HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-10-05 - Orange Coast Pilot----------=--=----*~ ...... ~ _.,,.. ~
a ya __ ez
Sniper Report
Reopens Probe
I
• ~.
OellY ,.... ,..... .., ltkM,.. IC.-.r
With all that gear it's bard to tell, but that's a future
firewoman behind that fire hose. Tessa Fowler, 5, tried
her band at firefighting Monday during a demonstration
by Newport Beach fireman Norm Sadeleer and his col-
leagues at Corona del Mar School. Firemen are visiting
other schools, too, as part of Fire Prevention Week, Oct.
3-9. In addition, children accompanied by adults can tour
Newport Beach fire stations dunng the week.
Probe Reopened
Another Newport
Sniper Reported
Newport Beach POllce renewed
their lnveatigat1oo today of
sniper activity in the area ol lstb
Street and Dover Drive aft.er two
recent 1hootin1a in the
Deiihborbood.
I Tbe investllatton was orilinal· b' launched last month when ao-meoae fired a rtne shot into the
i Ralellh Hills Hospital on lltb
Sb'eet. No one wu lnjured in that lbootlna. Police said no lncldenta were
reported unW Sunday when a tow
truck drtver said a rifle abot hit
hlltruck.
, 1be driver, Davld Gundenon
ol G and W Towin1 Seryice, was
diJpatched to the i:otenectioa ol
Dover and 16th to help a stranded .motorist get his car started.
He said be could not ftnd tbe
car and while drlytng around JookiD1 for the car, be beard a
shot. Police said tbey found a
spot on the front ol the truck
where it bad been blt.
Monday nlgbt police oftlcer
Richard T. Loni reported that be
heard a abot fired near the In·
tened.ion where be bat pulled a
motoriat over for a tnalc viola·
Uoa.
11 Shella End Calm ~ I BEIRUT <AP) -Random
· lbeJHaf llu mUTed a three-cl_,
It tuJl__Mi_~ Lebuese civil war ..
He said the only other car
around at the time wa a yellow
IJnported pickup-truck.
Investigators sa, tbey ue re-newlna their ef(orta lo the cae.
"We've been lucky so far," aaid
Det. Sat. Ken Tbomp1on.
"Nobody'1 been hurt."
II' 1 ,,,., • 1, •• _, __ _
Crippled
To Get
3 Buses
•
Dial-a-Lilt bus service for han-
dicapped residents in Huntington
Beach, Seal Beach, Fountain
Valley and north Orange County
will begin Friday.
Orange County Transit District
COCTD ) directors were told Mon·
day three small buses equipped
with mechanical lifts to accom·
modate wheelchairs will begin
operation that day a
The buses will be based in
Westminster, Fullerton and San·
ta Ana, according to OCTD
General Manager Ed Loriu.
Handicapped residents may
make reservations up to 24 hours
In advance by dialing 634-4822.
and they also may arrange for
automatic daily pickups at their
homes to travel to school or
wort.
The service originally was to
start about a year ago.
Directors also agreed Monday
to use taxicabs in the event the
buses break down, and if taxis
aren't available, they agreed to
pay Taylor Bus Service $19.50 an hour for backup services.
Directors were critical of the
cost for that backup service, not·
ing Taylor is being paid ooly $9 to
$10 an hour under a separate con·
tract to operate two ol tbe dial·&·
lift services .
But OCf D Assistant General
Manager Jim Reichert sa1d of
aeven firm• contacted foe such
service, Taylor was the only one
to respond.
A.a» rd
Snagged
DETROIT CAP> -The
United Auto Workers and
Ford Motor Co. relUIDed
talks today on non-
economic matters which
snaaed settlement ol a
tbne-week strike aaatmt
tbe nation'• No. 2 auto maker.
Announ~ment ol a ten-
tative accord for 170,000
atrikln1 workers in 22
at.ates bad been eQeeted
Monday, after the two
aide s auccesafully
ma.neuvt!red tbrqqb the
major laauea of a new
three-year contract.
But aourcea aald ta1U boaed down unexpeetedly
over secondary lasuea
wbicb could not be re-
IOlved despite a full dQ ~ mt.mn bar&alniq
ea aste
•
'Dial·a·IJrt'
For Handicap
Starts Fri-ay
Sore Head
Liule 01,d Lady Bop1 Thief
U>S ANGELES (AP) -A purse snatcher may
have a sore head to prove that two little old ladies can
make it tough earning a living illegally.
Sheriff's deputies said the man grabbed 75-year-
old Beatrice Sydenburg at a West Hollywood intersec-
tion, picked her up and carried her about 300 feet
down a hill, threw her to the ground, grabbed her
purse, and ran off with $76 and credit cards.
They said Hazel Mercer, 73, witnessed the inci·
dent while gardening in her yard and, when the man
ran by, whacked him over the head with a garden hoe.
The purse snatcher was last seen. deputies said,
running away holding the purse -and his head.
Magague% Incident
Safety
Measures
Advised
HARRISBURG, Pa. CAP> -A
Sept. 26 nuclear bomb test in
China bas produced radioactive
fallout ·'in significant quantities
over Pennsylvania," stale of.
ficials said today.
Thomas M. Gerusky, bead ol
the stale Bureau of Radiological
Health, said weekend rainfall
helped produce the fallout, and a
spokesman for the Nuclear
Regulatory Commiuion ia
Washington confirmed tile
fallout. The U.S . Environmental Unh d d R rt Protection Agency had projected ee e epo S thefalloutforPennsylvaniaafter ' a nuclear blast occurred at the
Lop Nor testing site in western
C I • Li Q China. ·ost y ID ves , Gerusky warned Pennsylva-• nians to carefully wash garden
WASIUNGTON CAP) -The
U.S. Marine assault ol an island
off Cambodia in the Mayaguez
rescue mission Jut year was or-
dered, at a co~t of 41 lives,
despite pilots' reports that most
of the crew of the merchant
vessel were not there, a con-
gressional study says.
U.S . pilots had already report-
ed that 30 to 40 Caucasians were
on a f1Shing boat and not on Koh
Tang, where the Mayaguez,
seized earlier by Cambodian
patrol boats, bad been taken, the
reporteaid.
The report was made by the
General Accounting Office for
the House lntematlooal military
and political affairs subcommll·
tee. The panel bad conducted
hearings on the Mayaguez affair.
The report says that although
the pilots' reports that nearly all
the Mayaguez' 40 crew members
were on the fishin1 boat -and
not on the island -were passed
oa to Washington, details were
too sketchy to make certain
whether some crew members
were still on Koh Tang.
Indeed, the report quotes of.
ftdala in W asbingtoo as baviag
undentood tbat only elgbt crew
members were oo tbe boat.
"We actnowled&e the dlf·
ficultiee and uncertainties exist· ID& at the time," the GAO said.
New Botz Scandal
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Former Secretary ol Agriculture
E*rl Bula met twice with direc-
tors of tbe department ·s
Cooperative Extemion &nlces
aad helped them clnnamvent.
federal laws qalut rtclal dla-
crtmJDatlon ID birtJll m aevm
1UU11 aec:ordlDI to tbe LOI ...... nm ...
.,
"But we believe that several
available opportunities to try to
redqce the major uncertainty
during tbe incident -the loca·
tion ol the Mayaguez crew -
were not pursued.
"The crew's location was cen-
t ral to developing a U.S .
response,•' it s aid.
The GAO report concluded that
the final Marine usault that left
41 dead or missing -and the
U.S. bombing of the Cambodia
mainland -did not influence re-
leue of the Mayaguez crew,
although it said tbia "probably
could not have been known at the
C8ee RESCUE, Page "2)
Skuth Traih
Speedy Hoimd
After Escape
OAKLAND CAP) -John
"Sherlock Bones" Klng, famous
detector of lott does. bas been
called lD to tract down Haneat.
a dwnpiOll IJ'eybound wbo sud· dmlY bolted the Oakland ltennel
Club 1bow at the Coliseum
Arena.
Police said Hattest. a uptn-
inl·leaed two-yeardd female
whose specialty ls outrunning
rabbits lD an open fteld, shot out
ol the Coliseum Sunday. outran
purauln& vans and can, even taklDa time out to c*h -a breath
in the back seat of a parted car.
C.ftffrt"aald tbe~ amoq the fut.eat of all · , couned.
1'NVed ~ dodled Wa)' out
of the Coliseum parttnc lo&,
turned on her after~barner and
ftMIMd put tbe chain link sat.ea . foramoreorleuclunptawa,.
vegetables before eating them
and said there might be
dangerously high radioactive
levels in milk.
He said high levels ol radloac·
tivity were found in varlOUI
samples of dirt, vegetation and
rain water. He said the rainfall
had brought radioactive
particles from the atmosphere to
the ground. Gerusky said the radiation
levels were the highest in Pen-
nsylvania In many years. Tea1a
have begun to see ll further pro-
tective steps are needed, be said.
A major danger Involves the
level of iodine· 131 in mllk, be in-
dicated. The radioactive isotope
(See FALLOUT, Pale AJ)
Coast
Weather
Fair through Wedneeday
•except for patchy fOI or
low clouds along the coast.
Coast bllbl lD low 708, Ion
of about SI.
INSIDE TOD~ Y
BarfJGra W aUcr1. Clftd ffonJ .~.Ofe Off to.a ....
sloft Ill tlwlr MIO .. ABC~ mg HNI" ~.ac
COfdmQ to Auodai«f Pr-.
1V ~ Ja, S'-o,,,_,. S.. ~Af. •••ex AtV .. ltnka M ,......_... at sr--....c11 •• ......,TYw .,. L.111'.lleyf .,.. ...... •• ~. .. ............. Att ~ ................... ~ ~ ==c..y :~ ............. ··= ... ............. ... • ...... , .. ti
......... •Ut af . AU ...... • ... , • .,.,,...,,.. I! =-::... :: =:..
c Al DAILY PILOT s Tueeday, October a, 1171
Callaway Did PreSs
FoP Resan Senate
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Former Army Secretary Howard
H. Callaway exerted ..-.u:re oa
1ovemment omctats in an effort to expand a Colorado ski resort in
•hicb be bad a financial interest,
a Senate subcommittee reported
. today
Although there WH no
eviden~ that the ~ ex·
Police Ask
Public Help
In Hit-run
Fountain Valley police are
seeking tbe public's help in ap-
prehending a bit·aod·ruo suspect
inJhe death of Steven C. Johnson,
1', who was killed last Thunday.
Young Johnson, whose funeral
was conducted lh1s morning, was
struck while attempting to cross
. Bushard Street near Warner
Avenue at about 8:33p.m. Thurs-
day, police said.
The suspect vehicle was
described as an aqua blue or
light green 1972-73 compact
sedan with two raclna stripes
. about tl\ree iDches wide nmnU1¥
the length of the autd. The vebi·
. de bad no taillltbts, police said.
The sedan was last seen bead·
ing south on Bushard Street and
probably incurred some damqe
. to its right fender and und~ar
riage as a result of the collision,
police added.
Jury Picking
Continues in
.· Bribery Trial
" Jury selection continued today
· in the Orange County Superior
Court bribery trial of San
· Clemente architect Leon Hyzen.
· · Hyzen, 66, of 2100 BS. Ola Vis-
· ta. faces trial on three felony
counts of offering a bribe. He was
indicted by the grand jury after
. county Supervisor lbomas Riley ~ nported alle1edly Wegal ap-
. : proacbes to bis office by Hyzen.
It is alleged that Hyzen offered
;.executive aide Peter Herman a
• Sl,000 bribe on three occasions · last May as a means of imuring
that be got the architectural COD·
. ·tract for a planned branch
library in the San Clemente area.
Jury selection in Judge H.
Walter Steiner's court.room is ex-
• pected to be completed today.
Irvine Heir's
i. Truck Target , ..
: Of Theft
l Thieves broke into a truck
belonfing to Irvine heir James
• Myf ord Irvine as be supped this
· mornin& at a Laguna Beach cof.
fee shop, police said.
Irvine, 23, of 133 Monte Carlo
Drive, Laguna Beach. told police
a 23-cbannel citizens band radio
and 25 bard and folk rock stereo
tapes were stolen. He valued the
lossat $325.
trvlne bad parted bis new
pickup truck in a lot adjacent to
Denny's Jr. Restaurant. 1800 S.
Coast Highway.
He ls the son of the late M.yford
ln1ne, former president of the
• Irvine Co.. and ls a areal·
1randson of Jamee Irvine,
founder of the Irvine Ranch.
lrvtne ls secretary·t.reaaurer of
--; the My1lo Corp.. a privately
owned investment corporation
baaed lo East Irvine.
.. .·. OAANOI! COAST
DAILY PILOT
ert.ed by Callaway~ ID~=
pnUon of tile Cr..a.d BuUe 1#1
.,.., wtdcb ii loeated Gil federal
land, the subcommittee found
that his involvement showed ln·
senattivity to potential conflict ot
interests and "raises serious
questioaa of impropriety."
The subcoaUnlttee GD envtraa-
ment and land reeourcea~
............
PRESSURE APPLIED? Ex·Armr Chief c-...y
FroaaPageAJ
Callawa,'1 cla'm that be waa 2 tt::t':x~:J::~"'&:t4'
Butte .-eaardlesa of what the dfi claloa might be.
.. It ls the subcommittee's vl9*
that Callaway uaed the oceui• to~ for a declalc:e. . .fnor•
blt to the Crested Butte DevelCJtit ment Corp.,•• the 11S-pqe repoit
Mid.
An 18-page report filed by tbt
Republican members ol the sulf
committee charged that the ia.
vestlgation beaded by Sen. F1o~
Hukell (D-Colo. >1 ''is, by naturt
• ~ lta cmduet ua timing, an• erelle for political ad•antaft and excoriation.••
At the time of the investiga.
tioo. Callawav was Presidellt
Ford.'1 campai&u 11\aQ,a&er ... a position be iiesfped when me
land deal surfaced as an issue.
Tbe four Republican memt>ers
CODCluded that ''Ulen was uo •
testimony nor e~ that pre-
uure by Mr. Callaw~ bad been Uled in the pursuit of Ida html....,
btteresta." The report approved by the >
five Democratic members
(ocuaed OD a July 197S meeting in
Callaway's Pentagon oftlce with
the then-undersecret~rx of
Acriculture,J . PbilCampbell,de-
puty undersecretary Richard A.
Albwortb, and the associate chief
ol the Forest Service, Rexford R.
Resler. · FALLOUT. • "Within a day or two of the
gathers on grass, is ingested by meetine. Jlr. Campbell, relying
cattle and can be concentrated in on wbat be bad heard at the tbemi.lk. meeting, called upon the
The fallout was detected by the secretary of Agriculture (Earl
Pbiladelpbi a Electric Co. 's But.I) to 'push' the Forest Service radiation monitoring program at to a decision which would
the Peach Bottom nuclear power 'positively designate Snodgrass
platnt near the Pennsylvania· Mountain as a logical expansion'
Maryland line. of the Crested Butte ski area,"
After the ortctnal findlng, the t.bereportaald. -company toot the extraonlinary '11aere 11 no question. the sub-
step ol baiting comtructioo work committee said, that Campbell's
at \he plant Monday. Company memotoButs "wasanCNterowth
officials apparently feared the -of the meeting" in ~ay's of.
high radiation levels were due to fl~!Nor can there bi be.,_ doubt local problems. , -The radiation findings .were that the memoran wn called for
also verified by tests CODducted the exertion of improper pre.
by the Pennsylvania Department ssure on the Forest Service," the
of Environmental Protection and report said.
by the radiation monitoring pro.
gram at th~ Three Mile bland
nuclear plant near Harrisbarg.
John Hope, a spokesman for
the state Department o1 Environ·
mental Resour~s • .Mlcl tbe ftnt
tests of mut samples were com·
pleted this morning and revealed
radiation levels of 116 plco curies
per liter. 'lbat is approximately
the same level t.J\at existed during
widespread nuclear testin& in the
early 1960s, be said.
"We would be more concerned if the levels moved into the
thousands or tens of thou.sands,"
Hope said .
He added, however, that of· ficials do expect the radiation
count to go higher than ll& pico
curies.
-~-........ Blitz Rqlaee.ftlt
John Knebel, un ·
dersecretary or agriculture.
has become acting
secretary following the re·
si~ation of Earl Butz in the
wake of furor over a racial
slur. See related story on
Page A4.
Cycle Rider
Succ11mhs to
Crash Injllry
A Camp Pendleton Marine, in·
jured wben bis motorcycle
crashed into a pole in Newport
Beach Jut month, succumbed to
bis injuries this weekend, ac·
cordlng to police.
Traffic inve1Ugators said Gary
Lee Murch, 18, died Saturday.
becoming the third traffic fatali-
ty in Newport Beach this year.
According to the coroner's of-
fice, the youth died ol complica·
lions of a skull fracture be suf·
fered on Sept. 18 when bis
motorcycle failed to make the
sharp rt~t curve oo Superior
Avenue •bove Pacific Coast
Higb\rfay.
The other two traffic deaths
both involved bicyclists. Jn May,
a bicycllat apparently leaving
the Balboa Bay Club's Chili Con-
test died when he was bit bead on
by acaron WestCoastJnghway.
In Macb, another cycli5t, try-
tq to c"* West Cout Wgbway
near the Attbes Overpass, was
bit by a car and died.
Traffic investlgaton noted
that last year at this time, four
people bad died in traffic acci-
dents and in 1974 the figure was seven.
ktorKilkd
In Crane Fall
CARLSBAD (AF>-Oneofthe
beat-known amateur acton in
the San Diego area died in the
coilapae of a 190·foot crane Satur·
day at the Enciaa plant Of San
oteco Ou and llectric Caln· pany.
HUlb Hudlon, 28. WU CI09 ol
m workmen wbo died ID the ac·
ddalt.
PICKETERS WHERE CAR INCi
Aom Left. Kim...._..,
3 Men Iajured
HB Wo-.,,.
In Picke
I
L1'be district a~y·s office
bas flied misde~r assault
cbar1es a1ainst a Huntington
. Beach woman accused of driving
ber car into a row ol picketers
Monday in Irvine, t:JQuring three
men. Police said her car struck
three men, who were treated at
Tustin Community Hospital.
None were bospitaliJed.
-The woman charaed is Belly
Jane Alvarado, 30, cl 178112 Baron
Circle. Althoulh ~ complaint bN been filed, Mi's. Alvarado
bas not yet been arrested or
'turned berseU lo, police said.
~ ftnt .... ldt ... ......,.
• Lope%, 26, of Whittier, who police
said was thrown onto the hood ol
i the car and then into the street.
He was treated for a bruised
pelvis and kidney damage at
-'l'ustin Community Ho6pital and
was then released, pelice said.
Diret!tor Sags
·'!'he incident occurred at 9 a.m.
wben litn. Alvarado wu drop-Pini her husband, Andrew Adair
Alvarado, at work, Sterling
Power Systems, 16752
Armstrong.
Candidates Loose
Alvarado told police he had at-
tempted to come to work on bis
motorcycle at 7:1S a.m .. but bad
turned around and had gone
home when be saw the picket
line . Once home-, Alvarado said he
phoned bis boss wbo told him to
return to work and come throUgb
the picket line. Alvarado said bis
wile then drove him to work in
her car .
About 20 picketers were lined
up ln front of the industrial busi·
ness, reportedly protesting
wages and working cooditions.
Police said that on her way out
ol the parking lot, Mrs. Alvarado
Disaster Aid
Centers Open
SAN BERNARDINO CAP) -
One-stop disaster relief centers
are being set up in three parts or
San Bernardino County to help
victims of Tropical Storm
Kathleen Sept. 10 and heavy
rainstorms and flooding two
weeblater.
The centers will have
representatives from the Small
Business Administration to help
anange long-term, low-interest
loans and from the Internal
Revenue Service to help me dis·
aster loss claims, officials said
Monday.
One of the centers -in
Redlands -will also have
representaUvea Crom the Farms
Home ~dministration to assist in
obtaln.lDg Joans to cover crop
damaae.
Oil Bikes Backed
CARACAS <AP) -Venezuela
will press for a boost in oil prices
at the forthcoming meeting ol the
on cartel, says Mines and
Hydrocarbons Minister Valentin
Hernanclu. lllnllters of the 13 member governments of the
OraabisaUon of Petroleum Ex·
portlnl Countries -OPEC -are
tomeetln t>ecember.
' .
For Next Debate
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Tbe
dlreetor ~ the debltet between
Pr9ident Ford and Democratic
aomtnM ·Jimmy Carter espeets "
tbe MCODd contest to •be leas •
tease but more sharply drawn
thm the first.
Jim Karayn, d..l.recting the de-
bates for the spoDBOri.na League
ol Women Voters, said Monday
that Ford and C~ ''mast bave
been scared" in their first debate
at Pblladelpbia.
"I think the candidates wUl be
looser now that they've been.
through it once." be added.
He expeets the second pael of
interviewers to ask sharper
DEFENSE A' VITAL
TOPIC--Edttort .. , Al
FORD-CARTER
STANCES OIVEN-A7
follow-up questiona Wednesday
night than did the first group.
The site of the second meeting is
the Palace of Fine Arts here.
1lmela6:30p.m . PM.
"We've uked our inteniewers
this time to be sure that their
follow-up questions stay oo the
same point as the criitna1 ques-
tion," said Karayn.
He made the arrangements to
put the Watergate bearings on
television when president ol lbe
National Public Affairs Center
for Television. In Karayn 'a view, the "ul·
timate consumen" of the de-
bates ''are the voters, and our ob-
ject is to give thetn a feel ror
these men and their ideas that
the voters don't get on the nigh Uy news or on the Sunday interview
show.'' or criticism that the first de·
bate was dull, he said, "We'd
rather be accused of beinl dull
and informative than betna lippy
video and lrTelevant. Eftl')'thlng
on television can be S8 HCODds of
POW! This is serious business."
Technical problem• that
Oawed the teleeaat ~ tbe ftnt de-
bate with a 27-mlnute silence
#,# .........
'EVERYTHING FINF -Jack Kelly, the man iD charge of
TV arrangements fOI' Wed-
nesday's Ford-Carter de-
bate, says there won't be
another 27-mlnute silence
Wee the one that flawed the
tlrst debate.
won't recur during the second de-
bate, the man in charge of
television arrancementa said
Monday.
"Everything ls t"oing to be Just
fme, ''said Jack Kelly, pufflqon
his pipe as be surveyed tbe Ourry
d actlvtty at the Palace ol Fine
Arts.
Court Nixes
Hughes Probe
WMBINGTON (AP) -'lbe
U.S. Supreme Court bu refused to bear arguments thal a com·
PllDY or1anised by tbe late
billionaire Boward Hughes im· prop«r"b' fired 12 employ• for
unlonactlvity.
~ongress Floods Mails
The court left undisturbed
llondQ a dedslon ~ the U.S.
Qmit. Court tn Loi~ and
Global Varin• ~ ot Callfonla, Ille., be conipelled to
reldn the employet.
Tbe compaoy operated the
fluabel Glos:nar lxPlorei'1 an un·
dtl'Ma vaMI that ODCe wu used
lD an ... ~ attempt to nlM a Runian aabmartne from
the ocean bottom \IDdel' a ucret
contract with the Cesrtral ln·
t.eWie:nce Agency.
WASHINGTON <AP> -BUll-
dreda of thOl.lludl ol ....
from ~ma 11 r'rtN re-election are belnl malled to voters at public expense.
The mu1 malllao cwaUtute
tbe la&ell lDltaace ~~ say Ja UM by consr-mm ~ta.e tree malliDJ priYllece to wtn
"'-· ~men• ue proldbtted
from matbaf mw ....... to OGDIUta.ata wUbJD a_,. of an
...... So .. .., Wll ... de-
adline .... ~ mall
fatiltd• were bu1. At one time ._..,~. an
employe putbtaj a ~
hamper from a tiallwq outatde
the HoUle foldlnt room to •load·
jqdock said, "We've been work·
ln1 DlSbts and weekends tor
three weeks."
Adotber said of the mail
whlme, "It's unbelievable. It's
•bad now as I've ever seen it."
A third WJAJ asked why there
WM IO mucb mall. "It's electlon
19ar," be replied.
The ultatant pcJltlnaster for the.llou.M said the men were •ollin• to t•t to the Postal Sentce befOfe mldnllht mass m•ntn,. by about 20 represen-tllU.-. Tbe Senate IRIMrloten-
clllllt ot malll deellned to ~ay wtMllber larte malbp ,_. t;een
seat bJ., Miiiion. . OaalreA app1oprlat. funds to l"llmbvle the Poetal Senlce for
its COltl ln dellverlna franked Cause, wbicb baa Clled suit
mall. ID fiscal 1975. about 317.4 cballenalnl the constltuLionallt,y
mlllloa pieces of fnnked mall ol the 1rankinl privil .. e, C90·
were sent at a cost~ taxpayers tends the prtvilece ls a unfair
ol$34.Smlllloo. Ftcuretforftacal adva.ntaae for aa lncwbbent.
1916arenotavallable. Common Cause bas tltiabated
Maas mailings :J:;tly are· tbe value of ~· free mall .at newsletters reco · a con· '70,000 per year for a H~E
11·es1gian 's accompllabments 111ember ud up to ssoo.ooo an·
and are addressed only to nually for a senato1'. •
"postal patron." They are • 1tutred Jnto eveey mailbox ID the Poetal Service statlltlcs abow
coqreaalooaJ dlatrict or. tn tbe tbe use ol franked maU lncreaes
cueofaaeaatot, 1Dthe1t.ate. dramaUcally before eleettclu .
ID the place ol a ltalnO ii a Just before the lift feDll'al ~·
frank, a tacalmUe of the ::i20mlWonplece1Gffnalr.ed
Codriu member's llpature. were seat la dli lMt two
wbiCb allowa the Jtem to move week.I ol Octobet'. ta tbi8 •e throu&b tbe mall~ charp. period of 1171, a Doaeteettoo
Tbe cltben lobby Common year,tbenumberwaal.4/
StISpects Relll8nded
lj I Kidnap-mnrder Trial Date Due · ' 'U
·' • 87TOM BA.&LEY I Ot .. DellY.,....,. ~' Two men accused fl the kid·
1 a1pln1 and kllUne of Los
Al1naltoa housewife Joanna
t Seteman were remanded Mon-
day for Orange County Superioc
Court action that will include the seWni of a trial date.
Judge Robert E. Law set Oct.
12 u the date of the Superlor court appearance for William
... Reward Set
Seigman Killen Humed
OFftCIALS OF 11IE MARKET BASKET company an-
nounced through the district attorney's office late Monday
that they are offering a $10,000 reward for information lead·
tng to the arrest of further suspeds in the Seigman killing.
"We know that there was defmitely a third and possibly
a fourth penon involved in the kidnap and killing," Deputy
District Attorney Dave Carter said. "And we know that
there are people out there who know of these persons who
could help us in our investigation ...
CARTER SAID HIS OFFICE bas received two
anonymous telephone calls wbiclt strengthen his belief that
further arrests can be made before defendants Gullett and
Ewing are arraigned in Superior Court.
"Reward or no reward. we appeal to certain members
fl the public to help us," Cartee said. "These persons we
seek are known to residents of the area and we need their
help."
~:~ Autlwrized Leaves
,;I
.~ Caused Bus Snafu ... By KATHY a.ANCY
Of tlle °""' ~ ... S4.lff ,
~· 'lbe real reason for an Orange
.. County Transit District (OCTD >
• service breakdown three weeks
" ago was given to OCTD direc· tors Monday.
It seems 16 bus drlvers were
on authorized leaves d absence
Sept. 13, the day the district's
widely publicized "new im-
proved" bus service began. ·
That meant there were enough
buses to go around but not
enough drivers.
As a result, supervisors were
pressed into driving service, and
worse, some commuters were
left stranded on street corners
waiting for buses that never
came.
Two weeks ago, directors
• were told by staff members that
the breakdown was due to a rash
fl sudden illnesses 8DJ00.1 26
drivers as well as a training pro-
gram that wun't turning out
drlvers fast enough.
But Monday, OCI'D General
Manager Ed Loritz admitted it
was the leaves or absence grant-
ed by staff members that were
: to blame for what directors have·
.-called an embarrassing failure
~ Only 10 drivers had called in
... • that day with last-minute ill· nesses.
w-·And while Lorilz explained
district officials bad sufficient
backup personnel to cover the
• routes of those drlvers, there
• weren't enough for the 16 on un·
paid, fitllortzed leaves.
As a result, 13 of the 292
scheduJes that day were missed,
leaving would-be bus riders
stranded.
* * *
Loritz explained the unpaid
leaves are granted frequently to
drlvers who are ill and have
used up their paid sick leave.
Normally. be said, about 15
drivers are on such leaves.
But. be continued, he did not
realize those absent employes
were allowed to bid for the new
routes and were COWlted among
the 450 drivers needed when the
expanded service started last
month.
Loritz said first-le vel
supervisor s realized the 16
drlvers were included in plan·
ning and expected to be on duty,
but upper-level management did
not.
His comment prompted
transit district Director William
Farris to suggest closer contact
during such planning with the
lower-level supervisors.
And while Director Robin Youns, a La Habra City Council
member said abe was pleased
"at least" to learn the reason,
she added, "I think manage-
ment can do little else but admit
that they blew it."
Upon her recommendation.
directors voted 3-2 to allow the
district to hire up to 465 drivers
instead of 450 to make up for
those on unpaid leaves.
But transit Board Chairman
Ralph Clark, a county
supervisor, voted against that
suggestion, calling for a more
general policy. Director Farris
also voted "no" after question·
ing the formula OCI'D officials
use in deciding bow many
drlvers they need.
OCTD Assistant General
Manager Jim Reichert said the
district needs 450 active drlvers
for its 267 buses or 1.7 per bus.
* * *
huJ Gullett and Ronald Lewis E'wtnc. both n. after a weell·lonc Santa Ana mu.niclpal tourt bear· lnl Into charges of 111Qrder and kldnao.
But he m1d1 it clear ha a long
summation of tbe evideDce Uiat
there bad been .. rery little
evidence to directly lint tbe two
Bellflower men to tile abduction
and murder Aug. 25. • "lt micht be better for a jury to
mate Uiat determfbatkm." be
sakt reJecUnc renewed defense
ple1s for dismisaal of tbe charces.
Judge Law displayed some.
hesitation before be allowed t.be
special circumstances provision
to remain in the allegations -
the Penal Code provision that al· lows the prosecution to call for
the d•4'th penalty.
But Judge Law's apparent
doubts failed to deter Deputy
District Attorney Dave Carter.
"We are going ahead with our
ease. we fully Intend to take it to
trial and we will demand the de·
ath penalty." he said.
"Meanwhile, our investigation
continues."
He alleges that Gullett and Ew·
ing are the two men who burst in-
to the Seigman home at 33Sl
Cortese Drive Aug. 2S and kid-
naped the Selgman family at
gunpoint.
The two men, masked ln wigs
and heavy, circus-type makeup,
ordered market manager John
Seigman, 50, to empty the safe at
bis Long Beech store and then
wall for further instructions via a
telephone call.
Seigman put $8,000 in a bag
while bis assistant manager
telephoned Long Beach police.
He then waited outside the store
ror the call that never came.
Police found and released the
three Seigman children who bad
been held as hostages in the
family van. But they could find
no Immediate trace of Mrs.
Seigman. 43, or her two abduc-
tors.
Her body was found less than
48 hours later in a field in the
Carson area. Police believe she
was shot by her abductors as
they drove from Long Beach,
angered by Seigman's apparent
breach of faith.
Gullett and Ewing were arrest·
ed after sheriff's officers re-
ceived a call from an informant
who testified in court that be was
invited to participate in the
Seigman kidnap cuwJ robbery
before it was actually carried
out.
Informant Curtis Ray Eddy,
20, of Garden Grove testified that
he changed bis mind about the
plan and hid in a back room of bis
apartment when Gullett called
for him on the evening of Aug. 25.
The defense argued vainly tbat
Eddy was the only supposed wit·
ness that the prosecution had and
that his testimony should be dis·
counted in view of the fact that he
was a parolee who recently com-
mitted a robbery in Garden
Grove while on parole.
Judge Law admitted that he
was "highly skeptical" of Eddy's
status as an acceptable witness. But he upheld the charges against
Gullett and Ewing and set their
bail at $250,000.
OCTD Controls Urged .
Chmrman's Proposal Surpriaes DUtrret
Oran1e County Transit District
<OCTD> Board Chairman Ralph
, Clark aald Monday the transit
' district ·s directors should have
more say in managing OCTD's
• rmancial affairs.
Clark took his fellow board
"' members by surprise when he
outlined an eight-point financial
• control program he said would
give directors more direct COO·
trol and tie OCTD's accounting
more closely to county govern·
. , ment 's accounting apron strings.
, • So surprised were Clark's
~· fellow directors witb bis proposal
'that they balked at taking any ac-
tion unW they have time to study ('\it. '°' OCTD General Manager -, F.clward Lorttz admitted be, too,
' 'was surprised by Clart's move
and asked for time before com-menting.
"No one likes surprises,"
Lorib said later. 'Tm Just not
certain what the full inf.ent was of
the document be delivered this IDOl'Ding .••
,.. Clark's two-page report calls
· · on bis fellow directors to adopt
r policies and procedures he said
1MJUld be slmllar to those used by
:..1t.d.ber transit system.a.
' He said his suggestion "does
·., pot lmply any form fl criticism
·}. bl cWTeDt transit district opera·
: !.-.rtiona," but, be saJd, the system is
srowmg so rapJdl.y it may have
.... ~wn former Policies.
... • Amoni the eight points, be sq·
, ,. aested the district follow cowity
• . 9Ceountin& sywtems and cbarta d
~,. Keotmta.
.... But Lorita aatd later OCTD ... alteady usea those systems and
_ '"b.u bad trouble with them. Re ex·
""" WANTS TIGHTER CON11K>L
Tr•nalt Board'• Clerk
plained the county's systems bu
not met the requirements OCTD
need.a for state and fedefal grant
fUnds.
Clark also said county Auditor·
Coptroller Vie Hei~, abould mlintaln control over ... budeet
aPP1"0Prtalioa1 ltem bf Item lbd
no transl en should be made
wtU.OUt directors• permiuioa. But Lorits said later OCTD
m8Jla8ement execudffl a.t pre-
eeot aren't allowed to make tbase
transfers without board approval
and tbey alao cannot spend more
oo any items wit.bin a depart·
ment tbaD bas been put in the
budget by directors.
Loriu said perhaps Clark is
saying he wants Heim to main-
tain those controls "alt.hough I
don't know why."
Clark asked Heim, in addition,
to provide internal audit services
which could examine operations
ln more detail than OCTD's an-
nual audit by an outside firm.
Heim said that would require
the hiring or at least one more
staff auditor .
Clark also suggested hiring a
budget analyst who would report
only to the directors. And be
asked that OCTD officials pre-
pare a budget act which spells'
out SJ)e(:ifically the district's en-
tire bUdget preparation methods.
Lorib said be would be study-.
ing the Impact of Clark's sugges-
tions later this week.
And Heim told directors be
would prepare a report on the
proposals, along with just bow
much bis services might cost
OCTD, by Friday.
Direct.on said they would re-
sume discussion of the topic Oct
l.S.
Clark had discussed the flnan·
clll proposal belore the meeting
only· wltb Director Thomas
Riley, 1 fellow county supervisor.
And RUey aareed there might
be room for 1ome improvement
ha dilt.rlct finances.
But Lortb said, "l don't think we have a lick of control in the
ftnanclal area."
Director Robin YC>Unt, wbo
called Cl1rk 's proposal Im·
pnaalve. said, "I guess I would
have aomo problems wtlh adopt •
~d. ~.ometbln1 ot tbia scope
••
J ~ .... • ,Y •
OAIL Y PILOT .43
Oil Site
Leases
Slammed
NEW YORK (AP> -
Democr1tic presidential can·
didate Jimmy Carter says the
Nlxon and Ford administrations
have moved too quickly to lease
off'Sbore oil sites.
''I don't see any reason to
lease oil areas either on the outer continental shelf or in the
interior except to supply an·
ticlpated oil needs." Carter said
in an interview with Field &
Stream maguine.
··under the Nixon-Ford ad·
ministrations there bas been an
effort made to lease 10 Umes
more area than wa necessary
This creates an absence ol com·
petition."
Meanwhile. a government of.
fieial bas confirmed that areas
within three m Ues fl the San
Diego County coast and
northward as far as Santa
Barbara might be considered in
the new offshore oil leasing pro-
gram.
Discovering California
'lbe coafirmation came Mon-
day from William Grant.
manager of the Pacific Outer
Continental Shelf office for the
Bureau of Land Management in
Los Angeles. A man dressed as Portuguese explorer Juan Rodriguez
CabriJlo arrives on San Diego shore with Spanish
soldiers in a re-enactment of Spain's discovery of
Southern California in 1542. The scene, repeated annual-
ly, is regarded as fairly authentic.
Grant was questioned after
Roger Hedgecock, a candidate
for San Diego C ounty
supervisor. told a news con-
fe~nce be learned the oil in·
dustry was urging the govern·
ment to include near-shore sites
in the proposed new lease grant-
ing. Marine Readiness
Called Highest Ever
Hedgcock sa id be was dis-
tarbed that the proposed lease
sale areas included sites closer
to shore than tracts leased in
December.
The Marine Co11J6 stands re·
adier aod stronger than at any
previous time of peace, says the commandant.
Gen. Louis Wilson said at
Camp Pendleton. "I am
satisfied ... He made the state·
ment during an inspection Mon-
day and today at his biggest base.
The only major problems lie
with recruiting -finding 50,000
new men annually and training
them fairly and weU -Wilson
said. addJng that "we do not
abuse our r ecruits" despite
isolated incidents at training de-
pots.
ln an interview. be said the
American people shot.lid know
that training will continue to be
difficult but "we are not going to
do it with harassment. with flSts ,
with verbal abuse or any other
kind of abuse."
Wilson, a Medal of Honor win·
ner. said the Marine Corps has
·'fewer units today in less than
combat-ready state than there
have ever been in peacetime.··
''Never have they been in bet·
ter sbape in peace -or war
while located here,·· he said.
HERE KITIY,
KITTY.. KITFY
WATERTOWN, S.D. CAP> -Sanitarian Larry HoUon's report
for September showed one cat in
Watertown's pound 'Ille shelter
was empty, though, and Hollon
assured the City Council the
animal badn 't been destroyed
nor had it gone to a new home.
The solution was as easy as a
new column on Hollon's monthly
report: "Total cats escaped :
One:·
GIVE YOURSELF A
NEW FIGURE FOR FALL
)
Improving your figure is more than just losing weight. Since two people who
weigh the same can look so different. The Lillian Ballard Method handles each
lady on a personal baSts.
SALON HOURS:
Mon.-Frl. 8 a.m.-8 p.m.
Sat. 9 ,a.m.-3 p.m.
MOW DOES YOUR
FIGURE RATE?
• Is your waistline slim?
•Curves in the right propartions?
• Thighs arms trim and shaply?
if not ... Let Lillian Ballard make some
wonderful changes
CALL NOW FOR
Your Coq>limentary
' Figure Analysis
631-2444
./ no Strenuous Exercise
I no Shots or Pills
I Nutritional Guidance
I no Disrobing
I Improved Posture
I 1 O years experience
A4 OAILYPILOT
....... .
,.:.'~l. • ... '·~· ,..,
·'*:" ··-·' ~ldne
'i:· :·
·'
, :.: Foolproof
:.~Debate?
ALL'S WELL DEPT. Tomorrow night we get another
televised great debate between
President Ford and former
Georgia governor Jimmy Carter.
This time we are guaranteed
nothing can go wrong.
You remember the last great
television debate, don't you?
Something did go wrong. A small
. hootenanny in the electronic
, . , works went awry.
· As a result, the sound went out
for 27 minutes all across
America. Some wags suggestt!d
it was the best part d the debate.
rr WASN'T MISSING the can-
didates• words that irked the
viewers so much. It was the sud·
den realization that television
can indeed break down. It can be
nawed.
Why. horrors, a thing like this
• might happen at a really critical
time, like during a Monday night
football telecast.
Now, however, with the second
big debate upcoming from the
Palace of Fine Arts in San Fran·
cisco, we get soothing worcb or
guarantee from the television
people.
One man, in particular, is COD·
fident. He is Jack Kelly, who is in
charge of the video arrange-
ments, and presumably the ex·
pected audio.
0 E\teryth.lng ls going to be just
fine," Kelly declared, puffing on
lli.s pipe as he surveyed television
installations at the palace.
GOOD REA VENS, there is
I your flat guaranteed DO foul ups.
That's frightening coming from a
pipe smoker. Kelly ought to at
least have stuck a little asterisk
after this statement, leading to a
footnote at the bottom of the
page.
Down in the fine print, he could
have then added: ·'This does not
include Acts of God, lightning
striking, the candidates failing to
show up, power failures, strikes,
or other unforeseen and/or un·
• -avoidable circumstances beyond
the control of management. .. "
: . But no. Kelly leaves bimseU no
escape clause. He's stuck with
living us that flat guarantee -a
warranty declaring that nothing
can go wrong.
!dost of us have become wary
of these kinds of certifications
over the years.
We recall the great dirigible
airship Hindenburg. Built in 1936,
it was the luxury liner of the
skies, held aloft ln perfection by
7,063,000 cubic feet d gas.
But it was the wroog kind of
' gas. It exploded upon attempting
to doek at LakebUl'St, N.J., in
1937. The warranty was worth· 'less.
THEN THERE w~ the great
.steamship Titanic. Sbe bad a
double-botlomed hull divided in·
to 16 watertight compartments.
Any four could flood and she
would be okay. Titanic was
,euaranteed to be unsinkable.
She hit an iceburg off New·
foundland on April 14, 1912 that
ripped a 300-foot gash in her
starboard side. She sank April 15
at2:20 a.m . Guarantee voided.
So tomorTow night, lots of luck
wt th your TV gadgets, .Mr. Kelly.
Tueaday,Octot>e<5, 1978
New Duo
Smooth
In Debut
B1 JAY 8BAUV'IT • -....c..-...,_ ...
Barbara Walten and Hany
1teuooer, newly teamed OD the .. ABC Eveniog News" and no
doubt attractinf men auention
than tbe news they delivefe(l,
peJ'formed amoothly on opeoina
nlpt.
Their debut Monday held up
despite the weight ol heavy ad·
vance publicity and advertW.na.
She didn't seem nervous. be wu
wryly sracious, and there were
no mljor mishaps or miastate-
mentl.
TBE&E WAS AIM> no hint
that be had almoet quit when
ABC asked her to leave NBC'a
"Today" show, join ABC at $1
milllon per year aDd become the
first female co-anchor of a night·
1y network television news show.
Miss Walters seemed uncer-
tain only once. It came after she
quoted former Secretary of
Alriculture Earl Bub, who quit
Monday amid controveny about
an obscene racial slur, as aaytnJ,
"I think Jiminy carter sboofd
DOW step up to the plate himself
and resign for his lJMUacreet re.
marks (on sex and adultery) in
Playboy."
Reasoner said, "I suppose the
Carter people would object to
having one verbal indiscretion
linked to a racial joke."
THAT SEEMED BRIEFLY to.
fluster Miss Walters, as if
Reasoner's unprompted remark
were unexpected.
Such are the hazards of report-
ing an item and chatting about it iV almost the same breath. In
any event, it was all smoothed
out by the second "feed" of Mon·
day's show to ABC affiliates.
She again quoted Butz' conten·
Uon that if he resigned because of
a verbal indiscretion, so should
Carter. Then s he asked
Reasoner:
"TBINK THAT'LL wash,
Harry?" Not in the Carter camp,
be suggested.
To show that ABC News means
business with its new look, no
doubt, and that Miss Walters
hasn't lost her touch for In·
terviewing the biggies, the show
aired a taped satellite interview
by her of Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat.
Even Sadat seemed caught up
in the spirit of her ABC debut. At
one point, during questioning
about Lebanon, be said, "I
declare this for the first time,
Barbara, for you."
TBESBOW,PRBCEDEDbya
good luck message to Miss
Walters from President Ford,
closed with her one-minute, 45·
second comment on herself, the
new show and what she hopes
b~ppens on it.
She said most of those
watehing were probably loyal
Reasoner fans, but some might
be her "Today" fans or curious
first-timers "drawn by the
rather too much attention and
overblown publicity given to my
new duties and my hourly
wage."
She didn't mention that the
publicity included a receGt in·
terriew of herself by herself in a
women's magazine, but to all she
pledged a big Reaaoaer-Walters
effort ''to bring you the best dam
news program on the air."
Monday's opening effort
was a fair start, and its ratings,
expected in a few days, should be
high. Whether it will be only a
momentary lift from ABC's
usual third-place ratings for
evening news remains to be ~n.
,. ... -..
'TOO MUCH ATTENTION, OVERBLOWN PUBLICITY'
H•ny R••Mner and Barber• Walters Debut tor ABC
Knebel Takes Post
Biltz Offers'
To Campaign
WASHINGTON <AP> -Earl L. Buta, bavm, reslped as
agriculture secretary beciawe d the furor ralffd by a raclal alW' ho
mlde aaa1111t blacks, HJ'I be sWl waata to campaip in the farm belt
for President Ford .
White House spoktaman Rab NHSen bad no comment when asked if
Ford intended to acctpt Butz• of· fer. But James A. Baker m. the Richard E. Lyaa, were men·
Ford campaip manager, aaldbe tianed in early apeeulatioo.
would d.Llcuu the idea with Buts.. A f U r B u t 1 res i g n e d ,
Democratic preaidentlal
nominee Jimmy Carter said,
''The way this whole embarra:as-
lng and dlsgustln& episode was
handled by Preaideal Ford shows
a contlnuatlon of lack of
leldei$tp. Instead d making bis
deciaion based on what w11 right
and belt for the cOUDb')', be very
carefully waited until he uaessed
pubUe opinion polls to eee what
WU d&ht politically."
..LET'S FACE IT," Bater
said, "a lot of agriculture people
out there support him."
Undersecretary cl Alriculture
John A. Knebel bas become act·
lng secretary.
President For" can have an
acting secretary for ~ ~ un-
der the law and then must make
an interim appointment until Cooareaa returns next year.
TWO OR THREE other
Republicans also are thought to
be candidates to replace Buta.
Two former assistant
secretaries, Clayton Yeutter and
Buts, 67, agriculture eeeret.ary
for the past five years, said he re-
ceived no pre11ure from the Whi,te House to quit.
Arms Limit Policy Due
"USE OF A BAD racial com-
mmtary in no wq reflects my
real attitude." be said. He said
bia ~atioo "is the price I pay
for a 1ross indiacretlon in a
private conversation." ma comments, made in a con-
versation with John Dean and
singers Pat Boone and Sonny
Bono aboard an airplane in
August, were publlabed in Roll·
tng Stone and New Times
magazines.
White House Plan Resembles Carter Views
WASHINGTON CAP) -Presi·
dent Ford is expected to an-
nounce soon new policies to
restrain ·the spread d nuclear
weapons, including international
control of spent atomic fuel and
sanctions against nations violat·
ing antiweapon safeguards.
Portions of the White House
Liza Deaths
Mount, Total
Open to Guess
LA PAZ, Mexico (AP) -
Searchers have found the bodies
of 16 more victims of Hurricane
Iha inside a building demolished
by a wall of water and mud when
the storm burstadamjustoutside
thecity.
(_1_N_SH_O_R_T~]
plan parallel suggestions out·
lined by Democratic presidential
nominee Jimmy Carter,
especially proposals he made in
a speech last month.
Carter ls calling the Ford plan
"a last-minute patched-together
attempt to cover up the failure or
Republican leadership."
Glaa1ICI c .......... .
WASHINGTON <AP)
Ghana, which bas been armed
entirely by Western nations until
now, reportedly has sent a
military mission to Moscow to
discuss a possible weapons deal
witb the Soviet Union.
U.S. intelligence sources say
Russia bas been offering arms to
the West African countrv since ur74, bul the Ghanaian govern-
ment bas not acted to take up that
offer until now.
Hubert H. Humphrey, reportedly
in bis usual good spirits, is un-
dergoing last-minute tests in pre-
paration for the removal of a can-
cerous bladder.
Barring unforeseen compUca·
lions, the Minnesota Democrat
would be back on h1a feet by early
December, bis surgeon 1ays. Humphrey, 65, was to undergo
tests today. The operation Thurs-
day will probably last six to eight
hours.
Boone said the episode struck
blmaakonic.
"I l\JST CAN'T get it into my
bead that a cabinet man can tell •
a bad joke in private and get
fired, and then John Dean can
tell the same joke to miltims and
get paid for it," Boone said. ''The
sad thing is be meant it as a joke.
I did not understand at the time
that it was his true feellngs, nor
do I think them to be now."
Boone said be "shuddered" when
be beiud the "tasteless and of.
feosive joke." MADRID (APl -Spain's lef· Here ls some other read:ion to
tist opposition today condemned the incident: the killing of one m King Juan F c w rni G
Carlos' advisers and four R.ooaldo~~a~an: a,.,: .. ~
policemen, apparently afraid the was sordid and inexcusable but,
deaths might provoke the 85 1 understand it, Mr. Buts was
powerful Spanish right wing Into simply repea~g what someone demanding a halt to the govern· d ld ment's political liberalization. else ha to m. I don't thlnt
The government continued a ~-~~cism can be attributed to
hunt for the Basque separatists THE R.,.V •• _,Luthe who claimed responsibility for -r.. • AAun r
the killing Monday of Juan Maria King Sr· commented about "the Gov. CezarMendozaofthestate
of Baja California Sur said Mon·
day the bodies raised the hur-
ricane'sofficlal deathtollto423.
mess in Washingtoo. And now de Araluce, 59, a member of the Butz brew out at the mouth. But • ultraconservative Council of the
B-11-,..,_4 SS4 ort Realm. Also killed were his he's .Just saying what everybody _.,. • -~ • ""'•• • else in Washington is thinking. driver and three policemen-I'm tired of all theseresignatiCJOS
HOWEVER, FJGURF.SONthe NEW YORK CAP) -Sen. bodyguards. andrmworriedaboutAmericL"
toll continued to differ widely ;::::==============================================-; among various officials. Mexican
President Luis Echeverria put
the number of deaths at 435 on
SUnday. La Paz chief of police
Ramon Elizondo said the death
toll was 353, while a source in·
volved with a military search
operation claimed the hurricane
bad killed atleast l,050persons.
Most of the deaths occurred
when a shanty town housing an
estlmatedlS,OOOpeopleontheout-
skirts of La Paz was destroyed by
water and mud when a 30-foot
earthen dam nearby broke in the
storm last Friday.
By Monday evening, electricity
was restored to about one third of
La Paz, a city of 8.5,000 located
near the southern tip of the Lower
Calllornia penninsula, 700 miles
south of San Diego. An electricity
company official said full service
would be restored by Friday.
Hundreds of people
Weft being vaccinated against
tetanus and typhoid each day. To
help guard against outbreaks of
disease, many of the bodies ol
storm victims were being burned
or buried in mass graves almost
as soon as they were found.
Plains' Rain Hits Texas
. · . Fml's Chill Beginning to Be Felt in U.S •
Te.pn-aturn
. :::::WQut ~ ~ . .:r::,,,lllt ~ ~ ,It
9'1ff•lo ,, 51
Oltcaot> e• ~ .11
OllCIMatl 11 ~ aa .. ,_ 11 )4 o.n...., s• 3'
Detroit /1 H
, Holloluhl 96 11
...... Q 6S t7
l<aNftOty IJ • .93
"'" V.0-S '" s 1 • Uft .. Aock .. '7
•Miami " II . Ml._.... ,, .. .66
• --.,poll1-Sl.P1ul 10 41 .ot
• New OrlMtls .. 71
; HewYor11 10 P
• Oltleflonle Otv ., M .1' ·~ •• 47 : "'91m$Cll1,.gs ts u • flNl.otlplll4 n St .......... ., .,
·~ 71 SI :s.cr~ n u . .---------~~---..., .... .....,
h ....... . ~~lf~OOllOI"'°"' -bY ~ 30 p "' Cllll lleb• , Piii. -~COP\' wtl .,. __
• ~ -Sul\deY n "'°" oo nc1 ,........'llV'I'_,.,., ..... Cllll
ll9b'e 10 .... -"°""--be ........
Q ..... , ........ .. ONflta Coul\ty ~ _,,,
_.._ HulllfflOIOll ..... ... --·· .... , .. 11111 OMMMa. Caoltll-8Mclll.. ... Jwlt CtllttMllO 0-Pollll. towtl'l UlllYf'ljl. UgiiM ..................... ..
Forec.,t 1odAy _,.. ._, tnc1
.,,....,.,,_,, lrom •••tWll Tua~
llW'OUOll Ille io-r •"d m lddle M11o-
t1.iP111 Valley.._, Mlt!llQM>
ti wtll be ~OOI from 1119 Mtw.IMlpc>I
Valley Wftlwtrd a..o mild_._..,,
Caillor•la
C .. er .. lft and Wlflll lemci-.......
'1IO<lld IW! th• rule o"er 5o111,.,....,
Colllfomla ll 1Utum" takft a b9ck
-.1lo-tl\dtenl1Hnmff-. H•llo ... 1 Wealll•r S•••IC•
'°"9<.HW" ttpecl "'""Y ..., ~
wean..-I" lfte Lot A-I"-~ l'IHdlY. Wltll I IOVCll of .... lf'I Ille ,..,.,1"'9
H'<l'\ WMIMtfltvfH are elqlllttlld to
~" Ille mid to UOll8' .. lf'I Loa MQttes .
°'~ prfflc~ lllQM l11cllldt •' .. -------------------u 111 ,,.,. mGllflttl11t, eos to IGWtOl lfl St. UIUlt
Soll! Llk• City
S...Fr-i-~ n.tm.t ...,...i\llell
IS .. u ,.
11 .. '4 ,.
tS .. ,. 54
v.s.s .......
!ht ••lle'l'I. 709 to mMl-«>t 111 •~
dl9Mttt Ml lllt 111111 '°' 10 llll040t In .. io..r•wrtt.
f
Kitchen Help
You Can Count Oh
You can count on the Wednesday food pages of the Daily Pilot to help
you if you're counting calories, stretching food dollars or simply bunt·
ing for recipe ideas for f amlly or guests.
Food Editor Barbara Gius brings you a host or consumer tips and menu
suggestions to help you subtract kitchen time while adding to eating en-
joyment.
Food is news this year. Keep up with the latest on nutrition, shortages.
prices, new markets and cooking trends by turning to the Wednesday
People section.
To make the most of what you buy or grow for YoW' dinner table, count
oo the food pages of the Wednesday
.
DAILY PILOT
642-4321
:
01 Times
DAIL y ,,LOT Al
In Jruleranging lmerDiew •
Brown Sees School Cutback
SACRAMENTO (AP)-Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr., purauin& bll .,,_Ule a&almt the
state's educallon establishment, pro-
misea that next year be will "wt oa the
. brates"onacboolftnand:q. DuriDI an lntemew In bll oftlce Oii
public televlaton stat.ton KVJE, the
Democratic 1overnor dted """81 in·
creases be had backed in state education
spending since becomin.c eovernor in
January 1975. Re then added:
"I think enouah ii enough. Tbil wu a
eeneroua year. Next year we will really
put on the brakes."
B&OWN MADE TllE STATEllENT in
response to queries about bis veto of a
proposal backed by Wllaon Riles, tbe
state schools chief, which Riles said
would enrich junior and senior high
school education.
Brown pointed out the 50 pereent in·
creases this year in education opportuni·
ty grants for disadvantaged colleee stu·
dents, and new runds for a Riles·
supported proeram for the lower grades.
''The education industrial complex is
taking money out of the gross national
product and shifting it into its sector,"
said Brown.
CloUan.
Currently, the Callfomta Supreme
Court ii revlewlns the Serrano decision
and la •pected to reatJl,rm tome version
of lt In the near future. Bivwn said the
state bu to aave its money "to meet
that.''
AsummU"J ototherremarb:
-SUPa&•E OOUllT: Refused to
commit himself to appolntlq a Ollbority
or woman to two u~ Heancles on the California Supreme Court. ~ut said it
wouldn't be difficult to predict what be
would do lf his record of put appoint·
ments were studied. Brown has aPPOlnl·
ed a large number of women and
minorities.
Pain No Issue
In Torture Death
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
California Supreme Court says a person
can be convicted of murder by torture
eveniftbevictimfeltnopain.
-BU81NE88 CLDIATE: Contended
califoro.la's economy ls ltrCml and IJ'OW· tnc. Said the economy depends In large
part OD aerotpace, aertcultun and de-
fenae. "What make1 this country coll the
selliq of danterous weapom to U.. real
oftheworld. TbatlaaJotofoureecDOmy.
lt'sratberaadtosay,butlt'atrue."
-canrt:: Complimented bla own r e-
cord OD crime leplatklll, saytnc tbe de-
terminant aentence law be aiped will
give most inmates a speeific date on
which they wW be released. Said be want·
ed to make it clear that priSCJGS we for
pmlsbment.
-P&IVACY: Reaffirmedbi.scritlcllm
ol a privacy bill by Sen. David Roberti (D·
la Aneelea) which be vetoed. 1be bill
would have made it possibleforcltlsena to
look at and correct IODle of the records
the state keeps on them. Brown stcned an exeeutive order on privacy instead,
which be claimed did the same lhiDI at a
fraction of the cost.
S. I. Hayakawa too his campalgn to San Francisco State Monday
and ran into a new neration of protesters whose chants touched
off the candidate's iju-bed wit. "It's a real pleasure to be back on campus and relive old times" said Hayakawa in response to
taunts and jeers by •udents. e waved a protester's leaflet and
added that mimeog~phing, etonc and grammar hadn't im·
proved since 1968 wh~ be had uelled violent student activities at
IN THE LAST YEAR, Brown said,
educational spending climbed by 15 per·
cent, while at the same time enrollment
declined and the cost of. living rose less
than 6 percent.
Also on education, Brown said the Ser·
rano court decision, which would require
more money to be spent on poorer dis·
'!i~· might cost the state half a billion
"The murderer wbo exhibits the cold·
blooded intent to inflict pain for personal
gain or satisfaction mv-not assert the
victim 'a condition as a fortultuous de-
fense to his own deplorable acts," the
courts aid in an unanhnouadecision.
1be decision stemmed from tbe case of
Theresa Wiley who. with her brother,
were convicted of murdering her
husband with a baseball bat.
Brown said Roberti 's bill would have
created a •'bureaucratic pretzel pa.lace.'' Citine tbe way eovemment worb now,
Brown added, "The left hand doesn't
know where the rllbt band is and that's
eooct"interms offifesonpeople.
PROP. H : Stated that the farm labor
initiative. supported by Cesar Chavez'
United Farm Workers, oo the Nov. 2 bAnot la necessary to move the farm labor
board and its electlonsOlltottbepoU.tlcal
arena for at leut two years. the university.
Delay Tactic Hinted
LOS ANGELES CAP)-AfederaJjudge bassug·
gested that the burglary of Howard Hughes' Summa
Corp. office may have been staged to delay preduc----
ing documents sought by the Securl~· es and Ex·
cbangeCom ssioo.
(
--------.) U.S. Di rict Court SI'ATE Judge w ,rr en J _ Ferguson ad need that
possibility · a ruling
Monday tu · g down a
request for release or59SEC document!;
The documents were sought in a ·t filed by
DooaJd Ray Woolbright, who is aw g trial on
charges of extortion and receiving s n property
in connection with the purported ma Corp.
burglary. He is accused of trying to bl mail Sum·
ma for return of the allef(edly stolen d en ts.
Spock Prote•t• Debate
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Peace and
Freedom Party's presidential and vie presidential
candidates planned to picket the Le or Women
Voters' headquarters hereto protest thetxclusionof
third party candidates from televised presidential de~ates.
Noted baby doctor Dr. BenjamiJJ Spock, the
party's vice presidential candidate, ! a student
audience at UCLA on Monday that s e, not sub·
stance, is the difrerence between ele n between
the major party presidential candidat•. The p11blic "gets rooted every four years by OW major can·
dldates because the personality or le two C8n·
did ates are difrerent and because the~ak slightly
ditf ereoUy."
Touri••• 1t'atela IJeaper Die
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -As mire than 100
tourists on a pleasure boat trip on San Fancisco Bay
watched, a young woman plunged to be death from
the Golden Gate Bridge.
Bridge authorities said the youngNoman's car
was found parked near the north end olhe bridge. It
contained an identification tab remoV'd from a box
containing the ashes of a former femae roommate,
they said. Bridge toll Sgt. Socorro Medoza said the
woman carried the cremated remais with her on
the fatal leap. The ashes were recoYred from the
bay.
DUpute Hal•• Corona Bu 1..lne
CORONA (AP) -A dispute abouan annual sub·
sldy payment of $10,000 has promptd the Southern
California Rapid Transit District to tsconlinue bus
service to this Riverside County com1unlly.
City Manager James Wheaton aid Corona of·
ficials and RTD directors are arglllig about a pro·
posed agreement that would make te city responsi·
ble for paying drivers and me<:hanls if It no longer
wishes service during the contrad>eriod. He said
RTD should be responsible for its ea:> lo yes' salan es
rather than the city.
Protnt• Lop 011 Pat1 like
SAN BERNARDINO <A!) -County
Supervison backed down In Ult race of angry
citizens, rescinding a 40 perceQI pay hike they
planned ror them selves in Decembt.
Their annual salaries wouldhave increased
from $21,612 to $30,178. A cilbms' committee
gathered signatures to put the )latter to a vote.
Supervisors, however, still \IHI receive their
automatic 5 percent raise.
SAVE 22 °/o -30 °/o
Dakotah Handcrafts applique style
bedspread collection at savings
Startling graphics of desert and mountains
seem to leave nothing to the imagination. In
hand-guided poly. I cotton with poly. filling.
Dakotah Reeds in dramat ic black and brown.
Dakotah Desert in rich, warm pastel shades.
Twin. Reg. $160, $110 Full. Reg. $185, now, $135
Queen. Reg. $210, $160 King. Reg. $235, $170
Save 25 % on matching sham. Reg. $35, 25.99
Dakotah Junction* in delicate browns and tans.
Twin Reg . $125, $95 Full. Reg. $150, $110
Queen. Reg. $175, $145 King. Reg. $195, $145
Save 20% on matching shams. Reg. $25, 19.99
Draperies *Special order, allow for delivery
Save 40 % with ''Grandeur'· our
own pure wool blanket irregulars
Take the chlll out of winter nights ahead
with naturally soft, hi-loft blankets woven
In wool. Assorted colors. Tw. If perf. $45, 26.99
Obi. If pert. $60, 35.99 King. If perf. $75, 44.99
Bedroom Accessories
Bullock's South Cont Plaza, San Diego Freeway at Bristol, Costa Mesa, 556-0611
I
I
A8
DAILY PILOT EDITtJRIAL P~GE
Debate Topic Tiinely
U is highly appropriate that the second Ford· Caz1:er debate Wednesday evening wUJ focus on
foreign policy and defense. The debate comes amid
evidence ot growing concern on the part of the
American citizenry about the capabiUUes of our de·
fense. Or, more correctly, concern about the sWi.ftly
growing Russian military Power.
It is clear that the Russian navy has been
lransformed from one primarily concerned wttb de-
fending Russia to one designed to exercise Russian
power and influence in Asia. Africa, South America or
literally anywhere.
In the last 10 years the increase ln Soviet arms
has been staggering: 40% in manpower, 30% in tanks,
6.5% in tactical aircraft,~% in nuclear submarines,
600% in nuclear missiles. These build-ups h1,1ve been
confirmed by reliable sources such as the U.S. Llbrary
of Congress, Jane's Fighting Ships and various foreign
military intelligence sources.
One British commentator has gone so far as to
warn that in 10 years the Soviet forces and their allies
could become so strong that they could have their way
without ever firing a shot.
Obviously neither presidential candidate would
advocate a weak and defenseless United States.
Carter is on record as favoring a $5 to $7 billion cut in
defense spending but this is the standard liberal
Democratic rhetoric and he has carefully avoided
making any specific ccmmitments.
The reaJ problem, of course, is that decisions on
our defense strategy and expenditures made now will
make the difference in whether or not the Western de-
m(X:racies are strong enough to survive 10 or 20 years
from now. That, forexampJe, is what is at issue in the
argument over the B·l bomber. A decision not to pro-
duce the B·l means a major change in our defense
posture from 1990on.
The grim fact is that while we still are the arsenal
of democracy. we will not ever again have the luxury
we had in World War II of having two years or mor~ to
build up that arsenal while others bear the brunt of
the fi&bting. From now on we must be ready in a few
hours -or at most a few days.
So tomorrow night's debate deals with more than
a few votes one way or the other come November 2. It
deals -or ought t.o deal -with the ability of our
children and our grandchildren to live in peace and
secwity in the next century.
Speed Up Trials
Two Orange County Supervisors last week ex·
changed heated long-distance verbal barbs with As-
semblyman Robert Burke <R·Huntington Beach).
Both Supe rvisors Ralph Clark and RaJph
Diedrich said they were miffed because Burke
sponsored legislation adding four new judges to the
Orange County Superior Court without providing
suitable state funding.
In turn. Burke said an amendment to his legisla·
tion by Democrats in the Assembly took out a funding
clause and that Democrats Diedrich and Clark
were simply taking political cheap shots.
That may or may not be the case. One way or
another, it is comparatively unimportant.
What is important is that the state Legislature
has authorized four needed additional judges Cor the
Orange County court.
And while Diedrich, Clark and Burke insult one
another, the civil case backlog in the court continues
to grow.
It has now reached more than 7,000 cases. And
trial litigants must wait 18 to 24 months to have their
cases heard.
It would be best if the likes of Diedrich, Clark and
Burke buried their hatchets and got on with the busi·
ness of staffing the court so that it doesn't collapse in
inefficiency caused by too many cases and not enough
judges.
Money PoUring Into
Dog Racing Dispute
Anti-Red Line Seen for Debate
Shaping into one of the more
heated campaigns over Nov -
ember ballot propoeitions ls the
dog racing initiative designated
Prop 13. At least it appears that
more money will be spent pro
and con on this than all the other
1' proposals combined. This
because the backers look to make
millions from dog racing while
the horse race tracks, and maybe
Nevada casinos. see it as siphon·
lng betting money away from the
bangtails and the crap tables. To
the bystander it wouldn't seem to
matter bow gam biers lose their
money or to whom.
There is probably nothing
wrong with dog racinl per se.
The purists
profess it to
be more
honest than
horse racing
slnce. running
without jockeys, the
human ele·
meot for ln·
terfere nc e
with th e
abilities of the dogs ls removed.
ln any case. as tbe law stands.
greyhound racing is not now
barred. Actually, the inhumane
treatment of animals feared by
the opponents. such as using live
rabbits for lures in training and
racing and the destruction of in·
ept or old dogs, is not now out~
lawed but would be specifically
banned by the passage of the in·
itiaUve. So the real issue Is
whether Californians want to ex·
tend gambling by authorising
pari·mutuel wagering at dog
tracks.
mE OBJECTIONS advane«t
are based on conteotiOo.s that it
..W lead to corruption ol officials
( EARL WATERS )
and create serious crime pro·
blems. The sponsors rebut by
pointing out this has not hap-
pened in the nine states which
permit greyhound wagering or
with horse racing in California.
To this point then the anti·
arguments have done better
sticking to debating the pro-
visions in the initiative.
The basic fault of Prop 13 is
that it writes into concrete,
beyond tbe power of the
Legislature to alter. all the de-
tails of regulation and the man-
ner in which the revenues to the
state will be spent
In their efforts to lure voter ap-
prov al the promoters have
honey-coated the propo6al with
revenue allocations to attract the
support of all the ~gooders.
Tbus, runds are assigned ir-
revocably to a variety of present-
ly D<lO-existent funds for such
things as bigb school athletics
and other educational programs.
child development, handicapped
children, deal children. child dis· eases, juvenile delinquency,
foster care. heart and cancer re-
search, senior clti~ nutritioo
and transportation, and even re-
tirement fort.be~~.
No matter whether such pro.
grama are necessary. desirable
or even feasible, the mooey must
go to those purposes even though
the Legislature might fund
grnter needs elsewhere. And, by
creating these new ~ it
could well be creating new burdet1s for the taxpayers. For
once such pr<>1rama get started
the greyhound revenue.a may Pl'O-
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Jimmy Carter and Betty
Ford ought to be married
to one another. They both
suffer from "Fool·in·the-Mouth Disease.'·
BW.
GIOOMY G"' , __ , ar• ..........,...,
,..-., e11d 0o llOl MU•Hrlly twfl«l t ... •iton of lllt ,,..,._.., .... s.fld ,,_ 11111
-\oOIOOmy Ori, D~llr ,..,.,.
ve insuffi£ient and pressures
brought to bear for additional tax·
es to augment them.
TO A LARGE extent the
other provisions generally are
patterned after existing laws
governing horse racing. But there
are significant differences not t.be
least of which is the state's share
of the take. That is limited to 6
pereent whereas the st.ate takes
up to8 percent off the top on horse
betting. Also. while local govern·
ments impose admission and
other taxes on horse tracks, the
greyhound promoteT"S have pro-
hibited such levies on them. So the
cities may get stuck with heavy
additional costs for traffic regula·
tion and other police and fire
services in connection with the
dog tracks with no way to pay ex·
cept socking it to the property
owners.
In adopting the horse race law
prohibiting board membef'S fl"Om
participating in ownerships or
profits connected with greyhound
racing, the same prohibition for
board employes bas been over-
looked.
The proposal might have been
far more palatable bad it lbaply
autborhed greyhound pari-
mutuel wagering and left the de-
tails of regulation and allocation
d revenues to the Leg1slature.
Taxes Boost Lockheed
WASHINGTON -The
Lockheed mllitary·lnduatnal
empire is now so heavily sub-
sidized by the taxpayers that the
company allegedly has siphoned
1ovemment. money into its com-
mercial projects.
Federal investigators have ac·
cused Lockheed of channeling
more than $45
million of the
taxpayers •
money into
such com ·
mercial de·
velopmenls
u the L-lOU
jetliner.
This was
accomplished
through a
complex bookkeeping maeuver.
In its simplest. form. the tecbnl·
que was to co-minJ)e costs from
noncovernment work with cOlta .&om government C<llllrad.I, a · ,.ain the invesU,at.ors.
It is aUe1ed \hat Lockheed
charged to defense conb"actl
IOIDC CO\lta that actuall,y went ln·
to butldh11 the elvtlian jeWnera.
Tbua the unwlttinl tupayer
1fOU.bd up belpln1 ftnance tho
company'• commercial ea·
deavon.
It Is am 111 wonder that
t.ockbeed bad troubM aepara~
:,crmment uc:1 commeretal ~. fM the 1..t.trill
f I
~ACK ANDERSON)
colossus did a whopping $2.2
bUlloo ln government business
Jut year. A.t t.be pleading of
President Ford, Congress also
granted $200 million in rederal
loan guarantees to keep the com·
panyfrom roin1 bai:Wupt.
ITS BOOU, therefore, are
suppoeed to be opeo ID govern·
ment auditors. But as we report·
ed in July, the Delense Contract
Audit Agency was barred from
inspecting Lockheed's books.
The company prefened to deal
with the more lenient Renegoti•·
UoaBoard.
Tbe audit. agency, nnert.M-
Jeaa, has been loveatiaaUng
•
Lockheed's vast California
aerospace facilities, Seattle
shipyards and Marietta, Ga.,
complex. The Renegotiation
Board, for its part, assigned a
special three-man committee to
procure other flnandal data.
The GeneraJ Accounting or·
rice, thereafter, asked to see
Renegotiation Board's financial
fmdings on Lockheed. This in-
formation waa s ubmitted,
together with a highly confiden-
tial covering Jett.er, by Chairman
Richard Holmquist.
Although HolmqutJt 's letter
doesn't specify the precise
amount that Lockbeetl took from
Peter to pay Paul, It ls estimated
that well over $45 mlllloo was in-
volved ln the juggllna operation
in 1172 alone.
PRESIDENT FORD, mean-
while. has held down tbo
BeMtotiatJoo Board's st.an to
less than 200. TMa bN left too few
W'8kbdop to keep .a eye oa the
aku.lduuery of the lnduatrtal
1lants. While tbe Prealde.nt
plncbe:a penniea. ble Industrial
pala apparently are 1tea.llll1
mlllloos.
Footnote: Lockheed Ml dtNed
Jmowled3e of any dlvenioo of
funds from aovenuntDl to com·
merclal purposes. 1be Defense
Contract Audit Agency and the
Rene10UaUoo Board dedlned
comment. .
Carter Tackles Detente
WASHINGTON -Before he
lurched into that notorious
monologue on sex and Lyndon
Johnson in his interview with
Playboy magazine. Jimmy
Carter delivered an unusually
tough denunciation of detente as
practiced by Henry Kissinger -
a stand which raises the
possibility of an unexpected
course for debate No. 2.
"I feel the policy ot detente bas
given up too much to the
Russians and
gotten too lit· ·
tie in return,"
Cart.er said in
the interview
that will ap·
pear in Nov·
ember's
Playboy .
When the in·
t e rviewer
(extreme Jefl
journ1lllst Robert Scheer) de·
manded an example, Carter
replied: "I never saw any reason
we should be involved in the
Helsinki meetings at all. We
added the stature of our presence
and signature to an agreement
that, in e ffect, ratified the
takeover of Eastern Europe by
the Soviet Union."
Such rhetoric, in the style of
Scoop Jackson rather than
George McGovern, delights
moderate Democrats d.iscom.fit-
ed by Carter's leftward drift.
Worried about Carter's bumblina decline since Labor Day, old
guard Democrats have feared
the foreign policy debate ·n San
Francisco Oct. 6 will pr-owe bis
undoing if President Ford 1>re·
empts the bard line.
ACCO&DINGLY, several at·
tempts have been made to
penetrate Carter's hideaway in
Plains, Ga., with this advice:
wrap Secretary of State Kiss·
ineer around the President's
neck and follow John F. Ken·
nedy's example 16 years ago in
preempting the anti-Communist
position. While delighted by the
Playboy quotes , moderate
Democrat.a hope Carter will go
further than deten~ and Helsinki
and disregard bis advisers by
criticizing SALT (strategic arms
limitation talks).
This would demolish the smug
conventional wisdom at the
White House regarding debate
No. 2. Assuming the President
can overpower an opponent who
bas only limited knowledge about
national 5ecurlty, Ford
operatives have looked to certain
victory at San Francisco after
survivin& Debate No. 1 on the
economy, the Democrats' bome
turf.
Specifically, tbe Wblle House
looit forward to a stumbling
justiftcatJoa by Carter al hl.S $5 to
$7 billloa in defense cuts no IDOl'e
convlncln1 than bis muddled
econom le ar 1umenta In
PbUadelpbia. Soft-line adv'lsers
around Cuter (locludln1 Richard Holbrooke, editor of 1i·ore1CD Polley magutoe. wbo Is
In cbarce of 1tra~ for debate
No. 2) precludes any b.ardening
of h1I poaltlon, ln tbe optn.loo of
tbe White HOUH.
AIOD8T THE Ford camp's
·eapbotia, however. tbef'e are a
few private ml11lvlnp. One
MOJor olliclal, wbo ha.a~ eot·
reel tar more often than the con·
alatently la1Uble palace guard,
beUevea rhetoric l.s more impor.
t.ant Lban 1tathUc1 ln any foreltn
( EV ANS-NOV AK )
policy debate. Ideology aside, be
fears Mr. Ford -better at
memorizing a briefing book than
inspirational homilies -will be
at a disadvantage.
Nor does the Ford leafl seem
aware of the selective hf!d line
taken by Carter. In bis Sept. 8
speech to the B'nai B'ritb con-
vention (largely written y soft·
liner Holbrooke). Ca er at-
tacked the Helsinki p and
raised the "organic' r ela·
lionship between the viet
Union and Eastern Euro ed
for by Dr. Kissinger's ri band
man . State Depar mint
counselor Helmut eldt.
"The Republican adm ·stra·
lion." said Carter. "with Son·
nenfeldl statement, bas s
lack of sensitivity to the
of the Eastern European
for greater independence.
unacceptable.'•
IN CONTRAST. the Pr
bas tied himself to tbe Ki er
record. fo r better or worse. ard-
liners inside the adminis tion
seeking a tougher Ford
on SALT abandoned hope
the President's interview i
Sept. 13 U.S. News and World
Report: it repeated the highly de·
batable Kissinger theme that
failure to achleve a SALT II
agreement would cost $5 billion
in annual derense spending.
Actually. there 1s ambivalence
about Kjssinger at the White
House. Mr. Ford pointedly
omitted Kissinger's name from
his Sept. 24 announcement or a
tentative Rhodesian settlement
(causing the volatile Secretary of
St.ate to bitterly complain to as·
sociates about what the White
House staff is doing lo him>.
Nevertheless, the President ls
prepared lo defend totally Kiss·
inger's policies.
Whal remains to be seen is how
much Carter will take advantage
of this vulnerability. U Carter
tries to justify his $5 to $7 billion
defense cut with the dubious
budget-slashing schemes he un·
veiled at the American Legion
convention, he will have invited a
withering statistical counter-fire
straight out of Mr. Ford's brief-
ing books.
To avoid that counter·rire,
Jimmy Carter is being urged to
take as tough an anti-Communist
line as Jack Kennedy did in 1960.
At the risk of offending liberal
supporters and advisers, that
would put President Ford in un-
expected trouble Oct. 6.
Why Lie Is "Short'
Tboaghta at Large=
When we say "ti{e is short,
really mean that we have ·l·
tered most of it away; if e
normal human span were t e
as long, most people would ·u
deplore its brevity as they g
into old age.
(SYDNEY HARRIS)
better it could be. and wisdom to
contemplate how much worse.
Speaking of marriage, Oliver
Wende ll Holmes 's shrewd ob· Confession is bad for the
unless it is followed by re
lance -most confession is si
ly the dumping of a load
garbage in order to make r
for the next load.
. servation has not wilted with
trme: "Easy-crying widows take
new husbands soonest; there's
nothing like wet weather tor
transplanting.··
What is needed now is a roo
deodorizer to get rid of
smell of room deodorizers.
I tend to be wary or someon
who is quick to admit litll
faults; such candor is often a su
tie form of deception. irnplyin
that he is therefore free or large\
faults.
Could we say that n shy man
makes ·undertures" ton woman
he has designs on"!
Men and women use "regret"
in di((erenl senses -on the •
whole. men lend to regret what
they did. while women regret
what they didn •t do.
A truth that bas to be de·
monstrated can never sway
people's emotions: we are moved
by slo,ans, not by syllogisms.
ORANGE COAST
The temperance people defeat
their ends with their 5mug self-
righteousness about liquor: an 1
ironically humorous approach
would serve 'hem better, such as
Benchley's remark: "Drinking
makes such fools of people, and
people are such fools to begin
With, that it's compounding a
felony."
DAILY PILOT
Robert N Wt td. Publ~
Tltornol Ktrvil. f:<Utor
Barbaro Krt111ich,
EdUon<ll Pogt £'"tor
e editorial page or the Dilly r ot seeks to inform and
s ulate reader!\ by prescntlfta
o hls page d1verst' commentary
IOpll'S or Interest by syndical•
1 olumnists and cartoonists. by
•1dlng .. forum ror reade ... · Nine out of 10 citll.ena in this
Bicentennial Year still couldn't
enumerate the Blll o( Rights: but
10 out ol 10 are willing to tell you
exactly what is wrong with the
country.
One of the consolations of bav·
lng a philosophical mlnd is the
ablllty to look around and be
grateful about the large number
0( persons one hos not married,
it ls folly to speowat.c bow much
\ wa end by pr('sentmg that
spapcr·s opinions and ideas
C\.ICrenl topac:s The ed.llorlal
n1~ of the Oally Pilot oppear
11 In U\(' tdltonal column at the
P of the PAIC•· Opm1<>ns ex·
t>-.~•• by the colutnl\1sts and
rtoon11u ond lrtter wr1l~r« ire
tar ov.n and no t'nd<>r5ement Of
e1r vtrw!I by the Daily PUot ~hould be Inferred
Tuesday, October 5, lS78
. . ·-. · ............. _ .... . . . . . . . . . ---------
Tuesday. Oetobef S. 1978 DAILY PILOT ,4 7,
Foreign Policy: Familiar Ground
•1 ne Aleedated Preu
Presklent Pord and Democratic rival Jimmy
Carter tum from domestic to foreiin issues in Wod·
needay altl\t'• debate, with questions expected to cover everything from mWtary spenclng Lo U .$.
_policy lD the Mlddle East.
, U the second d the three planned confronta·
1 tioa1 betw~n the presidential candidates goes
i.U)'tJUD1 Uke the llnt, Ford and Cart.er will range
over some faQJWar territory.
, Here ls a guide to what they bave said 011 some
dtbe •-'or foreign policy and defeDM issues:
t Asia
Ford has said, "We will seek to move forward
the Pacific ... on relations with the People's
public of China. Obviously, we will want to
gtben our relationships, which are very good,
I ,.
th the J apanese." He declined to speculate on a
for the normallutioo ol relations with Chin.a.
Carter 1ay1 he cMes no& eavlsloa a rapid
allaatloa of rdadoes wftb tlllaa aldllcMIP Ula&
be u •lti•• goal. Before ag:reelDg to albatioa, "1 woa.N wut C.O have u uauaaee
IOme way ••• Utat tlilere woaJcl not be a military at-
• Tahru aad ..aau.e TalwuesepeoplewfMlld
rdadvely llldepe•M. •• "
Deferue Speadiag
f Ford bas said be submitted a ''record t peacetime defense budget request of $112.7 billion"
.. to enable the United States to improve the strength
... ~ and readiness or the armed forces ''while trimming ~ off all the fat that we can." He said, "I am very proud ~; the fact that I sent to the Congress in the last two
ars the two largest defense budgets ln the history
the United States." Congress approved a $100.7
on defense budgetforfiscal 1977.
Carter has said that "without eadangerillc tbe
ease of oar nation or our commltmt11ts C.O oar al·
we can reduce present defense expeadttares by
billion c.o $7 billion annually." He says tbe cats
'" ian be made by ••management·lmprovement ef· forta." Ford says aayooe wbo advocates budget
cats of the size Carter la proposing "does not know
wlaat be is talk.Ing about."
., ..
,d• Ford has discontinued use of the word detente.
~·1 don't use the word detent.e any more," be said. "I l .think what we ought to say is that the United Stales
will meet with the superpowers, the Soviet Union
~ and with China and others, and seek to relax
tensions so that we can continue a polic)' of peace
t. through strength."
. Caner says: "I woald coatlDae the effort C.O be
" friendly with Russia. •• bat I woald be a much
\ tougher negotiator ... "He says, '-rbe relatloDsbJp
ol detente Is one of both cooperation and competi·
' tloa. . . The benents of detente mast accn1e to both : I sides." Carter also adds: "As we sell the Russians things that they must have -food In their drought
years, electronics equipment, heavy machinery -
weoagbt to get a quidproquorrom the Soviets!'
-,.~ ...........
DEBATE PANELISTS -Clockwise: Pauline
Frederick, UN correspondent, moderator;
Max Frankel, N.Y. Times editor; Henry
Trewhitt, Baltimore Sun: and Richard
Valeriani, NBC News ......
members. The first one I would nre would be
Agricaltatt Secret.,,. Earl Botz and not far behind
would be Secretary ol State'lienry Kisslnger." He
bas said be would not avo•d a strong secretary of
state, bot adds: "I would be the spe>kesm an for this
COQJltry. '.
Ford, asked if he would request that Kissinger
stay on, said: "Ir you have a ballplayer on your
team who bas a good batting average, you don't put
him on the sidelines."
Pa•wC'a.al
Ford supports continuing negotiations with
Panama, adding: "We are talking about a treaty
with an extended duration. . . We are going to in·
sist, during the period or that treaty, that we have
the right to operate, to maintain and defend it."
After the treaty expired, "there would have to be an
absolute insistence that there would be the right or
free access by all parties to the utilization of the
canal."
wtllial to reaecoUate tbe pa7meat terms OD tbe
Caaal" aad .. would be glad to yield part ol the sov·
erelpty over tbe Paaama Canal Zoae to Panama."
lfflMle E .. i
Ford bas sought to promote negotiations among
all parties ln the Middle East. providing military
and economic aid to Israel and to moderate and
conservative Arab states. "We will try to keep tbe momentum going in the Middle East,'' he says. His
most recent budget called for a $500 million cut in
mWtary aid to lsraellnfiscal 1977.
Carter H)'S, uwe must strive c.o maintain good
relations wlt.b tbe Arab eoantrles u well as Israel."
He woald aot support aeedlng U.S. troops to the
Mldclle East bat .-Id let lt be k.Do•n "that our
backlag for larael in economic and mllltary aid is
ablolwte.''
SA£T TaUa
Ford bas said, "I believe that in our attempt to
ease tensions between the Soviet Union and the
United States. we have achieved a two-way street."
He signed a treaty provt<ijng limits on underground
nuclear explosions and for reciprocal inspection by
Soviet and American scientists of each nation's
testing sites. Ford says the administration is ·'keep-
ing the pressure on in the negotiations with the Sov-
iets" id an effort to reach a new agreement on
strategic arms limitations to replace the pact expir·
ing next October.
Caner says the United States "should have
been mucb more aggressive when we attended the
Heblnkl conference" which led C.O the existlng
SALT accords. He says agreements C.O date "have
succeeded largely iD changing the baHdup in
strategic arms from a 'quantitative• to a
'qualitative ' arms race."
Troep Stretagtlt
Ford bas said that the United States "is the
single most powerful nation on earth -indeed in all
history -and we're going to keep it that way." He
also bas said, "We cannot lay down our arms in the
simple hope that ottters will follow our lead.
