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1976-10-06 - Orange Coast Pilot
,- I f I •' WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 6, 1976 VOL ... MO.•· n•c:noees, • PAOIES ~ • Rileg Baeks Ar~hitef!t In Lilwarg BriJJe €use .,! I ' • • • Ca1·ter's Free Rides 'No Influence' . ' ~Says He Would ~ \·~!r!~s!b~!!~~-, n.e OD corporate jets and spent several weekends vacaUooing at ~ eorporate retreats While be was governot c4 Geetaia. be bas always 1malntamed t.bat such hospitality did not Influence his actions as eov- tW'DOI'. 1 The Democratic presidential candidate, wbo advocates banning · dtt.I ot value to public <iflcials. says be would not accept such offers ~- BOTB mE LOaDIEED ADlCIL\PT CofP. and the Coca-O>la Coa:.q>any provided transportation for Cal'ter~ tb ;severu functions "wbll• he was governor fro~ 1971through19741~com11ao¥ \potesmeb ~. ' \I •.• "r ,' • I.luring a tbree-wet!k swing through Latin? mAprt.lo1972\> · · c.rter flew aboard a I..octheed Jet.star/ He; • ~la Co.: lllreraft to attend several National and• · · J ·:: • COo l•~~te provides aircraft and a travel-afi'"'~~ it,S g(w. t I •o .,... . Both companies have major installatlonsm ~ ; ,· ).. ASl[ED ABOtrr 1UE USE of the Lockheed Jet~tal\ Carter told a reporter last April that the trip was a routine trade mission in wbicb be promoted Georgia products, including Loct.beed aircraft. . ''There waa no aecrecy about it." be said. "It was· reported and . It oaPt to be ... The vialt to five Latin American eountries inclilded Carter, his • .wife, Bol.t.Ynn. two security guards, the state's chief industry banter, and several Lockbeed officials. A Coca-Cola Co. vice president, Ovtd Davia, said bis company is ·cine of several that provides products or services for the National ..S Southern Governon Coof erences. He said it files a corporate • atrcrattto both events. DA VIS SAID THE COMPANY has olfered free rugbts to Georpa 1overnors f« .c> years. Campaign spokesmen said the free rides bad no eftect OD Carter's declaiona as govemor. "He never did a favor fOI' either company," said press secretary Jody Powell. "I'm sure be felt no obligation to these companies." Powell added that using corporate jets miebt have "saved the ;Uspayera money" by reducing the cost of the 1overnor'1 trallllportatioo. ALSO DUaING IDS' ADlllNISTllATION, Carter spent two week. endl at a .rusti§!f< lodge owned by Bnmswtck Pulp and paper Co. in south ' · IJa. and a weekend at a lodge owned by UnloaCampCo.in SoQthCarollna. · llemben of bis f t'Mds staff and their wives, and a future i daahter·in·law accompa'1. ed Carter on ooe trip to cabin Bluff, a r I0,000.acre 0 producinl pi.De plantation" owned by Brunswick Pulp ..S Paper Co. near Woodbine, GL ~ Carter told reporters last weet "it would have been better not ~ to" hue accepted the boepitality, and said be would not do it aaaln. ,.. .. Tiii, ,Shoppers Armed Trio Storm Market in Mesa 1'0lftl'I to eJerb and. balf 4-l emtom ... '11ae1':$Zlfnlmanecaab drawer c;r:e mcrrinl down tbe line to aDDdler ~. ~ clerk Jobn Gletetti. ~ unaware a robberJ wu Wldel' way, ipored demandl fer mcmeJ from the abot1un-wleldiA1 &ader. Tbe clerk was hlt on the abOuJder with the bll'rel c4 tbe sbotauD by the 8Dll'1 pnman before band1ni tbe casb nPter drawer tobll accomplice. After deanlDI out several re-ctawa. tbe pnmm RDDOtJDCed. CleeSOUDY,.P ... AI> Priee of Protest ~~~~~~~~~~-· I Acapulco \ hi Path , ,,,, ...... Blood streaming from his face, a leftist student wounded and captured by police in Bangkok is helped to an ambulance by a Thai trooper and a girl. Defense minister Sangad Cbalawyu selled power todu after rioting broke out over the·return of tanner Thal military dictator Tbanom Klt-tikachom. (See stU)',,Paae 'A•> · Riley Defends ·Arcmted · B1'roMBAaLEY °' ................. Oran1e COG.Dty Supervisor 'l'boma11llley appeared to defend San Clemente architect Leon BJMD late Tuesday sbartlJ after be •• called to tile stand u tbe pr'OleCUtlon's second wltnea la U..SuperiorCourtbriberytrial. "I am 1ure be•• unaware be ... commlttinl a ctlme by mu· iDC tbo9e comments," be told ell-- ,... attorney Mike '1anas• -t while betna questioned on telephone calls mme to bis oftlce b)'UtedefeadanL . Rile,telUAect thatbeecm&ected tbe dlltriet &UoneJ'•· CJftke in Ku .19'78 an. a ledel cl fm1ber telep.bone co11nnatJona be· t1NID bis alde, Pltlr ....... andllpea. TbeCOIDftdentlal ~ MD& to Dtatrtet A~. 0aeU Rcb resulted In RJitD, •. of 2100 BS. Ola Vbta. beiDI Jndla.d b¥ u.e sraod Jpry Cid tane fe1on7 countaf4 olferlnl a llribe. It ls alleged tbat H)seD dfered a Si.GOO caineatsn coatrt_..to R11eJ thrOUlh Henna la ret.. b'tbe~'lpiedptMl'be woa1d be conaidered when tbe time came to ballid a braDcb WnrJtnSanClema.e. ' RU•1 told Blcka ln tbe -.orandu:i: "It 11 tbe lm· .Jr 11 fr of m~ aide tbat llr. '8el8&a&aY, Pt11,,U> .Of Storm MEXICO CITY, llelico (AP) ) -Tropical Storm Madeleine, pickinl ap 1peed in the Paciflcj ud hNded toward tbe Mmcaa l'elCll't of Acapulco, could turn IA-4 to a burr;icane by ta:dgbt. the 4 Mexican weather service re.-~pokesman for the weather ll service said there was no cause for alarm and no warning bad been issued to residents of ~ Acapulco. or otber communities I in the state of Guerrero. Tbe storm, located 275 miles soutb-soutbeaat of Acapulco, was moving toward Guerrero state this morning at a speed of about. ei1ht miles an hour, tbe spokesman aaid. Winds ln the center of the storm were recorded at about 45 miles an hour. '-We've ta.ken no steps to pre. pare people on the mainland for tbestorm, becausewedonotwant tocauseafalsealarm. Tberei.aoo • way of knowing which direction the storm ultimately will take,'' thespokesmansaid. ' He a aid Madeleine was movi.nC 1 in a northwesterly direction wltb ' a tendency toward a route which ~ would lead it to the state ol Guer~ f rero. Acapulco is the state capital. He said the winds were IJOW' f ing stroaaer and the storm was espected to be classified as a bur· • ricane. Acapulco ls approximately MO miles southeast of La Pu OD the Baja California peninsula. where Hurricane Iba struck 'lbund.Q. leaving 423 dead by offidai count and some 40,000 bomeJeaa. Weather Early fOI and low cloudl .to give wQ to a fair after. noon Thursday. Beach hiCh in mid 70s, low to • expected. INSIDE TODAY Al DAIL V PILOT s Wedneeday. Oetot>«ll. 1971 Wide-ranging Hues To Fuel Debate Fire · ROBBERY •• "Okay. let ·s aee 11CJme wan...· and be1an taki ng wallets and purses from three manetpatJ"c:lim andlwoclerts. PolJce today saJd the trio mwle off with at least $66 from euatomtn. Store ol.ftdall are dMQbl1 to ... 'lloW mutb--y wu take from,....... 9ld a 1ale la the store. 