame ricans With wine consumption movmg up steadily m the United States, Cocoa Cola 1s spreading its ch.ips on the beverage roulette table. Many of the squares on this table are already covered by Coca Cola markers The Taylor and Great West ern table wmes. dessert wmes and sparkling wmcs will JOm a cor· porate lineup that includes the following COCA-COLA, TAB, FllESCA, SPRITE, Mr. PIBB and Fanta sort drinks. Minute Maid and Snow Crop frozen citrus JU1ces. H1 C frwt dnnks, Maryland Cup and Butternut coffees and teas, Adrrurabon, Thomas J Webb and Huggins Gourmet Mocha J avacoHees Coea·Cola thus seems poised to exploit the beverage market, whichever way it Jumps The Ta ylor acqu1s1l1on :s costing Coke !.Orne big chaps It plans to trade stock worth about S90 million That's for a companv currently earnmg S6 m1lhon on sales or $70 m1lhon a year Coke earns $!40 mtlUon on sales of $2 8 bllhon, wh.i ch md1eates that the wme business is still JUSt a npple in the over-all beverage market THE COKE TAYLOR COCKTAIL matches one already eoncocted by BBDO's big sort dnnk chent Pepsi owns Monsieur Henn Wmes. which imports several French table wines as well as one or the lop sellmg wines m the Amencan market, Yago Sant'Gna Bringing Taylor wines mto the house 1,1, 111 also pit Coca• Cola against one or its largest bottlers, the Coca-Cola Botti mg Company of New York This bottler ranks as one of the largest wme producers m the country through its ownership of Franz1a, one of Cahfom1a's big wineries and Mogen Dav1d, Chicago· based master of the sweet wine husiness The Taylor acqu1s1t1on also raises the question of whal they will serve at the Jimmy Carter Inaugural Ball J Pad\ Austin, chairman of Coca·Cola, was a ma1or backer of Carter Donald Kendall, chairman of Pepsi was a maJor backer of ex President Nixon Stocks Pressured ,· By Profit Taking NEW YORK {AP> -The stock market stru,Rgled to a shght gam today. faced with profit takmg pressures after Monday's strong ad\ ance Trad mg was active The Dow Jones average of 30 mdustnal stoeks lost l 08 points to 960 69 Gamers topped losers by a 4 3 spread among New York Stock Exchange listed issues DowJout"111l t·~ragf"•j N~w V0t" CAP) Final Dow .)()r'U"'\ d VflfM)I"' STOCICS Oot'rt M1qn L,,w (IM.-O>Q 'leO ~· -, °' no•• on 10l II t 0 ~I lfl 01 n n )) 11\d .. ) I\ 461 •1 9S7 Ol 70 Tr" 1]1 )I HZ ~ ?'Ii 11 IS Utl I~• ll tOI 14 10J 81 0 SI~ )I) 81 JIPR 111 \.< lnGV\ Trtf'\ Utu> 6) SI~ I 80'l 100 .,., 1)()1) .,., JOO 1 II• 600 M'hat Stof'k• Did NEW VOii!( t1r.PI Actv~,,., Drtflnf\ l,IO\<l\ar>Of(f Tot•I h \IAJ Nt W 1'7t hlQI\\ New"" •ow• Prov rooev ctev 8~1 11"" ot,) l"l 4U .tl\ tt\a 1911 tlO t .. \ ' W>iA~ 4'MEX Oil) HEW YORK tAPl Advan(r \ °"'"~' Un(hAnQod "TOttl 1$'""' Now ttn nlQll~ N~• tt76 low• Symbol• l11C.'ltt,tn 1vt1 OIVIOEND\ Af'""""uM \f'\I 4t~t-Nl\llld,.f\fltu ~ f.\11)tt;\;1trA ,., tJ• "•'',, r 0" rt \tt f11r , ... h v••r no h fJll'-'' • It I o .. y,,.\fnl "" tf'f'U,.,..tl,tf"rt tf ¥ rt uh Id I r Ao1 I t 11 ¥• l' h· f (•\h I'' J \tOt ~ p' '1 i'\ I 11' tf' f ' ,, fl,U~ \1t'I(" r' rt ' 11t\ '''' u11111 •If H• t lu lo ., Olv '" 'I fP\I P' rl tri1 yflft I''"'' (11"'1t)ltnd ">t'nitlt...f ''''"''''"1" 1oc ~11 1tt1nt'f/.t C•lrM•t "' tt'I IOC "-p tld If\ It 1\ II) I '" bitn"-t '"'''I H ,. ..,, ' rt fl 'l' 'fl'•''l '" t •flon I .__,1,1tttl ti•'' Doll nn '• • ,,,.., 11•r1t cw~l <Nt n u-rt °""' w1•• 11t .. I Cr If,, fnt r• 1ro:>t .-t\I •' Am 1tt1 f) 1 t t CM• ,.. •" I' "''.J Ot, •¥• '1 by •h"' I '""1 lf'I •Ir I I 011 tlf\, '''""I• f1~wf' t•'1 •• ,, ath'Li' • fttto€"k11 lu The> Spotllgltt ti.I f w YORK (A,J"l Tht fOUow1no 11\J \l'loW\ '"""' Nf"'# 1"0'' ~toe• ( •(.P\.linQe: '10<'" And w•t r .,,,, 1h~t n•w,. QOn• up 1rw mu\t ""° no"'n .,., 1no\t """M:f O" ptt<•nt Of <"eHQr trQ.aldltllU Ot Vc>lum• '"" M<>May No M'Clltil•I .. tr 'd1no ~k>w U l'lf .. ""'' ~ Net An<t pf't(ti'r IN-'I (N tu:1r'-.,, ,,.. rt tff"f.,_ ' {.f ,.....,. .. n 1~ (Jff'ViOU\ CI0\"19 pt •t• •IWS 100.Y ~ 4 p "' &>•I(' UP\ JI • • ••• Vo Up n.,· 11 l llj 11 1 tO I tQO ~ , . "" l/p • un I I !Jo I ' Up • Uu '• Ut'1 UP Up IJO Un Un Uo 11n llU VO uo 110 •• . , ::· •o ,, 11 n I. ,. I, IJ 1 1 !'<I 011 II I Oii • ' Ott I 4 Ott •• Oii • j Ott H Otl ,, Ot• $. Off , • Ott I Z Oii , , Ot! I I 011 It OH • ()If • Ot• • ' 00 •I Ott •• Oii • > Ott • ) IWEF ... , - :lJf DAILY PILOT Tuesday. December 7, 1976 ·" . Nunfag Aloag a Caren- D~AR PAT: I have been a practicing Licensed Vocational Nurse for several years. What pro· cedure would be involved to upgrade to a Reg~tered Nurse? l'~e heard varying stories re· ga~ding further education, testing and challenge re· qwrements. Where can I write to find out about scholastic requirements and the state's testing pro- cedure? A.R., Costa Mesa The California Boa.rd of Nursing Education and Nurse Registration says that the usual procedure for an LVN going into an RN program is for the slu·. dent to complete required advanced RN courses ln nursing and science. The right to challenge RN courses ls decided by each individual college. Upon completion of required courses, the RN caadldate may submit her transcript of credits to the board, and it requirements have been met, the licensing exam can be taken. Complete information may be obtained by writing to the Board of Nursing, 1020 N St., Room 448, Sacramento, CA 95814. 11alJtl Food'• Mea t Standard DEAR PAT: As a new mother, I'm interested in finding out how much meat actually is contained in baby food "high meat" dinners. I'd also like to know the meal content of other baby food s that con· tain meat. L.P .. San Clemente Got a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat wilt cut red tape, getting the answers and action you need to solve inequities in government and bu~· ness. Mail your questions to Pat Dunn At Your Service. Orange Coast Daily Piwt; P.O. Boz 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 926U. Include your telephone number. The colurmt· a1ipears daily except Saturdays. Color Buvn-Fnulra•ed DEAR PAT: I bought several gallons of paint on sale, and none of it was any good. I took it back to the store for a refund, but the retailer told me he would not refund my money because the paint was a sale item. I wrote to the manufacturer. but have not received any response. The amount of money in- volved is too small to go to small claims court. Do 1 have any recourse, or have I just been taken? G.N., Costa Mesa Your best bet would be to contact the National Paint & Coatings AssociaUoo, 1500 Rhode Jaland Ave., N.W., Wasblngtm, D.C. ZOOOS. Tbls organtaa·· tlon offers to relay complalDts diredly to member manufacturers. However, there ts no minimum limit for small claims so you may 1Wl go to court: Wonaan'• P lace In the B o ... ~ DEAR PAT: Is there any organization that sup- ports women running for public office? I've heard there is, and l 'd like to know its name and address. J.A., Huntington Beach You can contact the National Women's Political Caucus, 19'll Pennsylvania Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006. In addition to supporting women seeking public office, this group also lobbies for the Equal Rights Amendment. High meat dinners for babies are not all that : blgh in meat content. Only 30 percent meat ls re· quired by federal standards administered by the I U.S. Department of AgrlcuJture. Meat and broth baby rood dinners must contain 65 percent meal, 1 and 8 percent meat is required for vegetable and : meat dinners. Swine Flu Fear H its Communion BOSTON (AP) -Stirred by fears of saliva. fingered priests spreading swine flu, a suburban couple say they will keep trying lo force a more sanitary way or serving communion, even though their latest re'q\Jest was turned down by a Roman Catholjc cardinal. Where can I get I Lifeline John and Alice Brennan of Needham have cam· palgned to change church rules since the threat of swine flu emerged. They want priests to place com· ~union bread wafers in churchgoers' hands, not directly on their tongues. THEIR CJ\SE WAS TAKEN TO Humberto Cardinal Medeiros by their local bishop, Daniel Hart. The bishop said that the cardinal turned down their request. Tele'-hone Service? fr om w. Pon fie Tt·!1'phrm•' lri 1/68 "'" •1ri•l11 ·•di f·'r·,,T·'··ihrr.t• '",,.rv1r1 fnr r• "' J, ·11,c .'• 111• , : 1 I ~. ;j 1r l1m t•><l 1nu rrl•", W•' '•f'•'r 1' rlUN t r '$2 SO u "The church's reasoning is that there is not the danger that Mr. Brennan sees in this form of dis· tribution or communion." Bishop Hart said. The Brennans tned but fajled to bring the issue up for consideration last month at the National Con- ference of Bishops tn Washington. THE UNITED SI'ATES, ITALY and Ireland are the only countries where distribution or commu- nion by hand is forbidden. "We asked that communion be allowed by hand as a prevention against swine nu and other viral and bacterial infections," Brennap said. "We pre· sented pretty strong scientific evidence. The whole ~ealth aq(umC'nt was completedly ignored. To me. 1t was kind of s illy." nrcnnan, 59. is assistant to the director of the F'orsyth Research Center in Boston, which studies Mal diseases. • rr1r • tl I I r I I rr •• ! .,. I " • ( I I ,-}I ... ~11 " 1 TRADITIONJ\U~V. TllE PRI EST PLACES bread wafers directly on the tongue of those re· cci.,ing communion I • 1\d· I I ( • 11 d ' l ;1 ·~ I " . . • I P , I Ii I ' n• 'I · ·11e goC's from one f>('rson to the next and ·next and next." Brennan said "lie gels his fingers wet from the saliva. The medical authorities we have talked to agree that this is unhygienic." .. ,p. I',_, Otnnt)nC 1 "''• ~nt,,,'1'1. Brenn an said he and his wife will urge Catholics to write to their bishops to push for change. And he s aid there is a way people can act on their own. JV• t n~ ; ~ l.lt fll(J\ l 1h•• [ .J\f bv/ 01·d P~.,1111~ut 1. Ji· \•<t. .,..,. , .... -. ' .>n', @ ~ifte Telephone "We advise as many people as we can to take communion in the hand," he said. "They can do this by just putting their hand out to the priest, and we think that 1£ the priests are Christians, they won't refuse.·· FRE~H eur eHR1~TMA~ TREE~ AU. TREES 4 ft. and over will be kept In water from the * day they ARRIVE. 0... Trees ~ so "FRESH" wiU have to . bep slapplncJ ttteir hands.. ,..,....,~_.<a•o ... •o~~-o•<a-...._~~-~-<a•~-O~~-<;itrc:>•t ~ OPEM 7 DAYS A WEH -8:00 A.M. to I 0:00 P.M. p • DECEMIER 2nd THRU DECEMBER 21 it ' t.oOIPQ~~-<atrQ'11'<:>11P'o-9"C•<a'c'"'<a~-Q-(l .. Q .. Q_ .. Q....,~~~-~-.f 0'HOLD IACI IHFlATIOM''--UM M-.y SGYlng Coupot1s CUSTOM FLOCKING FIRE PROOFING FREE CANDY CAME FOR THE KIDS RtESH CUT TREES A Y All.AILE ~-Ar • Scotch Pin "-hlHOll SI.creel Douglat Fir Mo'ffe Rr • White Fir sn ...... n,. ' , ............ . --· \ ·-.i.-............ ... -......... . i ... ,... ....... ~ •• S6995 rr~~ .. ~~;r.:::&~~411 CUSTOM FLOOCED J: t' i CHRISTMAS TREE ~ , S..• IS'llo .ff 1f -4194 ,,tc.wltllic b VOID AFTER 12/2"Vi'e J~ • c_._.c.,.y ~'!L""-~~~~~!ie.~~o Bees Busiest WASHINGTON (AP) -World bees had a busy year. producing a record 596,000 metric ton honey crop, says the Agriculture Depart· ment. HOUSTON <AP> - The Houston Polit 111id it learoed that Howard Hughes was negotiating the purchase or a multimillion dollar home in Hquston about two months before his April 5 death. ~ The newspaper report· ed the m ys t e r y billionaire recluse would have paid $1.5 million for three penthouses at the top of a 24-story building. It has been estimated that Texas will collect $300 million in state lax· es if it proves the re· sidence case in court. ·LaVI Aped Opinion Backs Bid DES 'MOINES, Iowa (AP) -The Iowa Executive Council must certify the candidate reeetvtna tbe most votes in an election u the ~el', even if the candidate is a chimpanzee Atty. Gen. Richard Tumersays. . ' "Tbe atudenta in a college town might, in a mischievous bent, elect by write-in votes a cbimppzee -albeit a very l~amed and erudite chimpanzee -who, appearing with his certificate of election in one hand and a banana in the other would be allowed to take his seat (i n the state legislature) unnoticed " Tumersald. . ' Turner issued the opinion on a question or whether State Sen'.-elect John Scott bad lived in lh!! state long enough. Turner said the Iowa constitution makes it clear that only the Senate can determine whether its members are qualified. (17:'1Kl·l'IYRlA.11 . AIR CALIFORNIA We're easy to take. Wakh YourTaxes Shrink While Your Retirement Savings crow At Imperial! How! Ws simple .:Vith Imperial Savings retirement accounts: the Keogh Pion for self-employeds and the Individual Retire- K ent Account for wage earners. Here's how they work: eogh Plan If you're self-employed, you con save up to $7500(or15% of you~ n~t income, whichever's less) every year, tax-deferred! Your principal and your high-earning interest are tax deductible until you withdraw funds at retirement time (when you'll probably be in ·a lower tax bracket). Up to $2500 is deductible from :i..our state tax return too lncf vid I H • · · I ua etirement Plan If you're a wage earner, and you're not covered by o qualified retirement program, you ~on save for relirement, tax-deferred! Every yeor you ~n set 0~1de up to .$1500 (or 15% of your income, whkh- ever 1s less} w.1thout paying tax on the principal or interest. When you withdraw funds at retirement ti!Jle, you'll normally be taxed at a much lower rate. What You Can Eam: lndlYJdual RetiNment Account Keogh Plan (~1500 onnuol contribution) ($7500 onnvol conlribotlon) ~ ~od ~ .. ~~"" Total"' of ~...J kcooN nl 11<.o.morlo<td .,..,.. P,.nopaj fo<"'"O' v!. Piocq>UI for""'J' ,.,.,,,,.,...,,. lNlolY..,. &wfofY- 1 1,500 80.85 1,580.85 1 7,500 4005 7,90425 1 3,000 246.91 3,246.91 2 15,000 1,234.54 16,234.54 5 7,500 1,303,51 8,803.51 s 37,500 6,517.54 44,017.54 10 15,000 5,249.49 20,249.49 10 75,000 26,247.39 101,247.39 15 '22,500 12,631.09 35, 131.09 15 112,500 63, 155.40 175,655.40 20 30,000 24,479.57 54,479.57 20 150,000 122,397.77 272,397.77 25 37,500 42,135.70 79,635.70 25 187,500 210,678.40 398,178.40 Above figures bosed on our current passbook role of 5.2$% per onnum. lritMe\I ~ Raki~1";U~bleeonhse Accounts ,,.-:===~----------------® 1mPERIAL SAVlnGS Acciunts Insured To S40,000. lelt-M~ • Cl•twmOftt • Coel• MH a • DowntOWft U.. A11941fn •l•t '•Mtnll • •O .. ndor• • Htlftlltlflotll 'ltrll • •Newport 8"olt ......,ort c.nw · Pueci.M • A•dl~ • •R!Wftktt • •8•1118 lllionlcm ....... Miid,. • •811111 Valley · •Sovlll Otte• Studio City • TOpMIQ• C*1lyo11 ··O.I A1110/Tom1nee . •Woat Loe .... WHIWOCIO vm.te• . l . ~ , •' Wtt\ Covllla · •Wl!llU.r • WllthW. • •Wffdlllnd Hiiia 4 Oftf ts Cati~ omc .. to Mf'I• you .... ~ wllh• p .... ot your ~ ....,hOM dlrtc:l.OfY for I~ ottic. M 8'"1 you_ •Oftl°" o,.n letu,.y•-1·1 ••Oflloet O,.n llWt'dlYil-10·• rHOLlY OWNED SU8SIOIA~Y OF OVER 1 BILLlON DOLLAR IMPERIAL CORPORATION OF AM~ICA o,m ~ ICA. 19-16 _.. Laguna/South Coast EDITI ON J\fft•r 1ioo11 N.Y. Stocks • VOL. 69, NO. 342, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA TU):SDAY, DfiCEMBER 7, 1976 TEN CENTS 1 Marines Continue KKK AssaUlt Probe By PHfLIP ROSMARIN Ot tlle O•llY 1'1144 54.tH Alter a rocky start Monday, the Marine Corps resumed a fact.finding investigation today to determine whether 14 black Camp Pendleton marines will stand courts-martial on charges o f assaulting s i x w h ile leathernecks. Government prosecutor James P atrick McHenry opened the possibility of amending charges to include conspiracy to commit murder and attempted murder this morning. Major McHenry said whether the charges are included at any possible court m artiaJ is up to the investigating officers conducting the hearing. According to the prosecutors, the victims, one of whom re- mains hospitalized, were at- tacke<iby black ser vicemen Nov. 13 who believed a meeting or the Ku Klux Klan was being held. The victims, stabbed and beaten, bad actually been in the middle of an unauthorized beer drinking session, authorities said,1 and were not connected with the ktan. Pendleton of- ficials, after first denying any klan activities on the base, later admitted that there had been a KKK meeting in the barracks, Execution Ruled·- filegal by Co111·t Current Guideline AP Wlrol)ltolo ' Violate d 'Doc Raped Me' Cl aims Wo mli1" 22 KLAN NATIONAL DIRECTOR COVERS HEAD FOLLOWING ATTACK BY PROTESTER KKK's David Duke, rfght In tight suit, Ta ngles Under Attack at Marine Bue SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The California Supreme Court ruled today that t he state's death penalty is unconstitutional in light of recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions. The unanimous decision, writ- ten by Chief Justice Donald R. Wright, held that California's capital punishment law is invalid since it violates current U.S. Supreme Court guidelines re· garding imposition of the death penalty. It said the la w improperly re- quires the death penalty under ' ~cified instances without pro- , vhiing for consideration of mitigating circumstances. The decision said lhe state's death penalty law makes "death a mandatory punishment for those categories of first-degree murder encompassed by the special circumstances·· section of the law "without provision or consideration of evidence of mitigating circumstances .