Carter says: "We still have too many military
bases and troops overseas ••. " He ba.s urged re-
daction of U.S. troops in Thailand and the Philip·
pines and a phase oat U.S. withdrawal from South
Korea.
At one polDt Carter urged
a gradul red11edcm ol
troop commitments to
NATO territory In
Euope. Be Hid more re-
cently, however: "I
woald IDtad to mabdaln
oar present level of troop
deployment in EaropefoT
the foreseeable fature."
He said that in tbe event
ol an agreement wfthtbe
Soviet Union to reduce at·
c.-........ ...,. ... s~1
645·1,09
~RMIGHI?
Learn What Makes
The Lindoro Method
So Effective
A complete p<09rom to Instruct patients
how to lose weight easlly. then how to
montoin their lean weight.
Daily therapy, with audio and sub-llminol
visual aids to promote motivation and
encouragement.
H.C.G .• a fat mobllizlng substance. makes
tt eoslef for patients to lose weight without
fatigue or excessive hl.nger.
lindora's very special diet. designed fcx
rqXI welij;j)t bis <rd~ eatrg td:>lts.
Behavior modification tec::tY\lques to lean
weight control.
lindora·s easy-to-follow maintenance
program to prevent rega1t"ilng.
The entire program is under the strict
supeNision of medlcd doctcxs. specialists
in baiotric medtone.
co111011ntorrnohon
Moodoy lhl\I fl1doy
9A.M T01PM -2PM T06PM
NEWPORT BEACH
640·6831
Fah::n ITT-d
COSTA MESA
557-1893
M..\• IVv•<lt'
I 'lnlt:~S•.)IXJI fj!OJ
San Bernardino • E Long Beoch • M1ss1on Hills
Haw1home • Orange • Newport Beach
Gorden Grove • Long Beoch • Pasadena
la Habra • Woodland Hills • Sherman Ooks
West Covino • Fullerton • ~1vers1de • Santo Monica
Costa Mesa • Pomo na • Cemtos • Hollywood
1t~~QK
Lndofo Medlcol Onic:s ore owned
onCl odml'llstllfed bV Medtcol Doctor'
mot r~tnct ltl8ll orochee to BonolnC$
All Cine P9l$0nl'l8l Ooctoo ond Nuse5
Clf& ttceosed bv !tie Sto1e ot COifomo
Kiablger
Carter aald early in bis campaign for the
llOIBiutioo, ••1 don't i*tld to retain U1.J Cablnd
.'B Girl'
Rule Hit
In Court
Carter bas said: "I woald not be in favor or re·
linqalslliag actual coatrol ol the Panama Canal or
Ma ue C.O any ot.ber aaUon. •• I would certainl)' be
mole weapons, "I would
even be willing to in·
crease poand forces or
conventional forces U
t.bat was what It took c.o
ghe us equivalent
ll&reagtb." l\~lN'l1 l~I)
WASHINGTON (AP)
-The U.S. Supreme
Court has declined to
bear arguments that an
ordinance prohibiting "B
girls'' from soliciting
drinks in bars is un-
constitutional sex dis·
crtmination.
The court refused
Monday to review a ruJ ·
ing of the Louisiana
Supreme Court uphold·
ing a "B girl" ban in
Bossier City, La., site or
Barksdale Air Force
Base.
THE ORDINANCE
was challenged by John
G . DeFrancis Jr.,
operator or the Black
Knight Lounge in
Bossier City, who bad his
license suspended for :.>
days for violating the or·
dinance.
"The ordinance clear·
ly discriminates against
females,·' De Francis
told the court. "There
seems to be the lmplica·
lion from the tenor of the
ordJnance that there is
something more lewd
about a female asking for
a drink than a male ask·
ing someone for a drink.
"THE J UDICIARY of our great nation should
not be so removed from
human nature but to re-
alize that males who fre-
quent such premises do
not only drink but ertjoy
soclaJ conversation and
companions h ip of
f emales ... Whal
mature male needs
legislative protection
from lhe so·called
· weakersex'?"
Pl.UNI ...
HIATI..-
All COMD. •n..-.. ,__,
......,. I" YOV< 11--<:M
"'ssooN VIEJO fet2' C.m1no C.11t•lrano ~0..)"l,.. .... ,. A .... "'..,.
495-0401
COSl11"4Hi\ l~N-llvd
442-1711
ICITCH9' & IATH
IEMODIUMG
F«EI ISTIMA TIS ... o ... Dloltl•~ ..
llNAl1(1M•MlllN or~IQI
lto»l/f l-
...... b (rt •t \> L• 77Z·J470 ., ••\~
\~61ii Ht;~~~~~
d~~~~~-
May we suggest
Repu~lic Federal Savings?
Declare your independence
from lower interest rates and
the tyranny of expensive services.
Transfer your allegiance (and
your account) to Republic
Federal, where you'll receive the
high interest legally available
on a wide variety of insured
accounts. Your interest will be
paid from day-in to day-out,
compounded daily. With interest
paid from the first of the month
SICIOO "''°""""" t>ela-•I 1'9•• "'lfll"'V"' r-"' r99"4a1-. pa.,,,...,,...,, .. ,.,,..,...
C~r1ff'l(.ll~ ecc.ountt fM'°'e Mttuf1ty but.,,.,. ... -....... ,_,_ ............... _.
~
111111 I •
on savings received by the tenth,
when held to quarter's end.
You'll also secure the blessings
of more than 20 free services,
including travelers checks, safe
deposit boxes,• note collections •
and checking accounts.••
At Republic, we do highly
resolve that every American is
entitled to life, liberty and the
pul'$uit of financial security.
REPUBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS
er# '°"" ._,.,...
FOUf 1oe11t1o1ie 111 or-.. C.-tr
SANTA ANA 17th St. Weal of Newport Freeway (714) 541·5286
ANAHEIM 202 Arleheim Plaza, 600 N. Euclid St. ( 714) 956-8290
LAGUNA NIGUEL 30232 Crown Valley Parkway (714) 496-0850
WESTMINST!A 134 Westminster ~all/ Bolaa & San Diego Fwy. (7\ 4) 894-5347
•,
USED
I GENERAL ELECTRIC
'BUILT-IN UNDERCOUNTER
DISHWASHERS
~~
lll~,,~l·lll)
$50 REBATE~tus
$35.INSTALLATION
ALLOWANCE DIRECT from
GENERAL ELECTRIC Co.
for replacing your old GE Built-In
0 ishwasher with a new
POTSCRUBBERLll
U!=.~~~DISHWASH·ER
''t' //11· I , '• . I I '
' • I f .J .
!,), ' ' ,,
I ...
'· _ _. ______
------~ ......
' ~
t
• t
f
• ~ fJp, llp and Away
: Climb a wall'! Easy as pie for Connie Mead
: of Riverside, one of 160 who tried to pass
: the Riverside Police Department's agility
: test for new recruits. She made it within
: the30-second time limit. .
Got a problem·' 'fl1C'TI '"rzte to Pat Dunn . Pat will
cut red tape. geltmg t.'.e answers and action you
need to solve inequities m government and busi·
ness Mail your questWris to Pat Dunn Al Your
Service. Orange Coast Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560.
Costa Mesa. CA 92626. I nclude your telephone
number. T he column appears dait.y except
Saturdays.
A Re-1'oltlng D~~t?
DEAR PAT: I purchased a riding lawn mower
from JCPenney ln May 1975. The mower came
• equipped with a battery ch:lfger . This April we
began using the mower and noticed that the battery
was getting weaker. We tried to charge the battery
, with the charger that came with the mower. It ~ didn't work, but my neighbor's battery charger
• worked just fine. The charger baa been checked by l PeMey's, and we were promised that something
l would be done to correct the problem. So far, it l hasn't. l W .S., Huntington Beach
• J CPeaney now bH provided" yoa wltb a
·,.replacement for tbe tl"OQblelome cll&rger. It dld no&
work properly because It was a slx-~oll ralber than
a l2·volt cbarger -the she your mower ftQalres. •
8ol11tfo11NotSo81teelcb'9
. DEAR PAT: I bought a pair of Hurst super air
shocks for $49.95 last Oetober. J was told.they bad a
lifetime warranty. 'Ibe sbock.'I became defective
last April, s o I returned them to \be store for
replacement. The store was supposed to send the
shocks to the Hurst Co. I am still waiting for tbe
• replacement. .
A.A., Fountain Valley
Fran Rementer, general sales muaier fer Ba.rst Performance IAe. In Warm.laster, Pa., re-
pons the air abocks are iuaraateed for oae 1ear.
Sbtce yoar claim fell witldn that period, Reaeater ~ la send.lag a aew pair of allocka to,.. at no e•aJ'le.
MaH Sft"mce Slaelu 0111
DEAR PAT: I sent a ~.45 check to Custom Flt
Patterns, Inc .• New York City, for a slacks pattern
on July 24. After waiting six weeks, I inquired about
my pattern and was told that it bad been malled to
me Aug. 9. U it was, I never received it. Was I taken
· by a mail order company?
. . . •
' . . . . . • ' .. . • . . .. . .. • ..
.. • .. . . . ..
I
p
• .. .. .. .. . . .. ,. •
• • r • .. ' ~
i • ' t
i ~ t
LE.H., Newport Beach
No, lt appears tit.at tlda I.I uo&her of <e la·
ereaslllg namber of •'lost mall" sttaatlob eaeoaa·
&ered by A YS. Caatom Ill Pattel'Ds wtU CGlltact yw
personally, and mall uother paUena to you. TMs
ftnn Is as UJllous to seUle &his problem as yo11 are •
(PAID AOVERTISEMENTI
NATIONAU..YKNOWN
SPEED READING COURSE
TO BE TAUGHT IN
IRVINE
Irvine (SPEC.> -Golden State Read.in& Lab wUl
clfer a 4 week coune ill speed reading to a limited
number or qualified people ln lhelrvkle area.
Thi.a recenUy developed method ol lnstrucUon costs
less than ~ the tuition cl similar courses and l.s the
most innovative and effective procram available ln the
United States .
Not onlf does thls famous COW'H reduce your Ume ln
the classroom to just doe class per week for 4 short
weeks but it also Includes an advanced sP"Cf readini
coune on cassette tape IO that you can continue to
improve for the rest of your life.
U you are a student wbo WOUid like to •e A'1
instead ol B's or C'1 or lf)'IN are• bulineea penon who w.au to stay ~breast of today's .. ercban1lllC
accelerat:lq world then tb1s coune Ls ab abeolute neceulty.
In a few monlba eoma allldeDLI are read.Ina 2040
times faster aUalnlnl apeeda th.& aJllP'C)llCh 9000 ,_..
per minute. I
Our avera_ge graduate lhoul4.t'eald 7-10 tlmei fut.er
upon completion of the eoune wma marked
lmproyemeot In comprebmlion and conceatratiot\.
For those wbo would like addlUon'1 llatormatloo, a -* "'lree1 oee bour, «iealmdan lec!t-bne be.a ICbedUled.
These special rree one-hoot lectures wm be beld •t
\be f0Uowia1 limes: Tuel., It Wed,. Oct. 5, 6 at e:ao ... II. •t:JO P.11.
1be abcwe meetbap wUJ be blld at Intne Hoit llator
Hotel, tn7 East Dyer Rd., IrvlM (Dyer Rd. Ult off
Newport Fteew ay -2 exits East ol San Dleao f'rwy. ) .
End to Checks the Goal
Millioru Use Electronic 'Check' Deposit
I By Tiie Auoclated Pren
Arms Banned
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-A measure problbitine
strikers from cal'J')'ina
loaded guns on plcket
lines, prompted by last
year's Sao Francisco
' (
Tbe 1ovemment 's P.l"OIP'am to
depoelt Social Secunty benefits
electronically ln the bank I C·
counts of recipienta is growin1
steadily, but not everyone is bap-
PJ with \be system.
(coNSVMERJ the bank acceunt location and police strike. was signed
will send the "stuffers " by Gov. Edmund Brown IMll '
separately. Jr . .Assemblyman Alan I
He a aid the complaint.a about Sieroty (D-Loa An1eles> In the~ ~r I)
receipta probably were the result i s s p 0 n so r o t t be --ii -
'Ibe electronic depo1ita, which be&an this yeu, are the aecood
ltep in a plan to eliminate cbec!k
~menta to indi vlduals, cutting
paperwork for the government
and reducing the risk of theft.
Plumly said the system bu
several advantages. 1bere ls no
risk of loss or delay in the mail.
The deposit is ln the recipient'•
account on the day the payment
is supposed to be made. Reel·
pient.s don't bave to worry about
casbin1 a benefit check or gel-ling to the bank.
of cuato~er'• mlsunderltandina meaaure.
bank pollciea. ~~::::..:....-----:::--.-:---:--=:-----
"I don't know of a financlal or--ooes Your Pet Meed th-.,
gllDilauca in the country that r Annual V-cination. ? stopped sending receipts without -
notlllcatlon," he said.
IN MANY CASES. BE aald. the
banks slmply told account
holders they would be notified on·
ly it there was a chance in tbe
status of thelr Social Security
payments. In the absence of
notification. Plumly said, the
banks told customers, "We'll
guarantee your payment."
&Aw c.tYecclllM-flf •.,,_....,.., .....
CATS ...,....,, .. ,r ......... SI ........... ··········'' ,.."' ......... .16 ...... ?: ., ..... .... ...................
D06S
c:.llle DHl ...........• u ~ ................ 11 e.a. .... ,.. JI " I II •• .Sii
IN THE FIRST step , t he
Tteaauey Department offered re-
cipients the option of havlng
checks malled directly to th9ir
bank.a for deposit. Les Plumly. a
Treasury Department official,
said 4.6 million persons -about
U percent of all Social Security
recipient.a -signed for the direct
mail program.
TIIERE ALSO AllE several
drawbacks, however. Tbe whole
concept of electronic banking hu
caused concern about computer
crime and the individual's right
to priv acy . And cons umers
without bank accounts can't use
the system. Asked whether there was any
evidence that the new system
bad cut \heft, Phaml,y replied:
Meofflcectl ~ 111ce .......... ...
Now. the government is doing
away with the checks complete-
ly . Instead, the mone y is
automatically transferred from
tbe government's bank to the in·
dividual via an electronic
system that debits one account
and credlta the other.
PLUMLY SAID ABOUT three
million Social Security deposits
will be handled electronically
this month. The other 1.6 million
recipients who signed up for the
direct-deposit program will be
converted to an electronic
system by the end of the year and
the government hopes that b.Y
1980, about 40 percent of all
federal payments will be made
electronically.
Tbe House Banking Committee
said this summer that it receJved
800 letters from people with com-
plaints about the direct deposit
Social Security s ystem. The let·
ter writers said they often could
not be sure the deposit bad ar-
rived because they got no written
receipt. They also said that in
cases where checks were Rent
directly to banks, the financial
institutions we re not forwarding
the general Social Security in-
formation routinely mailed with
\be benefits.
PLUMLY SA.ID THE informa-
tion problem is being solved. He
said that under the electronic de-
posit system , the Social Security
Administration has the home ad·
dress of the recipient as well as
"We don't have any statistics,
but it would pretty well have to.•·
PATRICIA. PERSSON, pro-
1 ram coordinator of the
Bethlehem. P a .• South Side
Senior Citb:ens Center. said sbe
bas not bad to fill out any claim
forms for lost or stolen checks
since the direct deposit program
went lnto effect last fall.
"It's the best thlng that ever
came down the pike," sbe said.
in the DAILY PILOT
... .... e4 .. ,... ..... Ill .... ,..
ANIMAL VACCINATION
<BfTRE
Various locations
throughout Org. Cty.
Phone for
Appc)intment
497-3882 ..
It,s the Wells Fargo Reward and a hundred thousand Californians have already
claimed it. That's the biggest response to any reward offer in Wells Fargo history.
It's a reward for people who are serious about saving. Just keep a $2,000 balance
in a Wells Fargo Passbook Savings Account and you,11 get:
D a checking account -no monthly service charge or minimum balance required;
D unlimited personalized checks;
D a safe deposit box -$6 size (availability may vary from office to office);
D plus 5% interest on your savings, compounded daily.
So, if you have $2,000 or more in savings somewhere else, be advised -you're
wanted now at Wells Fargo Bank. We'll even make transferring your account easy
by handling all the detail s for you.
GORE\Vm
MIMllJ' r D I C
t .
'
.~
:
....
Costa Mesa Office: 450 East 17 St .. 92627; Fountain Valley Office: 16025 Brookhurst St., 92708: Newport Beach Office: 660 Newport Center Or .. 92660
I
~ t
t
Bo Do Bo l~ot Good ·Eno•gh
f •
DALLAS . (AP) -Men with the ri.ht ""*8. ~ ri&ht size, a happy face and
, .,. ,that 1miJe might get into Cathy
Oobb a Santa Claus training school, but ~·to t~Wrda of them will drop out Wort evnlnc their whiskers.
c.tlay ia "Santa coordinator" for an ....,_eat agency that places Santas k.t cleput~ent stores from Thankagtving ~b Cbrtltmas Eve. She says the job . tan 'tall cookie. and milk.
DB.\N REYNOLDS, A FOUR-year ~an of aucb work, agrees. He says
eb1ldren punch Santa in the stomach and
leave candy canes stuck in bis beard. 1 ''Then there's the lady with the ill·
tempered mutt abe wants to lit on your
lap, and he's about re-«Y to tear your
throat out ...
'lbe traillin1 school bectna Nov. 1 with
classroom instructions on what to say to
the tots who come by to place their toy
Old~ For ex.ample: what do you say to
a child wbo tella you be just saw you at
another store? Anlwer: "I saw you, too,
and I really bad to hurry to beat you
here."
THE SANTAS GENEMLLY earn $3
an hour and work an eight-hour day,
Miss Cobb says. The average depart·
ment store contract ts $1,000 per Santa'
from Thanksgiving through Cbrlatmu
Eve.
Reynolds says tbe Sant.a duty is a real
esc>bullder.
"I like being the center of attention. It
pvea me the opportunity to be the happy
penon I'd like to be, with no risk in doina
il"
He says Santas can do Just about
anything .
"YOU CAN PLl"1' wrl'll the girls,
talk to etrangen. Too many times today
you can't even speak to a stranger on the
street without getting funny looks.••
Requests for tbinp WM brothers, pup-
pies, and ponies require some finesse,
Reynolds says, with Santa usually say· Ina he'll "aee what be can do."
Gag Order Abused
Younger Contends
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Stat~ At-
ty. Gen. Evelle Younger says he
believes California judges have over-
used gag orders prohibiting trial
, participants from discussing details
with the news med.la.
Younger, who defied a judge's gag
order wblle he was Los Angeles dis-
. trict attorney, said most gag orders
"are normally unjustified and not in
the public interest.
"THE PROBLEM IS 111AT they're
like eating peanuts -the more you
use them, the more you want to," be
said in an interview in the San Fran-
-T . ~~ Al'Wlrepllelo
Top Oceanside
CATHY COBB CHECKS ON SCHOOL STU~NT Official 41Needs'
College Cranks Out More than Ho Ho Ho s .
o?o\~" PR Assistant
OCEANSIDE CAP) -Paul G.
Graham bad one when be was the
Marine Corps commanding general at
nearby Camp Pendleton. Now, as
mayor of Oceanside, be wants one
again.
IH IY 3 P .M. OUT IY I A.M.
A public relations man.
No vote bas been taken, but
Graham and other City Council mem-
bers say they agree on the need for
such a person.
THE COPY STOP
His salary would probably be $18,000
annually, Councilman Melvin J .
Smith said, adding, "I don't have time
to put out press releases.''
The only other city in San Diego
County with a public relations man is
San Diego. Mayor Pete Wilson's press
aide is Larry Thomas, a former wire
service reporter.
I
4301 •d: Wt.5 He.,_.._. Cir....,_.,
751-1050
''Pssstl
OCTDjust
doubled
bus service.
Pass it on.''
Sometimes good news comes unexpectedly. Everyone is
talking about Orange County Transit District's new improved
service. We've nearly doubled bus service county-wide.
We've added more buses to almost every route and
streamlined the whole system. Many areas now have 15, 20, or
30 minute service. It's the biggest improvement we've ever
made. No wonder everyone's talking about it.
Call OCTD Information for the whole story. Then pass it on
to your friends and watch the good news travel. And remember.
nobody ever got a ticket on the bus.54'1~3u· Call 547--3311 , Or toll-free •
ZENITH 7~11, 6AM to 10PM
weekdays, or 8AM to SPMweekends.
Good news travels~
ctsco Examiner.
YoungeP--said bis office was study·
ing new shield laws to grant reporters
broader immunity from revealing
sourees.
He also challenged the assumption
that gag orders protect. the rights of
the defendant by shielding juries from
prejud.tcial pretrial publicity.
"I DON'T THINK THAT'S ever
been proven and I don't t.bi.nk it's
valid," be said.
The attorney general called gag or·
ders "the first step in the desire to
surround court proceedings in
secrecy.
"The problem or reporters' protect·
ing sources is just another outgrowth
of this," be said.
But be added, "History shows that
while that may be the way it starts
out, ultimately public officials.
whether they be judges or anybody
else, use secrecy to protect
them.selves."
Clwrch Names
Newest Saint
VATICAN CITY (AP) -Pope Paul
VI bas canonized Sister Beatrice da
Silva, founder of the Order of Fran·
ciscaa Conceptionists.
The Pope said in the ceremony that
the 15th century saint is an example
today to a world which bas lost sight
ofsome basic values.
The new saint of the Roman
Catbolic Church was born about 1425 in Morocco to Portuguese parents, but
did most of her work in Spain, wbtre she died.
Call 642•5678.
Put a fell' words
to work for ou.
Tueeday. Octot>er 5, 1078 DAILY PILOT .41 __ ...__....., ................. ~..;.,,;..----_____ ....._ ____ _
As a Los Angeles Federal Saver you'll receive higher
interest than paid by any commercial bank, plus
interest day in to day out plus security of your ~avings
insured by a Federal Agency plus all the spec~al tax-
saving programs plus extra hours and convenient
parking.
Plus, with a minimum deposit you'll receive a tree safe
deposit box plus a free checking account at a com-
mercial bank plus income tax service plus document
duplication plus travelers' checks. It takes only one
minute and one signature to start your savings ac-
count. It all adds up fo~ Los Angeles Federal Savers.
All Interest Compounded Daily
Annual Yield Annual Rate
8.06% $1000 for 6 to 10 years
6 .72% $1000 for 1 to 2 years 6Y2%
5.39% Paid day-in to day-out
roc10101 oegulaHOflS perm11 early withdrawal trom t111m acco;'"ta 11U1>1«1 10 au1>Man1111 "''""
ost feductoon.
Newport Beach
3201 Newport Blvd. -across from City Hall• 675-4500
OPEN t-5 MON.· THURS.• M FRL
Head Office : Los Angeles Federal Savings and l oan Association
One Wllshirft, Los Angeles 90017 • Other ofhces lhroughoul lhe area
Every day, thoo.sands of thrtftV
So4-the~ CallfomJans areJoetq
interest-hard-eamed dollars .
that are rightfully theirs,
It happens with every depoaJt ID
a benk ~vtngs account where
savings earn Iese tntereet thaD
~by Mutual Savina&
At Mutual Savtnp ~
dollara-earn high inter88t WttJi
safety IDsurad by an apnay
of the Federal Govemment.
Your mtarest Is oomputed from -.
the.day bf Clipoa1t to wtth-
drawlil. No bl Of Interest there.
And uDllk8 maDY major banb, . '
Mutual Savlnp 00. not
charae you to wJtbdraw yow' 0wnmOQBy. ..
\ Don~ you loeetntereet In
Southem CalifcJnda. P.arn
.t1-moet from what you have-
wtth ~at Mutual Sa~.
. . • .
..
,,, '
. ~~; o-..,,..._.. ............. .,.., ,., • ...,....,.....,........... IO·S
. . .:
Airings on 15 Ballot
Propositions Scheduled
By O.C. HUSTINGS Ol .. 0.11, Pile« M.lff
The Orange Coast
Leaaue of Women Voten
will provide the public
opportunities to bear the
pros and cons or the 15
propositions on the Nov.
2 ballot.
ORANGE COUNTY
. . '
Mobile Blood
Unit Urweiled
are extended to a p.m.
Appolntmenta ma.y be
made ln advance for
bloodmobiles open to tbe
public and the bead·
quarters f acUity by nll-
i n g the Red Croaa
chapter at 835-5381.
.............. .................
•tit • WAU.PAPStS
Three evening and
four daytime meet.J.nia will be held Oct. 11-14. At
all of the meetings each
proposition will be ex·
plained, and the main
"lsthistherirsttimewe'vebeenatyourlhroat'?" arguments fo r and -------------------against will be present-
• DltAPERIES
•l!VOlOIS
CAL•M•
OR. JOHN l . C •l ene .
ru ldent of Fo11nUl n V•ll•Y.
Ce . P•11ed •••Y O<t '·
1't76. 5'w'llwd by wife ~ol"'1 Cll«W: ,_ sons, Or. J•mo C•l•n• of
Skr.,..nto; JoM l Cll-. Jr. Of
-York; •-e1e119t1ters ; P8trlel• J. Wllltlns Of WM111"91on; Ooron>y-.
,,_o1-t•ln V•lleY. Ser<lcen~•d·
NSCl8Y II l :OO PM•tTlw OlwcllOIOur
F8t'-". ForHt LA-. CyprHS, C... Of·
flc:l•nl Rev. 8r11ce K11rrl•. Bell
Br-•Y Mot111.,.y dlrecton..
SH•A
~ O.vls Co• of LoYlsvll'*. ~
lucky; Ml Rl<"8rd O.vls Co•Of ""'1<
RIOQe, llllr1oh. Mr Jatnft On •s Qnrol
-·-Hiiis, c. .. and M rs. Oor'Olhv Devis lYll• Of Gollt•. C•. Five "'endctll,_en SN '#H •past r'9Qllll'll of The Wllllem CIOell Qwipter Of Ille OAR ~ • P8St otflc.r of Tiie 0.ugl'llen of
1112. Mtmtaer o4 Tlw T~y MDmlno
Club 1nd T11slln Wom•n's CIYD.
S.rvlees ~Y Oct. 6, 1916 •I
11.00 AM. Smith TYllllll Ulmb a-f.
5entAI """· ea. Fri.nds wt>o -nwv <Ontr11>Yte to Tiie OAR or Ille <Mrity Of
thelrdlOl<e Smllll Tutlllll !Amil-·
'°'' HOfOAARD
REEFORO P. SH EA SR .. ~ Of
J01 Miiford 0r1 ... Coton• del Mer, C... P8...:I ewey Oct. 3, 1'76 Slirvl...ci bY
wife lo<llM Ell••belll SllH Of C.0.-
Cltl Mir, c.. Two $0<01; Rte1onl Siie•,
Jr .. Of C.rmel Vellty: Dick Siie• Of
O..Wtlte, c.e. Aho. motller Prl:w:lll•
M8M of ~ Hiiis. Cl , '-\It-
ten; Al\8 W•IP ol Miii Velley; ~ f'llttlcl• M8ttlnoty o1 i...oUN Hills; def M¥. Cl . 0"4I brottwr, RIC!la<'d
five or•ndclllldrtn. StrvlCH •r• Ho199 ... d0f No,...ay Memorlelwrvlee
prlv•I•. B•llr·B•roeron Funerel Oct '· 1'7' w.dnHCt•v et 12 -et Hom9 C'Mon•delM8rdlre<I""-Peclllc View Memorlel P•rk o..p.I.
ROY F. HOIGAARD. resldenl Of 012 SH BrlQllt Pia<•. Carlsll8d, ea ..
lomterly of Newp0t1 &eac:ll, Cl. Pissed
ewey Oct 3. 1976. S11rvlved Dy Ills wHe
Betty liOIQUrd ol carisoad. one deugllltr Anneke Hol~ard Of Coron8
• Interment Peclllc Voew C.met.,y. COX BeltJ·Bergeron Corone del Mer dlrK·
DOROTHY l COX. roldent of Ion Ne-' Beech, c. P•ssed awey Ott
4. 191'-Stw Is ..,,.,,1 .. d DY -nv.oend. l!OQer M Co•. lour <lllldren. Or
BALTZ-BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona del Mar 673-9450
Costa Mesa 646-2424
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-91 50
McCORMICK
MORTUARY Laguna Beach
494-9415
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pac1l1c View Onve
Newpart,
C3lilorn1a
644-2700
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893-3525
SMITHS' MORTUA"Y
827 Main St,
Huntington Beach
53~539
.... TH TUTHILL LA•
OUR
WESTCLIFF CHAPEL
Mortuary • • 646-4888
427 E. 17th St..
Costa Mesa
CA•l"•NTl!R
IO\ARll YN E. CARPENTER, ml·
dlftt of N-11 lke<ll. Ce. PaS'8d
8W•y Oct 3, 1976 S<irvlved bY-
MtMn 0 Cerll'!nler; Ulnl B<lrlr Of El
Toro· son o<enny C••ll'!nter Of BIO
Be••. brotller lester Smolll ol UI
Mlr.Oe; thl~. RJlllS Pl<DY Of s.nta
AN. tour Qrandelllldttft. J-. Jet·
fery; Debbie ; •nd Jolln. Prlv.te orneskle ..rv1ceswt11 belwld~
dey 11 00 AM Oct. 6. 1976 8t O.ClllC
VI-Memorlal Perk. PM:lfk V...,
MOrt ..... y dl...ct~:
•DWA•DS
ALFRED H. EDWARDS, MO. fftl·
dtnt Of An811elm. ea. Puw.1-Y Oct.
2, 1916 S11rvl,,.d by wife ""8riem
Edw•rd\, d•u911ters. Cllrltllne E.,_rm ; and Kar9R Edwerds; !Ion,
!>l•Dllen Edw•rds: brother Brun Edw•rds; s l1ter. Yvonne Arden,
letlltr, Br1Ke B. Edwerds So!rvi<~
w111 ~ lltld wednesdo 2 oo PM "' f'll<lllc Vltw Cll•pel. lnltrnwnl Pecllic Vlaw Mtmorl•I Park. Pacific Vlew
Mo<tlWY dlrKtors.
PUBLIC NO'l1CE
SUl"IUtlOR COURT OF THI! STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR THI! COUNTY 01' O•AHGE
Ne.A .....
NOTICI! OF HEARING OF
NTITIOM FO• l"ltOaATE Ott W'tU.
AND FO• LETT••S TESTAMEN-
TARY laoNDWAIVl!D)
E"ate ol CATHERINE S. ZA>IOltA.
OKHMd
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN !Mt
OOMINIOUE SORCABAl, .,._
ly "'9lled "Oomlllk " In IM w111. lies
flied lltntln 8 llO'lllOOll fM Pr-ol
Wiii and for luuen<e of utters
Testa..-t•rY to t,,. oet•I'-tl>ond
-•vedl f9flrence towlllcll lsmedefor
fut1'-" pM11<Yl8". ~ 111.t Ille time w pl«• Of llffrlnQ IM Mme tin bMfl ... lw OctMer It, 1'7•, M 10:411 ... m •• In
l"9 C-1-ef 0."9~ No. I f/f
Miii c-1, •I fGll CIVIC C.l!Wr 0rt¥e Wnt. llt the Cit'!' of Sent• AM,
Glllfontll .
O.tws.tttmblrH.1'16
WILUA .. J .StJOHM
Co<HllY Clerk .... ttM.<N••
AttlrM'!'etuw I 1MIWlllC:..~l"•"w•y
West Cl'llM. CA t11'1
T .. : ltllltu-mf
........., ... 1 ..........
li'ubllllled 0r8'199 CHst Delly Pltot,
10tt1111r•. '· 11. 1'76 4151-76
ed. The public is en-
couraged to attend any ol
the meetings.
For information cootact
Mary Lou Sortais, RobeASrtS!,•8BdLYllAN 552-5686. .r.. a ham <R·
ID Lagoa Bills the In Lagoa Beach the Newport Beach> bas re-
meeting will be Oct. 11 at meeting is scheduled for ceived the endorsement
9:30 a.m. at Laguna Oct. 14, at 9:15 a.m. in of the Na lion al
FederalSavings. tbe bom e of Bobbi Conservative Political
ID the Saddleback Minkin, 490 Myrtle. A~ion Co~mittee in his . Babys itting will be bid lo win the 40th ~~~ ~~lebedOc~.lkma~ available by calling Pat Con~ressional District
9·30 in lb h of Cooperat49'..Q20. seatmNovember. . a.m. e ome • • • Vicky Birdsall, 25842 Members or the Jamon Lane, Mission League of Women Voters IO?fH D. WYATI' IR.,
Viejo (586-4253). are available to speak to candidate for judge of
An evening meeting in
the Saddleback Valley
area wlll be held to pro-
vide an opportunity for
persons who work and
parents with young
children to attend. ll will
be held Oct. 13 at 7:30
p.m. in the home or June
community groups 00 the ~est Orange County
the pros and cons of the Municipal Court on Nov. ballot propositions. Re-2, bas been installed as
quests can be made to Pres I d e n t o f th_ e
tbeLeagueat645-7m. ~~b~minsler Kiwanis
The League of Women Wyatt has served as
Voters is a non-partisan municipal court com-
organizalion open lo all missioner and judge pro
citizens of voting age. Its temporare since 1973.
• WOVEN WOODS • C'.ARPETllG
l!!!!!!!!!!I 300/o··
liiil OFF!
ll00.._4-.t.-.• c .... .... c.r ........ .....
llMI ..... ...
CALL 557·1151
SKI & SPOITS Wiii(, OCT. 1-13
e HEAD FASHION SHOW e K·2 RACING TEAM eSKI RAMP SPECTACUlAA e GYMNASTICS e AFTER SKI FASHtOHS e EQUIPMENT e PAIZEI
5outh Coast ?lua
Maguire, 24772 San Vin--------------------
cente, Mission Viejo ·~;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil (581-4392). ti
The Newport Beach
evening unit will meet
Oct. 12 al 7:30 p.m. in the
home of Diane Walker,
1132 White Salls Way,
Corona d el Mar (644-2192). The Newport
Beach daytime meeting
will begin at 12:15 p.m.
Oct. 13, in the home of
Phyllis Anderson. 110
Via Dijon (673-3073).
In Irvine the meeting
will lake place Oct. 13, al
7:30 p.m. al the Venado
Middl e Sc ho o l , 4
Deerfield Lane. The
meeting will be televised
for later viewing on ca-
ble television in Irvine.
Auto Talk Set
For UC Irvine
Automobile safety, fuel
economy and reduction
of air pollution will be
the focus or a talk Wed-
nesday on "The Future
of the Automobile in
1990" by Ham ii ton
Herman, a1ai1tant
secretary of the U.S.
Departm e nt o f
Tranaportation.
The talk, open to the
public without charge,
will be held at 2: JO p. m. in
Room 220 or Social
Science Tower at UC
Irvine.
IRVINE SAVINGS
ANNOUNCES THE GUARANTEED
;(fldZl/M
1DOUBLE
YOUR
MONEY
ACCOUNT
Tueldays at 7:30 p.m.
Do It
I
Ghe u tb1t much no• ... We'Dglve tbJs much bKk to90u la 10,......
FSIJC Deposit $ 1,000 (for 10 years) get back S 2,170.95 ~·
Deposit$ 5,000 (for lOyears) get back $10,854.75 : :
Deposit $40,000(for10 years) get back $86,837 .96 ~ ... ,. s~.,,\•
No matter how much you deposit ($1,000 minimum) we11 give you back 1173 more than you give us•
_....., ........ -
AND WE GUARANTEE THAT I
• •
All this happens when you open one of our 7.75". minimum
Term Certificates, for 10 years. Leave the Interest In and
you11 get an effective annual yield of 8.06",
and with any Irvine Savings account (see chart below), you'll
earn nen more money, because we'll give you:
FREE-chtcklng account at a local bank-this will let you
keep more In savings, less In checking, 10 you can
earn even more interest than before
FREE-instant telephone transfer of funds to your checking
account. This will let you keep your money In your
savfngs account longer so you can earn more ln-
krest
FREE-Irvine Savings "Prestige" card lets you withdraw
from your account at over 3300 savings branches
nationwide. This lets you leaw more money In your
savings when you travel. Withdnw onty when you
need tt, Instead of before you leave hoJM. Earn mOfe
Interest this way.
.. -. .. ....-ctla1ttlCAftlel' CIOolot •
llUCff .. 114•-_... ·---·-... -_,.., .... , ACCO!af. A«:°""''. "'''°"""'.°' Ow ... llooo.t J-...t .... ,, ..... " ........ . ... , ...... "--·-, ........ . .......... ......
--""'"· 5.2~ 5.75" 6.50,,. 6.75,, 1.so,, --
-·•~o-. i __ ...
5.39,,. 5.92,,. 6.12,. 6.98" 7.79" ---.. o.. ...
-
'Fedfrll
Pl.US
FREE-Safe Deposit Box-MVa you up to 17.50 per ~ar.
Money saved i. money earned
f'REE-Travelers Checb-no maximum
FREE-Money Orders-no maximum
FREE-Postage-what yoy uw btJ mall
f'REE-Tnast Deed Note CollectJon
f'REE-Notary Service
f'REE-Ktoth and IRA accounts (we p-v ttM annaal T~
In for you)
Can you dord not to haw an ec:count with IRVINE
SAVINGS?
Call us today. We can tab care of all details owr the
phone-or if more convenient-we'll comt to Mt yoa.
. .. , ...... .... "'°""'
7.75,,
8.06'.
li!liiRiiiiiiiiiiil Head Offioe
18552 MICArthut Bo.mWltd
(at Mlchelsonl
lrvlne92715
Ttlephonc (714) 752-64$6
~ '· .. '• ..
. •
Tonight's
TV Highlights
ABC G 8:00 -Happy Days. Fonzie
winds. up on the couch -a psychiatrist's -which causes an abnipt change in bis
life style. Henry Winkle r and Ron
Howard star.
CBS 8 9:00 -M•A•S•H. Hawkeye
(AJS!l AJ~a) i~ b~ by a gas stove ex-
plosion m this episode, which features
blind singer-compe>ser Tom SUllivan as a
fellow patient.
NBC 8 10:00 -Police Story. A
freeway sniper is the problem for officers
Frank Converse and Fred Williamson on
their way to a Thanksgiving dinner .
. (TV DAILY LOG]
. I TUl!SDA y I
·1 -_EV_8_N_IN_G __
.. 8:00
9 8 CD 9 Clll (])CD -..s II aJl Cll (al (I)) ID "-" B S SlarTM
<D '-"PYlt -~ •h!Wrtr.-., ...... 2
• o.ctrit eo.,., a Dilalt!
9uttlt~
-6:30-
• Dillll! Gvtsn incfu4e Robert
Klein, Bo Douldson & lhe
Keywoods, Joanie Somme1s, Glaham & f141a Kerr
{)) AM, Crilfitll
(JI ...,, Slfffa SllOlr mr...,Affaif
(ll) (J) '--'• &JZ-! . .....,.~
7:00
II D U CJ) 11D his
• LilfJ C» {))ltf ll11•S-
(J) T t Tel tllt T rvtll
G c..tratioe
Gi i LM llKJ G!J Tiie FBI
fiD ~ --..... 131 w, Griffitil m MICW/lam """ <a OO> llou!uJ 0) Dfllutlc Series . m Mc1MS r1111i1J
-7:30-. a Wt bet Albcmon ol "Cliico &
• Ille Min" IS special 1ues1
....... "' Dellal'S (l)Tlle~C.,ie
0 llOW Oii CIWltlEl 7! * HOl.UWOOD SQUARES
TWlCE A WEEKI B (lQ) 12)) CJ) Hollywood S..m
CIJ TM Siii Slltll D Tltt JoUf's Wllll . .,.,,.__
(Ill (]) ........ tllt ....
®Heca•'sHtteel m ~_, za TOlll&tlt
Q Ara's $fort1 Wol1d Ot c.IMfitJ S..~
r!)flmli«doe
8:00
ft (f7) CD (f) f OllJ Or1*I "' 0-freildtt Pt1nze and Eociald
Dan & John fOfd Coley iuest U aJ> CD (l!ll m 1118aaltlt'
Slieep Pappy Boy1naton welcomes
lhe •~anmenl ol an adm111l's 50ll to
hlS f1&hle1 squad n unhl he ltams
• his men won'! fly lh Ille neWC0111tr
D MMI: ~ h1) "lila of tM
Un4trwaltrWor '(un erwaler doc
umet1lary) '75-L 1tlStn CD lllowit: (CJ (211r) "W11 &
Puce" h rt I (dra) ·s6-Henry
, Fonda. Audrey Hepburn u (Qi) CJ)) f)f) ~ Dlys .. ,.
lilind ol Thfrr Own" Cweryone 1s
wonted wllen lhe ronz eniaee:s '" a sents ol lithts so lhe Cunntnfhlm~
conv1nc:t him lo see 1 psychlatnst
wll!Cll abruptly chanau Ills lifestyle
D llloN: ~ {2111) "ONlll of A
JN" (d11) '73-Ak•m hmirofl
at ltrMZO & HtllrM!b Mlllik $llllr
m "'"' M&SOA fJI llmll'llblic Attlin m lllasttrpie<e Tlleatrt: Tiit .....
slOM m Psydlic ......._.,
-8:30-u (QI Cl)) 1Jt um111 11111
Sltiftey Slulley lrres lo talk Lav«ne
mlo beconung a wlUllfttr nurse 1t t
~11 bul lamne 1esnts 1111111 tit<
btHI heartthrob enlen llrt hosprtat
for 1n OptflllOll
ID Sltuttoit ComtdJ
9:00 n (f7) ()1 (IJ 111•a-s•ff ~IOI a
IQOd samantan pays no d1v1deqds I01
Haw~eye when he 1ttemf>1:s lo hahl t
11uiw·s 1as stcwe at 4 o tlotk 1n lhf rnominc and suiters bhndnts$ and
se~tt burns rn the 1etolt1nt eJJ)fo·
s1on. Blind s1n1e1 /composer fom
Sulhvtn gutS!s IS I fellow pilitnt-
bh nd td rn comb1f -w1th 11hom
H1w\tyt ~n slllft his 11t111hon
8 *IE Ill ACTIOll * 011 "POLICE WOMAll"!
D 0 Cl> <JI Clll Mct Wolue "T tnder Soldier'' A series of tmons1
bonlbincs and ~e dt-.atll ol 1 poltce
oflte« 111 ont S«ll 111cidul leads
f>tllt* to IO undefto'ler ind jotn ~
revolutlon1ry underaround &roup, e A Motioll Pldurt (fie
'It "RICH MM POOR llAll
IOOl 11" COITI!IUES
• (121J ())) ID RI~ Mia, ,_
11111 Rudy .iofdach1's once secure
lllOrld is lluntentd by t b1lliona11t's Obsession for powt1
• Wiert ~t. Arttllll * '"'"' & Oarili fry9 Joi. Mt" Toaitil At t ...... Wfil ··---•hrletJSlllll • lliJllln'JS. Trm."Plfln
Sotalun(' ld Flanders sltrs as Ptest
denl Hany S Truman 1n this !low
loac special adapted from lhe l>eM
by Merle llhllfr. me11..-..•es&a
-9:30-
• Cl1J CD Cl) Oile Day II A Tlllt
Facmc tile ruhty that luhe has run
m y willl Clltd. Ann ecpeoenc:es
llurt, lruslrahon and lltlplnsness n
slit searches fOf 1 COUlse ol ICtion
that wdl bnnc lief dau&fllff holM m aw. 1>r1111
0)~1 ·15
10:00
D (17) CD Cl) Stritcll Pete ind
~ 1111,q""* n potet1hal bvym
in Ille dancefOUs pme of 1tu1 S11111&
g1inr in order to clear tilt repwtahon
ol a lormer dttectrve friend
8 POLICE STOIY E.MllY
• WllHIEJ-TOlllGHTl
8 @ (I) ®l m Pellet Stery
.. Boueht and Paid For" Ed'#ard Al
bert and C.ry Collins cuests as cop
slayer and cop (rf3j)tdl'ltly) Dtlrinc
tllf davlitllt htisl ol 1 ~,. by llllee
1obben, 1 lone unilonlled officer 1espands lo 1 at1nn·s Clll and IS
cunned Oown tile by the band1I
leader
0111"-'
Cl)leum 0 FAllllLY-OffQRC{
• FACES IWl~Y U (!21 ())) at f111lly Hiney
Maitland lawm~ ps lhrouafl lht
tmotionat ind htartblea~e ellltn
ence ol d1V01te lrom lltr h~11d. Jett Maitland
fBTMl'atll.._.Sllow
®~ m MOltJ ,,.._., r.,... Cima
m 111ntJ • M11Mra
-10:30-. .., ., .... m ...... n.r.stin1
IDZ•Hwa
11:00
tPI D fm !B lltwl IJ ())<IO@ ()) ....
8 QI (!B Cl)) l.,. Alffricu
SIJlt ())Stltlllf
-~ ..... • t.lttl Hides Tiit * T rvtll & Cattly Waits ftf Tiie Tat ltmlts m ., ltlrtlua. ., Han-
., Tiits of Ille lizlfn <Ill rn ,_, O.rrillltt
GtTht8tlrdllllHlllM
-11:30-
• <l7J CD (]) CIS late lhwie:
llGja "Dud on His feet" U @Cll <IlllD.._,C...
())Tllt ma. • (a W > a fllrsttlJ ., 111e .... ......
(8)TM 700GM
12:00 8 lat GI QlltCM
Cl MoN: "Sllentd HolM$ & ...
Houtt ol htr" (mys) '45-Basil
Rathbone, Nl&el &uce
Gl lhtit:"Th~(ch)
'44-Paul He111etd, Hed'f umarr. m CitletU l4
-1%:30-
0 All·llilht SM: (C) "Mlsacr• ill tfle .. fottst, .. '111 .. llMt Al ..... M..,. ........
Q) Motit; ..._,.. u, & QI" Cmrs> ·63-tisa Gnto11i, Robert Hollman.
1:00 IJ @ CJ) ~ Tllllf!W mTMm a•
2:00 0 Motit: "Acbon ill lilt llortlt .M· ltMlc" (adv) ''3-Humph1ey Bo11rt ca On blefuture llltties:
(CJ "SMitlde Co••ndo" (dr1)
'68-Aldo Ray ~ "TM o., Ille Not
LIM llot Hot" (com) '69-Robert
Taylor. C11¥1ts Boyt1. m M.Jicllt SM: MA i..ttet " Tllrte wi.n. ............. ff .lad
SIMt"
OCTOIOI
.... "',.., CllVl1hltl, .... .,. .......
JO:tO D • .,._. .. .,..._.,.....
(1dv) '40-Jon Hill, Victo1
Mcl11len, "Dtctptioll" (d11)
'46-Bette D•vis. aa.dt Rai11s. cs .. ......, u.n Forfttf"
(di 1) '46-Jol111 Gtrtiekl. Faye
lmtllOn. ll:CO D<.t>~ ~
(ldY) '55-Ruc-Hlldson, Bar
Nra Rust!, Jell Monow, Katb
letn Ryan. 12.'iJO at~• ......
(d1J) '65-Huah D'8nan, Cyd
Cl!atim
l:CO ~ "TM 1\11 .. Ula" (dn) ·64-tac~ W114en, Kltl'Oft Moole,
Keil Ounea.
2...0 U (C) "Qltt's.....,. (wa)
'71-Clllrfes &onson, tad I'll·
lllCI, RICllatd Bnellaft.
l :M al "Tiie .... & .........
(dtt) ·56-b«t 11,tor, 84111
Ms.
Tax-saving Retirement Account
Special from Fidelity Federal
.. .
Tu.d!y. October 5. t879 DAil y PILOT .4J I
Sae an extra 7.50
r l.R.A • • DIDI
or gb Ibis month
For Any Self-Employed Person
Open your Keogh account this month and Fldellty Federal
will waive the usual $7.50 annual Trustee Fee for 1976
charged by most &avlngs and loans and banks. Set aside up
to $7,500 of eame9 Income each year exempt from current
federal Income taxes and $2.500 of California state income
tax. Interest earned also exempt from income taxes untll
withdrawn In retirement years.
Open your IRA this month and Fidelity Federal wlll waive
the usual $7.50 annual Trustee Fee for 1976 charged by
most savings and loans and banks. If not already coverad by
·a qualified retirement plan, set aside up to $1,500 earned In-
. come each year exempt from current federal and California
income taxes. No.current tax on Interes t earned, either.
EXTRA BONUS:
Fldellty Fedenil pays 7~% •equl lol.08%
compou~ dally) on
any balance I.A.A.
Also Available for Any Person with $10,000 or More to Deposit.
Defer federal and state income taxes on Interest earnings through a tax-deferred i nvest·
ment annuity account. This new plan available to savers at Fidelity Federal with annuity by
American Guaranty Life Insurance Company also results in improved estate planning by
removal of funds from probate.
..
. -·
SAVE EVEN MORE BY USIGG THE VALUABLE COUPONS BB.OW
1-----------------------------------,-------------------------------------
FREE MONEY
ORDERS
Send funds safely through
the mail using these FREE
Money Orders In payment
of bills or for merchandise
FREE NOTE
COLLECTIONS
Personal Income Tax returns prepared completely
FREE of charge. Personal tax conference.
Computer1zed preparation. Both 1976 Callfomla and
Federal returns Included. FREE with $5,000 minimum
balance for first time users:
l
---------------~-------~----------~----~--------~-----------------~------.---.
All these Values together with Nation's Highest Interest Paid on Insured Savings.
-----.....__... .......
FIDELITY
dea6ultSAVINGS
AND l OAH AU OCIATION
Bring in your coupons together wi th your passbook ·from any other savings
institution. We'll transfer funds, simply and easlly. No bother to you ... no em·
barrassment. We'll handle all the detslls.
21 offices to serve you statewide
COSTA MESA
NEWPORT BEACH
1855 Harbor Blvd.
645-4420
Tax: Biggest Dollar Bite
A.oorage Worker Can Expect to Pay 23.4o/() More in 1976
WASH I N GT 0 N (A P ) -( J would be bettor off than last year Although food, fuel and medical because gross weekly pay wu
c:OOs get most attention when the NEWS ..4 N.4 L YSIS $118 this past August, up 6.6 per-
government reports on coo.sumer _ _ cent or $11 a week from the same
prices, the fastest-~ blte month last year. This pay hike
out of tbe average worller's tlon over tbe couneol-a year for sbould have been enouah to keep
paycbeek ls taken by taxes. those within a elven lncome ahead of the S.6 percent lnflation
The Labor Department says an range. Some individuals, or But under tbe federal income
average worker in private in· course. pay even more or get a tax system. the more money you
dustry, supporting a family or refund when they ruelbeirlax re earn the bigger the percentage or
four. now pays 23.4 pen:ent more lU1"115 for tbe year, depending on your Income the government
to the federal government for ln· whet.her they bave out.side In· claims in taxes.
come lax and Social Security come or greater-than-normal ex-Thus. in August last year. that than be did a year ago. penses. wortcer was paying Sl6 a week, or
mE DEPARTMENT arrived The over-all lncrease in con-9.6 per~nt of his gross p~. for
at that calculation by applying sumer prices over the past year Social Security and federal in·
lhe standard Internal Revenue was S.6 percent. Transportation come taxes . This year. tbe
Service withholding rates services, with a 15.5 percent in· August federal tax bite amount·
against new wage levels. crease, are up the most of any ed to $20 8 week, or 11.2 percent
Because the rates are pro-sing.le category in the price in· of total pay.
Tbls decrease iJ"I spendloa
power doesn't accOQ\t for state
Income taxes. which ate up almost 2 percent of \.be aver .. e
wace-earner'a total pa)' last
year, accordin1 to tbe (.cleraJ
Advisory Commission on In·
tcraovernmental RelaUoos. an
oraaru:Ht!on of federal, st.ate and
local officials. That percentage
was unchanged from 1'74, but
was up from the one-third ol 1
pen:enUlatet.ax bitein19'71.
· TomorrOID's Car? gressive, the over-all tax bite dex. Food prices are up 2.4 per-THE RESULT IS THAT the
goes up at a higher percentage cent. fuel oil and coal are up 5.8 buying power or the average
Taxable Sales
ContQiue Up
Through State
Visitors to ''Energy Fair '76" at the Los Angeles Con·
vention Center can see this experimental car built by
Western Was hington State College. The fair, which con-
tinues through Thursday. features current and future
concepts in energy conservation.
than income. which rose 6.6 per· percent and medical care worker's take-home pay has
cent. services are up 9. 7 percent. gone down tbree·tenths of 1 per. Taxable sales In California
continued to climb strong1y dur·
ing the spring ol 19'16, alter a re-
cord first quarter.
The withholding rates -which cent in that time. in sharp con·
determine the amount deducted IF PRICE INCREA.5ES alone trast to the 4 percent increase re-
from paychecks -theoretically were the only element nibbling at gislered a year earlier with the
represent the average tax obliga. that worker's budget, he or she help of the anti recession tax cuta.
* * * * * * * * *
Iris Sankey. a member ol the
Slate Board of Equalization, said
sales during the second quarter.
totaled $20. 7 billion, 13.9 percent
greater than for the second
quarter of 1975. When You Pay: Important Next April
Mobile home and trailer de-
alers posted the largest gain for
any type of retailer with 36.9 per·
cent. The building material
group advanced by 24.7 percent.
By LOUISE COOK A1 .. cialed P .. H
When you s pend can
sometimes be as important as
what you spend in determining
income tax deductions.
It is none too soon to start
.. thinking about next April's tax
. bill, deciding whether you want
to spend now or delay purchases
until 1977
The standard deduction cur·
renlly is 16 percent or adjusted
gross income, after business ex·
penses, but before m~t other de·
ductions. with a maximum or
$2,400 for single persons and
$2.800 for married couples.
Now, Cigure out whether there
will be any big difference
between your income this year
and next. Deductions generally
increase in value with the size of
income. If. for example, you are
paying 10 percent of your taxable
income in taxes. you save $10 for
every $100 in deductions; if you
eam more and a re in the 25 per·
cent bracket. you cut $2:5 off your
tax bill for every $100 in d~uc
tions.
come to drop -because of retire·
ment.. for example -it probably
pays to spend now so you can
have the deductions for a year
when your earnings are high. If
you expect your income lo rise.
you may want to save the deduc·
lions.
Even if your income will re-
main about the same. timing can
save money. Here's an example
from the tax experts at Citibank,
the nation's second largest com·
mercial bank:
•' THE IDEA IS TO use the de·
ductible expenses where they
will do the most good. If you
lump medical expenditures,
charitable contributions. etc. in·
to one period or the other. you
may be able to cut your taxes by
having itemized deductions
greater than the standard aJ.
lowance IF VOU EXPECT VOUR ID·
Bof A Steps Up
Assume that for both 1976 and
1977 you expect to qualify for the
maximum standard deduction of
$2,800. Your itemized deductions
will probably run no more than
$2,700 for either year, so at first
glance it would appear that you
· Boycott limits
Bank o·f America has announced it 1s accelerating
enforcement of new California strictures on
economic boycott provisions in letters of credit.
Implementation measures are being prepared for
-distribution to both domestic and offshore facilities.
.: Gov . Edmund G .
Quality doesn't
cost more at
Nabers
Cadillac
Cadillac Master Dealer
2600 Hubor Bouleverd
Con• Ml!Sa 540·9100
Brown sig n e d
CaUfornia 's anti boycott
legi'slation last Monday.
Additional federal
restraints are awaiting
Presidential action in
Washington.
A Bank of America
statem e nt said the
bank's imple mentation
steps will seek to an-
Ucipate federal as well
as state provisions ahead
of the st atutory de·
adlines.
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
FREE SEMINAR
"INVESTING IN 10% TRUST DEEDS "
You are cord1ally invited 10 attend an 1nfonnahve meet·
ing we are holding IO< pnvare lendeis (and !heir fnends)
who have eKpressed Interest In trust deed lOvestrnents.
Offteers or our company will present and discuss ltle
many rewording benefits of using high yield low ~ lrUSI
deed investments as a building block f()( investment
secunly
This evenlng semtnar 1s tree, but seating is lmiled. and we
musl have your rese<Vatlon tn advance, Please caM:
Hunbngton Beach (7 t 4) 848·2225.
Datt: October 6, 1976 Time: 8·00 PM. Ptac•:
l.kllofl Home Loans. 17552 Beach BIYd .. Suite O. Hu'ltng· '°" Beech. Ca~lom1a 92646
Presented By
UNION HOME LOANS
17652 Beach Blvd . Ste 0. Huntington Beech, Ca. 92646
Nation's Largest Home Loan Brokettve Firm
29 Offices throughout cattomla end Arizona
Donald W. Pres&oo, Newport Beach, has joined
D.W. While & Compa.Qy, Newport Beach insurance
brokers. as vice president in the loss control and
risk management division. He has 25 years of ex·
perience in the ins urance industry as a professional
safety engineer .
He is former home office manager for safety
services with lndustriaJ Indemnity.
He is a registered safely ,..., ••
engineer, a certified safety pro-
fessional and a member or the
American Society of Safety
Engineers, tbe National Fire
Protection Association and
American Society of Industrial
Hygienists. • Jeffrey E. Uappert, Corona
del Mar. bas been named assis·
tant manager at the Newport P1t1ST0"
Beach office for OccidealaJ We of Callfonlla. He
joined the company as an agent in that office last
year.
11
Cbarlea A. Bauaer, Newport Beach. has been
promoted to loan officer at the Bank of Newport,
Newport Beach. He joined the bank three years ago
in the bookkeeping department.
* Loals F. HeWi vice president and general
manager of Aeroautroalc Ford, Newport Beach,
has been elected president of the Greater Los
Angeles Chapter of the Association of the U.S.
Army <AUSA).
Heilig bas been a member of the A USA board of
directors for the past six years and spent the last
year as chapter vice president
and chat rm an of the mem·
bership committee.
AUSA is a private, nonprofit
educational organization in·
terested in national security and
defense.
* Dick McElblaey. Costa Mesa, has been promoted to
manager of the sales depart-
ME1uo ment or Traae commercial air
conditioning division, which covers seven Southern
California divisions. He joined the company ln 1963. •
Robert Waddell. Costa Mesa, bas been named
1eoeral sales manager for AMF Volt lac. 'a
domestic sporting goods sales. He ls former general aales manager for the company's national ac·
cowits.
For fast relief from that
run down feeling ...
Executives
Set Meet
William Devaney, pre-
s ident aod general
manager of Stanley-
Vi d mar. In c ., and
chairman of the board of
Sales and Marketing Ex·
ecutlves. International
will speak on •'free en·
terprlse and Orange
County" at Wednesday's
dinner meeting of the
Sales and Markelina Ex·
ecutlves of Orange
County.
...
t.ill u' lust. t.ikt> d f-1r,1 N.u1011<1I
Auto Loan. and go d1ree1ly 10
y()ur d\'ak'f' Thai\ All t~re •~
10 •I Ul)Oll Ol)ll(OYcll ol a sunple
credit appllc4111on 1.W'll IOd11
you up 10 RO'lt1 of lhe por
chMe prl<r of 4ny
new car vou
' choose lnclud 1ng~1·4i:lll~r-r-:"I~
And ~re's a
bonu• Since
MAIN Of'FICE:
Al tlw Pt..t• 1n downtown Ot..ntJt•
BltANCtt OfflCtS:
ANAHt.Pl ~IM• foll~lf !'J f\~11 ·COSTA.MESA· M""' v.ro~ & /\d.m• · f'L M()C)ENA
Chllpman /it P1Ml'f'CI • IRVt~: llnlw"lly !>1 fl MklwltM 0. · LAGllNA HILL.\: Ahr1a Pwk11iiiva ~ ~ Fr-~v • OAAl'fQ!. l\u.tin •Collin•· SAHTA AHA: t71hA lllMlll
T\JST1H: 1W ~flll I* II. .lr.ul • VIUA ,AU. Sen\WIQD & W.and.e
Devaney reeently re-
turned from a eat'•
tour of the United St.ates.
The meeUnc will be
held at 6:30 p.m • 1n tho
Trabuco Room of the
Saddleback lnn, Sant.a
Ana. ll.eservaUons may be made through Ma.ttle
Wilton atm.3131.
would be better off settling for
the standard allowance and get·
ting $5,600 in deductions for two
years.
HOWEVER, SUPPOSE you
have $500 worth of deductible
items for which the bills are due
in January. By paying them in
December, you bring your 1976
itemized total to $3,200. You have
cut $500 off your 1977 totaJ , but it
doesn·t matter Yim can take the
$2.800 standard allowance in
April, 1978. lo get a two.year de·
duction of $6,000
For someone an the 30 percent
bracket. the extra $400 in deduc-
tions means an extra $120 sav-
ings.
In order to take advantage of
the Urning plan, you have to
know which items you can shift.
It is hard for people whose mooey
comes from wages to shift in-
come: the year's last paycheck
counts as 1976 income, even if
you don't deposit It in the bank
until January .
Deductions are easier to shift.
You can pay medical bills early.
for example. Suppose you have
pledged $200 to a charity. You
can make good on the pledge now
instead of next year if you want
to boost the 1976 deductions or
vice versa. Sales taxes on major
purchases add up. Do you want to
buy a new car now, and get lhe
sales tax deduction for 1976, or in
January when_ the deduction will
go toward the 1977 tax bill ?
Ovt>r Tiie Counter
NASO Ustiftc}1
SANKEY SAID THE rate ol in· nation dedined for the fifth con·
secutive quarter with prices
averaging only 6 percertt more
than the same period last year.
ln dollars or constant value. tax·
able sales advanced 7.6 percent.
For the third consecutive
quarter, Sankey reported, sellers
of durable goods outsold non·
durables. Transportation and
building gained. New car dealers
were up 25.2 percent over last
year, accounting for one-tenth of
all taxable sales. Durtn~ the
quarter, 300,774 new cars and
trucks were registered, an in·
crease of 22.S percent.
llp• a11d Do.,..
U"5 Name i..u OIO ~
Enerqy Ml!!et•I' 2 t-16 + -Up H 1 ()c;ffn E •P'or J + ~ Up 1•.I ~1:~'7.1~( m : ~ :: a·~ A.,010<llCCI) 2-+ V. Up 11 I 8rMS Ufll 2Vt • \I, Up II I
MCI Communc•t 1 +J.16 Uo IO,J
AmF,,O"Lllt '"" + ~ Up I 6 =1$>C.Omm •"'-• -. Up •·• baUn\ Fd )llt + V. Vi> LI mLone Jiit + V. Up IS Mte,uru Coro 11111 • 'Ill Up 1.0
Rtall" Inc l'h • 14 Up 11 SchH~ El"lrn )V> + Ii. U0 1 1 ~;~~v~l~ 'fl: ; : ~: LJ
Maly,Ulnl 2 • ~ Up •·7 Chri"nSe< 117 • 1 Up 6,• GM<;-Sll ltMI' , .... • ,,_ Uo •.J
Do-Commun 1-... • ~ Up • > Fer'-El•< 8Yt + "' UO 6 J IMRU<llO.v •V. + v, Uo 6 J Cllll1.1mCo1. I"' + 'h UO 6 l JK~FL ·~ • \I• Up 6, I Cont C.plla1 • .,, • "' Uo s • lnv~tlns Am 4'1> + V. LIP S •
SmllllflelCI FOO•" 214 + "' Up S.•
DOWNI N-ust OIO Ptt si ... wto CO<p •"--._ Olf IS 6 ~v•I TtCll 6'1> -1 Olt IJ J LilelnvlM. S -" Off 11.1 Mlnntl<M>H UD 2 -"6 Off II I
Tymi/lart In< IS -t'4 Oii 10 • Pr09TrAm 1'4 -II. Ott 10.0 Sl>«l•ll~ Comp 1V. -v. Off 10.0
Electro )luCleon S -"' Off •I Ne•'l'rtlfoMQ 111) -V. Off t I
Te1eli1Cmp ,,,. -"• Off • I F•konPr~ 1>.Q -v. g: I J 0....1-Feld 1>1> -IAt t J We1s.1111<11 CO<o 1~ -"" 8 l Allled LA•wre J v, Off 11
Am Mlcro,~lm • '" Off 1 1 FarmHOuw Fd' > llo Ott 11 Acryl Oot Jt/, -"· Olf 7.1 AlldVenLI~ 8 3'4 -•4 Oii 1 I Ellman' Inc l V• -14 Off 7. I FrloNlllO JV. -V. Off 1 I lnclv\J Nuc:leonlc 314 -v. ; 1 1 SMClilCI l'"' -V. 1 I Oet~l"I Corp ,. -t • ' KV PlltffMCll • V. Off S,9 Rodt< Corp 1 -~ Ott s • Tntilell.-.Cll 1 -~ Oft U W•lterRlly Inv ~ -llt Oii S.•
MUTUAL FUNDS
NEW VORIC ( .P) Bet1t C.p 1 •s • • Felrfld ' .. 10 45 Inc 8osl • 03 . MCD 11 lA n JO N Eta II °' N L Div Fd S.h uo
-TN 1011-lno ""°" Bond'tk •AO s J ,..,m "" ... N L lndUStrv Uflev•ll MF8 IS .. ". N .... ,,, '., N.L. Pl'o9 F i.a •. 11 '-''°"'· l\IPC)lied Dy 8osf F.,., '36 10, ~•led Fund•: INTGN • JI • ,, Melfle" I I "' N L Pl'O Fllf'CI \ lO N L SIFrm Gt ,.., N.L. '"' N.tllon&I ASMKI· 8rwn RI J.31 3 S7 Am LOr • 10 t ,JA int lnv11 'Ill 1 JS Ml c.~ l•.IJ IS" Prov 04,. 1 11 •• $Ftm •• •.14 N.L. .. IOn Of S.<urltie' C.Mn Bullock: Emc>lr 11.9'.... llv GlllO ~ 1' N L ML Ad I 00 N L Pru SIP 10 M 10." "11e St 0 .2' 0.1\ 0 .. 1.,.,, Inc., art a..110 IJ. It 14 • Four E 11 60..... Inv lrldic unavell MIO A s 16 '·1>4 Pl.ot,..m F11ncl\: stt<Mln'!1., F11i1: Ille PfkH at Wllicll C.ndn 8 61 9.•I Fktellty Group Inv 8os tO 18 11 61 Mon Mkl I 00 N L Conv 11 J'I IJ.45 Am 1!)11• 2. NL.. llltM $Kutll~ Olvld J 11 1 46 8onll 8 6' t SO In¥ ~I MONV F •IS 10 n E:Q\111 •IO 10.71 A.so I' l. '4.L • cOllld lie.... Detn Monlh l•.6.S 16 01 ~I t 1• 10 01 C.Pm I 11 I t4 MSB Fd I• 7' N L 0.orQ U •t 14 74 lnvHl I. I H.1. tolO CNet ~ .. I N•tW , • .'4 10 ltd 11 19 N l Gapl1 S S ,. SI' -etn t .cl 10 l1 Gnrtll 10 ~ 1 t 62 OU... '-H.L. 1el\19) or bou9f'I NV vn 10 70 II. llr I I 00 N L lrwe\\O'I Group MIF Fd • " • .. lncom 1" • tltlll .... Fa:
1 ••• .,. pl~ ,.~<II· CG Fllfld 10" 10.. 0.1,.., • t1 10$ 8d s IS • °' Ml F Giii 3 tl 4 1S llWe\I 1" •. n 8elaf\ "·a ij·"· atVel Moncln CG ln<m I lO t It Eo Inc 14 11 N L IDS Gt1 S 1• . M\llv.tlol O<N ... • Vlsi. 10 07 u·OI c.P 0 ~ ,L. Sell .... ~Pres I 00 N L M1191l ?Cl.... . . IDS ""' OS s... ..... 11.4' 11... VOYllCI 11.n I ... Stock t. .l. AGE Fncl 4,tt S Sii 11 1' 12 !» Fidtl 16 OJ 1151 Mvtl t IS t '5 Grwlll • JA 4 7J RllllOW I 5' .L. 'I F .t7 .IO AcornFd It.' N L. .r ll\V '·" 10.SO Pu111n 10."1 II )t 3.U J."1 lncO!'I' • " .... ~ I 00 N.L. t:;: OI 1 ... Adm Gn a.ls., , . OWtrt Fd 11. I I U.Jl S.ltm t St S.02 ~ 1'.JO 10 ti Mui Slit\ 17.16 a ·L• l'tYere .... S ... T:l: llW :t!. lJ.1. Adm Inc 3.7'..... O\llM Gr 8ot: '"''" 11.07 N L Select .,,. 10.09 = Mut I.SI .L. lee E°' '21 10.07 ltM Clp 1:10 .. , Adm IM 7,S6 ••• , Fund UI 7.30 Trtnel ti 60 U.•t Vat Pv 6 71 1 2'I 11 Incl 10 6J .I... c Giii 7 '1 ..... T,... lllW t.,. 10. 1
Ad>t '"" 11.W... • """ c .uo '" A!YMl•I PrOQ: '"" Rtlll S.17 '6.S S.Cl.lt' S.r: Ulldff Fllncl,, ftn l!ca IO." It. s ,..._ F 7 74 t SNllcl 7.45 t. 14 l>t,.. 4.ft N.L. 11\'tl 21 ot ti n a.i.., t.•I 10 15 lnll F<t IJ 11 NL. TUllr Md lJ.04 N,1.. Aft'9 SI! 1i.. H.OS 5'11cl S ... S.'1 lndu!I •.11 N L l'i't 6 S2 N &.... 110nO 4 • 4.ff SOKI :n JS N.l.. 1-c Gt J.1S N.L. ,.,,_.,.. f' UO N.L. awll ... N.L. Ill<°"' 7~ N L JP Grtll I0.70 11 6) OllllCI HO 4. 11:.IM U.7' N &,. T'M\C IAC S 14 N.L. ""All'I Fd .J7..... I •. ,, •• ,, "" ln...,tor\ -F 1• n N.L c;rw.,, i.76 • I Com SI ••• " L. USAA G4 ...... .. All\tl49 t.• 10. Of Fdt· OIKO S 10 S II Joiln H"'1<0Ck pt St' 1 01 7.f;I Men R 10.04 N L US 0ovSt t 7' •.tt ,.,. "·" N I. Ubv ,.., 4 d ..... Grwlll 6.. 1. $J a.Ian • " • n Inc.om s .. s .0 L*W UI.. . . Ulllf """' l.37 " L Am 81'111 Uo 10. Miii> Fd 2 11 J 07 111<om •a • 6S 8ono "2• 10 t3 Sloc11 1.00 t u ,., """°' Unlfllnd e... t ... Ml EQ41y S.02 S. $(!1u5t 1 09 7 1S SIOC-8 ll tot (ifWlll 6 U 6 to NELlle FIHlll. Eq..1Y ~ f1 4.17 UfllOft ~ O<'p: Anltrk .. Fur.ls: Co!Oftl••: F•IMll A • OS N L. JoftMln 20 71 N.L EQUtl "·" 11,1(1 In .. " 7.0S t.70 &roed 12.JJ .,.n ""' ..,. t.os 1. Olwt t.00 t.'4 Forty Fr IUJ N L "•~lone F11nd1. °"""'" 9.IO • 51 Ullr• • )6 10 2) Nlll 1nv t.71 .U Nllcp •. ,, S,4 Fune! .... lo.JS Fnel Gtll l n • :n APOiio ) IS • ,. Inc.om II" u 20 Sentinel Group u Cap IO.tt 11.)4
A M4ltl ..,.. :;· Gnritl s 02 u• ,,_" GrouP Cus 81 17 n ,. SI Sloe IJ., IS u ,,,..,, a.to • " UnlOn " .. tU~ lloflCI IS IJ I lftQl!n ... '.. ~ • .. ' 13 C..s 8 .. II 10 ~ Berm 8.tlM 1 II • w UlliltO F-s·
C. Fd "-SI :1 11 Gell U., N L IM.om II 99 12" ~ ~ 1.23 tt ~rqy 13 71 N L GOnl S 12 n IS.. AU"' 6.n t.11 GriwVt uo "· All t.00 I °' ~ "' 10 OJ II\ !Cl , SS • ts <Miro 11.W N L. "'I °'" I '1 • 11 llOnO 1, 1.00 l11<om u ... 11 Ill c 1.... 1 •1 SMC• ' u • '° 1(2 s " s n ... ,,,., ~ ~ " I. )entry F 12 ,. 1J •1 OM Or •• 16 It lc;A 1U7 IS = 4.lS ,.._,ill°"°"°' SI "°' 20.IS Ntuw FO 16J NL ~Gp, Coo'"' ,, lt.n N Pot" UM 17 l .D t 4t ONTC 6 7t 1 lO S2 • ~ 10 1' fi9w W1C1 11,)4 N.L ()Mia UJ S '1 tncom 10 ... 11~ w .. M •.a t. 1.ea e .i ~ s u • ~ Cui SS un•v•ll "*"'°" 11.~1 l'4 1. £ntr1> s.,, s" ~left •.01 t:n
AIM< GeMrll: -11.71 N.L. "'"' • SI '.. °" s. 3.S) 3 .. ,..,... '"" 10.•7 N.L. R IK kl • a s,. Veno ~u .... 8d ..,, t. 1iw 10.~ 11 oo ln<om 1.71 '·"' Pol•r 'UJ >.n NIClll 1 l'· .. "·t· H.trt>t 1.:111 t .14 Ulllt S's:.• 1.12 111.1.. Or 4.tS .. 0 ' 1'4.L. u, Gov '51 10.» Ulnll Giii ··" t .13 NorM" • '° N. ' l.AIQel • •l 7,U Vtlut M. ·~ 1 ~ t. 1 H.L. c:.tll\ t.02 1.1. L.HlnalOfl Otp: t.20 • 1J P9ce ' 11 t '7 v.. ·~S m lllH!lr 10. tO. . 11 '4 12" EQ\111 J 2J UI QI \.« IS.4 .. ., "' I• n N L. Sllt«10fl ,._., I
I) fl t.02 H L Miil u. • «I 10 27 LA• Or 1 n • 4S r f'd ~ 17 0) 17 u ... ' I ll ~ t~ l.1 Jl 11 N.L l'dl" Otp Ml NL Lu In to • .U 1U2 6 .. 1... lllCO"' It 16 11.toJ ~I t rl ,...,; t" t·°' Qreolp: ~ J.'2 I.°' LA• It IS !9 1611 !ftGOnl I JI • G9 ln.,.SI 10 II 10 6ot \Alnot .
""" Oftlt I a n,s ,..,, "• Ill< Gnl: Ule IM •.11 , SJ . ODo Mo t.00 N L ~HG • 40 N t IM-l~t·r. ""' 1111111 t b "' 11 COl'lllll UI t 6l Uncoln f't•ll: AIM t 17 10 02 "*"" O IS.• N. _. ' t ltlft I-" L t. t. 1~ r... t.J1 li11n< OI 6.01 U1 Tl:h Ul 7.SS ~ Funch· CoMrll 6. t ~OOI , UO ._ J. ,,.. Tr I ·g 111i Am 1. N.l.. TC 1 'f· l ~ tit t S-:1 1 : , CM a.I u lot ~. UJ I ~ IJ.~ N,l.. ~'""" u: 11 ... ,. 10 .. , , 1t Wntt 4.0t ... r
01111y ~ N.L.. c: ,. 01 N,I.. ~· , tt .. ~IS la'(IH: illlaut .. ,,.. uo " ~-Ut • 1s v=.5 ).,. N.L Gtw9I j;OJ 1 ti 11 9w t.M N.L. SK I , N L. c.Plt 10 2t N L '°""" Set ··r. 1'4 1.. \llt!IC UI 10. l V ON.· § 711. 1 Ott• lfld '8.U N L. NM 1).U NL "'-"" Mu ,. pj L Sl~~i ti01f ,, ... -....... IO tO 0 1t IWlllllOll: AM!ett """• 1 •1 Ke"' I ...... 11. Fllftcla 4. " r.. ::J1 4.~ it L I' HQt. 4 '40 • ti ~llllO t ts 9 '° "'-01P uf I t7 -I 00 N 141 ti, II IW 7 1 \A...... lJ.jQ aq Or'#lll 6 7f 1 )1 llftd ab ti ot IJ 11 l'l~!l'I (irp ~· 1"'1t 1 l ••
Well! t0. 11.IP ~ M I002 .L.. ~ ... •.11 lncom ,.,. , '2 I f't u .. IJ.. '°°' '°·. s 11..0 tU4 ........ l. ..,, IM 1.f/lt \. ~ 10 f1 N l Lllt!latMI l(o IQ "° , ~ 7.t4 e 0 'I '· UI ,. ~ ""' ~· "' e tt.o} 1• rt " t.)I N p<llncJ 10 1' " ,. e . q N I... Ill ~ Hl ., .. tt .. ft~ ,II -v•ll l!aolt Or • ~ t '1 ,....\1 IO 11 N t. lllCOl!I 9 Oj t... W9. Ill l t1 t Jj S t . l. Wtlftft 10-14 •• l"ftCI I UMv•ll &ft11&1iow.,.,,: rltoe unavt ll us Oov 10 00 10 ti ,,. 111 10 1' H.l.. 1'~ 1. • \ e •.U ,q
0( U!lav4111 tn .t7 •.24 Tr 1. N L Me~t Co f'lllld" • t net ,~ tt. ~ ~ 't.''I u"' 5 !1w lf" 11. ". " r= · 11 1 • 1= :J.t! 1• l!.:.~ !IE ,. I; :i •. 111 ~Q 7i " "t ii rn t;: tt• • ..,. ~~ ... 1t:1 ~ ... '"" .t;i I ff 111 J ... ·-'-; .t."
11H.
1 .;t =·'-)-U1 16 u nt "' it ff ,Ml Mf!', II~ tit! ... = 1rn 1, fl~ .;. 1 : =: .~ ~'!; t"
• , • 1600NL "Si 1 ... Mio •nns~~~ ~· ... •tt N I. I 11.61 11 '7 1"9 1 t ~O Ii." t Ot'wtll 11 NL -N.1... -........ I I 61 N.L T'r U."4 I-tit 1 M I rs MFO II ... I IMOfll t1: N &.. O>l'fl 4,44 • H IM!el <-.I
. ..
s
ue~doy'•
Afternoon Prices NYSE · COMPOSITE
. . . -.-. . -
TRANSACTIONS Bufilng Jtl~azlae•
CBS Wants 2nd
No. I Rating
•
By llllLTON llOS&OWJTZ
CBS, whkh is No. l 11' broadusUna and reeonts. b•
moved to extend lts rucb 1D publl bi.DJ, where it woWd
probably lllso like to be No. l . It·, not such • rar-fetclled goal llnte publil!UDS remilna
a fragmented industry.
wlth no dominant
superpowers . Th<'
largest operator in lhe
industry Is Time JM .
which had 197S revenues
ol$910 million.
CBS already b~
Money
Tree
more than $200 millloo in saJ from Its publlshlaf IC·
tivit.ies, and it's on the verge of tacltln1 on anotb.er ll.50
mllUon through the acquisltioo ot 1-'awcett Publications. tbe Fawcett family has agreed to sell out to CBS.
OPERATOR OF 1HE LEADING television rtetwort
and owner or seven big·<:ity TV stations, CBS m~ well be
able to climb into second place in paperback publishing with
the Fawcett acquisition. The Popular Library paperb~ck
house is already part or CBS. Fawcett bas a much larger
paperback business than Popular Llbrary. and t.hc Fawcett·
Popular Library combination could give CBS a clear shot al
second place.
The leading paperback house is Bantam Books. with
estimated sales of $8) million a year. Bantam does betw~n
20 and 25 percent of the paperback dollar volume. It's owned
by I.F.J .. an Italian conglomerate.
The world's largest record company through its
ownership or Columbia Recor&, CBS would also move up a
number of rungs in the magazine world by this acquisition.
Fawcett would bring into the CBS camp three maeuines -
Woman's Day. Mecbani.x Wustrated and Ruddtrr. .
MAGAZINES ARE NOT NEW bustness to the CBS
publishing division. The company which everyone fdentlftes
with TV aJready owns Cycle World, Field and Stream. PV4,
Road and Track. Sea and World Tennis.
Mechanix Illustrated and Rudder. two special interest
magailnes. will flt neaUy into that lineup. but Woman ·s Day
will put CBS into the big leagues.
Published originally by the A&P grocery chain,
Woman's Day continues to derive all of its e1gbt million
circulation from s upermarket racks. ll ranks as one of the
lOlargestmagazinesintbenaUon.
Last year advertisers bought UC million of space in the
pages or Woman's Day. lts ad revenues were topped by only
s ix magazines -TV Guide. Time, Sports Illustrated,
Reader's Digest, Newsweek and Business Week.
WOMAN'S 'DAY MAJOR COMPETITOR is Family C\r.
cle, another magadne distributed through grocery chains.
Family Circle is now part or t.he New York Times Company.
CBS will take in about $1 billion this year from its broad·
cast operations. Woman's Day and other magazines have
been trying to get more of that action by pointing up prll\l's
3dvanUlges over TV. In one recent pitch directed at btzyers
of advertising space and time. Woma,n ·s Day said :
"Woman's Day delivers more 18· to 49·year-oJd women
than most of the top rated TV shows. an average or
11.672,000 per issue.··
When Fawcett becomes part of CBS. Woman's Day will
probably continue to use this anti-TV approach. It's just
that then CBS will be coUecting the money at both gates.
Passenger Bumps
Pondered at PU~
LOS ANGELES CAP) -tr you've ever been bumr>ed
from an overbooked airline flight even though you had
reservations, take heart. '
The state Public Utilities Commission (PUCl is looking
into the problem.
Tbe PUC staff has recommended that new regulations
be adopted for airlines that fly exclusively within California
so that passengers denied boarding would be compensated
with a specific payment.
THE REPORT SAID OVERBOOK.ING on intrastate
airlines Is not as widespread as supposed and can be
justified on the basis of "no shows." but said the rules
should be imposed to protect reserved space passengers .
. The P~C last ye~ ~eived 36 de~ed-boarding COIJ>·
plaints against Paclfic Southwest Airhnes <PSA) and t1ix
a~ainst Air California. PSA transported more than six.
rrulllon persons that year and Air California more than.a
million. ,
The staff report warned that regulations shouldn't be
too tough because it could affect alrllne revenues ~
airplane load factors. , ~ •
IT SAID PEOPLE WHO DON'T show up or who ch~
or cance! their reservations made from s to 25 percent of ill
reservations Cor the two carriers, and both airlines ov~
book to compensate.
"The problem of overbooking is common to the entite
airline industry,'' said the report. "In fact. reservatioos
overbooking and oversales practices by interstate air cq·
riers are presently being examined by the Civil Aeronauti'"S
Board." ~ ·.
Good News in Meat . :: .. ·.
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -The Agriculture Departme)at
continues to report more meat entertnc the market with_.
even drops in prices. '•
That's good news ror consumers in those cuea wwf~
wholesalers and r~ers have passed alont lbt lower
slaughter prices, depending on t.helr lndlvidual C<ISt and
profit situations.
IT 18 CONTINtJi:D BAD NEWS for the producers *' right now. .
The reverse may be true once :ilauchter has taken If.a
toll of existing herds and producers decide not to malntainte
stable level of meat product.Ion, based on the prtce of fetd
and other expenses at the time those decisions have to '*
made. <
Late last week. USDA reported that 1.49 billion pounb
ol cbJck~s. turkeys, ducks and other poultry were lnspe•-
ed for slaughter dUJinl Aqu&t. That was 19 percent m<*e
than in August 1m and 8 percent more t.han this Jutyl1
slaughter. .
ln the week endlna Saturday. It reported, the 471;t
m1111on pounds of beet produced under federal ln~
was down 4 pel"C'ent from the week be!ont but 8 perc•
above t.he comparable week tut ~ar. .,
PORK PRODUCTION, IRANWRJLE, lOt.aled 26l;j
mill.Ion pounds for the week, up 8 perttot from the w~
betol"e and a whopplnq 33 pe:rcent above 1 year earlier.~
blgb pork prtces lut year and lnto Ulh 1pr1n ... a.risina "'*
produC'el'·constrtcted suppll , tt'leOW'.,ed thls year's ...
paneled production, USDA sl,ys. ,
Prices for tlop oo Sept. tS. bowe"Ver, were down mcite
than 30 percent from • year before. With ttlffs e:xpeetM lo
some feed e.nd meal prtcea1 that market may ltabUiJe In a
few moot.ha, USDA ecoooamts say . -
,4 J4 DAILY PILOT
THE FAMILY ORCUS •
Tueed!y. October 5, 1979
By Bil KeAne Energy Crisis YWld: Cooperation
"Don't coll me ·~weetheort' while the guys ore
here.''
L 1'1. Boyd
Nude Bowlers
Wore Shoes
Approximat,ely 100 nudists in Los Angeles
draped the windows of a bowling alley, hired
security guards to ward off would-be OD·
)ookers, and conducted what no doubt was the
world's first nude bowling tournament. They
wore bowling shoes, and that was it. Don't
know who won. They don 'l publish names.
People who die from carbon monoxide
poisoning fall into three categories: drunks,
lovers and suicides. The cars in which they
succumb on the average are 7.6 years old. Na·
tiooal average age oC cars is 4.4 years. Mostly,
the death cars are motionless, their enginesidl·
lngtofumish heat.
BOXER REBELUON
Q. "Why was that Chinese uprising in 1900
known as a Boxer Rebellion?"
A. Because it was kicked off by a seeret
Chinese outfit called "The Society or
Harmonious Fists." Its
members were a bunch of
Kung Fu experts who un·
dertook considerable com-
bat with their bare bands.