81 WALTEa R. ll&US APS-t.IC..114 1¢1' From a cilltance. Gerald l"ord and Jlm1n7 Carter bave w.,.cl a sharp, aometlmes bitter cUeut.e about American defense and foreign policies. So there ls plenty to argue about in San FranciscO ~t ii the Republican President a the Democratic nominee want to 1et (NEW AN.4.LYSIS J tough In tbelr seeond camJ>a18D debate. (8:30 p.m. PDT> De bate ground rules and cautious television consultants may take tbe edge off wbeQ tbe two get qetber. but amcma the items for confrontation are 'Throat' Cut Porno Patrons Complain MIAMI (AP) -Truth-in-packaging bas bit the pornography business. A Miami theater showing the X·rated films "Deep Throat'' and ''The Devil in Miss Jones" was fmed for not telling the public portiom of the movies had been deleted. Asst. State's Atty. Kurt Mannar said some patrons complained to police they weren't getting their money's worth at the theater. Marmar said the Pussycat Theater cut the films after Circuit Judge 1bomas Testa ruled in 1973 that certain scenes were obscene. Marmar said an agreement with the theater's operators, Gayety 1beaters, Inc., called for removal d the objectionable material and a notice in ad~ vertisements that the movie had been revised. When the court got reports the theater did not in· elude the warning in advertising, Testa found the company and its president, Leroy C. Griffith, in con- tempt of court and fined them $3,000. Pugil Bout Death Marine's Parents Bring Massive Suit By WILLIAM SCllltEIBER Of Ille Da 11, ...... Stiff ·Attorneys represenUng the family of a Marine Corps rteruit. fatally injured during a hand-to- hand combat drill last year to- day filed a SH million lawsuit against tbe federal government and 12 individuals, including Presjdent Ford. 'lbe suit presented in U.S. Dis· biet Court in San Diego cit.es the. ''wronlful death" d. »year-old Ptt. Lynn McClure due to In- juries sustained during training at the San Diego Marine Recruit Depot. He was lmocked out in a • succession of pugil stick bouts. WUliam Yacoboui. whose law Arm bas offices in Orange Coun· Poll Shows Caner JI ote Cut Sharply SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Jimmy Carter bu plummeted in the California Poll to tbe point when he bas only a Alx·point lead over President Ford com· pared to a 20-point lead one .month ago. Mervin Field, direct« of the California Poll, aaid today that Interviews conducted Sept. 18-25 aho indicated Eugene McCarthy might have "strong write.in vote potential, 0 in California. In August , Carter, the Democratic challenger in tbe Nov. 2 elect.loo, bad a 53-33 per- cent lead over the incumbent · Republican president. but that slipped to tl·35 in the tally re- : leased today on 1,°"' interviews. Looting at the poll, Field said one thing was clear : .. California'• Important bloc of 45 eleetoral votes ls now in the doubtful category where not too many weeks ago it was solidly in the Cart« column." DAILY PILOT ty and Oceanside , said the famJ. ly bad filed a claim against the Navy in April and today's suit was the "next s tep." The lawyer said the suit names the United States or America, the President, the secretary of Defense, secretary ol the Navy. commandant ol the Marine Corps. commandant of ' tbe recruit depot, four trainine depot personnel and 500 "John Does •• to be filled in u needed Yacoboul said the McClure family, of Lufkin, Tex.., b aslrlng $3.5 million f~ wroogfu1 death, $3.5 million for the recruit's suf· fering between the time ol In- jury last December and his de- ath in March and $7 millioo in punitive damages. He never re- gained consciousness. The suit contends McClure1s rights under four comtttutioo.al amendments were violated. "Jf the cue is decided in the family•a favor, it wW eet a pre- cedent in the handling of militarJ cues,'' Y acoboai aaid. "Even attorneys fer the 1overu· ment agree with that.'' The attorney said be will argue that McClure was invalid· ly recruited by the Marines because be wu not really cape. ble ol passing a battery ol meo- tal and physical qualification tests. Yaeoboui said If the com.en. ticm that tbe young man was not recruited properly ls upheld, be would be considered a clYilian rather than military penoanel. The family's ault claims llcClo.re WU lei.zed unlawfully by the Marines, subjected to ln- volantary servitude, subjected to cruel and unusual pmishment and finally had his life taken without due process ol law. ''Some of tbeae fll'8 Vf!!!l'Y trick)> legal points to argue but '" feet we have a strong case," Yacoboui said. Now that the l\llt bas been filed the federal government presumably will seek a sum- mary judgment oo the claim that McClure waa lnvalldl)' recruited. Yecoboul said It the suit ls upheld on that point the clefeo- dllnt would be the United States IOft!l1lnlent and the other prtn. dpals named iD the lldioD would be dlacarded. uwe included the names lD tbe neat we are not able to pursue our attioo again.st the Umt.d Stlltes under the federal Claims Act, .. Ya~tald. In tile event tbe twnm817 Judlment 1oea qaiDll the faml· ly, the attorney a aid acUoe aaaimt the iDdlviduala would proceed. "But we feel we bave our stroaaeat cue qainlt the umi.. eel Sta&el, .. Y acoboal aald.. Tb:ree )(Brine drlJJ blltnactora and three officers •ho supervised the unit to whlcb McClure was a11iped were court·martlaled or rtlll"lm•nded bec:aua4' of his death. Two Teens Charged LOS ANGELES CAP> -Two teen-agers have been arrested in eonnectloo wttb the murder of a Minic• staUon attendant rrtclay dwiq • borllU'J lnt'OI .. - ~= -Ford's usertlcm that Carter dOelil't know wbat be ls lalkinl about lD 1111cestinf a S5 blllloo to '1 blWcm defeue-1p.,nctln1 cut. -Carter's charge that Ford hu abdicated foreign J)()llcy leade rship a nd c ontrol to Secretary of Slate Henry A. JCi.sa. tnger. Carter cooteadl tbat JC1u. tni-bas DO reSard for axnlit,y 1D U.S. policy abroed, and Chat be II a "Lone Ranger." running a seer«, one-man show. Indeed. if the White House rival• •imply repeat what they've been saying about each nther from a(ar, the Great Debate II will be far more heated than tneir flrat nalioQally televtaed mateh two weeta ago. AD Aalociated Presa poll rated that one a virtual draw ln the eye1 ol the voters, wtth a &light 1aln ln support for Ferd. So far, forelp policy and de- fense have not been tapics of tbe campaign -even though they are paramount responsibilities of any president. Carter bas campaigned hardest on the issues of the economy, taxes and jobs, categories that were covered ill" the flrst debate without either candidate breaking new ground. On the road, Carter talks about SCORE DEBATE YOURSELF Page A3 foreign policy and defense when asked, or lo prepared addresses to audiences concerned with those issues. He has said that polls show bim that when people are asked to list t.beir concerns, tbey list at least a dozen topics before they get to foreign affain. Ford, in a more limited road campaign, bas made more of those topics, but only in tbe most general terms. He reminds au- diences that under the GOP ad· ministration, the nation is al peace. He promlses to keep it that way, and says the way to do it is with increased spending for defense, not with such cuts as Carter bas advocated. Tonight's debate puts Ford oo ground he chose; be regards de- fense and foreign policy as bis strong points and bad wanted the first debate to be on lbo5e issues. Yet bis advisers already are hedging the wager a bit, with White House press secretary Ron Nessen remarking that the Presi· dent will be subject to restraints that will not affect Carter, because Ford's words "will be in· t.erpreted by foreign leaders as reflecting American policy." There does, indeed. appear to be a problem for Ford. and pro- bably for Carter, too, in any de- bate questi(>DS about Kissinger's efforts to promote peaceful transition to black nuU<rity rule in southern Africa. It ls unset· tled, it b explosive, and either man could compound the pro- blem with an ill-considered phrase. For