•. " Chief Justice Wright in 1972 wrote the decision striking down the old death penalty law but voters and the Legislature ap- proved a new law that went into effect Jan. 1, 1974. There have been no executions under the new Jaw and none is scheduled. The old law was abolished in a deC'1s1on saying that the death ~nalty violated the state con slttul ion ·~ proh1 bit ion against .. cruel and unusual pumsh· mt·nt. .. Thert' ar<' 65 men and two "wom en o n death ro w in Cahfom1a prisons The 1974 ch~ath penaJty law re· qwred tht> death penalty if a Jury or Judge found that the crime in · v o lv e d fitted certai n ClrcumstancE"s such a, multiple murders or f1rst~degree murder during a robbery. burglary. rape or k1dnaping Under the law, a jury or Judge would first de· termine guil t or innocence and then, 1r guilty. determine 1f the death penalty fit the case. Today's dcr1s1on invol ved the case of S t eve n Do ugla s Rockwl'll. 25, of Sepulveda, who was convicted in Ventura County Supenor Court or the murder. kidnaping and rape of Linda Beth Coverly on May 11. Following his conviction, the jury failed to rea ch a verdict in the penalty phase of the trial. Rockwell then asked the stale Supreme Court to bar a retrial on the second phase in which the ag- gravating cir cumstances were <See DEATH. Page A2) Umdy Sa/,es Cash Missing A 13-year-old Lagwia Beach girl who raised $163 selling candy for T hurston Intermediate School student body fund told police Monday it had been stolen. The young Arch Beach Heights r esident said she bad discovered the cash missing sometime last month, but rather than report it, reimbursed the fund Crom her own money. She aald she was afraid so- m eone would blame her ror the incident. Because of the time lapse, of· flcers s aid there was litUe in· vesUgatlol\ tha t could be done. '• ~ Olily _.!-'Slit! l'lloto TAKES NEW POST Laguna's Stanley Scholl Scholl Takes New Position, Lea ves Jan. 7 By JAC K'CHAPPEU Ot IM Dally ,.llOI SUH Stanl ey Scholl, Laguna Beach 's m unicipal ser vices director. has been hired by the ci- ty of Santa Monica. Scholl. 43. will leave Laguna Beach Jan. 7 and begin work Jan. 10 at Santa Moni ca as that city's general services director. Scholl 's departmental budget in Santa Monica will exceed en· tire Laguna Beach's city budget and he w ill a dminister a workforce more than double that or the city of Laguna Beach. Scholl's salary will go from ~.800 to $35,600 annually. City Manager Al TheaJ said to· day that during SchoU's three years with the city, he ha.'! "ac- complished a lot for the com- munity with his continual push (See RAISE, Page A2) A young Dana Point woman told an Orange County Superior Court jury today that her family doctor repeatedly raped her and forced her to participate in acts of se>(ua l perversion while treat- ing her in his South Laguna office last J an. 7. Obviously distressed and fre- quently covering her face with her bands, the 22-year-old wit· ness testified that Dr. Ross Todd McClure gave her an injection shortly after she disrobed in his office for a back examination. The witness testified that she had consulted Dr . McClure, 54, on several previous occasions in his office at 31542 S. Coast Hig hw ay without any im- proprieties taking place. But she told the jury today that the doctor removed her examina- tion gown and underpants last J an. 7 after giving her an injec- tion. She said she was powerless to prevent what she claims took place. ··1 was confused and dizzy and I felt like a vegetable," the wit- ness said. ''I was placed in several positions by the doctor while sex acts took place and there was nothing I could do about it." Dr. McClure is being tried in Judge Ke n n e th E . Lac's courtroom on charges of rape and sex perversion. It is alleged that the acts took place while he was treating his patient for a back injury suffered 1n a fall at her Dana Point apart- ment building. Dr. McClure was arrested by sheriff's offiq?r s alter the wit· ness was exhmined at South Coast Community Hospital short· ly after the alleged incidents took place. The witness testified today that Dr. McC lu r e used both a massager and a vibrator on her body. S on Juan T nute e Overton ·Election Results Certified Or a nge County Board of Supervisors, acting on advice of county counsel. Tuesday re- ceived and filed certification of Jan Overton 's election to the Capistrano Unified School Dis- tricl board of trustees. In so doing, the board rejected a protest of election results by South Orange County Educators CSOCEL The teacher association ch allenged double·marked ballots that were disallowed in the original machine count but counted as valid in a hand re· count. Candidate William Manahan. a teacher in the adjacent Sad- dleback Valley Unified School District, was originally declared winner of the Nov. 2 trustee elec- tion by an eight· vote margin. On Nov. 18 Patricia Lynam, a fri end of runner -up Mrs. Overton, requested a recount. saying she opposed having teachers on a school board. where they can vote their own pay raises. The recount started Nov. 29 and on Dec. 1, Mrs. Overton was declared the winner by three votes. The difference in election re- sults was attributed to allowing doubly marked ballots. when re· sults were tabulated by hand. These ballots were marked on- ce ln the blank write· in space and again in the space after Mrs. Overton 's name. The law stipulates that the of· fice of the Registrar of Voters must try to determine the intent of the voter In doubly-marked ballots, said Sh irley Deaton, chief of election oper ations. Acting on advice of county counsel, t he dou bly-marked ballots ln the Capistrano trustee election were decided to be votes for Mrs. Overton, she said. Mrs. Deaton said a certificate of election was issued Tuesday to Mrs. Overton, who is expected to be seated at the board's next re- gular meeting, Dec. 20. Tony Leon, president of the Capistrano Unified Education Association CCU EA> s aid today he plans to refer a copy of county counsel's opinion on the validity or doubly-m ar ked ballots to <See TRUSTEE, Page AZ> I 'M WRITlt-JG TO SA...iTA . ONL't' 17 SHOPPING Otl'VS LEFT.' Lagunan Saves Shaggy Dolt's Life ..................... 8UQHTL Y UI tiRID BALL O' PUR WAI TU1mLED flt CAR IN IOUTH LAGUNA Rlctl ..._, .. Looldng FM A tt..., Enchg Tel tfl9 .. ~ Dee .-, -~----...it ......... ____ _ ( t A rumpled ball of fur. A cold nose. T wo bright eyes. One lucky dog. Alive if not frisky, she huddled on the examining t able of Veterinar ian Doug Tignor. By all rights she s hould have been dead, She had been hit in South Laguna by a car going about •5 to 50 miles an hour . Lagunan Rick Balzer saw t he accident and stopped along with the driver of the car which hit the dog. "I sa w her goln& W'lderthecar, fur fl?;ing all over. My thought was I d just get the dog out ol the roadway," Balzer aaid. Ins tea d, Balzer found the animal alive -but unconscious. He picked her up and took ber home. Altboug.b it was -bout 10 o'clock Saturday night, be caUed Dr. nsnot' who made arrange- ments to meet Balzer at the veterinary bo1plta1. Titnor treated the ~oi for abra.slona and aboclt and k~t her at hll _m hom• all day SuDdaY. The veterinarian H id he didn't believe t.btre were Internal in· Juries. ''she•• pAtty atlff and acore. ti lt bid lteeD you or me. wo'd be •· ~lid." .hu ald. <8ee Lt1CKYDOG, Paa• AJ) --f Laguna Girl "Me nace d ' By Burglar A 17-year-old Laguna Bea'ch girl was menaced by a pock- marked ba ndit who grabbed her by the throat and threw her into a chair Monday when she dis- covered him rifling her family's apartment. Kristy M. Tooti was uninjured and nothing was ta.ken from the quarter s at a Laguna Beach I motel and apartment complex, at the Village Inn, 696 S. Coast Hi ghway. The young victim said she had I been preparing for school when she heard a sound in an adjoining apartment unit shared by her father and brother. She told officers the man ao· proached her, took hold of her throat and forced her into a chair. After first demanding money, the man said he would let her go if she didn't call police. With that, he fled. The man was described as hav- ing dark shoulder length hair and a heavily pitted face. Police ar e investigating. Dana Point Boat Struck by Burglar An intruder who climbed a fence to gain entry to a boat storage yard in Dana Point rans11cked a boat and left with a fire extin guisher an d scat cushion valued at $720. Orange County sheriff's of~ ricers said the theft was reported by victim Bob Purcupile, ss, 33760 Street of the Silver Lantern.. whose boat is stored in a yard at • 34160 Pacific Coast Highway. l Coca-Cola Payola? ATLANTA CAP) -The Coca Cola .Co. has found about $600,000 in "questionable foreign pay- ments" and more may be un - covered before an internatipnal investigation ls completed, 'the firm told a federal agency. ~ Coast Weather Fair but hazy weather expected through Wednes- ,day with chilly nights in the tow 508. highs of 70-75. I NSIDE T OD" V New York .audience gives Bing Cro1by a rousing welcome ond tonight the veteran crooner opens on 1 Broadway. Sto'JI, A3. l •dex Ah '-Servk• AIC MIMY'h'M .,,,.. ___ 11 ·-..... ~ .... .,.. Al MlllllMP'illllfl ~· ...... '""' O-*M aMt CIPMltCIMMY Cllllk1 II ........ =i::!Ut :1 ::-,,...... ·~,. ...... ,....,,... :.~"" "'' ,,...,. Ali.II,~ ....... .. .... -.. -~*" l l .:.~ ·1 AIJ All AIJ Al Al .,.. •••• AU :~( ,.,. ,.. AZ D~ILY PILOT use Selaool Schedule Slaying Suspect Sought By ROBERT BARKER Capo Trustees Okay Guideline OI-DMly P'llel ~~II Police combed Huntington Beach today for a 23-year-old man they auspcct of slaying bi& mother-in-law Mond~ alter· QOQO. Detecli ve Dick Nolen said Mrs. Muriel Norton, 50, was found shot to death in her home at 15161 Davis Lane, Huntington Beach, at2:JOp.m. Wanted for questioning is Daniel Buyher, 23, ol 5M.1 Hen· driclmen Drive. Ofticers u.id th.at poliee rushed to the Norton home after neighbors reported that Mrs. Norton and Buyher had engaged in a load araument. Police aaid neighbors told them Bulba was trying to force Mn. Norton to t.ell h1m the whereabouts of his est.ranaed wiie,Unda. A neilhbcn' woman said she could bear 'Mrs. Norton say, ··1 wish you could set tl t.hrougb ~thick •ull ... she said she then heaJ'd. Krs. Norton acreem ud the front door slam violenUy. • Witnesses said they then saw a young man running down the street to the reaidentt of 5441 Hendricksen. Buyber reportedly resided there with bia perenta, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ferguaon. Police conlooed df the llll'H, but B.uyher either slicJped through the drqnd or had Red 1.he scene before authorities ar· rived. B'l)'her is des~ribed as 6 feet tall and weagbang about 200 pounds. with blond. curly twr. Nohm said the weapon used m M~. Norton ·s death was a small caliber handgun. He said the v1cllm was shot m the temple Nolen said that Ruyhcr had no car and apparently had fled on foot The HunlinJtton Beach police Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT > unit moved into the house shortly before dark. The neignborhood 1s betwen Bolsa Chica and Graham Streets, Just south or Edinger Avenue. When SWAT team members emerged, they said the television was playing and a can oi beer had been opened and partially drunk . They reported that they found what was believed to be ~ SUS· pecl's bag!> packed in the bedroom Poltce said they were seekmg murder w11.rrant..s from the dlS tnct attomey·s office t.o<lay .,...,,......,.,,_ REPORTER TALKS wmtflt~S AT CAllP PENDLETON Prilltfft•ra c.rry Sil9n• Afelnst Ku K1vx fClan ,, fi',....P.,_e..41 KLAN HEARING. • • • but in another room Pendleton commanders made a belated attempt to break up the base KKK chapter by transfer nng its member& to other bases Hearmgs to determine the evidence against the 14 accused blaclt marines are scheduled this "'eek and next. Three of the mrn were scrutinized Monday. and each ofthe1r cases continued The real action came dunng a break in the proceedings, when Ku Klux Klan Grand Dragoo David Duke of Louisiana ap pcared outside the heanng room A band of a bout 20 persons prn- t est i ng tbe detention of lhl' marines spotted Ouke and four n.f his klansmen who unfurkd a KKK flaJ?. Tbe group, calling 1t!.clf the Commttte~ Against Racism, mobbed the klans~n. and a violent fight started when a woman picketer brought do\\n b« sign v.'1th force atop Duke s blond, blue-eyed head Several blows were ex · changed, with at least one KKK member striking the woman ptcht<'r Pendle ton m1'tlta r y police quickly dispersed the mclec. SW· mgmg heavy duty batons. There "'ere no reported injuncs. The prote!>teri. were hustled off the base The KKK cortege was allowed t.o remain. though MPs J,?rurny ordc•rcd Duke's pc.."'Oplc to µut away their flag. E1~ht to Len MPs stood vigil outside headquarten; today _ In the heurings, Chief Govcrn- mt•nt rro~rcutor James Patrick Mcllenrv re\'ealcd the Marine C:<>rpS .,.,:111 seek stiffer charges than those lodged against the ac· t'llM'<I mt•n . The pros(•cullon has indicated at least three of the injured marlnN-suffered rollapsed lungs fmm deep stab wounds. The case!I against Sgt William Spencer. 23, of lhgh Point, NC .• and PFC Donald R. Hunter,23.of Winston Salem . N C .• were con- tinued for a week No testimony was heard. By ANNE COOPER Ot the O•llY P'oi.4 SMitl Capistrano Unified School Dis tdct t ru stees appr<>ved auidelines for hi.Sh sdaool scheduling Monday which '"ill al- low each school to develop In· dividual schedules. The gu.idelines, recommended to the board of trustees by Superintendent. Jerome Thornsley, represent a change from an earlier recommendation that high schools be taken off this year's rotating schedules In favor of traditional fixed class schedules. OT. TbomsJey said he wBS im· pressed with the great sincerity of those who protest.ed a return to static schedulin~. which would mean that students would meet for a specific ct1urse at the same Lime each school day. Students testified at a Nov. 18 special board meeting that a ma· jority of students at both di...,lrict high schools prefer a rot.aling schedule. altowtng them to meet at a different time al day for each course session. Lisa Bellamy, .a San Clernente junior, said a poll ol the scbool's 2600 swdeou showed 94.7 percent of the 192t students who responded support some form of rotating sehedule. Only 2.7 percent voled fOI' the proposed return to t.raditi.A>nal, fixed scheduling. Kane St. John, student body president al Dana Hills High School in Daaa Point, said 82 per· cent of students at his school favor a rotating schedule. San Clemente English teacher Sue Doeren told trustees al the special meeting th al an informaJ survey of San Clemerl1e teacher~ revealed they share a student preference for a rotating schedule. The guidelines aclopted Mon· day establish a minimum 1300 minutes of teaching time per week, with 1250 minutes in direct classroom teac hing and SO minutes of other Instructional service, allowing for optionaJ club activities, student-teacher conferences, enrichment instruc· tioo. intramural at.b.letics, and the like. ln addition, the first class periods and the last two periods each day would be fixed . allow· ing students to leave campus for advance placement courses at Saddleback College, Regional Occupation Program training or after school jobs. The final requirement calls for all regularly scheduled semester classes to meet daily. Board W Review No,,,,.teaching Pay Spencer was to scdc represen- tat 1on by another military lawyer. Capt. Willhelm Bennett. llunter·s counsel told lnvestigat· mg Officer Thomas F Smith he needed more time lo TTview the t•ndencc After accepting written ll'shmony from the victims of the altac.k about their injuries, Capt. Daniel H. Koenig, aUomey for Lance Cpl. Uobby R. Bishop, asked and received a postpone· ment of the case until Thursday. Or. Thomsley saJd a primary reason for his proposal that the high schools return to a fixed schedule was lo accommodate the minority of students who wanted lo take advantage or off· campus classes or who needed to work after school. "We have nearly a million dollars invested in the Regional Occupational Program, and we were making it difficult for stu· dents to t ake advantage of it," he said. P•y scales for nonteaching emptoyes of the L.gun• Beach Unified S<'hool Dlstnc.t wut be pre.ented al a meeting of the school boud at 1 ·JO o ·clock toni~ht at the Educat.wn center The chslr1ct 's offf'r lo 1\5 bus•· JH~l'>i.. c ustodial 11nd cleric.