Foreigners labeled them
"The Boxers." They killed
231 aljens and countless
Chinese Christians before
their defeat by an interna-
tional armed force with
troops from Austria,
France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy,
Japan, Russia and the United States.
Our Love and War man repeatedly is
asked, "Which is more frequently the ag-
1Tessor in a romantic interlude, the woman or
man!" And be repeatedly replies, "The man.
Did you ever see a mousetrap chase a
inouse?''
BLOND~COST
No single man who is seriously dating a
fair-haired girl should forget what the cos-
metics experts now say they've learned: That
a blonde needs considerably more money over
her lifetime than does a brunette just to keep
up the appearance.
It's a matter of historical record that the
renowned Old )'est lawman Wyatt Earp took
a sizable kickback, legally or otherwise, on
just about every fine be levied.
And remember, a hen needs about six
cunces of reed to produce one egg.
Addreu mail to L.M. fk¥J, P.O. Boz 1560,
Co&taMuo, 92626.
Newspapers, TV
Win Safety Kudo
WASHINGTON (AP) -Newspapers and
television are coJtsumers' most preferred sources of
information about food safety, according to a na-
tional survey of a sample or l,400 shoppers by the
Economic Research Service.
Some or those sur· --------veyed indicated more
than one source when showed younger and
asked which medium more educated shoppers
they preferred to Ret cited labels most often as
food-safety inform aUon. their preferred source.
Handouts al stores or
BUT, OVERALL. 24 s.chools, spot announce-pe r cent preferred ments in radio and de-
newspapers, 23 percent monstrations al stores or
said television and 20 community workshops
percent said the labels were indicated in each
on the food producw. case by less than 6 per·
The study of con!umer cent of those surveyed for
food·related behavior, Lbeir preference, the re-
Slttitudes and knowledge port said.
is underway at the Those living in rural
Agriculture Department a r e a s p r e r e r r e d
agency, but it has~ magazines and other
reporting pieces of its publications received in
findings periodically this the mail, it said, boosting
fal[ the overall rankings for
THE FOOD-SAFETY those sources to 14 and 12
information section percent.
DR. W. J. FAMAl.ARO
CHllOPIACTOR
Announces the Relocation
ol Offices From El Toro Rd., To
CANADA IUSINESSCENTB
22691 UJ •a I • SUrTI 516 ......... ......, .......... ... t.M,...,.,
&T<*>
837-1341
M1W PMOI• 24 MU-WMllB9e$_._
CALL fOI DtUCTIOHSl
f\MSI C-=t,..,._IOOft
• i..e.n Wortd HOON Calta · Red~ Fee Schedule • F8ml'V Htttth Pfan • No ~lent ~futld For Inability
To Pav.
(
87 'IB>llAS D. EUAS
Somethlna new ls bappenln1 as Calltonila trie!
to cope with it.a com.lnl ~e ol natural gu.
three ot the 1tatb's most powerful fovernment
agcoclet are aC?lually cooperatin1, ratber than
bickertng over •ho lbou.ld have the most power.
Bickering has been the norm for years among
the Public UUUUes Commiaaioo, the Air R~s
Board and the receoUy·created Energy Com·
mission.
EACH BAS WANTED TO BE the "lead a1ea·
cy" in regulatinJ new oil, electricity or gaa.reJated
projects and lheU' int.ettsts have often seemed ln
conlllct.
The PUC, for instance, must make certain
Californians have enough electrkity to get by,
while the ARB must see that their air is breathable.
In places like Orange and San Bernardino counties.
these interests have seemed to conruct whenever
power plant expansions were proposed ln ree~t
years.
Such a conflict was also a possibility over t.be
impending gas shortage and t.be controversial plan
by the Standard Oil Co. ol Ohio to ship most ol ita
Alaskan oil to the Midwest via Loog Beach.
BUT INSTEAD OF FIGRl'ING over who has
power to re1ulate W'bat. the three key commissions seem to.,. worltln• logether.
For lmtance, the PUC has taken 1.tP a proposal
by the ARB to ship n.wta1 gas from Northern
Calllornia to the aout.b state when smog problems
are so severe that power pleta in the Southland
abouldn 't be bumlll(,oil to produce elect riclty.
The Energy Cotiunls.slon and the PUC also are
worldnl together, a departure. rtom the days wben energy aaen.cy statten blasted the PUC for belag
too sympathetic lo utilities.
One Joint project ls aimed a\ encouraatng new
aolar energy development. Another sees the two
groups trying to devise a totally new price structure
for electricity, one that would reduce consumption
in peak hours.
Under this kind of
OUTHERN system, rates woufd be CALIFORNI~ lowest during the early FOCUS morning and late night
boon and bJghest at mJd-
day, wbell air conditioning use is highest.
SVCB A S YSTBM SEEKS TO discourage
private energy use at the same time It encourages
indultr)' to schedule moN work at off ·peak boun. It
lower eneru ue during peak boun rauti.r. elec-
tric companies wouldn't Med to build u many new
power plant.a u they plan., wblcb could beJp bold
coosumer prtcea down.
But It's the joint ARB-PUC invut111Uon of
shittlni au auppll around the state that b tbo
mioat poteoU&lly·&ilJllftcant cooperative vea~.
For the ftnt Ur:ne., if the PUC goes aloq wttb
the smog board. tbe atate'a larte1t uUllt)' com·
panJes will N forced to coe>pera~. wttb areu tn
great.eat need 1etUnc the cleaoett fuel. Most of the
gas would be diverted trom Pacmc Gu & Electric
Co. supplies, more copious thn tbon lD the
Southland. and burned in power plants of the
Southern CaUfomia FAisoo Co. and the Loe AtiCeles Department of Wat.er & Power.
SINCE THESE na1'8 HA VE LONG competed
for fuel, often bidding •lain.st each other. coopet'a·
tion would be a significant innovat1oo.
lf it comes, it would be due to the coord.lnatJoo
wblcb Gov. Brown 'a appointees to the three eoel"CY·
related ~rds have sougbt.
Straight Talk from UCB/N1rmber 9
What to do
your bank m~-
If banks were perfect, we'd be wrtt.1.Dg
scripture instead of nawapaper ads. But
we're hum.an. And since there's never been
an infa.lllble man or woman, there's no
reason to expect a. bank to be.
Still, we'd like to be perfect. That's
why, if you've discovered a mistake, a.n
oversigllt, or a flaw on our part, we'd
like to help you do something a.bout lt..
In the long run, it11 help both of us.
Holler if we've
botched your statement.
We pa.y people to listen. And help. If
you've checked your records and th.ink
we've made a.n error. come in 1mmed1ately
a.nd ask your Customer Service Rep-
resentative for help. He or she
will help you on the spot or
direct you to someone who w111.
But please come prepared.
Brtng a.long your passbook, your
up-to-<late check register,
a.nd, of course, your
statement. If the goof iS
yours, we'll help you
stra.tgb.ten it out. If the goof
18 ours, you've helped us.
See the loan officer
who said "no?
What if you think you've been turned
down far ored1t UI\)ustzy? Your fl.rat step
18 to t1nd out why.
The law says tbat you are entitled to
know the reasons you were refused credit.
So see the loan of1'1cer who he.ndled your
applicat1on. a.nd ask about the information
used in rna.klng the dec1Bion.
If you still th.1nk you're not getting
the credit you deserve, ~the sna.tu is
in your credlt rat1ng. It happens. To t1nd
out, contact the credit reporting agency
that provided your rating (your loa.n
omcer will tell you how) and ask to see
your rue. If you f1nd a. m1st&ke or m.18·
representation here, you can ask tha.t
your record be rev1Bed. The law says so.
If all the information 16 correct, a.nd
the bank still sa,ys "no:· ask your loa.n
ofllcer how you can improve your chances.
It may help you the next time you appzy
for credit.
Don't bank when
evervone else does. Lon~f ~ a.re a. pain. And while we
try to he.ndle them as quickly as poesible,
we can't a.void them altogether. But~
you can. Here a.re some tips:
Avoid Fridays and Mondays. Thqre
prone to attract week.end spenders. And
who Ym:t a. weekend spender?
Avoid the first and flft.eentb of the
month. Why ruin your payday by ata.nd.ing
in a long bank line?
Avotd lunch hours, whenever you can.
That's when we're busiest. And please.
have your things 1n order (numbers
totaled. checks signed. cash counted)
before you reach the teller. For your sake
and ours.
Find a way to save
time and trouble.
Moat ba.nks offer the following
servtces. We're not pretending they're
unique. 'lb us. Or any bank. The point
• they can be helpful to you.
• Bank by mail. UCB pays your
postage both ways.
• Get on a.n automatic sa.ViDgs pla.n
-we11 automatically transfer
money from your checking
aocount into your UCB savings
account.. Our Customer Service
Representative Will get you
stArted.
• Drop otr or ma.1l your savings
passbook-we11 update it a.nd send
it back to you, for tree.
• Use drive-up and walk-up
windows. Many of ours offer
ext.ended hours.
Help us find the services
that are right for you.
It's possible that the produets or serv-
.1cee you now have~ not be the most
em.c10nt or economical for your needs.
There's an easy solution to that
problem:
Talk to us. Maybe you're a. person who
could use Ba.la.nee Pl~ It's a. UCB servlce
th&t lets you write your own loan. Or,
maybe you can save money on servioe
fees with a. United Account~
Anyway, the beat W8N to fmd out ts
by asking us.
Don't panic-
there's a last resort.
At least there 1s l?j"ou b6xii With UOB.
If you've worked with the people 1.nyour
branch a.nd still can't get a. problem solved,
you can contact our Department of Con-
sumer A1fairs. They'll repreeentyoudur:lng
any rev1sw or 1.nvestJgat.iOn l!QU t.bJ.nk Js
necessa.ry. And they'll see tbat UCB's
policieS a.re ca..rr1ed. out equaU;y and tatrq.
To everyone.
UCB's consumer a.ffa1rs experts w1l.l
trace your case through the cb&nnels,
consult experts, UDCOVer stumbling
blocks, and investigate any mtx-up. 'l'hen
they'll help you t1nd a solution.
If you're still not satistled that you've
been gtven a. fa.1r shake, you can cont.Bot:
• Ca.Utornia.St.ate Banking
Department. .
• Californ.t.a State Department of
Consumer Affa.trs.
• Consumer A1fa.1rs Dtv181on of the
Pedel'&l Reserve Bank of San
Pranc1soo.
• Your local regional government
agencies.
You IIl8'Y be wondertng wby we're
ta.lk1ng a.bOut goo1B and oversights a.nd our
own !all1bWcy.
It's 1'66Jzy quite Simple. We fig\lre the
more you know about ba.nklng, the better
off we'll all be.
lt'you bank with UCB and you have a
problem or quest1on, come in and talk to
us a.bout it. We can't prom1se that we can
al'W8i,V8 change th1ngs, but eometimee we
can. And that helps everyona.
If you don't bank with UCB, II18iYbe
it's time you c11d. Then, 1nstead or gett.1Dg
mad. you can get 1t streJ.ght. Beca.use that's
the wa.ywe like 1t.
Get it straight from uca
. I
\_
On the Road
To Vaudeville
By DENNIS MeLELIAN °' .. o.lty ~-,_...
The morning sun wanned the
stage of the Irvine Bowl where 16
women in colored leotards lined
up in typical chorus line fashion.
"Turn; 1,2,3. Step, left toe,
right toe. Turn around; right
knee, left knee.··
The chorines raised and
lowered their legs in Rockette-
like unison, paying strict atten·
lion to the man in front of them.
The women are part of a cast of
some 100 amateur singers and
dancers who have been rehears-
ing night and day for the 1976 edi·
tionofthe Fractured Follies.
The benefit produclioa ,
sponsored by the Silver and Gold
Chapter of the South Coast Com·
munity Hospital Auxiliary will be
presented at 8:30 p.m. Oct. 7, 8
and 9, in the Laguna Beach High
School auditorium. Tickets are
available in the hospital lobby or
by calling 499-1311, extension 642.
"OK, pretty good at this stage
of the game, u sa1d director Ron
Teigland, giving his eager-to-be·
beard blessing.
TOUlllNG DIRECl'OR
Teigland is a Svengalli of sorts.
A director for the Cargill Produc-
tion Company of New York, be
has been hired to whip the cast
into reasonably professional
shape.
He is one of a dozen Cargill
directors plying th~ country
directing charity shows with
such sbow·stopping titles as the
Cardiac Capers and High Fever
Yomes.
Putting the gloss on a group of
performers of v ary\ng degrees of
experience is no easy task. It's
especially difficult when there's
' only two weeks to do it.
But the 35-year-old director
takes il all in stride. After 10
years of staging s ome 90
musicals in 41 states, TeigJand
bas the process down to an art
form.
Traveling with trunks full of
more than 250 costumes, musical
arrange01ents, choreography
and themes for a handful of pro-
ductions, be has helped charity
ortaniutions raise more than $2
million.
aAZZLE DAZZLE
Ills knowledge of what makes a
hit show (be uses large doses of
ranle dazz.le, glittery costumes
and chorus lines) makes him a
welcome sight to fund-raising
committees.
One Midwest group-to his sur-
prise-met him at the airport
complete with red carpet and
marching band.
On the road nine months out or
the year. Teig land never spends
more than three weeks in one spot. And be doesn't know until a
few days before departure where
his next assignment will be.
"It's sort or like 'Mission Im-
possible."' be s aid, during a
break between rehearsals. "You
get a liWe envelope saying your
next assignment is ... "
HOLLYWOOD THEME
A meet-the-director party
starts the proceedings. Teiglaod
holds auditions and explains the
sbow. "Hooray for Hollywood" is
the theme for the Laguna produc-
tion.
The thin story line, revolving
around dozens of singing and
dancing numbers and skits, is
about movie actress Gilda
Golden wbo goes to Hollywood to
pick up an Oscar.
Because every theater, cast
and budget is different, he said,
be can't arrive with a set show in
mind. He quickly sums up the
situation and decides which
theme and numbers will be used.
Sometimes it's difficult dealing
with artistic egos and tempera-
ments, be admitted, but the cast
usually gets along and bas fun
doing the show.
"My ravorite expression is don't worry about the horses, just
load the cart,'' he joked.
HARDEST PART
"The hardest part is that only
one person knows the whole thing
and that's me. If you're doing a
production of 'Hello Dolly' most
people know bow it goes."
Because only he knows what
the fmished product will look
like. he has to concentrate on
keeping cast members' en·
thusiasm up and letting them
Boston bridal g,own designer Priscilla
Kidder with traditional dress.
. . . . , .. . .. "
Follies chorus line pays tribute to
Irving Berlin
know lbey are doing something
worthwhile.
He said audiences, comprised
largely of friends and relatives.
are usually warm. While that ob-
viously is an asset, it is difficult
to see how a Shirley Temple
number -performed by men -
could fail.
Staging mus icals comes
naturally to Teigland, who as a
boy in Racine. Wis., often put on
backyard shows. His first one
earned $7.82, which be gave to
the polio fund.
At 18 a member of a drum and
bugle corps, be talked the
parents into s ponsoring a
musical. He. naturally, was
director.
SHOWBIZ AUDACIT\'
With typical showbiz audacity,
he wrote entertainer Barbara
McNair -a Racine hometown girl ..... and asked if she'd appear
in the production.
She accepted. And the show
was a sell out.
'1'bal really got me going,"
said Teigland. who moved to
New York wilb hopes or being a
song and dance man.
All of his experiences have
given him a good background for
being a showman, an apt term
that be prefers.
Like living out of a suitcase, be
lakes the 9 a.m . to 11 p.rn. re-
hearsal schedules in stride. It
wouldn't be possible toJceep it up
10 years if he dido 't eltjoy it, he
said.
"The f irst week is the
roughest," he said. "'llien it all
starts to jell. It's very rewarding
on show nights.
''For the most part there's
nothing like it. The days of
vaudeville and review shows are
no more. There's sometbin2
about seeing a show live-
music, Rockette lines with se-
quins, plumes and feather.
"And, of course, knowing your
friends are doing it. it bas a feel·
ing all it ·sown.·'
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Tuesday, October 5, 1978
Adding a patriotic touch to the
show, left, are Carol Berryman,
Pat Berryhill, Mary Ann Carr,
Mary Osterhout and Galen Colwell.
Above, Maxine Jones, Joey Sims
and Lori Parker do a '20s routine.
.·
81
Nuptial Trends Reverse
<AP> -The bride rarely
blushes anymore. And the only
"somethine old'· at the wedding
may be the bridegroom, who has
been around at her breakfast ta·
bJeforthepastfew years.
But the white gown, the re-
ligious ceremony, the reception
-whether in a hotel or a family
garden -are apparently ma.king
a comeback, accordiqtotbepeo-
ple wbo follow such thi.np.
"lo the last four or live years
there bas been a trend away from
such things as marriages ln forest
preserves with the bride and
eroom in dungarees and back to
the traditional weddtnp," said
Marie Trillk, who wltb her
husband John bas operated Wed· din8 Service in Oak Park, Dl., for
19years.
"They now want the old·
fuhlooed wedding, although the
mother of the bride may be sltt.i.nt
ln the rear of the church holding
her daughter's baby," said Mrs.
Trillk, who ls consultant on about
40weddings a month.·
WITH TRIMMINGS
A number of authorities aicrou
tbe country report that many ol
those couples who have been liv·
lng together for several years are
now giving in to convention and
marrying. And when they do, It's
with all the trimmings.
"White no longer stands for
purity, it stands for security,"
said bridal gown designer
Priscilla Kidder, better known as
Priscilla of Boston. And many of
the couples who come to her
Boston shop make no secret or the
fact they have been living
together ..
'lbe Rev. Cecil Williams, con-
troversial pastor of Glide
Memorlal United Methodist
Churcb in San Francisco, said: "I
don't know of any couple I've
manied in the last eight years
wbo weren't already Uvlnt
toeether."
llabbl Paul Citrin of Boston's
Temple Israel, the largest
Reform Jewish congregation in
New EnaJand, said he too has
noticed a greater frequency of
couples living together "and if it
aoeswell, marriageteodstobean
almoetlotlcal conclusion.
''The onu I've bad dealinas
with ofteo tvrn around and have
temple weddings or some involve-
ment by clergy."
SAME ADDRESS
Prue Draper, society editor of
the Argus-Courier in Petaluma,
Calif., some 40 miles north of Sao
Franciaco, says couples filling
out the usual newspaper wedding
announcement forms "quite
openly list the same home ad·
dresses."
And when those who have been
living toaether do decide to get
married, "they go for tradi&,lal
wedd ln gs , w itb usb'ers,
bridesmaids and all that," she
said.
Couples are also more often tak·
lng charge of their own wedding
plans, once the exclusive pro-
vineeof parenta.
"One father we talked to dido 't
even know where the reception
was untll he read the invitation,"
Mrs. Trlllk said.
Mrs. Kidder reports that in·
stead of the mother ~ tbe bride corn1nc along to shop for tbe
gown, It's often lhe future
husband.
"Marrtare as a trend is boldinl
ltaown," she added.
But some couples are bendinl
that tradition to meet their own
needs or whims.
MAIL ORDER
Bill Reinwad, 25, and Julie
Kierstead, 23, were married this
summer in a rustic Grqe Hall in
the n.tral Willamette Valley near
Corvallis, Ore., before a miaiater
of tbe Universal We Church who
got bis mail order ministry by
paying asmall fee. r
The bride and 1room slmplf re-
ad "a statement we wrote
'ounelves about ourselves. to NT
totbe people who came."
U there iJ one fad this year.•
sa71, lt'• been beacti wedd1.np. a trend also n•ted In a reoet
Ellsabetb Post etiquette col.
Yolanda Gwin ol the Ad#e
Journal'• society departJb~t
says weddings ln that citf t#'f.o
be "perfectly lovely, Just old·~
wedCllncs with recelvlna llnei,
On tbe otber band, wbell·&he
Atlanta Braves receall)'oft.-a
two-day honeymoon ln Sav~
to any couple wlllina to set mw•
ried at home plate. nine COUfltl
took them up OD It. . .. . · ...
. . . . . . . ..
0All.Y"1.0T T\!!l!d!Y. Octobet,5. 111' ,
...... Show~r's NO Place to Gean Up
t>&Alt ANN LANDERS: I ,.._
: : c..uy au.ded a bddaJ lbower • . Jfor my slater. TwtDt)' pe1u
·, ceme Ud every~ broolbt a
.oft-eae1ptoa1. Sblln~r., • IM:lve.
• We cbeclred and double·
: • ~eel each •lft. IDd card and • : ·Glilldn ·t ft.nd • thm1 tromwa cer-, : : · ~ pe_raoo. The woman d• j: ....,a&ely cam• ~·banded,
i• •• cliDDer and helped henelf to .~ .~s1la111eaolpuncb. --'fie were all shocked. My alster
, ..... burt and puuled. Tbe l'*' .-• Uan II: Sboald we MY IOllMt 101
.. her? Allo, sbouldwelnvtt.her
to the wedd.lna? -ANXIOUS TO
KNOW
" . '•' -.· ...
ITT
.. -
' :'-. . : , . . . . ·, -,~~Season
~:·capped ..
·:··For the man who
. favors headgear for
"lhe fall season, de-
. . signers offer choices.
Made or wool they
are variations on the
. bill or touring c ap or
. a tam worn in the
: : Scottish Highlands.
. , . "' ...
r.
DBAa ANXIOUS: Well!!!!
Nner .... 1 lle&Ntl ...,...,.. ..
-.,.eaM. la .,-ntlre life. ........ temlal .. a...,
..... 1 .. allft!Bew ... c•,_· _,,.... ..... .._......,M ........ ~ .... ... ........... ,.d. ....... ....
...... c...t•ur1t Jtllteddle
..... peaalty .. --....... =:i" cu laave lier elee-
l"fe received • .......,.. ti kt·
ten from wo•• w1to HY lllej' uve belll tavlted &o u • .., u
fwr• ft.6 U.wen ,_UM ....
bride. Tiiey view tlle wllele
-.er1nt1eaaall&udertpaft,
... lmat1a,,)'OU ......... I
OMt .... el•aJNltJ•**---......._ ~. ctrta.,..,.......
illllt...,ea1e.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My
huabucland I io wttb ddl~ C()Ufl• <I'll call them the B's). 1"' fellow 11 obnoxlom. After be's
b8d a few clrtn.k• be,.... fnlb un-
dlrt.betable wbJcb lltlllecbupest a~b I've ever bMl'dol. l've
l1fted b1I band off my bee atleut
a do9en Umea. What I'd llb to do
llllapb11face.
Lut Dlabt 1lx of us were IOlftl out to dinner (the B'• lnclua.d..}
When I told my b\llblnd I didn't wut to alt next to Mr.BI bad to
explain wa.,. Would you believe
,.
·•· E's for Effort
AT
WIT'S
END
By ERMA BOMBECX
A parking garage in
Kansas City bas a little
button that you push and
an attendant helps you
find your car.
I don't know about you,
but I haven't been so ex·
cited since I saw a sale
on black towels.
It's about time. For
years, cars have been
wandering away from
where lbelr owners
parked them. They don't
get far -.. Just enough
to drive a motorist
crazy.
The "color" system
never worked for me.
Wby would anyone as-
swne that a woman wbo
can't remember what
car she drove would re-
member that she parked
it on the "yellow" level,
History Made
in the "E" section?
There's only one
system I know that
women use and it's quite
ineffective. It's tbe old
association trick. I am
parked on the 1reen level
in the I section, ergo, my
grass la green and we
use iron on it to keep it
that way. Iron begins
with an I. Thus, as we
leave the car I tell the
girls, "All we have to re-
member is that the grass
is green because ol the
iron and we know where
we parked lbe car."
Seven hours later, as
we return from abop·
ping, 1 tum to Eunice
and say, "What was it I
was supposed to re·
member?"
"When?" asks Eunice
blankly.
"When I parked the
car,"
"It wu your son who
outgrew bis pants."
"Wu it living?" asb
Diane.
"Yes."
"la it a movie star?"
"la It b1-1er than .a
breadbox?"
"I think so. Walt a
minute . 1 cot it!
Grus!"
"And what color la
your grass?" asked
Ewllee.
"Brown."
"And bow did it get
th.atw ?"
"N::fect."
"It '1 simple," ahe
aald. "We're parked on
the brown level ln tbe N
section." Kunau City ii 1,300
miles from my home
... but it'll be worth it
to commute.
.-,.._No~---M .. .•. mid• me reeJ a lot bitter about
l'll)'1eU. -AN ADMIRER ROM ATLANTA DEAR ANN LANDERS: Many tbua for your wooderfUl answer
to ''Sipplns a LitUe." It made my
~·too, found mYHlf f.,ettlnc
D.lllMI and mlsplactng articles
and worrying that maybe I wu
becomin1 senile. YOW' suggestion
D&\Jt AD: Yea"l'e sweet &o
wrtte IHI& I cu•t re.e...., tM
ICUer. •
· tblt tbe woman put th1cp where
they belonc was excellent. I've
tried it and ft work•.
Olacover bow to be date bait
witbout falllng hook, llDe and
sinker. Ann Landers' bookl~1 "Dating Do's and Don'ta," will
help You be mor. poUed and sure
or vourself on dates. Send 50 cents in coln along with a long,
stamped, aell·1ddrt11ecl en-
velope with yow reqUMt to AM
Lanchra, P.O. Box 1400, ElllD. JU.
60120.
And thwa too, Ann, ror admit· tine that you too are bavinl trou-
ble rememberinc thinp. Tbat
Pisces Gets Support
WEDNBSDAY,OCl'OBE&I
B18YDNEYOllAJta
AalBS ()(arch 21.·Aprll 19): Wbat occurs
behind tbe acenea I.I more important -and cur-
rent-than II apparent. Know It and look beneath
surface tndlcatlou. Secreta are revealed. You
feel eoaftned.
TA11&V8 (ApriJJO.MQJO): Accentoobopes.
wilbel, return from bmtnea enterprise. Member
of opposlte sex la in picture. Your romantic feel-
in81 IUl'le to foretrcm.t. GEMINI (llayZl·June20),: Youcetvaluelor
efforts, 10ooey. You could-promotion, special
honor from community. Those who took you for
granted will take a second look. Family situation
improves.
CANCER <June 21.Joly 22): Illusion,
mystern seem to dominate. Nothing ls really set·
tied. Don't permit any person to "bluff" you .
l.cmg·lenn arrangements, journeys, communica·
Uons, education, lanaua&e -these could be feltured.
LBO (July 23-Aug. 22): Basic issues, money
consldebtlons, practicalities are involved. Busi·
ness, emotional commitment -tbele could coJ •
tide or blend, depenc:tiq upoo your degree of dis·
dpllneand wisdom.
VJaGO (Au1. ~22): Uelow; play wait· in1 same. Permit others to take initiative. Accent
on partnership, lon1·ter"m relationship, public re·
lations, the way you look to others -and mar·
riage.
LIBllA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Moderation is fine,
but let others know you bave ideas or your own. Go
slow, but don't bury principles. Be receptive,
diplomatic without losine ftre of independence.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23--t'lov. 21): Creativity, intui·
,.
CALENDAR
CALIFORNIA
CONFEDEaATION OF
ABTS: A day devoted to
the state of tbe arts
throu1bout California
will be«iD '"t 8:30 a.m. Monday, Oct. 11, at the:
Mort Taper Forum.
Tbe first statewide
erotram of its kind, tbe
Ooqrell of the Arts is =:•ored by the a Theater Coun-
cil and the Coordin.aing
Roberta Carrington,
put director of District 6
ol Soroptimist Intern&·
ticlnal, will speak to the
Newport Harbor club at
its DOOD meettn1, Wed·
Deida,, Oct. 13, at the
HolldQ lno, Costa Mesa.
llra. Carrln1ton's
topic will be Tbe FOWMI· lDI of SoropUmilm and
ProJectloos for tbe
Future.
lion, emotion~! responses are part of your
personal scenario. Children, llflira of heart,
change, speculation, quick aetiona, lmpUlalve ._
clalonsarel.ikelytoL-epartolexcitement.
SAGnTARJVS (Nov. Z2·Dec. 21): You,_
. more room, breathinf space to 10 alonl wttb
solidity. Older individual will be more lluib&e •
Your own sense of humoreou.ld beJpaavetbed&)'.
CAPUCOllN (Dec. n.Jan. 11): Short trip.
unique call or messaae could be featured. Revlae,
review, get rid of the flimsy and build on IOlid
structure. You 'relnvitedtoapart¥or lathertal· AQUAlllUS (1aa. 20-Feh. 18); Empbull OD
what you locate, hold, what can be "i.t ao." &-
carded. Your sense ol emotional MCarl~ 11
spoW1bted -r amily JOe1Dber allow tbat 100
have been •' ri gbt, ''that views are vindlc:atecl
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Some penou t.houcht you had run out ol wind. You aurpriH
them with your staying POWtr. You bave alllea ln
many places. supporters who are quiet but
strollg.
COME and EXPERIENCE •••
the feminine touch of beauty ... Let us
give you the luxury of beautiful ceramic
nails-by Suzi. In the Luzzetta B~ard
tradition, a special offer for a ltmlted
time only ..• call today
640-6023
ryzzet~.&~ard
DISt..e PLAZA• 2•1.-....c....•.wteut ..._MMIU
Council of Artiats __ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.-~F.ducaton.
Debates will include
Art as a Tool for Sodal
Cbanle and Public Ac·
countability of Govern·
ment Subsidization ol the
Arts. Further information ls
available from Marlane
McGarry at (213) ~-i1 820-2808 (days> or (213)
851-3180 (even1D1s>.
AAUW: Copins With
Streu Creatively will be
the toplc of Dr. Harold F.
Burka , clinical
psycbololist, when be
speab to the Huntlnaton
Beacb branch at 7:30
p.m., Wed.Desday, Oct.
13, at tbe HunUnston
Beach Central Library.
Kore information la
available from Mn. E.A.
Hardlllburlh at 53MO&&. or Mrs. David Kurth at
8t6-57Sl.
SOROPTIMIST:
are available through
the four Newport .Heacb
branch libraries and
Chamber of Commerce office, or by sending a
check, made payable to
Newport Beach His·
tori cal Society, to Mrs.
William Ritter, 410 Aliso.
St., Newpori Beach, c allf. 92663.
"There was oil leaking _________________ _
Smoked sausage linkl. Medt In the old·world
trlditlon of exo.lllnc:e. Plump and juicy.
84Kstint with rich, mesty flaWOt, Wtltthef
brollld or fried, enjoy 1 touch of S.-la
tonltflt with Hid(Ol'Y flfma Brotwum.
AVAILABLE ONLY WHILE SUPPLY LASTS.
• --
The price, which in·
eludes two complimen·
tary cocktails, is $8 per person.
underneath.''
, "No, I'm trying to re·
member where I parked
it . . . something about
color. Something grow.
ini·"
In Lido Village 1
3400 Via Oporto, Sulte~6 -' °" ............. _....
Newport Beach •.
714-675-6191 , •.
.. .. .. • •• ~-If
<fara·1!raut•
A Ger~-..tlrtut wilt! Wtwrt...., The
.,..-feet OClft\tlllment to our Brotwt.nt. SOid McN-
11..ey et Hidcory F1m11.
~bebbP~
A ...., chedder 0.... midi With Just. nip of ..... OW-world .. ._
btendld to PlfMctlon. Now't thl tlml to experlenel • bit of 1twri1-'
IUbest. AVAILABLE ONLY WHILE SUPftLY LASTS.
Hlcko17 f•rms OF ONro•
'South Coast Plaza °:~=·~~::::
COIT A L-~ c.rovw1 Mell lu1'11ty 12 to I """' M!IA lrlltol •1 Sen Dieto fr-•v PtlOM! MMll1
UllllCO P 1D c1111 sma•
. ~:
~ .. . •' .. , . .. • . :
IOOMER by Wa F. lrowt1 md Mel Canoe
• . TUMBLEWEEDS
,•
td.'7 'f1r#( Am.NJSE, SONI t«>WS1HAT?
Sl'WM lFl rM A &.rm..! l'rAF FROM
~OFAA>RAOONl I
' J
~ .Y"11..'liJ'-'o:
' ~~-l J ........ -...... "11~~Wi. ~_ .... '
-: __ ...__~-----.. ~ .. . :..,
AJNKY WINKERBEAN
Record Roundup-
Eric Karma's new
record is a beauti-
ful song about the
pain of breaking up.
TANK McNAMARA
... AND AFTER tiJ!
KMBEK'7 CJr ~ UX)M~N'.5 ~ ~15
T~TOOK
~&~?rs.
.NANCY
But it's aU3o a la-
ment for the lost
spirit of the sixties
and the fai Jure of
the United Nations
to keep world order.
byTom BatUc
Thia symbalism,cou-
p.led with a snappy
disco beat, shoo1d sem. it right to the
top!
by &nie BushmiUer
THAT STIJPID WHAT MADE 't'OtJ SO
6RANC~ DIZZY ? ,.------
HANGING-
OVER
. ·. "' . . ..
DOOLEY•s WORLD
.
!
GORDO
:~ TODAY'S CBDSSIDBD PUZZLE •\. •PEAmNmU17.T;:S:-:::\l r---------. _____ __,by Charles M. Sddz ·UNITED Feature Syndicate IAonoa, aPuuieSoi.eo
ACROSS 4~Plc~edOUI '"0 " H[ART ABBOT 4 7 Runs t v [ 0 w H E R s A L L E
!Pt11latehsts &"'ouno REDOLENCE SLADE
t est •. T A A t T I A A E E s s 111 er 5 I Required 10 H A L L I c L u T s I ... p E s 6···· 1eawe
Bened•CI 521'.llldOI EAA l lOU I SHA M
lo Cn sh C HAR C E I T AN KI f T A ';~~; prtlb~ L E S S 0 H S I 0 R E A M E A
14 Western 54 Busmess A A T I G A T s I I N T E H T estab11s11mon1a P 0 A 1 1 0 A " 1 5 0 T ~I~~·~ 58FrtlCl1Htl'lut S NO Wl fRASE l l SLE
15Smallp1e 59 Gralll DIP TRA I All.ME O
t68ut1er spikes ATONE IT CH WEE OS
subslllute 61 ·····Sea c o "' t r H E R o l A G E
lnlatmal 82 Stared at T II E s s G R E T s It E L 63 lridulgeS Ill 1 7 Menial a winter
cond1t10t1 sporl 9 LCJ'lgriarrow 37 Repulsive
t80lw111gs 64 Japanese pennant fr:son 19 Where rehgion 10 Made 39 lie very Jagper is var th<>fougllly best: Sleng
Abbr S5 •••• ·8 wet 40 Britlllh
20 Moslem Weather t t Actr8'S Coklmbla
houaenotd utelhte V•• ··-· capital
areas 66 ····a ·tell 12 Srtualed 42 Pressrtg
22 O a tors bel11nd· need ' 1" privacy Preli._ 43 Brld"" 2 4 Lnre wt Idly 6 7 Bet ""
:26 Poor person acceptet 13 Heal and makM
27 Tree·llned bfown 44 Where
walks DOWN bread Albefla tS
31 Pref111 with 1 Drunk 21 Turi 46 Bandlelder
west and PMSon 23 Eagcw ·-Brown
way Slang 25 Small drum 4 7 Drinking
32 01 ttte sun 2 "So long" 27 Venomous bout
33 Uncovered 3 •••• ol snakes 48 Salvers
35Flxed by roses: Var 28 "Damn 49 Formal
agreement 4 UUllly Yankees" practices , 38 Proposed company girt 50 Seely legless
f!!Olect emplovee 29 Choice reptile 39 ·That will·· 5 flret In marble: 53 Pluck:
···now" 111 s var Informal
40 Forbl<I 8 ~re~ letter 30 StrQ'lgbOxes 55 ~~~~
autt1orlt1t1ve1y7 Femitea: 34 Wars ol the 56 Femn
41 Stile lrilormat -··· duce.I name 42 Merchandise BEndlng with 35 Rtllglous 67 Toots ····
43 Judie Ill pttoto or group NY aNertlona tele 36 Small personality
'4 Veuel Sullt• 60Dwecrion: Abbr.
NO, I [X)(T EVER HAVE 'THANG, OIOCK ... WEll. l«XJ A 6000 EOVCATION t5 10 60 TO SCHOOL A66.IN ... KNOW HOW NOCH M ALJUl\V5 'THE NEXT 6€5T THING
(M A Cf«'rlf /EO 6RAOUATE <:f 11.AATED A 6000 E~CATI~ ... TO A PlJ9-fl( MOTHER!
THE'ACE OfleDIENCE SCHOOL.~ AND "(OU KNOW WHAT
l'VE ALWA'<5 So.ID ..
JUDGE PARKER
c
INSIDE WOODY ALLEN by Joe Mai Ila
~ DID )tX) FIRST ~61~ "0 ~THAI
~ FAMIL. Y l'lf»J'i
l..CVE ~~
~ r SAW 1fie-
HOMe N\<Mf:SQF MY ~OOA~~~. 11'--~n---,
I
M)D ~el) 1HAi
MV~~
E'Dfll?P Mt: OOt.
DAILY PILOT ,R
by Gus Arriola
,. ...
"Whoever said money can'f buy happiness certainly didn't kllOw
about antiques." • • • •
•'•
• '4 ..
·~~· .... RllllRIAOtl', • . ·····
A .. WI ......
FRANCO HARRIS RAMBLES FOR SHORT YARDAGE.
$teelers Collapse
Big-play Vikings
Re1nain U nheaten .
:1n.OOMINGTON, Minn. (AP)
~ Minnesota's "Purple People
F.pters'' look hungrier than ever
U>l!r76 and they remain unbeaten
~month into the National Fool·
bj.ll League season. ~he Vikings, now 3·0·1,
ctpitalized on six Pittsburgh
titrnovers and ravaged the de-
fepding Super Bowl champions
1'{'6 in a nationally televised inter·
ccnf erence battle Monday night,
leaving the Steelers critically
'WOunded. ~·1 can 'l believe our defense has
eftr matched our effort,'' said fiJ ·
• $year middle linebacker Jeff
Siemon. "ln terms ol total effort,
eftr)'one is coming up with big MS."
·And while the defense did its
t.Jitng, the Minnesota offense
s'8yed on the ground more than
oermal under the direction of
qqarteraback Bob Lee, who
plflyed the entire game for Fran
Tarkenton.
'l'be 36-year-old Tarkenton mis·
s~ the first starting assignment
o(,his 16-year career because of
~ury. The veteran Vikings de-
fense picked off four Terry
~dshaw passes, recovered two
Pittsburgh fumbles, and blocked
two field goal tries and an extra
pojnt attempt. The work of the
Minnesota special team on the
Steelers' kicking game left
Pittsburgh's Roy Gerela a~
lOWlded.
•'They're so super in goal line and
short yardage situations and
besides, we were down only 7-6
and there was still 12 minutes or
so left in the game."
The decision to abort the effort
for a first down back.fired. •'There
are no tricks in this business,"
said Vikings coach Bud Grant.
"You don't want to admit to
yourself though that you can't
make a yard."
The Vikings have given up only
34 points in victories over the
Steelers, Detroit and New
Orleans and a 10-10 overtime tie
.against Los Angeles.
PlhsburQh 6 0 0 0-•
~-I• 0 1 0 10-17 Plt1-<:u1111ln9ll•m 1 P<IU from .,,..,ill•w
(kk ked l•ii.dl Mlnn-filfPfNWI I rv11 ICox Ille.kl
Ml""'-"o.-tm.., • rvn !Cox kick)
MIM -FGCox4
A~7.I09
St.....,~
A"'downi Ru\!>es-vuin
Pllul119 or"'
~tumvard~
~~
P\llli
Fumt>IM-10\I
PenalllH-y•nh
IZ II
«HTl •Uo S1 ,.
71 ..
1~72.. 4-11·2
»5 s-• 4-2 2·7
7-6<1 4.33
INDIVIDUAL. L.EADt!llS
RUSHING-Pltt•bur9h, Bieler 11>-IS. 8r-.i•
'>-47, Harrh 11.:M. Minnesote, F«oman V ·I•.
Miiier H . •
RECEIVING -Plltst>urQfl, HllrTli NI, S.ann
7·1'1, Cunnl11911am 2-14, Bloler 1-•. Mtnnetote, S.
Wl>lte7·23. Rashad 1·13, Miiier H
PASSINO -Plttsti..1r911, S..ed1'1aw 1~12 .... 'IO
yards. Minnesota. Lee. 4· 11·7. 41.
Sports in Brief
... . . . .. .
Angels, Tribe, SD Keep Skippers
87fteAalOda&ed"'-
1'be odds of a s~Yialon
m~or leque baseball manager
beinl rehired often are lea than
even money.
But Frank Roblnaoa. Norm
Sherry and John McNamara,
wboM teams wound up In the
second half of their division
raca durlna tbe 1978 aeuon, de-
tled tbe odds Monday and signed urn contracts.
Robinson, tbe only black
manager in major league bis·
tory, signed a one-year contract
for a reported $80 000 plus i.ncen· Uve bonuses with Cleveland after
directing the Indians to an 81·79 season and fourth place ln the
six-team American Leacue East.
Mistakes
Haunting
Steelers
~ ...
BLOOMINGTON. Mino. CAP)
-They have woo too many big
games to panic, but Pittaburgb's
two-time Suoer Bowl cbamoioos
feel they have already made
enough critical mistakes in the
young 1976 National Foolball
League season. "We fight back -we made the
mistakes," coach Chuck Noll
said after bis Steelers lost the
ball six times for 64 yards in a
17-6 defeat to Minnesota Monday
night ln a nationally televised
game.
'lbe loss dropped the Steelers
into a las t -place tie with
Clevelapd in the Central Division
of the American Football Con-
ference, two games behind co-
leaders Cincinnati and Houston.
The Steelers have a 1-3 record
and are in danger of missing the
post.season playoffs for the first
time in five seasons.
"We can't think about anything
else but Sunday." said Noll,
wboee team faces Cleveland in the next game. "All we have to
do is start winning. That's all we
have to do right now. The Super
Bowl is about four million miles
from my mind now."
"We've crawled out of holes
before," said star running back
Franco Harris of the Steelers,
who was held to 34 yards in 17
carries by the rugged Vikings'
def-.mse. Harris bad rushed for
more than 100 yarm in bis two
previous games against the Vik-
ings, lncluding a record 158 yards
in the Steelers' 16-6 victory ove.r
Minnesota in the 1975 Super
Bowl.
"We're too good not to do it
again this year.·· added Harris.
Despite the discouraging start.
veteran linebacker Andy Russell
saJd the Steelers must avoid th& "pessimistic doldrums," the 12-
year pro from Missouri noted
that, "a few of us m this team
have a lot of experience in this
kind of situation, very few. There
aren't many of us left."
Minnesota coach Bud Grant,
however, doesn't think Pit·
tsburgb can be counted out.
"They're the same team that's
won two Super Bowls," said
Grant. "We looked at them on
film all week and I'll tell you they
have some awfully good people."
Sheny. named California's in-
terim manqer July 3 when the Ancell wen ln last place lD the
AL West, also aicned a one-year
contract, at an undisclosed
salary. after lifting the team lnto
a Ue for fourth place, its best
ftniah since 1973.
And McNamara was given a
one-year contract with San Dieao
despite the Padres' fiftb·place
finish ln the N atlonal League
West in bla third year as
maoqer.
Robin son and general
numqerPbil Selhl both termed
tbe Indians' sea.eon dl.aappoint-ma. but Seghl said: "The very
fact that he's been rehired would
indicate we have ~deoce in
him. J think everybody learns by
experience."
Seebi noted that Robinson
s howed improvement aa a
manager "in some areas, but I
keep 1oing back to the fact I
tbouabt olayer Roblnson should have urged manager R.obinaon to
play him more.'! Robin9on, ooe
of the game's all-time leaders ln
home runs and runs batted lD. sent himself up to bat only 68
times during his last ot 21 years
as a player.
Sherry led the Angels to a 37·29
record over the second ball of the
season.
"At the end of the seaM>n. I
believe our team had gotten to
the poaUJon wbere the players re-
ally believed they could wtn ball
games, and did. As the season
ended. we reaJlY felt we bad at go-tna." Sherry sald.
"Tbincs went very well uode.r
Sherry," aald California general
manqer Harry Dalton.
Sherry 'a r e blrlng ended
specwatioo tbal Earl Weaver
m.itbt move from Baltimore and
become Angels manager.
McNamara called the Padres'
season "frustrating," adding:
"We played well In the fint half,
but things didn't fall right for us
ln the second ball.··
San Dieeo finished with a 73-89 ~d.
A .. WI ........
BENNIE CUNNINGHAM HAULS IN A TD PASS. MINNESOTA'S JEFF SIEMON (50) DEFENDS.
101-year-old
Phillies' Fan
Still Cheering
OCEAN CITY, N.J. (AP) -At
101, Elizabeth "Bess" Blundin is
taking it a bit easier these days.
Her Phillies have won the Na-
tional League East division.
"Bring on the Red Machine,"
Mrs. Blundin said recenUy from
her home, clutching a Phillies
autographed baseball sent to her on her lOOth birthday.
Mrs. Blundin, who helps
manage a summer hotel in this
resort city. said she was worried
when the Phillies went into their
September tailspin.
UCLA Post-mortem
Donahue Def ends
Kicking Strategy
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The
10-10 tie that knocked both UCLA
and Ohio State down a notch or
two in their college football rank-
ings seems to have come about
by both coaches trying to out-
guess one another while playing
it safe.
UCLA coach Terry Donahue
said Monday he was us ing
strategy and not settling for a tie
when be had the Bruins punt in-
stead of trying for a first down
with fourth down and short
yardage on the Ohio State 43 yard
line with 3:55 left to play Satur-
day at Col um bus.
for a tie and don't accepl that.
When you go on fourth and one in-
side your own territory and run
the fake punt like we did earliec·
in the game, I find it hard for
anyone to say we played for 1'
tie."
The later punt was simply
keeping with the percentages,
said Donahue, and "You should
always play percentage foot-.
ball. ..
"You get a kick blocked on you
ooce in awhile and you expect it,•·
said Gerela in the subdued
Steelers' locker room. "But three
in.a row. That's never happened
tome."
the Vikings have now blocked
three of four extra point tries and
tbtee field goal attempts.
"They 're the best l 've ever seen
at doing that," said Bradshaw.
"Just absolutely awesome."
Crown to Tanner;
Murphy to Lakers
"I have to contess I was
scared," she said, "But they
came back and lt was beautiful. I
watched that whole game when
they beat the Expos in Montreal
to win t.be Eastern Division. See-
ing them pop the champagne
corks was beautiful."
Can the Pbils beat the Cincin·
natiRed.s?
The Buckeyes wound up kick-
ing the ball back to the Broim in
a bit of unpopular strategy of
their own and UCLA then ran out
the clock with the game ending in
the deadlock.
Donahue said , "When we
ticked we put all the pressure on
Woody Hayes. I think many peo-
ple missed the psychology of the
game, and I think it was a
classic.
Donahue added, "I'd say in
that situation (the fake> you'd
take a high risk but a calculated
one. When you punt on fourth and
one in Ohio territory with 3:55
left I don 'l think you 're playing
for a ta e, you're playing percen-
tage football."
The UCLA coach also said that
Ohio Stale bad to be viewed as a
preseason game.
"We £ell we bad opportunities
to win at Ohio State and didn't
and yet I think we have to keep
the nonconference schedule in its proper perspective," be said. Bradshaw. in fact, was so im-
pressed with Minnesota's interior
strength that he changed signals
early in the fourth period. With
the Steelers at their own 28 on
fourth down -a few inches shy of
a first down -he originally left
the huddle planning to try for the
first down.
"Then I gave It a little more
thought," sajd Bradshaw. who in-
stead called a timeout and went to
the sidelines to confer with
~lerscoach Chuck Noll.
. I think against any other team
we'd have gone," said Bradshaw.
Court Quiet
On Crash Suit
W ASIUNGTON (AP) -The ~reme Court Monday declined
to "decide whether Wichita State
Uliiversity may be sued for
damages because of the 1970
crub of a chartered airplane ta.k-
ing its football team to an oul-of-, towngame.
Tbe justices let st.and a 4·3 de-
cl.sion of the Kansas Supreme
Court upholding a state law ma.k-
ine the stale and its agencies im-
mane from such suits. They saJd
tbe high court did not have
Juclsdiction to decide the ques-
~e autt stemmed from a crash
on Oct. 2, 1970, near Silver Plume,
Colo., in wblcb 31 persona were
killed and nine Injured. The plane
carried the football team, mem·
hers ol the f acuity aod university
aupporten.
SAN FRANCISCO -Hard-
serving Roscoe Tanner ended
Brian Gottfried's hot streak Mon-
day night, defeating his onetime
high school teammate 4-6, 7-5, 6-1
in the finals of a $125,000 interna-
tional open tennis championship.
Gottfried's usually precise net
game wilted under steady pre-
ssure from third-seeded Tanner,
who served 10 aces on bis way to
gaining the $20,000 firs\ prize.
The left-banded Tanner then
teamed with Dick Stockton of
Dallas, to win the doubles fmal,
defeating Gottfried and South
Africa's Bob Hewitt, 6-3, 6-4.
• ....,, ... Siped
LOS ANGELES -Forward-
guard Allen Murphy, who played
in the American Basketball As-
sociation last season and was
signed by the Chicago Bulls as a
free agent, bas been acquired by
the Los Angeles Lakers in return
for future considerations.
The 6-5 Murphy, who came to
the Lakers Monday, averqed
four points a game in 29 ap-
pearances with the Kentucky
Colonels.
Ma•agne Flrftl
ST. LOUIS -Red Schoen·
dienst, who guided St. Louts to a
World Series t.iUe in 1967, has
been fired aa manager ol the
Carda.
A successor to Schoeodlenst
will not be named at this Ume.
.. ~ ... Dae
SAN DIEGO -Lefthander
Randy Jones, one d the hottest
pitchers in baseball durtnl the
season ju.st ended, will have to
undergo surgery oo bis pitching
arm.
'lbe San Diego Padres said the
operatioa 1s scheduled Thursday
in Los Angeles.
Jones, whose record this year
was 22-14, reportedly bas a rup-
tured bleep tendon.
l{f ... Strotlflft'1
LOS ANGELES -Coach Bob
Pulford ol the Los Angeles Kines
says bis National Hockey League
club will be stronger tbia year
but be candidly admita be doesn't
think they can beat t.be Montreal
Canadlens.
·•1 like our chances against the
others," said Pulford entering
bis fifth year as the Kings' skip-
per. "But don't forget that Pit·
tsburgb, Detroit and others are
also improved.
"I think our defense is better
and more experienced and you
play strong defense and then
you also score more. I don't think
we played good defense last year
and our goal production went
down.''
"I'm keeping my fingers
crossed and so should everyone
else. It should be a good series,"
she said.
Mn. Blundin is a Pblllies fan
from way back. She was already
40 years old when the Phiia won
their fa.rst pennant in 1915, the
year sbe rented a room to Pblls'
Hall-of·Famer Grover Cleveland
Alexander.
Now, Mrs. Blundin likes the
Phillies' Dave Cash.
"He's producUve. Always gets
the clutch bit." she said. ''Tom-
my Underwood, too. I have great
hopes for him."
As for manager Danny Ozark
this year, she said, "Well, be is
an improvement over Gene
Mauch, but I'd say he's in and
out. Sometimes he doesn't use
good judgment."
Mrs. Blundin usually is too
busy in the summer to see her
boys play In Philadelphia. But
she m~es it a point to watch
them during spring training
when she vacations in Florida.
That way she can size up the
Phils before they come north.
Parents Die, Bot He Plays
IMPERIAL -AtUrtar Grijalva.17, learned of the death of his
parmta when be got home from a dloner for bis Imperial High
School football team.
The youn11ter was due beet on the playing field in two hours.
/uquarterback,beledbiateamtoa44-20vtctory.
Art.bur played the whole came but. said coach Pat McGee. "as
IOOll as be gol off the team bus after the 1ame Grijalva was In my anna Cl')'lnJ."
Alejandro Grijalva, a &year-old truck driver. ls •~pected of
sbootlnc hls wife, Rebecca. 35. twice before killlna himself Mon-
et.., in despair over monqproblens.
"When we kicked we put the
pressure on him. Now be has the
ball on bis 20 and he has to score
to beat us. I thought under pre-
ssure he would throw the ball and
we mlgbt get a turnover. But he
didn't let the pressure get to
h.im."
The Ohio State coach has said
he expected tbe Bruins would try
t.o put the ball in the air for a vic-
tory because "most young
coaches would've passed in that
situation."
The 32-yea.r-old Dooabue upset
the 63-year-old Hayes' bunch by
staying conservatively on the
ground, just as the Buckeyes bad
done.
"He misjudged me and I mis·
judged him,•· the Bnnns coach
s31d.
The lie slipped UCLA, 3-0-1,
from fourth t.o fifth in Tbe As-
sociated Press poll and Ohio
State went from No. 8to10.
Donahue insisted he was DOl
going for a tie and in defense cit·
ed the Bruins' fake punt on fourth
down tbat kept them going
towards their touchdown.
"I don't believe UCLA played
SUD8 Belt Lakers
SANTA BARBARA -Rookie
guard Ron Lee, Pboeobc' first
round draft choice out ol Oregon,
scored 17 points and veteran Paul
WestpbaJ added 16 u the suns
beat the Los Angeles Lakers
120-96 lD a N aUonal Basketball
Association nhibitlon same Monday night.
"Wehavetoevaluateourentire
team in the four games we've
played and I'm pleased with the
progress we've made," said
Donahue whose Bruins open their.
Pacific·8 Conference season this
Saturday against Stanford.
"I'm pleased with the progress
we've made up to this dateln''
Donahue said. "I don't think if
the middle of t.be summer some·
one had told me we'd be 3-0-1 l'd
have believed them."
Rick Forzano resigned as
bead coach of the Detroit
Uons Monday. His replace-
ment is expected todaY.
. ..... . . .
, .-ci•r. ocr®-5, 1~ DAil Y t-llO r •• ...
Offensive Players of Week Sa9s1t701.,_.an
MD Defense
Menacing
WIN PRIZES
WORTH
lllRKRUTHERS
San CleMente
KEVIN OBYMAKO
Eatancta
CARL CHERRY
Mertna
BRETT STEVENS
Laguna Beach
STEVE AAKHSHANI
EdllOn
Women's
Sports
WOMf H'S 8ASICfT8ALL
OCC IJS) 021 L0"9 S.ai<ll .. It pl ,,
&um• )1011
e"'"""" • o a ,,_.,,. • 0 •
H11l\l•n<lor 0 0 0
INall~ 0 0 • 0
TOm.t'l\I l I 1 1 "o.-0010 Total\ 11> 3 n lS
Halttl'"" OCC. 70-"
0.1_ w. .. lJU 1411 r .ut u
GllrHtll
\.AOn Cll~ll
8"r""'" Brown
Gia\\ ,,_,ne.,.11
M<t..een
Total<
Mal•Hm~
,, ti ,. " s 0 1 10
I 0 0 , 0 , , ,
I ] 1 S
\ 0 10
, I S
0 0 0 • , 18
11 • ,. S2
Golden W••I 11> II
Prep Football
SOl'HOMOlll
S<-llt O..uten
l!llMKla 0 0 I 0-1 Footlllll 0 0 0 ~
l!•l•n<la uorlno P.ar<• PAT; ,...wee.
MIKE MUSSO
Fountaln Valley
ROD BLANTON
Newport Harbor
DAN DUDDRIDGE eo.uu ...
MIKESENTAK
El Toro
Runners
To Vie
Saturday
Twenty six or the CIF'
top cross country teams,
including Edison or Hun-
tington Beach and Costa
Mesa lligh, will compete
al the Villa Park Classic
Saturda y morning at
Eisenhowe r Park in Orange.
Action begins at 8:30
with the s ophomore
races and concludes at
12:40 with the final varsi-
ty race.
The varsity will con·
sist or seven r aces with
the team's No. 1 runners
competing m· one event,
the No. 2 runners in
another, etc. Team totals
will be calculated by ad·
ding the places or the
finish or the school's
seven runners.
Observers m ay be wit·
nessing a preview of the
CIF 4-A finals as Edison,
Villa Park and Foothill
have thre e o f t h e
Southland's s trongest
teams. Cost a Mesa ls
ranked No.I in the 3-A poll.
Other Orange Coast
area teams entered are
Fountain Valley, Mat.er
Dei of Santa Ana and
Estancia.
IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY.
IRVINE TOWERS.
Hlgh·rlse space In
Newport Center's Flnanclal Plaza.
A prestige environment
In a community of 730 firms.
Outstanding views.
Security service.
Ample parking.
On·slfe management.
480 to 9600 square '"' available Wiii subdivide.
THE IRVINE COM .
TOWERS. ;oo a 550
.iewport Center Drive.
:ontoct your broker or
Im Slool. leoslng manager,
he lrvlne Company,
n4) 644-JOH.
NEWPORT ~CENTEll bu lHE~~
A btlltet piOe9 for t>uM\en tn o Mlt9' ef'lvtronment tor ~
lltKE D'ALESSANDM>
Huntington Beech
STEVE BEEUWSAERT
Mater Del
STEY! TELANEUS
Dana Hiiia
MIKE IPRAfl2
Corona del Mai
MIKEIWEAZY
MIUlonVteto
MIKEHEAALE
University
JI any blgb acbool football team llu a
quarterback wbo '*"' • threat to tbe llater Det lllCb <Santa Ana) MCODdary, BW Woi'tmu f..it
tbataquad la Edlsoo~liuJ}tinaton Beach.
But Workman, bead football coacb of Edison's
aiarcen, doesn "t mow how strona a threat Steve
Rakbshani will be at 7:30 Thursday nlabt when
Mater Dei and Edi.soo colllde at the Santa Ana
Bowl.
1'Nobodr bu bad time to get the ball otr a«aimt Mater Dei, • says Workman. "Their secondary ap-
pears to be really good. They sacked the
quarterback quite a bit against Lakewood and La
Mirada.
"And if you don'tbavetimetotbrow, there's no
way you can test theseeondary."
In its two pre vious wins, Mater Dei allowed op-
posing quarterbacks to complete 10 of 30 for 70
yards and bas thrown signal callers for 10 yards in
losses.
But the Monarchs ftaven't met anyone with the
ability of Rakhshani, who connected on 23 of 30
passes for 344 yards against Eisenhower. In three games, Rakbsbani bas completed 38 of 61 aerials tor SU yards.
"We thought be could be the best thrower
F.disoo bas ever bad." says Workman, wbo bas
coached the likes of Rick Bashore, an All·CIF pick
last year. "He doesn't run as well as Bashore, but
he's dol..na everything expected of him so far.
"Ancf he's still young and making aome mla-
takes that we hope he woo 't be ma.Icing later on.
Sometimes. he's not running when be should "11<1 he
has bad some trouble on audibles and cboice cl re-
ceivers."
-In addition to Rakbshani, the Chargers have
been getting offensive punch from tailback J im
Judd , who has r ushed for 241 yar~ on 47 carries.
Defensively. Edison showed big improvement
against Eisenhower after being punished by West
Torrance, which gained 372 yards.
And Workman knows Edison will have to im·
prove more in order to contain Mater Del
quarterbacks Tim Wigmore and Mark Druba.
"Wigmore and Drazba have tbe ability to be
broken-play type quarterbacks," says Wortman.
''The quarterback is the key to an option offense.
·Lakewood let Wigmore get away once, and he's go-
ing lo hurt you."
College Football Poll Edison bas given up the big play in its last two
games. although it didn't allow Eisenhower to run a
play from inside the 50. However, Eisenhower had
TD runs or 74 and 71 yar.ds and a scoring pass of 57
yards.
Tiw Too 't.w ntv tram\ In The A\.
toelated Press co11egr toolbell DOii,
-111 ""H>ltu •otn on oarent~. s.non re<o•dt •nd tol•I POlnh
p 0 • n I s b • ' • d o n »-1•11•·1•12-10·•·•7·6·~· 3 l·I
I Mk:ll~n IS11 HM> 1,181 , "'""''"9" ()) •.O.O 991 3. 0!!1"'10..,,. IJ I •.o.o 91• '· Geot'9•• ,,, 4-0.0 810 S UCLA 341 l>S8
• NlbrMll4 l ·0-1 ..
1 Maryl..,d • 0.0 SIS
·~\ •Missouri
10 OfllO Sim
11 vsc
11 Florida
IJ ~IO<I Coll•
I• Hor re O.me
1~ Teus Teen
16 Tu" II Teu•Al.M
18 Ark•n~s
19 Hor'lll Cllroll,..
10 Loutsl...a Statt
•.0-0
1 1.0
l I 1
).1-0
3·1.0
34.()
JIO
1.0.0 , 1-0
3·1.0
JI 0
•I 0
l I 1
500 .. n..
314
201
ll>S
141
'°' •3 21
72
JO
17
"We r eally played good defense," s a ys
Workman. "The only pass they completed was on a
broken play."
Edison will be trying to become the first Sunset
League football tear,n to defeat an Angelus Leq ue
opponent. Both Edison and Mater Dei bring 2-1 re-
cords into the contest.
See your Exxon Dealer now for tis
Get the T1ger's top perf0t 111er ...
the 40,000-mle Exxon·
Steel Belted Racial 78. s44
Plu• 12.11 F.O El Tu 101
•-BR 7&-13 wllflewall wllhH.o-4119,
Designed for outstanding
mlleage. Excellent traction,
control and gasoline
~11r,,a •• -.. economy.Two steel cord belts provide 1tsblllty and ~~~~~ puncture resistance.. Altd the rayon cord aid-all
provides road· hugging
flexobllity. A quality tire
bultl for the" tong run."
. _:a -·-"" M4.00 U.11
so.oo • 2.AO
14.00 2.80
OR7&-t4 eo.oo 280
GR 7&-15 a.oo 2t7
HR 1&-15 11.00 3.16
LR 1a.t5 74.00 3.47
CIMQ_ ......... ...,.._
Service Vall18S
ElJ{ON
Power llft withW
42-monlh
battery. s35
Allu Pa<:-ttar"' p,11,.74 wllll lraci.ln.
Don't gamble on a weak battery
this time or year. Trade now for
our power-packed Pacetetter.
Extra capac11y 10 meet Increased
elect1icat demands ol today's
cars. Check the price on a
Pacesetter to match your car's
power needs.
$3,600
IN'76
* R e ube n·s ~~IOO:X R. \KER
*
Weeldy Pigskin Plckeroo '76 winners
will •h•r• prtzes worth more than $330
by Mlecting their choice• of the win-
ners of 30 weekend football contnta.
The. Deity Piiot reader best predicting
the outcomes of Pfgsktn Plckeroo '76
games will win a one-year membership
at the Nautilus Newport physical fltneH
center, 4220 Von Karman Avenue,
Newport Beach.
Second place winners will enjoy • din·
ner for two at the Moon raker Restaurant
In lrvlne, Reuben's Newport Beach or
Reuben's Costa Mesa.
Third place winners will be awarded
frff car washes by Metro Car Wash
Systems at Harbor near Baker Street In
Cost• Me•• and Beach at Ellis Avenue
In Huntington Beach.
. RULES
1, ~I tlM et1l•Y blanll .,.,_or • ,..._Ille t.c:"mlla Of It lo
_1 .. c...-1 "lleH .... llMt.nimlM"lldellMdilll•""eH O .,..ic.ate." lnlrlet "'onl Ila""''....,,"' Mn-,,,_ 10 IMllla.te ......... n....W111CllCl.,.'l toottonnwiltM Cl1_.hfleCI.
I -11 IO' f'IGSKIH l'ICl(lltOO, ?•, ~ 0.-1JMlll. ,.,0, aoa 15611, Cetta MK•. CA '1H6.
l. OtllY -..my .. , .. ,..." _..,,. .... _ ...... CIMtH'-h .,..
.oCIVIMd IMI COlllHI ofh<f•IS ""'Y iotVH~ _.,... -rlH
from • ....... '11Clclrtts ~ St1t9le -·--flMY CllM!tfallty 6A' -I ...tnn t•ua ••sc:•-Dech icHt of illellff Oii lhlt pelflt m~t • ac~H IS 11,..1 by all C-t1Mt,
. ,.
4. E1'1rtet -•t M -lm•rUCI Mt ._ 11 .. n f'ri<My •""'ti lie.,._ ' lt..W .. IMC>ail' f'llolCellaMtWOf!IU b'l•P.M.
s. ~194 ...,flf*fn aftCI tllelr 1""""4ialoe •-'"' --etitlllM .
6. Tlf elllAICEll I LANIC MUST llE f'ILLID IN 011 IN'TllY IS • ' VOID. ., • ···············~························••.it • ENTRY BLANK . !.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·• • • •• • •• 1:
~me ······ .............................. .
Address .................................. .
City .......................... Zip .....••...
• • .• •• • • .. .. ..
PftOne .••••••••••••.••.••.•••••••••••••••• • • Circle te•ms you think will Wfn tflis Wfftc's gamn·: .. : .
Atlanta at New Orleana
Buffalo at New York Jeta
Chicago at Minnesota
Dallas at New York Glanta
Denver at Houston
Kansas City at Washington
Miami at Baltimore
New England at Detroit
Oakland at San Diego
Pittsburgh at Cleveland
St. Louis at Phlladelphla
Seattle vs Green Bay at Mllw
Tampa Bay at Clnclnnett
Stanford at UCLA
USC at Waahlngton State
Oregon at Callfomla
Washington at Oregon State
Michigan State at Michigan
Ohio State at Iowa
Northweatem at Indiana
llllnols at Mlnn•SOJ•
Purdue at Wlaconsln
Nebraaka at Colorado
Oklahoma at Tex••
Mlaourt at Kansaa State
Kann• at Oklahoma State
Army et Penn State
Georgia at Mlaalaalppl
Tennesaee et Georgia Tech
Teua Tech atTexaa A&M
·:· ··: .. •. • • • .. • • : • .. • .. : ·c • • .. • • .. .. • .. ..
i : •• .. • • • • • • J .. · .•.. • • • • ~'• .. ' .. • • • . : .· ... ...
·t . ~ .
i : • •• :
( .i l ,:
TIE BREAKE R -My 1U1S1 Oft ti• total
~ of points sClWtd 111 all • tlmet II
j~
• • : .. •• ... .. 1: • • • • • DAILY PILOT
•• · 1. . ·=t . .... • . ... • • • • • • ' .......... , ........... ~····················'
I.~ .
-DAILY PILOT
.:: What's DOing
Outdoors·
Pickeroo .JE Grid A.ees Barons Selected No. 1
Fomitaln V ailey IDCh
Scbool's Barona football
team took over the top
1pot lD the CIF 4·A tc4> 10
poll th.la week art.er anim·
prea11ve, 21·0. victory over Katella Saturday
Mlsaion Viejo bad been
unranked until th1I week.
tO. ()II-12·" ..
JIM NIEMIEC
The albacore appear to bave beaded for
• bktbem waters u the clock eounta bave clruticallJ
dropped off durlnc the put week. Only a couple ol P8J'll and charter boata are nanninJ out to the ~waters dally.
• -• -. U it la over. we bad a great aeaaoo u San Dleco
dock counts were in exceu ot 1.000 albl~ per day
forover7weelcs, andaomedQ&ex.eeeded3,000 ..
·••· · Sportfi1bers out ol Avila Beach and llorro Bay
_ ~picking up loneflns, but not in any numbers yet. 'l'be season usually peaks in northern waters
a.a:>uDd the middle of October. ~. · Area coutal actloo bu allo taken a dip for
Newport and Dana party boata, but sWl conslStent
·cs&cbes~f bus, bonito and rock flab are be~ re-
ported daily. Loads are vwy lllb~ and reservations
are no longer necessary.
MarU• StlU Sftwce
Faatutic aarllD ftlldq WU reperW reeeMIJ -u ftpres .. get beUerUa,.p OeWter ••• .,
tM ac:tlea Is takblg place • tile west Md of ca&allaa u4l Saa. Clemelll&e llluda. Marlla 8"e lal&.-
U.C fire.eye type Jiii eztreael;J well u wl&lleuel
by tM elPt marlla bM&ed by Kea, DkUrMa aad
t.r boated by George Balaaa reeead1. .
· · Relea Sml&b at tile Balboa Aqlllac O•b i.u
• welgJaed la a total of• mulla *9 .. le, ud 1ay1 at
leut that many splkellWa lllaYe beea taued ud re-
~ued by coaservaU.·•lede4 ucten. TM bit·
gest marllll wetgbed ID reeeeUy waa a ZZS.poudu
. '·enp&by Jame1 Brldpe from Newport BeaclL
Fhe entrants de·
lldloeted fM Ont place ID
the fOUlb ud tumble
weekend ol football u
they baWe\I wita tn tbe
weekly Dall~ Pilot
PlpkiD Piclleroo COD·
test.
Wbea all the upeeta had
been recorded. they Jed
the pack witb ac wtnnen
in 30 came1. Then Illy utilldnl the tie-breaer.
~ecf.lacement was
Da•lel Roble do of
Westminster came out
the champion and earns a
year'ssnembenhlpintbe
Nautilus Newport ~ical health center ol
Newport Beach.
Ruunerup Eric Nix.on
d Newport Beach gets
dinner for two at the
Moooraller in lrvl.ne ~
either of the Reubell's
Restaurants in Costa
Mesa or Newport Beach.
And t h ird place
finisher Mike Mac rorte ol
Santa Ana has won car
washes by Metro Car
Wash Systems of Costa
Mesa or Huntington
Beach.
JACK UPTON
GWCOffenM
KEITH JOSl!PHSON
OCCOtfenee
•;:~· .. Private boats wortdaC tlae oater .laluda report ~,;i'llere are a lot of bhlefta baa la &lie area a.ad boatl :iDalq Ht of Newpol1 atU.I millat be able &o plek 1IP
~ltrayalbacorewbiletrol.llDlformarlia. Prep Cross Country
YAltSITY HJt~ .sa.. \'lcetete to Opett YUCAl .. AIMYITATIC*AL
San Vicente Reservoir, i.D San Diego, will open 1. o.Nels cs..n Gor90ftlo> ,,.,. 1.
11:14 16 CoPOOtn (FV) ll:ts tl-eow.n CFVI 11:• 21. Edd lll'Vl 11:•
S>JI. McGl .. rln IFVI 11:51.11. T-
CFVI U:OS.
THm lotel.: Ville P•rlt 39, Foun-laln VelleyM. U ,its gates to the fishing public Thursday. San Vicente f.;:~9;.~~='•.~:.~· 1=~ f( during the last nine months bas kicked out more va11ey1 10:113 1, scw1aner 1,._1 . .in ~ ,•'---125 largemouth bass in excess of six ....... -.. ve11ey110:11' au111~ 1Fv110·211 .. ~ -.. ...,......._ ~ tFVI tO:M 11. serm._ CFV> A.-CaJ dar :• 'Jbe majority Of bass have been in the 9 pound IO:U JJ. Brown IFVI 10:42 tt. ~-ea en ;"J rang•, the largest in excess of 18 pounds. Loot for ~:!•.=!:'°~t.~~ ... ,.., 31• ,.._,. ...,...., 1ocu1 '• uµs popular lake to provide excellent bass, trout 1e1nve11 • .,w.Se<10ot90"1o111 • w-.. Poto-u1tewoo0 •' ow-·.,., and catfish angling well into winter. .IUMIOtl YAltSITY del Mar, O.ne Hiiis el El Te><o '-01*1 (Fl/I 10·47 11. Conroy LA911MlleeclletWvlle.Monett4tlret "• Irvine Lake will tentatively close for a short <FV> o :M 1s. Hutc111~ 1FV1 11· .. Ed'""· Fo""'•'" ve110 e1 Los
0• tim., {)ct 17 With th nne.cibili"ty of reC>pe"i""' ()ct ._ 22. ~l (FYI 11:17 1'. Cb'wed Alemllos, Merl"• at LB JOf'diln. • ... . e .......... --. -IFVI 11:••· s-n CPI/I 11'2S •1 ,,_lllllME1llln<1-l•ll•U:1SI. I · . in order lo provide Orange County anglers wilb ...,...., ,"", 12:26 Gins i.nn1-1re1est• •• ~ ~ some top trout fishing during the fall moaths and T_,., tN!s: v111e P•"' o . ,.._,. Kertior 121.
b · of I · • • t b 1:11nva11ey11. Girts betllelNll-Et cam1"° et lJ also a chance to ook mto one rvule s 11an &SI P11ou..so'"" 0••111• coot C•ll•v• o :Jo>. ~ that seem to be on the move aft.er the lalHt closes. ..s...oem tll'V> 10:50 u. au.n tFV> Pu1111M •t.OOtOtn wes1 1uo1. !_! Big Bear Lake is producing some fair trout ac· ;:::;;::;=:::::==============;;:;;
'1 . tion for both lrollers and shore fishermen. Weather IMllEDYrE }.. eend.itions have been good, allowing trout anglers to · ~ • gf!t in good fishing time prior to the start of winter. ~ Vail and Henshaw lakes are listed as fair for bass oecu~R.NCY r;. and caUish and should begin their trout programs ,.-shortly .
.;. Duck Datn Set ~,J. It ls only a few weeks away h'om the opeaing ol 48,072 aft FT. OF
the waterfowl seasOll for SoaW.aad aeauequeen. ~ ~.=J Tbere are many ducks mov1a1 .... s..thel'll INDUSTRIAL 5n•"E -CaWonala. moetly teal ud yoeq aprtg. Bii& mbed r~ ~ Wttb local blrds, lauatlDg sboald be good &11.roqltoat ..... IUUL ~ ... die soatbern portlon of Califonla. r&1U.:. ~• Ml.S.,
• . Nor1hea1tern Callfonla opeu Sablnlay WU. DOCK•RIGR LOADING,
• loU of mallards a.Del big '-ken la tile area. For ftft...r L£yl!i.£BI, more btformatlo• OD lum&btg ill ud U"W8d Altvu, ~.. --·--·
.~DoeColllsal(IH)m.zzzt. PBOT~ EDW IBO~ h ·. : Any waterfowlerwt. w llOt beell able te OH a ~-... an W n~n a,
P. place to slaoot daeks ud C"ffM lD So•tHl'll EAS'fl'llEEWA'Y KCESSAJIOBE.
1 CaWonala this sea11on aa.oatd eatad Dea Walker• 6 Lakeview. Walker's clwbalaooU over z.• aeres. of For infonnabon on this or other building alternatives. call
-nU establllbed poeds ud lau epnlq1 for Wit your broker or Craig Lyon. Manager ol Sales & Leasing.
weekday and weeu.t sbootiag da11. Call (714) at (213) 628-4204, (714) 833·1010. . i1 .f57·33U for lnformatlaa.
ERIC JOHNSON GWCDet ....
JOHN PHIPPS
OCCDefenM
FREE
MOUNTING
AND
BALANCE
olCht.
• quna Beach. wtth a
3-0NCOrd., remainedflftb
in tb.e 2-A rat.lnas and was
the only other Orange
Coast area eleven select·
edinthetabulalions.
CIP POOTUU. l'CK..L ...
1. ,__..Y.-.,tMI W
t. 5"tll Hiii• CHI 117 ). Servlt. (M) ,,.
._ IM Alt9 l>O> 121 s, s.nte Mollie:• IMI .,
.. fll1111XCMI ft
1. llW.Amal(MI a e. SI. l"fan<lt lH I 13 t. s1 . .,.ul 12-11 n
IO. WIHtOD¥1M(MI M ~~~.o;:n~MMI&~ ._ ...
'· $0Utt\Po~• 1).0) t. Oucente Valle¥ IMI i. Son M9rlno IM)
4. SenteANV•lleY ().01
s. ANMlrn lt-0-11
.. Senta M9fla IMI
1 111 .. ,.ldt PolV lt-0)
t. Vltte""rt1IMI
•: Oll«1a IHI
001.trl P•ttlllll, Mollttllltlle,
c.111oro1le, '"•Clflco. SOii .. ,. _. ....
Fountain Valley's
Barona of coach Bruce
Pick.ford, have rolled to
three straight wins, all in
impressive fashion, and
gained 188 points. The -----------------
total was enough to edge
previous leader, South
Hills Wgb , by one point.
• In the cross country
rankings, Edison's
Chargers dropped into a
second place tie with
Foothill after losing their
first meet of the season
Saturday. Villa Parle is
first in the 4·A poll with
Marina fourth and Foun·
· lain Valley eighth.
Cost a Mes a continued·
to lead the 3-A division
with Mission Viejo fifth
and University sixth.
,.. JC Penney c••:tt11 Ml.,.+C......•....._ ....
5!1e~Oct-!. ~7~
The SCOISMA•
TIRE OITLEI
1931 ..wPC>lrT IL VD IMortll of 1-. St.I
COSTA ..SA-641-9260
McCllARY 11115 -SIMCI I ti I
r-----
( ... ) j\\<: C:lll:/4llY ,11,
\I \\1 1 \I 11 WIK Ill IJI \.I II' •-·-·
111<1'1llK0\ I IUall U \I<..,
BELTED
White Wall
G-78-15
529.99
STOllHOUIS
MOMAltL 1:30 .. ~
SATUIDAY l:JO to 4:tO
SAVE!
II
THRIFTY
WITHTHE
SCOTSMAN
SPEGAL I
...: "' NEWPOllT &LV'l.
I TRACI TAPE DICK
WITH 2 SPIAIERS fl · " Bti Beu Lake will be opea for clack llutla1
{; · tlits wlllter, bat laaMa's are waned tllat die Slu-t: field cal-off area Is sUJJ a pro&eded aes&tag ud II ~
f I resting area for redheads and cus ti.at Yislt Bti NOW •r IRVINE :z: z : Bear every year. Tbele are a aamber of mallards, INDUSTRIAJl .... SCOTSMANS ~ : . .,n,, teal and spooales OD tM lalle with ......... ~ TIRE f
t: efcoot.Haatmglse-.pea~~~:_:be:.:falr~a:t~bes&::~·d:ue:.:&o::J====================~CC>IVl~~=Pl.E:!::~X:_jJ~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!90~D!W'/!Gu!!aran!!t!ee!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"' J. low water condltlou. ,. r: Martin Wins ~ _Tennis Title i! ' ·Ex-UCLA star Billy .t• .Martin defeated Bernie
·'•Mitton 7·5, 6·4, to capture
the sin~les title Sunday at
the Laguna Niguel tennis
-invitational.
Also, Mart In teamed
...... ::Mtb J eff Borowiak,
:O!Jll'olher ex-UCLA player, ::i~:4bdefeat Mitton and John :·~:t.tbyd 7-6, 4·6, 6-4 ln the
• .dwblesfinals.
• · 'Martin earned $2,400 in
•
th.is $5,000 tourney.
i 'llYDI ADVANTAGll
-OUI PAOD OffDI·
1
fti1t .yours mey ftOtl
COMIUTI OIAHI couNTY conu•• . ..... .. ... ~·:.:~ • .!. t .... ""9·
'-....... -... -&Mt ........... L.A. ...
• MO.mt TO M0trTM :A llNTAL IASIS
·~ MO DIPOSfT 119Ul• I· ~ OM AMOWD CMDn f 4 ONLY tl1.IO Pll MOtmf
i
1 '" TOTAL corr i .. , ........ ,....,
f .s NIW C0Mf4CT IMn ...... smnv ..... v.1
t1 ., :Jt fOICI MDIAM PANIS . D AUO All AYAIWl.I t: 1 ... LL ,_. MAINmlAMCf
I OlfA~(il (UUN·n
lr \OI01fl I l'HO~r
SI 11\'lfl "'
·11.14f fti.)~OI
• ... s.un'A ... IA!fTA UloA -==--~~ ~CITM. ....... •••·UU
Refreshments and drawings
·door prizes ·
. ---.. ~ .. . ... ~ -...........
\ ,1
MEET REGIS PHILBIN October 5th and 6th 6 -10 p.m .
Regis currently hosts KABC-TV's "A .M . Los
Angeles" program and is Entertainment Editor
for Channel 7 Eyewitness News . His movie
reviews are aired to all ABC affiliate stations
around the country. . ~
The Mayo Body Contr<!I Center For Men Only
3961 Mac .Arthur Blvd., Suites 101-103
Newport Beach Phone. 752-5155
-... . ·. \. ' .. . . .. . . . .
-,-
. .. . . . . . ... . . .
County Premieres for Irvine, Mesa~rz.Oc·· ... ··~ ~IL Y P'LOT1 ,,.,
A pair of Orange County premleret hit the
boards thJs weekend under the auspices of two Costa
lla•bued community theater iroups opea.intt
their respective productions a few miles apart.
Launchin1 their three-weekend engagements on
Friday wW be the Irvine Community Theater drama
"Wben You Comtn' Back. Red Ryder?" and the ~Mesa ctvlc Playhouse comedy "The Secret Al·
fain ol Mildred Wild.'' The Irvine show is a heavy,
adult drama. while Costa Mesa's production ls 1
wlJd, waekycomedy.
DAVID 8BVSTER BEADS the "Red Ryder"
caat as a psychopathic bully who terrorizes a group
ol people in a New Mexico diner. Other major roles
are played by George Quick, Alan Levy and
M'arga.ret Humphreys, with Joseph Carr, Lynda
Robbins, Mardl Kilhtlinger and Tony Castle com·
pleting the Irvine company.
Tom Titus direeb the Mark Medoff dram a
•cb will be presented Fridays and Saturdays at
8:*» through Oct. 23 in lhe Youth Services Associa·
tion theater at Bristol Street aod Red Hill Avenue
Costa Mesa. Reservations 646-3178 days and
551·7211'1 etenlngs.
Pati Tambellini is staging Paul Zilldel's
"Mildred Wild" at the Civic Playhouse with Robbi
Schoonover play~g the title role of the middle-aaed
dreamer who dnfts into Hollywood fantasies of the
Intermission
Tom Titus
Walter Kitty variety. Ot.ben in the cast are Joanne
Wolcott, Dave Morris, Ted Knorr. Faith Korthever,
Helene BrlHa and COriane Leavitt.
"MILDRE D WILD" WILL BE OD stage
Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 throqb Oct. 23 in the
Community Center auditorium on the Orange Coun·
ty Fairgrounds. Reservations 556·5391.
Completing their respective engagements with
ftDal performances this weekend wW be "The
Sunshine Boys .. at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse
and "Oodapell" at the Westminster Community
Theater.
Robert Hastings, Gene Benedict and Jack Mis·
set bead the cut ol "Sunshine Boys," wblcb re·
sumes tonight and runs through Saturday at the
Moulton, 606 ~a Ca.n.yoo Road, Laguna Beach.
with an 8:30 curtain and reservations at 494-0743.
"God.tpell" closes out Friday and Saturday at 8:30
~l the Westminster theater, 7272 Maple St .. and
tickets may be reserved by calling 893-8626.
Ex-network Chief Producing
87 IAY SHAR'BVTr day he was mterviewed.
W S ANGELES (AP>
• -Last May Robert D. ~· W.ood resigned as head of ~! CBS-TV after more than ~ seven s uccessful years. ~ He also quit New York to ~ retur n to his favorite ·~ locale for living -swmy
-: Southern California.
{ It was a s urprising
: ~ve, leaving the power,
• b1~ salary and pin·
'! striped perquisites or ~ CBS in Fun City. But
,. Wood, born in Idaho
•; raised in Beverly Hills:
says he has no regrets
about his decision.
"To be back here. with
my friends, my family,
back where I was raJsed
~ -geez, there·s no way I
~ can deser ibe my ex·
"'-hilaration," said Wood
:: bis voice as cheery as th~ .. ,.
~ ". ~ ~ ~ :; ~ i ~
I • .
. .. .
. • . . • " .
' ~ :
~
l
' .
! • ~
'
f
mE MAN who gave
the nod to a bold new
s how called "All in the
Family" in 1971 and
began a revolution in
situation comedy isn't a
member of the shuf·
neboard set yet. He's
only 51, still active in 1V.
He now heads Nephi
Productions, Nephi be-
ing the name of the small
Idaho town where he
spent his boyhood sum·
mers. Tbe company will
develop TV shows ex·
elusively for CBS -
which Wood joined in
1949 -for at least four
years. He already has
four projects on the
drawing boards.
They are a two-hour
drama about a father
ft'"&Y MUI TB'I
2001:
A Spece OdysseJ
(())
a need for more family
shows like CBS' "The
Waltons" or NBC's ''Lit·
tle Hou se on th e
Prairie," and "as long as
those needs are there
... there's an excellent
opportunity to fill
them."
~CITY CEP4TRE CINEMAS
METRo.GOlDWYN-MAYER pr.-u
BIDD l'Ulll. rax un.n
"SOBllA11 ...
ll'l'llATYOVt"
a different set of jaws. {i).
~
STARTS FRIDAY OCT. 8
IN AUDITORIUM #1
Liza Mlanelli • lapid Bera•••
.AGMatter
o.-s.o.CHAALES ()()Y[f\ ol ~
C.olor Plwl bt' ~· M ~ W.,~ PICIUI@&
OONT1NtJING ~NG the Oranae Coast are:
''Tbe Rulln1 Class" a t South Coas t
Repertory. t827 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa, play·
lng tonight throusb SUnday at 8 o'clock and Sunday
aft.ernooo at3. ReaervaUODi64S-l363.
-"South Paclftc" at Sebutian'a West Dinner
Ptaybouae. 140 Avenlda Pico. San Clemente,
tonight tb.roUlb Sunday at varytng curtain Umes.
~atiou 4fa·9'CIO.
-"Come Blow Your Horn" It the Intimate Dln·
ner 'lbeater of the Holiday Inn ln Costa Mesa. 3131
Bristol Street near t he San Diego Freeway.
Performances Friday and Saturday at 8:30 with
dinner at 7. Reservations s.57~.