Carter's words, like Ford's, will be read. analyzed and weighed in foreign ministries around the world. Utility Fights Crash Probe CARl..SBAD <AP)-San Diego Gas and Electric Company b go- log to court to block the California Industrial Safety Divt.ioo from interviewing wil- nesaes to Saturday's crane col· lapse that tilled six wort.men. Gardon Pearce, a vice presi- dent ol the utility, said Tuesday it will seek a temporary restrain· lag order and preliminary in· Jupdioa. "'lbe company's position is based Oil the possibility that the COJllPaD.)' or lta employes could be crtmlnally beld ~e fer the accident," Pearce 'said. "We want company counael to be pre- sent when the state investigators talk to our empJoyes." Talb May Reopen NEW YORK (AP> -Secretary ol State Henry Kimnger and &raeli Foreign Minist« Ylgal Alloa met today to explore the re- opening ol Middle East peace fl. forts. POlLY WANTED, GUI' GOOD HOME A Father's Grief APWI ...... Over come with grief. Francisco Sanz cries by the grave where the body of his son, Luis, is about to be buried. The son was a police offi cer slain in the assassination of an adviser to King Juan Carlos in San Sebastian, Spain. They believe the~ m.v have made oft with food stamps and several rolJ• of qusters aod dumce amounUoetoGOO. That flpre eould So mueb :!f:r!i:• polie. epatwman DHcrtp'9on bf tltie thrH l\IDD>flll. Men b1 It ......... otber ltore patloal ta addlUoe to victims In the robbery. CClQftnned that the trio were of Lalin clescft1t. One suspect wu delcribed as beint aix feet tall. weigbiDg. between 160 and 200 pounds, and wearl.n1 lofli black hair, combed atraieht back. A secood 1unman waa described aa bei.QI ftvef-. .,_ inches tall. witb a atodry build with allcked down black hair. fte third 1uspect ls abc>W the f"'9 ftve incbea tall, weiCbinc JJO to 150 pounds, alsowitballcbddown hair. Police are questioning wit· nesses to the robbery for a more complete description of the aunmen. F,....PflfleAJ Laguna Girl Raped; BRIBERY • • Fat Suspect Sought llysen probably WU unaware that be was committting a crime by making these comments but I thought it wise to bring the matter to Your attention.·· A frizzy-haired fat man raped a 16-year-old Laguna Beach girl be picked up while she was hitchhiking in front of Laguna Beach High School Tuesday nigbL She also suffered a broken wrist. Police believe the assailant to be the same man who accosted a 12-year-old girl walking her dog in the south part of town earlier in the evening. The man fled when tbe girl ordered her dog t.o attack bim. The young worn an was raped al koifepoint behind bushes along Donna Drive, a rutted dirt road meeting Park Avenue just below Hidden Valley Drive. The girl attempted to flee when taken from the man's red· orange VW beetle and but she either fell or was tackled by the man, and broke a wrist. She was then forced at knifepoint to walk up Donna Drive to the secluded area where she was sexually at- tacked. nie girl bad been picked up as she hitchhiked in front or Laguna Beach ffjgh School at about 10 p.m. After the rape, she was driven to an area across from Thurs ton Intermediate School and released. She walked to ber home and police were summoned. Det. Gene Brooks said the girl described her attacker as a heavy set man with frizzy aboulder length hair and a full beard. He appeared t o be between 25 and 30 years of age and wore blue jeans. a T-shirt and tennis sl oes. He used a J. inch bladed pocketknife. Det. Brooks said be would be checking today with law e n· forcement agencies throughout the area to see if the description of the rapist matched those given in other rapes. The attack is the second in Laguna Beach since the mid· May arrest of Gary Lee Jackman, an El Toro Marine staff sergeant sought for 16 rapes committed by the "polite rapist." Woman Jailed 'On Fraud Rap A Seal Beach woman accused on arrest of defrauding the Orange County Welfare Depart. ment of $6,833 bas been sen- tenced to 90 days in the county jail and ordered to make restitu· tioo. Superior Court Judge James H. Walsworth ordered the jail term for Vera Springer, S1, ol 3521 Pansy Circle, after she pleaded guilty to felmy welfare fraud. It was successfully alleged that Mrs . Springer drew welfare without reporting her earniDgs from employment, ber receipt of child support payments and ber r e ce ipt of une mployment benefits. Flanagan pointed out in bb cross examination ol Riley that the memorandum was sent to Hicks just one month before an election in which Riley was re- turned to bis Fifth District seaL Riley also confirmed for f1anaaan that be received mare fundl in campaign contributions than any other candidate and that builders and developers were amoo& the major contributors. Riley told Flanagan and Depu. ty Diatricl Attorney Joba Conley that there were no pJam for a branch library in San Clemente at the time Hyzen allegedly offered the bribe and that thet"e are oone today. 1be trial ran i.oto a deJ=~ when Judie H. Walter decided to question prospective witness Brian Patrick Lane out- sid.ethe presence oftbejury. Lane, wbo ls an att.ouaey ard mayor of San Clemente. bu pointed out to Judge Staner as he earlier pointed out to tbe snmct Jury that bis attorney-dieut rel•. tionsbip wUb Hyun must be clarified before be testifies. Speech Boycotted MANILA, The Philippines (AP> -lo the first overtly political moves ol the Interna- tional Mooatary Fund <IMF> World Bank meeting, Arabs and some Africans walked out today before a speech by an laraeli. and Pakistan demanded admission of China and expulsiooofTaiwan. Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST. • COST A MESA • 646-1919 w Slits -~ 131s. 24ss.29ss.3915 Soccer B*-'95 ID 2695 Soccer Sllae$.-7'5 to 241s Cotton Swat Saits-89° Heeded-Zippered Swatsllirts-aso Long Slem-Y-mck Acryic Swatars-&ts Long & S.-t Sleeve Colored T-9irts--3's & 41s Gym Sberts & Track hits 225 ti 450 llyloa ......... JacUts 7" & ps S1utsa-1zs to 300 Opea 9 ti & Closed Sllday Basketllals--695 ti 32'5 F11tbls-795 to 21'5 Volleyllals-695 ta 231s Raql8tballs--t 2s T enlis Balls can of 3-1 11 1aa.22s.2so Handballs & Cleves Racquetllal -•ts Tenlis Racbts Tennis lkesses T 11nis Slirts & Sllarts Tmis Sllees Racbt Stl'inlif -5a Center --~1919 Wodne$day. October b 19715 O"'IL 'f Pll.OT A3 ,..-----DefHlce ~ttard.------Sclunit Seeks Ref 017113 NW.YSIS R~ING EVloeNCE _ORGANIZATION -- REFUTATIQN -- --PRESENTATION -- Total Points __ Property Tax Study Set .. • -• ~ • ., .. J ~ I ., -Award each c.ndktate 1 to 5 pointa In ••ch cat990'Y 1--Poor 2-Falr 3--Aver•g• 4-Excellent 5-&lperlor SC..ndllrdl of EveluatJon ANALYSIS: REASONING: EVIDENCE: ORGANIZATION: REFUTATION: PRESENTATION: Doe• the spoaker ;antJfy laauea which are clearly relev•nt? Doe• he ofter .ound basic presmiM• fOf' hi• subuquent lln•• of argument? Does Heh step In the a.,.ake,.