-al rmplo)'e'i ranies rrom the lowc!.l i.alary of MJO a month t.o St ,811 :i month. The pereeit~e of in· creai.r rl'pre!lentcd by th<' offer "as not 1mmed1aleb' available. In addlthm to the pay ranRe propor.alA, the achool board will oller Lo c:onunue CJUSllng health msLD'ance benefits. 1be board •• expected to set a pubhe beariog for 7 JO p.m. Dec. 15 to reee1ve cltben comment on (hepropoW3 Other school buasneas m · eludes ... -comideration ol a trip by ~aguna Bt'•rh lh"h School c:trama s tudent& to New York ~·here they w()uld attend auch· on!I, workshop<; and view four adway shows. The rosl L!I $319 student. l -<:onsldet"aUon of a ''p051llon 1•per .. on the district's ~--~~~~~~~~~-... '-"'c DAILY PILOT --c-.. -....... --.. -'-'""'d tM H•W\ ..,f"\\ ., OUO'•"""° D¥ t"'" 0tAno-t QM\t P\;941\ftWlll co,,..ny ~, .... .Ott~~· -.......... "'''"'"°' -... <.Mt• ___ ............. ,-.. ~~-...... Y••••• ""'"''' ,._..._.., V•ll•f •fl'WT L~f!l11t..C:~ \ovt~C...t • .....,...,....,.., ... , t~ h INbt•WWd ~\ ..... ~' ,.,.. ~;=~~-=::i= ..:.::. U') W.tl ~. -·-.... ---·-_..._:::.,:;:, .. _ ..,__ ---'"':::::;;..-:=::--•UM .._,._ .,\,j,. ................. f .... , responsibilities to educut1onull y tumd1capped student:. Acceptance of a SJ!; !tlm strip, cassette recordings and bOoklct .!>el on "Economics for Young Americani." gr\'rn h)' lh•• I~ai;tuna Beach Chamber ,,r ('om mcrce RAISE. • • and enthusiasm 'I am very dis appointed to see Stan leave. although I rea!Ue 1t 1s • big advancemenl for tum pro- fe98dl•lb' and economically." Theal said he will make or Ranitatlonal changes in the Municipal Services Oel>artmcnl and will assign an ex1st1ng city department· head to run the dt' partment on an 1ntenm bas1!; A decision on that appointment 1s pending. Scholl sald his tenure 1n Laguna Beach has been £ulf1ll Ing. ''I am happy to have had the chance lo participate in so many significant projects that have changed Laguna Beac h - a~pervwng construction ol Main Beach Park. five utility under· ,rounding districts, reforesta· lion of Coast Higbw~ and the downtown. We're halt done, but at least we're started." AddltlonaUJ, the city addeci more than 200 partttng spaces un· der Scholl's designs for more ef· ftcleut. layouts, and seven new tennis court.I were built. He Aid if he were to cbarnc· terir.e Lacuna Beach t.i would baYeto'J)Oint out tbedMne and M:tive ll&Z'licipaUon d dtizen ar· 181ll&attom. "With so many different poupa •GU»csl~ p.nlcip8Ung, lt fa quite a challeqe 10 aticipat.e wMre oppostUoo io • project mi;lll¢eme fnlll. .,,., ran&, ~ 1.bb\p.. baLTe.a\.wl...Uy •• lie Aid. 8611....&d tte~•--•bolll 50 percent of hil projoeu ~ ..._llilc~ ta• ,..a, 1111b ~Ubla ,. .. er•1• la t.asvn• BeKb.'' Today three more or the ac· {'Used m:irlnt's were scheduled to be heard. They are· Lance Cpl. Gregory A. Coffee, 21, of St. Louis. Mo., Lance Cpl. Ricky C. McG1lvcry, 19, of Dallas, Tex .. and Sgt. llcrman Fletcher, 23, of High Point, N.C. McGilvery's case was con· hnued after the Marine asked to be represented by El Toro Capt. S. B. Ray. McGilvery's current couns e l Capt. Daniel C. Stanhope, said "we'd proceed un· der a very strong objection'' when invest igating officer William Halsey denied request for additional counsel, beside Ray. Stanhope argued that his client was entitled to an extra attorney, l>lllCe the government had as· signed two men to handle t.he case against McGilvery. Perry Parks, an aide to ConAr ess woman Yvonn e Braithwai~ Burke, was a spec· tat.or al Monday's hearing. Other spectators included Car· rel Reavis. president of the MOftttord Polot Marines Associa· tiGn. retired veterans of the first t.rwP of black martn. edmitted into the C"Or,ae; and Joe St.one md. )lyon11 G!bbs of tbe Sm Diesc> Urbm Lupe, wbJch f'l:rst ex· poled JUO[ actlvity at C&mp Paodldaa. Raid of Pail Yield& 1532 An intnckr who apparently wu aware that the oeerator ol a t..aiuna Nti-uel service statlon kept his receipts in bis lunch pail took S5SZ from the recept.acle wtllle iti owner was busy servinl cnaUne. <>ranee CounlJ sheriff's of-nc.s aald the thdl ~cub a'nd chec-ks 'WU reported by Carl W'llUam Butrlclie, M. OWMt ot Carl's SheU .... S~rvlce, 28862 Camlno Capblrano. They saicl the thief Ollt.ered the front clllce and raidec! lbe J>ail. Dr. Thorns ley said the guidelines were developed following a critique session with the high school principals. in ,,.... Paflf' Al TRUSTEE. • • CUEA attorneys. He said his oraanlzation may initiate legaJ steps to unseal Mrs. Overton. depending on advice from association attorneys. After the last column which was about natural and cultured pearls. I have had many readers ask about the ocher types of pearls too. It's gratifying to find so many J)l900le who are read4ng the ootumn and find It stimulatlno their Interest In gems. UlkeBlwa(B ... wah)Japan la the most prolific aouroe of rr.lh wattW pearls that we grown In a mollusc almll• to IM ult water variety. These peens .. irregular In INPe (baroque) and color. Their ~ dihenc. rrom the norm makes them attr1ctllt9 and tntereallftg. We found an unusual Blwa that had *""oc>ed In the ahl09 of a cross. tt ta approxl'""* one and a qu.wter Inches tong tnd one~ of.,.. lncl'l wtde. Our ....... h .. fasll6on9d It inco a dramatic ~n<Nr1l The large Biwas make uP ~fully as rings alto. Our °"" Miaslaslppi Rlvtr bed le ht .ource of .90IM VflfY pretty colontd ,,..,,. -all ...... of PM'•I• .and even -brOwl\ and bladca. TheM differ from th• JapanHt ,..,. "' .. they .,. Ntural. an ~t of natu<e. TM onee ''°"' Lake Blwa at• which they evaluated difrerent needs and interests of the :.tu· dents Kay Karns, Parent Teach~r Student Association president al San Clemente lllgh School, en· dorsed the guidelines. and Tony Leon . president of the Capistrano Unified Education Association. commended trustees and ad· minislrators, sayifta it showed "some give on their part." "We see it as a step In the ri1ht direclloll'," said Dr. Thornsley. ··1 guess you could call it a com· promise.·· Al'Wl .... le ·CHINA VETO OVERRULED U.N.'a Kurt Waldheim l ' U.N. Chief Wi~ Re-election Vote a ,. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -Kurt Waldheim was re· commended for re-election as U.N. secretary -general by the Security Council today after an initial veto by China. The General Assembly will make the final decision, but it is a formality. Diplomats emerging from the dosed meeting said the second· round vote was 14·0 with one abstention to elect the 57·year· old Austrian diplomat to another term u bead or the world body. He la completing a five-year term lo which he was elected In 1971 on the retirement of the late U Thant. The job pays $119.~ a year. China, which has wanted so· meone from the Third World as secretary-general , vetoed Waldheim in the first round in or- der to support former Me.xican Presidenl Luis Echeverria, the diplomats said. The Chinese abs· tained on the decisive ballot, they said. China's first-round veto had been expected. It is customary to conduct as f'roaa Page AJ DEATH .•. brought out .. He contended retrial was im· proper because the law providing the death penally upon li finding of aggravating circumstances 1s unconstitutional. The state alleged the victim was killed to prevent testimony as a witness. that the slaying was committed during a kidnaping and during a rape. Califorrua law imposed the mandatory death penalty for persons convicted of murder under suc h circumstances. The tribunal agreed to review the petition and barred the second phase retrial. The court pointed out that a sentence of life imprisonment was proper' in such a case since the death penalty could not be imposed. The court noted that the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in a Georgia case providing for the death penalty may neither make, that penalty mandatory nor give that jury or judge abs-Olule dis· creUon in the choice of life or de- ath. However, the stale court said that the rulings directed that standards be required so that the sentencing authority would "focus the particularized circumstances of the crime and the defendant." Mary BelT. Cef11n8d Gemotoglat many ballots as necessary until a candidate receives at least nine of the 15 council votes without a negative vote fro m any of the fi ve permanent powers China. United States, Soviet Union. Sn. lain and France. ,r Diplomats said the first ballot. vole for Waldheim was 13·1 with 1 abstention, presumably Panama. The vole for Echeverria was 4-4 with 7 abstentions in the fir.lt round and 3·5 in the second ballot. They gave no detailed breakdown on the former Mexican lead~. who has long wanted the UN post. , Wal~helm, who was drafted in- to t.he German army during World War 11 , rose in th~ diplomatic service after the war; becoming ambassador to th.e United Nations and foreign minister. lie ran unsuccessrulty for president of AustnH in th.Cl spring of 1971. He became the fourth secretary-general of the United Nallons m the tumultuous day~ that followed Peking's admission to the United Nations. In three days of secr et balloting 10 December 1971, only Waldheim· among 12 candidates avoided veto by all five pcrmanenl powers. Waldheim, who will be 58 on Dec. 21. 1s a hrisk. slim man standing 6 feet J. As secretary' general he has traveled widely, spoke" often and nudged the Security Council and General As· sembly to act. He has sometimes mcurred the wrath of the West by seeming to s upport Third World causes too much. LUCKY DOG Dr. Tignor s aid had Ball.er not gone to the dog's aid, she pro· bably would have died of shock. Although willing to provide a "foster home," Ball.er, who has a Weimarancr and a cat already, is eager to return the dog to her owner. She was hll on Coast Highway between 10th Street and the 'Three Arch Bay signal at about 9 p.m. Saturday. She 1s a poodle mix, ab-Oul eight months old. gray and bl ack and is wearing a nea collar and a red leather col lar. She has no other identifica- tion. Either Dr. Tignor (494·658:1) or Balzer (497·2489) may be con· tacled by the dog's owner or anyone who may thmk lhey know who the dog's owner is. cultured. Tho lroah water oearts from the Mls'l1~.,,pp1 are not 8'1 abundant as the 8lwt1'l and are rougher 1n texture The Mobo (mah·bavl pearl 1s cultured and 1, produced by placing an ob1oct. usually a hemisphere of molher-<>H>earl 1n the shell ol a fresh wale< mussel where 11 1s coaled with nacre They are cul lrom lhe ,hnll and pegged for setting - uw1111v In earring"> CHARLES H. BARR With the lntinl\e variety of peans, natural and cultured . fresh and sail water. there Is always one that wlll make a tasting and memorable gift iust right tor someone apecial to you. • .A.c.ueM .. o .. L ... 1 ••r , Orange Coast EDI T I ON 'l'od u~"'s Closi11~ N.Y. Stueks VOL. 69, NO. 342, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1976 C TEN CENTSl . l Mesa Seeks Funds to Buy Canyon Land By STF.VE MITCHELL Of .... D•llY f'll04 M•tt Councilmen voled unanimous- ly Monday night to seek federal funds to help purchase 35 acres or undeveloped canyon land in park-starved west Costa Mesa. The canyons arc located bet" ecn Victoria and 19th Streets near the Freedom Homes tract. Advocates 0£ the purchase claim the wcsts1dc 1s 32 acrt.>s short of parkland, according to the city's adopted park standard of 2.S acres per 1,000 population. Co11ncil action Monday authorized city officials to apply for SO percent funding for ac- quisition of the acreage through the U.S. Department oC the In- terior. City Manager Fred Sorsabal said he learned the state received an $8 million allocation from the federal government for Its Land and Water CoruervaUon Fund Program. He said the canyons land, as- sessed recently at $000,000, "ap- pears to fall under the guidelines outlined for these funds." Sorsabal said the city should go after the funds to purchase the open space land ''using the least amount or city monev possible." The c-ity's applicatioo is based on the appraised value or $900,000 for the open space area. 1£ the ap- plication is approved, the city would receive $450,000, or half of the canyons area value. "However,•' Sorsabal ex- plained, "if we get the Rroperty for less than $900,000, the amount of the federal g rant to us would not change." That means if the owner of the parcel, State Mutual Savings and Loan Association. agrees to sell lhe acreage to Costa Mesa for $700,000, the city'!f portion of lhe bill would only be $250,000. Vice Mayor Jack Hammett was skeptical of what be called, a .. free glftfrom Washington." "I know il's like s aying I'm against motherhood by not ac- cepting the free gift for open spac-e land, but Uncle Sam's donation to us is not really free.·' He sajd that.. no matter where the funds cotn1' in lhe end, they all come from the taxpayers' pockets. either at the federal, state or local level. Hammett also expressed con- cern about developing and main- taining the canyons area if the ci- ty did acquire the land. Sorsabal said he is recom- mending that no development CSee CANYONS, Page AZ> Execution Ruled .IDegal by Co11rt Curre nt G uideline Violated SAN FHANCISCO IAPJ The California Suprem e Court ruled t oday that the state's dealh penally 1s unronslltut1onal in light of recent U S Supreme Court decisions. The unanimous decision, wnt- ten by Chief Justice Donald R. Wright. held that California's c-apital punishmt•nt law is invalid sinc-e 1t v1olat1.•s current U.S Supreme Court gu1dellnes re gardmi: 1mpos1tion of the death penalt} . It said lht' t:iw improperly re 1qwres the death penalty under ~ 6pec1£1ed instanrcs without pro· vidini: ror tonsu1eral1on of mitigating circumstances. The dec-1s1on s aid the !>late':. · death pt•nalt} l.tw makes "death "* mandatoq punishment for th<>l>C c:atc~or1es of fi rst degree murder encompassed by the special circumstances" section of the law .. .,.. ithout prov1s1on or con:..1derat1on o f evidence or m1t1gatmg circumstances ..... Chief Justice Wnght in 1972 wrote the dec-1s1on stnlung down the old dl'ath penalty law but votE>r'i :ind the Lc1uslaturc ap- proved a ne w law that went into cffec-t Jan I. 1974. There have bet'n no f'lH'C'Ullons under the new law ::ind nnne 1!\ scheduled. Tht• old la\' "a' aholishC<.I m a clN'ISllln S,l\'tn.: th••t the d<'ath p~nall~ v1olJtcd the stale con· 't1tut1on " proh1b1llon again!'.t 'c:ru1•l and unu11uul punish mcnt Tht•rc Jfl' 1>5 ml'n and two w o m t• n o n d c a t h r o w 1 n Cahformn prisons. Tht• 1974 death !>('nalty law re fStt DEf\TH. PaieAZ> ·Te W'inkJe Slates Plant Care Class A plant <'are cla.<1s for green thumb ad\'nc11tes will begin Jan 11 at TeWinklc Mtddll' SC'hool m Costa Ml'sa Th<' <'lght Wl'l'k cl ass. . :..ponsored by the CMta Mesa de partmenl of leisure services, meets on Tuesdays from 7 lo 9 p.m. and i~ open to residents 14 yurs and oldrr. For further information. call SS6-s.100. Coast Weather Fair but hazy weather expected through Weitnes- day with chilly niC}lts In the low SOs, highs of ~7S. l ;\'SIDE TODA l' NN York .audf"" gfw• Bing Cro1b., ,a routing wtlcom• .and tonight the veteran croon•r o,,.,,, on BroadWClJI. Story , A3. I lnde AU All AU A4 Al •M .... AU Alt AU A4 ,.. <l~Wl,.....to CHINA VETO OVERRULED U.N.'s Kurt Weldhefm R e-electio n Of Waldheim Supporte d 'NITED NATIONS, N.Y. tAP> -Kurt Waldheim was re· commended for re-elec-tion as U N. secretary-general by the Se<-urity Counc-il today after an initial veto by China . The G<'neral Assembly will make the final decision , but 1t is a formality Diplomats emerging from the closed m eeting said the llecond round vote was 14-0 with one abstention to elect the 57-year- old Austrian diplomat to another term as bead or the world body. He is completing a five-year term to which he was elected in 1971 on the retirement of the late U Thant. The job pays $119,580 a year. China. which has wanted so meone from the Third World as secretary -general, vetoed Waldheim m the first round in or- der to support former Mexican President Luis Echeverria, the diplomats said. The Clunese abs- tain~ on the decisive ballot, they said. China 's first-round veto had been expected . It is customary to conduct as many ballots as necessary until a c-andidate receives at least nine of the 15 council votes without a negative vole from any or the five permanent powers -China, United Stat.es. Soviet Union, Bri- tain and France. Diplomats said the fll'St ballot vote for Waldheim was 13-1 with 1 abstention, presumably Panama. The vote for Echeverria was 4-4 with 7 abetentions in the first round and 3..s in the second ballot. Waldheim, wbo was drafted in- to tbe German army during World War II, rose in the diplomaUc aervice_after the war, becoming ambassador to the Unlted -tJatioos and foreign. minister. Re ran unsuccessfully ror president of Austria in the spring of 1971. · SCAG Panel Named Coeta Mesa city councilmen Monday appointed two of thelr peers, Mary Smallwood and Edward McFarland,._,. delegate and alternate, respectively. to the Southern Califomla A.seocla· Uonof Govemments. Colla. Maa joined the regional tovemment body lut month. Slaying s~pect Hunted By ROBE RT BARKER 0t 1114 D•ol1 ,Hot ~It Police com bed Huntington Beach today for a 23-year-old man they s uspec-t of staying his ~ -o"'on'• Greeti·ng• mother-in-l aw Monday after -,;:,e ., ., a noon. Detective Dick Nolen said Mrs . Muriel Norton, SO, was found shot to death in her home at 15161 Davis Lane. lfunlmgton Beach, at2:30p.tn. Costa Mes a police helicopter cr ews were pleased lo sec this Yule greeting atop two garages in the Monticello Townhouse com- plcx near police headquarters. 