-"I DO, I 00" ATTllE Forum Theater on tbue
Festival of Arts grounds ln ~a Beach, a Joint
produc:Uon ot the Festjval ol Opera and Saddleback
tollege. Performances 1bunday through Saturday
at8o'clock and SUDCIQ at3. Beaervatlons494-0709.
-"Harvey" at the H untington Beach
Playhouse, 2110 Main st.. Huntington Beach.
Performances Friday and Saturday at 8:30.
Reservation.a 842·$421. -"Bell, Book and candle'' at the San Clemente
Community Theater, 202 Avenida Cabrillo, San
Clemente, Thursday through Saturday at 8:30.
Reservations 492·0465. -"Old Times" in the Actor's Playbox at
Golden West College Friday through Sunday at
8:30. Reservatlom 882·7711, extension 545.
An
1HUTAES-OMNGE CO
llmanzDSSl.51
SO. COAST PLAZA
SO. COAST PLAZA
).1101nlltlS4 $451111 ••I-""
"CAMO.DT" 1•s.u~1,..
"llWI ltiY" fe) ....... ,~.)·
S . COAST PLAZA
l'IO•rntlSI W1lll 1tt1'61110'
••ALJCllH
WONDERLAND .. DU
--·" 7:J--.1•11 UT /SllM J_,__
•:ff.7'11M'4 .. l•ll
'1.lfUUAID"
It)...,_..
W IDS IWS" (PC) ., ...... ,w.
CINEMALAND
1410t llltMI &m.•IJS160l
llllHftNIC
· "JAWS"
ltff.6-lf>..ll
1llE lllMDEXIUIS" .........
· CINEMALAND
"ALICE IH
WOHDHLMW' (II
,,,~--
,~·-
"MORMAM, IS lHAT Your , ...
'"Lo.Mn llUM'"
'"HARIY&WAl.1960
TO MIW YOW-C .. J
cSlll ;i; I
&Iii ;;[;o f
tr.itlfl......._ ......... -
YIOUNTI fOICI ""·. "'Ille •
PtJlll DYNAMITI 11'"!( • .................
"°"*" -_.. ......... :.
ntl OMIN flt .. ..
It llAICM Of DUCW,... ....... -......
"Man =~--:-..,.
20011 A IPACI oonstt'"'
CIOM'llllOlll .... , .. , .... ......... --"
-MM'll • °""" -. .
8UlHT OffRINOS ""'-• "'"· ~MOUll ... -·1:•··--' ...... -... 9111111 ~ .. ..-... -= :':at'ul4...;a. ... .... -~:
-llinlvnl
JAWS "' •OMc<.. KOn
DAY Of ntl IOUMtN-#t4' -·-·---" .. _,,,_.,_....,.,. ·--· Ultl llNDON 1N1 <
2001: A SPACI OOTSSlf~ _ .... -..,··~·
~ °"""9 .. ,., ..... -... " ...... 0llll'OllTAlif llOTICfl tllllOll(li UllOlll 11 'llHI •'
,,......, .,
.tl .... lt
525-3526
........... _ .. -821-4070
I. ILAZING SADOllS ltl
2. WMUl'S POPPA c~
i_ WHlll DOCS rr HUtn'
t0111U '*AU a aaa •
--• OllllS'°"91tlll TO T'NI Dmt A DAUCMml ~
IMllY011> -MM:a·--IUINT OfHllNIS,,.
fWI•
TlllOI .......
_ ........... _
IUINT OfNIMI . ~-...
TlllOI HOUSI ""'
.... l&MW ...... ~ w~;m·•~· fl!.-.
INIT CAMI FIOM wnHIN ,,. ----------.;u KiiOM . -~
"".-':'-1. POM POM CMllS 1111 ·,..
421·1131 UIUf ICOUT/CAl'NOUSl f9Uls. a. SWINGtHG CHUWADRS .., ....,,"",_ .
JAWS "' '; tlGllMC.9ClOft
DAY Of T'NI DOlJltM ,_
n t•U ACTIOMI
NK10•• ... •C:-•
• C:OlOllft
~T°'80S 90JO a ICll
Of9ATIOM c: ... __...
llA.IUWI
t.OOITOIUY JOl«Nt ·'
2. nuNOll ' GUNfMIHTll'"' , i .unu•MAN
®
...
.•.
·=
.. . .
-~-~ --
8f DAILY PILOT Tue.day. Octobef 5. 11rn1
An Offer Most Refmed
Few Look Up Paper"s Copy of Botz Slur
F,._AP~
An editor's oner to let reader• $ee for
themselves the controveralal remarks or
Agliculture Secretary Earl L. Bet.a sUrred only a rew curious souls In lhe northwestern Pennsylvania
town of Erie.
The Erie Morning News ran a fronl page
editor's note telling readers U'lat Butz' racial slurs
were in poor taste and would not be printed in the
newspaper but that any adult could stop by the
ectitorial offices to read them. Seven took them up
on the offer.
In the remarks, Butz called blacks "coloreds"
and spoke in derogatory terms or what he charac-
terized as their sexual, dress and bathroom pre-
fuences. • Jack Kirschke, former Los Angeles County de-
puty dlslrict attorney. lost his bid for U.S. Supreme
Court review or his murder conviction in the slaying
or bis wile and her lover. ( l The court l~t stand a PEOPLE decision or the California
_ _ Supreme Court denying
---------Kirschke a rehearing.
Kirschke was convicted at a sensational
1967 trial of murdering Elalne lllrscbke and
Orville William Drankbao. m the Kirschke bed at
their Long Beach home . • Yugoslav-Italian movie actress Sylva Koscina
-who played a leading role in Fellini's "Juliet of
the Spirits" -decided to sell her
villa outside Rome and auction
its furnishings sb she can "be
free again."
The furnishings include 16th
century French and rtaliao
furniture. expensive carpets,
14th century paintings and
graphics by Picasso and DaJi.
The value of the villa and its
furnishings has been estimated
i.lt $1 8 million. ICOSCUU
"In the last few years I did nothing else but
work to pay the upkeep and taxes," the 41-year-old
actress said. •'I decided to put it all up for sale also
because my work does not allow me to enjoy this
mausoleum."
* Ru Allen, cowboy singing star whose actmg
career began in the days or Gene Autry and Roy
ALLEN
J Rogers, will host the annual Rex
Allen Days in Willcox, Ariz. for
the last lime Oct. 8-10.
For 25 years, his hometown
has held the aonuakeJebratiooto
honor the cowboy star who grew
up there. But now Allen, 55, says
il's time to call it quits
. "l love Willcox and the peo·
pie there." said Allen, whose
home 1s in Los Angeles. "But I
think 25 years is enough."
* The Rev. William C. Mcinnes, president of the
University of San Francisco, resigned and will
become chancellor of the l22-year-0ld Jesuit institu-
tion.
Mcinnes. 53. told the school's trustees he was
stepping down from the top post, effective Jan. 2
He bas been pres ident since 1972 .
• While most husbands and wives are having din-
ner at home with the children, Natalie and Chet
Cartls will be on television delivering the 6 o'clock
news.
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
PVBUC NO'llC& PUBlJC N011CE PlJBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOftCE
...,,.
Publlllltd 01•ft0t CMtt Dally POllOt.
s.cit.lt.-(l(t.), ll, "· '"• ~,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
9"(11, u....,
.OMIMt ... I& ---"'''"'* CTA Pleil.,,.. 0t4lfttlf c:o.u o.u, llllGll.
.••••• elldOc:t 5, u. 197' ...,.
PUBLJC N011CE PUBLIC NO'ltCE
NOTIC•OP PICTTTIOUlaUll•UI a U'-IC TltAMSll'la Ill.Ula l'JATUtl.,,
HOTICI IS Hl!ltl!BV GIVt:N Til Tiie ... -... --k ..,.. 111111 TMI Cl.rOITO.S 0111 05NHAM --M
MIUAlt, IMC , • CAltt.nllti ~· ....OfOMlrTIUC 1UltVEY$. Qlt tlM. 01a1A 0 & M UXACO M!R\llCE IMn;llSt • ~ 8ff<I\, CA 9-ST4TIO.., Tr•ntl•r•r, 11\tit • l»vltl OoNI .. uwh. UO VI• UO. Norcr.
tr8fttltr h •bo11t I• be -ck •• ....._, 9Mcfl. CA ~ • ..,_ WU....t ..,_ f\ TM\ llu\l-t I' <...cN<Mcl 11:1¥ M II\ *' ~ h\l .. V.•d In I+. OIV OI cllvlCllNI CJlttA MfN. CilYMy of 0. ..... , Sl• Of Oofwld uwlt
Ollltnll• ..... •JI°'-.. ~ llwi· ""' 1e.-1\f ••• to"" Wtltl '"'
.... ~ -...,.,... ... .,_ wltl>ln 0......y °""'"' o. ..... c:....ritv QI\,... tftrw-"'--Ntl.'8f•r -~ .. .......,tS. lfH.
Trell\feree, ••• "'• u-. 10 J ,..,... ~•In ltOCI(, ,,..,,,._, wt10W 11'1*1"*9 OrMVe Cont Dejly .,.._
INtlfle\t eeklre" I• 1tt.c1 Al\110(1\ S.. n." . ...iO<t S. I), lt~ ,..._,.
DrlWlt, 111 IM City Of '''"'-• CiMlr!IY ef ------------t Or ...... Sl•I• ol C•lllOrl\I•, al \ ...
'-!OwtllO 0.M:rl""' Pt.._,.111"-rly
•fr ... tlff8',l•wtl: ------------t All 1100 In lr.0., ll1lurn, fC!ljjjlo PICTITIOUI eu&1111ns
PUBLIC NO'nCE
Mtflt t'ICI OOoCI will of. cert<tll\ $«vice N4Mll STATllMINT
Statltfl .,._lntu kl\Own ._ O & M Tlw tol'-lno llef''41'1t er•dolftQllYil·
'TIXACO Sl!RVICE UATION •nd -H:
local.., al 3001 H•tllor 8ou .. V¥0. In PACll'IC SIH!l.I. STORt!, 1~
tlw City ol Cotl• ~H. c:ourcy al· Mcfeoo.<I Pl~•. Newj)ofl 8Hcl\, CA. Or•nve. St••• of CAllfornl• n '""' ~ "-~llO lkllk tr•ntl•r wtll Oe '°"' J-O. 811<1 H•I.., G llM'llle, f/1
wm!Mlt<t on or •lie< Prld8y"" 1sn. E ltll\St .. C:O,l•llilitw,CAttU'T
0.. of OclOl>tf. ""· 11\tOlltft I!~ Tl\lt thl\11\ .. \ I• cond11clllCI bf • ,..._ 1'2·1236t, •C llwtt<rvw~nt Ot,.."'"",.....'~lo
dtlw""9YN8Hchllrtfl<f\Of5«"'1ty J-G llt•"'• PIKlll< Nellofttl 8e1111. •I :191 ~ Heltn G .. allle
A,.._ 111 ,..,. c11y oi uoune lle«ll. Tilh tt•t•""'"' w•• llkld '"''" ""' Coul'llyOf Or.-.. SU1leof C.lllOtftla. °"'"'Y Clefll al Orel\09 eounty on Sep.
04Tl0Seolembtrtl, 1'1• .......,8.1'7•. ,.., ..
~._,, O.ilf\9t eo.11 Dtllv Pllal.
.... W, JI, W. MO Oct. J, 1'7• all).76
J ltoti.r1 Roell
Tr.,.~rff
tec:IUltlTY f'AC"IC
MATIOHA'-U.NI(
·r:::'.11.camJ1 PUBLIC NO'l1CE
fl\ltltlV!M Or41f\99 CNtt 0.lty Plllll. t":-=..,...,'."":'."',,....,,_,,,_,."'='".,._,~-==-=-1 Odat»rJ."76 ,,...,. •o•LTO•·•IOVeL WAT••
DISTRICT
PUBLIC N~CE lllOT1Clll•V1TIMOlllAl.•oaios Va a flOaTMll COMSTRUCTIOHOP
c:ottTltACTM0.4-~1
C'·-1 UIU'ltOVIMINT DllTltlCTN0.4-J
"1CT'ITIOUS •usllHSS TltANSMI UIOfOAA INS
lllAMI STATIMIPIT TM 8cM>r'd of 01,.ctors of tlW -T"9 "4-ino perlOfl•.,• ~Ml-N!-4W•ter OlllrlctofOr•llOtOM'llV. -•s: C.llfonile, "9re1Mtt.w In -•~ VILU NllfOS, 1st• Al\I .. ~. IUncft rwl•rrtd 10 8j "O!ltrlct.." dO
......._, .. eel\, C.lllonile ~ ~lttl'f lnvllt .. atecl bkts for U. IOl-
0\erles A. Sollltr, Jr., 1S2• M lt• ln9 dtocrlb•d pubtlc worll: Tl\t
Ulfte,NfwponBtacllC.llton>l•f2..o Cllftstrvctlon ol Contract Ho. •>-1, •-Peter W. Pertt•11ll. 6JO l'lttll prove,.,.,tnl Olttrlcl Ht . •·3, ,..,.,_,New Yorll. Ntw Vorll 10020. Tr.,.smlulon Maln1, , __ wltll •II
nti, bu$1...,, It COllCIY<t.d by a llmll· _,rt.....,.t -•k tlwrtto, u -II\
tldoertnen/llp. OtUll -described In ll\t pl-. II"> Ole"•• R. ScMller, Jr. "'"'· dr•Wl1111• ... cuons 41114 W>Ktfla-0."-<•I P•rtn.r UOl\s on Ill• II\ 11\e office ol Boyle
Tiiis st111e,...n1 w•s tlltd ow4tl\ 1._ ""91-1119 CotllOf'tllOI\, U01 0.-11
Cooln!y Cl.O. OI 0r•"9t CouMy °" 5t9-SlrMI, N•wport 0.•tl\, C.lllomla, ••mber 14, 197•. ""'''" docum•nts •••by this f91erence
PUl.Of', ltOUTON. lncorporeled herein. For """""
•UltMS&McKITTltlCIC pertlculaf'\, r•••••M• .. l\tr.C.V -..,, .,...,._ o ... rwttl to wkl pltns, protlles, dr•wl"9l. >K·
AlletllityiatUI• lions and ~lllcatlons tor ll'le -4*MKAl'tllWalM, cletcrlbt<l lmprovemenl entlll«I "Con-
.....,...audl,CAtlMJ l•KI Documents end Conllrvctlon
,..UM SO.Clilctllons •"" Constrvcllon Pl-
l'Ullll"*I ~at\99 Cout O.lly Piiot, for tlle Con•lrv<llon ol Coner8<1 No
S...21,21,-0ct J, 12, 1'16 3"9-7' •S-1, lmprv,.._nt Ol•lrkl No. ~.
Tr~~tlol\ MelM " S.tcl ..._ -------------j 'l»Cillcat'-may bt CMJrCNM<l al tM PUBLIC N011CE o111u01eoy1een111,_r11111eoroora11on
lor \10.00 per .. , O>ec-murt t» ,,_
-HOTI--Cll-O-l'-NO-N-R-U-l'O-N-$4-111-U-T-Y-11»\'.tl>I• 10 IM Mcl11ll..,..NI~ -
Holk• Is l\ereby olven ,..., '"" ""° Olltrlct.
lltr\IQl\ecl Wiii nol be ··~DI• for 111.nYMt lo , ... UI-c-t:il --4"1ts °' llablllllft contr«19d o,. si.te of CAlltom••, IN Mollt..,,..NI~
.,.,_ otl\tr \Mn ,.,~ .. 11. on or an. Wlllff Olstr1cl ,.., auert.al,,.,.. --tNsdMt ... 111"9 rat• of .,., diem w~ ol 1"'
Dtt..itllhUd8yofS.Ot-lf1'-IOC.llllty lft Wftlcn '"''won Is to tit
SANORAM llAATLETT Clerlormed lo bt H Oel•lltd "' .... 1'078ayade<tTerr Soilll\trn ~lllornla Masin Ullor
CotOMdtlMar "°'9t,,,.... fllt<I In 1M otficeof IM As.-
we1TOYElt &MAC!( fOClaled G•n•r•I Cof'tr~tort ol
... TCM&u.WAl(aP-tllLOAMCX ~·<•. SoYIMrn C.llloml• O\aclter. _.,.* ... tit~ Coc>lts °' the_,.,--'""' r-
PllDllsM<r Oren~ Cool O.ilv PllOI ol oer <11t<t1 ••on u <1etermlned11Y111t
sept. 21 2' •no Oct J lt1' G1 I• OIJlrkt are on Ille at lh prlnclo.t otac•
' · • of bu\lneu, 10 wH nsoo u. Pt• -· • ~NI-I, C.lllornla. A.s ~,...,
PUBLIC NOTICE ~~!c'°::.:~! °!.~':,,,1.t1~ ~~~
------------hrefor It •wtnhd 51\ell 0051 a COPY SU,EltlOlt COUltTOl'TME ll\ertof•1Hch jolxl!t.
STATa 01" CALll'OltNIA .-Olt It Shell lie tnel\delory UllO" any Olft-
TMI COUNTY 01" OltANOI tractor to wl\o"" • COtllr8<1 ls_,..,,..,
IN. A..,... .,.., -.,,, suC>conlra<l<K -1\itn NOnCI! 01' HEARING OP' PETITION lo pey not ltU tl\an '"' ... ., ooecllled
PO• 'AOaATE 0 1" WILi. AND "°" •111ft 10 till ··-~rs, -·""""· and LITTl•S 01" ADMINIS'tltATtON rneclWlnlcumploYtd by IMmlllllleH·
WITM·TNl•Wll.L ANN IX I D AHO Kutlonof 11\t contract. Th• &>en811Y tor
ll'Olt AUTMOltlZATION TO AD· ftllure to comply l'ltrewlll\ I• as
M I H I ST E R U N 0 I R TH E tcieclllecl In Section t77S ot 11\e L.ebOr fNDIEPIENOINT ADMINISTIUITI()lll COC1t
~ IESTATIS ACT l"ltOIATE COOE TM COnlrector sl\ell oey tr·--"11TSIQI wbsitttftUpeyrnenlllOMCl'l...,n,,_
Etl•le ol FANNIE HAR81SOM, needed to extclllt Ille -o. • tuefl
0.<lNM<I 1r .... landSUIJSl'1encepey_nb.,..dll-
NOTICE IS HEAE8Y GIVEN lllet llr>ed In lllt •PPll<•bl• cotte<llve
JAMES E HI!' IM, Public Ad· ~lnl"9 aQf'ffmeftls lll•d •111"" 1'111111\tre~ tor '"' Coutlly of 0r9"0t Dot-1-nt of lnc!vstrlal Relec~ In Nati1e<1,,.,.111e oet111on•"'-Ho1 ecc~ wltl\ SectlOft 1173.1 ol Ole Wiii -lor h'l!l•nce of utten ot 116-labor Coclt.
f'llllll•••tlon wltll 11\e wlll ·--to A"tntlonl1dlrecledto1M""""4-.
tilt petitioner -1or e11tl\or1ut .... 1.o 1ns.ct1o1111m s.n<1 m1.•o1h~
.i.mlnltttr tlle EH•I• ..,,.,., !fie 1... Code conc .. nlllO tlle emo1ovmen1 al -
dtotncleftl Ad""lnlslr•tlon ol esi.tn ll"tnl~ by the Contredor or....,~ ~I 1Prob8t• c-s•1 ti wql, ,.... contrec1tKyncHrl\lm
ftrence to -lcl\ I\ "'8M tor lllrtl'llW *1lon 1m.~ ....... ...,.~
-11<ul.n,•nclll\alll\ell,.......,P'ec• th• Contr.clor or s111Kontractor
fJf ~ 11\e S8"" l\H bffn wt llor()c. trftf>!OvillO lr-~n 111 811Y -tomr 10, 1•1• al •·oo • "" , In fht Ucoblt occ.-1io.. 10 •Pl>lv "'IM loint
<OUrtroom of Ot,..rt,,..nl No J o4""" -lleelhlp '°"""'" .. -.,. <OUrt •1 toe Cl•lt C.n1tr 0.1,..~. tn slit of ,,.. pvblle worlis orolect -
tlltCltyotSantaAn•.C.lllomle Wl'llCI\ aclmlnlll•n tM a__.lceSl\ip
DtlecJOctolMtr I, 1•1• i:oroorem lnll\81 tr-lor•c.rtlttcaeof
WILLIAME.St.IOHN, ~al T ... <ff111k•I• wlll .. ., Ii"'
Co\lnlYCltrlt ... r111lo of _.mien'"'°"""""""
AOalAN KUY"llt. COUN•y "'8twtll lleuv<I ll\IN ot~of
CIOUMSI I. thl eontr 8<1. n.. r allo ol fOPf'lfttlcn to
6 •A•&Alt4 TAAlll TMOM .. SON, ~n ln~l'lcasn-lnotlle
otlf'UTY lft.t11'18no...toll~••<ec>t:
tUOllkc.11 .. ro..1 ... w.11 A Wll.., _.,.,ploym.,nllntlW-
f'.O ... a 1J1t of cov.r-by 11\e loint •PP<Wlll~
S-AM, C.llfer'lllOJ11J '°""""'"" r..s .. ,ffeled an •--ol Tel; 1714)0.."'S IS .... inl ... tOd•YJPl"lorlolftt~IOr
....,,.."""""'MlcAdMll\l\tr..,, Cfftlll<eft,or
PllllllWd Oranot Cout Oallv Piiot, 8. wi.....111e ftOmbef-of •""""111C9il
OttOll..-J, •. 11. 197' 410./6 '" tr•lnlllQ I" tile.,, .. axe-tr«lo Of ------------1ant1011 .... or
C. W11.-. 11\e Ir 8Cle Clln \!>ow tl\lt II k
'90IKlllO at IM11 1no ot "' ,.,,..... -------------1-t/llp """"°" •PPrtntlcfllllp tnil,.. NOTIClllNVITIMOllOS lflQ on"".,,,, ... ,""'''' s1-.... or flOUlfT Al .. VALl.IY locally, or
R•CltllATIOHCENl'•R O. M\e<\ 11\e Conlrtclor provldn
MHMl.LOIAMOND l'ENCI .,.ldtn<• tMl l\e employ' reot--
4DDITIOMS pnntlGt\onall ol hltcOlllftCUOI\.,_
NOTICE ISHEAEBY GIVENl'-'lllt ,....l•--offtOl lnstl\an.,,.~
Oty C:O....Cll ol tilt City Of ,.,..,lain tkato•l9"t tOY,....y,...n,
Valley, C.lllornle wllt rectl~ M619'1 'TM Olntrector Is required to,.....
l)t'Of!OSels""'ll tl\tl\ourot 11 oo .. rn.,on contributions lo 1111\ds .slaotl-for
Octolltr 19, 1'7•, tor conll•Y<tion ol Ille "'-tomlnlstr•llon of ·~"
k""l•l11 V•lley A.creation tenter proqremt ii "9 emc»on r"91 .... -~II Ola"'°"" Ftl\Ct AdOlllon\ In ~enll<H or j-ymen In.,.,,_.... a<('Or'denc~ with ot•ns •"" ~Ille• llCHbl• tr.O. OI\ W<I\ COtllracts -M hons. Pr~I\ sl\811 Dt Prt-.,.. _, Col\lra<lort on tti. ouDllc _,.,
-SiMled <C>Wr -,.,.II lie a<com-\Jteare,..OlnQSllCl\COl\lrlbuli<lnt ,,.,,..,, b¥ -Ol tl\t lor-of blddtr"s n.. Contr8<tor •nO any ~-It•·
_ .. tty H ~Ir~°" P•0t AJ ol !tie b "'*' 1\1"" tr..11 comply wtlll 11\e,.. SOKlllcet~ 411 l>-•'' .,._., bt qyi,_nh of S.CtlOI\ 1111 s -'"' • mertr.., "PROPOSAL ON llASEBAU. lntl\HMPloY,...ntt:ilaPOrtntlaos.
OIAMONO FENCE AOOITIONS" -lnfcH'"'•llon ......... to •POr•n.
fl'llllt<I or detlvtr..S M> H to tie 111 11\e tlcwllp\t.,.<lllrcl\, ••~1ucl\edulft,....,
Mflds of IN CllY Cler~ al htr offl<t In otMr reqvlre-nl' may be olllM""'
tll9 Otv H•ll. 10100 Slt .. r A-... •I '""" ,..,. Olrtctor ol lnclY~tnal Rel•
Wllkll tlmt ell bid$ reotWllCI ""II tie ''-·••OffklollleAdmlnlstratorol•
p11bltcly opento, •••,.,.,lned, •"" 111renllc•\lllP, Sen Fr•nchco,
dKlaredb¥tl'ltOty Clerk, 81~-C..ltornla, or lrom t ... Olvtslonot •
1'-llUbllcMelnvltecllobtpr•....,.•ttllt -tktll\lp St-.rcli M\d lbbral\CI\ C11Kltrallonol\aldpr0110wl1. aftlcft.
All bkh to received, ••amlMd -HOTlCErSHEAEBYOIVEl'lltlllltle ci.tla...O wlll be rtfff,.d by U. Oty Mou11-i..111ue1 W•t•r OlslrlCI wlll ,...
Cltl1I to,._ Oty Enol""r enO tr. Oty eel ... \Nit<! bldt at '"' ofllt• o1 Boyte
Altonity for c11te~l119 •"" --11"9 lo Enqlneftlnq Col'oor•llon, 1501 Q.ae/1
tlW City Councll 111 lh rt1111i.r meetl"G SC,_, Ntwoon e...:11, C•lllornla,uplo
en0ctobtr2', 1'7•. '"" !\our ol 10:00 a.m . on Oclollef o. "''°'to cotnmel\Cll'IO w&rti, 11\t <on-lt7',•1WlllchtltM•ndPl•<•l,..,.,..UO. tnKI...., ell sut1C011lrectol"\ \!Wiii ooi.1n Plltllk l'f _.., end retd. S.ld ~
• tllltlnts.s llUll\e ''°"" 11\e Cll'f of"-' Ohb ""'" bt lor ,..,. 4011\Q of ttw tMlllc IMtoV111evlnaccord11neewllf\t"'...,.,... ..,It lltrelnbttore de\<rlb9d end or. 1•11 V1ltey M!lnlcloel eoc.. Voh•ne 1, Cllredlntt,.wklrtMJl11llon
Tll"S.O\tpt•n J ~•""'·°' E.achbldorproposel i.tlalllle-OIA '" <tecoranc• Wiii! ti. prewl\lellt ol Mid wbfnltttcl on • form to bt Ollla!Md
l«tlons 1no to 11rl, lnc:IU$1,.., ol tlle et Ille office of floyle &Ol-•lno
UberOldtoftlleSteteotc.ttlfOml-.1+. OW_.clOl\, 1SOl~ll"rW\,..._,
oty ~II of, ... City ol '-llln 8"cll,C.ellloml1.Uchllldor.,,_..i
Val...,llMb'fntelllllonM<tttot.,,..,ttoe mutt llt eccompenled II'/ • ~
twtv1lt1nohollrlyrMeotw .... 1ot...u. o..c-or c1'K1u~ ... t111tC1...., • ,.._._
<rift w l'flM 111 WOl'l!rnan or tNCl\eN< Ille -" or • lllOcHr'I -for en
Medtd to •119<11te Ille Ctflt.-.c1 ~ -' l\0114\t lllM\ '°"Of 11\e-
""'lllle awenlad to,,,. W<Ct uful bl<IOW. of ... bid or of lt\t tota1 •.-t tot.-.ia.
1"8 -•111"0 "'991 In c1tQlflcal'°"8 llle'f wlll «<891 • <Ofltrect --fWlt ,.,,,..,,_.,tor b¥ ,..,ohitlon ft41 not 11tnble to theordff or In tl'lef-of ttle
tie ..,_, fNfl IN lnO\t ...c...t ._ de-MINl'°"""t9W1 Weter Ols1fld. &ell
tlt'm!Mllon twttle 0r•f'99 County-N<!I 919 or_., "'811 .,._..._
• po,1141i.11eo by 11't Unlt.O 511119' fli.<t .. "'9 afflce of tt.e 011111et •or a._, ol UO.W, •11<1 In no_.,. ""-llllltlmelnt/lls~ke~
nll II 11e len '"'" '"' HUollll....., no. -... ment9-cl\t<tl or......, ,...,., .. MINm..l'llW•oe. lf\tlllle ....... H9111rtfltft1Mtltwllll>
Ho 1114 "'"be c-totrtd unit«" 1' dwwllltm•r ll\lo1contract11--.i mt<te 011 tll• olllclal blt'\11 ,.,,.,., tlle-ll••Wllllle<lalmect•~I~· fUff!IUltdb¥the City.,,., l•-ln~ ell 1Mlftl11H If Ille ~U.1111 ~,.... ~· wtlt\ , ... provl~ "' "'~ """'"'MIWlllfotMe.trect -ie-Mdtl'lt~-,.1~ Tlle~Mlllddtrw4ll11t,......i""'
8llll«Olldillonl Mt IOrtl'I 11nci.r $1ctlon) '91\ifNOlepe.,,.,,.... '*"' lnen-
Clll IMSpt(lllcet'-e.<11 lllelltlf-....,., to*"'°' tlllCOfltractpr1c:unde
llelic:.nwct lft eccoroi.nce Wllfl4IOPI~ ftltftMllWtotmance tloM 111.,_
llldtM•U"' "111111 to IOO'Mo of ti. coritract orle.'e. Mid
"'-5"<1flC81'-· ..., ottkle! llOfldlattl lie tKllrtd ''°"' ...... y_ """'*'91 lll"'IS tt De lllft i. lllddl119 -YMtlSle<tOl'y totl'ltMoYI~ ..... -<., llt otll•I-only et tM offkt ot""' WWf'Olllrlct.
CllY E"91-. City Htll, All tw"" end condltlOM -·" OKI of .. let Plai!J and Sclt<Hlc.t(IQnf lie lt1flWll'l1UIM tor bkJder ... 411tlC!led tt1
It kOO +MIUCllno t•x. II 11\t ~ ,._ Mid• r»rt of tlle 1110 '°'""· ""'' ....-m Q<IHh 11'181 llw Plll\t and $.-Clfk•lklM 11 t"°"9I\ M lv det<rllled MrW1 atld
be MM llol' INll, ll'le m•lllf'IO _,"9 lllellel1111beco1ftuo..-tofttwtentr«t.
Clllf'91 IMll .. an addltlontl ,, 00. ,.,.. Moulton•NIOutl W•l8f Ol!Md
,_ltlWr 11'4 ton ol ti\• Pl.,., MIO -"'" 11\e r..,.t to r•Jtct en., -All
S-lflutlOftt nor , .. (Ott Of "*'lno tllfS tK PW•~~ of any """Ml llHJ. IO
endll8'IClll11twlll """""""° -rel• tOlllrtet lor ..... 11*1 ell ol llw
Tiit City ........ 1711 ''"'' ... rtltct lt~ftr .... 1(1\tll(ll l»ch _llwl ..... .,., ... t lllMd\ .. "91Vot MIY llllormatlt'f In e liild not el·
Ott.o1S.ot--11.1'76 *'"""'-EYelYfl~I... M()VL'T'ON·NIOU•'-WATEA DeoYtyCltvC~otttleOty OtSTltlCT
«l'ftrltolllllV•llff,Ol/""1111 •yAle••-rllowle,WNI_.,
""-1"'94 Orlfttt ONll o.lly PllCIC P\1111....., Orlllllf (;Mst DlllW l'llat. Octlllw i, ,.,. ,,,..,. ONeltr ~I. lfM 4"'6-76
PUBLIC N011CE
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
. . .. ' ' ' II • \ ..
Tu.sday. OctOber S. 1976 DAIL 'f PILOT 89
••••••••••••••••••••••• .......................
,.. .................... --itCii1ne1el 1002
AN OU> MACH SHAac. South of the
Hwy. in old Corona del Mar. but
now. It's an attractive dupJex you'd
love to occupy. 2 Bdrm. &c den for
you + modem, sunny 2 bdrm. apt.
over the garage. to help make the
payments $129,SOO. Ftnaocing is
very flexible ; make offer!
ERAORS: AdnrflMn
lhcMlld clled1 their ach
dally .ct report ff
ron lttwnecMcrf.ey.
DAILY PILOT a1M11M
liability for th flnt I
cornet iltMf'flon only.
Publ1~'1 Hotfce:
All real ~tale ad vertlsed In this newspupcr rs sub-
ject to the Jo'cdernl Ful
Housing Act of 196
which makes ll Illegal t
advertise "any pre·
ference. limitation. o
discnmmallon based o
race. color, religion. sex,
or national ongin. or a
intention to make an
sucb preCerence, l1mita
Uon. or disc rt m1nation."
nus newspaper will n
knowingly accept an
advertising tor real
estate which 1s 1n viola·
tionof the law
••••••••••••••••••••••• Ciie..eral I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
WATERFRONT
Family Home
5 Bedrooms, 3~ baths. 3
rar garage with 50' on the water, pier and slip
rncluded, pnce just re·
duced to $220,000. Quality
built home and a com·
pletc &lass view or the
bay. Vacant und availa·
ble. ·
54Mt41
~
•••••••••••••••••••••••
R.AMIUMG
llACHISTATE
l IR·W AUC TO SURF
$64.500
Secluded entry to larae
famlly-s1zed living room.
MllSSive stone fireplace.
Formal leisure dh1in1i
room conveniently
served from gourme
garden kitchen. L11:1
41J..4406
HARBOR
tro pical t e rr ace . Separate wing tor ve
privatAl master suite
c h II d re n · s q u ar le r s . !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Hc!~,19~~.1! ~,'~>8!1~oet • G1•1 • I 002 GaMral I 002 [ •BIM ···~::;~;;::··· ·····;;~;;;·· .. ··
ENTERT AIMMEMT FanlasU~ ram!IY home. GARDENS Huge 36 ~amity room. Big twe>-story. 4 bedroom CEHTB Low mainte nanc e with ramlly room.
J llDIOOMS-POOl.-151.500
Fantastic Anthony kid.ney·shaped
pool completol,y fenced. This Costa
Mesa home being completely
redecorated by seller & will deliver
in beautiful condition. cau us today!
Jll I S•Ja i I Nlll.oed
MEWfOIT CINT9. M.1. 644-49 I 0
1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
CUstom 6500 sq. ft. waterfront home
on the point. 134 Ft. frontage with
magnificent view or boats & harbor.
Slip for large boats. Remodeling has
been started -finish it to your own
.taste.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
Superbly up~raded r~mi· grounds comp!ete with formal dining and out-
ly hc?me with spacious gas bar-1).q. 3 Kmg s1ied standin& 1ntenor decora·
&ct!Vlty room and enter-bedrooms w/masa1ve uon and landscaping.
t a in men l ~~ n le r. f!l<lSler suite! t ++Two Ttus is a large home with
bedrooms, d1!11ng room fireplaces. Wire s aver a pool size yard and
and charming pat~ k Itch.e n. Fo rm a I large side yard for boat
area. Y~ own the land 1 candlebght. din.Ing. 2SOO 0 r l r a i 1 er storage.
t h Is des tr ab I e Har bo SQ. fl. of u Ill mate I u x ury. a 500 For further in. ''!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! View llomes localion. All for $93,000. call to-r 0 ~ m' at I 0 n c AL L 1:
341 Boy,,d,. o ... , N B 67~ · 6161
Price $120,000. Call Co day. Open house Sat l ·S 556-2660 aooointment. 673-SSSO 646-7171. ·
Ol'fN It( 9 .JI S rl}N 108l NJCf 1 OftN 1119 .ii S IUN l(Jf;1 NICf'
•
CSELECT LIDOSAMDS ~ 1_T" __ PROP ___ E_RT __ l_ES_1 La~!Uc4to~~~a~b~a.,
4
~c:-i~e;.~ch ~ ...... "*'' Crplc., extra large lot: Regeney. cust' home on
u..belittYable! commun,. pool. Seller Fairway, 5300 Sq.rt .. HEB> A SLIP 4 Bedroom. 3 ball\ family mostaruuous. $79.5001 marble entry. gourmet foryourboatm hlffstor's home . Only s12 .ooo. lalbooloyProp. kit., oak paneling. beaut Will take up lo 40'. Delaht Spaciousexecutivehome Realtors tand sc pg & more.
Beaulifully upgraded $48,foo with step down living * 640.5560 * $425.000. By a ppl only.
CONDO. 3 Bedrms. 21
11 room, vaulted ceilings, t~~~~~~~~~fEx~c~lus~l~ve~A!?g.!en~t~6~7~5-6900~~ lh f l I A sharp 3 bedrm home · I s ba s, p c. compete withnewpaintlnsldeand expansive g ass area •
bltnodkitchcen. Shrows like a out. New carpets and f~~~y3room, form~dint DO IS E m el. all or appt. drapes. Greatlocation on "'fl.,. car garage. ea LI L
$140,000. 644·7270 ... ~ 1 Call location. Call 540-1151 for Priced redueed! Vacant POOL ffOME large 110• ~P ol. r Ud ·1s
tt4tUi ~ and ready to occupy. 3 MESA VER 0 E. 3 ~ Bedroorrus & large sunny bedrm. den. 2 ball\, near
• . .
'~I'
~ ..... •'
-----·"'""'\ THE REAL '
ESTATE RS
----l THE REAL I
ESTATERS -----~
751 546-5880 for (ulJ details. u euu · and newly redecorated
~ 1un101s patio. Near tennis court. Country Club. Priced to f~-;;~~~u.~~~,~~-~l~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~I beach and bay. Now sell today! $87,500. Call F = $147,500. for a opt.
1-C .. O .. LO .. N_Y .. ~-ARl--l·on .. ~-~-et.1_! .. Dta-.M .. ':-~-!i ... ~-F .. ! .. ~-ain-rV-~-~-y~-n~~!~-&l~PETE~-~~~r!!!!!;TY~"R!!!!!:rr~~lffiK,,PEE'S]
COATS & WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC.
MEWPORT HEt~HTS
HACIENDA
There is no end to the
possibilities!! Lovely 2
bedroom, 3 bath!
Spacious livin~ room.
family r oom with
beamed ceiling, plus ex·
Ira large fireplace.
Every woman's dream
kitchen + + + 3 car
garage, 2 works hops.
Potting room and large
yard. All for $89,900 Cull
IRYINE de·sac. 3 Bedroom, 2 clean 2 bedrm, one and a 1-..!ut~:'...:a.-':'~t bath. + huge bonus room t T ·
Sharp 3 bedrm home (ldeaJCormother-in-law. hal yrs new. ennis1·---------1~--;s~49~·~8~6~.5~5--located on larg~ col'her teenagers, etc). Step courts. pool & jacuzzi(
lot. Shake roof. brick down Jiv rm, rplc. shake facilities. Many up·
fireplace, dog run. Close roor. large yard and graded features. OPPORTUMITY
to community pool and much more! Priced $46,750
recreational facility. right-hurry! 546-5880 -~1 . IL, $00.900.
640.6161
ANYTIME
price. 646-7171.
()/!IN"' 0. ti~ lt)N ro111 N•(I'
~~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS ~
1e111u1 , ___ ..._ _____ , :.:~~F0th~~:Ebd.
SUPER SHARP recreation rm. H&F
poof. Needs a little TLC
but what a buy. Located CONDO on quiet tree lined street.
COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESiATE. INC.
FRAMCISCAH
FOUNTAINS
4 +POOL
Pnvate cul-dc·sac drive
to courtyard entry 1 Ma·
jest1c double door entry
to step.down living room.
ExecuUve formal dme ·
sunshine gourmet
kitchen. Separate family
room w /toasty fireplace.
Soaring staircase to
sweep ing master
bedroom comp l ex
wtseparate drcsising
area! Tropical rear yard
h1-ltted by sparkling
pool. Seller leaving area
and must sell quick.
Take over exist. loan at
S37.2SO at $397 per mo.
GI, FHA buyer welcome. Only 1 \'2 years old ln El ~1 Toro. 2 Bedroom. 1 bath.
air conditioned-totally
upgraded with lovely
sundeck. Priced at only
~.1so.
~
Walker & lee
Peal f state
$48,500.
100/o DOWH
Better than new-DOVER SHORES
Spacious 2 BR, Fam.rm, One of Newport Beach's ----------• Townhouse w /enclosed finest homes! Unusually
Hurn! 847 ·PPito
BIKE TO BEACH
Super area, super condi·
lion. super family home.
This s bedroom, 2 story
large family home on a
corner lot is near all
scbools.shopping, beach
and parks. can 546-23l3
before it's too late to see
It!
Ol'rN 1119 • '' S IUN IOl!f "llCI'
JOb with a low·c06t Daily .~ : Oon'tdroptheball! Get a rerrf 1 ~~~-w;"·· ... : .Jim
1002 a ... , .. 1002
Deane 'Homes B PJan. Beautifully
decorated & upgraded. Superb
Jow·m aintenance landscaping.
Corner location in cul-d e-sac.
$109.000.
A C:OUM&L IN4ml CO.
644-1766
J1t1 IANJOAOUINHM.U"D.
IN NEWPORT ClNTI"
patio and a ttached well designed & fuJl or
garage· plus • a cozy amenities for the com·
Clreplace & warm at· fort & protection or the
mosphere-plus com· family. Large, elegant
munity pool & jacuu.i-dining rm.; kitch~n is a
plus90%financing avail. gourmet s delight! Cal 644--7211 Poolslze lot. You own the
/Jn NiGEL land! By app't, $249,500
[Jl\I LEY &
l\S'JLJ(I t'\r E 5 C. F. Colesworthv
REAL TORS 640.0010
1002 GtMrat 1002 ..............................................
macnab / Irvine realtg
IAYROMr
Experience the GOOD LIFE in this
smashing tri -level home in THE
COVE. 2 Bedrooms, dining room.
wet bar. comm. pool. beach &
jacuzzi. Boat slip avail. $195.000.
PoJJy Johnston 644-6200 (G60)
642-1235 644-6200 901 ~r Orh1• H.wtaor View Cfntier
lrvlne •t Qlmpus Valley (.enter
752·1414
S@~dllA-l££tfs•
. Tito# Intriguing Won:I Game wiflt a Cltudle
------~It>, CUT I. IOUAN
•,..,,..,,.. ....... °' .... '°"' ocro...oi.d -dt be low IQ ._. '°"' ....,.. ~
I p E E l 0 p I
' 11 I I I I
I· t rn I i
I N 1 P E T I L Thew Pofl1 you road aro • I I I r "•u•lly u""'"'b'• b«ouJO 1tto . • • --. reel pvbllc opinion I• only ex.
l V A T R 01 C I PletMd In -· rt·f ... -...1,-1-1-.....-..,.1--1-e-.>• ,... t"'-dle quoted
.., by hl•llle "' ......... "II -d '--................ .._ ___ -.......... ,,_ lltCI No. 3 below.
• :~,r~~E5mm r r r r )' t I' I
.~w~~r.•m0s'0 l I I I I I 11
1a clauHlcattc. aoos
knocks ort.en when you i---------use result-getting Dally
Pilot Classified Ads to
reach the Orange Coast
market.
Meifac:hs
''Pavilion Reatton••
A Whale of a OHi
200 MAIN ST, BALBOA
Call 675-8 I 20
Phone 642-5678
,, ... .If .
SNAPPY KHOT al lhe IOI).
then seams shape close to tti.
WllSI abo'fe ' wllit11112 Sk•rt Sew this feminine. delightful
dre&s in c11pe. reruy . Printed Pattern 9240: Misses Sins 8. 10. 12. 14. 16. 18
Sire 12 ll>ust 341 t1ke5 2"• rards 60-i!Kh fabric. Send Sl.00 for Heh oattem. Add 35<' for Heh 1>1ttern for II~ ·CIUS tlrm111, h1ndlin11 Stlld tt:
Cozy up on chill nlitits with this brigllf afghan beauty•
BULKY KNIT1 Use 2 strands
syn1het1c worsled together as one 101 llexagon In 3 colors Join with crochet edge Into
atgli,,n. Welcome eitt. 1pres-sk1 M Pattern 7292: 011ect1ons. $1.00 tor each oettem. Add
35C" each ~ttem for t1rn<l.tn airmail and handling. St11d to1
Allee Brooks
Needlec1111 Dept, 105
0;11lyP1lot
Box 163, Old Chelsea Sta,
New York. NV 10011. ~int
Name, Address. l•"· Pattttn N umber
MORE thlfl ever befonl 200
dtsl&TI' plus J frtt printed 1,... side Hf.W I 976 NEEDLECRAFT
CATALOG' Ii.ts eY!fY\llini. 75(.
Marian M1rt1n Crechet wltll $q1arei .$1.00
Pat\ern Dept "42 Crodltt 1 Wanlrobt .-$1.00
O.Jly P1101 1111"1 l'lftJ Quirts --$1.00
232 West 18th St.. New Rl,,it Croclltt _.--$t.li0
York. N Y 1001 t. Pttnt Sew + Kalt looltd.--l.2S .. AME. ADDRESS. ZIP. Httdleptlftt look 1.00
; I Z E a n d S T Y l E Fltwtr Ctocht look _ .00
N MBEA, Hairpin Crtchet look • 1.00
0t JOI ltllOW flow to ltl I
_.neni frtt1 SalKI flt• fer
tttr lltW hll-Wl11ttt P1tta111
:1te1ot-cllp co.,.11 IMIClt 1•1
lrtt •tt•m tf raur cllflct.
Seti• lS. •WI Sew ... lllllt ltok SUS
l1Staflt liltlley Crrfts $1.00
les1Ht faslliOll look $1.00
tllStlwt s...n.c '"k S1.00
tnstlftt Ctocllat look _$t .00
'"rt111t Mtcrs111• look ~1 .00 li11~ Mmy lftlc •• 1.00 co .. platt curt l ook 1.00
Co11plete Al&fl•ns !14 1.00
12 Prfn At11t1ns 112 _50, l oot of 11 0111ts at __so,
MIHVlll Q1llt lfok 12 __so, 15 Qtllt1 for T.-, 13 -50, ... , tf 16 Jltfp •• --50,
.~ ......... ,. ..... .. . ...
---
8JQOAJL.YPU.OT TU!!day,OCtoberS.18'71 ........ ~ .. ":!!-•-.• ~~.':'!!•--• ~-~~_.,..,... •••••••'::.•~••u••• ~.'::'"..5:!:••••••••1~.':':.~•••••••
.......... ~ ~~WI ,_Wt c..t.M.M IOM F-'•Yllley IOJ4 t044 .,.._ 1044 Hewporthoclt IOHMtwportlffdt &d6t ...................... ~~~~ .......................... ~ ........................................................................................................ ·····························•••·•···•····· ..
111111111 '•Hi •-rif 1002 ••• ,.. • 1002 ForSiltlyOww #I fOWHHouu· BANCHOSANJOAQUlN -... ..-. .... IWI .. "••-.••••••• .. •"'f•• •••••••• .. •-••••• •••••••--•••-••• .,.... ... ._.... .AODR.lSS i Bt 2"'a Ba. popular San -"" "
IUM.D YOU. JM, 3 Br, I Ba Coodo for 4 Bedroosns + 2\t batbs ~;!.'Jes R ~r.·w 'i:J'~~ Rcmdo S.. Jooqaln
1111 YICTOllAM ~
A blltoricall)' signiflCJnt home oo Y.a
acre ln ~tin , carefully restored to
its oriftrial beauty and charm;
gleam ne h a rdwood floors, 3
fireplaces, a sunny sittin~ room
filled wlth wicker furniture, 4
upst ai rs bedrooms as b ig as
be<kooms you'll ever see. formal
dining under an incredible antique
chandelier. and a. manicured yard
dotted with fruit tree& and lawn
furniture a nd interrupted by a
circular driveway that peaks at the
wide step.s leading to the e~ive
porch. Tell f rieods about thla Unique
Home. Presented exclusively at
$350,000, shown by appointment to
qualified buyers only.
U~lfJUI: t1()Ml:S
REAL TORS~. 675-6000
2443 East Cont Highway. Corona del Mer
also in Mesa Verde. at 546·5990
PRICE JUST REDUCED!!
Highly motivated seller has given us
instructions to reduce the price on
tus duplex $5100 & SELL rt THIS
WEEK! There is a well maintained 2
bdrm. home in front + cute bachelor
apt. & 2 car garage. Located on
com er R-2 lot, South or Hwy. New
price $89,900
ECONOMY MINDED?
Let us s how you t his gre atly
upgraded 4 bdrm .. 2 bath, frplc.
home, near South Coast Plaza; price
$64,500
• •
YllW HOMI sn ,500. Please call newly listed Tiburon & lake. SUS 000 5471044 i.~:1:; :11~ap~t~~ tf;!t;
Ra.re view lot m Corona Merylt710M0-4082 townbome an Fwnlllln orm~t5 ' ' pool. View '
del Mar overl9oltlna 1 Valley. Over 1800 sq I\. H S fabulous Newport HIW,HIW.MIW. Step Into lush livin~ TUR1l.HOCI A TIHGS&CO.
Harbor. The Jetty and • Bdrm ho~ w/J'EW room. C11mily room and lmmac 3 br, z ba, Redton &40..SHO
oceun. Price redored to crpta. ~eo m, fen~· daning area. Hriabt and tam.rm din.rm .. vaulted ~~~~~~~~~I $85,000 Coll for dNU.. Ina le It• In u prime cbeety wife-saver cellloct, brick frplc.. \MHYPOSTPOM11: ~ Meaa Verde tocataon. kitchen. Versatile noor covero4 paUo & alrUlm " "
CWi ru·"'''-"IOOtNl('f''. •.500. £Nes.541-Wl plan. Lots of rich wood. 188.500 Incl land. Oi>en HAPPINESS?
p, I• Vv I' • ,, wallpaper and custom S.t/Sun 12.s. 6142 Blinn
'• I '.
drapes. Hurry! Only one Lane,Owftl.152.7867. Profess Ion a 11 y oo the market al 161 ,450.•---------• landscape d 4 bdrm ll~~~llM~ll!!tl'co"-.-u....._EG_E_P_A_R_,K_.-3-9-r~.• Call842.2fi35. ltmclloS..J...... Berkeley In Colleae ~ Ol'OI rr1 9 •II HUN •0 81 NICI' 3 QR. 2~ Bil Townhouse, Park. Beautiful built-1n •--------rzBa. It PoOJ +Jacunt. 4 Montanaa Nort e . desk & shelves tn study. * V. • TERMS * lmmae.187.000. 54947q o-3 79 ... "" l>N\ wet bar In ramlly rm. "'-_. 1 evea. ~ ...... ....,,,. Bark yard is enhanced
INTIMATE, PERSONAL, GEM OF A
HOUSE located oo comer lot of one of
Lldo Isle's uniquely open a'2'eas. 2
Bdnns., 2 baths, frplc .• 2 very private
patios, profess. decorated. $165,000
LONELY LOT desires company of 1
custom house. Let's meet to dJscuss l
our future t.ogethe.r on beautiful Lido 1
lslo.
LIDO REALTY
"" ... Udo, ..... '7J.73tf
Large 8 br. 2 b9 home. Hardwood & pluter 3Br, by larae covered putlo.
Gas bltns. PW, FA heat, 2ba. conaer. ~.900. aa· WE deckin&, gas BBQ & eon· LaglllMI hoch I 041 wport IHch I 069
brick fpl~. Owner paJ,nt· sume7% ln.~-3139 Ci)UA.INTMAMTUCKIT versatiC>naJ fire pit. Steps •••••h•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1newl\I thcarperuo~~·. o1nb•ltea1
1
1 ~~. STYLE urap YOU SELL! I f h' .., _ nu. away ro.m re res ang A maanifkent NF.W lux· NEWLISTIMG!
LgepaUow/blln BBQ. SOMITHIHG ZSTORY&POOL anddonotchargeapen-eommuni.t y park~ & ury home overlooking N)lt. Shores; A·frame.
646-383S;eve15'e-8104 SP!CIAL Warm ellrth toned ex· oy! Call us for details. PoO~-Seeing is believ Emerald Bay. 3SOO i.q l-sly,2BR&denor38R.
4 Bedrooms. SSS.9 terlor. picturesque Red Carpet Realtors. ing. Price .has. beea re· n .. spectacular vacws Bltns. 2 pat\oS. Steg-: lo ~it.":f:~~~:U: ::.:~~g~u!J~:St.8~:i'.i.833-J380--··------i duced!Do~n lm1ss lt! Oon'tmJss thlsone! ~~~ & poola. nly
r m. fireplace. custom orfuJ nowers. 19x21 fam CAYWOOD RIAL TY
kitchen. Oversized dou· rm. 3 luxurious baa. UMIVHSITY PARK • 541-1290 * --------T--• ble garage + recrea· generous bdrms. etc. The Terrace. Dover 3Br.
IR PI• MIER Uorutl vehicles uorage. 1Sx38 glistening pool. 2ba, uparded. l story, SPYGLASS HILL
PALACE JUST LISTED!! Hurry Owner bougbl another, end unit. $119,900. SS2·17SS NEW & EXCITING Xlnt Oppty.Superb View
2STORY-POOL on this Costa Mesa must sell. Xlnt school OWNER RAMCHREALTY hJlltop home fealunng •Br.3Bath&Oen
Lachenmyer
l<t'.tllUI
$75,HO' bargain!! CAll540-1151 area. Anxious. Price wUI 551 •2000 CATALINA VIEWS. 3 By owner 640·1751 or ~We®or Cormal mar-astound /;;u. bell er. WANTS OFFER! BDRM. 2 BATH. Quality 640-8277lv mesS1&e
Weent.ry to dramatic Uv· hurry. 968-1'~1754 University Pl'k Deane ALL ABO D construction. S87,SOO. ing room. Crackling ' home. 2Br. fam rm. Sub· AR ! JayW. Yeats Realty
fireplace. Large lormal1~~~~~~~~~ mit au. Owner has men· This beautiful Columbia 31709Coast liwy
dining room convenlent-1• tally moved. Model in College Park So. Laguna 499.2237 SPYG• ars Hill
ly served from pantry1•--------THEPROFESSJONALS has been upgraded I.JU
kitchen. Comn'8ndlng MEW ---------CALL752·7575 lhruout! This 4 bdrm11ooC111J1111C1Hih 1050
new of splft'kUng pool & 1 BR 2 BA r I I ll EYEPLEASIMG 1---------home offe rs finished •••••••••••••••••••••••
jac u ztt. Covered · • p c. am Y HR&DTW"'RMIOo.11.!. Turtle Rock Glen by bonuaroom.familyroom •ROOMTOGROW• pavtlloo. Sweeplng,stain room, double gar age. llOAft "' ~ owner. Plan 3, choke lot. & formal dining. Sl~reo Spacious 4 Bdrm. home
lo hideaway master & C1U.7so. · · Doesnotevenstarttotell XlntlocaUon, ready Dec. intercom to sa_ve ttred w/2 ....., baths. ram. rm ..
guest !suites. First lo call Roy McCcrdle the story of thJs home. SSl-4931or 552-01()(). reet. Flr~place m laml~y sep. dining rm ... huge
gets thls unique find at a Realtw 1810 M•wpo.1 W~ ~are you to see it! 31---------1 room. Mar:ore~ doors m master bdrm. suJte &
bargalr\ price! Call CostaMeto548-7729 ,bedroom . Big family ATTENTION bdrm. Patios m front & Saddleback Mt. views. 963--7881 1---------rwm. Ybllrown park for rear 3 comm. po Is. $98900
Newport Beach's finest
custom homesltes, on the
very top of Spyglass Hill.
Will build to suit. From
$135,000
Spyglass Hill Sales Ore
15 Bodega Bay Drive Newpart Beach
(714)644·1321
Of'fN rho.,, s 11.JN ro 8f ""''' • a backyard. Less than J Parks. Close to schools & .... •01· 1 .... 5 1.: "'LTY
T B• miles from Huntington LARGE FAMILIES! shopping. Are you in love ... " 5A e~~~~~~ ff.~Jrif r REAL '
~-~~AT [RS~ eXGS IQ State beach in Fountain Enjoy lots of elbow room with tralns? Then this is * 494-8057 *
4 IR+ '-'lty1tM Valley and only $65.000 in this large Monterey the home for you! Watch IEST STREET lka Siu-MW ,.,.u Take us up on our dare! located an the prestigious lhe trains go by from CONDO IEST VIEW
i---------iGreal family !~cation! C~N~;~'UN'Ollf'Ma '1'heRanch'"i.nlrvine.6 yourbackyard!Hurry! By ownr. Assumable E.AllLYILUFfS
NEW LtSTIMG Has a h41e family room ! . . Bedrooms. over sized lot. @; 8.,..% loan, no qualifying. r~~o~:i~~.?.rr.~ ~::*~~i!:~~~ :!all~Pdtl ~FJc~:=:~~·k ~ So~i~~;~~~~~~ JS~1=~~s
w/(rplc ... encl. parch & hardwood floors. _cov· -=I =•nr::CI' ~ Leisure World. $49,900. 301 Avenlda cerrltds
Dice p.aUo i r ea. Dbl. ered veranda, euy·care-1---------i $10,800 down. pymnts, Morris ReaJty 833·1969 garage with bath & yard.s.Oo.ly$SS,950.ca11't •1111111r.;;-;-~-;-;;a;;";';\ S362.mo.Callforapplart
workroom. Extra 2 car las1,BKR,caJIS40-1720. RAMCHREA.1.TY or all day Sat/Sun parkln·e . P r iced at 551-2000 581-9026.
$105,00o llllllllllllai• 6'13-3663 833-0523 Eva
associated I BR Ol<[HS-PFl\l TOii'.
20/C, """ l albHI ., I 1tt I
'4# I a.. CClllfonia" REDUCED !!!
OPEN HOUSE
llACH COTT AGE 1·5 SUNDAY Huntington BHdt 1040
Lush carpeUng In living
rm. & fam. rm. makes
•--------1 this 4 bdrm .. 2~ ba.
3 18)ROOM 297 LILA' c L'AiaE. •••••••••••••••••••••••
4BR +FAMILY
S64•9oo MUST SELL NOW! Quiet cul-d e-sac in All the work has been
Irvine. Spanish arches done for you in thJS near· entry. Large enclosed bl hi d d frootyard patio. Smokey new. g Y upgra e • 3
mirrors and redwood bedrm Pacesetter home. Amt move In & start llv· board decorator living l~g. Offered at only room -plus Spanish SH OOO brick rlreplace. Handy · ·
HARIORVllW
Open Sat /S...
$109,000
Phase 3. 180 degree no-
glare VJEW. nke deck,
upgraded 2br & den.
Absentee owne r /bkr.
Drl ve by 2244 J>ort
carlisle, (71413!7·3773.
100 3Br 2ba. Plana for
addition. Newly dee.
$145,000. Bh 67~ • + JACU%ZI ft S&S Resale Specialists. 3, Jl!~C~O~R~O!!!l!!!!N!!!A~D~E~L~M~A~A~·~6~7!!!!5~·!!!!3!!!!0!!!!0~0~~I Usteo to oceCJa 1urf from flldiaRgwed Spec(a (ors bdrm models avail, this beautiful 3 bdr m. Al~t ellU nct-a truly some w /pools. 968-4602
house with Jacuzil. Sur· tradltaonal 2 story home Pennhigton Properties
tQwnhome a special
treat! Bruce "Hdwd"
flooring 1n entry ball &
kitchen adds to Its de·
h ght. Extensive brick
work In entry court &
back patio. Univ. Park.
chef's kitchen. Family FULLER REALTY room. Queen size master NEWPORT SHORES. 3 suite plus J more family 546·0814 br, 2 ba. nr comm1m.
a-cal 1002 GiMral 1002 r ounded by lots of i.o prestigious Eastside. ---------
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• redwood decking. Near boasUni fine homes and Doll House. 3br. 2ba. new carpet thrOughoul. n e 1 g h bots ! T h is 4 f:rplc, lrg back yrd, nu IACKYARD WATER TREMENDOUS Laue covered patio. bedroom. 3 bath rarlly crpts, $350/mo. Evh.
$78,000 bedrooms. E ·Z care pool/tennis. Walk to bch.
yard. Potting bench. Re· By ownr. Prin only. Best
locating -take advan· Newport &.ach I 069 buy on bch property.
lage ! Call 752-l 700 today. ·~··•• •••••• •• ••• •••••• $66,000. 646-4288.
Ol'fN IU 9 • t ~•UN 1081 NICE• $209,000 MISAYE:RDE Just listed Ill An un-has lovely mas,save ~lQr962-S58S.
-SPA R KLING NEW Lovely. highly upgraded be lie•able SS 3 ,SOO driftwood & ston e
POOL b idd e n 2 story In w /V.A terms. Hurry! fireplace/marble hearthi---.------1
552·70~0
Mariw'sCo•e l'HE · ... · -!1'fllltll ING YOUR CLUBS San Clem1nt• 1076
White packet fencing •••••••••••••••••••••••
frames this gracefully • • * BE AC H G ET
warm 3 bedroom. 2 bath AWAY. $37,900. Perfect
borne. only steps to a golf cottage ror 2nd. home or
course! In prime loca· retirement. Ownr must
tion In a people-who-care go and will help with
neighborhood See it rtnancing.
'·
w/Jacuui & a WATER Southern Mesa Verde. CalJ91)3..6787 PLUS Del PulO tiled en-
BAR. Sophisticated ex-From the terra.u.o entry Ol'fN11l 9•1 HuNrO!j(""'' try foyer & plush master
ec. Bordeaux model on to the wet bar. to the cov-• suite. A genuine lind-
81g Canyon golf course. ered patio beside th ' ~~~~~~ farselectiveowner
Hard to find 2 Bedroom. VILLACE. . .:
I ~ b a t h . A d u I t REAL TORS LIVE IN IRVIME
Townhouse. Jacuzzi, len· '~----------1 $49,500
nls & ~auna & pool MEW Walnut sq plan B. 3 gl~~~u~lf~v~ed~~: }m8~~~ ~~ a!~hvl:i,~~'*;:.,~~,~~· ~~~~~ II IQ ~ decorated in quiet good tremendous value. Call J•a
taste. Available Im· 546·2313 TO Sii'E IT . 31.ED8 00M Pim:• .
$50,SOO. bdrm. 1 ba. com pool &
64§.347 LISTING!! park. Call us now to see now-$72.~. •BER111A HENRY•
REALTORS 492..4121 media 1Y "" • • Deane Home; a BDRM. te · NOW! • POOL-Prop71!"2.tle1.._a and fami ly room. 2 WATERf'RONT Ol'IN•11<1•11HUNrOatNic1• 'I .,..v baths; on a comer lot.
HOMES JACUZZI MOOOUA.lln ~tAOt Near Communlty park.
REAL. ESTATE $59 900 M11:<1t .1. DEL M "'R pool and lighted tenrus 631·1400 • ~"' "' .courts. This delightful .Sharp two story Newport By Owner, 3 BR. 2 Ba. ---------•home is Ill' top condition.
lhas well appointed
home. 54&0022 mau.:.~J
Prap ... t ... 7S2•1t20 MOO OUAIU T NI T lfAClt
~
Walker & Lee
Heal Estate
--------···=•""•=H-O;;;:R;;;:S;;::E=;;::H;;::E;;::A;;::V;;::E_N_. Riviera J bedroom. Huge frplc , Uv·r m. din-Cam -Prtce-$99,500 1----------master s uite. Family rm, nr So. Csl. Plaza. S S • I LOCJUUM1 leach I 048 all.et Haven $65,000. An ACRE to r 6om overlooks huge '63.500. S46-868i unroom pec1a •••••••••••••••••••••••
roam with a great 3 e<>ve'red garden patio 21' Added room + a de·
4 Bedrm, 2~ bath on a Bdrm home. Outstand-Stone wood burnln i FcMwtainValley 1034 light!ul3bedrm,l~bath
c\11-de_-sac. 3 Car garage !n& location In Vista ad· fireplace. Walk to tennis •••u•••••••••••••••••• home. Excell residential EMERALD BAY w{'-raaler access, walk Jacent lo wide ope-n courts, pool, jacuzzi. neighborhood one mile to
Mlle Square ~ark: Relax spaces. Tack rm, 5 to~ sauna etc .. elc., etc. J ust CAREFR££ CONDO the beach. A bargain at 3 BR OCEAN FRONT in f~t ol fire ln this hay barn. 2 paddocks l 0% down. Hurry call $65,000. home oo the Point with a
ovenued !"u~r 1).lile. fen~ed. pastures. Great now. 9e2·77S8. COMfOIJ 962-7771 spectacular white water
Wt ·J tn11 ·:&Co111p.1111, . . ' ...
E u r yl b an g you 've forklds. ..~,...-view. Just listed at
B>.750. REALTORS 492·4L21 ever 1 one l It t h i a I I 1 1 't513 CutPUSDa!hMltE only. HA.RIOR VU HOMES always wanted , only •BER111AHENRY• there'• 1ometh. lof for ~II S325.000. Shown by appt.
215 Del Mar. San Clem. beautJfully up1raded 3 1 Pop Palermo model on
H 0 II e m • k I f , S bedroom end unit! Enjoy~:~~~~~~~=~~;;~O~PE~N~D~A~CL~Y~;;; cul-de-sac st.. lrg aide a PRICE SLASHED -..OOP.mMlo 100 lbe ramlly CLUBHOUSE 8A.M. T06 P.M. yrd for boat. car. etc.
Witlk to rolf course and ••••••••••••••••••••••• wt POOL & PARK just Pool size lot. Open Sun, Dream equestrian trails from 7 UN'lTS . $295 000 across the street-i>r r~ RANCHO 1-5. 1607 Port Barmoulh.
3 Bedrooms, 2 bath this 4 bedroom rambling BeachCottage-$64 500 lax in your own M' tiled IEACH BARGAIN SAN JOA"'UIM y TC L S Ail 673'7601
vt/gas BBQ in kllcben. r!?ctoh!IE~~cliutilnvetileen· Reduced! 5 Br. 3 ba, nr. patio! wt!!,.etedrilng. ~ 40'PooU40'Flll You've ttot to ~ ..... It to 3BRM. 3BSA.'sauHnla ,LVlew, Best buy In Newport Great neighborhood."'" u...,, v g room. bay&ocean.tl&4,500 oewyca.,.-wos....,." -... Sho B 3b cloee to everything. This Country sly le island 4 BR lba $137 000 condo Is geared for E·Z $63,500 believe l! \/.orgoous 2 View, Vjew. Great Ex· res. 4 r, a. comer
215 Del Mar. San Clem.
FIXER UPPER. Ocean
view, 4 bdrm & fam rm
home. 1,800 sq. ft. Frplc,
2 patios. $69,000.
J; AMCHOIAGI
IMYISTMIMTS
17141496-771 I
1080 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DOLL HOUSE
ONLY $49.500
GI. FHA terms. Charm-
lng 3 bdrm, 2 ba bome
w /huge FR on lrg lot.
Sep laundry rm w /hGbby
rm & sep bath. Xlnt buy.
545-9491
~
Walker C Lee
Renl lstate
•
beauty wiU go ln a bu.-. k.ilcben! Fiesta family 2BR & de~ SJ.29'500 living at$Si,OOO. 4 Br. sep 40' party rm bdrm. San ateo patio ecutive home. lot. c;tabwhr. frplc, pools,
f -·~--SAA .. ., room with massive 15' M.arshall Rlty 67s W/massjve brick fplc & model home with a step 673-7601 A.GT. !ennl .... hl8ed. betoac$7h.8e.~.PCariclel w---&-L.--......... ----.-0-9-8
Ol'uo.y _,_,, brick fireplace and•--'----_...;;-----1 open beam celUnas. down Uvlna and dJnlng .. ..., _, ~..,....
•
chalet ceilin gs! Ex· OCEA.MfttOMT f!· .Quall Giant 20x40 sparkling room. plus a spacious PropertyHowse.642-3850 ...................... . Roberts panstve master bedroom s b r + g u es ( a p t . Plac9 pool. plush lands pg & muter bedroom with 10· FAMILY DELIGHT HARBOR VIEW HOME r--------•
R It , retreat! Seller anxloua · Q>O,OOO.Ownr.675·5089.p•i-U.a manicured lawn. 2'h Mi. ceiling, designer drapes lfigb above Laguna ; Orig Inn I Porlofino •'54,950• !I U tr)'•nyofferortakeover --~-....... .,.2."20 to ocean. Can't be beat. and carpet&. Close to large 3 bdrm .. 2 bath Model. 3 Br, 2~ Ba. 4br. 2ba, Uv rm. frpk.
e1tl1tlng loan at only _ _.. M• ~MOO~!QUj(k~~'!:..'· !!!l~!!.!~:!!.I Hurry. Century 21/Walk· pool and greenbelt. Only home; many extns: ~bl. +bonus rm w /loft bdrm encl patio w /BBQ. Nr
•a...,. •M. $207. SO per m on th. ••••••••••••••••••nne ln848-~. ·179~ nreplac. e, Jar a_e daning •. lull bath, air cond,
UqlMi.... 841..fOlO l!b.l"'MI.,. ..a.L •TIBURON·BY OWNER .. "' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ol'f~111<1•11sru1onolllNl('P ~ .,,._ Newc,pts, tile. IMMAC. 3 WIU. SELL rm .. pnvate bnck pat~o: Spanish lile, llQOl. Iota of
I-I-R--t C• J II + Bd, 2~ ba. Xlnt locatJon. fY ITSELF lmaragte fenctede yard Xwtatht brick work. new lndscp· • • .... -~ ' Days 8*8437 tve/wknd ure r es· n Ing + much more. ByOwner '73, HIA.lt,Alk 4 Bedroom. l~ baths. neighborhood. Priced lo· OPEN HOUSE ~~~~~~~~
4122 F.scudero Dr. Fresh .as a daily ".only _96:_3-_3l_l_3 _· -----• carpets. and drapes like day uU89 900 SAT & SUN 10-4 or appt.
s t ~
W E ~ T <.; I [ l E IH At T Y
INC H 1f! :1 ·1:· ~
3Br.2ba,famrm,formal steps to.a St-..S>'· Jetty OWNER ANXIO\JS . new.GoodbuyatSSS.VS0.1----------1 t824PortShe!fleld OftMrRealbtah
.. dining rm. pvt yd. Call TWO OM A ·LOT view park & walldna dis· Sln&le •tol')' 4 I>•". 2 ba. Pb : 962-7751. * OPEM HOUSE* -~ft.Wb~ Fee Lund $159,500 ••••••••••••••••••f•••• for appt-or Open House &&nee to a~y beaches, fam rm&sparklin&20x40 lNT'l,R.~.NETWORK -..._""'Su"' t-4 Byowner (714 )998·2228 Mobiletto.H 1· Sun l·S. Ph 55e-4515 Brand new. One home a delightful roomy & POOL. Xlnt cood. DI.a· •-499_2800 Fors.ht 1100 ---------1 bas 3 Br, 2Ba; the other oi>en210fllQ ft ~br 3ba, tress sale-at f '7.9SO. II LEMOMTRIE VIEW •••••••••••••••••••••••
UICIHIW
•DUPUX~
bu4! Bulltbyoneof our ,f.acnil)'rrnbomur/den• i1IA or VA terms. Call Univ. Pk. Terr. 2 BR., --------•!From the Bluffs. 2311 aaler space tor rent ur. best local bldra. Xlnt formal dlnina lncludlng ~ Aftlnl ram. rm .. w/courtyard Cllff Or .. 3 er formal din to 2S'. 175 mo. + uta .
EASTSlD£ location. a •umptuous matter mt.ry. Plush cptg. Many rm, fam rm. near new. ~173
~ 3BR. 3BA ~pper. Ocean
• view from dedr. Lari• IBR lower-4 car gar.
Frplc. ea. unit. bltna,
rrp<41 4c drps. Clote to
beach. Sl33.500.
Oood set up for JOU " the SI.lite w /wood bum ceU·reiiij~ii~~~I .,,.__ ~ £....... amenilie.. Quiet street.. Owner anxious! Open·---------lfaodpattn&a, or for l.n· lap Ir stain tlua 1'\n· nau -,... nr.ahoppJna.164,900 Sat&Sun.Agent642-4603 ....,_.,,lntltly
Comt property. Our ex· .dows. Reduced t.o lo 1Jr 1N!JIAY 2 BR, full bath. ram-rm.
cllolllve llat1nl. 646-1711 $14.9,500. • I. For l~ase: drive by 2l LIDO ISLE Uv-rm W/pau thru bar to ,.~, .... '721 I ~ ---Whitewood Way; end un· k' h 1 p -. .... --~ .... 06..l-l!l!veusl!s $14 ... 500 1lc . palo. ark $120 .,_.. " """"'" -., It on greenbelt; sharp AWAKE~ "' mo Incl uUI. 494.0451
HmAHTS Time t o rnalit th•t Hanover. 3 BR. atrium. " OWNER wlll ronslder 1--------"1n ., •I
JACQIS RIM.TY
'75-6670
....... 100 ·-·.. • 1002 ............... -··"··· ... ···· . -··-·---110111 .ILllll CD
OVER 50 YEARS OF SElfVICE
&UM, IUM'"
Front Row ~tb Weter View From
Every Room. 3 Br 3 Ba, Family
ROOQ\. Tlled Courtyard f;lltry.
$157 .500 or Wlll Consider La /Opt
•t DCWa DIM G1·1•
• ,·, I I '.
,• .',II .\It,
.._., cbaJtge to a newer rrlore plush camel cpt.. Univ Pk To spectacular vus of lease. 4 Bdrm. 3 baths, COSTA MESA· VACANT
tJPIJ'ad«i Hillview end Pl~ borne. Modem 4 1465 natural caves In a very family rm, wet bar. 14.500
unit fealuring Fran· belt. •Landmark w/fam Ccmt.ennh1l Real FAtate secluded canyon. 2 south p11llo. Beautiful tbr furnished, lrg l>atio.
el1can tile entry and rm .. floot to ceUi.11( mlr-EVEIJVN COPELAND Bdrm .. loft, ocean vu. open design, ldeaJ for en· awning, walk lo stoi:es &
atrium. 2 Bedrooms plus ron In 1tepdowo L".:t..1. 552·1776 S52-0U4 1._Sl.12 ••• soo ______ •I tertalnlng. Drive by 222 bu!&. lnqul re o¥ner.
aen, 2 ba tib1, maDy eov'd paUo. twib yanla. •• Via Palermo, then caJI Space 72, 2191 Harbor
beautiful amenities flus wallpaper. pecky cedar, Br. fam Mn. dlaln1 rm (213) 795·58~ days or Blvd. 548 t915 E · Z 1 l v i n « o a ,14p graded fl aorln a 1 Lge lot. S'79.,9SO. No1 ________ •I (114) 573·0541 eves &1-----------
townboUM.O~atViewof c:ollect.988~Bkr. asnta.552·9388 wl&ds ror appt to In· BOLE.5 AERO. 24'i Sr.
Saddlet>aok and 'night ~1 Lowinead f73!50Q l!.v~ism• UST&N TO sped.. L.B. Benedict Clllien Park. c tral ~~~~~~~~I Ughta trom your pr1\'ate .. AFTIRHOURS" '"" • THISURF Costa Mesa. Cozy, lean -paUo. "8,500. : A ..1·-amJc settlnfi In this' Pre 11 I e n t . R ~me . Beautlfu.lly bulll English By owner. 2blocks to home. 548·3663. vall
'4,.••tOO ~~ u.. l Turtlerock 1Na. Shows style home 3 houses from beach. 3br.den,2ba. now. ROBBY ROOJll
fat Dad in hl~ 3 bedrm
homo ' with' ~·an~f view of Ju ' atden.
• v--r 1 •0·-" d~r,r~ ~·.x,:. Uke a model. Principals the 11wf of CU'Uc!ent Bay TeMla court &t pools . , _______ ......__ ~home. Beama. pnly.833·0763or 545-3031 Beach. ·a bedrooms. con· S72.S00.23SLugonla. •"'°Pert, ~400
Decorated' .itb o U•· lnc mint>n "a ~ck.
II.om will do.-"'1np
l n dr eamy-1'1Cche o.
sa.&J I.I.I, av..
valley Realty
Prtcecl ria1-((¥! ~tl1e &ocalloo. Jtat,JOO. eau ,,,. r..a.t dni• 1~
00'# fOr prhatu.bowln11 Wm · .a Dall7 "Pl
ROYAL P ROPElt1'l!S. Cla11lned Ad. """""
&U·l830/MM406. MWf1'8.
vertlblt den. couotr)' 548~ •••••••••••••••••••••• ::~:~1~e~1":,fic:.r: Lecne/OPTIOM kitchen/dining roorn .... _______ OHICI ILDc;
won't last! C1U collect We will make a deal. Nd Be It N 0 . Lag un a IY o~a•.•. On the Water. Newport ~Bkr. 1 fomlly to Jive In our oceanside of blghwoy ,,.." Beach. adJaceot. ~Lido
9M1 Bootbbay STS900 former home. S8r. locatJon.$164,500. BlgC.nyoo-NwplBch Villaac. Short ltlll s,
---------''-2ba '+' (amlly rm. 8)' Cstm home. 48r, 4 ba, \deal ror headquarters
Br\ f•m rm. pool , owner 752·0283 or =· billiard rm, vle•. b Id a . I n q u tr e
ftrtPJl ct. ~9,t9f. 10-. '40·01H, A1nt. Pleue ,_~ .. ·~~rteaor•~!~!..tt.r'. • <714)862·8622 H U E. doWn. Owner anxtout. 1e .. tnamefln1>mber. 496-7W 131..0IU ........,_...,.,.,, .... u..u Highland Ave. San OaU MWl60 Aaent Bernard.loo 9240t ~
~ .
1
I
I
. ·. . . .. . . . . . . .
It
I
T
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
0...--... ._..,. I°"""' .... 11..._ ...__ u.,. ' tt• " f ht•• U.fw I t • Uwfw t • 1 • ;.''*CS!y=:=l~· Oc::;:;.;•.:;;obef'=..::5..:..;1~m--.. ______ ... DN ...... L .. v ... Pt_...Lo-..T_8_J"""J •······•···•·•········· ~··················· ......................................... ... ....................... GeMrtl l ZIJ .,.. lUI...... l 2441L11 .. •1Hdt ·3%41 ...... U.fwt11t1• lf twlla,. •• ,. ....._
a.:-rr.,.., •v 2ooot.cw ,,.., •v 2000 ···-················ .... ---····---···· •••••'41 .. •••••••······· -·-··············· ···········-······· ....................... -············-···· "•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3br.lba,fplie.DW, UNIVIUlSlTV PARK 11 U 4 ~leed1 3741 MeM 3114
ORANGE COUNTY •lllMTALS• CJJta. drp1. 13&51mo, primo 1reenbell loc .• !'Ir ... :".:":.cH !~:~~.~ ............ -. .. , ..................................... .
Sant.aAn•Hel.lhta m.4BAO.Nor... poqla. park. •cboola. 4 BDRM •FAM RM 4 Br l>\lplex. SeaabOre Bach. Near beach. UUI ew1dultwat rfrontMw 3 BR. l BA •••.•• al5/rGO avill lmm"-d. 3 Br 2 Ba. bUt 1 lutdwn 1 • •• 45lh St. Yearly lease. pd n~ms mo: 185 wk. In Mesa Verde. Btau ul J8JtlBA ...•.• '37S/mo VACANT. lmmac 3 br rorm dlM. S480. SS:-0136 ....... _-n • ae. ~ Calls.4&-S684 lWN.Cit.494·2* land11cap1n1 Exc•P· P Laeuna H.lJla home fplc comer lot orm-o&1S """'it w1~•0 view· -• Uonally rich lnterio1"W. RIDE OF OWNERSHIP '48R.30A ...... $tSO/mo Only $400 . 24l9i mo. 2Br.ZbaCondo.pool.tM·Me •portleocll 37" tft.2 bdrms rtom STIS. a~ · Blrdrocll. call Sue, 1\artle.rock 4 br, fam rm . OCEAN SIDE OF KWV nlt cour\S. Newpor ••••••••••••••••••••••• Men Verde Vlllu. 15$$
UNITS ~BR,3BA ...... $SOO/mo ~rrn.ooree. ~~....!'!". •!.~·l-~ crpl. ~vVl•'~tbR~a~B1~~pt1ni' Ctest. ~ mo. Adlt.s Lg 2t>r apt nr. bch. Best Mesa Verde Drive East.
&..c"-~· ""' .__ ....... ..., ,.... .. "'... 673-1'1'1MeVflll. area. Winter ~13SO Coal a Yea a . (1 l4 I FllWI K11·TY llO'ONTHEWATER! to beach. tat lill lncl. utll. aer" laundry M0-88'1l. aUM. 3 bdrm new bome on W\Uow Homee. 3 be'. 2 ba. BDRM. CEDAR HOME. r ·1 962 050$ 1~ w.u-,.;;._-------146-0ll 4 Laite Forest w/View of l>W. (pie. cpts. drpe, 2 "'-81 t hs . 2 IJ e ... Very apacloui 4Br + :.Ct't>Oa Bl. • 11 · EMTSJDE adult 1"2 Br. I~~~~~~~~~ Wld:ei'. 1.S281q. n. 2 ba. 13116/mo.~Agt.No rtc-eplacoa. All bill·ln Den. Park. beacb & f200.$22S.Llkeocw. Pool.
A/C. wel bar. (rplc. P1"9 ree. lrltcben. Stained 1la11 wat.er view. MOO yrly OCEANFRONT 3 br. 2 ba. no pet.a. ITT E. 2%nd. St. t
u
INone OlderThan 3 Yn OldJ
• 3 New Units, townhouse des.lgn lncl ,
3 BR owners unJt
-4 P lex, 12 Yrs old. w/unbelievable
4Br. 2Ba. 1700 sqftowners unit.
• 4 Plex, Under construction.
3Br, 1 *Ba owners unit.
Choose colors and options now.
• 4 Plexes. 3 In Orange County SOLD
-6 New Townhouse Units, Costa Mesa
W~~:v~~~AkJrm & dbl gar. CJubbouae, Uve in Irvine Vllla.ge. We wlndowa. Must have ex· leue. New lge deluxe bltns. 644·0818
• 1 _.. pool & l«Ulls ind . S4.95. havohomaavailablefor cell.refen!n~.STSOMo ... Best Weat Bayrront rrplc. wnshertdryer. .... ......... ~,.._._ Kids. pt:ls,stnl 9 .,,.. ~ad" now! 6«).8JO() •----In·. 3 BDRM., OUTSTAN· loc:alion w/50' boa\ dock. encl. gar. No nots. SSSO. ~ """....,. ~ NEW ERA·fee ~ ~ -OC "" =--.:---=--:=-:-::--::;:-;;11rtca•tt.•iRV...., l2l4 WaJoulSq TbeRaneh DING EAN VlEW. Sl.250 yrly <rum or un· mo.Winter 673-6840 THllAYWP
.......... 1207 ....................... l'.>eerlleJd Culvenfale Llv. r m. w/flreplace. furn> Lge 2 Br near bay & t Bdrm S330
....................... ft.....t....... b ba C.. Homes Univ. P1rk Very lge. Ir s pacious. Waferfro.t Ho.et beach. Pool. Avail. now 2 Bdrm Water Pd D&O
2 BR. l Ba. partly rum. ·p;.~;.--,;..; c~~ d,,,:O: CoUegePark well deaa,ned ram U l·1400 toJune30.675-l84l Beaut.lt'ul. •~c!Ou Mw
yrly. Prefer cpl w/1 DW.Nowaxnrs,,uper 3Bryou.rchoiceof<9• 4bomeBDR.$SOOM •·F0.;,.. RM 3 apts.Pool.pvtpa\ios.
child no pets ~u -.. .... .. ~..-A from S3llS to $$00 · • "''"· ·• Oceanfront Sl'75. Ulil pd. Adults. no-• • IOc . ..-./mo . ......--et .. B ,..__, of <61 BATHS •. Lie. hv. rm .• ,, .... lsle ·2bdrm •·d"n 2 "'-I ok .... -· ado""C ... .. 3Br. 2 bath. Across from No fee. ~ r your ... uu.ce beam cetllnga. rireplace, ILA\N ' '"' '" • .xiig e ' r ee _., nVOC • .... .
Lo I l from MSOlo'-'75. .. .. «"" ba. SSSO. 2 Bdrm .. 2 ba.. M1tln Rentals. 540-s.TJO M6.ol83 Btly be19ch. ve Y v ew. Compl redec. 4 br. 2 ba. No Fees •car garage . ..,.,., "'0 • bayfront condo $1000 1----------i----------
SIOO yrly. 67H304 now cfl)b. c1rpa Ir paint. RANCHRL\LTY COMMERCIAL STORE Agenl645-ue4 ' . BactK>lor. all ulll. Single 2 Br ,...., Ba Twnhse br1c
'r 1 -s Units (2-4 Plexes> 2 Complexes to
choose from.
2 Br. l ba cottage on Bal. F)lc. 'S4101mo. ~ 551·2000 orofflcen!nlal.Seperate ·Qk. $175. Bcachcom~r. fplc, gar. lgepatlo, adlts, Perun. Yrly. l;!t blk t Agt. No fee. bldg. & re~t rm .• a t S.ChuneMt 3%76 feeSlS.631·2011 no pets. 127S. 2441 Elden i't 2 B nd 3 b 2·~ b Plcadllly Circus. $160 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avtt. 919·l9S8: Evs pier. Pvt pa Y· S2 S. Lease•BR lge2Sl.Y best ra new r. a. Mo .. El.EC. & WATERN 3b do p 1 J Bayfrootluxury2br.2ba. ~7027
~ • ...
-
• 12 Units (3 yrs young. Costa Mesa)
•16 Units (4-4 Plexes) Breaking
ground now.