• pro- ceu of argument Mem reasonable and logical? Oo•• he move 90Undty from premise to conctuaion without 1o9'caterror? How effectively dOea the speaker support hi• own auertton• wtth vatld factual or atatlstk:al lntonn.tion, or with the objective opfnlons of re- cognized expert•? Does the speaker present hi• •rvu- ments In a clear and weU organllied manner, or Is he overty complex and confusing? How effectively does the speaker ex- pose t he analytical, logical or evidential fallacies In the arguments of his opponent? ~w persuasively does the speaker communicate ht• meNage? Does he combine delivery. gestures, and eye contact to create an Image of com· petence and leadership? Round Two Score Tonight's Debate WASHINGTON (AP> -You can ~ain keep your own score in tonight's foreign policy debate between President Ford and Jimmy Carter. And you 'II have a chance to compare your judgment with the opinions of the experts. FIVE PROMINENT university debate coaches again will judge the debate for the Associated Press. using a scorecard adapted from the one used by the American Forensic Association in student competition. You can judge the performance of the candidates for yourself on the accompanying scorecard. You can then compare your results with the experts' scoring, whlcb wiU be published in Thursday's edition. You and the experts will use a point system to evaluate Ford and Carter on each of six aspects of their performance. performance. The sJx aspects include presentation, or the candidate's style: evidence, or bow well a candidate documents his pos1- tioos; reasoning; analysis; refutation, or bis skills in rebut- tal; and organization. IN EACH category, a candidate gets a score ranging from one point for a poor performance t.o five points for a superior job. The scorttard was prepared by James J . Unger. dire<:· tor of forensics at Georgetown University in WasbingtOll. Unger, whose debate teams have reached the final round of every national debate tournament, is a graduate of Harvard Law School and will be ooe of the five AP panelists. The other panelists are: Dr. Barbara O'Connor. chairman of the Department ol Communications Studies at California State University, Sacramento. She directs one of the country's largest speech programs. DR. DON PARSON, forensics director at the University ol Kansas. His team woo Ute national intercollegiate debate championship in April. William Southworth, forensics director at the Universi- ty of Redlands. His learns have the most successf\ll record in tbe Far West. Melissa Maxcy Wade, forensics director al Emory University, Atlanta. She is director of tb~ largest debate tournament in the South. Jn the first Ford-Carter debate, the panelists con- cluded the encounter had been very close, with four of the ftvei>anelists giving Ford a slight edge, while lbe ftfth judge aaid Carter bad a slight advant.qe . ~'------------------------------------------------' By KATHY Cl.ANCY OfllleD•llyl'l .. 5Ytt A committee designed t.oderue ways to reform slate property t.ax laws was 1ormtl<1 'l'\lesaay by the Orange County .Board or Supervlsors . Eventually, the 14-mt mber committee es t a blis hed al Supervisor Laurence Scbmit's suggestion will suggest: -Measures necessary to over· haul tax laws Schmit said are forcing some homeowners to sell their bomu because they cannot affordt.opay increased taxes. -Methods the board of supervisors can use to exert pre· ssure on state legislators to force Sea Scout Fund Vote Postponed Orange County Boy Scouts won't learn for two more weeks whether county supervisors will donate $442,752 to help develop their Newport Beach Sea Scout base. Wb eo the matter came before the board for approval Tuesday. two supervisors expressed some reservations. and the board put off a final decis ion until Oct. 19. Super visor Laurence Schmit said be wanted to make certain there were no other projects in the Newport Beach area just as · deserving or the county's be)p or more so And Board Chairman Ralph Diedrich asked that a contract be drafted that would assure equal use of the facilities by scouts and other youth groups alike. Ron Nove llo. an assistant director of the county Environ· m e ntal M a n ageme nt Agency (EMA>. explained dollars for the project could come from the Newport Beach Tidelands Fund. He explained the fund will con· lain about $710,000 by June 30. And SS percent of all dollars over $250,000 must be given to the state by then unless they are spent, he said. Novello told supervisors that no other projects for the funds have been round. Schmit asked if the funds could be used to help pay for the new Pacific Coast Highway bridge. But Supervisor Thomas Riley said the bridge already is in the Caltrans budget. and the ~ded county dollars wouldn't speed ronstruction. Riley asked fellow supervisors if they couldn't go ahead and ap- prove the financing Tuesday. but lat.er agreed to lhe two-week de- lay. Kenneth Hickenbottom. ex-ecutive with the Orange County Boy Scout Council, said the exist· ing facility as weU as the pro- posed new one are open t.o all groups equally. although they must first make reservations. He sa.id the facility serves 20.000 to 26,000 yOWlgsters on various outings annuaUy . The county's $442,752 s hare would provid e new docking facilities, along with architect's rees and site improvements. The scouts would provide $512,212 for a building a nd furnis hings, $23,SOO for a swimming pool and $54,580 for other improvements, permits and insurance Cable Controls Added CoWlly Okay Required for Price Hikes Stiffer controls on cable teleYiaion rrancbises in Orange County's unincorporated areas were approved Tuesday by coon· ty npervbors. The new measures reqaire that tour cable TV firms operating out.Ide city Jurisdict.lon obtain aperoval from tbe county Board ~ SUpervison before inc.re.g rates charged lbelr 12.000 aab-ecrlbers. Aloal with the rate coorols. tbe new recu)aUoos mate it man· datarJ' that new tranchise ap- plications be revtewed by the board •t a public hearing. And cable operat.ors must keep recarcla of consumer complaints a.nd their responses or risk forfeltins a $5,000 performaoc@ bond. Should violations be de- emed tevere, lbey can uJUmately bave their franchise uncel.led. R. J. "Cuba" MOl"l'U, diN!ctot d the county Gu.al Servtcu • A&entY (GSA), said .the new re- • platloru lhouJd belp the county • maintain fair cable ..-vtce rates and smoother operation. · In addlUon, be u.td. the new rules meet all Federal Com- municaU.. Commlllioa <FCC> requlremmta. • Fred You, a OSA ad· mlDllU'atlve 1enlca assist.ant~ 1ald the replaUons were d~ 11,,....s &o comply with an FCC or det llkinl cabl~ Qperalon lo meet certain conditions by Marchi. One ol those conditions will re- quire that the four cable operators in unincorporated areas come back t.o supervisors for new franchise agreemeots. And while the FCC regulations do not require supervison to have tbe final say-so on rate bikes, county otncials decided to leave that provtaion in the county ordinance anyway. In the past, Voss said, supervisors did not have direct control over rates. And as a result, some residents of unincorporated areu had complained Ulat t.be&r catMe rues were higher than Udle in sur- round.Ing cities. For ex.ample, Storer Cable TV Jnc. ch11ges lu subscriben in Laguna Beach and San Juan CaJ>lslt"a.no S6 monthly, be saJd. while residents in unincorporat- ed areas of South ~a. Irvine Cove, Emerald Bay, Laguna Nlsuel and Dana Point pay ff.SO a month. Voss said Storer has about 7,250 sublcrtben tn the unln· corporated areas. In additlon, TM Communica- tions Inc .• wb..lcb senices unin· corporated areas in Capbtnno Beac.b, Mission Viejo, A.etean tnlls and North ~charges It.a 4.400 customers f1 ~a month But the firm until recently bad been charging subscribers in San Clemente only $5.50 per month, at that time the lowest rate in the county. The San Cle mente City Council has now approved a rate hike to $6. 