1t i~ so~c­ one·s way of saying thank you lo the poltcc department's two heli copter crews. Wanted for questioning is Daniel Buyher. 23, of 5441 Hen- dricksen Drive. Officers said that police rushed to th e Norton home after neighbors reported that Mrs. Norton and Buyher had engaged in a loud argument. Swine Flu Confirmed Wisconsi1i Case Diagnosed by Govenunenl Police said neighbors told them Buyher was trying to force Mrs. Nor ton lo tell him the whereabouts of his estranged wife, Linda. A neighbor woman said she c-ould hear Mrs. Norton say, "I wish you could get il through your thick skull ... She said she then heard Mrs. Norton scream and the front door slam violently. Witnesses said they then saw a young man running down the street lo the residence of 5441 Hendricksen. Buyher reportedly resided there with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Fer guson. Police cordoned off the area. but Buyher eithe r slipped <See SUSPECT, Page t\2) 6-car J>ileup Stalls Traffic A six-car, rear-end collision on Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa backed up morning rush hour traffic for a balf-mllc today, but no one was injured seriously, police said. The accident took place about 8 a m. near the intersection or Newport Boulevard and 22nd Street. At least three of the motorists were able to drive away after ex.- changing names and insurance information, according to police. ATLANTA CAP > Govern ment scientists have made the firs t confirma tion that a Wisconsin man suffered from swine nu, a spokesman for the national Center for Disease Con- trol said today "Material testing by lhe CDC 1s positive for s wine inOuenza A· New Jersey-76," said informa- tion officer Don Berreth. "Further invest1gat1on 1s n ecessary b e fore th e significance or the swine flu can be assessed." he said. Officials In Wis consin indicat- ed last weekend that Don Harris. a Brodhead farm worker, had contracted swine flu. His case is the first confirmed this fall by analysis of throat cultures, Berreth said. A Concordia, Mo.. telephone lineman. Larry Hardison, is believed to have suffered the dis - ease in late October, but throat cultures that might have shown viral infection c-ould not be taken because H ardis on recover ed before it was suspeeted he had swine flu, Berreth said. Tests o n Hardison's blood showed a rise in antibodies against swine flu. an increasr consistent with having suffered the disease, Rerreth said. Tests on Har ris' bloodhavenot s hown the presence of swine nu antibodies, but Berreth said that is not necessar ily contradictory to the throat culture finding because the anlibodiC11 build only Olga to Wed Gm.med, She's Mum on Mate ST. LOUIS (AP) -Everybody's darling of the un - even parallel bars. Russian gymnast Olga Korbut, ap. parentl,y is getting ready to settle down to married ICOtllaUT life. Miss Korbut, 21, bought a wedding dress at a J C Penney store over the weekend and in- dicated she would be married next year in Russia. said Edna Welch, the store's bridal e<>nsul- tant Ask ed whom she would marry. the gold medal winner in the 1972 Olympics, said only, "A boy." Miss Korbut was in St. Louis to perform ln an exhibition with other Soviet gym. nuts. The dress cost $177. She also boughi a $55 flngcrtlp veil and paid for the purchases with three $100 bills, store employes said. ... J!radually after· the illness oc- curs Three CDC epidemiologists ha\'e gone from Conc-ordia to Brohead. a small soulh-centra1 Wisconsin town, to check Harris and other area persons who have shown symptoms of respiratory illness. Berreth said. "There is, however, no indica- tion that there is extensive upper rt>s piratory illness in that area." he said. Recent blood spec-1mens from the farm worker arc being tested I at the CDC. and a blood sample taken while he was ill JS on Jts 1 way to Atlanta, Berreth said. The swine nu case suffered by Harris, 23, was diagnosied by Dr. I Bernard Easterday, a University or Wisconsin influenza exoert I who had gone to the Brodhead farm to check an outbreak of swine flu among hogs there, Ber-' relh said I Klan Involv ed? Marines Continue Probe of Attack By PHILIP ROSMARIN Ot .... 0111, ~llot SIAll After a rocky start Monday. the Marine Corps resumed a fact-finding investigation today to determine whether 14 black Camp Pendleton marines will slund courts-martial on charges o f a ss ault i ng s ix. white leathernecks. Govl'rnment prosecutor James Patrick Mc Henry opened the possibility or amending charges to include conspiracy to commit murder and attemptc<l murder this morning. Major McHenry s aid whether the c harges are included al any possi hie court martial is up to the investigating omcers conducting the hearing. According to the prosecuton;, the victims, one of whom re- mains hospitalized, were at- tacked by black servicemen Nov. 13 wbo believed a meeting of the Ku Klux Klan was being held. The victims, stabbed and beaten, had actually been In the middle or an unauthorized beer drinking session, a uthorities said. and were not connected with the klan. Pendleton of . flcials, after first denying any klan activities on the base, later admitted that ibere had been a KKK meeting in the barracks, but ln another room. Pendleton commanders made •belated attempt to break up the base KKK chapter by transfer- ring lts members to other bases. Hearings to determine the evidence against the 14 accused black marlnn are scheduled this week and next. Three of tbe men wero ecrutlnlzed ..Monday, and each of tbclr cues canUnued, • The real action came dunng a break in the proceed.mgs, when Ku Klux Klan Grand Dragon David Duke of Louisiana ap- peared outside the hearing room. A band or about 20 persons pro testing the detention or the• marines spotted Duke and four of his klansmen who unfurled 11 KKKOag The group. c alling itself the Committee Aga inst Racism , mobbed the klansmen. and a violent fi l(ht s tarted wh<"1 a woman picketer brought down her sign with force atop Duke's blond, blue-eyed head Sever a l blows were ex.· changed, with al least one KKK member striking the woman picketer. Pe ndleton military police quickly dis persed the melee, sw- inging heavy-duty batons. There were no rePOrled injuries. The protesters were hustled off <See KLAN, Page A2) I'M WRlTltJG TO S AMTA . ONL'/ 17 SHOPPING OAVS LEFT' .1 , AZ DAILY PILOT c Tuesday December 7. ,976 M~Nallg Site Agency Offers Help in Sale Although Newport-Mesa Unified School Distnct trustees seem m no rush to sell the McNally Continuation School site, Costa Mesa downtown re- development agency members are offering their help in getting the parcel on the tax rolls as soon as possible. In a letter sent to the school board this week, the agency urged trustees to consider saJe or the property in the near future. The letter said in part, "We (redevelopment agency) are aruuous to cooperate with you in every way possible to assist in your marketing of this property atthis lime." The letter continued, "It is sur- ely in our interest to sec this Vllluable key pllrcel developed at the earliest date in a way that FrOMPageAl DEATH ... quired the death penalty if a Jury or judge found that the crime in· vo l ved fitted ce rt ain circumstances such as multiple murders or first-degree murder during a robbery, burglary, r ape or kidnaping. Under the Jaw, a jury or judge would first de- termine guilt or innocence and then. af guilty. determine if the death penalty Cit the case. Today's decision involved the case or Steven Dou~las Roc.•kwell, 25. of Sepulveda, who was convicted in Ventura County Superior Court of the murder, kidnaping and rape of Linda Beth Coverly on May 11 . · * * * 'Pandemoniu"l' Greets News On Death Row Ry The Associated Press The reaction on San Quentin's Death Row was "complete pan demon ium •· today after the Calirorn1a Supreme Court ruled the death P<'nalty unconst1tu· t1onal. a prison spokf>Sman said "Ir th<'\' had balloons and t'hampagne, thcy"d be celebrat mg, I'm sur e." saad San Quentin ~pokesman Ball Merkle Al Gordnn. a spokesman for At ty Gen. EHlle Younger. saad all pendin g death sentences arc automat1ca1I)' rt•duced to lift• terms But Younger. an outspoken ad \IOCate or the death penalty, did not immediately comment. Merkle said there will be no immediate action involving the 65 men and two women on Death Row until a legal interi>rclation ts issued by Youni?er. ~o execution dates had been s et for the 67 Death Row prisoners because prison :.aulhonlies had bc<'n waiting for .... ord Crom the court Stn!'e lh<' List <'X<'<'utwn an C'altforn1a n<'arly 111 yc.>an• ,1~0. the d!•ath penal!~· has bt>en rull'<l unc.-on~t1tut10nal tw1<'e und r<>1m JlOSt'<I On('(' In the :.lal<' Legislature, the rP Jrt1on -. a ~ ju!ll as quick . allhouJ?h not aor; ~Pf'('t:'lcul3r a~ c.-ondcmnc•d inmate.' Jubilation .1t San Qu<'nlln Proponents or the death penl.ll l) s:ud thf'v -.ould introduce new, Math lc~11il at ion immediatrly. lJut they predicted trouble pll.!'s ing It Foes said they were elated by the ruling, but pessimistic that a new death penalty bill would be introduced and passed. But Los Ange)('s Police Chier FA Davis. a death penalty sup· porter. was skeptical. "It would be beautiful but It will benefit all of our com· mumty.·· The school board voted Nov. 9 to delay a decision on the reloco lion of the continuation school for up to two years, saying they will take up the issue prior to June 1979. The seven-acre parcel. with nc· cess to 19th Street, Newport Boulevard. and, potentially , Harbor Boulevard, is seen by re development agency officials as the ~Y to downtown redevelop- m ent. The land, according to school district estimates, 1s worth more than $1 m1luon. Agency members told trustees that sale of the property would of fe r, "an immediate return to the district as an earning a.'\set, and the return to the tax rolls." Trustees were told an N11v ember that the district probably could make more money in the appreciation or the value of the Mc Nally property than it could in interest on the money gained by selling the land now. At that time, School Superin· tendent J ohn Nicoll told trustees there is no pressing need to sell Mc Nally. He sald the district is selling two other sites in Costa Mesa and also expects to get federal public works money, al I or which will go for capital improvements. Redevelopment agency member Dr. Tom Nelson said he was disappointed in the school board's decision to hold off on sale or the Me Nally site . "It's basically important that we redevelop the site," he said. "McN ally is an ideal l()('ation ror a good imaginative developer to kick o!f the redevelopment or downtown Costa Mesa," he said Job Forms Stwnp Kith PHILADELPHIA <APJ One in seven Philadelphia high school seniors who took a literacy test was unable to rill out a job application. one in 12 couldn •t derine the word "cr edit" and one in 14 d1dn 't know ho" to read u ne" spaper . But Supt• Micha('! Marcase said Monday hP "as pleast>d with thc OVl'r all test results, hecauM' 149 2 percent of the setuor!; passed it. The test, e ailed "The As :i;essment of Functional Llteracy" was designed by the school district and given lo 13,088 students 1n Philadelphia's 23 public lugh schools last October. I',.... rage Al KLAN ... thr bas<'. The KKK c.-orte~c wa~ allowed lo remain. though MPs grufny ordrred Duke's people to put away their flag Eight to ten MPs i.tood \ 1gtl outMde headquarters loday. In the hearings, Chief Govrrn ment P rosecutor James Patnck McHenry revealed the Mannr Corps will seek stirrer charges than those lodged against t.he ac cused men. The prosecution has ind1cat<'d at least three of the mjur<'d marines surcered collapsed lungs from deep stab wounrls. The cases against Sgt William Spencer, 23. of High Point, N.C .. and PFC Donald R. Hunter, 23, or Winston-Salem, N.C. were con- tlnueod for a week No testimony was heard. O•llJ 1'1191 ""°"" l>y lt•y fl•lr•d• POLICE SWAT TEAM MEMBERS GATHER FOR CAR TOP STRATEGY SESSION Huntington Beach Murder Suspect Apparently Lett Behind Warm TV, a Beer and Hla Luggage Pregnancy Benefits Ruled as Optional f'rOM Page Al SUSPECT • • through the dragnet or had fled the scene before authorillcs ar- rived. Buyher is described as 6 feet tall and weighing about 200 pounds, with blond, curly hair Nolen said the weapon used in Mrs. Norton's death was a small caliber handgun. WASHINGTON CAP) - Employers do not have lo cover pregnancy·related costs in their health plans .for employes, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled to- day In a 6-3 decision, the court said the General Electric Co. dld not \'iOlate the federal Civil Rights Act by excluding pregnancy from its d1sab1hty m:.urance pro· J?.ram. The decision stnkl:'S down a policy of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which s aid GE and other employers must provide for sick leave and pregnant women 1r they provide such benefits for other dis- abihtaes. The opinion, written by Justice William fl R<'hnquist, reversed a ruhng by the 4th l ' S. C1rcu1t Court of Appeals an ravor of 43 women employc~ or GF. who work in plants at H1chmond, Portsmouth and Salem, Va . Tyler, Tex . f<'t Wayne and Tell City. Ind . .tnd Philadelphia The women had ralc'd a dass act ion suit on be hair of more than 100.000 female emplo)'cs of GF. Cost~ Mesa Buys Ground For a Song Where can you buy prime com· merc1al property an downtown Costa Mesa for only four cenLs a square root? You can 't. But the city or Costa Mesa can, and did, In council action Mon day night The 5,200 square root mtenor lot. located near Park Avrnuc and 19th Street, was approved for purchase from the County of Orange. The county acquired lhe pr('). perty after taxes due on the parcel became delinquent. In such tax sale transacllons, local government bodies have the first chance to buy the propertv. Costa Mesa city ofCiciaJs de- cided not to let the bargain slip by. Assistant City Manager Bill Dunn said the property is worth between $3 and $4 a square foot He said the city plans to sit on the property for now, but added the land will be used lalrr for r<'· novation or 19th Strcet and the downtown area "The plan, in effect is nothing more than an m surance package which covers some nsks but ex· cl~d others." the !ugh court sa1 . · There 1s no risk from "' ch m<'n are protected and women arc not. Likewise, there 1s no risk from which women arc protected and men are not. · He said the victim was shot an the temple. Nolen said that Buyher had no car and apparently had fled on foot. 'Shooting ~rows' Sniper Swpect Remains in Jail A young Huntin~ton Reach oil field worker who insists he wa., only target shootan~ at crows r e- mained Jailed tod ay, as detec- tives and the District Attorney's Office assessed has case Mark Allen Smith. 21, of 2601 f-1orada St . IS h~ld 10 ueu ur SI0,000 bail on n char~c of ass:sult with a deadly weapon The lluntinglon Beach poltcc SWAT unit responded to the c:11l about noon Monday when thr rt>- port came tn that a sniper was firing on a city work crew Sm1lh, a welt.puller. was ar rested without incident at his apartment art er police said two shoLs he firerl narrowly missed a trio of city surveyors working in Drill Team Spots Open Costa Mesa's award·winnang drill team. the Pace-makers, arc offermg instruction in marching, strutting, coordinated teamwork and team roulin<'s this winter Nine to 15·year -old girls participate m the city program. coordinated by the department of leisure services. Classes arc held on Mondays and Wcdnesda.>s from4 lo5p.m at College Park Elementary School. The rec is $3 for the 10· week course. for furthf'r information, con fact the department of leisure r,..,.,.(~nr 'It CCC t;:'JIV\ the area oC Huntington and 17th Streets . '"One round passed so close they heard 1t and then after they ran a considerable distance another round passed quite close by," a police spokesman said to· day. '"They relt. u nder the c.