• 12 Units, 2 years old
• 18 Units, under construction
•29 Units, 7 Years old SOLD
•48 Units, Laguna Niguel SOLD
-64 Units, Anaheim SOLD
•lO'l units. 3 Yrs old. under 7xGross
Other complexes are listed and sold
b efore advertising. As k for
appointment with one of our staff in
a dvance. BUILDERS-OWNERS;
Quail Place lists and sells $3-$.5 Million
i n prope rty a month. mostly
apartments; but homes. office
buildings, condos & commercial as
well. List whe re the action is.-
675-331.5 Ft. Vly a~a. Xlnt OOnd. xtras. S46S. No pets. PAJO. ew r con . oo . ac. pvt club. Re fe rences.1---------
Corofto def Mar 3222 thru-out.Frplc.lgeyrd, 871-8471or 833-2l05 Mt~saoNltlliTY tennls.~/mo Avail. now thru Nov. VlEWOF
••••••••••••••••••••••• car gar, $650. mo. CUii 88SS.Coaat.Laguna Lux 3br. whitewater JOth.499-4147 OCEAN&CJTV
B b John, 963·5671 Agt. N •RENTALS* ,.._.494-0731 vt· ......... h acA,..,., ~-... o. So.HIL-3716 Lite. bright. airy, new 2 Beaul duplx. 2 r. lo/.t a. ree ..... "" ......... ......... ----br. 2 ba .. frplc. dahwhr.
rrpl. + xtra.s. So. Of hwy. · 2 BR. 21,, ba ..•..•• ~ 1 8 11 tit Kids ts moo1mo. Anchorage lo· •••••••••••••-•••••••• jacuui. garage. 642·'7992
$4SOmo.S49-950t. ..........,_.._. U40 1BR.den.2ba .... S47S ~ aBeuch~m~rl>f}ee vestments.496-Tlll. ble3se2Br.2Ba.large ..;....--~-----
2 Br. 1 •~ Ba, do"bl,,,••••••,•••••••••••••-• 2BR.&Pool . ···•· S47S sic. :..1 ~11 ' .. ,_ r~ ...... -a.o b apl. AValt. immed. rrooAdullUvi.nglnspac .• new· ·~ .. '" 2 BR. Plan/..... . . S500 ....... · •nu a ....,..ta ~ ........ e. 3 r mo 499-283$ ly redec. 3 br. 2 ba garage, l ~ blks l 2 ~· 4 br, 2 ba. f'plc, 3BR.2Ba ....... 5450 Panoramic ocean view, 2 ba. patio. & rec facil. . townhse w /patlo &
beach. new paint. <:ot•. DW. Cpts, drps. clean. 2 BR. & Den ..•.... ~ new exec 3 br. 2~ ba, 2 $39S. Call 49&-7327. 1arage. $300. No pets.
drps. Avail Oct IS. N M7s tmo. ~58&. Agt. 3BR.i:R.2Ba ...• S49S frplcs.SSS0.499.2807. ....... Ap_alwab 645·33Blor837·9517
pets.$4l0mo.644·21l9 ~fee. SanLuisRey .....• 5625 ~ 3278 Uorfunll.a.H
38
de
2
r I be 'd
So. or Jlwy, 2 br. 1 ba. CONDO 2 Br. den 21-; Ba. 4 BR. FR .....•. S550 Beach house. Victoria. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• r. 1 n. ~~so am
' I bltn No k'ds wshrtdryr nr Karbour 4 BR....... . . . . S47S 2br c ha r mer. Ocean 38 b GeMral llOZ cell nga. mo . rp c · s.. i ' n ' · And we have others for view. frplc. $450 lse. Lu it ne w r · 2 ~2 a fM2.®4 or 7Sl·9235 pets. $325. 673·3022 S400 mo. No pets. Dys 1 ecf t 499-218 Tw n h s e . ··~ m I I e to ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ---------l-82l-2$}.9, Evs 846·2261 mm ia eoc:cupanry 1 eves. Marina. Rec facilities. 1 child ok here at Treelane Hart.or TowMcl ..
HARIOR VU HOM~ •br Twnhse. Cpts, drps., Home. ocean & canyon 5425/mo. 493-4290. Townhouse Apts. Only 2 Bdrm. cpta. drps.
Palermo 4br. 3ba, frp c. nu deco r . nr s hops . vu. private. Lg yrd. . Sl95. to move in. ·'The Mature adults only. No
pool. cabana. $700/mo. school & bch. 2 pools d eck . built·ins. 3Br. 2br condo. Pool. patio, presUgiouscommunlt,y''. pets .. S22Smo. '46·0392.
Agt, 673·7601. rec cntr. $350. 962·97S8 hardwood floors. Cal lndry. drps, crpls, gar. See oudurn.isbed model. 22l'lHarbot Bl. MgrD•l .
LEASE Duplex 2 BR + Robert Mance. 752-667 =o· Xlra nice . Spacious llOO sq. ft. NEWLVDECORATED den ...,..5 N dons •• IMMAC 3 Br 2 Ba. all or494·36n townhouse apts nestled · -· · mo. 0 " · bUns & fplc. $360 mo J'errace Townhome. 2 br. Wnt.Mnter 3291 in wide open spaces ol 2 Br wtgar. $205. New I! 'Quall ~1 1• iQu~ Agt. D•-.S.644-7211 11..,e righl In! Tc...tfic 2 ba. "Pl•aded <pl. Xlnl .._... ••••••••••u••mu•u• .,_,..all 2 "'· '" ba , ....... ~~Pel, waUter Capdll. ----Beach cottage S27S. 2 br. cond.848·9427 loc. S375 833·8488. •••••••••••••••••••••• wllh lge private , 2176 F acen a. P-. Plclc9 singlesok. Fee 833-1972 Redec. 3 br, 2 ba, cpt.s, 3 Br. ram rm. Near enclosed patios. Newly beiwn 1·5.636-41.20. Pl....,.. Ult• Ai ap•1 U.a . Main Rentals 540.5370 SPOTLESS ne w. plush drpls. fplc, DW. ne schools. Lrg rncd yd. $370 painted & every luxury
-riii-1920 752-1920 ------· ---1 cpt, dsbwshr. d1sJ>()8al. NEW Univ Pk. Peters area. $37S/mo. 963-4569 mo. Call 8J9.1S58. brand oew-Cpt.s, drps, lBr. cpts, dr'P8. bltns,
!!00 OUAILI! NIWf'Olln tA04 l400 OUAIU t. H ACM •OCEAN VIEW 3 br. 2 ba, palnt. 3 Br 3 Ba twnhmo. Twnhme, 3 Br 2'<: Ba. Agt. No fee. Cefldaunlna.s ranges. air conditioning. pauo:e;M~·slde.
Otti.r RMI &tot• Othttr lttal &tote 2 frplcs. gar w/elcc dl>!>r. Encl 20x20 bonus rm. Plan C. Avail. Oct. 15 U..f•Rilhed 3425 vinyl floors. 20 minutes,•---------
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• washer. dryer. refng, S395mo.MS-3359 SS25.S47·7044or 833-32l5 l...,.a........ 3252 ••••••••••••••••••••••• f rom Anahei m o n Bachelor apt unrurn. pool deck patios fuU ••••••••••••••••• •••••• R! Ide Fr to G nd M ·
1600 otsforSole 2200 m~l. $625'.67J.6635. 3 Br. 2 Ba, crpts, drps. 2 Available Oct1 15. College •••MONARCH BA y Mo n lice II o .. 3 b r . orr~mp . ;/5 s:~lb aluref11qwe~.._#Z ....................... car gar. $350. m o . Prl<.4Br.2~ba,bonus VILLA. Very plush. dshwshr .. newpaant.new VI U pt 2 Co M4111•-... ..,...
2.8ACRESHORSE OCEAHVIEW 675-5810oc642·9608 rm S495 mo1lse pref. BR. 2~ BA, t&SO sq. n. cpts .. no pets. SlOO dep. 11~~:.4..a · rooa. Z?SE.lSthSt,C.11. BAYFRONT
Office building. spec·
t:.icular vww. luxurious
t!Xccu11ve offices. An '<Int
investment at S630,000.
llLLGRUHOY
RNltor 67 5·6161
PROPYTY & POOL SZl.5. 3 br T.H. Pool. kids. 12131926-3Sl8eves. Panoramlr <>Ci!an view. Isl& last. 132$. 548·1392 U 1·1001
Newport Beach acreage Sharp, newly redecrl"d. singlesok. Fee TURTLEROCK President Leaae$100. Beaut decorated quiet Sunset Beach. Deluxe 2 East.side. 5 Brand new de·
1n Back Bay area . J~r. 2ba hm, Modern MainRentals.M0-5370 prestige home w pool. J * IOHDREALTY * adult condo. Tustin. br. ~ardent=~~ luxe2 BR Units. QuJet&
Complete set or plans for kitchen. birch cabin~ts. Walk .. fth 2 b ....," Br. Comm tennis. !.625 83MM1 l Eve 831·22 Walk to sbop"g cntr. 3 br. SlvK?~" 7000 mo.10493~7• pri v • ltt. Ea s t 11 de. hidings & layout availa· elec bllns. Wood bummg . to .,.. r. ~· mo. 644·41S7 2 ba. AC. nr fwys. I story. · ~ or M Townl'aouse type w /pvt.
ble. 545·9491 frplc. lots of storage. K 1~s !pets /s ngls . f co. Renttl...se. 3 Br Pacesel· Water incl. S375. 547 ·1450 eves balconies & patios. Also ~ Enclosed patio tn front. Mam Rentals. 540.5370 Rancho San Joaquin. Up· tcr. $450 mo. gardener in-an 4pm. single level w Jlge patio.
Walker & lee
Real fshlte
Deck overlooks pool. Fire lace. 2 br du lex, graded garden model on cl.495-0357.493-4385 WATERFROlllJT Deluxe Spanish decor. ~Imo. ~Ch.Id .k i-· P golf course. 2 br. 2 ba, Mlsslon.Vlefo 3267 aer. H.B. Ideal loc . " ·From S3l0.640-6890
TheRonTcrytor M~inRen~is ::o.5370 den .. O.H. Adults only ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~shr1dryr1refrg 1range 2 BDRM. bltns. range &•---------
1800 ---------• Group.673·7601 . · Avail Nov . 1 5525· 3 BR. 2 DA. on quiet st. ancl .S23S.9&H242. oven. refrlg .• frplc .. LRG2BR.pool.n.rshops,
NORCO AREA 24 4 Br. pool, kids. pets ok. 752-~ Huge yard clean pre· .,..a.in U..t.. 3600 wshr /dryer• new crpl· adlta/no pets. UlJI pd. ··••··•······•··•··•··· Costa Mna 32 $300. Beachcomber. fee Jbr 2ba Greentree home stige a rea' Sho~n by ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ing. lrg paliod~. pier & UIM Monrovia. 548--0336
21/J ACRES ••••••••••••••• ••••··~ Sl5. 631•2011 Grt floor plan. lrg 1oi.: appt. '425/mo. New Duplex. 2 Br + loft. dock Included lot y~r Adult 2 br townhouse. 1.,..
Ideal for s ub-dividing or REAT 3 BR 2 BA CON • B 2 Ba r •-dbl 5450. 833-2569 eves. Leaden1h1p Real Estate Attach ~ar wrwshr dryr own boa t , up to 25 . bath patio gar age country ~lale. A lot of 00 cpt.s drps fplc walk • r. • P"'· gar. d 536-3 8 ~Imo • • •
Buy now & sclel't your newconslrucllonanarea inclosets.en~lpatlodbl S:OO .rno.~i~ last &2 Br. vaulted<'lngs. form 84.2-4466 ys:eve 11 ~'!,et~bai~sp~~er:c~~~2 · dsbwhr.644--0873
own lntenor. Won 't lust Owner will help finance. gar. pool, adlts. $350. c earung. · din, rpl. 2 car gar Ask New Cordova 3Br. 2ba. lrg Garden Ln 213.937-0321 3 BDRM. 2 ba, blt.ns, UNUSUAL2 Br 2 Ba
WATER~ROMT
DUPLEX
PIER &DOCK
Bwlder. 675-1233 Full pnce $45.000. &l2-1Wor64.S-234S Vacant 4br 2.story rrpl<' Bill.Agt 546·5880~9·0253 wal.led yd, great vu. "s 7 1 wk d y s . Ev s near beach, S400tmo. twnbse apt, good loc. --------r Afl 6 73-760 I d. d • .,A.,51 • wt· Patios. cul-de-sac. S290 213 .• 72 u.-· 12'75 548·49'11 COSTA MESA • Newport Ills. 2 br. inrm. en,_.. mo runiv. Pk. 3 Br. z•, Ba. Oct. S375 /motherearter. ... ·~11 2 BDRM & den plus•---------
, 2 Units on lg lol. Need bal Est• $325/mo. 642·8233 or pd. 894•3288· fam rm. frplc &sund~ck. Owner768·3487. • OCEAN VIEW. $325. MODERN spacious 2 Br 2
work .. Gc,00 toe .. great be~ 2800 675·6789, eves. 3 BR, 2 BA. bllns. nr 2 sty tnhome. 55<?·0736 or Apa lww..t1 Fvniwd Ba. fplc. step dwn Llv
,. potential a-15.7221 ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach. S376/mo. 552·9444 Mr. Dunn . Hewport hoch 3269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• oc1:.a uFIO...., Rm, cpts. dtJ)8. lge patio,
Century 21 ··wc~tcliff" MOllLE HOME PA.RIC Super condo 3 Br. 2 ba, Agent962-777l ••••••••••••••••••••••• Isa.cl 3706 2 BDR':'" u" 1 & gar. lndry rm. no pets.
0 led 11 frplc. pool, clbhse Nr •LEASES• BLUFFSCondoLeases ••••••••••••••••••••••• . carpe ng ~.1·996-0600, X251 or 7 space lop ra a shops. S375, 645·7953; Spacious rortbe big faml· c somefor6mos.1 StartingalSSOO •YEARLY • drapes. range o ven. t-499-3292 eves lnc:OtMProperty 2000 adullpark.Lrg2brhou~e 673-2332 ly. 4Br. huge finished 2BR.famrm ....... S375 •Agenl644·ll33 • 28raptw/frpl.142Smo. refrlg, dshwshr. hugea---------
••••••••••••••••••••••• for owner imgr. t 1 2 20x22'game rm couldbe 3·4BR.ram.rm .... S410 WIW ... MWINTO ..... deck.$450/yrly. Huge2br.coveredpo~h. acres & permit or 12 For lease $450 mo. Lovely do r m b d r ·m n r 2 BR. den. din rm . S4.2S EXECUTIVE "' "" JACOIS REALTY util pd. $2.45 mo. !lave up lo SS00.000. cash
lo invest 1n unit~ &
Comm'I NOW! G-t0-8300.
add'I s paces. $200. 3Br . 2ba. cul·dC·Sac sl\clstfreeway 5450 Call JBR.Zba ....... S42S RIMTALSERVICE RealE.nate 675-3331 675-6670 642-6612 ~wty B F~r deta~~cf~1 home. Frplc. nice yard. Ruby, Agt. ·968·0779. 3 BR.dmrm ..... S43S HOM ES. CON DOS. Bayfront. Balboa ~~~~~~~~~~! c~e . owey I , Call S<SS-?240 for Jnfo. 536-8091 3 BR. den. FR • S1~ APTS. from $400. per Island rum winter ren· 1· WHY MOT?
4·PLEX 54,.3.,00 2 b r I d' 3 BR.d inrm. . . S450 month. •al,"'"pets.H!N\.675.7690 NEEDARENTAL? Sunkenlivlngroom "* & r. orma . in.rm .. La Cuesta Ra,...uct Club. R <>A7c. • "" """"' W o.-vethem1 1-48drm cathedral """iUng R"""'ntly constr•1ctft .. in r I di h h Ir ~.. 3B .din.rm .... .,. ... 67"7601 ... GT e .... . . --~ ...... " ' ""' rp c · • 5 ws r • se 3Br. 2ba. ltd tennis. 1 mi 3 BR. ram rm. . . . $490 ,.. "' • BR Apt Winter S290 Kids. pets. singles ok. 2 bedrooms. 1 "11 baths San Ctvmcnte overlook· Real &tot. c lean range & oven. bch. $450/mo. 960-J444 aft w ER l A bed Ing golf course. Large Wanhd 2900 Mature couple prer'd. 6 3BR. FR. DR SS3S OCEANFRONT VI EW 2BR lwrdplx YrlySR5 NE A· cc 638·8300 ttac garage
unil!.. ~12s.ooo. firm. 612 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gardener lncrd at 5425. 3BR. FR. DR • . MSO CONDO. 2 + Den. 2 car JBRS Bayrmt Uprdplx lal»ool"-d 3106 ~~drri."h~·up
r Call:; ~ampana owner, Pnvate party will pay 631·2444 Dys; 646·6Sl Beach Walk. 3Br. 2ba. ~ private parking, Cull Adlls only no pets ••••••••••••••••••••••• Y wt pal
I 496-i.'7S cash foryoureqwty. Evs. <B>Mdl. Security . 55270 security building. Lease. OONT-i'L~~~SOC. DELUXE 2 Br. sundeck. A:g1i1i~w·
CH" •. "'~ CH ... ':.E Call 556·0347 . $500/mo. 960·3444 aft • M). p/mo. AJl. 644·721 t REALTORS 67s-4000 prk. g, step lo bch & shop· Vll.LAGE ;r. • ' "'---~------1Ready & wailing. $50. wk. 6pm wkdys $325 548-4970 bef )• l&BFOURPLEX l WanlloBuy llouses Util pd. l br. child ok. ' · THE BoalsUpavailwlth 1 ping. · 621W.Wllson,C.M.
ANAllEIM llaveCash. F ee Main Rentals. 3BR.2ba,very privyard. VILL 3BR.2t;;baTownbome. lel»oaP•••• 3 07 8AM /art7PM 642-4991orM2-42'26
7 329 Near beach. Phone ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,_.___ ... 3107 Fol•r 2 bedroom. Spec JackSco<t,BkrS367533 540-S370 $400/mo. 84 . J ; REAL~ORS H •w'llSlAgt BEACH VI w i r 2 8 -'•••-$180 l br pool l adult
buy. only $72,950. Take Homey 2 br. $21.5. Kids olr;. 847-8420or 963.2425 . a arry • .....,,. . $400. 1' Bre s:iJ e,,. mt. ··•·••·•••••·••·•·•·•·· over 21. No peh. 32S J ,
over VA lo .. n v. JSll.950 Rtt1hl1 Fee. 2br condo. $390. lst/ last/ Westcllff. 3Br. 2Ba, rrplc Adlls, util pd. 303 E. LoitW')' 1 bdrm bayrront 17th Place. aft. Uam.
down ,, OWN R I AG T ••••••••••••:•••••••••• Main Rentals. 540-5370 clean Ing. 67:; · 4902 RENTALS 2 car gar, enclosed yard Edgewater. (l )871-2866 apt. Exchange for2·3 ~rs 0....1
1
Be
54Q.OS5!i HoulH furftilMd wknds; <213) 92S·4796 Single Pamily Romes quiet area. 1475. 548-7300. 8· ll am housekeeping 2 ...,..room. arge. am Sa Cl 12 t ••••••••••••••••••••••• $240. 2 br. patio. yd. kids. wkdys 2 BR, 2 Ba .......... S400 IALIOA INN weekdays. G r eal ror ceilings, pool, available
2 tin bu~~e~~~·co~~: ~<~:. CoronadftMar 3122 Beachcomber. fee $15 · 3BR,2Ba ........ S38S PEHIHSULAn. 1 br incl ulil. Equipped single reUred lady <no now at $210 a month.
$2l.OOO ~ross. n r bch. ••••••••••••••••••••••• s:n-2011 Lovely home. 3 Bdrm, 2 3BR.2Ba ......... $39S Exec. home, llke new, kitchen. other e~t1ras . childrenl.673-2012 :,a~u!~ =i ~~ rC::t
$210.000. l'h<l92·S078own. 2lir. Iba, S blks frm ~h. EASTSIDE bNa. be~ ~el'!rbo~ood. 3BR.2 Ba. • ... M2S superb quality. 3 Br , d Close to bus. val age $375. Yrly. 2 br. 2 ba, 752·1920
pvt yd & patio. $425. Pri"'ft fO hi r ac • nc ya . no 38R,2Ba. . ••.. $425 rm. den. 2 rrpJc•a. stores. 11w. mo. 67Soa740 story 2 car encl gar •---------•--------•I 671:9513.6758785 w::O wnen P pe •s. ••001mo lease. 38R 2Ba •c.N'I term lease o....wnn•.., • ·NEAT 1 B _.,._ · · 3 BR -2 BA p l u s ~"" · · · ' • · · . ....,., FAMIL.Y HOME ~ """' Balcony. 64%·1603 & c ean 2 rapt. Distress Properly! r 1 h kit hen& 4BR.2Ba .......... ms B r eoro.odefM• 3722 S3'.lS mo. Adults no pets.
I can rind itror you. foclntailt VaU.y l 114 d1brelpgaacrea. geuseBeacuttrul Xlnl loc Beach area 4 4 BR. 2T\')o!!e·bo·. m .. ;.;; . M90 4 r. am rm. new crpl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br. l "'i ba. aludlo. S33S a. Nr. Shops & bus. 352 Vic· h · ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . ' .... .... d""", paint lo-out. Loo 3 BR. 2 b r t t -... 2 ..... 1 ba up-toria, u gr. • -. .....,. u75 Beac arcaspecluhst. L'1t•le "harmer ~iso. UUI grounds_ • Quiet. S38Stmo. BR. l~ ba. 2 car gar. 2 BR 28a .,,_ .,::;;..,_ ii rroo a ocean ron • ,,...,., u.-"'N. -,......, '"9",.., Probates. foreclosures. • .. " Is te •· rd .. _ ru Inds pd & dee Nr · · · · · · • · -.... ....,. "' ..,ase,ava . •• . . · $350. Yrly. mo-mo. o bankruptcies, divorce. pd Pool Fee inc wa r • ga e ..... r. new.., c · 2 BR. 2 Ba ....... 5450 DAVIDSON CdM Mam bch. Garage. pets m.-ra EASl' SIDE 1 & 2 Br. like
Investment properties _M_a_•_n_Re_._n_la_l_,;...54_0._537_0_1 CaUJOS~·S2'70 ~~&ats~smo~4i>a~: 2 BR.28a ..•.•..•. SS25 REALTY g'13-Avail. unrurn. $6B~Uo · · new. From S17S. Adult.!
belowmarketprice L a. 3 ... .,H,..,_ .,..,,,..,,.... 3 BR.2~Ba ...... $425 Wntr .. $7SOYearly. i Newer,Frstdiog2br. oopet.s.130E.20thSl. · OCJlliMI ,...acll •-pty ....... ._ or .,.... . ..._, 3 BR. 2~ Ba.... . S4~ Udo Isle. Lovely 4br. 2b1 Grundy Rltr. 6'75-6161 ba. balconlea, encl. 2 c 646-~ ec ... John50ft.lroker ••••••••••••••••••••••• COMIHOMll or67).1433eves 1BR.28a ......... $50() home. Frplc.allelecklt ,.__...._ .... ~-372 .. gar. walk to ferry. Yr1 .. ----------Call (71'41673-4545 LAGUNA COTIA.GE Have a real home 11t Fox· 38R. 28a.. . ... ssoo dbl ear. Avail wntror yr -.n1--.. s 3 8 5 . 6 4 o . 4 4 2 EAST SIDE Fa bu lout ---------11 Bdrm. Ocean View. hollow Village. 621 W. 21LKSTOSA.MD 3BR,2~Ba ...... $560 ly.67J.1334alter5PM. ••••••••••••••••••••••• eves/wknds. 838·442 huge 2 Br. balconies,
If
••
120 Units. pride o f Pool, frplc. Maintenance Wiison , Costa Mesa. Super sharp & c~ean, 2 38R,2~Ba ...... $6SO BEAUT. Condo, uppe SJ7.50WHl<&UP wkdys bearns. gtorage, llkt hi Id & util included. MSO mo. Adult.s, S3SO. mo. Open large br's, ne"V kitchen 4 BR 2i-. Ba $495 •Studio & 1 BR Apts new. $300. adulta only nc
• ~~:r~c~~. 7
8 ~rssrr~)is: 494.2996 4-6:JOk !',.eekAday1s1• Nll-6: 1 wtdwsbr. new cpta, fully • • •· ~· ~· · · · !>!>' .. ~""· 3 Blr. $6SO mo •TV & Maid Serv Avail Nr. ocean: 2 BR 1285; J pets. 64&-0505
d I wee envS. va . C)v, , encls'd yard. Enclsd gar Newport Beach .....,.........,agen . •PhoncServ, Htd pool BR. MOO: t BR IZ50 l~% own. Super oc . d • R 1976 642-4991 w/wshr. 1414 Olive. M rahallRll e'75-4eOC
I•
1
rrin.only Brkr.642·1003 OnUlesan .48 .,$1 . Hurry this won't hist. 2Br.2ba .. rurn.S625 ... aaP.-Pt. •ClllldrenSectlon I y Yrly or $750 Wntr. • • • • •Low monthly rates. eoro... .. Mar 3122
(3) FOURPLEXes. HB. Agent 494.1551 pool house. (rplc. $335 pes=b~· 536-9'19l res : Corona del Mir Pnlt.i._decors atA!d 2Br, l 23'79 NewPQrt Blvd. CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl 19 500 Each ..... ...I -· 3 BR 2 a.aths --ba. M1 Imo yrly lse. CAO ....c.t: or .uc ........ · MeWBftf'thacll 316' mo.~A-. ·• "" ._., blk to Ocean /Bay. --~·-~-· <5l u.n1t. H.B. St27.~ •••• r.;................ a»r. l'1t1Ba tondo. Frtte m-Hrs •--su-5-c-.-e-.... -... -e--V\ctonan House + in· 'BR. Uv rm, fam rM, 2 lnoClry pool park ~•--.,
come units nr beach & Ybcrlyh. rS37512mbo.,l 1blk1b ba. frplc. ldeel &oe•tlon. Prime 1'oc siutmo: Minutes lo NB. Bach & 1 ~ ..,
Lake Park In downtown • urn, r. rp c. a . Clean. $450 mo. 675-2082 981M157S Let our awiaUttd ren BR furn. Adults. no pets. 'll,.. !"!!"!~---llB. 1105.000. 842·29111968·2133. ' ""-2Jl0 !llewport Blvd. CM. J,.. = = ~ = "" (2) N 5 U ·t bid Br duplex. encl. garage . .,. .. .,... .. """IC 4 BB ... Ba tal service fl nd yo
Aoah:lm. ~36.~s. Lldo Isle. bayfront & san Fncd yd S22S mo ... ~i~:-bltoa, encioaed quallCied t enants. Cal NING l Br garden CORONA DEL MA R
Century 21 /Spa row dy beach. 3 BR. 2 ba. sng 54~ ~ard. Vatant. $39$. Call A:l~ BARBAAA: apl. Pool, rec area. 521.5. t Br Townhouse, (rplc.
Investment 963-7866 ~,;.e:. b~'!':· ~~lcto w~~~ '. 1961 FULLERTON Donna, 962-24~ VJtTVVVU .., _. IHdt IHlty 710 W · 18th St. CM· Pool, tennis, continental Over 500 ull treeund 1;;
askforJlmWllson SSSO.(Z13>274-41l8 l br $165. Incl. utll. 2Bdr.4 blk.sbeach...Cl:aS. 671-3000 LAJe,_,._2.. bteakrut.Someocean& lit.reams with waterfalll:
EASTSID EC.M. Adults,nopeta.67J.m2 No pets. Avail. Oct. ts. 't523~Da:l'RY• Adlll,no"ta,w1w.drps. Cat.allna views. Close to creauiarelaxlnlt10Uln1 7 Units. J.JBr. 6·2Br HIWPORTClnT 3Br. 2ba, fplc, fncd yd. 2 968-0652all4 pm OP~DAlLY NEW 3 br tobae, tie bltlns.Po()l.S22S.645-397l ·=~g Ir fioo beach. for YoUr apaclou. Dew 1
S2 lO.OOO. 979·n 33 ugt. VlEW CONDO car gar. W. aide. ~. NN-er 3 br condo. GrMt 8A.M. '\'Oe P.M. rooms. trptc, pool. $S50. S150. Large 2 br. clean, :-.!,:~dF~~~ •::;J
Prinonly. Beaullfu.IJy decorated-mo. Coup lea only. loc. $350. Avail. 1111., Bedroom 3~ be eicec Kid.9oll 8'75-llMll PUrlfled water. Iott or frplc patio fl car
00
F'urn ituro nallable
Newpon Be11ch trt·plex. completely furnished M2-9970evea home z rovend patio .. WATERfROWT dplx. lawn. Covered garaaes. pet._ by' appL S375Jino. Small peu OK. Adultt
on canal W/boal doek. bedrm. 21
1\ bath, 2 Cl Br boun. w11arage u.r... Wall~ glass In llvln1 .. *·free boat doclc. Prt orr street p ark Ina. s.5-4GorUt-4'710. aolJ. Ofn~ open t :OO ll
Sl0.440 a ross. Sl35.000. garage. $235. Cpta, yard, kklat .._.-,-LP 1142 fem rm. EJrtra tge yd. I)' tum. W1D S,,00/yrl)', ~~'l~o~~\!ik ~O~ 1:00. 2300 PalrvM!w Rd .
C-3710,eves. AGENTM6-3ZZS peg0K.$4IH881 ••••••••••• ........... ,Nev abopphti. athoolil. S400 wntr per mo Newport/\ lblkSo.of J)upaex.~.2bedrm,I Coat• Mesa . Pbon•;
EXCELLENT rental ~-.... •--A. lll BrOC\ ~ ac~. w/3otber 1 8r,"3 ba toYffthouae. ~omm . park Is pool. 'M«IMorl'TWt•. Bayl.M2~ ' :~~ ra~td~'xa~~frJ:1-54$43GO-_.. _____ _
home-CO.ta Mesa. Cor -__,_ lb p 10 lnet· utll " Sf arkHnc new cood M1Stmo. UDO ISLI C 1 8 rnU Lam 3 Br 2"' Ba nr tot. 3 BR. 2 BA. d bl gar .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1:, . U ~ S '70 Ca I I •·Lt I a ... 151·ZOOO. ...... 8dnnl 2 ba I 1mo. yr 1· a OCX:. -. '• V•l~ch
tplc&xlnttond. lmmed. l .. CHAlOMT · ryfac · 4 -.t.in or-.54Meva.' ~moMonth "00 ae. t BRF\lro $1t5 11¥~ n.Me.~.~ ,
aale-S58,500. C all 3 Br. $500. Avail to June. E-slde 3 BR. 2 Ba. quiet CVLVERDAL.SSC'ffOOL • • • • ..i..a ot bltn&, pool, walk ... ON BEGONIA: lm· • or-~Agt. 846-ZWor(213)592·2135. cul-de-aac. frple, bllnl • ...,... 1 >H• :,:.a~~bllttor,.:.~ s Bdrma .• 4'1ti b• .• dln. to1boppln1."'amlbeach. maculat.e, charmlna I~ ~BRbftrx• rn~rr
... · 6 1a..a...i --a. It 430-9766 dbt aar. "2$. 8734800 ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• 11s.ma mo. rm .• ram. rm •• atudy. N1 w. dthSt. bedroom apart ment . ~-o c _!!n· v •• ----. oc ll• ..,._ SUOOMo S48-0G2 Comer kl&.. No peta or ......... no1i-au .... en on W'11 more than moke the SOllth L4pM Br. 2 ba, bllnl, frplc, Leuei OJ>tion attrac. :t OreentrM aru 38dnn 2 LAW~ IWTY cbildren. SllOmonlhly. 1)1. IWfa. req. '54 W. 11th', PQrmtnl3 Call 752-0283 ••••••• .. ••• ••••••••••• encl. back yd. Nice area BR a be bom Prtv • • COt.I °' MIWPC)ttT ~ '•
or 640-0188, A9nt. Ple~c a.Br. 2Ba t'Ondo nr ocean. 2519 Fordham <Colle1e )'!'rd. air. oomnL pool ii ~~ :aml~rrr''l~~ * 6 MNJ • 8r Opt, ~40 mo .• otU lno REALTORS Br & . ,
teave no me• number T e n n 1 s . p o o 1 • Park). 095. $411..W'fl unru.. $3IS. mo. w.um ~ .:S, '¥ ~1111 Pref Senior Cit liens. 6 l S-S5 I I 3 ~ ro:.ut. •du: com,: 81~1.agoon Villa. M mo. OU don't Med a IUD 2Sat Nwpt Blvd. Apl. ~ t4 ........ Eftcl , IU watet;
• Dbn't drop Lhe bllll t Get 11 mo. Ownr ~ 1581 0 lassllled •d• aell bl& Una IMU'tltiftl wlUa a 0""1ll.rff Romea. 8lfl ''dra• r .. t'' when you LC'e fum. bac~lor apt. Ac.tract 2 Br 1 Ba upper, ~ · praa ' ~-:
Job w1Lh t low·cost DaUy 2l34'76-338J ltema. a mall items or l)a1b Pi.kit Cluatned M *· COUl'llli ktcbn. frpk. plaic. an ad la tlle Dall)', $150. Pn!f. middle aic. open bom cella new •
l>llol Cluallled Ad any llem. Juat ca11 bastl'DDtem.atw •• , ~.arpools,~kfl }"llCJlWantAd.al CallDOW·No c.blldnn or pets. cptt I& palot. U71 .tlavesomelhlnitoaell~ ftaone&U·:1618. Wantad resulu M2·56'78 MHl7& J19teall~ N111.DTltmo1&Sl· · -tu.'"8. eu...-rtorMS.-M2·29ll • Cl.ualflededaclollwell .• ,
\
8JJ DAILY PILOT Tuelday. Octobef 5 1919
Add it...Bulld it. .. Oiaper it. .. Hammer It... Carpet SERVICE lt...Cement it ..• Wire It.,. Hoe l\. .. Clean lt ... Move
it. .. Press IL.Paint It... Nail lt ... Plaster 1L..F1x It ... DIRECTORY
Add-A-«ooa _,..... '"'defli-.g G .... a1-.1cn 9'ti edl 't Mrf9t .....,, .. ,"'-9 ,...Senlu ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Add1UoN1 remodels. reu. Remodellna 1-'ramlng It LEE M JARVIS Exprd H•wtlan garden.er Handyman: carpentry. •HOUS~£AN1NO• MO~G! Let 2 E•pr'd •P•l.Pt.lpl·P•P«ina• Rc.imovats. trl mm1n11..
prl ctn g. au pert or 1''1ni1h Commrrclal & AddH10N & Rt!modcllng Yd ~•~•nups, tnmmlns: paint 'g. landscaplna. _ 8)' Reliable Couple men move you Reas, Jnterior& Exter1or prun1na. IN!!e e!jt 1.1c d
workmcnablp, avg. Rea Id. Con l r a ct or 962-5513 Lie 317854 prun Ing Ll 11 aul · g movtng. yd work. rnecb'I Good referencet 5311-TTll Ret1,49M938 lnsured/Guaranl* Uc l'\illy insured. 842-~-~pl. lie. Ul7W 96241314•24 hra GERWICK&SON 64$-0087 repair.B47·5'2S4 ~leaninl)orehrs, FTimdl,yMovtngCo. Etrl· m388.CAll&42-4558 Leo's Trt'c-Service• ---------4 MINOR llOM E REPAIR AddtUona & Remodeling 'bacle• of Green· yard HaMlfM) own traoap, 548-001 •fl clent. hiendly service. fer j1tepcNr Artbllc lrHnming & re-.... mce R.,..W (;arpentry. Plumblna Lie Bl2UM2 Care. Royul •ervice. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $PM l..oJIOQratu.&47·0992 ••••••••••••••••••••••• moval. Lt<"d 23 yr,. in
....................... CeramlcTile~"60 ~2170 673~1 down to "Earth" pnces! HauUng/movina. cleadup ... ~/P Lm PATCH PL:\STERING area. Compl 1111rd1•nin1l,
APrUANCE REPAIR 64()..s.t.SS rt/ Tree o k R Juat bousedeanlna. No ,,.., -. .. ,_.. ••ALLTYPES•• clo1nup s. lndsrp~ SlO -ServlceCall Ci.rpentry Pramlna •c•AND~~N &Aissoc. tasf.~~e.t'SJ_.597 eas, rontract hasales. Refa. •••••n•••••••••••••••• f'roo E!ll S40.682.S 675-5750
<7l•)S4DU22 Finish. J\ddltlonii, stm nr1ck & Stone Ron'scomplotcjtardenln& P l ~aao phontt Myra ProfesllonalP1lnter.
------·----• Remodels. Commercial. Wo rk. Pntio cover~. service. Reui;. ratei; Sollf\¥ & Jer. Free haul· 613-3810 lntr/Exlertor.
labysftffttg Ph64.2-4~ redwood decks . .iazebo:.. Npt, c .M .. H.B. 54&-4981 Ing, cleanup, tree wk, tor 1 -...1....--a... Freeestlmatee8"-S3ts VEHY NEAT PATCll REES. abrubs lnnim~. JOBS&TF.XTUIU~ removed Clnups. frl!c •••••••••••••• ••••••••• -....as I 64().8144 A "pin us a bl"' lt"ms Fences· ..--....._,, -,....... ..,. ce ...., · "' "' · .. ••••••••••••••••••••• EXPERT Painting. lntr & Vacat.lonmotl\4!rwlllcaNi ••••••••••••••••••••••• Droftmg wesUnwn l.'scape ser. Bldpremoved.557•2005 f:xpr'd landscaper&. Ex tr Fre e est ,11'11.nblll1C1 Huveaomcthmayouwant forrourhome&chl~ren ampoo & steam <'lean·••••••••••••••••••••••• Cln-up. hauling. reg. YOURAVE1TREADV Sprink lera·lnatell & Workrnaosblp guar ••••••••••••••••••••••• tosell'!Class1fi1,'<iudsdo
F'r'ee 1'1lt. 893 1439 ~l. Mike 548·M24
~~:~cesyo: xf~~tr~?· lnl(. Color brighteners: Rm Addlllona. ne w malnt Free est or J'J..LHAULITAWAY R~palr . Concrete It llG-O'lZ MARV'SPLUAfBING ltwell.&12-5678.
645-0574 161.()66$ . wht carpls 10 mi,n homes. remodeling, cnu!'l>e 640-1880. Richard Tl'MS48-6306 Brick Work. ~7978 Fr P~Y-C_...._ ••~980'1••
• bleach. Clean l\v rm, drn co~mer'I, 25 y1i. exµ. est. --._...... NOJOBTOOSMALL' ...._., s.r.fce rm & hull $15. Avg rm Rsnbl. 847-4557 Cabellero & Sons. Expr HauJ Junk lo dump: trees. Avra: E•tr lSty S34S
•••-•••••••••••••••••• fl SO. couch SlO, chair $S. gardener. Fr ests, re· old app'l, cln garages, & u 2.St,y 1465/lntr $4Srm • lepair
Attorney's Overload s~rv. Guar el.Im pet odor. Crpt Aoors »Sonable. 646·4~4 art ycb. 847·S812 ttlla4rf Prices Incl mtr'l/labor ...................... .
Exper legal secys repair. lS yn; expr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .ipm. YOU HAVE IT READY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Guar .lnard.'freeesl. ustom Bldrs. Addition,
714-962·0'll9 ~~~~01 myself. Reh Scrub & Wax K•lchen GeMral Sfr•lces l'LLHAULJTAWAY ~~~~~"~'Jo Ted638-'7085orSS2.0ll4 ~~~l~~'kil"r~
C4!1Mnet Mak.iltg . , Floo.~ Speci~.I $19 9!> ....................... TIM 548-6306 Block Walla BBQ Pits PETt:RS PAINTING
••••••••••••••••••••••• .. 'um&CptClng. IOyrsm Call Sparkle 962·6011 HANDYMAN-Homes &"---a....-i..-Ref.Esl5846-0464 Expr'd reas. rales, free T•Tislo.Repair
h arbor area Oct Apls Cons ient1ous ·~ est.CelGeneSS2·CWSS ••••••••••••••••••••••• •H & F HANDIWORK• Gardenio9 . c ....................... Fr t SI to Ul
Cal cabs, comelelc SpedalsavingsS40.2llS ••••••••••••••••••••••• l·raflsman ~5 ~. HOUSECLEANING 1s bl:~~IJs~m~ck~epla~: •CUSTOM PAJNTINO• C~~~~t!~~~c~O.
lc1tchs. bath \IH11t1cs. . Tht> fastest drow in the Our Busin~ss. Call t.ers. QuaUty work al re. Let.st.alkaboutyour
storage. est cnlr lops Fmd what you want CleaNIDs-Yrd Moint. West a Duily Pilot Janice's Raggedy Anns. as prices. Bob 750-9354, needs. Bruce ~6·072 al Fair Prices960-1633
SJ8.1641or551·3074 Daily Pilot Class1f1eds. Call Mt KE s.&8·2049 Classified Ad 642·5878. 67~ ooo..a eva. 642·S67
USITHI
DAILY PILOT
"FAST
Rl!SULT ..
SHVICI
DlllCTOIY
For Result
Service Call
642-5671
ht.JU
Af••••••........ tu..ti..mbu.rw.. u.tw.. Apcalouw•lsu.tw.. RftltmstoShore 4300 ...-../1 .. •at/ .._cme....ts/ W..W 7100HelpW..ted 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• ••• ••••••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "--Ce Pee HR .. 1/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coda MffCI ta MHa 3824 LOCJ111M1 leoeh 3848 Soutfl LOCJUUta 3886 Wanted wrk 'g fem. to •••••••••••••••••••••!• Lo.t & Fot.d BANKING
••••••••• ••••••••• •• •• • •••••••••••• ••••••• ••• • share 3llR t.:>e. lrg yrd . ..._.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Advertising Assists. UTILITY CLERK
----QIANDOP£N1NG-----Quiet, charming 2 brLge, quiet. loxunous ex· Sm.childOK.557-4S81 Oppottmlty SOOS Loit&ro.d 5300 NOW HIRING &COMM'l TELLER
S the lwnhsc sty~e apt. l blk ec. 2 br, 2 b!I apt. r-f Rent4350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Manufacturer's Bank is tep m• to from main bC'h. No Elevator lo scenic priv .• :::.-:?:!.!': •••••••••• •SCHOOL-Reading, skill, LOST: Irish Setter, rem, J • Cl c hildr en S300 mo . bch.Party&gameroom, speed.etc.!Costa Mesa> yr.Reward! Edwards& GIRLS&MEN seek1DgaUbllty erk &I
gOod life 497-3232. totul sec Perfect living Dblgaragefor storageon· •SCHOOL-Pvt Jr/Sr Slater,HB.S42·5S93 Commercial Teller for r1r wknd retreat for the ly S60 mo. 708 Weelo, Hlgh !Anaheim) No&per. tWc. lts Newport Beach of(',
1BR,slepst.obcach.S250. adventurous adult. $S1.5. C.M.S48·6357aft7PM •BOOKSTORE FOUND: Young male 18Yn0rotchr The successful appU
first&Jast mo yrly lsc499·2835 OffiuRHtGI 4400 •DRAPERYWKRM mosUy Irish Setter, vie ~ningaFor: cantswillhavcamin.1·2
Stroll the J)dthways of a pine forest. Me.!nder PdSI 494-7538 S -112 8 1 n••••••••••••••••••••• •RUG/UPHL Cleaner Wamer/Srpingdale H.B. •M.arlteUng Dept ~~i:;~~~o:;!~~ comm'I
tumbling waterfalls and quiet pools. Listen 10 1he LCICJWIO Hills 3850 ~~ & las~'=,:~· •FURNITURE Renn _MS-_7_22_1 ------•Public RelaUons Tme The bank ls also seeking
sound of bubbling streams and gr<Mrlng things. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · · Contact Agnt Sam Crane F 0 u N 0 : w 8 t c h . •Customer Serv Trne a p/time bank exper'd ~r adult ap.irtment home at PlnecreekVilldge is SUPER SHARP 3 Br Con. !139-3.524 1714> 1714>64s..tl70 East bluff Dr . Call & Salary $115 person to work Mon,
dlo1alm1rca1. Here~ucanenjoyunusualprivacy do. Panoramic View Apaitntet1tafvmi~ .r.""'°""'"' Iii HOBBIES! CRAFTS ! idem.ily. Tues.Fri.
<1nd luxuiy. Pool. $365 mo. 830-8945 orUnfw:niahed 3900 ~~..--Turn Key Operation! ~ to $148 Week~ An attractive salary & BE AMONGTHEFIRSTTO CHOOSEthe~t eves/wknds, li34 ·355 ••••••··~··•••••••••••• ::;=:... Lovely shopping mall! . . 'I benefits ls offered. In· ~ dys,askforMr.Horn THE EXCITING .,...M ___ Owner will train! Idea LOST. Male Ch.ihuabua 1-'orlntervtewCal terested persons should locaoon.thebesiarrangement.thecolors~~nt. PAL.MMESAAPTS .r--r t' , OWNE Vic South H.B. Oct. lsl 549·9111 contact:
Don'1wa11. Twotennascowts.Swimmingpool leoch 3869 • ./'._. __ ..... or re tree. Black/blege markinga ~~~~~~~~~~ MaryJ. Elder pfus uninuevoJL..~~Upool Jacuzzi. MINUTESTONPT ............ ...-. WILL FINANCE! Uni CashReward!S3IJ..8280 ·,. OperationsOHlcer
.., "'Y""' P""nK iuEWPORT BCH. que at $10,000. (7\4 Ans wer Ing Service 5<indvolk¥>allcout1.Mounlainlodgedubhousewith -" Bach.1&28R. 492·S300. Pacific LOST: Fem Irish Set. 2 Telephone Opr Day 1201 Do••St,N.1.
f1repldCe. cor111ersation pit. billiards.~. sauna. APARTMENTS from Sl!IS. Realty. Old City Piasa. yrs. Nr back bay. lrviM shin. E.'lper'd oniy. 228 17141752-0600
Hunyto 1hegoodhfe and thenrelax. lor2Bedroomsand Adults.NoPels •lMOFREERENT• COffHSHOP Ave area. R ewar d . Forest Ave, Laguna EquaJOpporEmployer
FROM $265 TO ,.,..,., Townhouse!' 1561 Mesa Dr. 1.2.3 Rm. offices from S48.864Sor64S-5707. Beach ~ From$32950 lSBlksEast ofNewport u 2s per mo. Adj GROSS$30.000.MO. ...::.::.=.::.:.·:.._ ______ ,::-:-:-=:-:-:-:-:::------
lndudlng Heal & Warer. No Le..1se Reqwred. ()pen 9-6 Dally Blvd.) Airporter tlolcl. No lea Free standing, seats ~ Lost peacock. Vi~. APT HOUSE BANKJNG
OncBedroom.One&it-Spa·Pools·Tt•nnls :-.46-9660 req.S33·:1223TLl noon Owner m oving t Placentia. 19th MEWPORT MOTITELLER
TwoBedroom.TwoBath Across rrom Fashion Arb.ona and must selt Pomona Sts. CM. Cel A Bankexper.ContactBob
l300AdamsAvc,lnCostaMesa. Island at Jamboree on BESTBUY 60'PER$9FT Goodterms.Agt.837-642·1460 M:INsTiN.AN~E.gC~u-Creighton, Irvine Na-
SanJoaquin llills Hoad. IN TOWH 1s17 WESTCLIFF·NB I B k I tional Bank. 833·3700. acrossfromOrange CoastCollege 17141644-1900 Srn~les. 1&2 Br. rum & AGT.541-5032 Row..-s&"-h Sm lkCo·1Whll lteCocl apoo pe, full time. Salary E.OE. between Harbor and FaiMew. ----------unfurn. There's $1 _________ 1 NETSS3.500.MO. male. ar on y Mesa open Ex pe r . only.---------l•--------1 million in recreation: DELUXEOFFICES San Francisco style del Mar area. Reward. 644·~ll or494·1268 IEAUTICIAM (714) 540 1300. NOW llEN'llNG PENINSULA PT. TENNIS !pro & pro-Comm! & indsU spaces. major shopping center _546-8.lO ___ i ______ ll ________ •I HAIR CUTTERS
2BR,lbaunlSSOOyrly shop > complimentary 200to2000sq. fl. As la. Only shop or Ila kl l'WIOllCllh 5350 ASSEMBLY lmmcd. opening. can
OCEANFtlONT lesson11, s wimming, as311sq, rt. Lag Niguel& around. Xlnt terms. Agt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cam $250.-$300. per 40 hr' ·· Hwrtlft4on IMch 38401tt.tington leach 3840
.·
. '
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
OAK CREST
FOUR PLUES
HlnJJ CW, A hw Left!
OPEN DAILY
SPAUUMG MEW-Dauxl!
3 Bedroom, fireplace &2 bath $375
Bltns, OW, Uti1Rm,2cargar.
Will consider 1 or 2 Children
Apts are close to Central Park &
recreation, s h opping, schools.
freeways, Bike to beach!
Cross streets: Slater & Beach, H.B.
-West on Slater orr Beach one
block, right on Keelson to cul-de-sac.
Follow the signs! !
3 BR,2ba .. yrly. $745 health clubs. parties. Mi ssion Viejo areas. 8374200 Drinking problem! TRAINEES wk. Vedacations benSoefils. NEWPORT TERRACE BDQs & Sun<lay brunch. Handy to s. O. f'rwy, REST /CICTLS Call Alcohol Helpline Local in busy uth
3 BR.2 ba condo $500 Sorry, no one under 21 & Call83H400 CR~ SSl,OOO. MO 24 hrs a day835-3830 Many Needed lmmcd. Coast Plaza Mall. Regis f!.,""Wl ... DCOMDO no pcL'I. Month lo month ---------• C rr Sb L No ex""r. req'd. Should Hair Styling, 540·8838 ..
--" occupancy. Models open FOR LEASE Di~nlne.ge Rmo. ~; -Aaoluedngoen. MASSAGE have transp. & phone. Apply in persoa. 2 BR. den 2 ba $450 daily 10.7 3 OFFtCES uv.; ., .. _. IAYFflOHT HOME the way to San Diego in AGUIE MODELS <MJUJ~&long~erm assign. BEAUTY OPERATOR
38R,2ba.$2000Moyrly 03kwoodGardcnApts SISSMOEACH affluent area. Civic & ESCORTS ments.E.O.E. exper . w/some follow-
STS'STOIEACH FineCOSTA MESALoc Ftatemalmeelingplace, &, mg. Costa Mesa area.•
2eR.2balh!.S4oo NcwportBcachNorth • 1s2.1100 Agt.837-.4200 OUTCA.U.OMLY !] temno _646_·7_522 _____ _
3BR,2ba,wmlerS375 8801rvme(all6th> DBJCATISS~ 631·3811 " ~-P:.-Beauty·Manicunst want.'
l·BR.l·ba. S2SOyearly l714)645-05SO [9. ;,lil~i:f:Jjl NETS$4000. MO. PREGNANT'? TEMPORARY HELP edforEIToroSalon.
associated
BPOKEllS-Pf Al TORS
101\ W Bolboa •"I •tilo 1
Newport Beach South ;· j ttbH:t All help run. no seating. Carin~ confidential Call 540.4455 8374743.
1700 J6lh St Cal Dover 1 . ·~ --·:.= ·--= everything to go. Heavy counseling & referral. Never A Fee At Tempo BELLMAN 17141642-8l70 INVESTMENT DMSION foot trarnc loc. Well Abortion, adoption & eslabhshed w /xlnl re· k~ping 11 :30pm-7.30am shift.
Rooms 4000 BAYF'RONT Office Bldg putallon. Terms to right APCARE 547·2563 Associate Rep Must be over 21. Leading
---------•••••••••••••••••••••••• SpaceAvail Reas. party.Agt.837-4200 1---------l80ROYER NB Hotel. Call Chuck •DELUXE• ROOMS $25. wk up with 675-8141 AIORTIOM MO EXPE.R. MEC 644·1700 ext 565. EOE.
Eastblufr 3 br, 2 ba kitchen $37.SO wk up "44 Newport Blvd Ste o. ~la•n"-wt Counseling&Rererral ----------
Lease. Incl spac. m11ster apts. 548·9755or 645-3967 456 Sq.ft. $165. mo. Ut1l Fl rst Trust Deed or Preg. test-avail. wknds If you're new to Orange BOAT CARPEMTHS · d & dbl $200,000, available for 24 Hr Helpline 547-9495 Co .. temporarily discon· suite, in rm Sleeping rm for rent pd.675·8457 oceanfront property. Unuing your cducat1on, Expcr'd. High pay! 4· ~:::e~e~v~i~loP:C,l0& We!>lchff 3rea. Pref, !utirn -''--V-£N_E_.7_r_o_o_m_o_f_f_ic-c' Valued In excess of •SPJRITIJALREADER recently dischar ged Day work week! Lots oC
Umc student $80 mo alt . 1 $300,000. Current rate & Fully Licensed rrom the service. or for o v e r l 1 m e ! A p p I y recreallon area. Adults SPM 642·684G swte w /con erence rm. terms to be mutually 312 N. El Camino Real Westsa1 I Corpora lion,
only.Nopels lde11l tor acceountants. agreeable. Fordel11ils SanClemenle. Forappt; any reason seeking tem· 275 McCormick, Costa .y: Kent·~ D-..... * 86SAm1gosWuy ,NU N(.•a r OCC , Kitchen rontrnctors S750 mo. 492.9034 492.9136 poraryorcareercmploy· Mesa ft~ -..__.,. Managt>d by pnvgs. Prkg space. Pref. _!17_9-_3560 _______ , ment. consider this uni·1~~~~~~~~~
111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!8!!48-1!!!!!!!3!!0!!0!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 Granada Mgmt Co. male. $125. mo. 645.3025 MAY 0 CK *KAREN'S* queoppor. You can earn I· BOAT
-Yrly. Ocean view. 2 br, I Priv3te entry & bath. Lite $150 Month C'o .. rouTto" Olfl'CALLMASSAGE $196 PEJt WK MANUFACTURER
ColfoMna 3824 tbth•glOft leach 3840 badup. SJSO/mo. 644-678() ckg'g for quiet empllem. Newsmallomccsnear ~~ 838·1780 Well established Sail
•••••••••••••••••••••• •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• or642·3639. Rers.Sl25.646..SS02 Bristol&NewportBlvd "-~-Based on your produc· Boat Manura clurer,
2 Br Beaut. adult c:om IY THE SEA OCEANFRONT 2 BR. y ....:..1 R 5 Roy McCardle EXOTIC GIRLS ll v I t y • co m m • + n eed s : r ore m a n •
nlex Pool. gas & wal(I New 3 br deluxe ln'"·", 1 ocunon ...tm' 42 0 Realtot-1810 Mew..-t DISI'RIBUTORSALES Massage&Modeling incentives & extra prom supervisors, quahty con· "" """ Ba, deck, gar. cpl.S, drps, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..--• Outcall Only C:A''-3169 h I b Th trot ins""ctors. Must be pd. F.ncl. g11rage. S250 20114thSt.536-1718 no"""".$385.645-3655 MAUI, liAWAtl . Lux ful CostaMHa548-7729 Your own bus. onl ,,..... s ar ng onus . e ~ 542.5073 ,,..~ S43.oo. Multi level Mkt -----'-----• Women & Men we are cxper, all phases or con-
ILOCI< TO IEACH l blk bch. lrg4br, 2ba. nw. 1!..f.hr; k~~1~0~~!>· ;~ plan. G round fir op A~Ff:~~~~~E lOOldng for may be tired struct1on. MINIMUM s
Eaatsldc 2 hr. newly de ~ Br. encl .garage. patio. ly dcrtd. no pets, yrly be. Kaanapatl lkh. Tennis. 150 I WestcOff Dr. portunity. Additional ln DIST. of typing, Colding papers, ~efix~r. Many fringe ~~~edN;' ~~~1;:i;;, I>~ ~ lSlh St. 536-8729 or SS7S. 542.3443. $.\5 day. S34S wk. 675-2361 Newport Financial Ctr fo call Similar Mktg Plan New ~~r~~:.t':t ti:~~: Send resume to:
mo. 540 1877 ~1118 Super unlls 2 br & 3 br or <2L3)899·7219. leasinCJ Offlc• Space S49-9000. Product. Easler to sell· Work w/young people. Box \1104, Santa Ana.
----Ocluxe 3 br, 2•.2 duplex apts. Newport . CallonSiteManager BEAUTIFUL successru groundnOOf'. Rapid advancemen C&llf.92711
$280. Ea.sts1d<' 2 br, 1 ba. w1washer·dryer hookup Shores 1 1~ blk from L5uxun,ous, r9urn hvilla on (714)642-3111ext246 shop In a Hunt. Bchahop Callse9-900I> possible. lfJou're 18 ..... , ________ _ balcony ne "r new . · ' 0 . ayu 1ta eac n<'ar 1 d 1 BOAT • .. · Lgepatio.$375. mo.Callo cc an . w n er p rl V 11 rt 4 b 4 p ng ce nter on E I :! over&woul beavail.t Adults, no pets. 642-1603 846-1371 ask for Jngrid o (714)8'ro-9203 baue~ wak a731~37· 77 r, CORONA DEL MAR sculptured nails, s ki •, :,... • start wort lmmed., cal MANUFACTURER
IW&-8413afler 5 _ ..,.,.,, · Sl50. Dix suite, ample care. make-up, etc Pl ,.... betwn9am&3pm. Now accepting appUca· Duplex, 2 br, 1 bo. Clean 48r, 2ba. Nr new, frplc, R .............. s to s .. ~ ..... 00 pkg .• /\/C, 67~. Forced LO sell. husban •-•••••••••••••• .. •••• ttons for: quiel. $265 . 2 U L 2 BR 1 \.'t~ I N lH•a h ......_ ~ "'~ ScM•& C&b' t blc AmericanAvc 642-7743 #le · a, pat.o. gar. elar64 7 c ....................... Office Space to sublet, transferred. NoreallOC\a 700• ____ S_l_9_·_1_1_8_3 ___ 1 Mlll~eenassem rs ------·---frplc, gar. 1. Qu1e $400/moyr y. 5· 450 SlNGLES STUDENTS Canada Business Center bleotrer rerused. MS-1 IAlltNot'-~
8 ctdult Townhouse t Ml ortwte 97u. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... Uf" '"HEVY Llnecarpenters Sl7S. 1 R. Mature adul to be h 1285 sgs:2470 · I Br partly rurn. Newport. SENtORS VIVO RC ED El Toro. 768-0221 ,_,. "" *"' ~ . lleU arc welders
only. no pets. 147 E. 18lh. ac · · Between ocean & bay Live bcllc.r for half the TOP LOCATIONS hsifteas W..e.d SO I 11 A IAltT84DER •TRAMSMISSIOM/ Cabinet sanders
St. 642·2628 3br, 2ba. ocean view. gar, 1232. 675-7876 cool. We help you rind a H~rbor 3rea's ...... t. LOO •••••••••••••••••••••• *LIME COMIO EXP ER. ONLY ~.Avail 10/1. Family compuUblcroommute " ~ RUT""UR""..,.. FuUorPart·Ume MICH""iulCS NEEDAPPLV tWktqton leoch 3140 w e I c 0 m e 2 Br, aduJts1 no pets, S200. County Wid e Service To 1,000 sq. ft. From SSO "' "'" • . Be ready to work as a * "'"
••••••••••••••••••••••• 846-908B/536-4508. ~~1180E.1 16lll St. N. Hgts. Roommate ffnden RP.ALONOMJCS, Corp. I can arrange a qwc protealonal bartender fn Chevy dealer'• 11rowiol( Ma~~~~~~: ~n:ms ~ Brokers 675·87 aale or your restaurant. 1 weett. Free job place-service dept. in buay ERICSON YACHTS l Br, 1 ba, frplc, at the 2 hr. cpts_, pool, play yd., Yrly steps to heh mod ~2775 S30-7940 have lho buyers. Let' ment uslatance. Orange County AlrPort 1931 Deare i\ve,
beach. Garage. Gas & no p eu. 2208 A , up~r 2 br, bea~ cc1i: AVOIDlNCOMPATlBLE lmillfftRMtal 4410 ~:kPark,Bkr 673-1 AmerictnBan.enders fr~~s~i;:lo~~u::~~~~ SanlaAna water pd. S2Z5 mo. No Delaware. S36~9. r 1 te G ROOMMATES I School --------pei. 846-9088 or 960.2325 1"1> • vac. sys m . ar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• to Lo. 102 UCM E 17th St SA blnatton technicians .
orseemgrapt9,428 16lh Mew&.al&el'..t& ~-~&ierator . u 2s ~r:·CI2uut1Nwmw NEWPORTIEACH ~•••••••••••••••• 834-1960 ' Chev.exp.essenua1. Ex-m~~~P:e~,~·~r:::t
Sl. Deluxe 3 bl', 2 ... ba. all. Tukes the Guesswork Stor. or Offices I z.d Ir Jrd TD • l~~~~~~~~~~I cellent pay· benefit.a. &:e have excellent bookeep..
dbl gar .. pallo, frplc. 17 Bea~ apt ocean vu 4 br outofflnding that $250 t500Sq Ft> at. • '1 7071 ~ice mgr. HOWAR ingskllls. Call Commun.I·
. lA~ :'!I07up~~~~:.~~ ~b1a:1a , 536·3465 or 2ba, ds hwshr, lrplc .; RIGllTROOMMATE Across fr~m New LOANSAVAILABLE .......... ••••••••••••• Sta v~le\, Do~ &bQuall ty Presbyterian Church,
• -.. 219 15th St •· 220 1 1 washer & dryer, sun 832-<1134Since1971 M.arioers Mile Shopping Credit not Important Pl'actlcal NurH seelca .. ewport ac Laau.na Beach. 494-7¥5
_.... "' deck & gar. S485 mo. yr Center 2830 J\von St 87lM883 Broker ·---------i;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; l.2thSl. 2!iR· !!.8~;"i~co,e:~ ly. Eves, 673-5136. Daya, 3Br hse. Beaut Lake Wynn Rltrs <213!477-7001 . .......,w..tM 503 ell::~. ~.~.p~
.. NEW 2 BR, 2 Ba, + den, 536-2888 aft. e P.m.. . 644·7321. FUolr,rsts1:orea.ReCslpb pFrievm. C•R .... ry Village •••••••••••••••••••••• Z25 " fpk , dshwshr, 2 car gar. · · .. .....,; Resp. proeperouJ 22 yr ---------• 2117 Hunttngton St. Pool. kids, 11.ngtes. $175. EASTBLUFF lge 1 Br up. Ref558l·Z464. Cottage old male student n Hllp W..e.d 7100 ..!'~~"Y Ea!O~! ~'LJeek I
842"3S13 br, gar. Fee. ~....:. '~s 1;;;~~8544<:fo'!; One rmmete wantgcd to 646-480lors7a.29ts financial help for a sou ••••••••••••••••••••••• Main Rent.ala, 640-5370 ·.... .,, "VOOV h II h ••• 000 t Pl •a a a a POSITIONS Lge 2 br 2 ba Garage & Dys s are our me ow se ..... ven ure. cue IVUV'
yard 'eroo.khursl & Near beach $160. 1 •br, Walervlw. $15()/ mo. Lag ,.._trlalRtfttCll 4SOO ca.11Tom f73'1t66. AcctngCllt/OcnOrncc
Hemllton area. Avail childolt. Fee. S.CMNl'lfw 3176 Bch3805A~n oNr Jason Bl ....................... ~II, Trt11t M~:'~~~~:rs
10/l.S. 848-9088 or 961"2743 Main Rentals. $40..5370 •••••••••• ••.••••• •• •• •• :!:SOS7 • or onns Rlty · Mls.5JON VIEJO. Retail, o.idi' 503 Empaoyera PayAJI Fees
.....,.. 3144 eous Wh1tcwatt>r Vu. comm, or ind. 18< per aq ••••••••••••••••o••••• lb. Reinders Agency 2 ht, 1 ba In 4•plu. O/W, Lip <!Br Completely re-SPECIAL ROOMMATE · ft. lM8-0520or 581-6700. 4020 Birch St. Ste ICM
MMTy Clwftt.al woridng alter achoQt & a A.'9d MOMY on Saturdays. This is no< f
To P.y For tt a P a p e r r o u t e .
Start Now·Sellin11 Tranaporlation PTO· I
beauuru1 products. Ca-:;sll~vi~ded~. ~ca~l~l ~$36-~!11~1~2~·~ 5*10U or Zenith 7-1.,; f
few Information.
gar .• No kids, 00 pet&, El· ••••••••••••••••••••••• dee, Adults. $265. 20 40 yr old happy, run e~. LOANS 9% Newport Beach 833-8
tis " Beach are•. *240. lt.clto s. e a l M a r q u I t a et' w hes lo 11h~re bl.I 3 2000 sq. ft. Across lrom .u.--... __.1D I ~ --cc_all_ for_A ... Ppl.__/E_•_ta_b_'_6S-IB~b ltter needed Im. ae-1230. Ja I I .... 3967 f448-S300 nr' 2 Ba luxury lrvlnc o.c. Airport. 2 or~. 1 ba. -----ReotJ "I l260 h 1 &\lance warehouse. 2 i.e Fairetl Termulme 19f9 Adv. Asst'• ly. Tuea Is Wed. CSR. Super abarp. New d I ng Lerom I . .._ 3110 om~ .. with a hea t h roll-up doors. 549·14'0 S.....M&. Co. 2:15 to 5:15. Own trarup.
CAIDlJVBS
Menor Women
MU3t be:!Sorover
Apply ln Person
carpet. d rapes, paint. A u t apta. u ng pre-u••••••••••••••••••n• mlnd'-'Q lady age 2S·3S In· Ted Broderick .... .., "17 I ... '7541r ""'I I WIJMEN 18 & UP Reliable. N.B. M1-64M. ao.e to acbools at ahqp· view now la a prest11e lercsted in jogaing, bike ---------• --_.,
: ptq. 8ulltinapl111 refrt3. Irvi ne community. rld!ng, health foods. 1 OOOaq rt. 1539 Monrovia.•---------• Nal'l Co. haa ~P Babyallter needed lrtt·
$.\'i0mo.Call646-.5Wa.n. Twtnl.Y Pe:raola, Culver •-O..hdrooM Let s act into & stay ln No. 10, Npt B. $200. SPECIAL for 10 new fllrl1 ln med. Mon-Wed evea
Y•wCtilt
11251 Stat~r Avenue Fountain Valley
CahteriCll ..........
•I
SC>m & Sandburt, 2 blocks so. -,,... great sh ope together! Crpt'dorc. 543.31~, public relations f :30o10:30. My home. or San D1ego Frwy. BUllUnll. lnch.tdlna di•· SlSO + \oluUI. ~·1222 LOW RA TES C\19tomerMrv~depta. Dana Pl.'98-3785.
1195. utll pd. t Br older $1100 h!"asbcr.$205permont.h. 1.000' clcnn. secure. &i•icwc••H Mo •xperle•c duplex. ya.rd, near bcb. ftnsl and laa~. Aaent. NOTICI Storage or light mfa. TV " -&...-1 Babysitter my home
No do11 11. $36·8539 or 2 Br 2 Bo Twnhse. pool & 54().05S5. how Pally Piiot Class· $200/monlh. 64$·3S44. T.D. LOA,.$ ...a-:z,-'" ...,..., 2:30-Upm. Live In or out.
'"'" ,._ ~.... rec facll, paUo, avail lfied ads .. [splay their •~ W_..._... 4600 El Dorado ""ortl•fte ,,_ Sal.ary SI to 11'8 wkl.Y 30\JJd. 642·1*10 .. Mr.-.. •-u 11nt.752·1083 " _.. _.._ '"l3lS7" .. 3~60 -....,....,,.,,. For Inter view cal m<'SSe~cs wf\h leglbillty .... v-·~ ...., ""'" ....... ..a ........ 111 Trtptp.. 3 OR12 Sa, walk Don't five up tho ship! and Impact o da ••••••••••••u••••••••• or 1714)~ ._ween .. Am·o1r ·
In cloMt. lrp c, •JI bllM, SEl.J.. Idle ttenu w1th a ''List' it In classified. are proud to.~~~ ro~U: f\tm, 1 Br or studio, Nwpt 14o.o92S 11ka laa~t draw in the
S..batitwte
Short hrs. 3 Hrt u
~. Muit havc car. • sa.11 hr. C.M .. N.d. It
CdM areas. ApplJ at
Newport Mesa Unified
School District. Food
Service, 1857 PlaccrlUa. ~ CM~32'73. dal<lto~h .. Oulcwtr 0.jlyPIJotClu.slnedAd. Ship to abore rcsultal ut renlta. Phone atta.PoOinoorless,1mlS.lJ.J.. Idle lt..m with a
pd.. ass. mo. M 2718 ~. SC2-5"11. &4.Z·S678.. dof allowed. !IJ·5QS.03a O.CIJ Ptlot Quain.ct Ad. Sen k1Je ltema
Wea .. a Dally Piiot
Clualflcd Ad. Pbone •---------_..._._.._ I0-5111. lldlettema
•
t~~~.-.. ?:~ ~~~ ..... ~~!~ ~~.~~ ..... ?~!4?1~~~ ..... ?!!!~~~ ..... ?~~~ ~!~ ..... ?~!«! Tu.c!!y,Oetabtf 5, 1;79 ~l.Ol •l.J
i CAUIOINIA ~ ---, -MIGMJCOOll .... W..ted 7100HefpW..e.d 7100 •• IL~s w A...._..._. !:ll s.c,-."" to '8C)(I PR 8U ................................. ····-· •••• ••••••• .... •• •• •• • • • • -~"•-Ty Im Dillman'• Re.taurant. 0 CTION 5 1 C d Mtl .. u 1005
8eJUn1 nationally •d ~pt/l'yp1.at ~~= JANITORIAL m.onlaalttor Roaer. !O::, sn:~t~:~~!::.rl SICllTAIY ....................... . = ~!"~ou~~ P'ets N /AboF .. Jobs HUl58.YMAN WORIEIS ""ller8rU5h~'7llS\ To.._Se.eNt1a•nt =e ~~ walnul
Set your own pace I p=~llfitp~t ..... EJpwim •n1••. LE t:xpcr 'd, r1Ume. Mature MALE/PEMAL.E SAL~ $914toSl.l I I Mo m:.._:,l40 ' W/lood profits. w "hls '"" on"" ac ncy ... ~w-11--Nll-r<We. over 21. 6 Daya In J ~ Under sencral dlrectloa1---------
top notch product. Only C88 E mh. Coeta Mesa J It -t....11111. .... I cludlnt Sat1Sun. Work Immediate oponln1s for ' serves u 11ec ... tary to FlNEST ENOL.ISH AN·
one representotlvo ~r Su~22t-_ ~2 1410 • ....._ nH •c• w1planu • \J'OOll Dellv incentive <piecework l Hell Jtwelen the superintendent 11 TI QUE 8 A YA I L
llChoolororaanluUonal· ~.......--Pm S3 Hr & up. Overt.lme. production workera. Now l.ntervlewln1 at SO. 8oardoCTtu.:lteelrtllev• ABLE IN Jo'URNJTURE,
lowed. 0.11 CharUc lhnn Par L .... store ln1. ~ntflb. Advan~o-Minimum 2 ycon recent Coast Plaza Louuon for lni superintendent of ad· CLOTHING, PORCE
<714H!94-Z312 • FACTOltY .... nwnt PC>\cOUal. Laauna factory experience re• quahly Hies oriented m1n11\J'aUve •om~ ct.· a.. A 1 N . s 1 L v g K ••
Canvauers TltAtMllS .. P 11W• ltllmd HUis Nursery. Inc • Et qu.lred. Muat be able to personnel Jewelry ex· tall· Ptrforma hllhlJ CRYSTAL. PAlNTlNGS . ..... e.W-I010W.a~ Toro.~ work any ahlft +-over· per. dc3 lrablc but not complex • re1pon1lble m4>67S·268l. STUDENTS •A 111 • m bl er s . ..__.__... 11 . lime. stullna w•Jet nee. Pl~as~ call$49-13TO clerical work: perform• N.ected ns phone • foot PackaKert. -.....-• ¥2 4 NW\SIS from 13.27 pc:r hr. Pay or549·l:r79rorappl. publk relation hanc--Frt11nch anUque dbl bed.
IOliclt.c>l"l.13perhr. Aft •And Warohouaemcn RN'S-to $62 rangeuncow~lloverM SAUSLADY -lions : u.ndertUnds belld.alde •footbOardJi. 8<'bJ hra. WHt Cout Jobs avail. for ull 3 1 per hr after loarnlnr policies ••dmlnlatraUve 1100.6'75-67l0
lnsul otlon. Call JHk ahll\s.No f~ MltpW.... 7IOOHtfpWanhd 7100 AJ~~,144 period, depending on F /tlmoposltlonavall.for l"fJaulatlona&doeaother Couch,hrmchalrs.canl'
75l-54ll. i!' ~ ••••'•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• a-$36 employees production. :u~~·bu~aEx~~~~c~~ relatod work as te· back. ramllY estateaalc.
CAll'IT LA YU ~ Im HOSnSS l VMoehonM Hurse For 8 Hour Shins We also offer exc.lltl'lt E I "" quired. 640-9008/634·2322 Roaer. '1 Exs*"d In dJnn'r holbo 11-1 Shift L~ Cbarae. Joi~ • reput.abl~. J>ro· 00"!pan1Y pald.be12 neflta. vP~g~1~y Maternity Skill: Dictation 100 wpm, ' Call 7S2-.6l08 .-.J. " l I .. """rlOn f/U 1 7 Sh n LVN fa11onal nunln& service "pp y 9am noon u:7 57"" typing~ wpm. SCRlll IEJS •rempor.ry Services '""'"' nPP IY .. ..-• me. 1 · 1 re-ft k h d h 41 Monday Thru Saturday -· .... Apply ln Penon At· """"
CASHIHS WAHTB> 4320 carnpl.L'I Ste 130 1411,• s Codt Hwy. lief ch~rse. :Ml c~ar1e n:oi~Js ~r ·~ c~ct. Or For'J'hotll• Appllcanb !Saleslady, ex~r'd. Retail Fountain Valley ~boot l .... WrrBS .
O.shlen needed In our Newport Beach M!MJO'll i..gunaBeach. t~·~:_?rt~nA~~~eB, PJocr/U~e. WlloAreUnablt clothing. Over 2s. No Dist. No. l Ll1thlhouse n.i1 rt.ft ~fiztf: ::: !~.tl~: San~~:a Grand ~~!ml HOSTESS ~ 7"164 ' . l~UISEOSOD R~~~~~~n~e~:'e!.v eves. MS·~. ~.:.Vl~~ oi!:l~~I~ Poople -Rover -
da b I e & n ea t • p • Mature )lostess. f.arl " Hours. Our Employment $.lesman wunted. Need 2 Valley, Ca 1~RJ~TErt-
pearance, must hove lime. full time. Arp Y In 4500Campua Dr.Stt seo Office Will 8e Open yrs ext!r So. caur area. l''illnt Delldline: Tbese polb you ,.ad arc f:~':· ~c~!lc& ~re: C:!CJ~~~:~bip· ~t!·,.~ri::;. E Toro MACHIHI! Newport Sch 5*~ on:s.:.:;1:~ed ~~~ry ~'t>:~J;~:::. W!°.~~~1:~ ~~~!YU:~~!i"~~lll~
: ~tc c!all (213 l fcing dept. traineti. Call Housekeeper /Cook , ~s~1~ NIJRSES AIDES 2008Newport Blvd.C.M. oppOrtunhyemployer optnion t.sont.yupressed
f · orapptS.Jlam.~5·CMOl. remaJe for l lady. Live. .A. ~ F SALESPIRSOM tnPRIVATE.
f ~ERP/TIME FASHION SA L ES -In No smoking. Refs. TRAIHHS $35 ~ Exper'dlnretail,ewelry 2QueenAn.neOakdlning
MATUll P/TIME. Homemakers 499-tS22. T o 1c 11 r n genera I Private duty 3·11 & lM. VO:'liT luC & a knowledge o china. SICllTAAllS rm chn, $110. ~
JO Key addtt. Drive thru needed lo demonstrate Housekeeper/Compao1on mechon1cul usembly Also. need Hoepital Sta(( 'I • ,... • C'l'Slal. silver & window & TYPISTS anytime.
-Jlboto.Dependable.Able ourbeauurulnewl!n~of w/soclalsecurity tohve work. Relief. Come in 9AM· 3101$.H__. d is play. Full t ime. Employed or un · •
to be bOnded. Hn 3·1 fashions. Free tr11,ining. in. cook for elderly l11dy 9PM 7 days a week s.... Ano. Co 673·9334. employed at present! OAK SQUARE TABLE Mon-Fri. E.Qista Meu No investment. Car.& $200mo.67S·l932. CALLFOR Lescoulie Nurses Getoutotyourrut&ln· w/cbeln
area.5.31).2873. phone nee. Call Beeline APPOINTM ENT Registry. 3Sl Hospital An E"'ualOpportunlty SALES vestl~ale the hllhly ~after 5PM Fashions. 963· 7470. Housekeeper, rtt1me for Rd " C..WW/S...dGys new mother. Due mid <2JlJ4J5.489l .NB EmployerM /F WOMEN'S dlven n~ureofaleal• Din ing Set; table,~
For drive tbru photo & 32 FAT WOMEN Nov . Refs p I case CINT'lllln HURSIS AIDES ContttnpOt m, porary office helper. chain. buffet. $350. Anll•
backup. DependabJe & WANTED 644·5891. OIVISIOH Days, exper. pref'd. P/tlme Sales, S40·S70 ClothlftcJ • quedftnish.~7815
mature.530-2873. to participate In revolu· HOUSEKEEPE R. hvein DORG·WARNERCOR P. Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp, wk /up. Men, ladies. slu· Wearelookingforanag· ~e~ Afpl.,cM 1010
--------... tionary new weJght con· for s yr o&d twins. s days 666 E. Ocean Bl, Ste 605 661 Cenler St. C.M. dents · E v es I Sa t gresgive person w /l year iii ..................... .. CLEltlTYPtST trolprogram. pe r wee k, SlOO. S . LongBeach,Ca90802 1»54·ml,839·7800. exper. & background in ~ctitDamageHotpoint •Altitude Guldence Laiuna Areu. 493>27a2 "'""ual 0p-.. Employer HUR SES AIDES womon 's clothing & ac· Temporary Services s.Je. 3308 W. Warner. Accurate typist, 80 wpm. •Food Planning & nutrl ..,... ...... F /time & P /time. Day cess. t.o manage & take 4320 Campus ste 130 near Harbor Sant.a Ana Mature personality & Uonal consultation. HOUSEKEEPER. live in. shift. Exper'd pref'd. AP· ~UL ISTATE f/chg of our women's Newport Beach M9-80'T1 ' front omce appearance. 1 p k Su · 1.045 SA.• •s~LE d w 1 ...... s Qra .. d "V""' •· Able lo deal quickly & •Physical conditioning UO.O. + per Im o. 2 ~ Y ar r,nor, .. -11; r110Vr ept. at our estminster _.. · .. " v KenmoA washer • gas
pleasanllyw/visltortraf· •PropcrSupervislon. Ch'd~n. age 11 & \6. MACHINISTS uperl.or ve, N B. MIEDEO Mall store. Cllll for in· SantaA.na ·U8·9021 dryer $.'50 each. Call art lie a. heavy telephones. For information call Spaiush s peaking ok · 6'2·2410. Red HUI Realty Is adding tervw appt. 4pm, 980-210'7.
Recentexper pref'd. Choose For Youn;elf Inc Refs. H.B. area. 960-10\4 Good gene ral back· OFFICE to Its surrin Mission Vle· THE LOOK
STACOSWITCH, IMC 494-3474. Housewares sales ""!'Son. ground, setup & operate J H rtMrt jo. A new comm1ss1on 540-4500 SECRETARIAL o:~etf~~ M/ebrrltt bro:~ ,.,~ vanely of machines. In· .~ sc h e dule hai been ---------&GENERAL 11 .... ve_,,w umera. U398aker CostnMesa FfGHTIHFLATIOM pe~anenl part·t1me in eluding turrel lathe. HallJ.-..Men established which pro·---------OFFICE WORK slie. $4$/beat offer.
549·304a Add extra money lo the eluding Sunday~. Crown verllcle & horizontal Now interviewing al S. vldes a greater OP· SEAMSTRESS Ofc localed in Laguna PhoneT18·l0'1&.
Equal ()ppor Employer family bud11et. Local Hardware. 3107 E. C:.t malls, punch presses, Coast Plaza l?Cation for portunil) ror financial Niauel. Please conlact Range, droP:-in electric, --------~Amway distributor will Hwy.CdM. small p'rec1s1on parts. F Jtimc office h elp. rewuds. Don't let this Wffllbperi~ Mr.Covert,49$-1980. Hot Point. sell-cleaning.
CLERKTYPlST tram. 873-4785. Industrial Seamstress small shop, d ays only. Pleas~ apply betwn chance tor a successful Newport Beach clot.bing near new. $225. 5S2·lT33
Interesting & varied Food prep person w/ex-needed, exper. Pl~ce Muslhaveowntools. 2·51>m.inperson ooly. rutun:sllpbyYOU. storebasopeningfor a Security Guards-... ANA UJCROWAVE
responsibWl.eS tor right per, wanted for sm. work. LS15W. MacArthur STACOSWITCH IMC. ORDER CLERK, for R.ctHm R•alty Part-Time Seamstress Im me d . openlnl In nlU •
person, comfo~\able quellty reatauranl Blvd. C.M. Suile l7 11.39Baker,CoslaMesa mens shirts.PartUmc& Anestabllshedcompany PleaseContact Newport Beach. 4l Hrs OVEN. 6 moa old.
s m a I I o ff Ice, 67~ 540-3422. 549-l04l ru11 tame. C.11 631-1361 &en•ing Oranae County TallorShopManager perwk. Oraveyard ahlft. Transferrable warr.
Newpor\/C.M. area. Call Equal 0Pl>OC' Employw ror appt. for the pa.st 18 years. 64 ... 5070 Uoilorms furn. Wkly pay $325. 'TSJ..emz. Mr.Kane~2640 FltYCOOK INSPECTION 28892Marauenle Pkwy. ·~~~~~~~~~ w/overtlme.& paid vac. Will buy some refrig, ap-~ P 1 Orthodontic Assistant. 131-3050 1. Call (or lntervlew plla----·ltl.o" or not, C• -•-tST Evening shht & IT me. RECllVINCi MACH1HISHOP Exper. Top waae s. AU ..... M---•n. Mgr SEAMSTRESS. exper in 13 -9 .. " ......... _.,. 0 ~ ' '.-Apply In person. Sad· , .... Ir-TOR . ruu . L .. "" IUU 2 ,.,,., ,,_, also scrap metal 8'15-5258 Insurance Co .. in Nwpt dleback Lanes Coffee n.--in.. . Small manul. near 0 .C. Part/ hme. aaunal•--------1 dressmaking & altera·
Bch, needs billing clerk Shop, 25402 Marguerite Of small precis ion Airport needs \ male to Beacb. 494.SSSS for In-tlons. P /Tlme now. Servicestalionattendanl. t .. ytaaWasherS30,Ken·
with good typing skllls &r Parkway. Mission Viejo. machined & molded pe rform machlnln& tervlew. Real Estate saleag:rson t~/time later. Send re· expertcnced. Full or part more Gas Dryer $35.
IO key. Ole exper pre· 586-65ll parts. tor electro -operatlonslnourproduc· needed. For best eal In sume to P.O. Box 1069, time. Apply Arco Sta· Kenmore washer S75.
ferred but not necessary. ---------1 mechanical devices. lion machine shop Some Part lime openings now H.B. Call Scott Realty Newport Beach, 92660 Uon. 17th & Irvine. C.M. Sig. Elec dryor $50.
kl I d f . · avcill lo loeal fast Arow-536-1533 G "•6 ....,..,. Salary to ssoo. Good Co. GAS MAH/ Wor ng know e ge o J{en I machine shop ex-ing business organiza· Service Statton Atten· uar.'" ..,.,,~ eenent.s. W-8450 "--t u-T-... true position dimension· per. desirable, but not ti Call 68 3064 ll~~TIO .... IST S.C:'yjRKeBI d 'd D •· a.i........a.. 8020 -._., .,,_. lna ptet'd. Proficient use nee. Should be at least 18 on. 1 -•eves. -u-" ""' ant, expcr · ny .,. --r-• Comp. Hskpr. Live/In, Needed at local car / · 1 · General office, pleasant Typing 60 wpm, li.ghl bk-Eves. Full & p/tJme. Ap· ••••••••••••••••••••••• rook, help elderly lady. wash . Sa I + com. o prec1s on measuring yrs old w /own ta:·nnsp. 4-0 Part lime bookkeeper as· on phone, lite typ\ng, 4 k P , A . M u s t have ply, Shell Station. 17th & NEW & USED BIKES and
S al. CdM. 673-8267 , missions pald daily. instrument.s&J.Syrsex· llrswk.s:i7·7283. slst.Lltetyplng.10-key daywk,lObrday,Mon· knowlcdgeofgeneralofc Irvine.NB. ... ..... Ctulsers MX's 3 64-4..fof60 per. req'd. caJculator Hrs flexible. 1b 54&-7 17 procedure. XJnt benefits ,.... .... •1 •
_61>_l_827_·------1----·-----STACOSWITCH, INC Management Fountain Valley Call1--u.r_. --1----&advancement. Call Bill SHIPflEC CLBI & lO Spd.s. Cyc e & Co.
COOK GIHHAL OFFICE 1139 Baker. COsta Mesa MEH'J Wed or Thurs mom, 9--U . UCB'TIOHIST /SICY Searl. 640.28SO. Needed ror llghthtg nK· :r.J'i~wport Blvd., C.M.