75 for tbe firm. Other cable franchises operat· in& fn tbe county include Orange County Cable Television, wb1cb charges $8 monthly to its 350 su~ s cribers in Trabuco and Silverado Canyons, Voss said, and Century Cable wb.icb serves the ciUes of La Habra and Brea along with about 100 customers in unincorporated areas nearby. V~ sald llve other firms bold cable franchises In unincorporat- ed areas, but h•ve not developed a service. Under terms or the new county regulations, franchises will nm for lS years. The musure aJso spells out m ethods ror ide ntifying tranchJse service areas and Ule length of llme ft firm has t.o Im· plement service, usually about llveyean, Voss saJd. In addition. it requires the county to hire a cable rraocbise rt,Wations employe to monitor Urma' o perations . Thal employe'a salary will be covertd by a two percent franchiM tax ca· ble n.nna pay on thelr riross mon· lhly recelpu what Schmit uid are needed re- forms. The committee will be made up ol five public members appointed by each of the five county supel'Wlor!I as well as Scbaiil and Supervisor Ralph Clark. Also named to serve oo lbe tax reform committee were County AdministraUve Officer Rubert Thomas, County Counsel Adrian Kuyper, county Tax Collector- Treasurer Robert Citron, county Assessor Bradley Jacobs and county Superintendent ol Schools Robert Peterson. At Supervisor Ralph Diedrich's suggestion, tbe Orange County Chapter of the California League Dana Barbor ol CiUea was invited t.o appoint two representatives to the tax re.- form com mlttee. Formation of the ()C)mm.tttee came ln the wake of sharply in· cre .. ed property values within the county that this ye.ar resulted tn an overall increase of l8. 7 per- cent In the county's assessment roll. That sharp overall gain tn· eluded increases from 5 to 80 per· centon&SpeTcentofOrangeCoun· ty residential dwellings. And, next week Tax Collector Citron will begin malling almost 400,000 residential tax bills reflecting the impact ot the value aocreaseon county homeowners. Marine Studies Project Backed Plans for a $600,000 marine studies institute at Dana Point Harbor won a qualified endorse- ment from Orange County supervisors Tuesday. The board agreed unanimously to join a consortium of county government and four community college districts for the develop- ment of the institute en 3. 76 acres or county-owned land. In addition. supervis ors pledged to apply for their $400,000 share of construction costs from state tidelands funds. Supervisors based their ten· tative approval, however. on a yet-to-be negotiated agreement with the four college districts which would give the board a greater s ay-so in.the make-up of the proposed institute's board of trustees. Supervisor Thomas Riley sug- gested each college district could appoint one representative, the Orange County Department of Education could have another. while supervisors could each ap- point one member. The 10 trustees. then, could ap· point an 11th member, Riley said. Dr. John Casey or ""Uerton College, who proposed the con· * * * sol'tiwn, had suggested earlier that each community college di.s- trict and the county education de- partment could have two mem· bers, while supervisors could each appoint one. But be told supervisors Tues· day the college districts' chan- cellors were not opposed to the change, although it would re- quire action by each district ·s board of trustees. Supervisors• t entative ap- proval of the institute plans came despite stro11g misgivings ex- pressed by County Ad · ministrative Officer Robert Thomas in a report to the board. He said a private, non-profit foundation tried unsuccessfully for eight years to develop an in· stitute on the county-owned site. He questioned whether the pr~ posed institute would be a ftnan· cial success and where the coun- ty wouHI get its $400.000 share of building cost. He also asked whether or not s upervisors wanted to take part in an educa· tiooal institution. Casey told supervisors Tues· day all four community college districts have now agreed to donate $50,000 eacb t.o the pro- ject. * * * Dana Harbor West Marina Opening Set Ten years or dreams and hard work culminate tonight with the grand opening of the Dana Harbor west marina. More than 500 county officials, business executives and builders are expected to attend the three- hour private festivities that begin at5p.m. The 65-foot yacht El Dorado, loaded with dignitaries headed by Fifth District Supervisor Thmomas Riley, will cast off from the Harbor Patrol office, bead its bow west through the main channel and chug t.o to the new Dana West Marina. Strung across tbe sea between the fmgers of land that fonn the entry will be stretched a ribbon. The El Dorado will slice it and tbe marina wiU be officially open. At that instant, if things go ac· Gem Talk U11J C J/VMPlllW-;S STONEI HAYE MANY HUES cording to plan, a round will be fired rrom the antique mounted gun of the Quiet Cannon restaufant that overlooks the harbor. Organizers said food and drink -lots of burritos and mar. garitas-wiU be accompanied by entertainment including a JO.piece Marine Corps Band, a mariachi band and a barbershop quartet. The marina sales office and the six docks that have approximate- ly 1,000 boating slips will be open for i.n.spectioa. Marina manager Jack Bolander said Wednesday's is a private party. not open to the public. With only 900 parkiri.g spaces on the marina island. he said, tbe officials and dignitaries will be eDOUJCb to handle. This Seiko Chronograph meets all requirements. From cars to clothing to interior decorations, people ol good taste are showing more and more appreciaUoo ol color Supervusors took t.helr flrsl swipe at property tu laws lD ear· ly August when they adopted a CJark·proposed resoluUOQ calling for a freeze on property assess- ments. The same resolution said the current $1,750 homeowner's ex· emOUoo 8hould be incn?.&sed. Lut week. Clark went to a County Supervisors A.ssociaUon of California conference In an at· tempt to have Or ange County's position incorpor.ated &nt.o the as· "sociatioo's lax r eform program. Schmit said Tuesday tba.t his committee's e ffort s hould dovetail into whatever position the aasoclaUon eventually t&lces. "l agree with bis (Clark's) stance that it will be useful for the counties t.o be together on t.hls issue," said Schmit. "Meanwhile. J feel stroag.ly that aa the second largest count.y in the stat.ewe have a responsibili- ty to develop a broadly based and tbougbtlul position.