-1rcumstances. they had adc quatc reason to believe he ma) have had more than crows on his mind.'' the officer continued The older. rural area of centr .11 lluntmgtoan Heach 1s mfcste<I with crows. Investigators say whatever the out com('. al the very 'least Smith is expected to be charged with discharging a firearm inside city limits TONIGHT "'SATURDAY . SUNDAY, MON DAY .. South Coast Repertory Theater, Tuesday· Sunday through Dec. 19, 8 p.m WEDNESDAY, DEC. 8 "FROM H ERE TO KJNGDOM COME" OCC Drama Lab Theater, Dec. 8·11, 8p.m. Wo01an . ~ Charges' Assault A young Dann Point w()mM told an Oranee County Supcn or Court jury today that her famlly doctor repeatedly raped her •nd forred her to participate in acts or sexual perversion whUo trett· ing her in bis South Laguna of(j~e last Jan. 7. , Obviously distressed and f~e­ qucnlly covering her face with her hands. the 22·year -old wil· ness testified that Dr. Ross Todd McClure gave her an inj~n s hortly after she disrobed _In JtS office for a back examination, The witness testified that sho had consulted Dr. McClure.~· on several previous occasi~in his office at 31542 S. Colft Highway without a ny im - proprieties taking place. But she told the jury today tut the doctor removed her exami•· lion gown und underpants t!st Jan. 7 aner giving her an injcc.- llOn. She said she was powerless to prevent what she claims t..ok pince. "I was confused and dizzy u.n<.l I felt like a vegetable," the wrt· ncss s aid. ··1 was placed an several positions by the doctor while sex acts took place and there was nothanc 1 could do about it." .. Dr. McClure is being tricd ,ln J u d g e K e n n e t h E . l, a e l.s courtroom on ch arges o! rape and sex perversion. It is alleged that the acL'l l06k · place while he was treating his patient for a back injury s uffered in a Call at her Dana Pomt apart- ment building. Dr McClure was arrested b)' ~her1ff's officers after the wit ness was examined at South Coast Community Hospital short- ly artrr the alleged incidents ld04< place •: Th<' witness tcstifil'(l today t~at Dr McClure used both '\t massager and a vibrator on her body an what the prosecution claims was an attempt to sexual· ly stimulate her prior to sexual Ultercourse. f 'rolfl Page Al CANYONS • • and no maintenance, other than an initial cleanup of the area, J>c done to the canyons area for ijl least Cive years. I I Councilman Ed McFarland said he believes the westside or the city has a need for open space. and ··even Ir we can't work out this plan. I would hope he would continue to work to get this property.·' Sorsabal added that the only other means of acquiring Ute land, if the grant falls through, is to dip into the city's S3.2 million reserve account, "which I would strongly recommend you not do,'· he told councilmen. Jn an interview today, the c ity manager also said an arrange- ment might be worked out w\lh State Mutual to pay for the <la· nyons in installments if the city's applic?.tions for funds is denied' Mine Safety 'Lax' WASHINGTON (AP) Two methane gas explosions w~h killed 26 men in a southea.,tcrn Kcntut kv coal mine last Match were inevitable because of mloe conditions and lax enlorceme.at of s afety regulations, a report by the House subcommittee on Labor Standards says. would be dreaming -that the California Legislature would enact a properly drafted death penalty,·· Davis s aid. Leisure Services After the last column wl'uch was abOut natural and cultured oearl'J. I hevo harl many readers ask about the other types of ooarls too It's grat1fy1nq to find so manv peoole who are reading the column and ltnd 1t stimulating their interest 1n gems c@ 6EM WISE .• cullured The fres h watl pearls from the M1ss1s'l1P01 are not es abundant i'I~ the Btwe"I al"d are rougher 1n te>Cture OflANQI COAST c DAILY PILOT ,._,°' ..... (°"'\I 0•11\1 •Oot ""'"'w1'&tfttH..,,_ .,.,_,.,"'-... .,, .... ,, ''~•V..&.,""'°'~ (M" ~f\l't""t (OMO•"V S.0-.. .,. .. t'°"" .,. ......,,,.,...,. ..,~•• t~,~ ,:~ •or C...1• Mill•• .... WOO"l ~-( ll'I M """"......,.,. f'tt(I'/,,.,. "'" ¥••··· ....... \•ltl't+ft«ll "•"•" •"f "'~"~ .. " ~lf!IC.,.\t 4 \lf'lit .. ,~··-• .,.,.. •\ OWt\l'lfd \"W'd.tt• .-. ~~ f"'t r.,~-~~:.~.~,·.~~.:,;• We•t lty ••eitnN, .... ,.,f\i._~, .... ,,...,..,~ , .... c .... . V•o ,_,Oldfrtl •Nf GfNt ... tNM'Ott ............ " ... (d11&1' ,,,.IM, & M...,..i.. ~.,. .. tfllltl1'1tOJI' CMno•M ~-11..-~ """ . ,.,,~, ,..,." .. -..{ .. .,, Costa M•H Office ''°"""°'''•'"~ MtllHllM) •tlilf,t\\ P 0 9iU l s.I t)iUt Ofno .. l •9'1"• .. H~ t ... (U•,..,_,,• ltNtf .,"""""_.. ·-·"~ "'" ..... 6(.9' ...,..., ••• '°"''* ..... v ..... 111(11"" ... 11-•t Mn 01 ... ,, ... .. - To Off er Classes Classes ranain1 from belly dancing to Ice skating are avail a· ble lhil winter through the Costa Mesa department or leisure services. An eight-week lee skating course at the Ice Capades Chalet ln Costa Mesa wlll be held begin· ning Jan. 11 for beginners and in· termtdlate skaters. Cost ls S20. which includes a half hour of instruction and one hour of pra ctice per week , plus free use of skates. Oil painting classes for Young artists 8 to 18 years old and another for artlsts 17 years and older will be ofCered on Tuetldays beglMlng Jan.11. The younier artiata wlll learn baste techniques of oil painting from • to 5:30 p.m. and older art.tau from 1 to a p.m . at the Colta Meta Commw\lty Rec~a­ Uon C.tel'. Cclel ll • for younoters and $10 for lhe older arlllll. An a,hl•Wffk COW'M 1(' belly dancing. taught b y Sonia Chapko, will be offered on Wed· nesdays from 7 to 8 p.m. for beginners and 8 to 9 p.m . for in·· termedlates, at College Park School beginning Jan. 12. Cost for teens and adults Is $15 a session. Four cour ses ln dance instruc- tion for childre n are scheduled to begin Jan. 15. The eight-week courses lnclude ballet, tap danc· ing, modern dance and creative dance. Fee for each eight-week session ls S8. Weaving lessons for children and adult.t will begin Jan. lS, with youth weaving for students 8 to 15 years old from 9 to 10:30 a .m . and adults from 10:30 a.m. to12:30p.m . Cost for younaatcrs and adults Is $12. For further information on any or lhue winter acUvttles, call the department of lelaurt Mf'vicet at 558-s:JOO. Lake Btwa {Bee·wah) Japan is the most prollf1c sovroe of fresh water oearls lhat are grown 1n a mollusc similar to the sall water variety These pearla are irregular 1n Shaoe (baroque) and color. Their very dillerenc:e from the norm ma!(es them attractive and . Interesting. We found an unusual Blwa that had develoPed In the ahape of a Q'OSS. It IS approiclmet.ty Ont) and a quarter Inch•• long and three Quarters of an Ind\ wide Our Jewelor has fuhloned II into a dramatic oendent. The large Biwas make up beautifully as rings alto Our own M1stlasi04)! Alwr bed 11 the 110Urce of tome VfllY pretty colored pearla -all ahades of pe1tel1 and eve11 some brown and blaoka. These dllfer from the Japanese variety in that they are natural, an 1ccldtnl of nature The ones from Lake B1wa are Mary Barr. Cert11t~ Gemologist CHARLES H. BARR .t.cc,..._.,G"" i tter .. oi, , 17111 & '"'" w ..... ,, .. . .....,.,. .. .. The Mobe (mah·b1y) pearl '6 cultured and 1s produced ll>r> placing an obiect. usually a hemisphere of mother-0f...pearl 1n the shell of a fresh watw mussel where ti 1s coaled wHh nacre They are cut from the shell and pegged for setting - usually In eamngs With tl'le Infinite v&ffety of pearls. natural and C\lllur9d tre$h and Hit water. tl'\fl(e 111 alwavt one that wlll meke a l11Sting and memorable gift Jllltl nght for someone special to you. Orange Coast I ~OITION T oday's .Closhag N.Y. Stocks ,. VOL. 69, NO. 342, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1976 N TEN CENT . rMarines Continue l Assault Probe By PHILIP ROSMARIN OIU.. Delly "lel~H ,. ' Aller a rocky start Monday, 1the Marine Corps res\lmed a fact-finding investigation today to determine whether 14 black Camp Pendleton marines will Jitand courts-martial on charges or assaultin g six white Jeathernecks. Government prosecutor James Patrick McHenry opened the possiblllty or amending charges to include conspiracy to commit murder and attempted murder this morning. M.;or McHenry said whether the charges are included at any possible court martial Is up to the investigating omcers cooducting the bearing. Ac;cording to tbe prosecutors, the .victim&, one of whom re- mains hospitalized, were at - tacked by black servicemen Nov. I3 who'belleved a meeting of the Ku Klux Klan was being held. The victims, stabbed and beaten, bad actually been in the middle of an unauthorized beer drinking s ession, authorities said, and we re not connected with the klan. Pendleton of- ficials; arter r1rst denying any klan activities on the base, later admitted that there had been a KKK meeting in the barracks, (See KLAN, Page A%) :Execution Ruled 11llegaI· by Co11l~t ·Current Guideline I Violated SAN FRANCISCO IAP> The California Supreme Court ruled today that the state's death penally is unconstitutional in light of recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions. The unanimous decision, writ- ten by Chief Jus tice Donald R. Wright, held that California's capital punishment law is invalid since it violates current U.S. Supreme Court guidelines re· garding imposition or the death penalty. It said the law improperly re- . quires the death penaJty under 11pecified lnstancK wit~l pro- V'ld i ng ror consaderataon of m1t1gating circumstances. The decision said the slate's death penally law makes ''death a mandatory punishment for those <.'ategones of first-degree murder encompassed by lhe special circumstances" &ection of the law "without provision or consideration of evidence of mituzaune ciroumst.ances .•. " Ch1ef Jushle Wright ln tm wrote the decision striking down the old death penalty law but voters and the Legislature ap- proved a new law that went lnto effect Jan. 1, 1974. There have been no executions W'lder the new (Sff DEATH, Pag-e AJ) Hughes Will Witness Due LOS ANGELES <AP) -Two former dose aides to the late J(oward llughes have been or- dend to answer all quest.IOM put to them by attOTneys trying lo prove the authenticity or a purported Hughes will found by tbe Mormon church. Superior Court Judce Nell Lake on Monday ordered John Holmes of Los Angeles and Roy Crawford of Encmo to appear ln rourt Friday for depo&itions lo be taken by Harold Rhodes, at- torney for Noah Dietrich. Dietrich. another long-lime Hughes aide, was named ex- ect.ator of the billionaire's fortune Jn the document found by the Church of Latter-Day Saints <Mormon) in Salt Lake City shortly after Huahea' death April 5. Coast We atber Fair but tuisr weather expected throuO Wodl!a-day with cblUy nllfrta in the low 50s, hlthl ot10-'7S. I NSIDE TODAV NftO York .~ (/loa Bing Cro1l>11 .ca rou1t1tg wtlcom• .and tonight the vd•nNt crooftff OJ*" on B~. Slorr, A.t. •••ex "" "'" Alt M ,.. ., .. ..... .\ti ::t M .. .. f J I Al'WI~ CHINA VETO OVERRULED U.N.'a Kurt Waldheim Re-election Of Waldheim Supported UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. <AP ) -Kurt Waldheim was re- commended for re-election as U.N. secretary-general by the Security Council today after an initial veto by China . The General Assembly will make the final d ecis ion , but it is a formality. Diplomats emerging from the dosed meeting said the second- round vote was 14-0 with one abstention to elect the S7-year- old Austrian diplomat to another term u head of the world body. He is completing a five-year lerm to which be was elected in 1971 on the retirement of lbe late U Thant. The job pays $11~,580 a year. China, which has wanted so- meone from the Third World as secretary-general, vetoed Waldheim in the lint round in or- der lo support former Mexican President Luts Eche'verrla, the diplomats said. The Chinese a bs- tained on the decisive ballot. they 11aid. China's first-round veto had been expected. It ls customary to conduct as many ballots as necessary until a c~date receive& at least nine ot the 15 council votes without a nesattve vote Crom ~of tbe five permanent powen -China. United Stat.., Soviet UDioe, Bri· taln.and l"rJQce. D6pl'omata aaid the flrlt ballot vote for Waldheim wa 13-1 with J a b sten tio n. pre1umably 'Panama. Tblftltafor Ecbeverrla w11.f-C with 7 alletent.lona in the ftnt round udWiD thel«COd~ '1'be7 IH• DO detailed breakdown on the former Mexican leader, <See)'OTB. Pase AZ) Neff' S~ying TtiallOperu ' $AUNA& (AP) -Jury Hlec· Uoft .. under way ln the retrial ot -Inn Garcia ln the latU abooUna ot a JOO.pound DtM abe aaya helped r&j)e her. A panel ot • prolPe(.'UveJuron w• polled Monday before Mon·· ttHJ Count1 Su.perlor Court ,.... Nat A. A1Uao at the ltart ot t.bl HllOG... J J Al' WlrepMlo KLAN NATIONAL DIRECTOR COVERS HEAD FOLLOWING ATTACK BY PROTESTER KKK's David Duke, r1ght In light suit, Tangles Unde r Attack at Ma rine Bate Slaying s~pect Hunted By ROBE RT BARKER 01 !he D•llY l'llot S~ll Swine Flu Confirmed Police combed Huntington Beach today for a 23-year-old man they suspect of slaying his mother-in-l aw Monday after· noon. Wis consin Case Diagnosed by Govemnwnt Detective Dick Nolen said Mrs. Muriel Norton, 50, was found shot to death in her home at 15161 Davis Lane, Huntington Beach, at2:30p.m. Wanted for questioning is DanJel Buyher, 23, of 5441 Hen· dncksen Drive. Officers said that pohce rushed lo the Norton home after neighbors re ported that Mrs. Norton and Buyher had engaged in a loud argument. Police said neighbors told them Buyher was trying to force Mrs . Norton to tell him the where abouts of bis estranged wife, Linda. A neighbor woman said she couJd hear Mrs . Norton say, "[ wish you could get it through your thick skull. .. She said she then heard Mrs. Norton sere am and the front door slam violently. Witnesses said they then saw a young man running down the street to the residence of 5441 Hendricksen. 8uyher reportedly resicted there with his parents, <See SUSPECT, Page A21 Woman Blames Dogs for Fall A tenant or the Sandpiper Inn, Corona deJ Mar, sued the operators of the apartment com- plex Monday for $50,000 in damages with the allegation that the presence of large dogs at tho faclllty led to her aJleged fall. Cer.elia A. Mueller states in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuJt that she was injured in the driveway or the building at 2101 E. Coast Highway Dec. 6, 1975, when she slipped and fell. She argues that dogs are kept by other tenants and are allowed to roam the area at will. ATLANTA (A P > -Govern· ment scientists have made the first con f irmation that a Wisconsin man su(f ercd from swine flu, a spokesman for the nauonal C~nt.er fpr Di6easc Coo· trol said today. "Material testing by the CDC 1s positive for li wine infll*n7.a /\· New Jersey-78.'' said in forma- tion officer Don Berreth "Further inve.st1gat1on 1s . n e c e s s a r y b c f o r e t h c significance of the swine nu can be assessed," he said Officials in Wisconsin 1nd1cat· cd last weekend that Don llarni., a Brodhead farm worker, had contracted swine nu. His case is the first confirmed this fall by analysis or throat cultures. Berreth said. A Concordia, Mo., telephone lineman. Larry llard1son. is believed to have suffered the dis- ease In late October. but throal cultures that might have shown viral infection could not be taken because Hardison recovered before it was suspecl<'<i he had swine flu, Berreth srud. Tests on H ard1son 's blood showed a rise in antibodies against s wine nu, an increase consistent with having suffered the disease, Berreth said. Tests on Harris' blood have not 11hown the presence of swine nu antibodies, but Berreth said that is not necessarily contradictory to the throat culture finding because the antibodies build only gradually after the illness oc- curs. Three CDC epidemiologists have gone from Concordia to Brohead, a small sooth·central Wisconsin town, to chc<.'k Harris and other area persons who have shown symptoms of respiratory illness, Berreth said. "There Is, however, no indica- tion that there is extensive upper respirat.ory Illness In that area," he said. Recent blood specimens from Olga to Wed Gowned, SJW;a Mum on Mate ST. LOUIS (AP) -Everybody's darling of the uh· even parallel bars, Russian gymnast Olga Korbut, ap· parenUy ls getting ready to settle down to married life. (~ , ' I ............ ~ Miss Korbut, 21, bought a wedding dress at a J C Penney store over the w~end and in· dicated she would be married next year in Russia, said Edna Welch, the store's bridal consul- tant. Asked whom she would ma.fry, tho gold medal winner in the 1972 Oly mpics, said only, "A bo " .o11•u" Y ·w.a Jtorbut was ln St. L9Ult to pertonn bl an exhlblUon Mth other So~et l)'tll· nata. "~ Tbe dress cost $1'1'7. She alao bought a ..- ftngertlp vell and paid fat' the purcbues wlth three $100 bills, storeemployes aald. , •'' the farm worker are l>eing tested at the CDC; and a blood sample taken while he was ill is on its way to Atlanta, Berreth said. Tbe ~w\n~ ll" ~4$e suffered by Harris. 