Matute person. Cood National educallonal in· S49·3041 Ca.hmparary ~02. Exper'd tront ortlcc, .Com!"onwealth tu.re co. 2031. s .E. Ma.In ---------
benefits. Adult resident slit.utlon baa openinli for Equal Oppor Employer CtotWet PAS~ up ARTIST w /poise. ma lure juda· Firuumal Corp. N.B. St. Irvine. 546-2901. SCHWINN 26" girls blJ<e.
carecenter.642·5861. sharp indiv. w/detall~~~~~~~~~I Wearelookingforanag. , ,.._ ment , pleasant phone good ~-$40/bst orr. ---------•ability. Will answer cor· 1..__ ... A. .... c:ir:: A.GEHCY ttresslve person w/back· F /l1me. Mon, Tuesl voice&abihl.Y to meet&t---------SHOESAUSPMSOM Ph:~78S'7an&pm.
COOICSWAMTED resp.tohomestudystu· "--' lliR 1tround lnmen"aclothlng ThW'li •• Frl,Sal .. Exper'o work w/ bus iness ex· SECRETARIES P/Ume, nights & Sun Ma Barker's Restaurant, dent&. Req's 45+ wpm Acc:ount Secretary, ex-&accessories to assist in or will t rain . Co. ecullvcs. Newport AWalY· PaulAllanShoesllW•1C1clklllt1C1gMatftfah902S
212 E. 17th St. C.M. typlnf. Good co. benefits per1 dNpel"IOrtnal & rocm· the management ot our Nbenems8• 1APPc'l.· 1545 Center. Call 64().6950 for Desperately Needed 9 ashion Island, NB '• -·••••••••••••••••••••
---------1 & working conds. Apply m · ewpo .area. on· Westminster Mall store. ewport vd, "" appt. •fxecaff•e CEDARSHAKES Counter help full time. National Systems Corp, lact Mr.Dennis,7S2·18ll. Weofferpenslon&profil ---------•Adlllillistraff•• SHOPMAH Direct rr Mill. Call
Job open for Consclen· 4361 BircbSt,N B. Janitors wanted, part sharing. Call for In· PIXAeaSenOpr RECEPTIONIST •TecMltd Needed tor light.log n~-aeythne.503-476-0Ul tious person days. Some time. &pm to llpm, Mon· terv1ew oppt. tlnmed. openings for Good typi.ilt. Xlnt phone ture co. Sheet metal ex· Ceta I035 ::.~u::a~l:';!;!:lr:; Gene.rn?~ONlST Fri. St.artlng pay $2.50 TH!LOOK ~~~hrs7~tn~. p~~ manner. Lite clerical *~..__'-per, beJ!.rul, bu\ not nee.•••••••••••••••••••••••
8 0 per hr. Call 714--640.1027 540.4500 t . . A 1 · duties. O.C. Airport loce· *• -~ 2031 S. ·Main St.. lrvlne.1"'J p . y-u. •-cJ~~,I ~l~d290HU.la.!"aJnlge Work in lovely exec. or-blwn 4&~pm. r a1n1ng. PP Y an lion. Send brief resume •Acca1nl"'4 546-2901. l">ldveraugherste••r~m· u""'s t erb"'e uuua,._.. .a · fices. Type !iO+ wpm. ---~-----i MANAGIRTRNE person,1S$RochesterSt, lo P.O. Box C-19525, NoShorLiteSh R""''s good g_....mlng ._ J.A.~ITORS CM 1 l CAm•• Store mgr for Balboa together. Cf'A reg, SSO r ac-w ,..""'AGED Earn ~.. '"" • ""' No C"""r. Over 21. App-1---------1 rv ne. £.J Longorsbortte.rm Isl d • I both ....... ,.._., ~ .._,. ..... · ~1easant -rsonallty. AP· PJTl-e evenings. San ...,... an womens caaua . -~· S200 to MOO per week ..., r ... ly, Me n Eds Pina. 410 PEOPLE PERSON . asslgnmenlli. Top$$$. wear t.o R I to d . I I r ety Nationa l Systems CJemett&e area. S days a E. , ..... s• CM Exec needs p/time as· RecepUonlst. law omce. s re. ee Y a Persian KJttens. 1~ j:':i':r' :~b!c~f~~l:n Cotp,4361Bl~hSl,N.8. week, Mon lhru Friday. ~ .. ._. ... soc. inwhslesupply. Ful· Bright person~ble, llllhl .i. ~-x76:~a1a'~otM~~~· Registered. S7S.
salesmen. You mus t -----------• Pbafter4PM.540-5874 M_,c.tst lycapitalbed 673-2223 accurate typing, xlnt .0. temno Ca.92662.' • 548-2933Debbieatl8l>m .
h I t t. •• G111tral Office For sculptured nail shop. . . spelling &: Jlrs 8:30 lo -• "'-pl.-ave a a rge s a IOu a ldl l K h p rf w....a.'--1 '30 Alrpor• area s Tu DENT I 0 r ~. 1040 wagonorvanand be able ap Y grow llJl com· eypunc DM-97S9.545-1408.tr9Cf _ __,, · · • · TEMPORARY HELP ~
to work wllh 10.15 year P•D¥ need! gal Friday to Data Entry Opr HOW'S 833-9980. Cal 540-4456 ™-ework. 6 Hrs p/Wk. •••••••••••••••••••••••
olds. Phone 536-9712 Cor 'fVOrk eart Ume with ad· The Jolly Roger. lnc. is Man Or Couple 8:30-2:30or R. E. SALES Equal Oppor Employer Exp. pref. CdM area. Irish Setter Pupa. Interview. vance ~o full lime . taking a pplications for a Early AM new11paper 3:»9:80 644·5898 AJ<C,shots, wormed.
---------• Person~h.ly 8 must for Data Entry Operator. route, 7 Days per wk. Work 8 hrsadayearnlng IKS-74'11 ---------i this p08lt1on. General of· Min of 1 year exper. w /8 Must have van or lrg 13-$9 per hr In pleas.ant Fne 14 day SECRETARY p l'r TechJFMld S... DatallttryO~ flee skill needed, typing rno's on IBM 3741. Perm. wag. l rv lne a r ea . sur roundings. Deal TralnlltcJCoun~ / • F/lime thru Dec. 2 Yn St Bernard P\u>e, cha mp ...... _Jolly Roger, nc. Is must be accurate. Will F .. 1me. Days. pny will Regular pJtlme job for h bll 1 Sm a 11 • Pl e as an l exper AA & o Elec· blood line, AKC, ahOllS, """ be ·ti I ,.. " I k .., .. 0 'fl /t e Pu c n our engineerlngok. Mon-Fri · ' E 1tb St wormed,557-3391 taking applJcaUons for a ass1s fll sa es person· be based on exper. level. eoerget c wor er. ..,.. Irvine ore representrng •Peraooallnstniction l -Spm. Must be good tronics, Z15 • 1 , •---------Data Entry Opera tor. nel with a variel~ ol Apply 1n person, Sam· permo+.962-4633. Time Liie Boo ks. •Mana1ernentopporty's typist&neat.S49-5234. CM642.e882. A.KC Golden Retriever
MlP of 1 year ellper. w/6 du lies· B 0 at an a Spm Mon-Fri. 11042 MASS USE 1 . Dynamic personality •to~Commbsion ---------rrELEPHONE SALES. pups, d.nt bunters, show mo'aoo IBM 3741. Perm. knowledge helpful. Con· GllletteAye,Jrvlne. 11 El tJB..~? egit, most Ukely to succeed. •On the job training SECRETARY o,,.,_.. or .. , __ bled m•"" dogs & family pets. F/tlme. Daya. Pay will tact8arbara900-244t ru l me pos tion in ln•-ted housewives & •M to offi •loc's ~ ~ "" Ch ...-1....,. .. -_,,1 bebasedonexper level . MaSllaJ(e. No exp. nee. ....GO any P c.. 40 Hrs. TyP.ing, and wome rt. E ll tra amp.,_.,. ..... ._,.,_.
Apply ln person.· Sam: GLAZER, e)(pe.r'd. Apply KITCHEN HELP We !-J'ain. Call 540-2053 =ts 8~~rm. shorthand & gen l orrice money ror the hoUdaya. AKC reglstered Alfhan
5pm. Non·Frl. 17042 211 Los Mollnos, San Full Ume, some part anytime. onsca · skills necessary. Call Mornlni C?r evening, pups, 2 male, a em.
Glllette A.ve, lrvlne. Clemente. 492-6191 time. Exp helpf\11, wllJ RID CAIPET C o m m u n I t Y Good earrungs. Phone Champion atoclt. 848-0563
GUARDS ~~:~ll=~~=~ ~~tT~cR ~o ~~~o~~ PHONE s•• ~ REALTORS 962·1011 r::~i~~-.. ~~~rcb, ~·Opportunity AK c D 0 b e rm an Day Cook. Fem. Mature CostaMesa 2233Fairv1ew,CM. newcomers & cootacl ftLW Fordeta114ca11Llnda , _ _.;;;.._______ Employer Plnacbera ch. lines.
F/Ume for coHee shop. Permanent. Full & part-merchants. Flexible hn. Phone Sales people.i---------csECRETARY tor Real pet /a bow quality. _c_aJ_l_fl63.8878 _______ 1 time. Phone & transp re· LANDSCAPING Need car, lite typing. male or remale, I6 to 6$ RE SALES Estate Co. in Fashion trelepbone canvas.aina red/bUt, SM, lFem born D~IC H" .... D q'd. Retired welcome. Exper. required S47-30GS.. yearsofage. Guaranteed UN. t'QUE· o-'th th lsland Mutt have 4 yn MJF. part/full t1m•i 8115/'18. 846-8SJS -. .... Call S4G-0274, ore hn 10-2, 493-1904 or493-1622 -•--i • _, wi e · • salary + bonu1. Cal Full Ume. muat be ex· ci-.... Wed MATURE Woman w1car. wages or comun.aa ons. bct\, training. support, exper., type 85-70 wpm, S40-l360 Male mixed breed; St per., well groomed. col· U<KU • Legal Sect 'y Trainee pt-Umc baby3illlng &: It 2SO EHt 17t h Street, advertising & ules aids. ah 80·90 wpm. Afply Bernard Ii S.moy. 18
le1i•te, between 20·14 GUYS & GALS Some exper prel'd. good h 1 w r k. FI ex I b I e Suite 0. Costa Mesa. Unique Homes in Mesa Tiii, 31111 San Mlgue Dr,. moe.. old, S?S.. CaU. aft.
yrs._Gd pay" beoorlts. MlSllon Viejo, t:I Toro skills req'd. Ne wport hrs/days, occas. eves. belweeoS:00&8:30p.m. Verde baa openings and t200,NB. n-1....._
0
± wknda, anytime.
Send resume tA> ad #781, area, to work a few hours Center. 640-8900 640-9119 ~~I Opportunity opport u n It I cs. Ca II llllV HR _Ml)._'1982 ______ _
c/O'lbe Dally Pilot. P.O. a day. Fun Job. Earn $25 MEDICAL Employer J ackie Handleman or 51Clt!TAIY E. Lee Male Germ. Sher., 6 yrs
Box 1560• Costa Mesa, \o S.SO per week. For LidoC:O...ateacent FRONTOFFICE Jlm Wood.5"·5990. $692·$141 Mo. old. AKC re11ter ed, _c._._926216 __ ·-----1 more Information phone Cettter Bookkeeper, rec:eplionistl---------·~~~~~~~~~I u n d e r g e n e r a I papers Included, sso.
DENT A I.. AS S T . 830-0lll3. L v N p M •·Noc w/modical bUUn° exper 111pervllion """rforms a Nowi-.ktn~ Call aft. &pm ; wknd, Equal Oportunity · · · · ... " "" '.I "' """ Applicati"""'• or· Anvti llUl\.-Chairslde, 4 handed den· F (l'ime & Relief needed ln H. a. \6000 RESTAURANT w Id e v a r i et y of ........ • ~·me._.,..,_.
tistry in preventive den· Employer ·call DirectororNurses salary & conditions. Mr. PIANIST /SIH(HR JACK IM eecreurlal & clerical IUSIOYS & For Salo Botton Terrier tal ofc. ln HB. Beaut. 1ur-HGlrc.........._ a. 51u111t . ~1'&4 Davis (714) 544·296'7 Fu ti t l me tor new THI IOI work or above avg dll· 1 r o und l ng a. Exper ..........-..-•r" Newportntghtchab.Read flculty & doea.related MOS'nSSIS pupp es wtp•pers.
neceaaary, 1ood hra., F~~0~f;=•· ....... StoreCleti& MeclcallRKept music: accompa.nyacta: ~RtllN"•I workaa~'d. DAYS&NIOHTS MMlllOatUPM.
aalaryopen.846-UM --------•Mature. Experienced. Eve hours. t~prnec. ~ btwn Mt.a. BaJa.ey Sldlla: DlctaUoo70wPm. Germaa Sbol'lbaJr pup .
...__._.C.._ .... •u• Bondable. Apply at 895 CoetaMeaa.&40-170'7 ~~~.Call Bob Fla· M&P.+"-t.yplog&Owpcn. Appl:rlrlPenoeOnlr U:• 1 tetnllle, 4 males,
-_._ -W 19th C M In """non ·-·-·-· ..a•..........._ Apply In person at Foun· 3PM..S.PM t wa md. IG4'» or Mut have exper. Noa HELP! ~ · · · r · MENforLATimes home~~~~~~~~I _ _....... ta.ln Valley Sebool .Dia· 151 I.Cwt..._ ......._ Smoker.~. Lbe in housekeeper II deUv. ln C.M. $27$-$350 -·-rrc. trict, no. 1 UghtbouM ..... -w 1----------
DMtuy Cook needed im· companion for elderly pet'mo.548-1740. .-M'OloiMGMACHlMI ~~.W:b1!~~ua~p:ent~~ Ln. tcornerOCTalbert6 ............. ,,.. .. Y• e045
_ ... E reoPLE lady in Placentia area. M-· .. ~--Su 1 over. Please apply ln Newland, F.Vty> e ...... n-.-.. ""'-••••••• .. ••••••••••••••
:.or:ch ,.::,~1~,LH~~n:. HHDB>HOW! _M_us_l_ha_ve_c_a_r._67_~ .... -.... _"", W /~pln f'W::C •........ OPllAUT~~. r l*'SOll from 1:80 to 11 F'tlJM dtldUJlt ~L 7th. -.-"-""mom,....,.-''GtadeBen ... MlxedGer.
*·80TS. Temporary A11l1tn-l•--------1 supervision. Apply to ... •in& •PP ca._. ... or All and l :IO t.o 3:30 PM t9'16.We ore an equal op. Shep. It COila.. 4 yrs.
--------.. ments. Day & Nigh1. LOAHNOCISSOI penoo. 1m E. Pomooa. ~h~~~~':ndopciO: at.: 1~por~e~m~pk>y~~er~.~~~~rrt'RAVEL AOENT • 2 ~ ~ • lovlnf home. Dlabwasher . p /lime. Perm Pttlme n....--sa I •·, _ S A p i: cxper., So. OrlQle Qll ,_...eobdoUvlftlloocon· Bayview Manor, 350 W. IL' lJ•..&M uv ... ,..,y v np ... vvan . muaul.plant.. a1 1roup ltS• 17"'St loc.Sendresume\OP.O. ~TLC.P~6'M78J BavSt.CMW-3505. U -JOIS huanapeninglnOranae MOTELM•ID Ufe & healLb ins. Good .,. Box ?4.2, Dana Polnt,_Ml_or_irpm _____ _ , (Nfftapaper Packaalnl Co. for indlvldual ex· "' vacat.loo plan. C.... Mete rrPBEJARY -
llAt&emblY> per'd ln procaulng COil· Over 18, 9AM to:S:30PM, Appl)' ln pcrson ~ ~ S Adorable HUlky/Aust. *~ venUonal loan$. SavJng! Newpe>rtCh&nocllnn C411f•lila r.mai~ty BOlllEEP£1 TYPlST, 50 wPm 6 do ibep.puppMI, Frtelogd
Olabwuber, mature for
coov. heap. Bayview
Conv. Hoep. 205511\urin
Ave.CM
DONUT Shop Help,
p/\hnt AM 4s PM. No ex·
per. nee. Female, age
25-45. Appl)' ln penon,
Mr. Doout, 13& E. 11th St,
Oleta Meiaa.
Eam $160 wk & up adllnl li'uller Brush. U )
'714/S54·78Sl, m.a.1.
•.~ & loan or mortgaae N.B. 642-3030 =•-.... -.a.a~ -itDptoy•llJr gen'I office wo?lt for bm.Mlo-4e33 bank.lni back1rou.nd pre-wmn..,.-= smaD omce. Muat be •t· I'd. TnMa roq'd. Need S$S For Christmas? 2185 ,a• Ave, C. • = curate. Hours .,.. MOD· Ptne youaa fem, spayed Call l>ersonnel BeeUnc f'aablonl hu ($) <t Bloek So. Of llUOOR1 ()pr dept' com· !"ti N. Call ISHIU IOI do11 rlvr /abtp mix I a.I IJJ.1441 1714)549.0902 p/tlmeopeniqaldealfor 8alret,olfaedhlll) mil. Ntwaall-ap, retla· E•tnmely com teat ..,.;... ~.!.'.:. llo'd. IHtle. KILL., sav1eu For 1'\arther lntonnatlon .., 0 m 0 n w I '10 u n a ble. lhtlller Yacht•. I" /Chuce Book Hptr -
SPECIAL •A at ~~. We lnla. aupp-PllSS OPl m.ast throuah trial bal • proftt WAIT'IUS l\VlEWS _,u Oppor-SmplQYer b aa.mel•. Car• phone WebftowKJuge, exp. die Ii Ion wbo la&.. ntlllble ... -1050 rN'l'~R YOU ·-nee. CaU ror .,.,-.onel In· cutliq, priatlng, pro· SALJiS.A'M'JCNTtON enou&h \0 al.to nave too Ex.p. Dinner ROlalt ~;;;;;;.~ ............. .
MONl&TRURS Locker rm attendant tor t.4lrVfeW'tlS-Tf10, 11ure aentftivo label AMWAY ·SH.AKLBE toereb.rtal altUla netdecl ,va,treu. A~l~ Redtcora~l:fi wUI aell
OClobat4th61tb womona htalth club. .... •• _.. .... -· 1tock. Stable potlUon °'-'•·-J>~p· 1 N ror l &lrl offt.ce wlthl.n a ~~~·-~~ Ntom makblns SanCJtm ns.. Moo. Wed. at Ftl from a " __.., w/UctUng irowth com. ""''111...-...... u cw taraer co. JI you are weU ··-· • I' Wa. I.ow\, Chair. CommMltJ~nt.r to 10pm, CM area. For DESJONER Sama Ana pany. Maft.)' benem.a, PnlducL EUiet lo aell· organl%Od, cood at W&LDKR8 · I Ottomans, red ta white
lOON. SeVW. more lntocall537·2320. Manurarlurer. He kt (71')9T8·U.4 days or ll'OUDd ftoot. schedullna. type 75+. Hcll arth wtldtr linen toll•, 1llephcrd
A oerac ci.ualflld d•ifcner lo¥· tvts. CaU~ h.tv. rnln. 5 yrs generaJ Stalnleatsalu.mlruua cUMn. MIO. Oott $1800. tsTAB'L co. e.xpa.od1n1 t u. Looldna for a auti.Utute allt t.n defeloptftl on office aper., el'\JOy bal'd t:iq,ootr a&lbot. oaa .. Tbl. $IG$.
011beat comm· In sraoclmothcr, 2 clya wk. art. needM wcwk llne. GA.RA.OE SALE 9da In You don'\ Dttd a sun lcl work" preaaure a.,. ~~ot'Jtt :i;.Vza Qrud P lano, tp•clal t y 111 l c1.H.aveeomeUllo. 1y0awant rroo. t :»S:30. Prtf so-Cbrlatmu Oetl1Dt1 t.beDa1!1PUotbrtn&,aa.p. "draw r.t•• wtMO f'OU lookln1 tor n xii\ No cal.la
Complete trllntn1 pro-to MU? Claalriee ada do meone who llh• cbldna. C r • w • l w o r k o r py rtMJb. To place .J'CIUt Dllel u 8d ln Iba !>alb future. pleue talUlarte CSOM YACln'S
IP'8Jn. Call!M0-1* It well -Call NOW, & lives In CdM or clOff l*U'WC\IJ_.ar iatG'91&.. CaJI drawl•t _ea.rd, ploH Ptla& Wint Mal CaJJ ftO'llr Hkkmao.MI 1080 1a:J1 Deare An eo.N?I. by.CallafU:30~ Mn. ~·r.-.mo IOllfltoda)t. -6G41'18. s.ntaAna
•
I
I
~r::'I Autoa W..t.d 9590 Aaltot., lmport.d ......... rttd •• UMd .... U-.d
' 150 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nnritunt 8050 lKtftaMous 8080 TV, Rodff>, ••••••••••••••••••••• ... Wt PAY TOP DOLLAR 9720 Saab 9760 Codlhc 9915 9935
814 DAILY PILOT Tuesday October S.. 197'8
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HJFI, Ster.o 1098 69 V AM.AHA 180 Twn FOR TOP USED CARS •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• **'BUY•• WA ..... TED (;~j~;·Tv~···;;;;: ... e:i 1200. T2 SUZUKI. 55tO FOJlELGN.OOMESTlC '7Z 2<10Z. l owner .SAAB 99 LE. 1973 Mdl ••••••••••••••••• 'NUart.customolOr,VS.
f"lll 1 ' T • S'560.546-$Tn orCl...MSlCS AM /FM /\/C lmmacul11te 645380$ (!) alr,P/S,vmyltop.ndlo. Good used f\&rnlt1.1r~ & TOP CASH DOLLAR Pr cc s • 0 PP 5 JI your car ls utra clean ' · n ew al\6~·017<& · uee l r Ad 1u1.. orl I'· Appliaaceis--OR J wlll PAID f'OR VOUH Warehouati sales . '75 HONDA CBMO. Im M.--euannt. bfa.kes.abocks&clwtch. owm·r $29~0 113tM102~.
sell or SELL ror You JEWELl\V ~ WATC,m :s , 633· 9SU. t 3 3 o No mac tond. $1300/bHt ol IAUEI IUICIC All orig1t1al. Xlnl conci. Toyota 9765 t>T:l ~15
MASTUS .AUCTION ART OBJ l:X."TS. 00,L!J Gla.ssell. Orange rer. 979-S337 Arland ~Harbor Blvd. S337S. 151-3133 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I A
646-8686 & 133-9625 ~11~Y.,E!_!USR~ R ~ ICANE . SUPER SONY Stereo w/2 1970 Hondo $175 Costa Mesa 919-2500 'aJ DataunSlO. 2drsedan. SOUTHEttM 6 'i i t:ul'<IOl'l ~ '"14n. like --------1 nQ''u"'ES .. ••c .::,,.,.,"' t3) way spkl"!I, worth '250 <:all art S-645-8261 TOr IUY-$79~ or t>.1t. ofr. Call OltAHGI COUNTY'S nc .... P~. 4!11.000 mi. 50!200, SAVE! New & used rurn _._....,_·".:..vv ___ will sell for $175 on Wed. . UoL , 7$1.,.754, VOLUME 1'..T-lbe ~·<i3'1&
appl's, misc. Wll11on' LUGGAGE TAGS al GPM. 2187 fnlrvlew. SUZUKI. 380 RT. L See us hnt. & I.at. Top .76 280Z f' 11 rt l TOYOT O"'•Lltl 1 ~ IS •ta Charf(t'r :~J llnlt AtC. Bargain Nook, Now CM. rnlle oge $850 Call dollarpaldlorlmporta. · *;' Y c 1 s A .-AM FM ~ll'ffi> radio. 4 Stores -MS & 814 W. fromyourbusmesscard _.__ ~ 2PMtUIDPM COST.AMI SA fo~ aale new car. C'~i·11ac :.pkr s . nl'W b1Htc>ry. 19th, C.M. 6<12·7930 Send one card ror each looh&M__._ ' Auto. A/C. AM tfM / EXAMPLE. Brand new ~--
548·3262. tag plus one spare. W EqYI,.....+ Nlft)' ''10 Honda 350, real DATSUN tnck, mll&S. heal olfer. 1976 To.Yota. 2 Dr. & fully $1000 Ph <213>592·2178 ----------t return permune ntly ••••••••••••••••••••••• lhrit\yS:SSO. 2MSHarborBlvd. 751·9490 eql.llpped. (1~21> Qu .. lhy .snd Price llB _______ _
Q U E E N S 0 F .') seal~ attractive tag loClh. Powft' 9040 847-1'38 Costa Mesn 540-6410 •ee Datsun Wagon. 60, ONL y $2997 Guaranteed Ford 9940
SLEEPEH Unus ed. strap. meeting atrplin ••••••••••••••••••••••• Motorlototnes ml. lug rack. town. Xlnt I (',t\in.: Spr C1.il"l\ •••••••••••••••••••••••
l.ooise pillows. SM-<1760 l.D. reqwrcments. re. 18' Lyman. 1 /B, laP1Strake Sde/R..t ' 9160 I BUY JUNK CA RS cond. SlJOO. Ph ~'8-077 Prclcrrc<J R.t1c\ •FORD W .AGOMS• HIDE.A IS) venl loss & thefl! For a hull. full covers & awn· · USED AUTO PARTS Ml\RQUfS
MOTORS Un .. --... Cost .......... .,,_11 personalued ta.: cnclos ing. S3300. 6<t<Hl208. •• .. •••••••••••••••••• 5'10-.Sl.2S 847.9637 74 2160Z. 2+2. ;iuto. air,
""""' .,..,.,., .x-wallpaper, fabri c o * *lB' Rent 26' CMC. Pvt ply. stereo. 16,000 ml, 1$700. 1170 & Deliver. 554·4'160 "Day Glo" paper & w Call 833·2616 or 642-4097 .... -.. Ima f.A ~7400&675-8638
will back & trim you Newport Beach. Calif. -·....,.et .v
• Cl. '\~. ... t w 'f ,. .. '"' '
~ f .. ' ". ~ ••• '
'\'I '' '" wit h.J
I JllotC't ~ckll1ur1
ul New & u,cJ
C.H.hll.in 111
OrJnJ;c County Sora:7"4!',orangertoral,6 lags. Or try two cards OWENS** •••••••••••••••••••••••Fiat cu sh 1 on s. re~ en t l y back to back TraMen. Ufflty 9 110 Giural 970 I ...................... ·r----------
cleaned, nice cond $1&5. PRICES FUiiy t!q1.1.tp .. bali lank. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Private Party
.. ' "\ 1.... " Open ~und<1y
Cadillac
M.mcr Oe.lltr
2600 Hdrbt~ Blvd
Costd Me$.! 540·9 I ()0
1972 TORINO• Dr 3
seat•. roor r;it'k. air
cood .• pwr i;teenn~ &
brakes. wood ((nttn
sides. Immaculate!
<<t280T81.
_49&-__ l93_1 ______ 1 S2eaor31SS .~2 Pumps). 6 Life Heavy duty, 20 Inch '74f75lOTUS '7SFlATX·19 NOWOMLYS2495 YolCIWOCJftt 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brand new beautiful solid 4/5 tags SJ.60ea. ~a c ~e l 5 • f Ire ext· wheels. needs work ELITE Customized. air. ste
Mahogany b ookca se 6/9tag!t$1 !>ONI ingwsher, rod holders. tires. $100 or orter. full .. 1 .....,. pd tape, low mileage. s.i •VOUCSW•GE .... S• d Co l lOor more SJ 40f'u. new Manne batter)', new 642.2073 Y eq..,p~. Ss 'Jow under book . Mr . "' " d~ s°r~n. sn1 ~mlf~arl Sales Tux.Included ·fuel tanks, glide wright Auto Sen m II ea ge . Sl o. 75 o . Commtn. 1·735-9522 eves
t975 LTOUndcr 21.000
miles & in 1rnmaculuw
c0ndiUon! <861.NKL> sensuous. 92"x 66" x 9" NO C:ARO? stt1ertn1?. New mtr '?B p k~& <4l3NJT> 752'5221 S:30-6 & weekends . dnys
deep. 4 pcs S850tofr. Cull Draw your own or send Ev1nrudc l ts. Less than crh 940 wkdys. TI6-93SO.
&ii-0139 name, address. phone 15 hrs. still under ract •••••·:~······~··••••• ----------1
we'll make one card pe warr Great r1sh/sk1 5 • 14 alum1nu~ U AtfaRomeo 9705 1968 Flat 1.24 Convertible.
<2 >Malcbing p&llo tag.Add25'carh bout Seats 7 easy. Nice mags, w /2 new 14 C7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 spd, AM /FM. new
couches. g reen rtoral. Send check or money or ta ndem trlr All good tJ~.960-469& ·~Alfa Romeo 4-dr secl. radial tires, '!laroon
xlnt cond $175 ca. • <J 16' derlo: rond $2500. New motor 1600 Super engine, 4.whl w/w~I~ top. AdJustabl<'
Convert sofa. herculnn. PILOT PRINTING alone was $2239. Have re· Autos fw Sot. disc. brakes, Michelin r eclining seats . Xlnt
brown tones S75. •Oc· P.O l:lux l:>60 ce1pt 493-0726. ••••••••••••••••••••••• radials. Good condition. cond. Sl895. or best orrer.
casional chair. beige Cosw Mesa. Ca . 92626 18' Glen co Beautiful ~/ $1750/oUer.645-7542 _536-83 __ 1_0 _______ 1
w/cane S45. 557·308'J. cond Olds Jet. V·hull. Claulcs 9520 Honda 9727
M\lst sell sora bed. $450 WOVEN WOOD full canvas. pwr till ••••••••••••••••••••••• 74 Spyder. r~. 750 ml. •••••••••••••••••••••r•
Sell $175. Mattresses. SHADES-To SO":-Off thrust, lrlrtbrakes. bait •OVER 70CARS• ~~Mor~~ $7895· Brand Mew •74 lung, queen. full. twin. Call 645 8950 tank & ladder. Fish & IN INVENTORY ·
ortho, velvet sora & love fast.968·8744. --Audi 9707 HONDA Cars ~eat, worth $900. Sell Rare Rober.to. Lup~tt . . . ANTIQUES & CLASSICS ••••••••••••••••••••••• S500. 3 pc coffee tbl set, nor al . ml puinung, 3 xs 32 , Sporlf1sher .leff nes. Roll.s Royce, Bentley & ,7 3 AUDI I OOLS OVER I 00
lamps, dinette set w;6 appr.a1sed ul $1750 Mak l~ . be a.m . au.t~ pilot. T·B1rds; From SS-00 to Dix. sedan wtautomallc. To Choose From!
chrs. First come first ofr646-5471 radio, f~thomctcr, tape SSO.OOOcars. M FM d' . d U ... IVERSITY
F deck S ingle s crnw BUY·SELL·TRADE A I ra 10, atr con .. " ~erved. Wed. Thur, rl & Used Simpson nome M 1 d"'d VSD o or 1 n g 1 n \' u a.z F •RGO & co elc. 065 > • Ofdsmoblle &il.9·9. dnver., suit SCCA ap si4 950 (?1Jlr~1-5totl A 8100Garden Grov.e Blvd. pro\•cd. Appro >o. me • · ~ · 830 S Main·Santa Ana HOIMla Can • GMC
G.G. 894:£_160 ___ size. $IS S48 M87 22· Cab111 Cruiser. 2113 10to6. Mon.·Sat Trucks
6 l /Brd w /batl lank & a lot Closed Sundays ..... S ca••~ 2850 Harbor Blvd.
1968 BUtl ·ll RUNS!
(90:2J6ol8 1.
OMLY $777
1967 Bug-A customized
beauty! (4~CTP I.
Nabers '
Cadillac
MOW OMt. Y $4997
S 14 77 '76 Cad CdV. lo11ded.
M l\R Q l11 S
MOTORS
JStH.>1 Mt.ih •. ut li~tl ""'"~'
1970 House Car·On llM mi, lsl~.IOOlakes.
wheels! (606BNA). Call642·49S9.
'•••\ L1 ..-qJJ• -... A,.,.,• 1,,,
l\41"'1H.'N 'tlll J11
SJS97 '72 Cad CdV. Low price. . 1971 Statlonwagon·Large high miles. $2990. rlrm. '70 Ford Tonno. 2 dr. Air
l\Jl-J~r.0 4V', 1}11
fa m 1 I Y spe c 1 a I . 54&2-tlSAft6. cond. PS/PB, t owner
<84SCAX >. car, lo mileage. 675·9436 $2677 il CdV. fully equipped, • 1973 Stallo nwagon· newures, $2.500. '70 Ford Van~ ton, 2 gas
Automatic w /air eond. Perf cond. 673-2642. tanks. st.ereo8 trk. maes.
Looks new! <04SNRM ). . · Ice box. Gd m~h cond..
$3997 00 Cad .. CdV. J\/C. ~II G495.. 548,1487 power, vmyl top, radial , . Ml\RQUIS
MOTORS
• "'.' ••:"' '-!Pi•! r•• y f
...... '''··· ..... ,. .o. ••• , ••••
M •'-"IJN 'v'lf J(J
,, 1 -;,,,.u .ivs. -''O
tires. Xlnt cond. Super 75 Stiver Granada Ghia.
clean! 497-1132 Very clean, loaded. l.ow
mt 's $4800. 559-5505 '71 Cpc OcVille. Clean. all ---------xtras, l ownr. Lo m1 '7S LTD Landau Tudor •
$2895. 644·1561. btfl wht on wht. Cull.)', equip. pp $4800. 557-4780 SEET >\PPRECIATt-; llou!tehold items for sale of acce!>sories. Sl700. * 547-9709 * 2'tO ....._..,., Costa Mesa 540·964 Drcx.el solid oak antq Moving out of s tate N r hr d ,,,....:.._a.-..,.. .... ----------173 VW Bus . Xlnt cond. Lo ~i:>ar;ish 9 drwr dres:;e~ Washer·drycr . $100 pair s:,;. 1~e~n 1~ w~~:~:~ RKV~ _.. -'72 Honda Coupe mi.. $3875. MS-5859 after
1962 CADILLAC '69 Ford Ranch W1~ COM~ERTIBLE Good Mech'1y. Nefd.t
6 i;. w I m 1rr 0 r livin~ room set match in Chest w /pad for seat, cmcleS' 9530 Gd Cond. Sl,000 5:30.
n:iatching. Kng hdbrd tables SlW, gold hide·a $l2S. Fishing poles & ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 Audi lOOLS 4·dr. Aut-0, 673-1541 or673-8040 ---------1-~leganl Sac. Also S pc bed, good condition. S7S tackle. marine radio Bubble-Top Dodge. 1 ton. AM / FM. nu brakes . .___
9 3
Unique '68 VW. '71 reblt ~pan,. BR gruup. dresser bikes: l wo man 's, Call67J.9088. ~mos young. 20k mt .. $Z700. Pvtpty963-1327 ~ 7 engine. $1000. Xlnt cond
w mirror .. chest. 2 ~>1te girl's, 2 boy':.. Call arte loaded. S6.000. 842 6252. 72 Audi lOOLS. blue 4 dr •••••••••••••••••••••• ~. 548-4193.
''A q asslc 'in near mint body worlt. S6SO. M.2-MU
condttlon ._ Only 58.240 or675-8508. original miles. A "Buy ol•----------
a Ulelime". to!GOASL>. ck 9947 •••••••••••••••••••••••• ~lnds-. Mis c furn ... OR 6pm. wknds , anytime 15' 6" CABOT skt or fis · XKE2+2 '69
Legonia (upstr:..> Nwpl 540-7982 hin~ boat 75 HP xln sedan. Full serv record, lownr. xtra clean '70 VW Sqrbk. Nu eng, nulllillllMN r.••ll~I Shores. &12·3188 cond S200() 546.5777 must sell, wholesale 64.S-1354. pamt. $1,600. ..
AIR HOCKEY llURRI . ' 4W'MefDrins 95SO book.493·3206 Call552·7168.
Quality bdrm :.el CANE by l<.lcal Used '72 Trojan 30'. FIB. ex ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMW 971 KarmcMnGh1a 9735 '68 VW~"-k Clean run• Complete'. i\11 or part times, .sold new for SSO press TS F'atho VHF · •••••••••••••••••••••• "" · ' ':::::==:=======~I 0 l h e r m 1 s c · will take S2S f"r(•c stand Teak 0dc~ks. Outriggers: CHOICE OF TWO ••••••••••••••••••••••• '00 ~armannGhia ~~~J OOO or offe r. -ro
640-9008.634-2322, Hoger. ing. Ph· 778·1006 bail recvr swim step ongownr $1750. Car.a
Asktn" Sll!.000. 1974 TOYOTA 64S:9280days. ,74 vw. Gold. Super Sun ••••··~···~··•••••••••• ract air . Xlnl mech cond. Fane reproduc tio ns I RV J N E C O U NTR'r " • ....... 0 R 74Camaro $2895 5481487 Cherry. & Maple woods, CLUB !'t.•E.\1BL:nsJllP Minncy's Yacht Sales ~ ... C UISERS Beetle. air cond, xlnt . , · · ·
kmi; size bed l'Omplcte. s.500. 64-1 5124 .. _.. S.'8·1725 Hardtop. Ele(1nc wench Mcnda 9738 cood. lo ml, sunroof cord Mm ml .. loade~ • 14 M 0 n l eg 0 M x.
dbl dressers. chcsb ,:.cw ----SELLINGTllE FLEET & all the goodtl':. ! ••••••••••••••••••••••• uphl,$2799 640.7022 .S4l9S. 613-Brougham, power. air,
mg marhtncs. & lamps. Dishwasher never used, 13. WllAl.ER. 40 HP . t366LRD>. BUY OR '73 RX2 Coupe, lug rack, .75 vw Convert. AM/FM 73 CAMARO. 350cc, 4 loaded W/Xlras. sll bhd
714-673-2681 Tappen, $350. Solid oa Sl.SOO. SYUNEY sabot. ONLY $4597 mags, special top, many stereo cassette. xlnt spcl, PS. PB. AC. S3.000. radials. low, low l3,ll)(
. --huteh. never used. S400. s2 7 5 . l S • 0 1 Es EL LEASE ai.JOW otherxtras. 846-6834 <.'Ond. 640.7762. 63().7733. 499.1394 ml. Best orrer. S49·37G'• ~een size bed, dresser, & Call 962·!)211. f"lll wkncls anytime. wk<b,n
rutestand. xlnl cond. On ~lissic, S4.500. 675-6666. '74pdMazdda RXJ Coupe, 4 Classic .51 VW gold ·;5 Camaro LT hard top. aft. <I.
lyS200.494-568t Closelsful i;al's 15/l · IMWTRADE-IN's s . un er wrnty, very velour int. ging;r ext. Xlnl cond. lo mi.. fully•----------
MOVING ! Eve rHhtnl! ~·:ri~~~:lmo:.t new 18' ftshm~ boat. Ship to '122002·An21FTQl. cleanS37·3202 Runs gd.$2600.548·1273 eqpd U68·S928. ~~aa~~.l~~eds2~~';01
g oes. 5 room s <> f ---shore radio. fish tank, '722002-4 sp. <SSOS>. '71 VW Camper w/pop. CheYroMt 9920 963~18 ans.
beautiful furn 836·"170 lrvtneCoast CountryClu depthfmdcr,7S llP.$900 '72Bavaria·<488FOFl e-deslem 9740 to 1 4 $2800. · •••••••••••••••••••••••---------
aft 3 PM. J(olf membership. S500 o 496-3103. 732002·A. <"3460 I ••••••••••• ••••••••••• p. s PIS ' . •CHEV. '76 Mew• tanc) 991l
bst &16 6369 ·75 is· "CHEETAH" tri •73 Bavaria· 1818JSI ). 960 Mercedes 220, 4 spd, 498'2522 .. fonzu Town Coupe. 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Medit. Sofa. loves cat. · • VCMS 9570 '74 Bavaria· <348LFM ). AM/FM radio, new in· Vol•o 9772 " .. t11blcs.lamps,goodcond.Rattanloungc chrw1ot-~uli , w a lkbllhru, hwh '7"n"l.4 sp.<105NV ll>. lerior"·tires 25miper ••••••••••••••••••••••• speed economy. (5368) 75 """ 8 5 57r. tle/metallic ue. 6 rs ••••••••••••••••••••••• """" "' Only SJ798 Sl . ,,.,,,.7 1 tom an. tan n.iu.1:. ., 752002·A. <236M MN>. gal. Best offer or trade SOUTHERN HOW,.R.D CL.-y-••t Bltm lloti>oml dshwshr. total lime, Volvo-Penta Skiers. customized '74 •755301A A (705NIJl f . k p I "' nc ni.~
Uke new Drexel dining AllocadoSSO. 640·70<!2 lJO HP. Ideal for skiing f'Qrd. must SI;!('. Dest of · · · or ptc u or pane ORANGE COUNTY'S Dove&QuatlSts. rm. Pecan tbl, 16x4!>, 2 ------rishtng Trailer. 12·24 fer over $4800. 646·3003 SADDLEIACK IMW filS-0970 days or 673-9676 NEWPORT BEACH
extension lea\'cs 18". fl Budweiser watrr s kis. volt trolling motor. com MISSION VIEJO afl6pm. VOLYVOLO UD~~Lb!I 833·0555
ca1n ba c k c halr l>. single & double. nca pass,CO\'Cr.l'Onvert.top '730odge Windowva!l.9 831·2040495·4949 •--... ~ ~ wtarms . custo m t bl new. sso 96J 6886 ~IOOor&W-4054 PM pass. dlx. VS. PB. PS. ----------t .cw ...
pads, top & bottom tbl --• AC. sterro, l owner. xlnl ORANGE COUMTY'S Mew Used special. Cost $1200. :;ell Genuine Shet•psk1n thro loots. Sail 9060 cond. $3950. 979·0121 •
S>7S. cash. 963·2339 rugs, approx I! sq rt, ••••••••••••••••••••••• days . 644-1601 eves. OLDEST OVER I 00
many 1·ohm, l() rhoose Hobie 16, trlr, new trans & .7 f rd 200 P 8 P S ~ MERCEDES
Sc v e r a I M ah o ~a n y frum , S<!O 1:1-12 2976 art more. Sl.425. 646-8255 or 4 0 · / · I.. ..,, OM DISPLAY vanities w l mirrors. 6PM SBl-7505. oni; owner. S3.9001bc:.t
some matching pieces offer. 494 ·2382. eves . Sales·Servicc.Leasing HcMase of l111DOl'fs
6942 Garden Cro''<' 1 mi Chnstmas Is Coming COLUMBIA 29. Milrk I, Roy Carver, Inc. AUTHORlzto west ofbch Comp tram layout.. Ovl•r fuJI keel sloop. IB. good 1974 Dodge Van 3oo Rolls ltoy<'e BMW MERCEDES DEALER
40 110 & 14 N ~ai:ut' shape, $13.900. 971·2169 Sportsman. all xtra:., lMOJamboree 6862Manchei.ter.
GorogeSale 8055 trams On Rx\11' lx.t;ird 17141 11ood cond Btwn 5 & Buena Park ••••••••••••••••••••••• Towns . t unnl·ls, c•lt· ---9PM.-l93-4lfi5 Newportl3each640·6414 523-7250
SUPERGARAGF. Comp.SJO(l l'P.ti75 o6h6 Catalina 22, clean & OntheSantaAnaFwy.
EXAMPLE: Brand new
1976 Volvo 242S. Fully
equipped. (090046).
ONLY $6596
Ml\RQUIS
MOTORS
.ftht1"'"'AQ(UfA1•t PttW•
")on f"or(p;f, _., ,a•r"< y f •I
Ml'>,IUN ~If JO
,iJl • JHKO '1Q~ • 17•u
&ESTAT~SALI!: -------loaded,$4600. AutosWanted n590 '"0 i0 to 7 ORAMGE COUNTY !I drwr dresser, 3 mir· Game tbl /1 <·hrs, kng .,.. ·"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7JMercedcs450SL.
rors. l antique. rare l of spread, matching tufted ClllNESEJUNK WE BUY &t ST• HOADWAY 640·1004. VOLVO
a kind. porcel:11n art, hdbrd. upr11:ht rn ano JO ' & Beautiful. new •USED CARS & SAMTA AMA EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO
tBavanan, 1-'r, German. fill-3600 &ails. & Dsl ,213 >372.3954 TRUCKS• 76 MBZ 300 Dsl. Family Largest Volvo Dealer Eng,> 1810 sew in!( eab, Come in or Call 835·3 I 7 t crisis forces sale. Full in Orange County!
antique cuckoo l'lock. Sabot·glass. FREE•--• al TMEVl.1-TIOllCVINOMACHIMf. eqwpmenl. only 8000 m l BUY or LEASE
stups clock, glast.ware. 'scellaMOU1 $150. Groth~;:,.. •USED BMW's• Bstoffer751·9490 DIRECT
vases, chests. lgc Onen· Wanted 8081 640.5823 18211 Beach Blvd. •73 Bavaria-!983HNV> MB '75. 450SL. Alloys,~ l':~,~~r.ll~."(~Zl'l·•,PJ:r.,~~1'11'.'1.jr.~ftll talhandwovenrug. !both ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·742oo"Tla· (087KXV l y II -·-~~ ------I R Boats Slips/ H II gto Beach "' cassette. c owttan. ~~~dc~esP~~;i s ha;1~ SS$CASHFOR o~kl 9070 e41.608J•S49·llll '752002 ·<629NB K> 11u. s1s.5oo rP ,
Chinese Pe acock pie· Good Usl•d furntrefr1 gs ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75S30ia · (246NJ\Kl <714)831·9970 bus. (114)
lure AAlique s · golden fr1.rs1stovcs 516·07611 Slips·Satlboats 25' to Z7' TOP DOLLAR ao.ed Ott S..ndays 497-2821 res. 2025 S. Manchester
ral'cd car\'ed Chincse ___ WAHTED F:lec/Wateron ~k IM•tlt1t,.PTELV ;2 3.0 4 Dr. silver, sun· G 974 Anaheim 750-2011
t.'a b Antique chlldi. Frceprk·g~verythmg roof. leather, s tereo.••••••••••••••••••••••• ir.:•~"ll trunk. 22 rifle Childs ORI ENTAI. HUGS Isl dass. Best in Nwpt FOR ALL C
1975CHEVY
MONL\2+2
Automa\lc. radio,
heater, special wheels·
can't be told from NEW!
<!lllOLWA >.
ONLY $2991
Mf\RQUIS
MOTOR 5
.'b1HJJMAA\0Uff.ltH P"'N'
''"' lJ•1 ,,...,F. ,,.., /'\,,, yl• I 0
Ml>~IOP4 •If JO
iJl-1tsUO .tY\-IJ1lJ
Doll't See Us ffnt-
lut 5ff Us Lott!!!
'1f You Dow't
Buy"'°"' CONNELL.
You-r. Payfnq
Too Much! .. -
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
*MUST.ANG II'•*
1974 · Spotless 2+2
tl7SMPU >
NOW OML Y $2997
1975 · llardt{)p. A lit.th
redbeauty! <ATV0241.
NOW OML Y $3Zt7
'65 Must 289. Very &•
cond. Call ror detaOi;
$1000 firm. 548·6306
* 1966 MUSTAMG•
Hardtop with lots o
character . Restored
One of a kind·must see
<SLU669>.
SAVE HOWi
Mi\RQOIS
MOTORS
.tib01MAIH_,utk11f P•W1
')ur101ct1uf•-i -\.,,,,. 1
Ml\' . .10"' -.it JO
.1 \1-JtinO .i1.,."
bicycle & wgn Costume Persian & <.:h10(':..c also 673_6711 lilll()pm. FOREIGN CARS ~upert.6100 :'>-16·7739 1960 MCA onvert
Jewelry magn1hcent lthr Tapestry. Pvt Ply'sonly CALLORCOME IN Capri 9715 Classic, wire wheels,,"•11111111111 2.828 Harbor Blvd. Pinto 99S
lop de.sk. 4 J;enutnc 640 701'1 SIDETlESLIP,uptol8', TOSEEUS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~e:1 }o~n~at~r!~\~o:·
l\udubon prints .<si~ed). Wanted: Large Bible with $40 m~3-814seves NEWPORT IMPORTS '73 Capri. V6. A/C. ~. deck, good rubber. xln111 .... 1111r. .. •lllllll
2 Turner pa1nt1ngs. good pnnt. Reasonable. . JlOOW. Cat Hwy, NB ml, good shape. Gd lires running cond. Paint iJ l~cms 52.00. lo $4,000. 536-8280 Side tic for 20' boat. Bal. 642·9405 $2500. 646-4694 or 544~11 chrome like new. This •SALES 9.~A.M to 6.00PM. 41Z7 Perun. E. of Pavilion. Mr. KiWon. car is a one or a kind' JIUana Way, Apt C. N.B. eeded used frostless ""'3·6790 TOP "1" ..-017\ Se I B h •SERVICE (N H H ) 646 7638 h u• i4 Capri 2000 CC. AM I " .,_.., ' a c . r oag osp. . refrig. Prefer l al you DO' I ....
de Ii v e r . A ft e r 6 pm -~ ~ radio, ralley whls, s~ '74 MG Midget. Xlnt cond •I.USING MOVING SALE! 592.1419 .;;::;.:-.:::-:-::........ PAID betted radials. 12600 Low mileage. Oveneas
9 to s. 2015 Commodore i al C Sde/ FORCLEAN -~---·-----1-$2900--------1 Deli ~d.~t~o1<~o~~~hn~1~. ll~:i! IM~ 8083 f:t"'· 9120 IMPORT CARS 1974 CAPRI Ponct., Service & pn:"!w open
ends Oct 10th. •••••••••• ••• ••• •••• •• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• VB. <I speed, AM /FM on Sat '1 8 to 4 for your
----------11.:onn Mln·O·Mat1c clec. 'X12'1i' <.:allover Camper , low mileage. (2:MKLD). 'fil 911 Targa. Fantaali convenience.
Jew.try organ, excellent l'Ondi-w/boot & jacks, for long ONLY $2999 me ch 'I cond.. $6450 ...... •••••••••• • ••••• •• lion. $600. P. P SJZ· 1~ bed P U. $700. S48-3S87 673-0317.
WANTED 1edllkH 9140 'iSPonche9llS.
TOP CASH DOLLAR guitar w /c ase. Xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• $12,000tbst olr.
PA l D F 0 R Y 0 UR concl. $320,/ofr. 644-2766 * FALL SALE * Musl sell. 968-21.39.
JEWELRY. WA~ES. e hrnlture & S...U.y Mopeds $350 '70 . 911T Ta!la· reblt en
COSTA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••
S4fJ.1200 '74 PINTO
XLNT.COND. '67 IMPALA. PS/PB, nu $2.100 545-0 Ures. auto. rent tune·up,•---------
runs gTeat. $700. S57-6386 Pfy'**"' 996
1973CHEYY
MOVA UFTl.ACIC
Vs. autom atic. pwr.
steeri n g-u n usually
clean! tS07028>.
ONLYS2897
Ml\RQUIS
MDTO R 5 . , o: ''·"•"1t lit..,,,, I''" VII'
1 •f, 1• 1,...,. l\,,,,I••'
••1 , l'I,, \l'lfJ)
• 11 • n~(J lo'J 1 \ .'1u
••••••••••••••••••••••
~rzvoEB~E~av 1 E~: Equlpmtttt 8085 c leWorb WA ... TEDI. & trans, "S' tnst.. ne
FINE FURN & AN ·....................... le " tires " wbls. AM tFM.1----------TblnklngofLeasing? ATLAS TIQUES.645-2200 osing OJ>Wlion. Desks. l82He 111'-wpot""""rf .. ll•d. JUNK AUTOS -'73-'C...-a-'p-ri-..... V_-6 __ , x-l-nl_co_nd_.-i mustaell.673-4818 73 164E. AM/FM. air. Call Paul Reed
---------•chairs, ""(ypwri ler , CostoMHa 548·5713 AMERICAN FOREIGN auto l ownr S3 800 $46-l200or67~9626 Chrts .... ~ U•ntock 8075 credenza, dinette set. · Owner. $2,900/besl orter '68 91% Targa. AM /FM, · · ' · Open Dady & Sun. 'UI , I pay more cash than Mark. 581·2342/837-9400 rac alr, Koni's. McAfre tM·~U6, Alan. ---------.. PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• etc 540-3368. Motorc cltt/ anyone. 1'114>1·635·712( Int cond S6SOO U ,.--ti.I tal 9930
Reg. M. organ mare, broke '-• & OnJcm$ 8090 )fOf'CYCM 9150 or toll free 0.1.enith 77120 Oatsun 972 mags, x · · Alltot.. MCI "'"°"""'" 2929 Harbor Dlvd .• d •-d I blk ._..,.. Scoot.ra 963-2312 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa to r1 e .,. r ve,d. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------• •••••••••••••••••••••• parade Morgan gel 1ng, . 0 D XL Salff&lAo 1-'7S Carrera. Ulack on AMC 9905 '13 ~ARK lV, while on 546-1934
Eng Western ( 714 l urlitzer Ori;<an. Walnut 7511 N A 2SO. TOP Dollar •P--.aid black. All p<>15sible ex· .. ••••••••••••••••••••• white, low mlleage, sunt---------338-1011 spinet, 2 full munuats. I owner. $650. lras. Must sell. 540.o224 '68 RAM SJ.ER Rebel -4 roof, S&OOO. 963-7409 k wanted for trat ---------t like new. $400. P h 548·5783&646·477<1 OnALLTrode·lns or963·245e. Or. automatic, excellent '7SMAUIV for '70 Plymouth Duate
MisceflGMOUS 8080 846-3033 art 5• ••LOOKS New. Driven NEWPORT OATSUM lransportaUon car. Musi 751-4754 anyllme
•••••••••• .. •••••••••••Player Piano, English 1476 nu, '72 Honda. CL 818 Doff Street "70 Porsche T911T, superb sell-leaving state. $350 $8786
Swvl Naug. chair , Works ok. "George t7S. lmm•.c cond ,,NJearboMacArtRhud.sr ~~r .. dt.A~e~~~· new Pri.ply.Call497·3474 Loaded with a ll the
wrought aroia.paUo chrs, Steck ... Light Ma hog. HeJmet, tool k1l incl. $425 • am rff oa _... • • •• AMX 390 en.g 4 apd &oodles, like AM /FM •7,. Vega. Xlnt cond.
&rttee. Bakel"arack, um· 497-3811 or trade Cor dirt bike. 833-1300 Rois Royce 9756 c I e.:a n ,' good 'co nd: stereo, cruise cootrol, tllt Sl.800/bettofftr.
brella table, vent hood 982 4335 ----------1·•••••••••••••••••••••• (1)5.13-25Mor&40-tM>l8 wheel. air condllionlng 837'-79l3aft Gpm. fan, cook loPS (gas Stair., Rntaura11t, •--------• DRIVE A •t DEALER IN U.S.A. ~ more. 8eauuru1 car .. 1-------
· .. 1ec ), tables lo cover lar 8095 '74 Honda XR'lS. Xlnt LITTLE... •O"' '74 2-dr M atador Mml seetoapprec\Dt.c.'72VegaGT.Super clea
ater eo spkr a , 120' .. ••••••••••••••••••••• cond. $300. Call eves, IR{ " '' Broua"-m. PS, AC. AM· (5\'88A823038>. mags, good tires. It/I
galvaruted pipe, Nothing DISPLAY _646-_7_30_1._____ SAVE A LOT CAIVER FM B·trlt. 28,000 ml. A / C. r une g re a 1
over 520. ~-0504 Wlllas $350 Shelvr~ from n noo Suzuki. SllOO SHOP *-CO""PA"'£ lOllS·ROYCl $2500/bsl ofr. S40·1W.2 ~my car. $1400/ot
$2$, 9· 1 only ~!M 19 belt offer cs • n , ... ~ days, S$4.017J •ves. 540-1905
Brown 9' naul'ahyde Radio •94-2433 IAlWICtcDATSUM .. ___ ... ~._. Ci••c tttm: 1--------
('0UCh, xlnl cond. S200 ot • • San Juan Cattrano •• --"' IF YOU L.a&Ff s...___ 8ota ..-~ ................. •• •• •• be<l,Quadcartapedcck, "' • ""1IV MINIBIKic..o> n•-13754 l -JJ7S CLO\IOWl'ol~YS havcucrvlce toorrcr·
$50, Blk & whtc port TV ••••••••••••••••••••••• llondQ SO, mini trail, -.-....-------...,----------1'76 SDN., LOADED. LO ------.;;..-.;--~ aoodHo tell, flac:e an a
10" scm. $20, Womans n Pioneer PL1l t umt.ablr. aood cond, $100; 3 ht)rff "72 >&OZ, air, 1111111. t 1¢ '54 Benlley R Type. wbt, MI • 8 L V E I W HT i£LL ldle henu wlth a in a he Da l y p I I•
6 ski boots, Sl5. 751-A178 new saoo. sel I siso nnw & Str11uoo Taco. amlfm, a.at alter o¥e rray Int .• auo root, alltO. 546--50'75 AFT 4PM. PVT. oan,y PUotct ... mect Ad. Classified Soctloh ••
atlSPM 631-1574 aooctcond. 960.llwas3 $.1500.84WI03 tlb&cond llH.. PTY. 142.5111.. Phooe64.2·5678 .
,,,
..
I
'
"i •• -..
1 !
Huntington Beaeh
..,ountaia v!~~y Afternoon
N.Y. Stoek8
LYNDA REYNOLDS, NEW FRIEND NANCY TAKE Sl'ROLL
Bnnd·Woman Loses Gulde Dog but Recelvea New One
Der New Eyes
Girl's Hero Dog Replaced
Lynda Reynolds of Huntington
Beach has a new guide dog today
to replace Pixie, the Labrador
retriever credited with saving
her blind mistress· life.
On May 7, Miss Reynolds was
walking with Pixie at the corner
-of Stater A venue and Koledo
Lane when she started to cross
tbe street in front or an oncoming
school bus.
"Pixie pushed Lynda." Miss
Reynolds' mother explained.
"She saved her."
Pixie was killed instantly by
the sehool bus. Miss Reynolds suffered only a broken foot.
Now through efforts of local
clUuns and the Guide Dogs for
the Blind of San Rafael, Miss
Reynolds bas a new guide dog
named Nancy. She is also a
Labrador retriever.
Miss Reynolds and Nancy have
juat returned from San Rafael
after \,bree weeks oC training and
getting acquainted with each
other.
Mias Reynolds owned Pixie for
about nine years and had obtained
ber through the San Rafael or-
ganisation, according to her
mother.
. Pbie would have bad about two
Accord
Snagged
DETROIT (AP) -1be
United Auto Worken and
Ford Motor Co. resumed
talks today OD DOD·
economic matters which
anaa1ed settlement ol a
three-week strike qainst
t.be nalion 's No. 2 auto
mater.
more years of active work, then
Miss Reynolds' parents planned
to adopt Pixie as a pet and their
daughter would obtain a younger
guide dog.
Miss Reynolds misses Pixie but
says she "doesn't have any pro-
blems" with her new friend,
Nancy.
"She's a little different but she
likes to work and is very frieod-
1 y ." the Huntington Beach
woman said.
"I've just had her doing little
things each day so ahe can get
used to her new home," she
added.
"It takes a while to get used to
walking with a new guide dog,"
said Miss Reynolds. "She'll just
be bouncing along the street and
I'd think something was wrong
butlt'snol."
· The Guide Dogs for the Blind
training school bred Nancy and
gave her to a4-H student in Valen-
cia to raise and train until she was
Umoothsold.
Nancy was paired with Miss
Reynolds when she went to the
San Rafael facility Sept. 12. Both
the animal and the in-residence
training were provided tree ol
charge ~Y the non-prolitorganlza-tioo. ·
Donations from community
groups after the May 7 accident
went toward Miss Reynolds'
medical costs and transportation
totheSan Rafaelorganlutioo.
Officials Hunt
Escaped Killer
ARCADIA. (AP) -A mlmbunt
b under way for an etcapecl eon·
vic:ted murderer wbo wu belnc
held as a government witDeu in
a narcotics coupirat)' case,
authorities say.
1
I
TEN CENTS
I
Marine Lives W aSted?i
I ~
Pilots' Report on Mayaguez Ignored !
WASIUNGTON (AP) -Tbe
U.S. Marine assault of an island
off Cambodia in the Mayaguez
rescue mission last year was or-
dered, at a cost ol 41 lives,
despite pilots• reports tbat most
or the crew of the merchant
vessel were not there, a con-
gressional study says.
U.S. pilots had alPeady report-
ed tbat 30 to 40 Caucasians were
on a fishing boat and not on Koh
Tang, where the Mayaguez,
seized earlier by Cambodian
patrol boats, bad been taken. the
report said.
China Nuke
Test Rains
In .East
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP> -A
Sept. 26 nuclear bomb test in
China bas produced radioactive
fallout "in signlficant quantities
over Pennsylvania," state of-
ficials said today.
'lbomas M . Gerusky, bead of
tbe state Bureau of Radiological
Health, saJd weekend rain.fall
helped produce the fallout, and a
spokesman for the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission in
Washington confirmed the
fallout. Reports of fallout also
were received from New Jersey
and Connecticut.
The U .S . Environmental
Protection Agency had projeeted
the fallout for Pennsylvania after
a nuclear blast occurred at the
Lop Nor testing site in western
China.
Geruaky warned Pennsylva-
ala.na to carefully wub garden
vegetables before eating them
and said there mlcbt be
dan1er1>usly bJtb radioactive
levels in mUt.
He said high levels of radioac-
tivity were found in various
samples of dirt, vegetation and
rain water. He said the rainfall
bad brought radioactive
particles from the atmosphere to
the ground.
Gerusky said the radiation
levels were the highest in Penn-
sylvania in many years. Tests
have begun to see it further p~
tective steps are needed, he said.
A major danger involves the
level of iodine-131 in milk, he in-
dicated. The radioactive isotope
gathers on grass, is ingested by
cattle and can be concentrated in
the milk.
The fallout was detected by the
Philadelphia Electric Co. 's
radiation monitoring program at
the Peach Bottom nuclear power
plant near the Pennsylvanla-
Maryland line.
After the origi.nal finding, the
company took the extraordinary
(See FALLOUT, Pace.\%)
Panel Seeking
New Members
Huntington Beach residents
wbo have interests in the finan-
cial side of municipal atrairs are
invited to apply for membership
on the city's Economic Advisory
Commission.
Applications may be obtained
by calling 536-5201 or by writing
to P .O. Box 190, Huntington
Beach, 92648.
'lbere aie four openings on the
seven·member commission.
Residents with experience in
budaetinl and fiscal planning
are particularly needed, city of.
ftctals said.
The commission serves in an
advisory capacity to the city
eotmcU.
The report was made by the
General Accounting Office for
the House International military
and political affairs subcommit·
tee. The paneJ bad conducted
bearings OD the Mayaguez affair.
1be report says that altbougb
the pilots' reports tbal nearly all
tbe Mayaguea' 40 crew members
were oa t.be fishing boat -and
not on tbe island -were passed
oo to Washington, details weft!
too sketchy to make certain
whether some crew members
were still on Koh Tang.
Indeed, the report quotes of·
4'WI .......
'EVERYTHING FfNE' -Jack
Kelly. the man in charge of
TV arrangements for Wed-
nesday's Ford-Carter de-
bate, s ays there won't be
anothe r 27-minute silence
like the one that flawed the
first debate.
Sharp Second
Debate Seen
By Director
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The
director of the debates between
President Ford and Democratic
nominee Jimmy Cart.et expects
the second contest to be leas
tense but more sharply drawn
than the first.
Jim Karayn, directing the de-
bates for the sponS-Ori.ng League
ol Women Voters, said Monday
that Ford and Carter "must have
been scared'' in their fll'St debate
at Philadelphia.
"I think the candidates will be
looser now that they've been.
through it once,'' be added.
He expects the second panel of
interviewers to ask sharper
DEFENSE A VITAL
TOPlc-£dlton•I, AS
FORD-CARTER
STANCES GIVEN-A7
follow-up questions Wednesday
night than did tbe first group.
The site of the second meetine is
the Palace of Fine Arts here.
Timels6:30p.m . PDT.
''We've asked ourintervtewen
this time to be sure tbat tbelr
follow-up questions stay on the
<See DEBATE, Page A%)
Sore Dead
Utt'le Old Lady Bopt Thie/
LOS ANGELE) (AP) -A purse snatcher may
ba9e a sore bead to prove that two little old ladies can
make It tough earning a living illegally.
llcials in Wasbineton as having
understood that only eitht crew
memben were on tbe boat.
"We acknowledge the dif·
ftculties and uncertainties exiat-tna at the time," the GAO said.
"8ut we believe that severaJ
available opportunities to try to
reduce the major uncertainty
during the incident -the loca-
tion of the Mayaguez crew -
were not pursued.
"The crew's location was cen-
tral to developing a U.S .
response," it said.
The GAO report concluded that
Crippled
To Receive
Dial-a-lift
Dial-a-Lift bus service for han-
dicapped residents in Hunttnatoo
Beach. Seal Beacn, Fountain
Valley and north Orange County
will begin Friday.
Orange County Transit District
<OCTD) directors wereloJd Moo-day three small buses equipped
with mecbanicaJ lifts to accom-
modate wheelchairs will begin
operation that day.
The buses will be based in
Westminster. Fullertm and San-
ta Ana, according to OCTD
General Manager EdLorits.
Handicapped residents may
make reservations up to 24 bouts
in advance by dialing SM-4822,
and they aJso may arnnge for
automatic daily pidtupe at their
homes to travel to school or
wort.
The service originally was to
start a~t • fHl' -.,. 'Dlrecton alao agreed Monday
to use taxicabs in the event the
buHa break down, and if tail
aren't available, they agreed to
pay Taylor Bus Service $19.50
an hour for backup servi~.
Directors were critical of the
cost for that backup service, not-
ing Taylor ls being paid only $9 to
$10 an hour under a separate con-
tract to operate two of the dial-a-
lifhervices.
But OCTD Assistant General
Manager Jim Reichert said of
seven firms contacted for such
service, Taylor was tbe only one
to respond. Some of the others
said the eight days allowed them
tosubmita bid wasn'ttime.
Directors asked' him then to
use the expensive Taylor service
only for 90 days, while trying to
negotiate a cheaper contract.
Ocean View
Teachers Eye
New Contract
'lbe Ocean View Teacben ~
sociaUoo <OVTA) will seek writ·
ten approval from its mem-
bersbJp tbiB week on a tentatively
approved contract before the
~ment is ratified by the dis-
trict board or trustees, according
to Marianne Blank, board prai·
dent. According to association b~laws each teacher must be pro-
vided with a copy of the agree-
ment and either accept or reject·
the pact in writingbeforeitcango
into elf •.
Teacher representatives ex-
pect the membership to approve
the contract before the end ol the
week. Tentative approv~ was
liven by 331 OVTA members
Monday morning al Murdy Park
ib Huntlqtoo Beach after Barry
Vltcov, usoclation ~idst, re-
ad the contract's b.lgbllgtm which
included as ~rcentpay bike,
Mrs. Blau1told t.beboardlloo-
d~ she wu pleued Wltla lbe ten-
tative .,reement and wW ~
bably call a 1peclal meettna for its ratiftcation if OVTA doel ctve its
written approval toCDedme UUI
week. The board bu Mt a sped al
meet1n1 for next MCIDQy.
.
tbe flnaJ lla.rlne assault tbat left .
18 dead or ml.aslnl -and tbe t
U.S. bomblnl of the Cambod.la ,
mainland -diet not influence re-,
lea.ae ol the llayaiua crew, i althaueb lt aald this "probably
could not have been known at the t
time."
"However," lt continued, 0 cer-
ta1D U.S. actlona. for example the '
siolrinl ol aunboats and U.S. air '
activity lD the area, probably did ~
influence that decision.''
The crew of the Mayaguez,
which bad been seized by Cambo-
<See &ESCUE, Pase .\Z)
FUNERAL RITES HELD
Htt...un Victim JohnlOn
Valley Poli.ce
Seeking Aid
lnHit,.Run
Fountain Valley police are
seeldng the public's help in a~
prebending a hit-and-nm suspect
lD the death or Steven C. Johnson,
1.C, who was killed last Thursday.
Young Johnson, whose funeral
was conducted this morning, was
st.ruck whiJe attempting to cross
Bushard Street near Warner
Avenue at about 8:33 p.m . Thurs·
day, police said.
The suspect vehicle was
described as an aqua blue or
light green 1972·73 compact
sedan with two racing stripes
about three inches wide running
the length of the auto. The vehi-
cle bad no taillights, police said.
1be sedan was last seen head-
ing south on Bushard Street and
probably incurred some damage
to ita right fender and undercar-·
riage as a result of the collision,
police added.
Torah Search
Wntinues ·
HEBRON. Occupied West
BanJt <APl -Orthodox Jews
combed through the rubble of the
synagogue at the Tomb of
Abraham tod~, searching for
fra1ments of the holy Torah
scrolls destroyed by Arab
Moslem youths two days ago. ,
A ritual burial for the scrolls,:
reqwred b_y the Jewish faith
when the Torah Is desecrated;.
wu to be held today but was
poatponed.
--~~~~~~~~~--·
Coast
Weather
Fair throu1h Wednesday
•except for patchy tog or
low clouds aloa1 tbe c:out.
Coat hllhl tn low 70s, lows
.olabom51.
INSIDE TOD~ Y .
811~ tra#era.Clllld Borrrl ~ GtW off lo a ftrlOOCh ~.
dart flt tlwtr MIO ''ABC EtJin. fn/1 N_,,. P"fHfttation, oc-
("
Announcement ol a ten·
tatlve accord for 170,000
atrikln1 workers ln 22
llatet bad been expected
llond•J.' after the two
aideJ" successfully
ma,atuvered tbrouab tbe
~or Issues of a new
Ernest Martinea, 31, was dia·
covered mlul.ng from bll cell
Monday at about 2: 15 a.m. during
a re.War bed cbec:t, Arcadia
pollcesald.
Sheriff's deputies said the man grabbed 75-year-
old Beatrice Sydenburg at a West Hollywood intersec-
tlon, picked her up and carried her about 300 feet
down a hill, threw her to the ground, arabbed her J>Ul'S!r and ran off with $788Dd credit cards.
.. Quick Fix' Faulted
MANILA (AP> -U .S .
'l'Nu_, Secretary William E.
Simon bu cautioned =ent
poor naUODt aaalmt a
"qultk fts" to IOlve ecGilWlcn.lc
lll'Oblem.. He allo f.lrl9d a'1·ricb
laoda to Joln lD emer1enc1
IDMlu.ret to enaare IUtftcieat
World Bot fu.ada fOf' U.. PGGn1t
COUldri•.
cordiflg to AllOClal«I 1Wu
'JV Criffc JOfl Shorbldt. 8"
,.A4.
.three-year contract.
But sourcea aaid talks
boaed down uneJrpectedly
over 1econdary J11ues
which could not be re-
lolMd despite a full d.a,y ol
~v• bar1alnin1.
...
U.S. M•nbals tranaported
Mart1.De1 to Arcadia Sept. 17
from the Arlsona State Penlten-
dary ao he could Ml'\'e 11 a Wit·
neu in a federal na-reotlcs cae ln
Loi Anleles tnvofvinl heroin and
eocai.De smusiunc. authortt1ea
laMl.
Tile)' said Ruel Mercer, 73, witnessed the in~
dent •bile gardening in her yard and, when the man
ran by, wbackedhimoverthehead wttb a garden hoe.
1be purse snatcher was last seen, cMi>uties said,
nmning away holding the purse -and his bead.
I
'· -kA!\t.fttLRI H /F ,..._,...,,Al
RESCUE ••• ... c"'"" ...... -• ~ ft'ltlll'-ll11111nl '°'* WM .... leued May u. ms about the
same time the Marines assaulted
Koll Tant l1l111d and U.S. plant9
bOmbl!d a port and 9'.rfield -u.. mainland.
The report says that on May 13,
the da)' after the ship was sel&ed, U.6. j.U made lowpaslelandre-
Pol'led back that ao \0 tl s;r,11~ Caucallan.a •ere Gil a
bOlt.
Although the pilots were flying
too fut to get a good look, the re-
port Hid, they saw that tbe.
passeqera 1ppiea.red to bt too
large to be Oiientals add t.bat they were wearing brightly col·
ored 1Uckers and other clothing
that appeared to be Western
rat.Mr than Cambodllb.
It quotes Def eose olftclals as
11ying tb~t th• pilots' reports wert telepbonect to Wabiftatoa.
But the report says too UWe de·
tall was given to tell d«tsloo
makers what the pilots bad~.
A. a result, ll says, both the
Department of State and the
Paclflc Mllltary Command have
st.bee sa1d that they tho\tdlt only
six to nine Caucastans were on
th• ftahln& boat and that the test probably were still oa Koh Tang
Island. "Contrary to the defense asser-
tion." the report says, "we
bell1ve there f 1 no wq to de-
termJnt the Impact that accurate
or more compl1t. lnlonn1Uon
would have bad ~ tbt dtclllon· mum• 111111m•nt" the 1ltua-·uan or on their flllal declllana.-. .. But ulde from the crlticllm of
comm\llllcatlont, the Nport H1d
the U.8. military elfDrt to rescue
tbe crtw "wu atnerally IC·
eompUahed in an elflc1mt And tf·
feotlve manner.
"Tb• performance of U.S.
foret1 wu ln1plr1n1." tt •111·
Sl,euth Trait.
Speedy Hound
After Eacape
OAKLAND (AP) -John
"Sherlock Bones" King, famous
detfctor or loll doaa. bu been
callld In to tract down H&rvest,
a champion greyhound who sud-
denly bolted the Oakland Kennel
Club show at the Coliseum
Arena.
Police s aid Harvest. a lightn·
ing-ltited two-year-old female
whon 1pecialt1 11 outrunlllng
rabbits in an open field, shot out
• ol the Coliseu.m Sund.,, ouvan
pursui~ vans and can, ~ven
taking time out lo catch a breath
ln the back Hat of a parked car.
Officers uid the pooch, ainong
the fute1t of all dop, couned,
.. aved and dodged her way out
· of tbe Coliseum parkin1 lot,
turned on her aft«·bW'Dtr and
fibbed pa1t the cbaln hnk 1ai.es
roramoreorleascle1n1eu.wa,y.
Harvell 'a owhtr, Jane
Bulman, 11ttmated Harvest's
worth in five fig\lrea and posted a •100 ... ward.
Stolen Key8
Used in Theft
... .," ............ fllCK!T!RS WH!R! CAR INCID!NT OCCURRED MONDAY
From L•ft. Kim Prnton, Jo. Vergo and Mlkt a.rt ..
HB Woman Held
In P icket Assault
The district attorney's office
bas filed misdemeanor assault
char1e1 acainst a HunUnston
Beach woman accuaed ol driving
her car into a row of picketers
Monday in Irvine. injwint lhr~
men .
Police uid her car struck
three men, who were treated at
Tustin Community Hospital.
Nooe were boapitalhed.
Prison Chief
Pearl West, 54, of Stockton
has been appointed by Oov-
ernor Brown as the new
director of the state's Youth
Authority X>epartment. She
has been a special consul-
tant to the Califomia Coun-
cil on Criminal Justice.
Federal Aid
Tbt woman cbarpd la Betty
Jane Alvarado1 30, ollTm Baron
Circle. Althouih the complaint
hu been filed, Mn. Alvarado
bu not yet been art11ted or
turned hehelf ln, paUceaald.
The Ldcldent oecW'l"ld at 9 a.m. when Mra. Alvarado wu drop.
Pini ber buaband, ~ Adalr
Alvarado, at work, Sterling Power Sy1tem1, UT52
Armatrona.
Alvarado told poll~ be bad at-
t.mpted to come to work on bis
motorcycle at?: 15 a.m'., but bid
turned around and bad · tone
home when he aaw the plcket
\lne.
Once ·home, Alvarado 11td be
phoned h1J boes who told him to
return to work and come t.broulh
the picket llne. Alvarado aald bis
wUe then drove him to work ln
hlrcar.
About IO pleketen were lined
Up jn front of the lllduatrtal' buai-neu, reportedly pre>tt1Uog
waaH llld workinl condlUOM.
PoUce aald that Oft btr •11 out ot the parlMn• lot, Mn. Alv1rldo
all11tdly drove btr auto throQah
the picketers, h.ltting one man
bead~n and strlki.nc two OUlers
lenatverel)r.
The first 01an bit was Ramiro
Lopez. 26, ot Whittler, wbo police
said was tbrOwn onto the 'hood of
the car and then into the stteel
He was treated for a bruiaed
pelvis and kidney damage at
Tustin Community Hospital and
was then released. police said.
Two others, Donald Ara&._on, 52,
of Norwalk, llld Richard Roaas,
39, of Santa Ana, were l1Ao hit
and were treated at the hospital
and released. All three are
maobln• operatora.
Police said Mrs. Alvarado told
them she became frightened
when tbe picketers lineCt up in
front of her car, shaking their fls·
tsatbtt.
At Car Wash
A burglar, who maY have used ..... F o r HB Bus
a set of stolen keys when he
Wltntllel laid Ille WU travel·
tng aboUt flvt to 10 m1J11 per bour
when \Ile lncldlnt occurncl, but
that she increased \0 about llS to ao mllH ptr bour add e<mUDued
driving after altgedly &\rlldng
thtmtn.
,.
. . . .
cleaned out a Huntington Beach C S gh uatomated car was h, took enter O U t
n1arl1 ... 000 worth of stereo
tapes and a variety of Indian
jewelry.
Sheldon Oro11111an. rtpreStn·
tative of the Huntington Center
Car Wub, 16061 Blach Blvd.,
told PQllce tbe Iota w11 dis· covered wheb employ• opened
up Monday.
Tbe intruder removed the
sllver·mounttd turquoise
Jn-elry and sound system tapes
from tb• ~•shler•1 omoe area, oouce laid. ...
Notmally 1ucl\ merebandlse would seeni unusual for an
1utom.ated ear wash but moat to-
day uUlize thelr lounp IJ'tU for
atber money.m,atlftg purposa.
Of'ANQI COMf .. , ..
DAILY PILOT
Ota.age Cowity Transit District
(OCTD> directors wlll seek
federal tun& to help build a $3
mUlton mus transportation
center In ffontington Beach.
1bey will ask the Federal Aid
Urban Protram for nearly 12.s
nillllon lJl coftsltucUon lunda. the
dlsb1ct .ill provlde the remain·
lJlg Sll'00,000.
OCTD Manager Ed Lont.t said
Monday the proposed faclltl)' will
be located on 32 ac11!1Just~of
Huntlnetol'l Cente~t Oil McFadden Averiue west of me San Dtego
Freeway.
He explained the cent.er wllJ be
deslaned to serve freeway ex·
Pf8lt buses, intra-db' buses and other buses, as well as planned
taa\drat11y1tem1.
Tbe p~sed 32-acre slte, he coratiruied ts ln an area tdentifted u ha¥lll1 hl1b Potential use aa an
OCTDpark and rtdefteillt)'.
Man Queried
In Slaying
SAN DlSOO (AP) -Police
sald · "•>' wert 'l\iMdoolna a ~year-old Navy man ln the fatal
stabbing of a woman who wu
discovered near dellb in a field
8Mbda)' dlgbt.
Homicide orttctrs ldedUfied
tbe Yictim a. M•IOCb' Mttoalf, 251
who WIJ toun• ift the Paralli.N HWa atea •bOu' liK mil• ft'om bit bonae • .._ dJ .. eerb' Mon•
clq. A ••atn&A for Ult ~
a6lr' 1&ld abe bad btl9 r.,_-.nu
dlell .ubbed I DQIDblroltmaes. Offt~ laid • ffn ... beed
~ ... Ttftf tltt ... Md Wal
later located in U. Parad.lse
NIU. area by Cttbens Bud radio
c:iperatora wbo had joined Police
intbeaearch.
·F,....P.,,eAJ
DEBATE •••
same Polnt as the ortgillal ques. tion, ••said Karayn.
He made the an-QgeMeets to out the Watergate bearlnp on
t.elevtaloo when ptestdent of the
NaUOfta1 Public Aftalts Center
for Teltvillon.
In Karayn's view, lbe "ul· timate tonaumert" of the de-
bate. •'IN tile voten. and our ob-JIG\ la &o •lve them a feel for
&hele men and their ideaa that
the votfts don't 1e' on the nllbUy
ntWa or on the &uoda, lDWYiew
lbow.''
Of ct1Uolsm that the tint de-
bat. •u dull, h• aaid. ••We'd
rather be accaased oi bebaa dull
ud iDforma&.lv• than beial lippy
video ud irnlenal Eveiytliing
on t.elevisiOn can be 58 secoods of
POW! This ls serious business."
Tecbo1cal problem• tllat
Oawed tht t.lecut ol &ht flrR de·
bate with a 11·mlluatAt ailece
won 'l recur during the secc:ind de-
bate, tbe man in cbara• of
ttlevlalOD artaJllelDllltl l&ld
lfllftday.
"Evel')'UUA& ii aaiaa to be juat
ft.De,0 1ald Jatk kelly, ~
bis pipe u be 1une1edlM nirry
ol aclivlf.1 at the Palace Of l'lDe
Artl.
VF'W Pott Awarded
I
WMHINOTON <AP> -Hun·
dnds of thousandl Of ltll~rs Ihm ceqre .. aap IHldllll re· •l~tton ate belna malled to ~ al~ubUc ::r.-· ~ mus ma .... "tonsutule
the latest instance oi what critics
aay is use bJ co~men of the
free malUna prl'rilege to win
vo&el. -Congressmen are prohibited
from maldna mass mailings to
c:onstltuentl wlthln • da)'I ol an
election. So llobd&)' wu the de-
adline and cona....akltlat mail
fadUUta were b\l&)'.
At one Ume Monday J. .. an
tmploye p\llbin8 a tnall-nued
baDlJ)el' lro01 a hallway ~tilde
the Jlouae f oldl.D& room to a load-
ing dock said, 11We've been work·
in& ni1hta and weekend• for
thtee'kfflu,''
Another said of the mail volume, "It'• unbelievable. It's u bad now a1 l 've ever seen lt." A third waa asked why there
was ao much mail. '1lt'a elecUon
year," be replied.
The assistant postmaster ror
the House said the men were
wortin1 to ael w the Poatal
setvtee befor. mlClnllbt 01ass
mailings by about 20 represen·
tatives. The Senate superinten·
den& of malla declined to say
whether larp maillbp bed been
sent by any senators.
Congresa appropriates funds to
reimburse th• POltll Setvtct for
its costs ln dellverlng fra.rtlted
mail. In fiscal uns. about 317.4
miWOb pitcea of franked mail wve aent at a coet of t~rs
oOM.5 million. Fll\&IW for file al me are not a~IJ.lable. Mua maill.o11 tnquen\b' are
newsletters r•OOGOUDI 1 con-
irH1man '1 accomplitbments
f.Dd are addn.,ed ool)' to 'po1t1l patrori." Tber are
atuffed Into every mailboa ill the
coqrtsa1onal district or, ln the
cue of a aenator, in UM state.
In tbe pl,c• or a 11tamv ll a frank, a racalmlle or the
" Conare11 member'• 1iJmature.
which allows Ole item To move tbrouab the man without <!barge.
The citizen lobby Common
Cauae, which bas filed. auit
challen(in1 the constitutionality
of the frantina privileae. con·
tends the privilege is an onlair
advantage for an incumbent.
Common CauH has estlmfLed
the value of the free Dlall al
$10,000 per 7ear for a House
tntmber aa4 "P &o M00,000 an·
nually for a senator.
Poetal 8en1o• &latllUc. show
tbe me of franked mail increues
dramatically before elections.
Juat before tbe li721eneral elec·
lion lO million pieces ol franked
mail were Hnt lo the lut two
weeks of October. ln the &able
penod of 1973, a nooelection
year, the number wu IU milllon.
Parents H eld
IQ Boy's Death
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Police
aay they booked Wendell and Betty Bennett for lllvesUgaUon of
murder after dilcovertna the tie·
composed body of tbelr son ln a
cloth travel bag stuff eel ln a
storm d..raln.
The body of 3111-year~ld Mica
Btnnett was discovered ~t. 6,
omclalk aald.
The parents. both 22, reported
him missing Aug . 30. The cor·
oner's office 1aid the cause of de-
ath •al a 1tull fract\ll'e Ind
added that there were also old
and recent mulUple rib frac· wr..
'1~tl111 A l ded
Huntington Beach paramedic~ treat Manball ScotUnl.
16. as tow truck operators prepare to haul away the HunUnston Beach ycuth ·a wrecked a uto. Scottlni, al
Gallant Drive, was hospltallaed wtth ~evere abrlllona
following a ta: 10 p.tn. cruh Monday on Newland S&i:eet
near Paclflc Coast H11hway. Poli~• Hid he wu throwa
from hls car as it rolled over. A J>•aaenaer. Dawn
Eichler, 18, of I0082 Shorewood Circle. Runtlnlton
Beach. also was injured, but waa not hoepltallnd. police
said.
Oce an View Board
Rev iews TV Plans
Ocean Vhu~ School Dl1tr1ct
tnllleel ,.viewed the propoeed
eoutrucuon of two teltvlaton reeetv1D1 atauona at a.a View
and Wttlmont aoboola Mondi)'.