·· ln reaponse to Scbm.tt's re- marks, Clark said officials from other counties believe it may be necessary to resort t.o a ballot in· itiatlve to have the property tax structure overhauled. Youth 'Fights Devil,' Loses Right Hand Sf AFFORD. Conn. (AP) -An ts.year-old man said be cut off bis band because he "got in a fight with the devil." then walked the streets with a Bible to preach the word of God, says the policeman who found him. Robert Huettl of Stooington, Conn., was in stable CCJOClition at Hartford Hospital following sur- gery to restore his rtgbt band. A spokesman said it was too early to tell if the operation bad been successful. Patrolman Fl-anJt Kania said he found Huettl Monday night as the young man was walking along Route 190, carrying a Bible under bis arm and bleeding heavllv "I a!ted him wby be did it and he s&d, 'If your right band of· fends thee, cut it off and toss it away'." Kania said in an in· ~ew. . He said HuetU's parents told police their son bad no bist.cry of any wron1rdoing or imtabil.ity. The young man bad taken a room Sunday night in an ion and was to attend a nearby truck drivers' school, Kania said. He apparently graduated from high school in June. Kania said HuetU bad made a t.oumiquet for his arm before cut- Cing off the band with a razor blade. "He knew he wasn't going to die," Kania said. "He just bad t.o get rid of his band. He said be got in a fight with the devil." The patrolman s aid be and an orr-duty volunteer f11eman who also stopped at the scene made a better tourniquet and called for another officer to retrieve the band . It w as found in a wastebasket in tbe room. Huettl told the firemen "'Ibis ls what the Lord did" and said be 1 was oo bis way to preach about evil. As they drove to the hospital, Huettl "just read the Wble." Ka0&a said. "He didn't say anything but be was coherent. He wasn't shocked or anything." Colored stones have increased in popularlty. too. Mo$t or us are ramWar wilb the green emerald, the red ruby and the blue s appblre. The wide range ol colorful stones becoming more popular include such beauties a.s tbe blue turquoise, the blue-green tourmaline, and sapphires of c:Ulferent hues . A etttonograph It a Wflll wetCll thel'e f llO a atop watch. lhll atunnino Seiko a&tt-Wlod. 11op.11en pu1h t>unon, aynGtlronized second MtllnQ. lntemel rotallng elaPMd llmil'O rlr'Q. 30 mtnute recordef. tac:hymelef llrner. Hardlex mer·tM11t CfYllll. 229 ft. wai.<· ... led. Engtllhf . S(>enilll calendar, Instant dey-4111& Mt. Lumlnoue hand• and dtal metkell. Seiko rellOW dlel, ttelnlMll tlMI Cliff and bt'ec.1$1. A.tk tot No.~17J. Even tr you have a strong liking for a particular color, you have a wide choice ol stones. Tbe ruby, ror exatnple, is not the only red beauty. You may choose a garnet, a rubellte tourmaline, red splnet or red zircon. ''Color couslna" of the blue sapphire include tan za nfl e, o r the aforementioned tourmalines In •que, blue or blue-green hues. Tbt co~ors you will find ln prectous aoet aern1·PteclOUJ stones are Almoel limitless. YOW' own eye., your poct et~oot a n d your apprtcladon or pl'Mty thinss. all have wide hor1&0lll ol color to cbool~ lrom. 1823 NE\WOAT BLVO COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS 30 'Y£ARS IN THE SAME LOCATION Qanl(Amoricard-MH tor Charge PHONE e>48·3401 ,44 o:.ILY PILOT .last Thai Power Seized . 22 Die, Martial Law Declared . ·.''•') , ... • " w. ·· Tom ~ldae 1.•:1 •.• Great Wall Going Up 8CENE&Y DEPT-We now come to the weighty issue ol the Orut WaJJ of Emerald Bay. 'Ibis la not the Great WallofChina. But tor the atudy this atructure bas beengiven,you'dtbinkitwas. Just for the reeOrd on geo- graphy. the Emerald Bay under diacussioo is not at Lake Tahoe. Jt la a private community, split by PacUlc Coast ltighway, just northwesterly of Lag\ma Beach. Emerald Bay people decided to buJld a block wall along the hlJbway frontage to screen off their homes from traffic and nolM. 'Ibe part they built is 4lf1 feet long and she feet tall. WHEN THE EMERALD Bay people did this, they made two mistakes. First, they buJlt a block wall that is plain Ully. Secondly, they built the thing without bothering to cet a permit from the reatonal coastal com-m.i.ssJon. It appear that the second error ha.s cauaed a lot Dl<ll'e trouble than the first one. After the re1ional coutal peo- .ple iaaued a notice of violatioo, the wall was submitted for a permit. It wu denied, presumably mean· in&the wall bad to comedown. Emerald Bay people appealed to the atate coastal body. Now I have in hand an ex· tensive coaatal commission staff report and recommendation on the Great Wall of Emerald Bay. THE STAFF has studied the impact or highway noiae on the ac:ljacent homes. They admit that the wall has cut traffic racket to acceptable residential levels. Al.ao beauUlicaUon haa been man- dated. The ugly wall has to be capped with wood and covered with perennial vines within five years. So much for all that. But ap- • pveoUy part or the wall still must be torn down. The reason ia, accordin1 to the coutal staff report, It blocks the view.• ''The coutal act requires the commiaslon lo assure that .. award views from the highway Will be protected and estbetic values maintained ... , " the staff repo.rt reminds us. The Emerald Bay case iJ. lmtrates how state bureaucracy can set into • local problem and blow it. What should be pre- served, or course. are our wide viataa to the sea. HERE AT EMEILU.D Bay, Coast Hishway swings down Into an arroyo lo an S·curve. Several sates open onto the bJghway. There is an acceleration lane in the middle of the b.l8bw~ at the bottom or the dip. Headln' south into tb1a curve, ·the speed limit, which nobody pays any attention to. 1oes from SS to 4S to 3S miles per hour. THIS 18 A DANGEBOtJS stretch of highway. It's no place fer drivers to attempt a fieel:in& aJance at scenery. U UD·uglJlled, a wall there mt1ht even save a tew Uvea and the coastal COJD· mission ataff ought to aet lheir heacb atratshtened out on that one. Two of my friends have been tilled on Emerald Bay curve. I'll admit that may have col· ored my thinking a bit. BANGKOK,Thailand(AP)- Tbailaod's defense minister seized ~wer today an. lhmled n1btlo1 between lefUata and rtgbtilt.a over the return bome ol former military dlctatcr1banom Kittltacborn. Police uJd at least 22 penom were ldlled. most of them atudents, and about 180 wounded. RJlbUsts hanaed two 1tudenta and mutilated their bodlee. Other bodies were set afire. RADIO THAILAND SAID Defense M lnlater Sang ad Chalawyu bad taken poww-from Prime Minister Seni Pramoj's elected government and declared martial law. Sangad, 60, wbo returned u naval chief and armed forces supreme commander six days ago to join Seni 's cabinet, is known for bis tough stand against communis m and is considered pro-America. The city was calm aa n!Dt fell with no overt oppoaitfon to S8JlCad's takeover. UNCONFJBMED REPORTS put the death toll at 3S or more in the riots at Thammasat University. Flgbting erupted between rl1ht·wing and lell·wtng students, then waves of police firing machine guns stormed the leftists. Rieht-wing groups moved in again behind the police. Then a right-wing rnobol about 10,000 broke through the 1ates of Thailand's 1overnment house but did not enter the building itaelf, which was surrounded by 1.soo police. RJpUsts banged two students. set upon their bodies with atick.s, gouged out the eyes and cut the throats. The body ol another vie· ~.headless on the college Auociated Presa photo· erapber Chee Sae Chu aaw a mob drae four students from the uo· iversity gates throuab nearby streets, beat them, soak them wit..b gasoline and set them afire. Strips ol automobile tJre were used to reed the names. Chee said be couJd not tell ii the vie· tima were dead or alive when they were aet afire. AUTBO&mES A&•aTED more tban 1,300 univentty atu- denta. Field Marshal Thanom, whose own re1ime waa ousted by Strikers To Vote On Pact DETROIT (AP) -1be22-day. old strike against Ford Motor Co. ia expected to last at leut another week