23. was <l1agnosielll b y l>r. Bernard Easterday. a University of Wisconsin influenza experdt '4 ho had gone to the Brodhea farm to check an outbreak of swme nu a mong hogs there, Ber- reth sajd . Easterday confirmed that several hogs contracted the dis- ease. Some Wisconsin officials spe<.'ulated that Hanis caught the disease by working with tho hogs, but the source oC his swine nu case has not been positively detetmlned, Berreth said. The source or the Missouri telephone lineman's apparent ca.lie also Is undetermined, Ber· reth said. Official Threatens I :~~~N~~A~~~-'!.~;:~~~] Leo Ryan was so Irked by a $.5 plaming abol!t the t1c~et to a parking tic ket he got at countysuperv1soranda1udge. Sacramento Metropolitan In the letter t<? Sacramento Airport that he threatened to try County Supervisor Sandra to r estrict reve nue-sharing Smoley, Ryan noted that he funds the Sacramento Bee says. serves on a congressional com-Th~ newspaper reported Mon-mittee that handles r evenue day that Ryan, a South San Fran- sharing. H.e said he has aJways I cisco Democrat, complained that fought to give local gov~mme~u he was the victim of "harass-as much money as possabte w1tb no strings attached . Nessie Gets Name, Still Eludes Hunter NEW YORK CAP> -They'~e going to name it "Nessitems Rhom boptery x" -if they find it. "It" is the Loch Ness monster, or Nessie as it is known to Scotland's schoolchildren. Dr. Robert H. Rines, dean of the Franklin Pierce Law Center in Concord, N.H., and Jeader of the 1978 Loch Ness photographic expedition, claims to have seen Ule legendary monster in the Scottish lake In um. Before addressing the Mauacb usetts Institute of Technotoey Club here, be told re- porters Monday: ''I'm absolutely convinced the monster exisq. We know there are mote ~an one dowT\ there.'• · . The problem is fmdl.nC NdSie -or some part oC its remains. Durln1 a allde presenl~UoD, Rine6 and three other Amencans "Yho accompanied him explained the major dlfflculty ln localing ''the wonder of Loch Neu with the diamond shaped fUpper. •· The lake, 24 miles long and 900 reet deep. id filled wltb murky water and surrounded by hllb crauy walla which make.~~· aldM. lt provl4es mil• o1. I plactt tor un.aociabt.,monatera. But Rines and otbers are already at work trylJ\8 lo con- vince t.M ownert ot 1mall re· Hareb aubmar in• t.o lend them equiptn,nt IO Utey Cf.ll ~avel aloaC the bottom md examine what tlaey bellove are tho akeletbna or e arcauea of Neu10'1 l~bean- But this concept may have to be re-examined, Ryan added, If the county can afford to let two sherUf's deputies "pass the time of day in the sunshine" writing tickets when law enforcement agencies are complaining abo4t tight budgets, the newspaper r~· port~. . In his letter to Municipal~ Judge Lawrence Marvin Jr .• Ryan s aid he was harassed b.v what he called idle traffic of- ficers with nothing better to do. He said he parked his car Nov. 30 al a five-minute curbside zone for less than 15 minutes while he unloaded 11 pieces of baggage to ship to Washington. after his marriage to a Sacramento woman. He said it wowd have been virtually hnpoaslble for him to move that much lucgaae from a parking lot to the terminal. "Of courae, I might have ukecl the officera to assist,". Ryyi wrote the 'ud1e. "They IW'QI)' . seemed pressed for time because there was only one otber car parked against either curb for at lea.st 100 yards In front of the en.· Ute airport bulldin1." I'M WRITING TO S AMTA . ONLV 17 SHOPPING ~vs LEFT.' ~2 DAIL V PILOT N McNallg S i te Agency Offers Help in Sale Although Newport M esu Unified School Dbtnct truat~<'S seem in no rush to sell the McNally Continuation School aite, Cot1ta MeH downtown re· development agen<.'y members are offering their help in gelling the parcel on the tax rolls aa soon as possible. Jn a letter aent to the school JobFonru Stump K idil PHILADELPHIA <AP> -One In s even Philadelphia high school seniors who took a Uteracy test was unable to fall out a job application, one in l2 couldn't define the word "credit" and one in 14 didn't know how to read a newspaper. But Supt. M ic hael Marcase said Monday he was pleased with the over· all test res ults, because 89.2 percent or the senlors passed It. The test, called ''The As· sessment or Functional Literacy" was designed by the school district and alven to 13,088 students in Philadelphia's 23 public high schools last October. E',....P~AJ DEAT H ... law and none ii. S<.'heduled The old law was abolished in a d ecision saying that the de<ith penalty violated the ::.late con· stalutaon's proh1b1l1on against ··cruel a nd unusual punis h· ment. ·• There arc 65 men and twf) w ome n on death row in California priS0'1!1. The 1974 death penalty law re· quired the death.penalty If a Jury <'Ir judge round lllal the crime in· volv<'d filt '\'d certai n circumstances su~h as multiple murders or !irst·d-.Srce murder during a robbery, b~glary, rape or kidnaping. Under~e ~law, a jury or Judge would lki..t. cit'· termine guilt or innocence and then. ar guilty. del<'rmane 1f th<.' death penally rat the ca.\e. Today ·s dec1s1on involved the case of Ste\'cn nou11las Rockwell. 25, of Sepulveda. \\ho was convicted an Ventura Count\ Superior Court of thC' murdt-r. kidnapang and rape or l.Jnda Octh Caverly on Ma.> 11. board this week, th4.' agenC'y urged trustees to com.adcr !>ale of the property in lhe near future. The letter said in part, "Wo (redevelopment agency> are anxious to cooperate with you in every way possible to assist in your marketing or this property at thla time." The letter continued, ''It is sur· ely in our interest to see this valuable key paroel developed at the earliest date In a way that wlll benefit all of our com munity.'' The school board voted Nov . 9 to delay a decision on the reloca Uon or the continuation school for up to two yeart, saying they will take up the luue prior to June 1979. The seven-acre parcel. with ac cess to 19th Street, Newport Boulevard, and, potentially, Harbor Boulevard, is seen by re development agency officials as the key to downtown redevelop ment. The land, according to school dis trict estimates, is worth more than $1 million. Aiency members told trustees that sale of the property would of· fer, "an immediate retun;i to the district as an earning asset, and the return to the tax rolls.'' Trustees were told in Nov· ember that the disttict probably could make more money in the appreciation or the value of the McNally property than it could in Interest on the money gained by selling the land now. At that time. School Superin- tendent John Nicoll told trustees there as no prei:.sing need to !>di McNally. He said the district is selling two other sites in Costa Mesa and also expects to get federal public works monev, all of which "''II go for capital i mprovcments. Redev elopment agcn <.'y member Dr. Tom Nelson said he was disappointed in the school board's decision to hold off on sale or the Mc Nally site. "It's basically Important th at we redevelop the site," h<' said. "Mc Nally is an ideal location for a good imaginative developer to kick off the redevelopment of downtown Costa Mesa," he s aid. P ro8ecut ion R ests LOS ANGELES IAP> -The pr06ecution has rested ils case in th&. trial of the man accused of belllg the "Skid Row Slasher" and Superior Court Judge Earl C. Hroady has refused to di5m1s::. the charges dgaansl 33 year old defendant Vaughn Oran Greenwood who 1s charged with 11 counts or murder O..•• ~ ,..., ty •~ &.lr~u POLICE SWAT TEAM MEMBERS GATHER FOR CAR TOP ST RATEGY SESSION Huntington Beech Murder Sutpeet Apparently Left Behind Werm TV, a Beer end Hla Luggage Pregnancy Benefits Ruled as Optional Fro• Pilge A J SUSPECT • • Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ferguson. Police cordoned o{f the area: but Buy her either slippea through the dragnet or had fled WASHINGTON (AP) - Employers do not have to cover pregnancy-related costs in thelr health plans for employes, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled lo· day. Jn a 6·3 decision, the court s aid the General Electric Co. did not violate the federal Civil Rights Act by l''H'ludan~ pregn:rncy from its d1s ab1hty 1ru.urance pro Jtram Thi' dPc1swn ~lnkes down a pohl'y of the Equal Employment Opportunity Comm1'>::.1on, which !mad GE and other employers must provide for sack leave and pregnant wom <'n 1r they provide such bene fits for other dis· abahlics. The opanaon. wrall<.'n by Justice William H. Rehnqwst, reversed a ruling by the 4th U.S. Circuit Cour1 of Appeals an fuvor of 43 women employes or GE who work in plants al Richmond, Ports mouth and Sale m, Va .. Tyler. Tex .. Ft. Wayne and Tell City, Ind., a nd Philadelphia The women ha d filed a class- ; l'I aon ~uil on bl•haH of more than 100.000 rem ale em ploycs of GE. "The plan. an errect as nothing more than a n insurance p11ckagc wha<.'h cover:. some n sks but ex· d udes others ." the high court said " . There as no n sk from "ha ch men are protected and '4omcn a1 e not. Likewise. there IS no r isk from which women are protected and men are not." Chief Justice Warren E . Burger and J usli<.'es Potter Stewart. Byron R. White and Lewis 1''. Powell Jr. JOlned an Rehnquist's tnaJority opinion. Justice Harry A Blackmun con- <'urred in part. Ju!>lic<-S Wilham J . Bren nan J r , Thurgood Marshall and John Paul Stevens dissented. · the scene before authorities ar· rived. Buyher is described as 6 feet tall and weighing about 200 pound$, with blond, curly hair. Nolen aald the weapon used in Mrs. Norton'• death waa a small caliber handgun. He 1aJd the victim was shot in the temple. Nolen said that Buyher had no C"ar and apparently had Oed on foot. 'Shooting Crows' Sniper Suspect Remains in Jail A young Huntington Beach oil field worker who insists he was only target·shootlng at crows re- mained jailed today, as detec- tives and the Distnct Attorney's Office assessed his case. Mark Allen Smith, 21, of 2601 F1onda St., IS held Jn l.leu or Sl0,000 bail on a charge or assault with a deadly weapon. The Huntington Beach police SWAT unit res ponded to the call about noon Monday when the re· port came in that a sniper was firing on a city work crew limits. None or the three SW'veyors in the team that came Wlder fire - or feel they did -was hit, but aJI are a bit sore today from their frantic dives for cover. ID Program Drmm 'Nay' Woman Charges Ass ault t\ young Dana Point womnn told an Orange County Superior Court Jury today that her family doctor rE>pealedly raped her und forced her lo participate In acts of sexual perversion while trut· lng her In hit Sou.th L.aguna omce lastJan.7. Obviously distrC'Sstod and frl'· quently covering her race with her hands, the 22·year-old wit· ness testified that Dr. Hoss Todd McClure 1ave her an injection shortly af{er she dl.srobed in his • office for a back examination. The witness testified that she had consulted Dr. McClure, S4, on several previous occasions in his o trlce at 31542 S. Coast Hi g hw ay w ithout any im proprieties tak101 place But s he toJd the JutY today that Ii the doctor removed her examana t lion go" n and underi>anl~ la~L Jan 7 after ~1vang her an 1n1ec· lion She said she wa!> powerless to prevent what she claims took place . "I was confused and clJzzy and I felt like 11 vegetable." the wit ness said . ''I was placed in sever al positions by the doctor while sex acts took place and 1 there was nothing I could do about it." Dr. McClure la· being tried in 1 Judge Kenneth E. Lac's courtroom on charges or rape and sex perversion. It is alleged that the aC"ts took place while be was trcaU°' his patient for a back injury suffered , in a fall at her Dana Point apart· ment building. Dr McClure was arrested by sheriff's officer!! after the wit· ness was examined at South Coast Community llosp1tal !>hort ly after the alleged mc1denl~ took place. The witness testified today that Dr McClure used hoth a massager and a vibrator on her body in what the prosecution claim!' was on attempt to sexual· ly stimulate h er prior to sexual intercour~e. Huntington Driver Jailed Ove r Crash A Huntington Beach man who admitted in court that he was drunk behind the wheel or his car when il smashed head·on into another auto on West Coast lllghway in Newport Beach has been sentenced to rune months an Orange County Jail and placed on three years probation. Following ha s con"action. the jury faal<'d to reach a verdict in the penalty phase of the trial. Rockwell then asked the state Supreme Court to bar a re1rlal on the serond phas(' in which the lilo? gravallng circumstances '4ere brought out. KL.AN INVESTIGATION. • • Smith, a well puller, was ar· rested without incident at his apartment after police said two shots he fired narrowly missed a trio of city surveyors working in the area or Huntington and 17th Streets. WASHINGTON <AP> - A federal advisory panel voiced s trong opposition this afternoon to any system of national identity cards for Americans . Superior Court Judge James II. Walsworth further ordered Mike Lee Green. 21, to stay away Crom alcohol and make full restitution to a woman who was seriously injured in the crash. The woman was identified as Rosemary Trotta, 32, who wa!I seriously injured when Lee's car cr06sed a double yellow Une and rammed her auto Sept. 11. Lee later pleaded guilty to charges or drunken drivinl? lie contended retrial was im- prQper because the Jaw providing the death penalty uf)(in r• finding e>f aggravl!ling circumstances 1s unconstitution ul ;rhe stile alleged the victim was killed to prevtnt tefllimony as a witness. that the 11laying was committed during u k1dnap1n11 ;.aod durani.: a rape CaHrorrua law Jmposed the mandatory death penalty for persons convicted or murder under su c h cltcumstance<i The tribunal a 11rl't"d to review the petition and barred the sttond phase retrial The court pointed oul that a sentence or Jiff" lmprl11onment was proper In such a case since ute death penally could not be imposed. 'The court noted that the U S. s/ipreme Court's decision in a <fr>r11ia caae providing for the dfath penally may neither make tliJt penalty mandatory nor give ttat Jury or judge absolute dis· c~tion In the choice of JiCe or de· a&h. I ' O"ANOI COAS'T DAILY PILOT I Vk•,. .. ,.:,~.~~=:' .. w,.,.... \ ' I\ ' nM••l!-1• ,., 1::.~.:=- '. CMnft M '--IU< ...... ~ Md J t , ·- AuOtMU M.IMtt"'t ltalW• Teletlllone (T14)Ml>W1 CIHt"'-cl Advertltlfltl .._11 .. but in another room. Pendleton commanders madl' a tx>lated attempl to break up the base KKK chapter by trans fer ring its members to other.bases Hearings to determine the <•vidence against lh(' 14 accu:.e<I black marines arc scheduled tha:. week and next. Three of the men were scrutinized Monday, and each of their c ase!'I continucd The real action came dunng .i hreak an the proc<'e<11ng!>, wh•·n Ku Klux Klan Grand Oral{Oll l>av1d Duke of Louisiana ap 1~ared outside the hearl"f room. A hand or about 20 person!! pro testing the dett'ntion of t h•• mar an es spotted Duke and four or ha'\ klansmen who unfurled u KKK na11 . The group, calling itself the Committee Against Racism , mobbed the klansmen, and 11 violent f111ht started when u woman p1ckPter brought down her s111n with force atop Duke·~ blond. bluf'•t'yed head. S everal blows we r e ex chang<'d, with at least one KKK member s t riking the woman picketer. Pendleton military police quickly dispersed the melee, s w· inging heavy.duty baton.'!. There were no reparted injwiefl. The protesters were hustled off the base. The KKK cortege was allowed to remain, though MPs gruffly ordered Duke's people to put away lheir nae. Etiht to ten M Pa stood vis ii out.side headquart.ers today. In the hearings, Chief Govern· ment Prosecutor James Patrick McHenry revealed the Marine Corps will seek stiffer charges than those lodged aiainsl the ac· cuHdmeo. The prosecution has Indicated at least three of the Injured marines suffered collapsed lungs Crom deep stab wounds. The cues against Sgt. W11Uam Spencer, 23, of Hldt Polnt, N.C., and PFC Donald R. Hunter. 23, of Wlnaton-Salem , N.C., were con· Unued for a week. No tesUmonY wubeard. Spencer w111 to seek repreaen· tatlon by another m llltary lawyer, Capt. Willhelm Bennett. HUDtel"'I counsel told Jnve1ti1at. tnt Offlcer Thomu F. Smlt.h he needed more time to review \ho evidence. - After acce pting writte n tt•st1 mony from the vlclams or the attack about their injuries. Capt. Oanael ll. Koenig, attorney for Lance Cpl. Bobby R. Bishop, asked :ind received a po11tpone· ment of the case until Thursday. To<tuv three more of the a c- cused marines were scheduled lo he heard. They ure Lance Cpl. nre~or) A Coffee. 