Tbt Public Oable Telmalon
AutHbrlty; CPCTA) a Joint
powtra aarHment betw~n Hunlln•ton 8eacb, .-oun\ll'\n
VaUey and Yieatmln.ster, plana
to be1in conatructton of the flrst·
phaae of a cable system In
March of 1971, accordin1 to
Jobq Bateman, executive dlrec· torJ
.lvtntually. 81tem111 alld, all
the 1ohool dialrlct'a e~
could have cable ttlevlalon
capabWtlee.
The sun Vlew and W•t.mont
recelvln1 1t1Uon1 would bt able
to receive an Wllimlteid aumber
of ultra blab frequency
FALLOUT. • step of baltlnl conatructton work
at the J>lant Monday. company
officials apparently feared the
high radiation levels were due lo local proble01s.
1'he udlatlon fl.ndlnp weh!
also verified by tests conducted
by the Penn1ylvania Department
ol Environmental Protectioo and
by the radiation monitoring pro-
gram at the Three Mile bland
nuclear plant near Harri1bu.r1.
John Hope, a spokesman for
the state Department of Environ-
mental Resources, said the first
tests of milk samples were C?om·
pleted thia morning and ~vealed
radiation levels of 116 pico cwies
per liter. That is approximately
the same level that existed during
wideepread nuclear testing in the
early 1960s, be said.
"We would be more coooerned
if the levels moved Into the
thou.sands or tens ol tbouaands,"
Hopeaaid.
He added, however, that ol·
ticiala do expect the radiation
count to ao higher than 118 pico
curies. 'the normal levelollodine
-131 in milk U; iero.
tt(evlalon channels, ~din1
to JlU HendrlclD, distlict med11
coordlnator.
Tbt two proPOSed receivlnt ltaUon 1lte1 will pnMde Ul lb
terconnectlon be~ all Uu
ICboolJ ln tbe district to recei\'t
tbt aame proarammtng, abt
Hid.
Mu. Hendricks says sh«
hopes all Ocean View Cllbpuse~
will be equipped with ma lqten
na 1y1t1m wblcb wUl a.llo"
teachers to taJte ldv•taa• oJ
educatlonal programa llke tbosE
. alnld on KOCE·Cbannel S> • "Glen Vlew Sobool now has
lll own black and •hlh
televlaton 1ludlo 10 we can
makt our own pracr1m1 and
broadcast them to all our ·
aehooll," the mtdla c:oardlnator-
1ald.
Mn. Kenctrtcb 11l1d tbe dis·
trlot will l~ into ila u.se of
PCT A studio f aci11ttes •hich are a part of the pl'<JPC)9ed cable
system.
Actor Killed
In Cra:tUJ Fall
CARLSBAD (AP>-Oneofthe•
be1t·known ama&eur a«ots in
the San Die10 area died 1n thel collapse ola 180·f00l crane Satur-
day at c.he li:ncina plant ot San
Diego Cu and Electric Com-pany.
lluah Hudllon, 18, waa ou of
six workmen who died lo the ac-·
cident.
Valley Boya Club
Sets P o ttery Sale
The Fountain Valley Boys Club
will hold a·pottery 11lt laturclay
4nd Bwld•Y at IMO Talblft Ave.,
Fountain Valley.
Saturda; bow-s for tbl •al• Ire
8a.m. tolp.m. SUodQbounare
from aooo to 4 p.m. All l*OCIMds
from the sale •W llO to &bl Boys Club.
Callaway Press11re Told
I
Senate Confimu PtUt Secretary's Action
WASHING'l'ON CAP) -
f'ormtr Arm1 Seor«aty Howard
H. Callawaf exerted prt11\&tl on aovernmen omolala ln an effort to uoanct a Colorado altl *ort in
which he had a fhuu~clal bi.t.rest,
a Seaate 1ubcom01lttee r.ported
tod&¥.
Although there wu no
evidence tbal tbe pressures ex-
erted by Callawa)" resulted lo ex·
pansion of the Crested Butte ski
.,..., Ytblob la located on fedttaJ
llbd the 1ubeommittee round
that 'bb involvement showed in·
aemitlvif.1 to potential conflict of
lnttNlta anCI • 'ralaet serious
quesUons Of Impropriety. 11
Tbe 1ubcommUt1e on environ-
mebt aJMI lutd retOWc:et reJetted Callaway'• ct&lm thlt he waa on· lY hnerelted In tJDedlttbg tbt de·
$ton an elpanslon of Crested
Butt. re1ardleta Of what t.M de-
tlllOn IDICllt bt. ·
O&Uawa1 ctllltd Ult report to-day a "brand·otw CbUp poUUcal ~G'lclk,"
"I& 11&be111beommlttee'1 \flew a.at Cal.law., uled &.be occaalon to,..... for a decllkn .. favora.
blt to tbt CrtNcl 8""" Deve10p-ment Corp., .. the l'fS.pqe l'fPOrt
•akl
AD J.1.pace re~rt rued by the
&ep.lblJcan memberl ot tbe sub-
I \
., .........
llR-URI APPUID?
b·AnftY C"llf o.lllWIY
'°mmtttee cbaraed that \be in·
vesti1ation headed by sen. 1'toyd
Ha*eU (D·~O. >. "i_!!, ~Y baturt ol U& caD4uct and tlmu\f, an ex•
erclse for .polltlcal acf vantagt ahd Htod~Uoll ...
At t!e time of the invest.lga·
Uon. Oall1uuv. wu Presldenl l"otd's campaign manqer, a
position be resigned 1fhin tho
land deal surfaced u an iasue.
'lbe four Republican members
concluded that ''there was uo
testimony nor evidence that pre-
ssure by Mr. Callaw-.y had beet;
wied lo the purauit Olbis ~
intereste."
The report approved by t.bt
fl\'C! De mocratlo membtrt
focuaed oa 1 Jwy 1111 meet1nJ il
Callaway's Peni.1on of.flee 1'ill
lbe then·undetHOHtflr)' ol
A1r1cu.1tur•. J . PbU tamP:DeU,.de
puty underaeottt&Qt l\ifllara A
Alh~otth. and tbt llllOClatec'1e: ct &be rortet semctt, a.font a fttller.
•1Wtlhln a day 0t two ot tht
meeu.n,. Mr. 01m*1.l. te1Y'lnf
on what be bad he..t at!
mtttln•• calltd \&&»on • MCl'tt~ of Alrlc\lltur. ( .
Butl) to PUlb' tbt hrtlt~c.
to 1 deetelof\ •blob wo~l<
'P>slt1nly detilftatt ~
Mownatn a& a to11e111 :r:"•laD of th• or11ted Bultt ara. •
Uler~rt sald. '
There la no ctueeuon. U>e •t>
l'Otnmltl" 11ld, tllal ClmptMIH't
memotoButs "wun~ ot t.bt mtetln•" In Callaway'tol·
ft cc.
.. Nor can there by '8 ID)' dc*abl
that the memorand\111 e.Ued foi
tbe exertion. of l111111oper ~· a ure on the Forest 5-vlce.' Cbc
report said.
.......... ---. -------:0 --~ ... --~ -... -• -..., -...
Irvine
EDITION
1 VOL. 69, NO. 279, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES
Today'~ Clo~l ng
N.Y.Stoeks
TEN CENTS
~i Mayaguez Mission Wasteful • ID Lives ~
i
sinking ol 1UDboatB ancflJ.S. .;}}
activity in tbe area. probably did
lnlJuence that declskm."
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
U.S. Marine assault ol an.island
off Cambodia in the Ma.yaguez
rescue mission last year was or-
dered. at a cost of 41 lives.
despite pilots' reports that most
of the crew of the merchant
vessel were not then!, a coo·
gresslonal study says. 1be report
blamed no individuals or depart-
ments. U.S. pilots had alreacly report-
ed thaf30 to 40 Caucasians were
oo a tithing boat and not oa Koh
Tani. ·where the Mayape1,
seued earlier by CambOdlan
patrol boata, bad been takeo. the
report said.
· The report was made by the
General Accounting Office for
the Houle International military
and political affairs subcommil·
tee. The panel bad cooduct.ed
bearings oo the Mayaguea affair.
The report says that although
tbe pilots' reports that nearly all
the Mayaguez' 40 crew members
were on the fishing boat -and
not oo the island -were passed
on to Washington, details wel'e
too sketchy to make certain
whether some crew members
.were still on Koh Tang. Inc\eed, the report quotes of· ftcials in W ashingtoo as having
understood that only eight crew
members weTe on the boat.
"We acknowledge the dif·
ficulties and uncertainties exist·
ing at the time." the GAO said.
"But we believe that several
available opportunities to try to
reduce the major uncertainty
during the incident -the loca·
tioo of the Mayaguez crew -
were not pursued.
"The crew's location was cen·
lral to developing a U.S.
Fallout Taints East
China Test Produces Radio activity
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP>-A
Sept. 26 nuclear bomb test in
China has produced radioactive
fallout "in significant quantities
over Pennsylvania," state of-
ficials said today.
1bomas M. Gerusky, bead of
the state B.ureau of Radiological
Health, said weekend rainfall
helped produce the fallout, and a
spokesman for the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission in
Washington confirmed the
fallout. Reports or fallout also
were received from New Jersey
and Connecticut. The U .S . Environmental
Protection Agency had projected
the fallout for Pennsylvania after
a nuclear blast occurred at the
Bike Pane l
To Huddle
OnMo-peds
Tbe Irvine Citizens Bicycle
Trails Committee will attempt to
figure out Wednesday if mo-peds
abould be driven on bike trails or
streets.
The meeting will begin at 7
p.m. at the home of Juanita Moe,
18111 Mann St., in Irvine. The
public is invited.
Committee members will try
to untangle the matt.er of mo·
peds, the small motor-driven
bicycles which sometimes re-
quire pedal-power to be
operated.
The state vehicle code is not
clear on whether the new mo-
peds should be driven only in the
street, or on on-road or off-road
bicycle trails, according to Mrs.
Moe.
Mrs. Moe said she is re·
searching the situation and hopes
to bring some new information to
the meeting Wednesday.
Another item to be discussed
Wednesday will be the recent
changes to the state vehicle code
related to bicycles.
Mrs. Moe sajd that .since the
law requires bicycles to travel
only with automobile traffic, the
new two-way bike lanes in Irvine,
that have bikes traveling both
with and against car traffic, may
be lllegal.
Other items to be discussed in·
elude:
-A project , report on a pro-
poted bike lane running along
Jeffrey Road/University Drive,
from the Edison Company ease-
ment next to tbe railroad tracks
to Michelson Drive.
-Planning of a Yale Avenue
bike trail and a San Diego Creek
bike trail in Woodbridge.
-The Yale A venue landscap-
tng proj~t.
Coast
Weath er
Fair through Wednesday
except for patchy fog or
low clouds aloag the coast. Coast highs in low 70s, lows
ol about58.
I NS IDE T ODAY
Barbaro Waltn1.ond HCJntl
. ~.or4! off to o smooth
1'at1 Jn thdr ntw • ABC~
MQ Neun" pr•imtatioft, OC·
c:ordmg to Auodattd Praa
TV critic Jo11 Sharbult. See
fbot.44.
l•tle~
Lop Nor testing site in west.em
China.
Gerusky warned Pennsylva·
nians to carefully wash garden
vegetables before eating them
and said there rnigbt b e
dangerously high radioactive
levels in milk.
He said high levels of radioac·
tivity were found in various
samples of dirt, vegetation and
rain water. He said the rainfall
had brought radioactive
particles from lbe atmoopbere to
the ground.
Gerusky said the radiation
levels were the highest in Penn-
syJvania in many years. Tests
have begun to see if further pro-
tective steps are needed, he said.
A major danger involves the
level of iodine-131 in milk, he in·
dicated. Tbe radioactive isotope
gathers on grass, is ingested by
cattle and can be concentrated in
the milk.
The fallout was detected by the
Philadelphia Electric Co. 's
radiation monitoring program at
the Peach Bottom nuclear power
plant near the Pennsylvania·
Maryland line.
After the original fmdiog, the
company took the extraordinary
step of halting construction work
at the plant Monday. Company
officials apparently feared the
high radiation levels were due to
local problems.
The radfation findings were
Sore Dead
Little Old Lady Bops Thief
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A purse snatcher may
have a sore head to prove that two little old ladies can
make it tough earning a living illegally.
Sheriff's deputies said the man grabbed 75-year-
old Beatrice Sydenburg at a West Hollywood intersec·
tioo, picked her up and carried her about 300 feet
down a bill, threw her to the ground, grabbed her
purse, and ran off with $76 and credit cards.
They said Hazel Mercer, 73, witnessed the inci·
dent while gardening in her yard and, when the man
ran by, whacked him over the bead with a garden hoe.
The purse snatcher was last seen, deputies said,
running away holding the purse -and his head.
Woodbridge Units
Eyed by Planners
The Irvine Planrung Com·
mission will consider a request
tonight by the Irvine Company to
bui_ld a 376-unit apartment com-
plex in Woodbridge.
The meeting, at 7:30, will be
held at city ball and is open to the
public.
The Irvine Company is asking
to build the units in the northeast
quadrant of Woodbridge, olf J ef-
frey and Barranca Roads.
Skuth Trails
Speedy Hound
Af ter Escape
Tbel'e would be 28> units for
adults, plus another 96 apart-
ments for families. The family
section would include two tot
lots, according to Irvine Com·
panyplans.
Other items to be considered
tonight include:
-A request by the Bank of
America to continue operating
for three more years the interim
bank facility at 4201 Campus
Drive in Town Center. The racill· ·
ty is a trailer coach and would be
used until a permanent building
can be constructed when the new
University Town Center is de·
veloped by the Irvine Company.
-A request by Southwest.
Santa Fe Company to extract and
transport 680,000 cubic yar~ of
non-expansive sand for use as a
compact flll s ite, located
between University Drive and
Bon.lta Canyon Road east of the
future realigned MacArthur
Boulevard.
also verified by tests conducted
by the Pennsylvania Department
of Environmental Protection and
by lbe radiation monitoring pro
gram at the Three Mile Island
nuclear plant ne ar Harrisburg.
John Hope. a spokesman for
the state Department of Environ-
mental Resources, said the first
tests or milk samples were com-
pleted this morning and revealed
radiation levels of 116 pico curies
per liter. That is appro){imately
the same level tbal existed during
widespread nuclear testing in the
early 1960s, he said.
"We would be more concerned
if the levels moved into the
thousands or tens of thousands,"
<See FALWUT, Page A.2)
Debate II
Lessening
In Tension?
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The
director of the debates between
President Ford and Democratic
·nominee Jimmy Cart.er expects
the second contest to be less
tense but more sharply drawn
than the first.
Jim Karayn. directing the de-
bates for the sponsoring League
of Women Voters. said Monday
DEFENSE A VITAL
TOPIC-Edlt0t1al, A6
FORD-CARTER
STANCES GIVEN--A7
that Ford and Carter "must have
been scared·· in their first debate
al Philadelphia.
"I think the candidates will be
looser now that they've been.
through it once,·· be added.
He expects the second panel of
interviewers to ask sharper
follow-up questions Wednesday
night than did the first group.
The site of the secolld meeting is
the Palace of Fine Arts here.
Timeis6:30p.m PDT.
"We've asked our interviewers
this time to be sure that their
follow-up questions stay on the
same point as the original ques·
tion," said Karayn.
He made the arrangements to
put the Watergate hearings on
television when president of the
National Public Affairs Center
for Television. ln Karayn 's view, the "uJ.
timate consumers" of the de·
bates "are the voters, and our ob-
ject is to give them a feel for
these men and their ideas that
the voters don't get on the nightly
<See DEBATE, Page A2)
OAKLAND (AP> -John
"Sherlock Bones" King, famous
detector of lost dogs, has been
called in to track down Harvest,
a champion greyhound who sud-
denly bolted the Oakland Kennel
Club show at the Coliseum
Arena.
Probe R e ope n e d
Police said Harvest. a light·
Ding·legged two-year-Old female
whose specialty is out.running
rabbits in an open field, shot out
of the Coliseum &.mda.y, outran
pursuing vans and can, even
taking time out to catch a breath
in the back seat of a parked car.
Officers said the pooch, among
the fastest of all dogs, coursed.
weaved and dodged her way out
of the Coliseum parlrine lot,
turned on her after-burner and
Oasbed past the chain link gates
foramoreorlesscleangetaway .
Harvest's owner. Jane
Bulman, estimated Hanest'1
wol1b in llve ftgures and poRed a
$100 reward.
Union Out of Suit
SAN DJE<10 <AP) -The
TeamsteT"S Union has been re-
moved as one of the parties •uiilC
over the cooatitotionallty ol • chart~ amendment aUowtna dis·
m111al of city workers who
stnke.
Another Newport
Sniper Reported
Newport Beach police renewed
their investigation today of
sniper activity in ~ an!a of 16th
Street and Dover Drive after two
recent shootings in the
oel&bborbood.
Tbe invest.igaUon was original·
ly launched last mootb when so-
meone fired a rifle sbol loto the
Raleitb HtUs Hospital on 16th
Street. Noone was iQlured in that
sbooting. .
Police said no incldents were
reported until Sunday when a tow
truck driver saJd a rlfie ahot hit
blatruck.
Tbe tlrlver, David Gunderson
ol G and W Towing Senice, wu
diapatcbed to the intersection of
Dover and 16th to help a stranded
.motortst eet bl11 cu started.
He said he could not find the car and while driving around
Jooldng for the car, be heard a
shot. Police said they found a
spot on the front ol the truck
where it bad been bit.
Mooday night police offlcer
Richard T. Long reported that be
beard a shot fired near the in·
t«section where be bad pulled a
motorist over for a traffic viola-
tion.
He said the only ot.ber car
around at the tlJ:;e was a yellow
imported pickup truck.
Investiaators say they are re-
newing their efforts in the case.
"We've been lucky so Car," !aid
Det. Sgt. Ken Thompson.
"Nobody's been hurt.''
response." it said.
The GAO report..coocluded that
the finaJ Marine assault that left
18 dead or missi~ -and the
U.S. bombing of the C.mbodia
mainland -did not inOuence re-
lease of the Mayague1 crew.
although lt .said this "probably
~d not bave been known at lbe
time."
"However. · lt continued, "cer·
lain U.S. actions, forexamplelbe
EMPLOYEES
ON STR\lE
Ot~tril t 94 ·
\ '\ •• 111 .. '4 • MAUt\Ml~ 1 c; ~
m\OSP.\U W®UR~
The crew of the Mayques. '.
whicb bad been seized by C&mbo-
dlan patrol boats on a routlnoi
frei&bt-baullng voyage, was ~i
In addition. 23 U.S. ~
were killed lD a helicopter crash. J
leased May lS. 1975 about tbef same time the Jla.rines auMalted
<See &B8CtJE. Pt.'9 AJ) '
DIN'tl'fltt .............
PtCKETE S WHERE CAA INCIDENT OCCURRED' MONDAY
From l eft, Kim Preston, Joe Vargo and Mike S.riH
HB Woman Cited
In Picket Assault
The district atu.ney's office
has filed mlsdemeanoc assault
charges against a Huntington
Beach woman accused of driving
her car into a row of picketers
Monday in Irvine, injuring three
men.
Police said her car struck
three men, who were treated at
Tustin Community Hospital.
None were hospitalized.
The woman charged is Betty
Jane Alvarado, 30, of17882 Baron
Circle. Although the complaint
has been filed, Mrs. Alvarado
has not yet been arrested or
turned herself in, police said.
The incident occurred at 9 a.m.
when Mrs . Alvarado was d.rbp-
ping her husband, Andrew Adair
Alvarado, at work, Sterling
Power Systems, 16752
Armstrong.
Alvarado told police be had al·
tempted to come to work on bis
motorcycle at 7:15 a.m:, but bad
turned around and had gone
home when he saw the picket
line.
Once home, Alvarado said be
phoned his boss who told hJm to
return to work and come through
the picket line. Alvarado said bis
wife then drove him to work m
her car.
About 20 picketers were lined
up in front of the industrial' busi·
ness, reportedly protesting
wages and working conditions.
Police said that on her way out
of the parking lot, Mrs. Alvarado
Irvine Heir's
Truck Target
Of Theft
Thieves broke into a truck
belonging to Irvine heir James
Myford Irvine as be supped thls
morning at a Laguna Beach col·
fee shop, police said.
Irvine, 23, of 133 Moote Carlo
Drive, Laeuna Beach, told police a 23-channe! citizens band radJo
and 25 hard and folk rode stereo
tapes were stolen. He valued the
louat$32$. .
Irvine bad parted bis new
pickup truck to a lot acUaceot to
Denny's Jr. Restaurant. 1800 S.
CoaatHiebway.
He is the '°" of the late Myf ord
Irvine, former presideat al the
Irvine Co.. and is a 1reat-
gul\dson of James trvlne,
founder of the lrville Ranch. Imne la ~retary-~ ot
the My1lo Corp., a pnvately
oned tnvt1tment corporation
baled in Ea1tlrvtn_
allegedly drove her atJto through
the picketers, bitting one m.an
bead-on and striking two otbws
less severely.
The first man bit was Ramiro
Lopez, 26, of Whittier, who police
said was thrown onto the hood ol
the car and then into the street.
He was treated for a bruised
pelvis and kidney daafage at
Tustin Community B061>'ital and
was then releued,J>Olice said.
Two others, Donald Aragon, S2.
<See PICKETS. Page AZ>
,,,...,.nu
IJsa Grayson, 10, a fiftb i
grade r at Vista Verd4-'
Scbool in Irvlne, walked ofn with a new bicycle as firs · e ln the Irvine Ranch ~ter District's "Silly Seal
Look Alike Drawin• Con·
test." Miss Gra~s win·
ldng entry showed a seal on
a unicycle, wearinl a derb)t bat
------~ ----
SPGnish%~iWrors See .Jewel of ltlissiolu
87 ANNE COOPD °' ............
A vfJltor to Mfsstoll San Juu
Capistrano Monday might have
thought that by passing through
the mission gate be had been
my1teriou1ly transported to
Spain.
The courtyard and chapel
echoed with Spanish coovena·
tion, u nearly 200 villtors from
Spain pald tbeir respects to the
Jewel of the California mlsstons,
founded Nov. 1, 1776 by Father
.Junipero Serra.
Among tbe visitors were emissaries of King Juan Carlos of
Spain, tbe Dute and Duchess of
Maura, mayors of several
Spanish cities, a priest·
biographer of Father Serra aoct
the director or the Junlpero Serra
museum in Palma.
"Our town's traditi<lll comes
from the rich Spanish heritage of
tM.8 mtaelon." F~er ltaut ftaa ol •aJSorica ._ r.-ed • • 11.U., m.lulOll , ..... toW t.M .... mlelc!ft naooae ..... ~
....... .,...b*t &a tM m&li. walad .,.. SU J\m'a -
skm'1biitorte caao.t. '"W•eom-tboro.a1att•r•. Camlao memor• toda1 lbe lift 8pata Capl1trano, to UM &l AdoM
bas liven to thla Part <:l tM Unit-restaurant, where city oft'lcials
edStat.es." welcomed Lbem with a buffet re-~ the claapel ~-ception. Spanbb mayors presented ei.fta Mayor Douglas Naab told the
to the misslon, mcluding a plaque gatheriD1 of local and Spaniab
made of tiles taken from the civic leaden that altboulb San
birthplace of Father .Fenntn Juan ba.s chanced a great deal in
Fruci.lco de Lasuea. whole 1815 its 200•year hiatory, the city ts
attempt to establish a mLsslon at pledged to protect and enhance
San Juan was aborted by an In· its Spanish heritage.
dian uprising. CouncUman Yvon Hecksc~er
Father Mart.in, in tum, pre-welcomed the guests in Spanish,.
seated each guest with a bicen· and plaques with San Juan's _city
tennlal medal commemorating seal were presented to the visit· the mission's 200t.b annivenary. ing dignitaries.
"Va.ya con dios. '' said Father Paulino Bucbes Adrovrer,
Martin, as be ended the chapel mayor of Palma and a Spanish
e«emonies. "May God go with senator, then presented Nash
you, wherever you go." with a Mallorcan nag and made
The Spanish visit.ors lathered him honorary mayor of t'2e cas.
in tbe courtyard to watcll as tbe tJe of Bellver, which be called
Chin E F,....Pt1geAI
a nvoy RESCUE •••
"the most Important castle in
Mallorca."
Dinner was &erved following
the ceremonies, and when ever·
yone bad eaten and the ~ts
were preparing to leave, they
gave Nash a standing ovation,
chanting "Doog-lass Naasb,
Doog-las Naasb."
Sees Soviet,
U.S. War
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
(AP> -Chinese Foreign
JD.i,Dister Cbiao Kuan-bua told the
U.N. General Assembly today
that war between the United
States and the Soviet Union i5 ln·
evitable.
''This is independent of man's
will;" he added.
Chiao, following the usual
Chinese pattern of attacking the
Soviet Union, said Soviet "social-
imperialism is the biggest peace
swindler and the most dangerous
source of war today.
"As chairman Mao Tse-tung
pointed out, the current interna-
tional situation is characterized
by great disorder under heaven,
and it is excellent,·' be said.
This disorder, be added, will
affaken and temper the people
and push the international situa-
tion in a direction "unfavorable
to imperialism and social·
imperialism."
Chiao's speech, the first major
Chinese foreign policy address
since Mao's death last month,
was clearly keyed to the Third
World. He urged developing
countrie s to oppose the
superpowers and specifically the
Soviet Union.
"Some people are terrified at
the mention of the Soviet Union,
thinking th at it cannot be
. touched." he said. ''This is
superstition. Soviet social·
imperialism ls nothing to be
afraid or. It is outwardly strong
but inwardly weak." .
Quoting Mao, he continued:
"All r eactionaries are paper
tigers. The revisionist Soviet Union is a paper tiger too."
C hiao said the s truggle
between the United States and
the Soviet Union was founded on
the "unalterable" facts that '1he
United States has vested In-
terests to protect around the
world and the Soviet Union seeb
expansion."
Of the two. he said, the Soviet
UnJon is the more dangerous
b e cau se "every day it
talks 'peace' but practices ex·
panalon."
Chiao said the process of de-
tente was "a fraudulent and
hollow phrase." He sald the 1975
Helsinki conference OD European
security was only a Soviet al·
tempt to put Western Europe off guard, "divide and crush at
piecemeal and ultimately seize
tile whole of Western Europe."
In bis 30·minule speech, Chlao
also welcomed Egypt's move to
break its treaties with the Soviet
Union and called for a unified
Cyprus, ouster of U.S. troops
from South Korea, a "reasonable
solution" in Lebanon and ad-
miuion of Vietnam to the United
Nations.
He hailed race conflicts in
Rhodesia, Namibia and South
Africa and condemned the Soviet
Union for "attempts to seize the
~portunlty to sow discord and
tarry out armed intervention
ttbile pretending to support na· Uonal liberation movements."
ORANG£ COAST
DAILY PILOT
==~~~~'r,:,i:,==~= C...C-ttill"O Comffftf -... ..,.,._.,. =~~~:t·::~...::,~
IM1t Y•llo . '"''"• S_,_, Vtl .. y tM ~e..c111s...t11 co.o" .. ~,......... ....
-I\ _,.,.... ~tlv•..,f> -s.Mrn n. ::::.~~:"'~''M:~·.:..lJO WHI .. f . _ .. _ ........... ,.,.,_,_ , .. , .. ~ Ylct~ftlot1tl_O._tl __
~ .. I(_ ... ,., ,.......,._,..... ..... _ .... , ...
ca.tiff" i..t ~~ ..... A•oltltM~t ... l!ei-.
Office• C.O.t11Mw· >•Wolll .. ys.t,.... l-llH<ll 11.0-.... S.-"QZt:.~ .. ~~w~ll~Mt
115-llOlttO"-
Tel.,etoft• (7HI~ Cle...., Advettttlllg IQ.9111
"""""-Ytll9y-Ol!k t A1-ti10
"-~ci.-4ta-OUO (#fr..., ~· °'-QMtl ..... ~ ... ~ _, ............ , .............. _ ...... ...
_ .. ff .. ~,., .. ""."'' MftJft m.y ..
,.,,...,.,, wttlMlvl ''°'"' ..,l'N•••M er ~-~-CIH' ....... 1N'41 et CMlt ... ., t e1ttt,.ftlt Su•urloUtlf' .., <•'"'•" '1 M -IMy Ot ...... ~ ,. -lllf MllllWt' #\t1Mt~",. fftOf'rtM'Y
Koh Tang Island and U.S. planes
bombed a port and airfield oo tbe
mainland.
The report says that on May 13,
the day after the ship was seised,
U.S. jets made low passes and re-
ported back that 30 to 40 possible
Caucasians were on a fJShing
boat.
Although the pilots were flying
too fut to get a good loot. the re-
port said, they saw that tbe
passengers appeared to be too
large to be Orientals and that
they were wearing brightly col·
orecl ailckers and other clothing
that appeared to be Western
rather than Cambodian.
Jory Picking
Continues in
Bribery Trial
Jury selection continued today
in the Orange County Superior
Court · bribery trial of San
Clemente architect Leon Hyzen.
Hyzen, 66, of 2100 B S. Ola Vis-
ta. faces trial on three felony
counts of offering a bribe! He was
indicted by the grand jury after
county Supervisor 1bomas Riley
reported allegedly Illegal ap-
proaches to bis office by Hyzen.
It is alleged that Hyzen offered
executive aide Peter Herman a
$1,000 bribe on three occasions
last May as a means of insuring
that he got the architectural coo·
tract for a planned branch
library in the San Clemente area.
Jury selection in Judge H.
Walter Steiner's courtroom is ex·
pect.ed to be completed today.
Motorcyclist
Still Critical
Layne Edward Guise, the 22·
year-old Irvine man who was in·
volved in a motorcycle collision
Saturday, is still listed in critical
condition today at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital.
Guise, of 17432 Paine Circle, Js
still in the hospital's intensive
care unit, according to hospital
ot'fici als.
Guise reportedly suffered com·
pound fractures of the leg and
pelvis and numerous cuts when
be was struck by an oncoming
car on University Drive near
Campus Drive Saturday night.
The driver of the auto, Richard
1bomas Libert, 24, d Santa Ana,
was arrested on charges of felony
drunk driving.
Parents Held
In Boy's Death
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Police
say they booked Wendell and
Betty Bennett for investigation of
murder after discovering the de·
composed body of their son in a
cloth travel bag stuffed in a
storm drain.
The body of 31Ai-year-old Mica
Bennett was discovered Sepl 6,
olflcia.ls said.
The parents, both 22. reported
him missing Aug . 30. The cor·
oner's office said the caused de-
ath was a skull fracture and
added that there were also old
and recent multiple rib lrac·
tures .
fi',....P•~Al
PICKETS •••
of Norwalk, and lllcbard Rosu,
39 of Santa Ana, were also hit aDcl were treated at tbe hospital
and released. All three are
machine operaton.
Jailinge to End
BERN (AP) -Neutral
Swiuerland, which has not been•
involved ln a war for more tbao a
C("lllury, has moved to end the
prxttce of Jaililll coudeatious
otri!Ctora ln favor d altel'b.atlvo
Hl'llice .
. ·
"It's been a tremendous day,"
Nash said in farewell. "I only
wish you could all vote."
0.lly ...... Sl .........
SPANfSH NOBILITY HONORS JEWEL OF CALIFORNIA MISSIONS IN SAN JUAN
TheDukeAndOucheuOt Maura Talk With Fr. Paul Martin, Mlulon Pastor
Ele«!tion Time
Post Office Sinking
In Congress' Mail
WASlllNGTON (AP) -Hun-
dreds of thousands of letters
from congressmen seeking re-,
election are being mailed to
voters at public expense.
The mass mailings constitute
tbe latest instance of what critics
say is use by congressmen of ~e
free mailing privilege to wtn
votes. o
Congressmen are prohibited
from making mass mailings to
constituents witbJn 28 days d an
election. So Monday was the de-
adline and congressional mail
facilities were busy.
At one time Monday, an
employe pushing a mail-filled
hamper from a hallway outside
the House folding room to a load-
ing dock aald, "We've been work:·
ing nights and weekends for
three weeks."
Another said of the mail
volume, "It's unbelievable. It's as bad now as I've ever seen it."
A third was asked why there
was so much mail. "It's election
year," he replied.
The assistant postmaster for
the House said the men were
working to get to the Postal
Service before mid.night mass
mailings by about 20 repl'eSen.-
tatives. The Senate superint~n
deot of mails declined to say
whether large maill.ngs bad been
sent by any senators.
Congressapproprlatesfund.sto
reimburse the Postal Service for
its costs ln delivering franked
mail. In fiscal 1975, about 317.4
million pieces of franked mail
were sent at a cost of taxpayers
d $34.5 million. Figures for fiscal
1976 are not available.
Mass mailings frequently are
newsletters recounting a con-
gressman's accomplishments
and are addressed only to
"postal patron." They are
stuffed into every mailbox in the
congressional district or, in the
case of a senator, in the state.
In the place of a stamp is a frank , a facsimile of the
Congress member's signature,
which allows the item to move
through the mall without charge.
The citizen lobby Common
Cause, which bas filed s uit
challenging the constitutionality
of the franking privilege, con-
tends the privilege is an unfair
advantage for an incumbent.
LYNDA REYNOLD8. NEW FRIEND NANCY TAK! ITROU.
Bind Woman LoeN Gulde Dog but Receive• N9w OM
Accord
Snagged
DETROIT CAP> -1be
United Auto Workers and
Ford Motor Co. resumed
talks today on non-
economic matters which
snagged settlement ~ a
tbree·week strike against
the nation's No. 2 auto
maker.
Announcement of a ten-
tative accord for 170,000
s triking workers in 22
states bad been expected
Monday, after the two
s ides successfull y
maneuvered through the
major issues of a new
three-year contract.
But sources s aid talks
bogged down unexpectedly
over secondary issues
which could not be re-
solved despite a full day ot
intensive bargaining.
4.0ther HaH'
Rate Festival
Successful
About half of the 30,000
festivalgoers expected at last
weekend's Irvine Harvest
Festival failed to materialize.
but organizers still claimed a
success.
An estimated 15,000 people at-
tended the festivities, with near·
ly every event well-attended, ac-
cording to festival director
George Leidal.
But rain showers and threaten-
ing clouds apparently helped to
keep attendance far below that
expected by those who put the an-
nual festival together.
Leidal said the attendance at
least matched last year's figures
and might have gone even higher
once all the young children, who
were admitted free, were added
in.
Of all the events offered during
the festival. Leidal said the
favorite attractions appeared to
be the Harvest Moon Ball (sold
out months in advance) Friday
night, the western barbecue and
outdoor free concerts Saturday
night, tbe children's unbirtbday
party Saturday morning, the
•"Gods pell" performances by the
University High Chorus SUnday
morning, and the Long Beach
Symphony Concert Sunday night.
"And don't forget the seals
brought by the Irvine Ranch
Water District," said Leldal.
''Kids came to see them .U da.v."
All Hands
Definitely
Not on Deck
CIDCAGO (AP) -"Do you
know who 1 am?" the man in the
well-tailored business suit asked
the partially disrobed young
woman aboard the $450,000 float·
Ing ~asure paJace on Lake Michigan.
.. No. but you're cute," sbe
replied.
"Well, I'm commander ot the
vice-control division," an·
nounced Michael O'Donnell, and
wttb that he arrested the vessel's
crew and the two young women.
The 60·foot Casa Rodi. a
chartered yacht, sailed Thurs-
day with skipper Raymond Dust.
45, deckhand John Ruiseco, 35,
Rowena Canaccinl, 20, Patricia
Reyes. 21, and a dozen un·
dercover policemen.
As the s hip headed from
Burnham Harbor onto Lake
Michigan for an eight-hour
pleasure cruis e. the women
began to disrobe. said O'Donnell.
who was posing as a busi-
nessman.
He said the pa.sseogen w"'
told that for $100 each they could
have rood. drink and perform tbe
sexual act of their desire.with the
two women. The arrests came
after the officers' mooey was ac·
cepted.
Fro•PageAI
DEBATE •••
news or on the Sunday interview
show."
Of criticism that the first de-
bate was dull, he said. "We'd
rather be accused ot being dull
and informative than being zippy
video and irrelevant. Everything
on television can be 59 seconds of
POW! This is serious business."
Fro•PageAI
FALLOUT. •
Hope said.
He added, however. that d·
ficiaJs do expect the radiation
count to go higher than 116 pico'
curies. The normal level of iodine
-131 in milk is zero.
Emily Unshackled
OAKLAND CAP> -A. judge
has ordered city jailers to l~t
Emily Harris consult wlth be.r 8'·
torney in an interview room
without being shackled. ·
Ber -New Eyes
~ Girl's Hero Dog Replaced
LYnda Reynolds of Huntington
Beach ha.s a new 1uide doll tod~ w replace Pixie, the Labrador
retriever crffited with sarin•
her blind mistress' lite.
On May 7 lfial Reynokb was
walking with Pixie at the comer
of Slater A venue and Koledo
Lane when she started to cross
tbe street in front of an cmcomlne
scboolbua.
".Ptxie puabed Lynda." Miss
Reynolds• mother explained.
"She 1aved her."
Pixie was killed lnstanUy b)'
the school bus. Mias Reynolds
suffered only• bro.ken foot.
Now through efforts d local
cltirem a.ad the Guide Doo ror
the Blind ot San Rafael, Mlss
lleynoldl bu a new iuide doa
named Nancy. She fa a1ao •
Labrador ntriever.
Miu R.Jnoldl and N~ have JDSt morned from San Rlfaet
after' three weeks of t.ra1nlq and
1ett101 acquainted wlt.b eaeb
other.
Miss Reynolds owned Pixie foc
about nine years andbtldobtained
her throuih the San Rafael Of·
ganization, accordine to be.r
mother.
Pixie would have had about two
more years of active work, tbep Mln Reynolds' parents pJanneCl
to adopt Pixie as a pet and their
daul.bter would obtain a ycJUl\ger
guide dog .
Miss Reynolds misses Pixie but
says she "doesn't have any p~
blems'' wltb her new trfeo~.
Nancy.
"She's a llWe dllteren.t but abe
lites to work and ls very friend.
ly. •' the Huntington Beaeta
woman said.
"I've Just bad her doUll UUfe
things eacb day so she can pl
uaed to her new home." abe
added. .
"It tabs a while to get used fo waJ.k1na with a new guide doc."
said Miu Reynolda. "Sbe'U Just
be bounclJll alo~ ltreet and rd tbi.nk some wu wroa&
butlt'aoot."
.. ... -.... .._ _......, .
Lag1•na/South Coast Afternoon
N.Y.Stoek~
EDITION
:,\IOL. 69, NO. 719, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1976 TEN CENTS( li----------------------------------------------------------------------~.....;.----------------------------r--------------..;..------------------------
i •~·ish Vuitors See .Jemel of Miss~
1
1 ~ I ,
O.llr l'llot Sqtt lfllofo
By ANNE COOPE& Jewel Of the Callfornla IDiNlons. lbla mtaalon, •• Father Paul:
0t .. o.1ty,.,....., founded Nov. 1. 17'1'6 by Father Martin, mission past«, told ~j
A • .:-'to t Mt-· JuniperoSerra. visitors assembled lD the ~
•MN r 0 ~1100 San Juan Amoni the visitors were •ion's b.istorlc chapel. "We com"' Capistrano Monday mtcbt have emissaries of King Juan Carlos of memorate today the lift 8Pa1n!
thought that by passing through Spain, the Dute and Duchess of has given to this part fl the Onit·
the mission eate be bad been Maura. mayors of several edStates." .
mysteriously transported to Spanish cities, a priest-During the chapel ceremoai~
SpaiQ. biographer of Father Serra and Spanish mayon presented gift.s1
The courtyard and chapel the director of the JuniperoSerra to the mtuion, lncluding a plaq~.
echoed with Spanish cooversa-musewnin Palma. made of Wes taken from the,.
tion, as nearly 200 visitors from "Our town'• tradition comes birthplace of Father Fermin/·
Spain paid their respects to the from the rich Spanisb heritage of <See BISSION, hCe AZ>
China Nuclear
Test Taints East
sylvania in many years. Tests
have begun to aee ii further pro-
tective steps are needed, he said.
the Peach Botl9m nuclear power
plant near the Pennsylvanla-
Ma.ryland line.
SPANISH N081UTY HONORS JEWEL OF CALIFORNIA MISSIONS IN SAN JUAN
The Duke And Dutcheu Of Maurt1 Talk With Fr. Paul Martin, Mlsalon Paator
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP> -A
Sept. 26 nuclear bomb test In
China bas produced radioactive
fallout ''in significant quantities
over Pennsylvania," state of-ficials said today.
Thomas M. Gerusky, bead of
the state Bureau or Radiological
Health, said weekend rainfall
helped produce the Callout, and a
spokesman for the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission in
Washington conCirmed tbe
fallout. Reports or fallout aJso
were received Crom New Jersey
and Connecticut.
A major danger involves the
level of iodine-131 in milk, he in·
dicated. The radioactive ilOtope
gathers on grass, is ingested by
cattle and can he con«atrated in
themillt.
Aft.er the original finding, the
company took the extraordinary
step of baiting construction work
at the plant Mond~. Company
officials apparently feared the
high radiation levels were due to
local problems. Water Boost Mulled
C/,emente Council to Hike Rates 38 Percent?
1be San Clemente City Council
will be asked to hlke water rates
38 percent when it meets at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the Civic
Center.
The basic monthly household
bill would go from $S.70to$7.86.
The council will also consider
amending the schedule of ~e
escalating charges. Under the
system now, heavy water users
pay less per unit d water the
more water they use.
The council bas mulled
whether the same charee per un·
ll of water should be levied no
matter what the level of use.
A unit or water ls 750 «iallons. 'lbe $5. 70 charge applies to the
tlrst 10 units, or 7 ,500 gallons,
used. That's 57 cents per unit.
Irvine Heir's
Truck Target
Of Theft
Thieves broke into a truck
belonging to Irvine belt James
llyford Irvine as be supped this
morning at a Laguna Beach cof.
fee shop, police said.
Irvine, 23, or 133 Moote Carlo
Drive, Laguna Beach, told police
a 23-channel citiie°" band radio
and 25 bard and folk roek stereo
tapes were stolen. He valued the
loss at $325. . Irvine had parked his new
pickup truck in a lot adjacent to
benny's Jr. RestaW"aDl, um S.
Coast Highway.
He ls the son of the late Myford
ltvlne, former president of the
Irvine Co., and is a great-
grandson of James Irvine,
founder of the Irvine Ranch.
lrvine is secretary-treasurer of
tbe Myglo Corp., a privately
owned Investment corporation
baaed in East Irvine.
'Hoppy'Fan
ToFeteHero
lnS. Laguna
Tbe late William Boyd. who
.oru.,ed former ··movie and
television he~along ~auldy. Will t>e witb •
cmanent memorial plaque at
:oath Cout Community Hospital
a Laguna, donated by a lcag-
lmefan.
Marion B. Guerin, 29, of
lewport Beach, grew up ln
ttlaiata, Jdollslog the world ·~eowboy. • Now an executive with a bull-
~ ... 1ys1ema firm 1D Orute
1 •ty, Guerin wants lo ~
' 1bute to bis hero. •11oppy," who ~ i9d at South Cout lbpit.a1 ln .m.
1 Jle arran1ed wJtb Boyd'•
' tdow, Gflce, of Oma Pcml.
ad bo•pltal autborlUes, to
ONte the plaque at bll own u -
..e.
Tbe plaquo b ~ farun-dni ln tbe bolsi'tal lobb)' at 2 m.~ov.21.
But for the next ~ units, or
1.50,000 ·gallons, only 42 ~ents is
levied, with the price correspon-
dingly decreasing with greater
volumes of water used.
Some of the council have ex-
pressed the feeling that a price
break for greater use of water en-
courages waste.
They propose that a single rate
be applied acroas the board. That
could mean a break far the In·
dividual homeowner, because
with increased revenues a Oat
rate would generate, a lesser rate
bike might be possible.
On a related matter, City
Manager Gerald Weeks plans to
ask the council wbdher it might
consider a $7 .4 million revenue
bond issue to raise funds ror $3.7
million worth of sewer improve-
ments.
II so, bond buyers would be
contacted and the matter
brought back to the council. ~
bably late this month. for a de-
cision on whether to bcx"row tbe
funds.
The bonds would be paid back
over a 2S-year period off re-
venues generated from the sewer
rates. Sewer rates, which may be
set Oct. 20, are expected to
skyrocket by 70 percent.
Alao OD Wednesday's council
agenda are a public bearing on,
the controversial Aries Corp.
coodomin.lum development and a
proposed ordinance to legalize
bingo.
The Aries project. which would
be built at406 Pasadena Court, is
a three-story, 21-uoit building
Jury Picking
Continues in
Bribery Trial
Jury selection continued today
in the Oran1e County Superior
Court bribery trial ot San
Clemente architect Leon Hyun.
Hyzen, 66, or 2100 B S. Ola Vis-
ta, races trial on three felony
counts of offerinl a bribe. He was
indicted by the 1rand Jury after
county Supervisor Tbomu Riley
reported allegedly illegal ap-
proacbea to his office b)' Hpea.
It ls alleged that Hyzen oftered
executive aide Peter Herman a
$1.000 bribe OD three occasions
lut llay as a means ol insuring
that be 1ot the architectural con-
tract for a planned branch
library ln the San Clemellte area.
Jury selecUon io JQdge H.
Walter Steiner's courtroom ii ex· J*!ted to be completed tbday.
Racing Engine
Reported Stolen
A tblef whole mecblllieal ef.
forta out on the driveway wentun·
DOUced intlde a Capistnao Beach
home earned oa a ncbll tDPie
valued by the victlm.&$1,JOO.
Oraqe County lberlff'a of.
Ileen HJd the burallr removed
the hl•b perf ormaan eaitne
from an import cu owned' by BJdmd J . Paque«e, 12, ol N58S
Calle Paloma. Tbq said U..
motorwN takendwiq\hetdPt.
that would face Trafalgar Ca-
nyon.
'lbougb approved by the Plan·
Ding Commission, the council
sent the plan back to that body
for review of setback require-
ments. At one point, the plans
call for the building to come
within five feet of a steep bluff.
A similar Aries prqtect in the
canyon was approved two years
ago and failed to win coastal
commission permits, but not
before a foundation was laid.
The foundation remains on the
site. One or the conditions of the
new project approval were that
the concrete and steel pylons be
removed and tbe slope returned
to its natural state.
The U .S. Environmental
Protection Agency bad projected
the Callout for Pennsylvania after
a nuclear blast occurred at the
Lop Nor testing site in western
China.
Gerusky warned Pennsylva-
nians to carefully wash garden
vegetables before eating them
and said there might be
dangerously high radioactive
level.a in milk.
He said high levels of. radioac-
tivity were found in various
samples of dirt, vegetation and
rain water. He said the rainfall
had brought radioactive
particles Crom the atmosphere to
the ground.
Gerusky said the radiation
levels were the highest in Penn-
Reports Ignored
Mayaguez Deaths
Caused by Error?
WASIUNGTON (AP) -The
U.S. Marine assault of an island
off Cambodia ln the Mayaguez
rescue mission last year was or-
dered, at a cost of 41 lives.
despite ptlots • reports that most
of the crew of the merchant
vessel were not there, a con-
gressional study says. The report
blamed no individuals or depart·
ments. U.S. pilots had already report-
ed that 30 to 40 Caucasians were
on a fishing boat and not on Koh
Tang, where the Mayaguez,
seized earlier by Cambodian
patrol boats, had been taken, the
reports aid.
The report was made by the
General Accounting Office for
the House Jntemaliooal military
and pollUcal affairs subcommJt·
tee. 'lbe panel bad cooducted
hearines on the Mayaguez affair.
The report says that although
the pilots• reporta that nearly all
the Mayaguu' 40 tteW members
were oo the fishing boat -and
not oo the island -were passed on to Washington, details were
too sketchy to make cer!ti.n
whether some crew members
were sun on Koh Tani.
Indeed. the report quotes d ·
ficiala tn Washington u having
unde?'Stood that only eight crew
members were on the boat.
"We acknowledge the dif-
ficulties and uncertainties exist·
i.ng at the time," the GAO said.
"But we believe that several
available opportunii!es to try to
reduce the major uncertainty
during the incident -the loca-
tion ol the Mayaguei crew -
were not pursued.
"The crew's location was cen-
tral to deve loping a U .S .
response," it said.
The GAO report concluded that
the finaJ Marine assault that left
18 dead or missing -and the
U.S. bombing of the Cambodia
mainland -did not influence re-
lease of the Mayaeuez crew,
although it said this "probably
could not have been tnown at the
time."
"However," it continued. "cer·
lain U.S. actions, for example the
sinking of gunboats and U.S. air
activity in the area, probably did
influeoce that decision."
In addition, 23 U.S. airmen
were killed in a helicoptercraah.
The crew or the Mayaguei.
which bad been seized by Cambo-
dian patrol boats on a routine
freigbt-bauline voyage, was re-
<See BESCUE, PqeAZ)
Sore Head
Uttle Old Lady Bops Thi,ef
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A purse snatcher may
have a sore head to prove that two little old ladies can·
make it tough earning a living illegally. •
Sberifl's deputies said the man grabbed 75-year-
oJd Beatrice Sydenburg at a West Hollywood intenec-
tioci. picked her up and carried her about 300 feet
down a bill, threw her to tbe ground, grabbed her
purse, and ran off with *76 and credit cards.
They said Hazel Mercer, 731 witnessed the inci·
dent while gardenlq In her yara and, when the man
ran by, whacked him over tbe head wttb a garden hoe .
The purse snatcher wu lut seen, deputies said,
nmn1ng away hold.lng the purse -and his bead.
~ ~ ______ ._,.. ______ _
The fallout was detected by the
Philadelphia Electric Co. 's
radiation monitoring program at
The radiation findings were
<See FALLOUT, Pace A2)
o.lly ..............
CRIME PAEVENT10N FORCE WILL HARDEN TARGETS
Officer Aon Uster Palnta Out Recent Problem Area
'Frienth' Targets
Of Young Burglars
B1 JACK CDAPPEU Ot ... O. .. , ..........
The boy, who couldn't have
beeo more than 15, knocked long
and hard on the front door.
He didn't think anyone was
home, but be had to be sure.
He and his friend, a classmate,
had been watching tbe house for
a couple days. They knew the
routine there.
If by any c:bance 8D)'ODe came
to the door, be was ready to aak ii
Jimmy were home and could be
play.
But, no one came.
And, be and bla friend were go-Ini to commit a burglary.
In the southern half of Orange
County Jut month there were at
least 170 burtlarles reported,
many of them~ percent lf na-
tJooal atatistics are borne out-
eommitted by buralan between
1S and 17 years old.
And, many of those involved Just such an MO met.bod of opera-.
tion). Statistics show that 48 per-
cent ol the hlta are made by Juveniles who live within blocks
of tbelr vicUm. Only oae pettent
d all burglaries are doM by ''pro{esaJonaJJ. ,.
A $100,000 federally funded
crime prevention Pf'011"81D iolnt·
1y involWI• the Or...,e QJQ.m1 Sber1Jf•1 DepartmtDt. Ind tbe
police departJDeat1 of San
CleinelM and Lacuna Btaeb.. ii
Meld"' to ......... tbt alannlq trend toward m0n aDCI men
burllarlea.
Af theJleart of the J:C'llD ts a talkfOl'ce mack up lbldlf'• de-
putlel Bob N•mltb, .t JtrrJ
Ooldlmidl, Lann• Beada ootice
officer Ron l.llter ud' 8an
Clemente police officer Tim
Hopkin.
The officers' basic weapon is
what they can "target harden-
ing" and a bell er that iC a home is
secure a would-be burglar will
look elsewhere.
Through public and individual
presentations and inspections,·
the officers hope to get residents·
to buy and install adequate locks;
to bar alidlne windows and doors,
and to report suspicious penons <See FRIENDS, Pace AZ>
Coast
Weather
Fair throui.b Wednead8.J except for patchy fog or
low clouds alon1 the coast. Coast .b1aht lD low '108, lows
dabout51.
INSIDE TODA~
Borbcn'Cl w aJUra Cllld Harrw
.Reoaowr. ore oft Co. a~
aarl in tb.W MW "ABC E.,..,..
ilQ Net0t" ~.OC· cordMf to Aaociot«f PNa
TV criffc JOfl mtarllwlt. S.. P0QeA4. •••ex
MYllPllr'fkt Al -~ £;:..;:-'• ea ....,,.,.. ., .......
OMMllM ... ~ =~= ·~ ~ u 0.-c-tty "" ~ 1,:... :u :'!'~ :; E:.--., .. ,, ,...... ., .. ,. .......... "" ..._... ....... : ....... ........... .....
1• ti.I DAILYPILOT L/SC Tueeday, October S. 1978
Water Paci Benefits Seen
' " . ' -. )
Accord Could S~(l $.24(),qt> in Area Projects
By PIOUP SOSMARIN Of .. Delly f'tleUufl
A cooperative agreement
between the city of San Clemeate
and tbe Tri·CiUea Water Diatrlct over the deUvery. of water to the San Onofre nuclear power plant
could eventually bring $240,000 in
annual water projects to the city.
Other benefits, •uch as a waler
luPPJY backup and availability of
water to fi1bt fires, woold accrue
lf the t'Wo tNUPe come to l'etms at a City Council meettac Wed-oeeday.
Tri·Citie' plans to btlild a
milUon·dollar pipeline dlrou.ch
toatbem San Clemente to turnllb
wat.r to the powel' plant.
San Clemente ofllcials contend
that since the line passes through
the city, and since city property
acwunta for 60 pereent of the
water dJstrict's taxing revenues,
the city should sbare in the
wealtb exi>eet~ In power plant
taxes.
'nle W)lter dl&trict DOW levies
an 8-cent tax wbicb garners
$32,000 a year. But with the com-
p.let.loo of two new reaetora at San Onofre aome aeven years
hence, that wm boost tax re-
venues to $400,000 a year from
the plant alone.
Former Freeway
Any increase between now and that time wouJ<t of course in-
creue those already Sllbstantial sums.
Olle fmt-priority project the
district mJght flnance within city
limits, according to City
Dana Land D • Manager Gerald Ween. ls a •spute 10-million·gallon reservoir ., behind Presidential Heights
Settlement Urged
By KATHY Cl.ANCY
Ot-.0.11, ...........
Oranse County' Counsel
Adrian Kuyper is recomn:tend-ing that county supervisors
spend up to $331,386 to settle a
land use dispute in the Dana
Hills area.
Kuyper's costly recommenda-
tion was expected to be con·
aidered by supervisorS at their
meeting today.
The dispute involves the route
of the now -defunct Pacific
Coast Freeway, which would
have passed tbFOUfb the -.t-50-
acre Thunderbird Capistrano
planned community nortb of
Stonebill Drive and west of
Golden Lantern Street.
The freeway route would have
taken 80 acres ol that land,
Kuyper explained, and would
have cut off another 100 acres
in the planned community.
The route area bad been
zoned by county supervisors for
open space and freeway use in
anticipation of the proposed
freeway.
And even after state officials
dropped plans for the freeway
in 1972, county officials kept the
zoning for possible use as an
arterial highway.
But developers of the housing
tract, Meeker Development
Company, bad filed suit 19
months ago against the county
and state contending the zoning
resulted in inverse condemna-
tion and caused them to lose up
to,$2 million, Kuyper said.
Now, after two delays, the
matter has been set for trial
Nov. 30.
Kuyper, in bis report to
supervisors, said the trial could
be a cosUy one to the county in
that it would re~uire at least
four lo six weeks m preparation
and trial time.
l're•P~AJ
RESCUE •••
leased M~y lS, llm5 about the
same time the Marines aasawted
. Koh Tang Island and U.S. plaJles
· bombed a port and airfield on the
mainland.
The report says that on May 13,
. the day after the ship wu seized,
U.S. Jell made low passes and re-
ported back that 30 to 40 possible
Caucasians were on a fishing
boat.
Although the piJots were flying
too fast to get a good look, the re·
port said, they saw that the
passengers appeared to be too
large to be Orientals and that
they were wearing brightly col-
ored slickers and other clothing
that appeared to be Western
rather than Cambodian.
It quotes Defense officials as sayinl that the pilots' reports
were telephoned to Washington.
But the report says too little de-
i.il was tiven to tell decision
makers what the pilots bad seen.
In addition, he said, the coun·
ty could be liable for damages
in the matter because the land wu zoned for public use before
it was actually purchased by a
government agency. That could
be interpreted as a government
agency zoning land it haped to
acquire eventually, thus lower· inc its value.
Kuyper told supervison the
state 1till plans \0 go to trial on
the issue, noting the developer
contends-the state should
purchase his land.
But, be continued, the. 1irm
has lowered its out of oourt set-
Uement demand to the county
from $80(),000 t.o $337,386.
He asked permission to
nesotiate a final settlement for
that amount or lower. depend-
ing upon whether the county's
insurance firm wiU pay part of
the seUJement. Kuyper said in-
surance may cover up to $50,000 ot Uie final payment.
County planning officials said
about half the 4.50 acres has
be)'n developed. A plan for
much of the remainder is now
in the hands of planning of-
ficials. who are working on re-
visions before submitting it to
the Planning Cosnmission.
The recent Southeast Orange
County Circulation Study
<SEOCCS> eliminated a
transportation corridor in the
area, and the current develop-
ment plan also eliminates such
a thoroughfare, planners said.
Cycle Rider
•
Succumbs to
Crash Injury
A Camp Pendleton Marine, in-
jured when h'is motorcycle
crashed into a pole in Newport
Beacb last month, succumbed to
his injuries this weekend, ac-
cording to police.
Traffic invesUgators said Gary
Lee Murch, 18, dJed Saturday,
becoming the third traffic fatali-
ty in Newport Beach U$ year.
According to the .coroner's of-
fice, the youth died of complica-
tions of a skull fracture be suf-
fered on Sept. 18 when bis
motorcycle failed to make the
sharp right curve on Superior
Avenue above Pacific Coast
Highway.
The other two traffic deaths
both involved bicyclists. In May,
a bicyclist apparently leaving
the Balboa Bay Club's Chili Co.n·
test died when be was bit bead on
by a car on West Coast Hidtway.
Jn March, another cyc1lst, try-
ing to cross West Coast Highway
near the Arches Overpass, was
hit by a car and died.
Traffic investigators noted
that lut year at this time, four
people bad died in trafiic acci·
dents and tn 1974 the figure was
seven.
,.,....PageAJ
homes.
The cllY already has a stake in
supplying water to San Onofre. A
temporary city water line does
the job now and wUl operate until
the Tri-Cities line is completed.
Tri-Cities is due to begin con-
struction ne.i week.
San Clemente and Tri-Cities
battled for two years to win the
right to provide water to San
Onofre. The city has even con-
sidered seceding to San Diego
County because municipalities
cannot annex across county
lines.
But Tri-Cities won the annexa-
tion fight and captured the San
OnofretaxprizelastDecember.
Some of the friction resurfaced
after 'l'ri·CiUeA aw~ the con-tract to begin construction of the
delivery pipeline.
Permits were obtained to ex·
cavate along El Camino Real but
were later revoked by City
Engineer Phil Peter. The
permits bad been issued in
Peter's absence by Howard
Birlew, assistant city engineer.
Peter charged that Tri-Cities
deliberately waited until be was
out of town before seeking the
MISSION •..
Francisco de Lasuen. whose 1885
attempt lo establish a mission at
San Juan was aborted by an In-
dian uprising.
Father Martin, in tum, pre-
sented each guest with a bicen·
tennial medal commemorating
the tnission 's 200lh anniversary.
"Vaya con dios," said Father
Martin, as be ended the chapel
ceremonies. "May God go with
you, wherever you go."
The Spanish visitors gathered
in the courtyard to watch as the
nag of Mallorca was raised on
the mission flagpole and then
walked down San Juan's main
thorou ghfare, Camino
Capistrano, to the El Adobe
restaurant, where city officials
welcomed them with a buffet re-
ception.
Mayor Douglas Nash told the
gathering of local and Spanish
civic leaders that although San
Juan bas changed a great deal in
it.a 200-year history. the city is
pledged to protect and enhance
its Spanish heritage.
Councilman Yvoo Heckscher
welcomed the guests in Spanish,.
and plaques wttb'San Juan's city
seal were presented to the visit-
ing dignitaries.
Paulino Bucbes Adrovrer,
mayor of Palma and a Spanish
senator, then presented Nash
with a Mallorcan nag and made
him honorary mayor of the Cas-
tle of Bellver, 'which be called
"the most important ~astle in
Mallorca."
Dinner was served following
the ceremonies, and when ever·
yone bad eaten and the euests
were preparing to leave, they
gave Nash a standing ovation,
chanting "Doog-lass Naash,
Doog-laa N aash."
"It's been a tremendous day,"
Naab said in farewell. ''I only
Wish you could all vote."
permit.a. wbicb Peter cootends
ibould not be lasued uoUl after the cooperative agreement ls
ai&ned. JIU& Birlew said he was advised
by tbe city attorney that It wouh\
have *n iU•••l for b1m to deny the excavation permits.
Tri-Cities officials and City
Muqer Weeki act ~erned
about tb• spat. however, &od 11ld
tb•lr lnterett la in mutual
cooperation.
W..U 1aJd the peruilt luue is "academtc. 'J;'b• atnement's fo-
lq to be worffcl out in ttme for
the"1. to eta.rt tbolr project.•'
China Env~Y.
Sees Soviet,
U.S. War
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
<AP> -Chinese Foreign
minister Chiao Kuan-hua told the
U.N. General Assembly today
that war between the United
States and the Soviet Union is in-evitable. _
"This is independent of man's
Will," be added.
Chiao, following the usual
Chinese pattern of attacking the
Soviet Union, said Soviet "social·
imperialism is the biggest pea.ce
swindler and the m06l dangerous
source of war today.
"As chairman Mao Tse-tung
pointed out, the current interna-
tional situation is cbaracteriz;f
by great disorder under heaven,
and it is excellent," he said.
ThiB disorder, be added, will
awaken and temper the people
and {>USh the international situa-
tion m a direction "unfavorable
to imperialism and social-
imperialism."
Cbiao's speech, the fmt major
Chinese foreign policy address
since Mao's death last month.
was clearly keyed to the Third
World. He urged developing
countries to oppose the
superpowers and specifically the
Soviet Union.
"Some people are terrified at
the mention of the Soviet Union,
thinking that it cannot be
to1,1ched." he said. "This is
superetltion. Soviet social-
imperialism is nothing to be
afraid of. It is outwardly strong
but inwardly wealc."
Quoting Mao, be continued:
"All reactionaries are paper
tigers. The revisionist Soviet
Union is a paper tiger too."
Cbiao said the struggle
between the United States and
the Soviet Union was founded on
the "unalterable" facts that "the
United States bas vested in-
terests to protect around the
world and the Soviet Union seeks expansion."
Of the two, he said, the Soviet
Union ls the more dangerous
because "every da y it
talks 'peace' but practices ex-pansion.'·
Chiao said the, process of de-
tente was "a fraudulent and
hollow phrase." He said the 1975
Helsinki conference on European
security was only a Soviet at·
tempt to put Western Europe off
guard, "divide and crush it
piecemeal and ultimately seize
the whole of Western Europe."
In his 30-minute s~h, Chiao
also welcomed Egypt's move to
break its treaties with the Soviet
Union and called for a unified
Cyprus, ouster of U.S. troops
from South Korea, a "reasonable
solution" in Lebanon and ad-
mission of Vietnam to the United
Nations.
He hailed race connicts in
Rhodesia, Namibia and South
Africa and condemned the Soviet
Union for "attempts to selie the
opportunity to sow discord and
carry out armed intervention
while P,retending to support na-
tionalllberation movements."
LYNDA REYNOLDS, NEW FRIEND NANCY TAKE STROLL
Bffnd Women Loin Gulde Dog but Receive• New One
Ber New Eyes
Girl's Hero Dog Replaced
Lynda Reynolds of Huntington
Beach bas a new guide dog today
lO replace Pixie, the Labrador
retriever credited with saving
her blind mistress' life.
On May 7, Miss Reynolds was
walking with Pixie at the comer
of Slater A venue and Koledo
Lane when sbe started to cross
the street in front of an Olle<>ming
school bus.
"Pixie pushed Lynda." Miss
Reynolds' mother explained.
"She saved her.''
Pixie waa killed instantly by
the school bus. Miss Reynolds
sutferedonly a broken foot.
Now through efforts of local
citizens and the Guide Dogs for
the Blind of San Rafael, Miss
Reynolds has a new guide dog
named Nancy. She is also a
Labrador retriever.
Miss ~eynolds and Nancy have
just returned from San ·Rafael
after three weeks of training and
getting acquainted wltb each
other.
Miss Reynolds owned Pixie for
about nine years and bad obtained
her through the San Rafael or-
ganization, according to ber
mother.
Pixie would have bad about two
more years of active work, then
Miss Reynolds' parents planned
to adopt Pixie .as a pet and their
daucbter would obtain a younger guide dog.
Miss Reynolds misses Pixie but
says she "doesn't have any pro-
blems" with her new friend,
Nancy.
"She's a litUe different but she
likes to work and is very friend-
Jy." the Huntington Bea< woman said.
"I've just had her doing Utt
things each dar so she can a
used to her new home,'' sl added.
"It takes a wblle to get used
walking with a new guide doe
said Miss Reynolds. "She'll ju
be bouncing along the street a1
I'd think something was wror
butit'snot. ••
Fro• Page AJ
FALLOUT.
also verified by tests conductt
by the Pennsylvania Dep~e1
of Environmental Protec!tJbn ar
by the radiation monitoJina pc
gram at the Three Mlle law
nuclear plant near Hanisbura.
Jolm Hope, a spokesman f•
the state Department of ~vtro
mental Resource•, said the fir
tests of milk aamplet were cor
pleted um mornJng and reveal•
radiation levels of US pico C!Wt
per liter. That ia approximate
thewame level that exllted durl>
widespread nuclear tatln8 tn t'
early 1960s, he said.
"We would be more C<JG~
if the levels moved lnto ti
thousands or tens of thouaana,
ffope Said. I :
He added, however, that 1
ftcials do expect the radlatt
count lo go biaber than Us P1
curies. The norm al level of lod.1
-131 in milk is zero.
As a result, it says, both the
Department of State and the
Paclflc Military Command have
aiDce said that they thoutbt only
aix to nine Caucasians were on
the fishing boat and that the rest
probably were still on Koh Tang Ill and.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
FRIENDS ••.
to the local law enforcement
agency promptly.
They make their pitches to
homeowners associaUons, and to
coffee klatcb groups. Tbey con-
duct individual security inlpec-
tlons of homes, pointing out
weaknesses which can be invita-
tions to burglars.
Laguna Trustees Eye SalarieS.,:
Soon, they'll be able to take
their messa1e to shopping cen·
ten and other places ol public ex·
poeW'e when the unit takes de-
livery in November ot a '9"1,000
motorh<>me outfitted with apecl~
dilplaya and audlo-vlsual 1ear. • "We don't wa_at people making
their bouaes tnto fort.I, but most
hoUses just don't bave iooct locks
on the CIOOl'I or windows,'' Ron
Litle said ln an tntentew.
When buralan •• ln, 1bey cet.
· tn 89 pero111t ot tbe time thnluch door&, and 18 })ercent ot the time tbrauah wladowa. ltatllUce show
that 1n daytime rutdentlal
burtlartea, ao penent ol the
time, no for« is uMd ud fb 38
percent ol the time. eal1 minor
lone ii used.
Otb.u' o;un. •bow tb•l the •verai• hul'flar wW commlt uo bursluia before he ta ca-bl the
first time.
Co11nselors Secretive on Wage Contract Demands ..
By PIDUP a08MADN
OttltO.llyPlllt ....
The board of trustees of the
Laguna Beach Unified SCbooJ
Distridt is expected tonlght'to set
a public hearinc for Oct. II for
community input an a • ., .. and
working condlUou proposal by
the district's counseling staff.
Com01ent oo the i.a,una Beach
Personnel and GUldanee As·
sociation de,nands likely will be
bamstnma ~Y the fact that the
bargaining Uillt bas:::: not to make public its potltlon ay ot
the potntl It liJtJI for lltian.
By contrut tb• IJllUD& Btacb
Facult)t Aaaociatlto. l'fl)l Hllrt>
ing cla11room teacbel'I, bas
uked an ovenll 9.2 J*'t*'t ~
bike. Teaehert are MICJdal1DI
with tile school board, w\kh bu
made lta COWi~ ol SOia' four pereetJt.
The public ~u been ~ed
" both 1ld11' po9ttiom Oft that and other polnta of pomlble dt.·
agreement.
But the proposal of the .dis-
trict'• five counselors, three
speech therapists, psychologist
and nurse Qfters 110 idea, public·
Jy, of what those employes want
Jnaoewoontract.
'lbe aebool board's negotiator,
BW Barnes, said the trustees'
COWlter·propoaal 'i"ill make de·
finite 1tatemenu ot •a!MY. fr. inle beaeftts and ~ coodi-
tlomL.. ID the llllllftef of the COUD·
ter-ooer ~ tbe teacher demands.
But the board W\11 lMa\re tbe d1Hdnntaae of f.1so Dotknowing
what tbe coUAse-~wants.
''lbote JO erpplo)ti, ttierefore,
probably ,,Ul be offered Ute same
,.Sq. teadl#I Wtli'etendered.
UDdW l\tte la1', the board CIQl· not flDd out the l)ltClftcs until .,._.the pu~c bearilll. ~, ,rbo" allo tbe district
IAlltaDt prillclpal for penoane1
mau.t, aald tnaa• bave some mlalf'1b1s about the IQ· nothing
proposal, but said 1t wu the
bargaintng route rec:Ommenaeu
by statewide counaelln1 or-
ganizations.
The strategy. Barnes said, ii to
identify topics of neaotlatlons,
then set to the apeciftcs Ol'lce
bargatning meetlnp eet under
way. Those sessions will come
att~r a public bearing is held on
the board's subsequent counter·
proposal.
But the board, Barnes said, is
concerned that the counselors
have efvtn the publlc notbh1c to react to.
Mattera llated for negotiation
-include the ne1otiatin1 pro·
c.cturea tbem1tlvu, pbyalcal
faclllti11, employ• evaluation,
grfevaace proc:edUNJ, salary
and frinle beneftq, leav. and
trader pollclea, and clerical as·
~.
4bo, 1taltln1 pau.na, pro-r ... iooal dev•lop~t. condi· Uou of employment, job
.reapanatbWUea and 8MOClatlon
ri,hts.
Walt Lawson. president of'1
assodation and counse!o~·
Laguna Beach High &boel;tl)
his 1roup i1n 't trying to blcWTI ot ita positions from the public.
\•
Flankly, he said, the M1i
didn't •how much lnWelt ld'1
public bearings he1d on"•
teachers contract. , ..
And, Lawson aa~ mcintA
the big ltern or coae.m ._
counselors. "TtHtr•'• a aMil'
ty tn the whole tbiN •·far
negottattns about mon~ Lawson said. Jt
•·we're oot taltln1 a•
money. Tbe cllstrict will <WI
what it wantl to 11ve 11 fjff
money. That ••• decidtct. w the buclaet." .,..
The association ls rna"9' e;
cttlMd about world.nl c:cn:Utf<
that mlJbt tend to lmP"M t
sJtuaUon of tbe cltl.kbn his'~
pie work with, Lawaonsaid ....
Orange Coast
EDITIO N
Today's Closa.g
N.Y.Stoelul
VOL. 69, NO. '09, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA C TEN CENTSi
y
Mayaguez Mission Wasteful • ID Lives~
J
"
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe
U.S. Marine assault of an.island
oil Cambodia in the Mayaguez
rescue mission last year was or-
dered, at a cost o! 41 lives,
despite pilots· reports that most
of the crew of the merchant
vessel were not there, a con·
IJ"eUional study says. The report
IJlamed no individuals or depart-ments.
U.S. pilots bad already report-
ed that 30 to 40 Caucasians were
oo a fishing boat aud not on Koh
Tang, where the Mayaguez,
seiied earlier by Cambodian
patrol boats. bad been taken. the
report said.
· The report was made by the
General Accounting Office for
the House Internatiooal military
and political affairs subcommit-
tee. The panel bad conducted
bearings OD the Mayaguez affair.
'I1te report says that although
the piloti' reports that nearly all
the Mayaguei' 40 crew members
were on the fishing boat -and
not on the island -were passed
on to Washington, details were
too sketchy lo make certain
whether some crew members
were still on Koh Tang. Indeed, the report quotes of.
ftcials in W asb.ingt.oo as having
understood lbat only eight crew
members were on the boat.
"We acknowledge the dif-
ficulties and uncertainties exist-
ing at lbe time," the GAO said.
"But we believe that several
available opportunities l4J try to
reduce lbe major uncertainty
during the incident -the loca-
tion of the Mayagua crew -
were not pursued.
''The crew's locatioo ••em-
tral to developine a U.S.
response," It said.
The GAO report concluded that
the ftnal Marine assault that left
18 dead or missing -aod the
U.S. bombing of the Cambodia
mainland -did not ln.Ouence re-lease of the Mayaguez crew,
although it said this "probably
could not have been known at the
time."
"However,'' it continued, "cer-
tain U .S. actions. (Ol'eu.mpletbe
sinking ot gunboats and U.S. air!
activity ln the area, probably did{
influence that decision." :
In addition, 23 U.S. airmen
were killed in a helicopter crash. ,
wbi~b~~rs~~;h~ ~
dillD patrol boats cm a routine ,
freight-bauUng voyage, was re-f
leased llay 15, 1975 about the{
sam?£:e tbe Marines assault.eel I &BSCtJE, PapA!) t ----
if~ 520 Employes to Receive 5.2o/o Boost .
By STEVE MtmlEU. represented by the Costa Mesa Beginning firemen will receive could mean another seven perJ 0ttt.o.11~,.. ... StaH Police Association and Sl,080, a $52 increase, and cent increase to police and fire
Costa Mesa's 520 municipal Teamsters Local 911, will get an veteran fire figbteTS will receive employes because that plan re-
• employes will receive an average five percent increase a$62increaselo $l,250. quires less employe cont:ribu-
average 5.2 percent pay hlke beginning this month, with a The 2.5 percent additional in· lion."
(Jnsaf e Landing
Beverly Hills housewife Rose Gallemore told Costa Mesa
police the accelerator on the Mercedes Benz she bor-
rowed from her brother stuck Monday afternoon as she
drove through a service station at 1916 Placentia Ave.
The car catapulted over planter boxes, scraping across a
guard rail (foreground) before landing atop two vehicles
parked on an adjacent lot. Police said Mrs. Gallemore
wasn't hurt in the 12:51 p.m. crash.
Post Office Sinking
In Congress' Mail
WASHJNGTON 1AP> -Hun-
dreds of thous ands of letters
from congressmen seeking re-
election are being mailed to
voters at public expense.
The mass mailings constitute
the latest instance of what critics
say is use by congressmen of the
free mailing privilege to win
votes.
Congressmen are prohibited
from making mass mailings lo
constituents within 28 days of an
election. So Monday was the
deadline and congressional mail
facilities were busy.
At one time Monday, an
employe pushing a mail.filled
hamper from a hallway outside
<See MAIL, Page AZ>
U.S.-Soviet War
Foreseen by China
. UNITED NATIONS, N .Y .
(AP) -Chinese Foreign
minister Chiao Kuan-hua told the
U.N. General Assembly today
that war between lhe United
Blaze Hits
Costa Mesa
Boys Club
States and the Soviet Union is in·
evitable.
"This is independent ol man's
will," be added.
Chiao, following tbe usual
Chinese pattern of attacking the
Soviet Union, said Soviet "social-
imperialism is the biggest peace
swindler and the most dangerous
source of war today.
"As chairman Mao Tse-tung
pointed out. the current 41ttema-
tioaal situation is characterized
by great disorder under heaven,
and it is excellent," be saift
This disorder, he added, will
awaken and temper 'the people
and push the iDtema&oal situa-
tion in a direction "unfavorable
to imperialism and social-
imperiallsm."
through July 1, tm, the City possible 2.5 percent hike on top of crease would come if the city de· He said the increase would
Council decided Monday rughL that next October cides to join the Orange County come from an out-of-pocket sav·
Council action came after the That five percent increase Retirement Plan, a program ings to employes contributing to
city's three employe ~iations means an additional S54 annual which is currently under study the county plan.
agreed to a memorandum of un-increase to beginning police of· byemployegroups. That would spell an increase of
derslanding with management ficers from $1,107 to$1,161. and a Assistant City Manager Bob about lS percent in salaries for
officials earlier this week. $67 increase to veteran officers, Duggan said that if the city goes those employes, if the county
Police and fire employes, from $1,345 to $1,412. with the Orange County plan, "it (See SALARY, Page AZ>
Callaway
Pressures
Asserted
WASHINGTON (AP>
Former Army Secretary Howard
H. Callaway exerted pressure on
government officials in an effort
lo expand a Colorado ski resort in
which he had a financial interest.
a Senate subcommittee reported
today.
Although there was no
evidence that the pressures ex-
erted by Callaway resulted in ex-
pansion of the Crested Butte ski
area. which Is located on federal
land, the subcommittee found
that bis involvement showed in·
sensitivity to potential conflict of
interests and "raises serious
questions of impropriety."
The subcommittee on environ-
ment and land resources rejected
Callaway's claim lhal he was on·
ly interested in expediting the de-
cision on expansion of Crested
Butte regardless of what the de-
cision might be.
CaJlaway called the report to-
day a "brand-new cheap political
dirty trick."
"It Is the subcommittee's view
that Callaway used the occasion
to press for a decision ... favora·
ble lo the Crested Butte Develop-
ment Corp .. ·· the 175-page report
said.
An 18-page report filed by the
Republican members of the sub-
committee charged that the in-
vestigation headed by Sen. Floyd
Haskell (0-Colo.), "is, by nature
of its conduct and timing, an ex-
ercise for political advantage
and excoriation."
At the time of the investiga-
tion. Callawav was President Ford's campaign manager, a
poslUon he resigned when the
land deal surfaced as an issue.
The four Republi~an members
concluded that ''there was uo
testimony nor evidence that pre-
ssure by Mr. Callaway had been
used in the pursuit or his business
interests."
The report approved by the
five Democratic members
focused on a July 1975 meeting in
Callaway's Pentagoo office with
tbe then·undersecretary of
Agriculture, J. PhJl C8mpbell, de-
puty undersecretary Richard A.
Ashworth, and the associate chief
of the Forest Service. Rexford R.
Resler.
Director Sags
Candidates Loose
For Next Debate
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
director of the debates between
President Ford and Democratic
nominee Jimmy Carter expects
the second contest to be 18$8
tense but more sharply drawn
than the first.
Jim Karayn, directing the de-
bates for the sponsoring League
of Women Voters, said Monday
DEFENSE A VITAL
TOPIC-£dlt0ftal, A6
FORD-CARTER
STANCES GIVEN-A7
that Ford and Carter "must have
been scared'' in lheir first debate
at Philadelphia.
"I think the candidates will be
looser now that they've been.
through it once,•' he added.
He expects the second panel of
interviewers to ask sharper
follow-up questions Wednesday
night than did the first group.
The site of the second meeting Is
the Palace of Fine Arts here.
Timeis6:30p.m. PDT.
"We've asked our interviewers
this time to be sure that their
follow·up questions stay on the
same point as the original ques-
tion," said Karayn.
He made the arrangements to
put the Watergate hearings on
television when president of the
National Public Affairs Center
for Television.
In Karayn 's view, the "ul-
timate consumers" of the de·
bates "are the voters, and our ob-
ject Is lo give them a feel for
these men and their Ideas that
(Sff DEBATE, Page AZ>
...........
'EVERYTHING FINE' -Jack
Kelly, the man in charge of
1V arrangements for Wed-
nesday's Ford-Carter de-
bate, says there won't be
another 27-minute s ilence
like the one that flawed the
first debate.
Mesa Yacht Finn
Told to Sail Away
Costa Mesa councilmen have
given a yacht sales company 45
days to ship out.
They ruled that Dale An-
derson, president ot Spoiler
Yacht Company, ~Newport
Blvd., i1nored earlier requests
that he shape up a potentially
dangerous parking problem at
his business.
Councilmen voted 3 to 0, with
two member! absent, to atve An-
denon 4.5 days to vacate the pre.
miles atter bearing a l«Jllhy
ariwnent from the yacht sales
opet"ator about parttns problem.a
at the alte. ·
China Nuke
Test Rains
In East
HARRISBURG. Pa. CAP) -A
Sept. a nuclear bomb test in
Cbilla baa produced radioactive
fallout "in signfficant quantities
over PellJllylvania." state of-
ficials said today. Thomas M. Gerusky, bead ~
the state Bureau of Radiological
Health, said weekend rainfall
helped produce the fallout, and a
spokesman for the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission in
Washington confirmed the
fallout. Reports of fallout also
were received from New Jersey
and Connecticut.
The U .S. Environmental
Protection Agency had projected ·
the fallout for Pennsylvania after
a nuclear blast occurred at the
U>p Nor testing site in western
China.
Gerusky warned Pennsylva·
nians to carefully wash garden
vegetables before eating them
and s aid there might be
dangerously high radioactive
levels in milk. He said high levels of radioac-u vity were found in various
samples of dirt, vegetation and
rain water. He said the rainfall
had brought radioactive
particles from the atmosphere to
the ground. .
Gerusky said the radiation
levels were the highest in Penn-
sy_lvania in many years. Tests
have begun lo see if further pro-
tective steps are needed, he said
A major danger involves the
level of iodine-131 in milk, he in-
dicated. The radioactive Isotope
gathers on grass, ls ingested by
catUe and can be concentrated in
the milk.
The fallout was detected by the
Philadelphia Electric Co.:s
radiation monitoring proeram at
the Peach Bottom nuclear oower
plant near the Pennsylvania-
(See FALLOUT, Page AZ> I
Coas~
-I
Weather l Fair through Wednesday
except for patchy fog or
low ckKada along the coast.
Fire in a locker room at the
Boys Club on ~Un Avenue in
Costa Meu, caused about $500
damage to the contents ol the
room and about $2,000 smoke
damage to tbe building Monday
ni&ht. • 8attallon Chief Ed Lewis said.
two en1ine companies and a
truck ~ponded to the 7:40 p.m.
tire, extlngui1bing a blue Deal'
l)'ID towels ln the locker room ln
about five m1nutes.
auao's speech, the ftnt major
Chinese foreign policy address
since Mao'a death last month,
wu clearly keyed to the Third
World. He urged developing
countries to oppose the
superpowers.
Sore Head
Little Old Lady BoJM ThUif City pla.anlnl department al·
flclala and nearby property owners told the coUDcll ADCfenon
f&lled to hold up his f.GCI d the barlaln ln a nearly two.year bat-
tle wtttt tenanta adjac«lt to tho
Y•Cbt 1aletllrm.
Cout hl. sba. ln low 70s, lows 1 olabout58.
INSIDE TODA"
Barbaro 1'olttr•.and HanV .~.CT~ ol/ to.a""°°'"• l1larl ln t1*r ftn1 'I ABC Eon-•
J
t "It appears the fire was caused
by someooc smoking In the
locker room," Lewis saJd Wday.
"There's not supposed to be any
amokina activlly in that part of
tbech1b."
ff~ said youngsters were
evacuated ftom the club until the nre was quelled and amoke was
rleand from lbe bulldinl at 2131
'"1ln Ave.
.. ...
"Some people are terrified at
the mention of the Soviet Union,
thlnktnc that lt cannot be
touched,'• be said. "This Is
&uperatttton. Soviet social·
Imperialism is nothing to be
atraJd of. It is outwardly strong
butinwan:Uyweak. ''
Quodng Mao, be continued:
"All reactlonartu are paper
llcera. The revblonlst Soviet
Union 11 a paper tiger too.••
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A purse snatcher may
have a sore bead to prove that two little old ladies can ·
make it tough earning a living illegalty.
Sheriff's deputies said the man grabbed 7~year
o1d Beatrice Sydenburg at a West Hollywood intersec-
tion, picked her up and carried her about 300 feet
down a hill, threw her to the ground, grabbed .,.er
purse, and ran off with $76 and credit cards.
They said Haiel Mercer. 73, witnessed the lncl· cmtt while gardening in her yard and, when the man
ran by, whacked him over the head with a garden hoe.
The purse snatcher was last seen, depuUes said,
running away holdingthepurae-and his bead.
CouncUmen viewed slides,
tP.en by a nearby tenant, which
lbowed congeation m Newport
Boulevard. •itb boats and
trailers D01lnf out lnto tM ltreet. and lD aorne cases, parted al-. lhepul>J.ic rl•bl-of·W~.
1be pbotoa were allepdy taken
after city COIPICil ~al cl a
C11M YACHT, P•Al>
ltlQ New•" pre•ntaffon, oc-l ~ to A•IOCloted Pre" '
TV critic JQJJ Sharbult. s.e
Po{1eA4.
la•e~
At'"-W-.IQ At AM&..1191n J 1.-~• •1 -...,r... , = A14 •*ti AS,...._. .. _, • ... , ............... E• ll o..,.c.-, :i ..... ""~ .......... M ;;;'°~ Af1.U ... ..... It .,...._ AH ...... ,., .... ,......,.. .,
........ ~---M .......... •• _,..._... A4
AJ DAii.••
l1ANNECOOPD °' .............
c
A visitor to Mis.ion San Juan
Capistrano Monday might have
t.boug.bt that by passing IJu"outb
the mission gate he b-1 been
myaterloualy transported to
Spain. ·
The courtyard and chapel
echoed with Spaniah convena·
Uon, u nearly 200 vtaitors from
Spain paid their respects to the
Jewel of the California mlasions.
founded Nov. l, 1776 by Father
Junipero Serra.
.)
....