while workers vote on a tentative agreement that puts union members on the road toward a four-day wort week. TllE TBREE·YEAB accord reached late Tuesday. must be ratified by 170,000 United Auto Workers (UAW) members who etnlck the No. 2 auto maker in 22 stat.ea at midnight Sept. H . Union officials say it could take a week to 10 days to win ratifica- tion and end the waUcout. which bu abut Ford assembly and manufacturing plants and baited the firm's North American pro- duction. The acreement made it seem likely that the strike would not damaie the nation's economic recovery. Financial analyst.a bad said the walkout could bave serious impact lf 1t lasted laqer than a mooth . UAW President Leonard Woodcock aald detalla ol tbe set· tlemeot would not be announeed unW after 1t ls reviewed today by the union's lotemaUonal ex· ecvtive board and 'lburaday by the union's NaUooal Ford Coun-cil. Police Arrest 100 In '"Fencing Ring' ATLANTA (AP> -With $64,000 in federal money, ~a police bought 19 automobiles, sbc pickup trucb and 1,100 other it.ems ranging from <fiamond rlnaa to a cbeck-writinc machine. all of it stolen. They also arrested nearly 100 persons in a "fencing" ( J operation so convincing that I N SHORT even police a.ometlmes could't couldn't tell cops from crooks . The arrests came in a rush early Tuesday in the Atlanta and Savannah areas. Another UIO persoas were beinc sought. It wu ln the two areas that federal state and local agents bad apenl six months convincing thieves thrj were tough, experienced criminals. Nl%on P ardo• at lsaue KANSAS CITY, Mo. CAP> -With Jimmy Carter's a~t •J>- provaJ, Sen. Walter F. Mondale has fell free to a peak bia mind on tbe Democratic campaign trail, even ii be diaairees with bia runn1og tnate. . Mondale raised the laaue Tuesday of Pretldent Ford'• 1974 pardcn of Richard M. Nixoo and declared that Watergate ud other 1overnmental abuses of power are "not yesterday's issue." Ptdloatt 'l'ltreatettftf BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP> -After acrambllnl for hl.s life at Beirut's "Museum Gate" croesing, Arab Lea,ue med.I.tor Hassan Sabrt KhoU threatened today to withdraw the league's small peacekeeping force at the gate uolesa right-wine Christians atop shelling Ule area. Kamal JumblaU. top leader ot the PaJestlnlans' Moslem leftist allles, ordered a general mobilization ln the leftist-held areas of Lebanon "to confront the Syrian invasion at all costa." But%. K11ebel AuaHftl LOS ANGELES <AP> -Actinl AgrtcuJture Secretary John A. Koebel allegedly helped former Secretary Earl L. But.a in secret ef. forts to avoid federal laws aaainat racial bias, the Loa Anaeles Times reports today. A similar report in the newspaper Tuesday alleging that B\JU bad tried to avoid hiring more blacks was denied by Butz and Knebel. Rains Band Across U.S. Stomu Extend from Gulf to Great Lakes Al~ AA<llOr ... At1ani. .... tf'llleltl .. .,.,.rtll eolte lo-... "··· O>lc ... Cln<IMetl Ciewla.'4 i:.nvw O.trolt Dullllll ,, . ._ _.,.., "°"''~ .. _City LA\ V.O.s LlttltlloO 11111.,.,,, Mlt-•te Ml"'-poll1-St flalll ..... 0r •• ..,, New Yori! A o.tf\CI ti tllo-•1 aM lllllft• dw1twnn ltM<MCI lto<n tlle t9fltrtl Go.tit CNtt 111'9 Ille c~tr., OrNt Uk• l"09IOft .. ,,, today, *-lno '*1.lrltlt t reins, •1MC:t.tt1 Ill IN SMI\ , .. ......, ...... -· t.K-..,, "1 t ~ l""4 IMt flt• ..... _.... ,,.11 ..., .. -ttocklft wttll ,_ .,.,.,.,,., • ft• ct•Q•••• allow --· '°' 1119 --c .i11""'i. widespread student rioting in 1973, returned from exile to 'lbailand Sept. 19 and WU or- dained aa a Buddhlst moo.It. He laid be wanted to be dole to bia 91·7ear-old father. Leftist atudenu and labor 1roup1 have demonstrated almost daily since Thanom'a re- turn, demandin1 that be be de- ported or tried for the deaths ol 72 dvillam during the 1913 riot. ing ud other crimes allecedly eommlUed durtn1 bis rule. Let- U.ta and rl1btlats have also duh ed. TBANOll WAS STAYING in a downtown monaatery, guarded by about 5,000 members Of the VWaie Scout.a, a youth CJ"OUI>. Student.a have long wielded considerable power in Thai politics. For a number or months after Tbanom's ouster, they <lid much of the work ol running the country, performing such tasks as directing traffic in Bangkok and being responsible for law and order. Wbeo the rightist mob reached government house today, Prime Minister Seni came out and climbed atop a bus to address the demonstrators through a microphone. He promised that he would resign lf their demands for the resignations of three cabinet memben were not met. Crown Prin ce Vachlralongkom. dressed ln an army captain's unifonn, alao ap. peared and urged the de- monstrators to dispene, saying they. bad already abown their bravery. Turne d Of I fJg Ma Bell Technological advances may improve some lives, but they leave Wilford E. Woodworth, Easton, Mass., cold. Paralyzed from the neck down by polio since he was 14, Woodworth lost special help of local operators when New England Telephone Company installed automatic equipment. He still can get help placing calls, but the sometimes far-away operators don't know him; retelling his s tory for each request is "a real hassle." Four Fined $17 Million RICHMOND, Va. (AP)-F\nes totaling more than ~7 million agal.nal two flrma and two in· dlvidual1 for dumping the pesticide Kepone lnto a river "dearly signaled that polluters will be held accountable," says the natioa 's top enviroomental of· fleer. Ruaaell Train, admlnlstrator of the Environmental Protection A;ency, hailed Tuesday's ruling by U.S. Diatrict Judge Robert R. Merbige as a "landmark de· ciaion." ALLIED CHEMICAL Corp. was fined $13.2 million, the max· imum allowable, after the fll'm pleaded no contest to SMO counta of discharging Kepone and other highly toxic cbemicab into the James River. It was believed to be the largest fine ever levied for pollution of the nation's waterways. Before fining Allied, Merhige called pollution "a crime agalnst every citizen," and said, "The word must go out. We are not go- ing to pollute the waters." UFE SCIENCE Products Co .. which took over Kepone produc· tions from Allied in 19'14, was fmed $3.8 million. However, the firm is now defunct and bas no u - sets, so there's no w~tbefinecan be paid. Two former Allled employea wbo founded Life Science Prochacta, William P. Moore ud Virgil Hundtolte, were.ch fined $25,000 aod placed on probation tor five years. They were allowed five years to pay the fines. Life Science Products was closed by the state Health Depart- ment in J uly. 1975, after ucoreOf workers developed symptoms of Kepone poisoning. F"ve months later Kepone contamination of marine life forced Gov. Mills Godwin to impose a ftab1ng ban on the lower James River. ''Pssstl OCTDjust doubled bus service. Pass it on.'' People au over Orange County are telling each other 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 and 30 minute service. It's the biggest Improvement we've ever made. No wonder everyone's talking about It. To find out for yourself what the good news Is all about call OCTO Information. Now Is the time to discover how easy and convenient riding the bus oan be. 541~3U And by the way-pass ft on. • Call 647-3311, Or toll-free ZENITH 7-3311, 6AM to 10PM weekdays, or 8AM to 5PM weekends. Good news travels fast. I I Parents Freeze Hopes I ( • "t•1•r fl 1978 0•1L Y PILC'T CeIDetery