21. or St. Louis. M o .. Lance Cpl. Ricky C. McGalvery, 19, of Dullas, Tex .. and Sgt Herman Fletcher, 23, of llJgh Point, N.C. Mc Gllvery·s case was con· llnued arter the Manne asked to he represented by El Toro Capt. S. ll. Ray. McGilvery's current t' o u n s e I C a p l D a n i e 1 C . Stanhope, said "we'd proceed un· der a ver y ilrong obJet'tion" when investigating officer Willia m Halsey denied request for additional counsel, beside Hay Stanhope argued thol his client was entitled to an extra attorney, :;Ince the government had as· signed two men to handle the case against McGilvery. Perry Parks. an a1dg to C onl(re ss woman YvC>nne Braithwaite Burke, was a s pec· tator al Monday'1 hearing. Other speclators included Car· re l Reavis, president or the' Montford Point Marines Associa- tion, retired veterans of the first group of black marines admitted in lo the corps; and Joe Stooe and Myonla Gibbs of the San Dieeo Urban League. whtch fi rst ex· posed KKK activity at Camp Pendleton. From Pap A l VOTE •.• who ha~ IQDi wanted the U.N. post. · Waldheim, whO wu dratted in· to the Germ an army durlna World War II, rose ln the dJpt9maUc service aft.et the war, becomlna ambassador to the Ul'\Aled Nation• and forelart mlhl ter. Ht ran unaucceaefuUy tor president of Austria ln tho •Pltna ourn. · "One round passed so close they heard it and then after they '-ran a con siderable distance another r ound passed quite close by." a police spokes man said lo· day. ''They f e lt. under th e rirC'umstances, lhey had ade· quatt' reason to believe he may have had more than crows on his mind," the office r continued. The older. rural area of central Huntingtoan Beach is infested with crows. Investigators say whatever the outcome, al the very least Smith is expected to be cha.rg~ w~th , discharging a firearm ms1dc city Alter the las\ column which was about natural and culll.lred pearls. I ,have had manv readers ask about the other types o f pearls 100 !l's gr81tfying to find so many peoole who are reading the column and find It stlmulallng their Interest in gems. Lake Blwa (Bee-wah) Japan Is the most prolific souroe of fresh water pearls that are grown In a mollulC llmll• to lhe salt water variety. These pearls are irregular In etiape (baroque) and color. Their very difference from ttie norm mal(H them attractive and ,Interesting. We found an unus ual Blwa that hid developed In the shape of 1 ctO$S II Is approxlmltelY one and 1 Quar1er loch•• long Ind three Qu811ers of en Inch wide Our jeweler li11 f1thloned It Into a dramatic 1>9ndant. The large B l waa make UP beaullf\Jlly as rings aleo. The Federal Advisory Committee on False Iden· tlficaUon studied the na- tional ID-card proposal in Its 18·month search for ways to curb the fraudulent use of false identification documents such as driver 's licenses. birth certificates and credit cards. The committee's 800· page report said it "op- poses any so-called 'na- tional ID card' " and "strongly opposes any new type of state or lo<'al gov- ernment· issued ID In· tended to supersede exl.st· Ing dO<.'umeots." @ EiEM WISE Mary Borr, Coertifitd Clemoloo1s1 A passenger an Lee's <'Hr, Shevawn Green. rn. <ilso was an jured in the collision Fire Hits Hotel FT. BRAGG <AP> -A stub· born fire heavily damaged the old Windsor Hotel but no Injuries were reported. The blaze broke out In the 63 year-old two-story structure at 1: 45 p.m. Monday and 3S firemen worked until 9 p.m. to bring It under control. cultured. Tho fresh waler pearls from lhe M1ss1sslpp1 are not as abundanl as Iha B1was and are rougher 1n le~lure Tho Mobe Cmah·boyl pearl Is cultured and Is produced by placing an ob19cl. usually a hemisphere ol molher~f·Pflarl 1n the shAll ol a lreal'I Wiier mussel where It ., coated with nacre They are cut from lhe shell and i>90ged for setting - usually 1n earrings. .t ·~ ... · ·~ ' " .1 .·~. > . ' ' Our own Mlulull)f)I Rlvtr bi9d la the sourc• of .aorne Vtf'i pretty colored PHrl• -Ill ahedea of pa1te11 .end even tofM brown and bleckt. Theta differ from the Jap1nHo variety In that they ire Ntural, an eccldont of nature. The ones trom Lake Blwa are CHARLES H. BARR Wnh 11\e 11\rnltt veriety of pearls, natura and cultured. ........ .,, A"'"4«11 ._Seel..., AcCf'lllW 4"tll LA I ... , frettl ond ••It water, there ls · aJ.,nJ.tt one that wlll make • · luting 11nd memorable girt JU3t right IOC' aomtone soecill to )OU. Saddlehack * * * * VOL. 69, NO. 342, ~SECTIONS, 26 PAGES DAILY PILOT ORANGE COUNTY, CAl,IFORNtA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1976 /\f ter1100 11 .N. Y. Stot!k s j TEN CENTS Marines Continue Assault Probe By PllJUP llOSMARJN Of IM 0•11' "!ell IUff After a rocky start Monday, the Marine Corps resumed a fact-rinding In vcstigatlon today to determine whether 14 black Camp Pendleton marines wall stand courts-martial on charges of assaulting six white leathernecks. Government prosecutor James Patrick McHenry opened the possibility of amending charges to include conspiracy to,commil murder and attempted murder this morning. Major McHenry said whether the charges are included at any possible court martial is up to the investigating officers conducting the hearing. According to the prosecutors, the victims, one ol whom re- mains hospitalized, were at· tacked by black servicemen Nov. 13 who believed a meeting of the Ku Klux Klan was being held. The victims, stabbed and beaten, had actually been in the middle of an unauthorized beer drinking session, authorities said. and were not connected with the klan. Pendleton of· ficials, after first denying any klan activities on the base, later admitted that there had been a KKK meeting in the barracks, (See KLAN, Page Al) Execution Ruled .IDegal by Co111·t Current Guideline Violated SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The California Supreme Court ruled today that the s late's death penally as unconstitutaonal in hght of recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions. Jhe unanimous decision, writ· ten by Chief Justice Donald R. Wright. held that California's capital punishment law is invalid since it violates current U.S. Supreme Court guidelines re· gardmg ,imposition of lhe death penally. . It said the law improperly re· quires the death penalty under 1 specified instances without pro- v1d in g for consideration of mitigating circumstances. The dec1s1on said the state's death penally law makes "death a mandatory punishment for those c ategories Qf first degree murder encompassed by the special circumstances" secuon of the law "without provision or cons1dcrat1on of evidence of m1t1gataog circumstances ..... Chief Justice Wright in 1972 wrote the decision striking down the old death penalty law but voters and the Legislature ap- proved a new law that went into effect Jan 1, 197•. There have been no executions under the new law and none as scheduled. The old law was abolished in a dec1s1on saying that the death penalty violated the state con· slltutaon ·s prohi bi lion against "rruel and unusual punish· menl ·· There a re 65 men and two women o n death row in Cahfom1a prisons The J971 death penalty law re· quired the dt>ath penalty if a JLlry or Judge round that the cnme in· volved fatted certain circumstances such os mulllple murders or first-degree murder dunnR a robbery, burglary. rape or k1dnapmfl. Under the law. a Jury or Judge would farsl de· termmc guilt or innocence and then. 1r guilty, determine if the death penalty fat the c33e. Today's decision Involved the case or Steven Doualas Rockwell. 25. of Sepulveda, who was convicted in Ventura County Superior Court of the murder, kidnaping and rape of Llnda Beth Coverly on May 11. Followlng his cooviclion, the <SH DEATH, PageA.2) Coas t We athe r Fair but huy weather ex-peeled t.hrou1b Wednes· day with chilly nllhts in the low SOI, btaba oC 70-75. I NSIDE TODA" NN York oud~ gfott Bing Cro1b11 o routing 101lcom1 and tonight th• vderon croontr optU on Broadt0011. StOt'I/. Al. l•dex AU an All •• •• •t.t .... All Alt All • •• M Job Forms Stump Kim PHILADELPHlA (AP) -One in seven Philadelphia high school seniors who took a literacy lest was unable to fill out a job application, one in 12 couldn't define the word "credit" and one in 14 didn't know how to read a newspaper. But Supt. Michael Marcase said Monday he was pleased with the over· all test results, because 89.2 percent of the seniors passed it. The test. called "The As· sessment of Functional Literacy" was designed by the school district and given to 13,088 students in Philadelphia's 23 pubUc high schools last October. Fire Details Withheld in Toro Arson Orange County fire depart- ment officials today still refused to release details of their in· vestigation or a fire they say was set, burning part ol El Toro's Saddleback Valley Plaza last week. causing $1A2 million damage. "There was nothing really ob· vious,'' said Capt. Bruce Turbeville. ''The volume or the fire just makes it extremely un· likely that it was caused by anything but arson.'' Turbeville said investigators have no suspects in the case. It is known that the blaze erupt- ed in Bambi's discotheque, formerly the Way Station Restaurant. then spread to an ad- J ac ent leasing office and a gourmet shop. Fire officials would not con· farm earlier reports that the fire broke out an a back room at the nightclub. Turbeville said today it could lake "two days lo two months'' to complete the lnveatigalion. Adult Choir Program Set The Adult Education Com· munity Choir, under the direc· Uon of Jan DeHau, will present a Christmas Program rrom 7:30 to8:30p,rn. TbundayintbeLa.ke Forest Beach and Tennis Club. Tbe public ls invited to attend theproaram . 1he cboir will perform December Child, A Gentle Rock Song, Christmas Calypso, Do You Hear What I Hear and You'll Never Walk Alone as well as other famlllar Cbriltmu soqs. Thk~T· . ~ ta Yuls Giftj Wrapped Christmas lifts were amon1 property stolen from • Lltun• Hills home by a bur&lar who removed the screen and un- locked the window to lain entry. Oran1e County 1hertrr'1 of· ftcen valued the Jou at the home of '••cher S&nen Kendall ltunuJ, 21. or 23N$ Loi Adomoe, at rt~. They u ld the intruder a1Jo carried ort musical Wtru- mentl and fish aquariums. ... Al'Wlr .. i.oto Slaying s~pect Hunted KLAN NATION.Al DIRECTOR COVERS HEAD FOLLOWING ATTACK BY PROTESTER KKK's David Duke, rtght In llght suit, Tangles Under Attack at Marine BHe By ROBERT BARKER 01 t~e O•lly l'llOI SWll Police com bed Huntington Beach today for a 2J-year·old man they suspect or slaying ha s mother-in-law Monday after· noon. Detective Dick Nolen said Mrs. Muriel Norton, 50, was found shot to death in her home at 15161 Davis Lane. lluntington Beach, at2:30p.m Wanted for questioning is Daniel Buyher, 23, or 5441 Hen- dricksen Drive. Officers said that police rushed l o the Norton home after neighbors reported that Mrs. Norton and Buyher had engaged an a loud argument. Police saad neighbors told them Buyher was trying to force Mrs. Norton to tell ham the whereabouts of has estranged wire, Linda. A neighbor woman said she could hear Mrs. Norton say, "I wish you could gel it through your thick skull ... She said she then heard Mrs. Norton scream and the front door slam violently. Witnesses said they then saw a young man running down the street to the residence of 5441 Hendricksen. Buyher reportedly resided there with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ferguson. Police cordoned ofr the area. but Bu y her either s lipped through the dragnet or had fled the scene before authorities ar· rived Buyher as described as 6 feet tall and w'eighang about 200 pounds. with blond, curly hair. Nolen said the weapon used in Mrs. Norton's death was a small caliber handgun. He said the victim was shot in the temple. Nolen said that Buyher had no car and apparently had fled on foot. (See SUSPECT, Page All San Juan Tnutee Overton Election Results Certified Orange County Board of Supervisors. acting on advice of county counsel, Tuesday re- ceived and filed certification or Jan Overton's election to the Capistrano Unified School Dis- trict board or trustees. In so doing, the board rejected a protest of election rei.ults by South Orange County Educators CSOCE>. The teacher assoc1at10n challenged double-marked ballots that were disallowed an the ora~inal machine count but counted as valid an a hand re· count. Candidate William Manahan. a teacher in the adjacent Sad· dleback Valley Unified School District. was originally declared winner of the Nov. 2 trustee elec- tion by an ei~ht-vote margin On Nov. 18 Patncia Lynam, a fr iend or runn e r -up Mrs. I'M W RITING TO S At..iTA. ONLY 17 SHOPPING DAVS Le Fr·' Overton. requested a recount, saying she opposed having teachers on a school board, where they can vote their O\fn pay raises. The recount started Nov. 29 and on Dec. 1, Mrs. Overton was declared the winner by three votes. The difference in election re- sults was attributed to allowing doubly marked ballots, when re· suits were tabulated by hand. These ballots were marked on- ce in the blank write-in space and again in the space after Mrs. Overton's name. The law stipulates that the of. rice of the Registrar of Voters must try to determine the intent of the voter in doubly·marked ballots. said Shirley Deaton, chief or election operations. Acting on advice of county counsel, the doubly-marked ballots in th& Capistrano trustee elecllon were decided to be votes for Mrs. Overton, she said. Mrs. Deaton said a certificate of election was issued Tuesday to Mrs. Overton, who is expected lo be seated at the board's next re- gular meeting, Dec. 20. Tony Leon. president of the Capistrano Unified Education Association <CUEA) said today he plans to refer a copy of county counsel's opinion on the validity of doubly-marked ballots to CUEA attorneys. He said his organitataon may Initiate legal steps to unseat Mrs. Overton. depending on advice from association attorneys. °"" ...... ..,.... .., ""' ... ,.. .. POLICE SWAT TEAM ..... GATffl!R fOR CAR TOP ITMftQV IElllON Huntington Beech MunW lu'IMd .,..._ntty Left 8ehlftd W8"ft TV, a 8fff and Hl8 L&198age j •· Rotating Schedule Rule OK'd By ANNE COOPER Ol IM O•llY l'ltOI M•ft Capistrano Unified School Dis· trict tru s tees approved guidelines for high school scheduling Monday which will al· low each school to develop in- dividual schedules. The guidelines, recommended to the board of trustees by Superintendent Jerome Thomsley, represent a change from an carUer recommendatio~ that high schools be taken off lha year 's rotating schedules I favor of traditional fixed class schedules. ' Dr. Thornslcy said he was im pressed with tbe great sincerit~ of those who protested a r eturn t static scheduling, whkh woul mean that students would mee for a speciCic course at the sam time each school day. Students testiried at a Nov. 1 special board meeting that a m jority of students at both distric high schools prefer a rotatin schedule, allowing them to meed at a different time of day for ead~ course session. Lisa Bellamy, a San Clemente junior, said a poll of the school's 2600 students showed 94.7 percent or the 1929 stude nts who responded support some rorm of rotating schedule. Only 2. 7 percent voted for the proposed return lo lradltional, fixed scheduling. Kane St. John, student body president at Dana Hills lligh School in Dana Point, said 82 per- cent or students at h.is school favor a rotating schedule. San Clemente English teacher Sue Doeren told trustees at the special meeting that an informal survey or San Clemente teachers revealed they share a student. <See ROTATE, Page i\2) Classified CUSl) Pact Approved Capistrano Unified School Dis- trict trustee1 unanimously ap- proved a tentative contract Mon· day with California School Employes Association, chapter 224, represenUng most. or the dis· lrict's claHiCled employes. The contract Includes a 6.S per· cenl salary Increase ror 550 cletlcal, maintenance and r<><><t-- urvice employee and will cost the dlatrlct $230,000, said Superintendent. Jerome Thomsley. Additional Cringe benefits, in· eluding Improved vacation and alck leave, wlll cost about $8,000. The salary increase puts the d ist rlct'a claaaifled employea represented by the a.uocJaUon, about on par with classllied employe1 ln other south Orange County 1chool dlslrlcts, said Del .MCCormlck, preaident,....,81W ' .J4f DAILY PILOT SB ·WoIDan .Charges Assault A young Dana Point woman told an Orange County Superior Court jury today thal her family doctor repeatedly raped her and forced her to participate in acllj of sexual perversion while treat· )ng her In his South Laguna office bit Jan. 7. Obvlou11ly distrelised and fre· quenlly covering her face with her hands, the 22·year·old wit· ness testified that Dr. Ross Todd McClure gave her an injection shortly after she disrobed in his office for a back examination. The witness testified that she bad consulted Dr. McClure, 54, on several previous occasions in his office at 31542 S. Coast Highway without a ny i m· proprieties taking place. But she told the Jury today that the doctor removed her examina· tion gown and underpants last Jan. 7 after giving her an injec· tion. She said she was powerless to prevent what s he claims took place. ··1 was confused and dizzy and I fell like a vegetable," the wit· ness said. "f was placed In several positions by the doctor ~hile sex acts look place and there was nothing I could do about it.'' Dr. McClure is being tried in Judg e Kenne th E . Lae's courtroom on charges of rape and sex perversion. It is alleged that the acts took place while he was treating his patient for a back injury suffered in a fall at her Dana Point apart· menl building. 