Amon« the visitors were
emllNriet o( King Juan Carlos~
Sl*b. the DU• aiid Dae_. ol
lllaura. ma1on of several
Spulab citlu, a prl•~l ·
biocrapher of Fat.her Serra an<'
the cllrector ot the J unipero Serr a
museum In Palma. "Our town's tradition comes
from the rich Spanlsb bttitqe ot
this mluion," Father Paul
Martin. mlaslon pastor, told the
villtora assembled tn the mis-
sion's historic chapel. "We com·
memorate today the gift Spain
l'arian~e Denied
Mesa Council
R aps Par king
A developer's planned com·
mercial building in Costa Mesa
came under City Council attack
Monday night for providing too
few parking spaces for the size of
the building.
Boris Pirih, an Anaheim de-
veloper, was refused a parking
requirement variance by the
council, which would have given
him perimission to build a seven-
wlit commercial building at the
-comer of Baker Street and Ran·
.dolph Avenue in north Costa
Mesa.
The parking requirement for a
building that size would be 85
spots but the developer asked the
council for permission to provide
only 69 spaces. 16 short or the
number required under city law.
A spokesman for the developer
argued that parking requirement
would only be 58 spaces ii a bar
located on the site was not in
operation.
That tavern has a capacity of
66 people, and city ordinances
Fro• Page A I
FALLOUT. •
Maryland line.
After the original finding, the
company took the extraordinary
step of halting construction work
at the plant Monda.v. Company
officials apparently feared the
high radiation levels were due to
local problems.
The radiation ftndlngs were
also verified by tests conducted
by the Pennsylvania Department
of Environmental Protection and.
by the radiation monitoring pro-
gnm at the Three Mile Island
nuclear plant near Harrisburg.
John Hope, a spokesman for
the state Department oC Environ-
mental Resources, said the first
tests of milk samples were com-
pleted this morning and revealed
radiation levels or 116 pico curies
per liter. That is approllimately
the same level that ex.isled during
widespread nuclear testing in the
early 1960s, he said.
"We would be more concerned
if the levels m oved inlo the
thousands or tens of thousands."
Hope said. -
Ile added. however, that of··
ficials do expect the radiation
count to go higher than 116 pico
curies. The normal level of iodine
-131 in milk is zero.
Coins, Bills Taken
From Mesa Home
A collection of coins and bills
valued by the victim at $600 has
been stolen from a Costa Mesa
area home by burglars who un-
locked and opened a window.
Orange County sheriff's officers
said.
Deputies said the theft was re·
ported by r estaurant manager
' Francis H. Patterson, 54, of 2586
Wlllo St. He was absent from the
home at the tlme of the break-in.
OAANOE COAST
DAILY PILOT
~~~~:,~,··r,~-;.:;:;:.::;,::;.
(N\t P\lolt-"t"' CMr\oel\¥ ~at~fd1t ... \ *'°"
o.t>h""'4 MtM•f '"'OvOft f ttMt I .. (MtA
Mt,. Now-.. .Ch ""'"'""'°"Boot• ~•••"' Y•llt• Jryt,_• \lctcll.0«' V'tl!ll~ AniQ ..._ .... ,.,'9vth0..\I .... ft(l'o.__,..,.
ttoft t\ pwMf\M>d S•tV"O•V' Md \uNMY\ ,,,.
c::.~,~:.'l.~1',:~Z&."' w.·.t 6•• .. _, .. _
Pn•tolftt .,.. ttwt111W.
JIKtll (-~ VK• P.n•cMn1 • .._,Git,..,, .. ~
1-•ll-ldllOt
T-•A"I ........ M1~111qt01..-
0...W•M.l-111<_.I' ... II "'"'"°"' M•-1 .. l•ltrl
COiia MeH OfftCle
Mtllo"' ..i:=:' ~·J ·~~MO. tlt!t
~!''= ~ °',~. c="~~~. "'1'1U •t .ct.ZrthfM•f\lt ....,.~ ........ ......... ( ..... ,. ..... ,..,., --·-.. ,_,..,.._
. ~r,:i..,<,:,e•t,.::!~r: .. :: ... :' (~::, 't1':.
"'lfllt~tf •• •••' \t M ,,..._~ .... M4IU .. • __ u,. ...... 1111.
f
call for a parking space for every
two bar patrons.
Pirlh sought the vari~~!i.~ay· jng the bar is predominHJUl)' for
night time use, and would not con·
ruct with daytime users or the
9,380square foot building.
The developer also said the
tavern owner's lease will expire
in the next five years and will not
be renewed..
Mayor Dominic Raciti said the
council could not approve the
variance on the word or the de·
veloper that the tavern would be
closing its doors in the future.
Councilman Ed McFarland
said, "We don 'l know what might
happen to that area in the next
few years. It looks lo me like it
will become a much more desira·
ble spot in the future.'' due to de-
velopment or the freeway and
South Coast Plaza.
"You'll be needing those extra
parking spaces in the future,·· he
said.
Councilwoman Norma Hertzog
suggested, "Take vour proposal
home and worry it a little more."
adding that another building con-
figuration might help meet the
parking requirement.
McFarland agreed. saying,
''We're talking about a building
that is essentially twice the size
of that allowed for the number of
parking spaces he is asking for."
He said approval of the park·
ing variance would be creating a
problem for the future develop·
ment of north Costa Mesa.
Mesa Assists
Service Units
With Funds
Two service organizations
have received a total of $17,788 in
federal revenue sharing funds
from the city of Co!!ta Mesa to
continue their programs.
Councilmen approved an al·
location o! $11, 788 to the Mardan
Center Monday and another
$6,000 to the Share Our Selves
CSOS> group from the remaining
$25,000 in rev~nue sharing funds
held by the city.
The Mardan Center, in oper·
lion since 1962 in Costa Mesa.
trains teachers at all levels to
Identify and help children with
learning disabilities.
Share Our Selves, a four-year-
old progr~operat.ing from St. John the B tist Catholic (,,'burch
on Baker treet, provides
emergency ~helter and food to
destitute families.
FroaP~AJ
DEBATE •••
the voters don't get on the nigh Uy
news or on the Sunday interview
show."
Of criticism that the first de·
bate was dull, he said, "We'd
rather be accused ~ beinl dull
and informative than being 1lppy
video and irrelevant. Everything
on television can be 59 seconds of
POW! This is serious business."
Technical problems that
nawed the telecast ol the first de-
bate with a 27-minule silence
won't recur durlng the second de-
bate, tbe man in charge of
television arrangements said
Monday .
"Everything is going to be just
fine," sald Jack Kelly, pufftna on
bis pipe as be surveyed the nurry
ol activity at the Palace of Fine
Arts.
Ford and Carter wt.II debate
foreign policy and natlonal
aecurity before a highly select
Uve audience of 578 and a
t.leviaJon audience~ millions.
'lbe candidates were arrlvtna
in San Francisco on Monday
amid ''tile bt11est 1eourtty effort
ever bere," said Police Cblef
Charles Gain. "lt'a the nrat time
we've bad both a president and a
presidential candidate'• oppo-
nent here together for an ex-
t.endad atl)'. Tb ere will be a
nschedullna of some police days on and some overtime."
Carter wtll stay at the
Sheraton-Pal.ace Hotti, and Ford
at the home of a prom.l.oent San FrancJaco lawyer.
bu oven to thls put~ tbe Omt-
edstat.ea." Durlftf the chapel eeremonles
SpanlJb matora ru •ent«I Sifta to the misaton, inc l.dn, a plaque
made of tUes tak• from the
birthplace of Fatfier Fermin
Francl!co de Lasuen. Whose 1885
attempt to establish a mission at
San Juan was aborted by an In·
dlan uprising.
Father Martin, in tum. pre-
sented each guest with a bicen·
tennlal medal commemorating
the mission's 200th anniversary.
P..Uon Chief
Pearl West, 54, of Stockton
has been appointed by Gov-
e rnor Brown as the new
director of the state's Youth
Authority Department. She
has been a special consul-
tant lo the California Cowi-
cil on Criminal Justice.
Fro•PageAJ
RESCUE···
Koh Tang Island and U.S. planes
bombed a port and airfiek1 on the
mainland. ·
The report says that on May 13,
the day after the shlp was seized,
U.S. jets made low passes and re-
Ported back that 30 to 40 possible
Caucasians were on a fishing
boat.
Although the pilots were flying
too fast to get a good look, the re-
port s aid, they saw that the
passengers appeared to be too
large lo be Orientals and that
they were wearing brighUy col·
ored slickers and other clothing
that appeared to be Western
rather than Cambodian.
"Contrary lo the defense asser-
tion," the report says . "we
believe there is no way to de-
termine the impact that accurate
or more complete information
would have had on the declsion-
ma.lcers' assessment of the situa-
tion or on their final decisions ."
But aside from the criticism of
communications. the report said
the U.S. military effort to rescue
the crew "was generally ac-
complished in an efficient and ef.
fectlve manner.
"The performance of U.S.
forces was inspiring," it says.
"V_,a coa dJoa," aald Fa&htr
VartiD, u h• _. the cbapel
ceremoal•. "May God 10 with
you wMl'•v•r you go.·· TIM Spanish visitors gathered
ln the courtyard lo watch as the n., of MalJorca was raised on
the mlsston nagpole and then
walked down San Juan's main
thoroughfare , Camloo
Capistrano, to the El Adobe
reltauram, wh•re city ottlclala
welcome4.tbem wlth a buffet re·
ception.
Mayor Douglas Na.sh told the
3 Irvine
Picke t s
Injured
The district attorney's office
bas filed misdemeanor assault
charges against a Huntington
Beach woman accused of driving
her car into a row of picketers
Monday in Irvine. injuring three
men.
Police said her car struck
three men, who were treated at
Tustin Community Hospital.
None were hospitalized.
The woman charged is Betty
Jane Alvarado, 30, of 17882 Baron
Circle. Although the complaint
has been filed. Mrs. Alvarado
has not yet been arrested or
turned herself in. police said.
The incident occurred at 9 a. m.
when Mrs. Alvarado was drop·
ping her husband, Andrew Adair
Alvarado, al work, Sterling
Power Systems, 167 52
Armstrong.
Alvarado told police he had at·
tempted to come to wort on his
motorcycle al 7:15 a.m ., but bad
turned around and had g<>ne
home wben he saw the picket
line.
Once home, Alvarado said he
phoned bis boss who told hlm to
return to work and come through
the picket line. Alvarado said his
wife then drove him to work in
her car.
About 20 picketers were lined
up in front of the industrial' busi·
ness, reportedly protesting
wages and working conditions.
Police said that on her way out
of the parking lot, Mrs. Alvarado
allegedly drove her auto through
the picketers, bitting one man
bead-oo and striking two others
leu aeverely.
The first man bit was Ramiro
Lopez, 26, or Whittler, who police
said was thrown onto the hood of
the car and then into the street.
He was treated for a bruised
pelvis and kidney damage at
Tustin Community Hospital and
was then released. Police said.
Two others, Donald Aragon, 52
of Norwalk, and Richard Rosas,
39, of Santa Ana, were also h:
and were treated at the hospital
and released. All three are
machine operators.
Police said Mrs. Alvarado told
them she became frightened
when the picketers lined up in
front of her car, shaking their fis·
ts at her.
Witnesses said she was travel·
ing about five to 10 miles per hour
when the incident occurr~. but
that sbe increased to about 2S to
30 miles per hour and continued
driving after allegedly striking
the men.
iatberiq of local .S Spanlab
cMc leaden that a!Cboulh San
Juan bu cba11ged a great deal in
its 200-year history, the city Is
pledged lo protect and enhance
its Spanish heritage.
Codncilman Yvon Heckscber
welcomed the guests ln Spanish.
and plaques with San Juan's city
seal were presented to the visit· lDa dignitaries.
Paulino Bucbes Adrovrer.
mayor o! Palma and a Spanish
senator. then preaented N aJb
with a 14allorcan Oag and mllde
him boMrary mayor ol the Ca
tie ot ~liver. •hicb be caJI•
"the most lmpe>rtant castle
Mallorca. ··
Dinner was served rollowit
the ceremonies. and when eve
yone had eaten and the C\le6
were preparin1 to leave. lb(
gav~ Nash a standl.08 ovatio
chanting "Doo1·iass Naaal
Doog·las Naash."
"It's been a tremendoua day,
Nash satd lo far8'.Yell •11 ODI
wish you could all vote."
Ge t ting Readg E a rly
Workmen s tart construction of the presidential tn:
~uguralLs~and. on the ~apitol grounds -even though the.
inauguration isn't until Jan. 20 and it's still unknown
who will be being inaugurated.
YACHT ••.
one-year extension foe a lem-
parary trailer on lbesite.
Councilmen iasl Apnl ap·
proved the extension with
several conditions. They told An·
derson at that time that be must
provide six customer parking
s paces. keep all boats and
trailers on the site. and get city
permits for some illegal signs on
the property.
Property owners complained
to the council that Anderson bad
not complied with these condi·
Uons, which sparked the council
to revoke Anderson's trailer
permit.
Anderson argued that conges-
tion on the site ls more the excep-
tion than the rule, but Coun-
cilman Ed McFarland interject·
ed, "I've been by there many
times, and I've never seen more
than two spaces available for
parting."
..
F ro•PageAJ
MAI L ••• I•
tbe House folding room to a load-,
ing dock said. "We've been work-
ing nights and weekends tor
three weeks .··
Another said of the mail
volume, "It's unbelievable. It's
as bad now as I've ever seen it.''
A third was asked why there
was so much m ail. "It's election
year," he replied.
The assistant postmaster for
the House said the men we.re
working to get to the Postal
Service before midnight mass
mailings b,Y about 20 represen-
tatives. The Senate s uperinten-
dent or m ails declined to say
whether large mailings bad been
sent by any senators. •
Congress appropriates funds to
reimburse the Postal Service for
its costs in delivering fran.la!d
mail In fiscal 1975, about 317.4
million pieces of franked m~
were sent at a cost of taxpayers
of$34 .5 million. Figures for fiscal
1976 are not av ail able.
Fed Funds Sought
F o r Transit Center
"I don't think you have taken
our conditions seriously, and I
think you may have outgrown
your area," be sald.
He told Anderson that the suc-
cess of bis yacht sales business is
evident, "but you 're DOl being
fair to businessmen around you
who are also trying to make a liv·
ing."
Councilmen amended a plan-
ning department recommenda-
tion which would have given An·
derson 15 days lo vacate the
property, extending that de-
adline to 45 days.
Mass mailings frequently are
newsletters recounting a con·
gressman's accomplishments
and are addressed only to
"postal patron." They are
stuffed into every mailbox In the
congressional district or, in the
case of a senator. in the state.
In the place of a sta.Jm) ls a
frank. a facsimile of the
Congress member's signature,
which allows the item to move
through the mail withoutcharg~
Orange County Transit Dl.strict
(OCTD) directors will seek
federal funds to help build a $3
million mass transportation
center ln Huntington Beach.
They will ask the Federal Aid
Urban Program for nearly $2.5
million tn cons truction funds. The
district will provide the remain-
ing $500,000.
OCTD Manager Ed Loritz said
Monday the proposed facility will
belocatedon82acresJustnorthof
Huntincton Center, on McFadden
TONJGRI'
BEHIND THE
HEADLINES" -Dr. Giles T.
Brown lecturer, OCC Forum,
7:30p.m.
COASTLINE CC LEC'J'URE-
"MeditatJon," Barbara Bullard
leeturer, Ftrst UnJted Methodiat
Church, 7:30p.m.
•1THE RULING CLASS" -
South Coast Repertory Theater.
Tueld11·Sun4•Y tbroUgb Oct. ao,
8p.m.
WEDNESDAY,OCT.t
OCC LECl'URE -'-AYlatloo
Safety for Pllols," Fln• Atta
Blda. 119, 7:10p.m. ·
8ALLl:T lfOLKLOIUCO
MEXICANO-OCCAudltmtum.
t p.m. Admlalion $3.50.
Avenue west of the San Diego
Freeway.
He explained the center will be
designed to serve freeway ex-
press buses, inlra·clty bu.sea and
other buses, as well as planned
rapid rall systems.
The proposed 32-acre site, he
conUnued, la in an area identified
as bavlne high potenUal use as an
OCTD park and ride facility.
Shells End Calm
BEIRUT (AP> -Random
sheWne has marred a three-day
lull in the Lebanese civil war.
Probe Reope n e d
Another Newport
Sniper Reported
Newport Beach police renewed
their lnvestltatlon today of
sniper actlvtty in the area d 16th
Street and Dover Drtve aft.er two
recent 1bootln11 in the
neilllborllood. The tnvaUgaUoe WU orlll.nal·
ty laUMhed tut montb when so-
IMCIDt fired a rtne lbat lnto the
Rale&,b WU. Hoepltal on 16t.b
Street. No oo• w aa lDjared in that
1hootln1. ~c. said no lDcldents were ~until Sunday when a tow
truck drlTer said a rtfte ahat hit
blltruet.
The driver, Da.td Gundanoo.
ol 0 ud W 'fowtna Service, was
ctilpltebed to UM £nteraeetion of
DoYer md 1ltb to tMlp a stranded
IDOtclritt 19l ll1a car .tart.I.
He said be could not Ond the
car and while drMnc around
loolr•nJ for the car, be beard a
lbot. ollce said they found a
spot on the front d the truck
when it bad been bit.
Monday nt•bt pol.Ice ofOcer
Richard T. Long reported that he
heard a shot fired near the In·
tenectloo where be had Pulled a
motoriat over for a trattlc viola-
Ucn.
He said the only other car
around at tbe time wu a yellow
imported plcku.P truct.
lnvestifaton 11;1 tMy are re· newtnc tbeir efforts bl the case.
"We'Ye been hacty eo far," aaid
Det. sst.. lteo Thompaon.
· 'Nobod,)'"a been hurt."
The citizen lobby Comm n
Cause. which has filed s 't
challenging the constituUonallty
of the franklng prtvllege, c0n:
tends the privilege is an untlir
advantage for un incumbent.
Fro"' P age A J
SALARY. • •
plan ts implemented, nuacan
said.
He said the city has notdeclded
one way or the other on adopting
the county plan, but that a com·
rruttee of city employes ls stuely-
ing the program .
"If the city doea not Joi.o tbe
Orange County ReUtement Plan.
we will renegotiate salariu Wlth
those employea next October.•:
He said the increaa. foe other
employes ls a one-year peet~•
and, "we w m be negoUatto1
aalary ln crea1e1 for tb9_m
whether or not we ~v• ~
county reUrement plan. '
Salary ran1ea ror regular
employes will ranee li'Oln tWo
percent to 8.25 perrint lot the
next year, Du11an aald. 1'
Emily Unshackled
OAK.LAND <AP) -A1 Judie
baa ordered clty Jan.a to Jet
Emily Harrla conault with ber al·
torney ln u lnterview room
without being shackled.
Or an:ge £east
EDITION
VOL. 69, NO. 279, 2 SEt'TfONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
' .
: .. Mayaguez Mission Wasteful · in
• WASHINGTON CAP> -The U.S. Marine assault '1 an.Laland
oft Cambodia in tbe Mayaguez
rescue mission last year was or-
dered, at a cost of 41 lives,
despite pilots' reports that most
of the crew of the merchant v.esH! were not there, a coo-
gre:ssiooal study says. The report
"blamed no individuals or depart-ments.
U.S. pilots bad alre.ty report-
ed that 30 to 40 Caucuiaoa were
oa a fishing boat aod not on Koh
Tang, where the Maya1ue1,
sei1ed earlier by Cam~an
patrol boa\a, bad been takm, the
r:_eport said.
· The report was made by the
General Accounting Office for
the House International military
and political affairs subcommit-
tee. The panel bad conducted
bearinga on the Mayagueaaffair.
1be report say11 that although members were on tbe boat.
the pilots' reports that nearly all "We acknowledae the dif-
the Mayaguez' 40 crew members flculties and uncertainties exist·
were on the fishing boat -and ing at the time," the GAO said.
not on the Lsland -were passed "But we believe tbal several
oo to Washington, details were available opportunities to try lo
too sketchy to make certain reduce the major uncertainty
whether some crew members • during the incident -the loca-
were still on Koh Tang. lion of the Mayaguez crew -
Indeed, the report quotes of. were not pursued.
flciala in Washington as having "The crew's locatioo was cen-
undentood that only eight crew tral to developing a U .S .
response." it s aid.
The GAO report concluded that
the tmal Marine assault that left 18 dead or missing -and the
U.S. bombing of the Cambodia
mainland -did DOl influence re-
leue of the Mayaguez crew,
alt.hough it said this "probably
could not have been known at the
time."
"However,". it continued, "cer·
lain U.S. actions, fotexamplet.be
Fallout Taints
I'
T .. ay9 CIOtlhlg
N.Y. Stoeks
N TEN CENTS
Lives.
ainkiq of cuoboats and U.S. air
acUvity in the area, probably did
influence that dee Ilion.•·
ID addition. 23 U.S. airmen
were killed in a helicopter crash.
The crew of the Mayapea,
which had been aeiied by Cam~ dian patrol boats on a routine
fr~t-baulinc voy-.e. wae re-
leased May ts. 1975 lboat the
same Umt Ys~_¥_artnee assaulted <See a ESCVE, Pap AZ)
East
China Test .. Produces Radioactivity
·Fire girl
With all that gear it's hard to tell, but that's a Jfuture
firewoman behind that fire hose. Tessa Fowler, 5, tried
her hand at firefighting Monday during a demoiiitration
by Newport Beach fireman Norm Sadeleer and;ttls col-
leagues at Corona del Mar School. Firemen ar~ visiting
other schools, too, as part of Fire Prevention Week, Oct.
3-9. Jn addition, children· accompanied by adult~ can tour
Newport Beach fire stations during the week. '
.
Post Office Sinking
In Congress' Mail
WASHINGTON (AP) -Hun-
dreds or thousands of letters
from congressmen seeking re-,
election are being mailed to
voters at public expense.
The mass mailings constitute
the latest instance of what critics
say is use by congressmen of the
free mailing privilege to win
votes.
Congressmen are prohibited
from making mass mailings to
eonatituents within 28 days of an
election. So Monday was the de-
'~'Fan
To Fete Hero
lnS. Laguna
'lbe late William Boyd, wt->
portrayed former movie and
television hero Hopalong
~assidy, wlll be bOOOl'ed with a
~anent memorial plaque at
~ Coast Community Hospital
iD Laguna, donated by a loac·
time fan.
Marion B. Guerin, 29, of
Newport Beach , •rew up tn
Atlanta, idolllioa. U1e world
laJDous cowboy.
Now an executiYe wttb a buli· 'lMss eyatems firm 111 Ori.Ille ~ty, Guerin wants to pay
vibute to his hero, "Happy," who
.~ at South Coast Holpltal tn 11'72.
He arranged with Boyd's
wtdow, Grace. of Dana Point, t!!' ... hospita1 authorltle1, to ~te the plaque at hit own U ·
The plaque is scheduled for un-
ttilina in the hospital I~ at z ;>.m. Nov. 21.
ad.line and congressional mail
facilities were busy.
At one time Monday, an
employe pushing a mail-filled
hamper from a hallway outside
the House folding room to a load-
ing dock said, "We've been work·
ing nights and weekends for
three weeks."
Another said of the mail
volume, "It's unbelievable. It's
as bad now as I've ever seen it."
A third was asked why there
was so much mail. "It's election
year," he replied.
The assistant postmaster for
the House said the men were
working to get to the Postal
Service before midnight mass
mailings by about 20 represen·
tatives. The Senate superinten·
dent of mails declined to say
whether large mailings bad been
sent by any senators.
Congress appropriates funds to
reimburse the Postal Service for
Its costs in delivering franked
mail. In fiscal 197~ about 317.4
million pieces of ftanked mail
were sent at a cost ol taxpayers
ol s:M.S million. Figures for fiscal
1f'19 are Dot available.
Mass mailinp frequently are·
newsletters recounting a con-
1re11man 's aceomp~bments
a nd are addressed only to
"postal patron." They are
stuffed into every mailbox in the
coacresalonal diltrlct or, in tbe
case of a senator, in the st.ate.
Jn the place of a stamp is a
frank, a facaimlle or the
Congresa member's signature,
which allows the item to move
th.rougb the mall without charge.
The cit.lien lobby Common
Cause, wbtch has filed suit
cballeoginc the coastitutionallty
of the lrantlng prtvlltp. COO·
tends the privllege ls an unfair
advantaae for an incumbent.
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP> -A
Sept. 26 nuclear bomb test in
Cb!na has produced radioactive
fallout "In significant quantities
over Pennsylvania," slate of-
ficials said today.
Thomas M. Gerusky, head of
the state Bureau of Radiological
Health, said weekend rainfall
helped produce the fallout. and a
spokesman for the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission in
Washington confirmed the
fallout. Reports of fallout also
were received from New Jersey
and Connecticut.
The U .S . Environmental
Protection Agency bad projected
the fallout for Pennsylvania after
a nuclear blast occWTed al the
Lop Nor testing site in western
China.
Gerusky warned Pennsylva-·
nians to carefully wash garden
vegetables before eating them
and said there might be
dangerously high radioactive
levels in milk.
He said high levels of radioac-
tivity were round in various
samples of dirt, vegetation and
rain water. He said the rainfall
had brought radioactive
particles from the atmosphere to
the ground.
Geruslty said the radiation
levels were the highest in Penn-
sy_lvania in many years. Tests
have begun to see if rwtber pro-
tective steps are needed, he said.
Director Sags
A major danger involves the
level of iodine-131 in milk, be in-
dicated. The radioactive isotope
gathers on grass, ls ingested by
cattle and can be concentrated in
the milk.
The fallout was detected by the
Philadelphia Electric Co. 's
radiation monitoring program at
the Peach Bottom nuclear Power
plant near the Pennsylvania-
Maryland line.
After the original finding. the
company took the extraordinary
step or halting construction work
at the plant Monday. Company
officials apparently feared the
high radiation levels were due to
local problems.
The radiation findings were
Callaway
Pressures
Asserted
Candidates Loose
For Ne~t Deba1te
WASHINGTON <AP >
Former Army Secretary Howard
H. Callaway exerted pressure on
government officials in an effort
to expand a Colorado ski resort in
which be had a financial interest,
a Senate subcommittee reported
today.
Although there was no
evidence that the pressures ex-
erted by Callaway resulted in ex-
pamion of the Crested Butte ski
area, which is located on federaJ
land, the s ubcommittee found
that his involvement showed in-
sensitivity to potential conftict of
interests and "raises serious
questions of impropriety.·'
The subcommittee on environ-
ment and land resources rejected
Callaway's claim that he was on·
ly interested in expediting the de-
cision on expansion of Crested
Butte regardless of what the de-
cision might be.
Callaway called the report to-
day a "'brand-new cheap political
dirty trick."
"It ls tbe subcommittee's view
that Callaway used the occasion
to press for a decision ... favora-
ble to the Created Butte Develop-
ment Corp.," the 175-page report
said.
An 18-page report filed by the
Republican members of the sub-
committee charged that the in-
vestigation beaded by Sen. Floyd
Haskell ( D-Colo.}, "Is, by nature
of Its conduct and timing, an ex-
ercise for political advantage
and excoriation.''
At the Ume of the investiga-
tion. Callawav. was President
Ford's campaign manager, a
position he resigned when the
land deal surfaced as an issue.
SAN FRANCISCO tAP} -The
director or the debates between
President Ford and Democratic
nominee Jimmy Carter expects
the second contest to be less
tense but more sharply drawn
than the rirst.
Jim Karayn, directing the de-
bates for the sponsoring League
of Women Voters, said Monday
DEFENSE A VITAL
TOPIC-£dltoriat, A6
FORD-CARTER
STANCES GIVEN-A7
that Ford and Carter "mus t have
been scared'' in their first debate
at Philadelphia .
"I think the candidates will be
looser now that they"ve been.
through it once,'' he added.
He expects the second panel of
interviewers to ask sharper
follow-up questions Wednesday
night than did the first group.
The site or the se<:ond meeting is
the Palace of Fine Arts here.
Timeis6:30p.m . PIYI'.
"We've asked our interviewers
this time to be sure that their
follow-up questions stay on the
same point as the original ques-
tion, .. said Karayn.
He made the arrangements to
put the Watergate hearings on
television when president of the
National Public Affairs Center
for Television.
In Karayn's view, the '"ul·
timate consumers" or the de-
bates ·•are the voters, and our ob-
ject is to give them a feel for
these men and their ideas that
the voters don't get on the nigh Uy
news or on the Sunday interview
show."
Frisbee Flinger
NB Youth Wim $500 Prize
Chris Johnson's story could be
entlUed "Fl'labee for Fun and
Profit." The 15-yeardd Newport
Beach youth bas just returned
from an all-expenses paid bip to
Atlanta, where he placed second
iD the national Frisbee competi-
Uoo.
As a result, Chris 11 now $500
richer In addition to bJs enjoya-
ble experience in performing
wttb the best Frlsbee flingers in
the world before a crowd ol200
J ohnson m 1de the trip to Allan·
ta after be won the Western
Reilonal competition in Las
Vegu, wttb a neal"perfect store
bl earlY September.
Re dldb't fan! aa well this Ume,
butaald be wu satldled wttbh.ls
performance.
Joh.nsoo was edged out ol the
Sl,000 first prize by a mere thl'ff
points. The winner was a yomig
New Yorker who is ranted ellbth
in the world. ''He was definitely
procaliber," Jobnsonaald.
Although the Corona del Mar
High Sehool sophomore plans to
enter more tournaments in the
futw-e, be is now concentrating
on winning a place on the
school's junior varsity tennis
team.
Johnson ls not sure bow be'U
spend the money he won, but
there's a chance lt may 10 lnto a
fund for bls flrst car.
Johnson ls the SOD ol Mr. and
Mn. MerriU Johnton, 1IM Port
Dwllellb Place.
.~ .. ...,.....
'EVERYTHING FINE' -Jack
Kelly, the man in charge of
TV arrangements for Wed·
nesday 's Ford-Carter de-
bate, says there won't be
another 27-minute silence
like the one that flawed the
first debate .
Fede ral Aid
For BB Bus
Center Sought
Orange County Transit District
(OCTD> directors will seek
fedual funds to help build a $3
milllon mass transportation
c:entu 1n Huntington Beach.
They will aslt the Federal Aid
Urban Pro1ram for neatly $2.S
million 1n construction funds. 1be
district will provide tbe remain-
~$500.000.
OC'l'D Manager FA Loritz said
Monday the proposed facility will
belocatedon32acresjwitnorthof
HunUnrton Cente~1 on McFadden
Avenue west or tne San Diego P'teeway.
He explained the center will be
del1cned to serve freeway ex-
press bUHS, intra-city buses and ~ buses, as well u planned
rapld ~all systems.
<SeeTRANSIT ...... AZ•
alto verified by tests conducted
by the Pennsylvania Department
of'Environmental Protedion and
by the r8dlaUon monitoring pro-
gram al tbe Three Mile Island
nuclear plant near Harrisburg.
John Hope, a spokesman for
the state Department ol Environ-
mental Resources, said the first
tests of milk samples were com· pleted this morning and revealed
radiation levels of 116 pico curies
per liter. That is approximately I
the same le\lel that existed during
widespread '1uclear testing in the
early 1960s, he said. j
"We would be more concerned
if the levels moved into the I
thou.sands or tens ~ thousands," I <See FALLOUT. Page AZ>
U.S. War
Inevitable,
ErwoySays
UNITED NATIONS, N .Y .
(AP> -Chinese Foreign
minister Chiao Kuan-hua told tbe
U.N. General Assembly today
that war between the United
States and the Soviet Union is in·
evttable.
"Tbis is independent of man's
will," be added.
Cbiao. following the usual
Chinese pattern of attacking the
Soviet Union, said Soviet "social·
imperialism is the biggest peace
swindler and the most dangerous
source of war today.
"As chairman Mao Tse-tung
pointed out, the current interna-
tional situation is characterized
by great disorder under heaven,
and it is excellent,'· be said.
This disorder, he added, will
awaken and temper the people
and push the international situa-
tion lo a direction "unfavorable
to imperialism and social-
imperiallsm. ·•
Cblao's speech, the first major
Chinese foreign policy address
since Mao's death last month,
was clearly keyed to the Third
World. He urged developing
countries to oppose thE'
superpowers and specifically the
Soviet Union.
"Some people are terrified at
the mentJon of the Soviet Union,
•hinking that 11 cannot be
touched," he said. "This is
~uperslition. Soviet social-
imperialism ls nothing to be
afraid of. It is outwardly strong
butinwardly weak."
Quoting Mao. he continued:
"All reactionaries are paper
tigers. The revisionist Soviet Union Ls a paper tiger too.··
Co ast
We athe r
Fair through Wednesday
except ror patchy fog or
low clouds along the coasL
Coast blfbs In low 70&, Iowa
dabouta
INSIDE TODA ~
Barbara Waltn1.ond HGrnJ
.R«UOMr are off to.a maooth
aart '" t~r nn> "ABC Even-ing NNf" prt1mtation, ac-
oordmo to Attocioted Preu
1V critic Jar Shorbvtl. St.
Po/leA4.
l•dex
AtY-terYlc• Al .-.u-... ea
...._-....-:.. ., MtMyn... -·· ~-:r <1114 -~.. ., • •. ,,..., ,..,.., "'i 0..lf'-41 .... , • .._. ... , ..... A
CIMtic• •• E OWtny ", =:=c.. .'l: : :u
....,.... ..... 'It Mlrtt.tt <1111-11 .....,__,,, er ~--AU "-'t A 11-11 11MMen er ........ ··--.. ....... ...... , ..........
I
.. ,ti DAILYrlLOt N Tuv-JGu(,UClOberl, tm
SpaaislJ Wfitors See .J.emel of Miss
87 ANNE COOPD Of .. Dtlly"" .. ....
~ ............ ,...
Clptltr IUO 11ond., m1tlrt bave
tboueht that by Pusi.al U\roQc.h I.he mlsaion nte be had been
mysteriously transported to
~ 'nt. eourtyard and ebai>e)
echoed with Spani&b cooversa·
don, as nearly 200 ft5Jton from
9paiD paid their ~ to the
Jewel ol the Cdfon1b ml.lllons.
lomcled Now. i. i m by l"alher
Junfpero Serra.
c.Ju~ Uat "lal*or& ••• ...... ulliaof Kbta~CVlOISrl
...-... Dute a ~1n Of
Jlnl'a •. ••Yora of Mweral IJ!••l•la ellle1, a piiHt·
'1 .. •rflll'.-Slln-'
the dbector of the Janlpero Serra mmewn ill Palma.
''Our town 'a tr.di.tkm comes
from the rich Spaoisb heritage ol
this mluloo," Father Paul
Martin. mission pelt«, told I.be
villtcn uaembled in the mls-
siaD '1 b.lAoric chapel. ·•we com·
memorate today the cl.ft SPaln
ba•.n-to tblll~ dtbe Uml· ed ... _..
~ ~ c.Upel cwWWWClld• =...;:c:r.s;r:1e--.. "'. ua.-tMM ~ birthplace or F aUaer Fermin
Franclsco de Lu1Ma. Mae tm
attetppt to establish a ndulon at
San Juan wu aborted by an Jn.
dian uprislnc.
Fllber If artl.D, in tarn. pre-
llllted eacb su-t "1lb a blcen· tanla1 medal commmnorating
the mlssJoo's 200th aonl~.
Coast Woman Charged
Aut.o Strike&, Injure. Three Irvine Preket.s
1he district arno.ney's offtce
bas fUed misdemeanor assault dlarges apiut a lhlllttngtoa
Beach wooian accused of driving
her car into a row of picketers
Mooday in Irvine. iqjuring three
men.
Police said her car atruck
three men, who were ~ at
Tuatia Community Hospital.
None were bospit.aliz.ed.
The woman charged is Betty
Jane Alvarado, 30, of 17882 Baron
Circle. Although the complaint
has beeo filed, Mrs. Alvarado
has not yet been arrested or
turned herself in, police said.
Tbe incident occurred at 9 a.m.
wben Mn. Alnrado was drop·
piQI her b91bud. Andrew Adair
Ahar•do, at work, Sterling
Power Systems, 16752
AnmtroJIC. AJvando told poliee he bad at·
tenp(ed to come to wort on bis
moUircrcle at 7:1S Lm .. but had
turned around and ·bad fJOlle
home when be saw the picket
lloe.
Once home, Alvarado said he
phoned bis boss who told him to
return to work and come through
the picket line. Alvarado said his
wife thea drove him to work in
bercar. .
About 20 pkteterS wer~ tined
up in front of the tndu:striat buli·
ae4s. reportedly proteatl.Jl1
wages and working conditions.
Police sajd that on her way out
or the parking lot, Mrs. Alvarado
allegedly drove her auto through
the picketers. hitting one man
head-on and striking two others
less severely.
1be first man bit was Ramiro
Lopez, 26, of Whittier, who police
said was thrown onto the hood or
the car and then into the street.
He was treated for a bruised
pelvis and kidney damage at
Tustin Community Hospital and
was then released. DOI.ice said.
Two others, Donald Aragon, 52,
Mondays Off
'Holidays' CtuUe Change
Tbe Newport Beach City Council will not meet on Mon·
day this month because of two holidays, Columbus Day and
Veterans' Day.
COW•BUS DAY is next Monday, Oct. 11. Councilmen
postponed their meeting until Tuesday.
The same thing happens at the end or the month when
the rP1tu1ar1v scheduled council meeting conflicts witb
Veter.ans' Day, Ocl 25. Again councilmen will meet a day 1!1~· City hall will be closed for both Monday holidays.
HOWEVER, Ji\D MYnderse, direetor ol general
services, said trash pickup will be as usual on Columbus
Day. Refuse collect«s will take a holiday on Veterans' Day.
Re said homes that have Monday trash pickup will not
be covered Oct. 25. That trash will be collected oa tbe next
regularly scheduled pickup day for those homes.
Two Escape Injury
In Island Mishaps
Two elderly people escaped
.serious injury Monday in two un-
related traffic mishaps on
.Balboa Island in which their cars
crashed into buildini.s. The first incident ocCUJTed at lL
a.m. outside Amelia's restaurant
at 311 Karine Ave. David Toffel,
76, of Los Angeles told police be
waa pulling out ot a parking
space when he lost control of his
car and ll shot forward. mowing
down a parking s ieo and
eras.biog into a cement bench and iron· gate in front of the
restaurant.
About four hours later, Thelma
Meyer, 71, of 313 coral Ave ..
Balboa Island. was involved in a ·
&hnilar mishap.
F,...PageAJ
FALLOUT. •
Hope said.
He added, however, that d ··
ftclals do expect the radiatioo
count to go higher than 116 pico'
curies. Tbe norm al level d lodlDe -Ul in mllJt h zero.
DAILY PILOT
._,"·-.... , .... n, __ ,.,,..
Jet\•.c.rtrr Vil•""'"*'"· ... -·--,_ ... _
E°''°' n-., ... _.....
--tflel:tlltor -.. ·"-..._.. ...... ................... , ......
~ .... ..,. °'-c-............. c-
-Nt .... -·•• M-r--· ""tt., Of' •4'vt rU'-tm..._t\ ._..,..,,_ Mty ..
t•tf"Mv«.-•ttMvt , .. t-1•1 ""''"'"'°" of _, . .,.._
tt,~;:,:,~".:::~~r.11:".:' (~::, ~
fl'O•t•ly OY 111111 !• IO -"lhlY "''llltrt .. .,.._,_u•-..tflly
She told offlceni she was pull·
ing out of a parking space on
Coral when ber accelerator ap-
parently stuck and the car raced
across the street and ploughed in·
to a home at 310 Coral Ave.
Neither Mrs. Meyer nor Tolfel
reported any serious t.nJurtes.
Parents Held
In Boy's Death
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Police
aay they booked Wendell and
Betty Bennett for investigatloo ol
murder after diacoveri.ag the de·
composed body of their son in a
cloth travel bag stuffed in a
storm drain.
The body of 31-'l-year-old Mka
Bennett was discovered Sept. 6,
otftcials said. The parents, both 22, reported
him missing Aug. ~. The cor·
oner's office said the cause ol de-
ath was a skull fracture and
added that there were al.so old
and recent multiple rib frac·
tures.
Actor Killed
In Crane Fall
CARLSBAD (AP)-One ofthe
best·known amateur actors in
tbe San Diego area died in the
collapse of a 190-foot crane Satur-
day at the Encina plant ol San
Diego Gas and Electric Com·
pa.ny.
Hugh Hochon, 28, was one ol
six wortmen who died in tbe ac·
ddent. Hudson. married and tbe
father d three girls, b.ed won
best supporting actor awards
from lhe Coronado Playbouae
md Actor's Quan..
,....PapAJ
TRANSIT •• •
i'be propoMd 32·ac:re aile. be
continued la ln an area ~ntlfted
aa having high poteoUal use aa an
OCTD part and ridefadUty.
d Norwallt, and Rkhard Rosas.
39, of Santa Ana, were also h: ·
and were treated at the hospital
and released. All three are
machine operators.
Police said Mrs. Alvarado told
them abe became frightened
wben the picketers lined up in
fl'Ont of her car. shaking their fJs.
t.sather.
Witnesses said she was travel-
ing about five to 10 miles pt!r hour
when the incident occurred, but
that she increased to about 25 to
~ miles per bour and oootinued
driving after allegedly st.rildng
the men.
Jury Pick
ForHyzen
Continues
Jury selection continued today
in the Orange Cowity Superior
Court brl bery trial of San
Clemente architect Leon Hyien.
Hyzen, 66, of 2100 BS. Ola Vis·
ta, faces trial on three felony
counts or offering a bribe. He •as
indicted by the grand jury after
county Supervi$or Thomas Riley
reported allegedly illegal ap·
proacbes to his office by Hyzen. lt is alleged that Hyzen offered
executive aide Peter Herman a
$1,000 bribe on three occasions
last May &5 a means of insuring
that he got the architectural con-
tract for a planned braach
library in the Sao Clemente area.
Jury selection in Judge H.
Waller Steiner's courtroom is ex·
peeled to be completed today.
Roy Hoigaard
Services Set
On Wednesday
Memorial services will be held
Wednesday In Coronadel Mar for
Roy F. Hoigaard, a longtime
Harbor Area businessman who
died Sonday in Carlsbad at the
ageof65.
Prior to moving to the San
Diego County town, be bad lived
for nearly 20 years in Newport
Beach where he did business in
marine electronics. He was a
partner in Alcom Marine Elec·
tronics until his retirement last
year.
He leaves bis widow. Betty of
Carlsbad, a daughter Anneke
Hoigaard of Corona del Mar, and
a brother, Richard Hoigaard of
Norway.
Services will be conducted al
0000 at Pacific View Memorial
Chapel with burial to follow at
Pacific View.
Police Seek
2in Weekend
Auto Thefts
Newport Beach police sought
two young mea today whom of.
ficers believe are responsible for a string of car burglaries in
Dover Shores this weekend.
Accordini lo police reports,
the two burglars took items
valued at IJlOre tban $8,M> from
four cars parked ovemtabt
Saturday on Santiago and
Galaxy Drives.
Included among the items
taken were three fUrs valued at
$6,700 taken from the car of
Pamela Popell, 18, of 1958
Galaxy Drive. She told In·
vesuiatora the fun were in a box
wra9ped for malling 1n the back
other Jocked •PC>rtscar.
The thieves appanndy ten a
comer or the convertible top
looH to aet Into t.be car. police,
said.
Al.lo reportin1 losses in the
burgtArtes were Roberta Feld:s·
teln, a. of 1954 Santlqo Drive;
H.O. Davis, 49, of 1951 Santt.,o
Drive, and Damel Brian Gable,
20, of 191S4 Santiqo Drift.
PoUce saJd a _,,.bor @llltt.ed
two youtbl rummacLnt throuP
the car or Geot1le Freeman. 5t. ol
2100 SanUaco Drive. and called police. but UM two ,.,._. men
were IOOC b7 the tlmecntcen .. rtved.
•
"Vva cm dios.·· said Father
Martial. u bf MCs.d tho ebeoel
cenmoaiea. ''ll&J. God fO wltb ~ ........ )'OU So·" r,,,. __ .... vlsltors latMred
ID u.e c:aartyard to watch as the naa ol Mallorca WU raised 00
the m.Jsaioft na1pole and then
walked down San Joan's main
thoroughfar e. Camino
Caplatrano, to the El Adobe
re1taurant.. where city otflciala
weleomed them with a buffet r&
~~ Douglas Nash told the
Park Plans
1atherin1 of local =aisb dvtc lnden tbat alt San
Jun bu cban16d • sreat deal ta
its 200-year history. the dty ill pJ~ed to protect and enhanee
its Spanish hertta1e.
Councllman Yvon Hecbcblr
welcomed the iuesta ln Spanllb,, ~ plaques wfth San Juan's clty
seal were presented to the visit· Ina dlenitaries.
Paulino Bucbea Adrovr.r.
mayor ol Palma 9Dd a Spanlsb
senator, then presented Nub
with a Kallorcan fiag and rQade
blm boooruy m~ d tbe Ue ol Bellwer, wtaldl i. .. tbe most lmportmt c..U.
Mallorca."
Dinner wu served followb
the ceremonJes, and when 8¥'(
t'ODe bad eat• Md the , ... were prepartq to leaV9.
1ave Naab a itandl.nc ovatio
chant101 "Dooa-1 ... Nau.
J>oo«i·lasNaaab. •·
"It's been a tN.,..,_ da,,
Nab Hid In farewell. ''I ool
wish you could all vote."
. .
Bids are being sought for this phase of the
West Newport Park to be built at the east
end of the old Pacific Electric right of '
way between Pacific Coast Highway and
Seashore Drive. The schedule calls for the
contract to be awarded in November with
construction beginning by Dec. 1. The
completion date is set for April 1, tm.
The city currently is negotiating for tbe
rest of the right-of ·way to extend the park
west to the Santa Ana River.
Three Seized
In Beating
And Shooting
f',....PflfleAJ
RESCUE REPORT. • •
Arraignment is scheduled
Tuesday morning for three men
arrested for alleged.Jy pistol
whipping two youths and shoot·
Ing one of them in Newport
Beach this weekend.
The trio, attorney James
Patrick Cantillon, 49, of 1418 W.
Bay Ave .. his son, Richard Henry
Cantillon, 20, of the same address
and Patrick Howard Cannon, 20,
of Beverly Hills were booked on
c.:.tiarges or assault with a deadly
weapon. All three are free on
$10,000 bond.
Police assert Richard Shapiro.
16, and Byron Romer, 18, both of
the Los Angeles area, were as·
saulted when the two youths tried
to collect a debt at the Cantillon
home early Saturday mominsz .
Romer was shot ui the foot dur-
ing the Incident but was released
from Hoag Memorial Hospital
Sunday.
Koh Tang Island and U.S. planes
bombed a port and airfleJd on the
mainland.
Tbe reports~ thatoo May 13,
the day after the ship was seiJed.
U.S. Jets made low puses and re-
POrted back that 30 to 40 possible
Caucasians were on a fishing boat.
~thOQlhthepUotswereflying
too fast to get a good look, the re-
port said, the)' saw tbat the
passengers appeared to be too
large to be Orientals and that
they were wearing brightly col·
ored slickers and other clothing
that appe ared to be Western
rather than Cambodian.
"Contrary to tbe defense asser·
lion," the report says, "we
believe there is no way to de-
termine the impact that accurate
or more complete Information
would have bad on the deci.sioo·
makers' assessment ol the situ•·
lion or on their final decisions."
But aside from the criticism of
communications, the report said
the U.S. military errort to rescue,
the crew "wa:; generally 66C·
Sore Bead
Little Old Lady Bops Thief
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A purse snatcher may
have a sore head to prove that two little old ladies can
make it tough earning a living illegally.
Sheriff's deputies said the man grabbed 75-year·
old Beatrice Sydenburg at a West Hollywood intersec·
tion, picked her up and carried her about 300 feet
down a hill, threw her to the ground, grabbed her
purse and ran off with $76 and credit cards.
They said Hai.el Mercer, 73, witnessed the incl·
dent while gardening in her yard and, when the man
ran by, whacked him over the head with a garden hoe.
The purse snatcher was last seen, depuUea said,
running away holding the purse -and his bead.
Probe Reopened
Another Newport
Sniper Reported
Newport Beach police renewed
their Investigation today of
IDlper activity ln the area d 18th
Street and Dover Drive after two
recent 1hootin1s ln the
aelabborbood. The lnveatigaUon was original·
1y launched lut month wben so-meone fired a rifle &hot lDto the Raleleh Uilll Hospital on 11th
street. Noone was lnJured in that
abootlnc-Police aald no incident. wore
reported until Sunday when a tow
truck driver said a rifle shot hit
blltruck.
1bo driver, David Gundenon.
d G and W Towtna Serltce, was ~to the Inwsectloo of
Dover and 16&.b to help a It.randed
mot.orilt 1et Ills c: 11' started.
He said be could ncl flnd the
car and while drtvine around
looking for the car, be beard a
&hot. Police sa.ld they found a
spot on the front d the truck
where lt bad been hlt.
Monday nigtit police officer
Richard T. Lona r.,.ud th.at be
beard a &bot rrrec1 oear the ln·
tenectioo where he bad pulled a
motorist OYer for a trattic ~
Uon.
He 1aid the only otber car
around at the Ume wu a yellow
Imported pickup truck.
lnvnU1atora say they are re-
newinl their eflorts ln the case.
"We've bun lucky eo far, 11 11.ld
Det. Sat. Ken Thompson.
"Nobody's been burt."
compli.shed in an effic:ient and ti
fectlvemanner. ,
"The performance of U$
forces was inspi.ri.ag," lhays.
Club Woman
Dorothy Cox
Dead at 77
Services will be held Wedner
day for Newport Beach resld611
Dorothy L. Cox, 77, wbo dle
Monday. Services begin at 1.:
a.m . at Smith TutbUJ Lani•
Chapel, Santa Ana.
Mrs. Cox, 1870 Park N~r
Drive, was put regent d ~
William Cabell Chapter of tbi
Daughters of the Amerldr,
Revolution and a past oftlcer .o
the Daughters of 1812. She wai
also a member of the Tuesd~
Morning Club and Tusth
Woman's Club. '
She is s urvived b) her
husband, Edgar M. Cox; four
children, Dr. Robert Davis Cox
of Louisville, Ky., Richard
Davis Cox of Park Ridge, Ill.,
James Davis Cox of Woodland
Hills, and Mrs. Dorothy Davi!
Lyttle of Goleta. Five
grandchildren also survive.
The family bas sugge1tecl
memorial donations to the D~
or to a charity or the donor's
choice.
Cycle Rider ..
Succumbs to :
Crash Injury
A Camp Pendleton Marine. lD
jured when bis ototorcycl•
cruhed into a pole in N~
Beach last month, succumbed ~
his injuries this weekend, ac
cordiq to police. •
Traffic inveatigat«s said Gar.
Lee llutch, 18, dled Satw'd.aJ
becoming the third tralflo fatall
ly in Newport Beach Ulla year.
According to the COC'OIMl''t d
lice, the youth died ol compUd
Uoa:a of a skull fracture be slit
fend on Sept. 18 wben h1
motorcycle failed to make tb
l1w1> rlabt CQne on SaperiO Avenue abon Pacilio Coas
Rlllhway. • 1be Other two t:nmc delldt
both lnvolved bkycllata. tn ~
a blcycllat appareatl;y lea"-the 8alboa Bay Club's CbW Cm
test dled when be waa blt bead Cll
by •car on West Coast Hllbwar+
In March, another cyclist, tr) int to crw1 West Coast ffl8bwa:
near the Arcbea ~ wa.
blt bf a car and died.
Traffic lnveat11ator1 not•
that laat year at t.bls time, fou people bad died in tr.me acq
ct.ti ad 1n 1'14 the nsan wa aevm.
Saddlehaek
EDITION
Afternoon
N. Y. Stot.tk!iii ,
,vo L. 69, NO. 279, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1976 TEN CENTS
~a~isia l'isi~s See .Jewel of Missionsj
• 4
Dal•• l'llol Sufi Pllolo
SPANISH NOBILllY HONORS JEWEL OF CALIFORNIA MISSIONS IN SAN JUAN
The Duke And Duchess Of Maura Talk With Fr. Paul Martin, Mission PH tor
School Additions Eyed
$1.5 Million Vkjo Contract on Agenda
Saddlebaek Valley Unified
School District trustees will COD·
sider awarding a $1.5 million con-
tract for additions and altera-
tions to Mission Viejo High
School when they meet at 8 p.m.
Wednesday in Los Alisos In-
termediate School.
W. J . Shirley of Pasadena, the
original builder of the school,
submitted tbe low bid of
$1..597,000 for the job.
'lbe bld, the lowest d six, is
still higher than the amount al-
lowed for state aid, said Robert
Ferguson, director of planning
and development. To bring the
job within the limit, he said, he
will recommend that cabinet
work, estimated at a . cost of
$25,000, be eliminated from the
project.
This same project was put out
to bid in June. However, trustees
~eeted all the bids because they
were more than $240,000 above
the state allowance.
The project includes a 356-seat
performing arts theater, band
room and new horticulture,
photography , metal shop and
math classroom s.
It also includes shower and
locker additions, expansion or
Close Call
the administration building and
rearrangement of the existing
multipurpose rooms to enlarge
the library and provide space for
a student government office and
a tesehers · workroom.
In other business, trustees will
consider transferring students
moving into the new housing de-
velopment from the Rancho
Canada Elementary School at-
tendance area to the San Joaquin
Elementary School attendance
area. Ferguson said the transfers
are needed because the enroll·
ment capacity of Rancho
Canada, wtlich just opened in the
fall, will soon be exceeded by the
area growth.
Sore Head
Little Old Lad,y Bop, Thief
LOS ANGELES <AP) -A purse snatcher may
have a sore head to prove that two little old ladies can
make it tough earning a living illegally.
Sheriff's deputies said the man grabbed 75-year-
old Beatrice Sydeoburg at a West Hollywood intersec-
tion, picked her up and carried her about 300 feet
down a hill, threw her to the ground, grabbed her
purse, ·and ran off with $76 and credit cards.
They said Hazel Mercer, 73, witnessed the inci·
dent while gardening in her yard and, when the man
ran by, whacked him over the head wit h a garden hoe.
The purse snatcher was last seen, deputies said,
running away holding the purse-and his bead.
Car Slams Into House
"'Ibis sure makes me think I
neve r want another corner
house," Philip Roger of El Toro
said today as he surveyed the
destru<:tion caused by a car that
rammed through bis den wall
Monday evening.
"U my wife and I bad been
home, somebody could've been
tilled or seriously hurt." he said.
"Later at nJgbt and 15 feet to the
right and be would've killed us in
our bed. I'm just bappy nobody
fot hurt. ''
The driver of the ear, 18-year·
old Edward Stanton of 10439 La
Cebra Ave.. Fountain Valley,
told the California Highway
Patrol be was mating a U-turn at
the corner of Twi& and Fordview
St!'eeta when his car accelerator
pedal atuck wide open.
'lbe heavy sedan hurtled over a
curb and sidewalk, acrosa a lawn
and into the wall d the Roger
home at 2'152 Fordvtew, the CHP
Coins, Jewels Loot
, In Viejo Burglary
A lliasloa Viejo woman re-
• turned home from vacatioa to
ftnd that intruders hlld stolen a ~ coin collection and jewelry
valued at '345.
r Oranfe County sberlff'1 of·
fleer• aaid leeal secretary
Catbryn Florence Welc:b, as. ol
*31 Mimoaa Drive. told them
tbe vahaabJes were taten from
tbe dre11er in her master
bedroom. Tbe method d entry to
the bome ba1 not been de-WIDJ.ned. ...
said today. Neither Stanton or his
unidentified female passenger
was injured in the crash.
"A neighbor called me at work
and told me," Roger said. "I
knew my wife was at work so lbe
only thing I worried about was
my dog and the people in lbe car."
When Roger got home, all that
was visible of the car were the
tallllgbts. The rest was imlde the
den and hallway.
Roger thinks most of the
damage was inside the )lome,
despite the five-by-10.foot hole in
the outside wall.
"I'm a musician and about
$3,000 worth of instruments were
totaled in there," he said, dis·
playing a shattered classical
guitar be valued at $1,000. ''I also
had a stereo and about 100 record
albums against the imlde wall."
"Something like this makes
you think how suddenly death
could come," Roger added.
'Friemb' Targets
Of Young Burglars
BJ JACK CHAPPELL OftMO.lly ...........
Tbe boy, who couldn't have
been mor e than 15, knocked loni
and bard on the front door.
He didn't think anyone .was
home, butbebadtobesure.
He and his friend. a classmate,
bad been watching the house for
a couple days. They knew the
routine there.
If by any chance aa)one came
to the door, be wu ready to ask if
Jlmmy were home IDd could be
play.
But no one came. A;d, be and bis friend wen 10-IDC to commit a burilary.
In the southern half ol Orange CGlm'1 lut month then were at
leut 170 bur1Jarlea reported,
mQJ d them-a> pereent if na· tkJoal stati.ltics are borne out-
commJtted by burglars betwem
15 and 17 yeara old.
And, many of those involved Just such an MO method of opera·
tioo). Stati5tica show that 48 per· cent of the hits are made by
juveniles wbo live within blocks
d their victim. Only one percent
ol all burglaries are done by
"professionah."
A $100.000 federally funded
crime prevenUon program joint·
ly involving the Orange County
Sberifrs Department, and the
pollce departments of San
Clemente and Laauna Beach, is
Mftin1 to reverse the alarming
trend toward more and more
btqlartes.
At the heart of the proeram 11 a
tatfotte made up ol sbertlf's de-
puties Bob Neamtth, and Jerry
Coldsmith, Laguna Beach Police
officer Ron L11ler and San
Clemente poUce omcer Ttm
Hopkin_.
<See •UBNDS, Pase Al)
"
8 7 ANNE COOPE&
OftlM Dalh• ...... Staff
A visitor to Mission San Juan
Capistrano Monday might have
thought that by passing through
the mission gate be had been
mysterious ly transported to
Spain.
The courtyard and chapel
ectloecl with Spanish cooversa·
tion, as nearly 200 visitors from
Spain paid their respects to the
Jewel of the California missions,
founded Nov. 1, 1776 by Father
JuniperoSerra.
Among the visitors were
emissaries of Klng Juan Carlos of
Spain, the Duke and Duchess of
Maura, mayors of several
Spanish cities. a priest·
biographer of Father Serra and
the director of the Junipero Serra
museuqi in Palma.
"Our town's tradition comes
from the rich Spanish heritage d
'
this mission ." Father Paul j
Martin. mission pastor. told the
visitors assembled in the mis·
s ioo'c historic chapel. "We com· l
memorate today the gill Spain ~
has given lo this part of the Unit·
edStates."
Du.ring the chapel eeremooles 1
Spanish mayors presented gifts '
to the mission, including a plaque '
made of tiles taken from the i
birthplace of Father Fermin 1
<See M~ION. Page AJ) , •
China Nuclear
1
Test Taints East
HARRISBURG, Pa. <AP> -A
Sept. 26 nuclear bomb test in
China bas produced radioactive
fallout "in significant quantities
over Pennsylvania," state of·
fieials said today.
TI\omas M. Gerusky, head of
the state Bureau of Radiological
Health, said weekend rainfall
helped produce the fallout, and a
spokesman for the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission in
Washington confirmed t he
fallout. Reports of fallout also
were received from New Jersey
and Connecticut.
The U .S . Environmental
Protection Agency had projected
the fallout for Pennsylvania after
a nuclear blast occurred at the
Lop Nor testing site in western
China.
Gerusky warned Pennsylva·
oians to carefully wash garden
vegetables before eating them
and said there might be
dangerously bigb radioactive
levels in milk.
He said high levels ~ radioac-
tivity were found in various
samples of dirt, ve1etation and
rain water. He said the rainfall
had brought radioactive
particles from the atmosphere to
the ground.
Gerusky said the radiation
levels were the highest in Peon-
Laguna Hills
Mall Thefts
·Investigated
A shopper who carried out the
theft while employes were busy
in another area of the depart-
ment stole five leather coats
valued at $722 from the women's
wear section or a Laguna Hills
Mall store.
Orange County sheriff's of-
ficers said the theft was reported
by officials of the Nobby store,
24142 Laguna Hills Mall. They
also are investigating the theft of
men's watches valued at $799.60
from the Jewelry department of
tbe J .C.Penney store in tbe
Laguna Hills Mall.
'nley said the watches were·
taken after the store bad closed
for the day. It is believed that the
thief hid in the store overnight
and then left when it was opened
in the morning.
Cordova Site
To Be School
Capistrano Unified School
District trustees voted un-
animous approval Mooday for
purchase of a Mission Viejo
elementary school site in the
Cordova Homes tract.
The district ls paying the Mis·
slon Viejo Company $456,000 for
the site, localed eaat of the in·
terseetion of Crown Valley and
Marguerite Parkways.
Architects Porter.Jensen of
San Clemente have been chosen
to desip the school. wblcb will
be similar lo plan to tbe
Barcelona Hills and Harold Am·
buebl elementary schools, cur·
rently under construction In
Mission Viejo and San Juan
Capistrano.
Walkout At End
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Eleven 1trlkebouod fJ"OUD food
processlu plant.I are reooeniftl
after a flYO·week walkout by
TeaJMten that cost irowen an
eltimated SZ miWon In harvest
lolea.
sy_lvania in many years. Tests
have begun to see if further pro-
teeti ve steps are needed, be said.
A major danger involves the
level of lodine-131 in milk, be in·
dieated. The radioactive isotope
gathers on grass, is ingested by
catUe and can be concentrated ln
the milk.
The fallout was detected by lbe
Philadelphia Electric Co. 's
radiation monitoring program at
the Peach Bollom nuclear power
plant near the Pennsylvania·
Maryland line.
After the original finding, the
company took the extraordinary
step of halting construction wort
at the plant Monday. Company
officials apparently feared the
high radiation levels were due to
local problems.
The radiation findings were
(See FALLOUT, P age A2)
O.lly ~ 19' SIMt "-l•
ENGLISH VISITORS IMPRESSED Wlt H MISSION VIEJO
Mike end Pennyeoomb9 Studying American Life
British in Viejo: Li/ e
'On Larger Scale'
Telev1sioo programmed round·
the-clock. personality-dominated
polities and music in elevators
are among tbe things two
Engllah visitors to Orange Coun·
t y d·e s c r i b e as uni q u e I y
American.
Mike and Penny Coombs came
to Callfornla keen to see
American life as it is lived in the
state they describe as the ''ul·
timate" in American lifestyle.
Traveling with the American
Host program, they stay with
American families for a morere-
allsUe impression of day-to-day
living than they could get on a
traditlonal tour.
Their first host family. Mal
and Jan Northrup of Mission Vie· .,
jo, are providing a two-week
sample of Southern California
livlnl before the Coombs proceed
to San Francisco.
"Mission Viejo ls very Im·
pressive." said Coombs, who
works as a computer analyst for
the Br\tis h postal servtce.
"Althoulb we do have planned
communities at home, every·
thlnl here is on a much lar&er
scale."
Mrs. Coombs, wbo also works
IOI' the BrtUsh postal service, but
aa a computer programmer, said
lbe was amaied at the varlaty of
foods available, particularly con·
venience foods.
''l couldn't believe it when we
walked into a douabnut shop,"
she sald. "I bad never seen so
many different klnds t.o cboole
from. And then it was the same
thing all over again at the lee
cream shop.··
One big difference in the
lifestyle of Southern Callfor·.
ruans, compared to the English,:
is that here society is dominated
by the motorcar. said Coombs.
He made E\ point of laking a
photograph of the Northrups·
<See VISITING, P age A2)
Co asl
We ather
Fait th{oqh Wednesday
'except for patchy fog or
low clouds along the coast.
Coast hlgbs in low 70s, lows .~about 58.
I NSIDE TODA V
Barbaro Waltna. and Harry '
R.ealona are ofl to.a nraooth
ftarf in thear MUI "ABC Evm-
ing N~8" -•-•'""-. r· .. ··-•. ac cordmg to Aaociated Prua
TV Critic JOJI Sharbutt. Sft ~ ....
1
1
J
'
Al DAILY PILOT SB Tu!!d!y. OOtoblt s. 1m
SACCPlea
Noise Area
Reprnenlativea d Saddleback
Valley homeowner aasod•Uona
were .:"&d Monday to send let· ten 1 eaeb Or.iii• County
superviaor to 1\Q>p(lr'\,,.ldential
buUdlng restrietlons in an!U lm·
pacted by El Toro Marine Corps
Air Station jet noise.
'Ibey were called to a meeting
by the Saddleback Area
Coordlnallng Councll (SACC},
which already baa aald It favors
the restrictions.
Although one association presi-
dent said it is "imperative" that
they go beyond Fifth District
Superviaor Thomas Riley -wbo
already supports t.he restriction
-other association represen·
tatives gave no Indication d their
feeling• on the issue.
and belleve the remdtlM lines
will be reliable m asures Cor
tbeoutfiv•1ars. .. We are not anti ·
deftk>pmeni. ' be said. "We are
anti certain kinda ol dnelop-
ment -incompatible develop.
ment." That. he Uld, includes
retldentlal homes wltblD tba &:s
CNELUne.
Altbou•h aeveral ,ruideoU wed wbat effecl the oolse bas
on people, no defi.Dit. answers
were,iven.
SUpervison are due to con·
alder the study and posalble
methods of reslrictinl NSklen·
tlal development on Od. 2'1.
SACC memben couatooly two
of the four supeniaon as favor· iDI a restriction d home con·
st.ruction in the area impacted by
noise.
o.11, ..... $IMf "-'-
However, there was obvious in·
terest as representatives asked a
series of questions about the
latest noise study, which bas
generated much recent con·
troversy.
Diane Lawrence, a planner
with the county's Environmental
Management Agency, explained
that the new study shows a larger
area impacted by the noi.se than
was indicated in a 1972study.
Rick Bo bay, SACC president.
said be believes letters may
change a vote among the
supervisors.
He told the audience, "We're
looking for more support. That's
wby we're here."
POOR SECURITY AT HOMES ASSISTS BURGLARS
Sheriff'• Deputy Geny Goldamlth Ex•mlnH Adequate Lock
r
In addition to the new65 CNEL
(CommunJty Noise Equivalent
Level} line, a point beyond which
there is generally community
response to the noise, the study
indicated a "grey area" con·
sidered in a 90 percent con·
fidence zone.
She told the representatives
that there are 15,700 homes
planned within the ~ CNEL line
and another 12,000 dwel.lini units
within the grey area.
Col. G. L. Fenenga. areprese.n·
tative of the Marine base, said
the Marines s upport the study
Cycle Rider
Succumbs to
Crash Injury
A Camp Pendleton Marine, in·
jured when bis motorcycle
crashed into a pole in Newport
Beach last month, succumbed to
his injuries this weekend, ac·
cording to police.
Traffic investigators said Gary
Lee Murch, 18, died Saturday,
becoming the third traffic fa&ali·
ty in Newport Beach this year.
Accordin1 to the corooer's of·
flee, the youth died of compllca-
tiooa of a skull fracture he aul·
fered on Sept. 18 when his
motorcycle failed to make the
sharp right curve on Superior
Avenue above Pacific Coast
Highway.
The other two traffic deaths
both involved bicycllats. In May,
a bicyclist apparently leaving
the Balboa Bay Club's Chill Con·
test died when he was bit head on
by a car on WestCoutHidiway.
In March, another cyclist, try.
ing .to cross West Coast Highway
near the Arches Overpass, wu
bit by a car and died.
Traffic lnvesll,gatora noted
that last year at this time, four
people had died in traffic acct·
dents and In 1974 the fieure wu
seven.
Reports Ignored
Mayagnez Deaths
Caused by Error?
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
U.S. Marine assault of an.island
off Cambodia in the Mayaguez
rescue mission last year was or·
dered, at a cost of 41 lives,
despite pilots· reports that most
of the crew of the merchant
v~sel were not there, a con·
gressiooal study says. The report
blamed oo individuals or depart·
ments. U.S, pilots bad already report· ed that 30 to 40 Caucas1ans were
on a filhinl boat and not oo Koh
Tana. where tbe Mayaguez.
seized earlier by Cambodian
patrol boats, bad been taken, the
reports aid.
The report was made by the
(,Jeneral Accounting Office for
the House lotemaUooal military
and political affairs subcommlt·
tee. The panel bad conducted
bearings on the M ayaguez affair.
Tbe report says that altbouah
the pilots· reports that nearly all
the Mayaguez' 40 crew members
were oo the fiabinl boat -and
not on the island -were passed
on to W ubington, details were
too sketchy to make certain
whether some crew members
were still on Koh Tang.
Indeed, the report quotes of·
ficlals in Washington as having
understood that only eight crew
members were on the boat.
"We acknowledge the dlf·
ticulties and uncertainties exist·
ing at the time," the GAO said.
"But we belleve that several
available opportunities to try to
reduce the m aJClr uncertainty
during the incident -the loca·
tion of the Mayaguez crew -
were not pursued.
"The crew's location was cen·
tr al to developing a U .S.
response,'' it sa\d.
the GAO report concluded that
the final Marine assault that left
18 dead or missing -and the
U.S. bombing of the Cambodia
mainland -did not influence re-
lease of the M ayaguez crew,
although it said this "probably
could not have been known at the
time." "However, it continued. "cer -
tain U.S. actions, for example the
sinking or eunboats and U.S. ~r
activity in the area, probably did
influence that decision.'· The crew of the Mayaguez,
which bad been seized by Cambo·
dian patrol boats on a routine
freight-hauling voyage, was re-
in addition, 23 U.S. airmen
were killed in a helicopter crash.
leased May 15, 1975 about the
same time the Marines assaulted
Koh Tang Island and U.S. planes
bombed a port-and airfield oo the
mainland.
The report says that on May 13,
the day after the ship was seized,
U.S. jets made low passes and re-
ported back that 30 to 40 possible
Caucasians were on a fishing
boat.
Although the pilots were flying
too fast to get a good look, the re-
port said, they saw that the
passengers appeared to be too
large to be Orientals and that
they were wearing brightly col·
ored slickers and other clothing
that appeared to be Western
rather than Cambodian.
Irvine Heir's
Truck Target
Of Theft
Candidates Loose
For Next Debate
Thieves broke into a truck
belonging to Irvine beir James
Myford Irvine as he supped this morniD& at a Laguna Beach cof·
fee shop, police said.
Irvine, 23, of 133 Moote Cerio Drive, Laguna Beach, to&d police
a 23-channel cltileos band radio
and 25 hard and folk rock stueo
tapes were stolen. He valued the
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The
director or the debates between
President Ford and Democratic
nominee Jimmy Cart.et expects
the second contest to be less
tense but more sharply drawn
than the first.
Jim Karayn, directina the de-
bates (or the aponsortn1 Leaaue
of Women Voters, said Monday
O"ANO! COAST H
DAILY PILOT
=.:~~·~~::'r,:=1.:::=~=
""''' l'Wll\111 ... c:n;r.·· ,..., ........ IOft .. r• ::.:·i:r.-=~~~ ·::L::.,~· tatn 'lt1111•¥ tr'i'tn•, S•cktleb«~ VeO•• •ftff ~=~~~~"·~~·~ ~.::~:.~'1:i:,::.i~~ :l:IO ..... , ...
.......... -"'"_, __ _
,.011.ew.. v ... ,., .. -•.,.Go-•--
~ .. 11-•• 11 ..
T":..;.~;_,,'TJ::9
a. .... ""-__. ...... """'""' """""°" ... .,."'"
hddtebecll Valtft Offtoe ,.,., ....... ~ ...... °'-"-
<>MM• c:.."' .._ .. a.w .. , ...,,.,..
_.,... ..... oc~ '"'U\M(illlev1 .. .,1
WOON ...... , llllG.._.,...lllJWI
Tetepflofta (114)....al1
Cl•Hlfled Actverttllne~
S-ltOK' Ytt...,_Olllco
N1.a10
,,_ .... Cit_
4-.....0
~ ,.,. °'-~ ........... °"" _, ........ \l9fltt, """'' .. -. ....,...... matter •' ••••rUMMettt• ,_.,.,,_ ,.... 1111 ••t<Mll< ... 11~ ...................... .. ...,......_
t« ..................... ti ~ .. ,.,
c.u1or,.lt ,,.."''''lr "' c~•lor U Jt ='•~'& ::::.J:,, _.,.,, ""lllMf
that Ford and Carter "must have
been scared'' in their tint debate
at Philadelphia.
"I think the candidates will be
looser now that they've been.
tbrouah it once," be added.
He expects the second panel or
interviewers to uk sharper
DEFENSE A VITAL
TOPlc-£dttOft .. , A8
FORD-CARTER
STAHCES OIV!N-A1
follow-up questions Wednesday
night than did the lint group.
Tbe site of the second meetlng is
the Palace of Fine Arta here.
'nmeis6:30p.m. PM.
"We've asked our tnt.rvlewen
this time to be sure that their
follow·up questions all)' oo the
same Point u the ortgln&l ques·
Uon," aald Karayn.
He made the arrangemtnta to
put the Water1at. tie.rtnp on
televi.aloo wMn preeident d the
National Public Aftain Center
for Telmslon. Jn Karayn's view, tbt "Ul·
timate conaumen" of the de-
bates ••are the voters, and our ob-
ject ii to stve them a feel for
these men and tbelr Ideas that
the voters don't 1et on the nightly
news or on tb• Sunday interview
lboW." ot erttlcilm that the ftnt de-t.te was dull. be 1aid. ""•'d r.tber be aecu.aed d belnc dull
and tllformaU•e th.u belDa 11PPJ
video and lrreltnnt. ~
on teleN&oa can be• MCCIDdl of POW! Tbll ls MJ'iOul hmtMM ...
lossat$325. . Irvine bad parked bis new = truck in a lot adjacent to
's Jr. Restaurant, 1800 S.
eo.at Highway.
Ile ii tbe IOD O( the late Myford
Irvine, tormer president of the
Irvine Co., and is a great·
grandson of James Irvine,
founder of the Irvine Ranch.
Irvine ts secretary.treasurer or
the Myglo Corp., a privately
owned investment corporation
based ln East Irvine.
F,.._ P"fl" AJ
FALLOUT. • also verified by tests ccnducted
by the PennaylvanJa Department
d Environmental Protection and
by the radiaUon monitoring pro-cram at the Three Mile Island
nuclear plant near Harrisburg .
Jolm Hope, a spokesman for
the state Department of Environ·
mental Resources, said the first
tests of milk samples were com·
pleted this mornina and revealed
radiation levels of US pico curies
per liter. That la approshnately
tbeaame level thatuisteddurins
widespread nuclear u.t.lftl in the
early 1960s, be said.
"We would be more conttrned
LC Ult levels moved into tbe
thouland.I or tens of tboosands.."
Hopeaald. Rt added, however, that of-ftclall do expect the radiation
count to 10 bf1ber than 118 pl$!(> curt-. The normal lllftld~n•
-Ullnmllkbsaro.
FrotaP,,,,eAI
FRIENDS ...
The officers' basic weapon is
what they call "target harden·
ing" and a belief that if a home ts
secure a would·be burglar will
look elsewhere.
Tb.rough public and individual
presentations and inspections.
the officers hope to get residents
to buy and install adequate locks,
to bar sliding windows and doors,
and to report suspicious persons to the local law enforcement
agency promptly.
They make their pitches to
homeowners associations, and to
coffee klatcti groups. They con·
duct individual security in!pec·
lions of homes, pointing out
weaknesses which can be invita·
lions to burglars .
Soon, they '11 be able to take
their message to shopping cen·
le.rs and other places of public ex·
posure when the writ takes de·
livery in November of a $37,000
motorhome outfitted with spec1aJ
displays and audio-visual gear.
"We don't want people making
their houses into forts, but most
houses just don't have good locks
on the doors or windows," Ron
Lister said in an interview. When burglars get in, they get.
in 59 percent of the time through
doors, and 36 percent ol the time
through windows. Statistics show
that in daytime residential
burglaries, 30 percent of the
time, no force ts used and in 36
percent of the time. onJy minor
force is used. Other figures show that the
average burglar will commit 150
burglaries before he is caught the
first time.
. Pickets Hit,
Police Charge
HB Driver
The district attorney's office
has filed misdemeanor assault
charges against a Huntington
Beach woman accused of driving
her car into a row or picketers
Monday in Irvine. injuring three
men.
Poltce said her car struck
three men, who were treated at
Tustin Community Hospital
None were hospitalized.
The woman charged is Betty
Jane Alvarado, 30, ol 17882 Baron
Circle. Although the complaint
baa been filed, Mrs. Alvarado
bu not yet been arrested or
turned beraell in, police sald.
The Incident occurred al 9 a.m.
when Mrs. Alvarado was drop-
ping her husband, An~ew Adair
Alvarado, at work, Sterling
Power Systems , 16752
Armstrong.
Alvarado told police he bad at·
tempted to come to work on his
motorcycle at 7: 15 a.m ., but had
turned around and had gone
home when he saw the picket
line.
Once home, Alvarado said he
phoned his boss who told him to
return to wotlt and come through
the picket line. Alvarado said his
wife then drove him to work in
her car. About 20 picketers wert! lined
up in front of the industrlat ~I·
nets, reportedly protesting
wacea and working conditions.
Police said that on her way out
of the parking lot, Mrs. Alvarado
allegedly drove her auto through
the picketers, hitting one man
bead-on and striking two othen
less severel~.
The ftrat man bJt was Ramlro
l.optz, 28. of Whittler, who police
s.Ud wu thrown onto the hood of
the car and then Into the street.
He was treated for a bn.dAed
pelvis and kidney damqe 3t
TuaUn Community Hospital and
"'"then released, pollce said.
Two otben, Donald Aragon. S2,
of NCJl'Walk, and Richard Roles,
S, of Santa Ana , wero alllo hit
end were treated at Ute bolpltal
and released. All three arc
machineoperaton.
Bg Claina Offlnal
U .S.-Russian
War Forecast
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
<AP) -Chinese Forel10
mini.st« Chlao Kuan-bua told the
U.N . General Assembly today
that war between the United
Stat.el and the Soviet UDlon 11 lilt>
evttable.
, "This is independent of man 'a
will," he added.
Cblao. fqllo\rinc the UJUl
Cb1Dele pat\etn ol auacttn1 tbt
Soviet Union, said ScMet "IOClal-
lmperlaliam is the~= swindler and the mOlt
source of war today.
"As chairman llao Tie-tuns
pointed out, the current lot.erna-
tlooal situation ls characterised
. by great disorder under beavea,
and it is excellent," be said.
This disorder, be .tded, will
awaken and temper the people
and push the intemlltioaal altua·
tion in a direction "unfavorable
to Imperialism and aoelal-
imperiallsm.' •
Cblao's speech. tbe firlt mljor
Chinese foreiin policy addreA
since Mao's death lalt month,
was clearly keyed to the 'lbird
World. He urged developin&
countries to.1 oppose tbe
superpowen and spedfteallY the
Soviet Union.
"Some people are t.errified al
the mention of the Soviet Union,
thinking tbat it cannot be
touched," be said. ''Thia ls
superstition. Soviet soclal-
lmperiallam is notbinl to be
afraid of. It is outwardly •troa&
but inwardly weak."
Quoting Mao. be coatinued: "All reactionaries are paper
tigers. The revisionist Soviet
Unioo is a paper tiger too."
Chiao said the struggle
between the United States and
the Soviet Union was founded on
the "unalterable" facts that "the
United States bas vested in·
terests to protect around the
world and the Soviet Unioo seeks
expansion."
Of the two, he said. the Soviet
Union is the more dangerous because ·•every day it
talks 'peace' but practices ex·
pansion."
Chiao said the process of de·
tente was "a fraudulent and
hollow phrase." He said the 1975
Helsinki conference on European
security was only a Soviet at·
tempt to put Western Eu.rope off guard. •'divide and crush it
piecemeal and ultimately aeize
the whole of Western Europe."
In his 30-minute speech, Chiao
Jory Picking
Continues in
Bribery Trial
Jury selection continued today
in the Orange County Superior
Court bribery trial of San
Clemente architect Leon Hyzen.
Hyzen, 66, of 2100 B S. Ola Vis·
ta, races trial on three felony
counts of offering a bribe. He was
indicted by the grand jury after
county Supervisor Thomas Riley
reported allegedly illegal ap·
proaches to hil office by Hyzen.
It is alleged that Byam offered
executive aide Peter Herman a
$1,000 bribe on three occasions
last May as a means or insuring
that be got the architectural con·
tract for a planned branch
library in the San (;Jemente area.
Jury selection in Judge H.
Walter Steiner's courtroom ls ex·
pected to be completed today.
F,....P-AJ
VISITING •••
home, with two cars tn the
driveway. because a two-car
family is a rarity in England.
Coombs said that although he
round commercials very dis·
tracting after British public
television. be was looking forward to watching the second
debate between Pretiklent Ford
and Gov. Carter
"In England we don 'l have this
kind of bead-to·head conlronta·
tion in poUU~." be said. "Our
elections are decided much more
on the basis of parties than in·
dividuals."
In Lacuna Beach tbe Coombs
Invited their bOlts to jotn them.
paddling in the ocean. The
Northrups weren't sure they
could provide the proper equip-
ment -a canoe! a surfboard?
Their English Crienda explained
all that's required ii to take off
one's shoes and stocklnp. Oh,
you mean wadinl! Yee, only we
call It paddllnt.
Coombs saJd he likes being
served ice water automaUcally
in restaurants, which does not
happen in England, but be would
prefer Americans not add lee
autom'atlcally to every drink
other than hot coffee and tea.
"I might like root beer U It
weren't full of Ice," be aaJd.
Although Coombe all'ffd to
sample corn dop ana frozen
bananu, be drew tbt lllle at bub-
ble gur:n tee ere am.
He aald be dldn •t f aney bllnMU
with lee eream meltlnc all down
his nm while be cbew9d th•
navor oul ol hll 1um.
also welcomed E1YPt·1 mO\le to
break Ill treaties With the Soviet
Union and called fOI' a UD1fted
Cyprus. ouster of U.S. ~
fl"om South Korea. a ''nuanable
sohatloo" In Lebuon ad ad·
mission of Vletnam totbe Ulllled
Nations.
Ht balled raee CODIU~ in ·
Rbodeala, Namlbla ad SOath
Allie a and coadelDMCl tbt ScwMt Union foe "attempe. to ... tlle
opportunity to IOW dileOl'd ....
CUT)' out armed lntervea&MID
wblle oretend.ln1 to suppott ....
UOnalllberaUon mO\lt:IDlllll. ••
New Unit •
Will Elect
FirSt Slate
Tbe voluntary Lake Forest n
Homecnmens Alsodatioo. creat-
ed att.r the June 8 electkle defeat
of an El Toro-Lake Forest
Municipal Advisory Council, will
elect lta flnt alate of olftcers
'lbunday.
The seulon will bealn at 7:30
p.m. at the Lake Fcreat SUD ad
Sall Club. near the bltll'MetloD ot
Lake Forest Drive and Toledo
Wl)'. Eacb homeowner la~
dance wW have ooe wt.e for tb8
candidates and nomlnallam will
be taken from the floor.
The offices to be filled include
president, vice president,
secretary. liaison to the Sad·
dleback Area Coordinating Coun·
ell, liaison to the Saddlebaclt
Valley Unified School District.
county government liaison,
representative to tbe Lake
Forest mandatory community
association, membership
chairman and publldtyotficer.
The voluntary group was
formed originally to counteract
the mandatory aasoctatlon,
which bas a board of d1recton
dominated by developers Ol" their
repre5enlatlvea.
The latter group was a key Coe
oC the MAC ballot Issue and
leaders of the voluntary group
were, for the moat part, atroog
MAC supporters,
But voluot.ary group leaders
have indicated they are woddng
closely wttb the mandat«J U·
soclation with an eye to tbe Ume
developers no longer have • ma-
jority voice.
F,.... Page AJ
MISSION •••
Francisco de Laauen. whose 1885
attempt to estabtlsb a miaaioo at
San Juan was aborted by an In·
dlan uprising.
Father Martin, in turn, pre-sented each guest with a blcen·
tennlal medal commemorating
the mission's 200th annlveriHIJ'Y. "Vaya con dios," said Father
Martin, as be ended the cha~
ceremonies. "May God 10 wath
you, wherever you go."
The Spanish visitors gathered
in the courtyard to watch u the
flag of Mallorca was railed on
the mission nagpole and then
walked down San Juan's main
tborougbhre, Camtno
Capistrano. to the E1 Adobe
rettaurant, wlaere city officials
welcomed them wlUt a buffet re--
ceptlon.
Mayor Doutla&Jllash told the
gathering of local and Spanlab
civic leaden that althoulb San
Juan bas cban1ed a great deal in
its 200-ytar history, the clty la
pledged to protect and enbance
its Spanish heritage.
Councilman Yvon Hecbdaer
welcomed the guests in Spanlah •. and plaques with San Juan•a c:lty
sea! were presented to the visit·
lnl dlCnitariea.
l>aulino Buches Adro~er.
mayor of Palma and a Spanilb
senator. then presented Naab
with a Mallorcan naa and made
hlm honorary mayor of tilt ea.
tie ol 8ellver. wbicb be called
"tbe me>1t lmpe>rtant cutle in
Mallorca." .
Dinner was served followtq
the ceremonies, and when ..,....
yone bad eaten and ~ a.ta
were preparing to leave, t.bey
cave Nub a standlnl O\latloe.
cbantln1 "Dooa·la11 Naub.
Doos·lu Naub." ,
"It's been a tremendous da,y,"
Nub said in farewell. "l aaJy
wish you could all vote.''
..
'