1 Dr. McClure was arrested by s heriff's officers after the wit· 'ness was examined at South Coast Community llosp1tal ~hort· Jy after the alleged incidents took place The witness tesliried today that Dr. McCl ur e used both a massager and a vibrator on her body in what the prosecution claims was an attempt to sexuaJ. ly stimulate her prior to sexual intercourse. Fr ... rage Al DEATH •.• Jury failed to reach a verctict in the penalty phase or the tnul. Rockwell then asked the state Supreme Court to bar a retrial on the second phase in which lht! a~ gravating circumstanccR were brought oul. He contended r etrial was im· proper because the law providing the death penally upon a rinding or aggravating Circumstances IS unconst1tullonal The state alleged the v1ct1m was killed to prevent testimony as a witness. th al the slaying 't'd~ committed during a k1dnapm~ and during a rape CaJ1Cornia la" imposed thr mandatory death penalty for persons convicted or murder und e r s u c h circumstances. The tribunal agre<.'<l to re\•iew the petition and barred the second phase retraaJ. The court pointed out that a sentence of life impn~onment wai. proper in such a case since the death penalty could nol be ;mposed. The court noted that the 1.J.S Supreme Court's dec111ion in o Georgia case providing for the death penalty may neither make that penalty mandatory nor gh c that jury or Jt*iac ab6olute dis· crt>taon in the choice of life or de· nth Howe\ er, the state court ~aid that the rulings d1re~ted that standardo; bt' required so that the sent encing authorit y would " r o c u s t h e p a rt 1 <' u I a r i z e 11 t'lrcumstan<'es or the cnme and the defendant · Carter to China? BOSTON (AP) President· elect Carter has been invited to visit China as soon alter bis in· nuguration as possible, but he lWOuld rather have the Chinese' 1visil him first, The Boston .Herald American reported to. day. OAANOf COAST Sii DAILY PILOT ~~::,~::,~,·,•:r, :,-:i:.: :'t:: ~~ r (M,t ...,....,"''"' '*""•"• ....,. ....... ~ _.,. itut>H,,... •M•f UW8Vf" ,, ... , fet CM•• Mii>'\A ,_.•OO't 6'•01 H""1t,...""' e..1<t\ '*""' ,,,_, V•llt ¥ '""'" \•fMlltllt4<' ""•11•¥ ll'MI \~ttl•.teft ~f\(OtU A~fllQl•tMIOIWl.O. t1M '" ~IWil )tlwt•f~ .__, ~n '"' :;~'(~::.~!1 .~,':;',...~ ~,. ut ... , ... , ....... _ ,_,, \MMfllit tM """''..., '"'. c ..... "~· fttt\t9"fl' •"'If Gt1Wft4 ""-MIP' '-••11-.... , .. "-............ ,...,_ .. ,,.. . ..., o..n..11 ~-................. .... ; ...... .-. __ t...,._ecllV..._.,OMG. tilt! u ........ "' -Of..-.. ,_ .. °'"'•• toot.Mow l10'1¥etll hwll'"4 11-t ......... H• 1''1111 __ _ ~.-,. .. ,.,,, .. 0-•IJl- , ....... 1\41 (714)to4#1 CltHlftHAdY•,,111111 ..... n '-•••O Yoiley-Oflk• .. ,..,,. ,, __ Cl_ ........ c.."1: ,., • .,._ CNil ~ ....... c-:=:1· ..• ,"':; .. :~~:'.;.~::r:··.~ie;r.; :!':".'! ........... wll•ow1 tMllal MtMlulOA el ._....._ .. .. ~ UHt Mtl•tt Hif II Cttlo Mo_. C.ltlorfti•. '"''(rt,.llH ll't Ulf•ln U M -11.iy '' ,,..,, t• M -•1¥1 Mllll.,, ... !llMl-u.--111,, R~PORTER TALKS WITH PICKETERS AT CAMP PENDLETON Protesters .cerry Slgn1 Agaln1t Ku KJux Kl•n Fro• Page Al KLAN INVESTIGATION. • • bul in another room. Pendleton commanders made a belated attempt to break up the base KKK chapter by transrer· nng its m embers to other bases. Hearings to determine the evidencl' against the 14 accused black marines are scheduled tht:s week and next. Three of the men were scrutinized Monday. and each of their cases conlmucd. The real action came dunng a break m the proceedings, when Ku Klux Klan Grand Dragon David Duke of Louisiana ap· pcared outside tbe hearing room. A band of about 20 persons pro testing the detention of the marines spotted Duke and four or his klansmen who unfurled a KKK flag. The group, calling 1t~elf the Committee Against Racism, mobbed the klansmen. and u violent fight started when a woman picketer brought down her sign with force atop Duke's blond, blue·eyed head. Several blows Wl·rc ex · changed. with at least one KKK member !>triking the woman picketer Pendleton military pollcl' quickly dispersed the melee. ~w mgmg heavy-duty batons Then• "ere no reported injunes The protesters were hustled off the base. The KKK cortege was allowed to remain. though M P~ grufny ordered Duke's people lo put away their flag I',.... Pap Al ROTATE .•. preference for a rot ating schedule . The guidelin es adopted Mon· day establish a mmimum 13()() minutes of teaching time per week. with 1250 minutes m direct classroom teaching a nd 50 minutes or other mstruct1onul service. allowing for optional club activities. studenHeacher eonferenc~. enrichment IJ\Struc lion, mtramural athletics, and the Uke ln addition, the first clas., periods and the last two periods each day would be fixed, allow mg students lo leave campus for advance placement courses at Saddleback CollE>ge. Regional Occupation Program tra10mg or after school jobs. The final requirement calls for all refularly scheduled semester classes to meet daily. Dr. Thornsley said n primary reason for his propo11al that the high schools return t.O a rlxed schedule was to accommodate the minority or students who wanted to take advantage· of off. campus classes or who needed to work •ner s chool. "We have nearly a million dollars Invested In the Regional ~cupatlonal Program, and we were making It dllficult for stu· dents to take advantage ol 1\," he sald. D r . Thorns l ey aald the 1uldellftes were developed foUowlng a critique session with the bl1h school pribCipals, in which they evaluated dlfferent needs and lnternll <A tbe atu· dents. Kay Karns, Partnt Teacher Student Association president at San Clemente Hlth School, en· dorscd the 1uideltnes, and Tony Leon, preslden't of the Capistrano Unlfitd Education APoclaUOn. commended trustfft and ad· mtnlttutor:s, H1inf It ahowed "tom• 1lvt on t.htfr part.'" "We aee It •• a •ltP ln the riabt direction," Hid Dr. ~ley. "I Ill"• you could C.U ii a c:om· promlte ... ' Eight to ten MPs stood vigil outside headquarters today. In the hearings, Chief Govern· ment Prosecutor JamCl> Patrick McHenry revealed the Marine Corps will seek stiffer charges than those lodged agam!t1. the ac· cused men The prosecution has indicated at least three of the injured marines suffered collapsed lungs from deep stab wounds. The cases against Sgt. William Spencer, 23, of High Point, N.C., and P FC Donald R. Hunter, 23, of Winston-Salem, N.C., were con· tmued for a week. No testimony was heard. Spencer was to seek represen- tation by anothe r military lawyer . Capt. Willhelm Bennett. Hunter's counsel told lnvestigat· ing OffiC1er Tho mas F. Smith he needed more lime to review the evidence. After accepting written testimony from the victims or the attack about their injuries~ Qipt. Daniel JI Koenig, attorney for Lance Cpl Bobby R. Bishop, a!!ked and received a postpone· ment of the case until Thursday. Today three more o( the ac- cused marines were scheduled to be heard. They are Lance Cpl. Gregor y A Coffee. 21. of St. Louis. Mo .. Lance Cpl. Ricky C. McGilvery, 19, of Dallas, Tex., and Sgt. Her man Fletcher, 23, of lllgh Point, N C. McGilver y 's case was con- tinued after the Marine asked lo be represented by El Toro Capt. S. ll. Ray. McGilvery's current co un se l Capt. Daniel C . Sta nhope, sa id "we'd proceed un· der a very stro ng objection" when in vestigating offi cer William Hulsey denied request for additional counsel, beside Ray Stanhope argued that his client was t>nt1lled to an extra attorney, since the government had a<;· signed two men to handle the 9ase agamst McGilvery. Perry Parks, an aide <o Congre ss woman Yvonne Rra1thwa1le Burke, was a spec- tator at Monday's heanng. Other s pectators included Car· rt-I Reavis. president of the Montford Point Marines Associa· tion, retir ed veterans of the first group or black marines admjtted into the corps; and Joe Stone and Myonla Gibb.I of the San Diego Urban League, which firsl ex· posed KKK activity at Camp Pendleton. Hughes Will Witness Due· LOS ANGELES CAP> -Two former close atdes to the late Howard Hupet bave been or- dered to anawer all queaUona put to them by altort\~ lr)1nf to prove the autbentl~ity of a PUl1>0rted Huch .. will found by ihe Mormon church. Superior Court Jud10 Nell Lake on Monday ordered John Holmes or Loa Angelet Ind Roy Crawfor(S of Encino to appear ln court Friday for depoeltions to be taken by H11rold Rhode•, at· tomey ror Noah Dietrich. Dietrich, another Jon1..tlme ffu11\tt aide, wa1 namtd ••· ec:utor or the bl1Uonalr9't fortune tn the document fCUld by UM Ohurch of Latttt·D•Y Saln.*- CM4.rmon) In Salt Lake Ctty abortly alter Hu1be1' ditetbApril 5. 'PD Cut Your Fuads' Parking Ticket Angers Solon SACRAMENTO <AP) -Rep. Leo Ryan was so irked by a $S p arking ti c k et he got at Sacram e nto Me tropolitan Airport thut he lhreatened to try to restr ict. r evenue·sharing fWlds, the Sacram ento Bee says. The newspaper reported Mon· day that Ryan, a South San f'ran· cisco Democrat, complained that he was the victim or "harass· ment" an.d wrote letters com· plaining about the ticket to u county supervisor and a JUdge. ln tbe letter to Sacramento County Supervisor Sandra Smoley, R yan noted that he serves on a congressional com mittee tha t handles r evenue sharing. He said he has always fought to give local governments as much money as possible walh no strings attached. But this concept may have to be re·examined, Ryan added, if the county can afford to let two sheriff's deputies "pass the time of day in the sunshine" writing tickets when law enforcement agencies are complaining about tight budgets, the newspaper re- ported. In his letter to Municipal Court Judge Lawrence Marvin Jr., Ryan s aid he was harassed by what he called Idle traffic: of· ricers with nothing better to do. He said he parked his car Nov. JO at a five-minute curbside zone for less than 15 minutes while he unloaded 11 pieces of baggage to ship to Washington, after his m arriage to a Sacramento woman. He said it would have been virtually impossible for him to move that much lugeage from a parking lot to the terminal. "Of course, I might have asked the officers lo assist," Ryan wrote the judge. "They hardly seemed pressed for lime because there was only one other car parked against either curb for al least 100 yards in front of the en· tire airport building. In fact, the place seemed almost empty or normal passenger traffic." Ryan said he did not identify himself as a congressman to the officers. Cyclist Sues Tavern Pair Over Injuries A motorcyclist who claims that the operators or an Irvine-area tavern are responsible for the al- legedly drunken condition or a motori s t h e names as co defendant de manded SS00.000 in damages Monday in Orange \,ounty Superior Court. Layne Edward Guise claims that Richard Thom as Libert wa~ drunk at the wheel of his car Oct. 2 when the car and Guise's motorcycle collided near the In· tersection of University Drive and Campus Drive . Guise claims thal Libert had been served drinks earlier al Lil· tie John's Inn, 20072 Santa Ana Ave., despite the fact that operators or the tavern knew he was not fit to drive. The tavern operators are idcn· tified as John J . and Carma Kuhne. Gui11e s tates he suffered serious injuries in the collision. After the last column Which was about natural and cultured pearls. I have had m1ny relld.,. ask 1bout th• other "ypes of pearls too. It's grallfying to find so many people who ire relldlng the column and find It stimulating their lnt9f'est In geme. Lake Biwa (8e•wah) Jlpan Is the moat prollfic eooroe of fresh water pearl• that are grown In a mollusc 11m11 .. to !tie salt water v1tlety. These ptarlr are Irregular In lt\lc>e (baroQue) and color. Their Yfll'Y difference ftom th9 norm n'takH them 1ttr1ctive 1nd lntertstln1 . We found an unu1uat Blwa that hid developed In the lh'Pe of a croea. It la ac>pro•lmatttv1one ~ a QUt(t., lnc:het long and """ QUMt!rt of an lnc:t't wide. Our fewetw hn ~ It Into a drametlc. pend9lt. The taro • B lwae make up be1Utllully at rings 1leo. Our own MlsalulPl)I Rlvtr bed Is th• 10Urce of tome vetY Pftlty CQlored pearta -111 ~ ol pattel• .end tvtn tOfM ~ ~btactca. n.. dtffer ffom th• J1p1nttt' • vwtetv 11'1 tt\et «tey ... Mtlll' ... 'an IOCldent or nature. The onH from Lake ~wa ere1 A copy or the letter sent to the judge also went to Mrs. Smoley and Sheriff Dwane Lowe. the newspaper said. Sheriff's spokesman Bill Miller said the letter had not arrived but added: "It's not too uncommon for politicians lo complain 11bout receiving tickets . If he left his car parked in a loading zone for 12 minutes, he violated the law. Anybody who does that is going to get a ticket. "lf he leaves his car there overtime parked again, he'll act another ticket,'' Miller said. '"'Wl ...... lo CHINA VETO OVERRULED U.N.'a Kurt Waldheim U.N. Chief Wins Re-election J' ote UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. <AP> -Kurt Waldheim was re· commended for re-election as U.N. secretary-general by the Security Council today after an initial vet o by China . The General Assembly will make the final d ecision , but it is a formality. Diplomats emerging from the closed meeting said the second round vote was 14·0 with one abstention to elect the 57-year· old Austrian diplomat lo another term as head of the world body. h e is completing a five-year term to which he was elected in 1971 on the retirement or the late U Thant. The job pays $119.~ a year. China, which has wanted so· meone from the Third World as secr etar y· general. vetoed Waldheim in the first round in or· der to s upport former Mexican President Luis Echeverria, the diplomats said. The Chinese abs· tained on the decisive ballot, they said. China 's first-round veto had been expected. It is customary to conduct as many ballots as necessary until a candidate receives at least nine of the 15 council vote.> without a negative vote from any of the five permanent powers -China, United States. Soviet Union, Bri· tain and Jo'rance. Diplomats said the first ballot vote for Waldheim was 13·1 with I abstention, presumably Panama. The vote for E cheverna was4 1 with 7 abstentions in the fir~t round and 3·5 m the second ballot. They gave no detailed breakdown on the former Mexican leader, who has long wanted the U.N. post. Waldheim, who was drafted in· lo the Germ an ar my during World Wa r 11 , rose in the diploma~ic ~ervlce after the war. becoming ambassador to the United Nations and foreign mlllister . He ran unsuccessfully for president or Austria in the spring of 1971 FrowaPageAJ SUSPECT • • The llunhnglon Bench police Special Weapons and TactH·~ tSWAT) unit m oved Into the house s hortly before dark. The neighborhood is belwen Bolsa Chica and Graham Streets, 1ust south of Edinger Avenue. When SWA 1' team members emerged , they said the television was playing and a can of beer had been opened amt partially drunk. They reported that they found what was believed to be the sus · p ec t 's bags pucked in the bedroom . . Police said 'they were seeking murder warrants from the dis-· trict attorney's orrice today Olga to Wed Gowried, She's Mum on Mate ST. LOUIS (AP) -Everybody's darling of the un- even parallel bars. Russian gymnast Olga Korbut, ~P· parently is getting ready to settle down to married life. «OlllUf" to perform nasts. Miss Korbut, 21, bought a wedding dress at a J C Penney store over the weekend and in· dicated she would be married next year in Russia. said Edna Welch, the store's bridal consul- tant. Asked whom she would marry, the gold medal winner in the 1972 Olympics. said onl y, ''A boy." Miss Korbut was in St. Louis in an exhibition with other Soviet gy m- The dress cost $177. She also bought a $55 fingertip veil and pa.id for the purchases with three $100 bills, store employcs said. EiEM WISE Mary !vr. Certified Gemologist CHARLES II. BARR ""'"'"'" Wntclff" ... .......,.... ...... cultured The fresh water pearls from the M1ss1ss1opl are not as abundant a11 the Blwas and are rougher In texture. The Mobe (mah-bay) peart is cullured and ia produced by ptaclng an obloct. usually a hemisphere of mother~f·pearl tn tho shell ol 11 lresh water . mussel where 1t 1s coated wit h nacre They are cut from the 5hell and pegged for setttng - uSYalfy tn earrings With the Infinite varietY of pearlt. n1tur1I and cultured. fresh and aatt water. theft 111 atWIYI ~"· lh•I wlll make a 1u11119 and memorablo ollt Jutt riOht for tomeone apeclal to y()IJ . '