Worker Dies in Crypt ... Slain Daughter's Bmin Hel,d for Fubue BERltELEY (AP) -Tbe brain ol a 15-year-old Berteley aJ.rl riclouaty beateo to death bas been fl'OleD ad pruerved ln Mtldp•Uon ol a lime in lbe tuuare when medical ldence can create a body lor it. ty," Robert Wilson, rather or Patricia Wilaon, nJd Tuesday. "WE TROUGH 'IUAT IF we cou.Jd make a con· tribution to scien ce somethlng good could come ouL ol thls tragedy,·• he added. SAN DIEGO lAP) -A ~melery worker who went to the aid of a man who collapsed In a crypt 2S feet deep Wa3 himself ~me by lack of oxy1en. and later died. "We feel it. la a bw lhot. tii..rt It's our way of ex· pr'eaUtl our belle! in Ille and our rejectloo of the casual acceptance ot murder and de alb ln our soc:le- Keepers Find Baby Gorilla SAN PASQUAL (AP) -A newborn &otrland eorilla wu found Tueeday at lbe San Dleeo Wild AnJmal Park -its third ever, all October babies. Tbe young woman was beaten t.o death Sunday at a Berkeley clothing store where she worked as a clerk. police saJd. Robbery appears to have been the motive. WUson said he and his wife contacted Art.bur Qualle, president of Trans-Time Inc. Quaife said the parents signed a release wlth the Alameda County coroner permitting lbe coroner to turn the brain over to Trans-Time, wblch speclalbes in preserving bodies unW such time as a cure lslOtlDd for the disease that killed them . .. WE DECIDED THAT the best thing to do Wal to preserve ber brain and Its memories hoping that at some future date science wiU find a way to re- constitute a person essentially the same as Patricia Wtlsoo, •·said Quaife. Spo«!k Speaks Out Tbe two men were preparing the crypt Cor a tour by delegates of the NaUon&J Catholic Ce metery Conference. Eight hours att. firemen rescued them, Jesus Becumea died in Paradise VaJJey Hospital. Berumen, 34, earlier had climbed Into the con· crete-llned. multilevel crypt ot Holy Cross Cemetery to help revive Fausto Palafox.~. Firemen worked almost 30 mtnutes to brine up Palafox and Berumen. Palafox was revived qwek.ly with "a shot of air," a fireman said, but Berumen oever regained consciousness. The parents are Olla and Trib, a 400- pound male whose other mate Dolly gave blrtb to Jim ln October 1973 and to a female named Blnti In October J.B7.C. It ls too early to tell the weight and sex of the newest addition, a put spokeswoman said He predicted such a feat is "at least 50 years away." Tbe brain will be kept at 320 degrees below zero. Quaife said there would be a $400 initial cost and an annual storage fee or $100. A special memorial as been started to raise the money. Dr. Benjamin Spock talks with fellow picket in front of Los Angeles offices or League of Women Voters. He was protesting limitation of debates to Ford and Carter. iViking 2 !Fails in Studio Sets "Mines' Adrift Free Ice Ban Eyed FAST. LOW-COST, QUALITY OFFSET PRtNTlNG 10 to 10,000 Copies Dig Try PASADENA (AP) - The Viking 2 r obot has failed to lift a Martian boulder. but will try again on a smaUer rock. scientists s ay. SAN DIEGO (AP> -Universal Studios is red in the face over two phony Japanese World War II mines that somehow were set adrift in the Pacific. And th~ Coast Guard hasn't been getting many laughs out of the situation either. Shipping bas been advised to be on the lookout for the mines and the Coast Guard said it bas spent a lot of time and manpower attempting to find them. Trueks Too "IT JS A BIG embarrassment for us," said Art Seidel of Universal. "Anyone who finds them is welcome to keep them. We just want to get them out of the water." The mines, which are about three feet in diameter, are made of plastic and are tethered to weights. They were among six lost from motion pie· lure filming on location at Catalina Island on Sept. 24. The prop mines have been drifting south and four have been recovered. "We really blew it," said Seidel SAC.RAMENTO (AP) -Tbe head of the st.ate Alcoholic Beverage Con- trol Department is to de- cide soon whether bars and liquor stores may continue giving away free Ice cubes, a tradi· lion dating about 30 years. "· .. ·-"'-......... _,_.,,. -..,_,, be ,....., .,.,.,. you "'*"- Pholocoplea Avell•ble NEWPORT BEACH 240 Newpot1 Center Or. Design Plaza. Suite 120 (714) 64().9053 OVEA 300 PIPt NATIONWIOIE Ytking team members found that the robot just wasn't strong enough to move the boulder and search underneath It in a last.ditch effort to find organic compounds on Mars. ( __ sz_'ATE_) Smog Rule Widened FRESNO (AP) -Stricter anti-smog regula· tions are on the road foe California's heavy duty trucb and buses. The California Air Resources Board adopted the regulations Tuesday after testimony from representatives of most ol the country's heavy duly Scientists theorized vehicle makers. NobodY. saves you 20% to more cities thin United. that if there are organics The regulations are to cover both gasoUne and Freedom Fare to 79 cities. -structuraJ compounds diesel engines of vehicles over 6,000 pounds gross ---------------------------------------------; that are the basics ol U!e weight, except certain limousines. as we know it -on Mars, they may be found un. THE MAXIMUM AU..OWABLE hydrocarbon derneath a rock, away standard for the 1979 model year was set at 1.5 from ultraviolet Martian grams per brake horsepower hour, dropping pro- {Junlight. gressively to 0.5 gram in the 1983 model year. 011 the Rook The maximum of hydrocarbons and oxides or LOS ANGELES (AP) nitrogen combined was set at s grams per brake _ A Municipal Court horsepower hour for 1979 models, dropping to 4.5 grams for 1983 models. Also adopted were test pro. judge has dis missed cedures similar to those of the U.S. Environmental charges against 14 ProtedionAgency. persons who received traffic tickets while pro-HEAVY DUTY VEIDCLES have ~n under testing the Santa Mooka anti-smog regulations since 1969, but the board said Freeway Diamond Lane standards haven 't grown so progressively stringent project. th f Judge Wilbur DeUmar as ose or passenger cars. dismissed the charges By the 1m model year, trucks and buses will be against the protesters 1 to 14 times dirtier than cars, said Mary N{chols, ' just before the start of vice chairman. their trial, saying the is· Tbe staff of the board said ii the standards Destina lion City Akron/Canton AJlcnl0\\11 /BethJchcm/Easton Balli rnore Bimlingham Boise l3o~ton Buffaln/:\iagara Falls Cedar R.1pic1-;/lmva City Charleston. W. \"a. Charlotte, ~.C. Oiatt.anonRa 01icago Round trl1> You r freedom fare Savlnits ~277.00 :$15.00 307.00 246.00 126.00 338.00 294.00 l l8.00 275.00 W2.00 258.00 ~45.00 S69.00 79.00 77.fX) 6l.00 32.00 84.00 74.00 54 .00 69.00 70.00 64.()() 6 1.00 , sue was moot beeause hadn't been adopted, by 1.990 California's trucks and ._----------------------1 the Diamond Lane no buses would have beet emitting 276 tons per day or Chicago $110.00 $86.00 lqer exists. oxides of nitrogen and Ir> tons of hydrocarbons. Our Economy Freedom Fare lo Chicago offers even l...aate Slain GENE CONE, BOARD spokesman. said the grcalcr savin!{s. CHINO (AP) -A 27· measurement in grams per brake horsepower hour Y1)U :.xwe 28% (1ff regular round· trip Coach fare. year-old inmate or the makes It difficult to compare the standards with Children traveling v.ith you save 55%. , California Institute for those for.passenger cars, which are 0.41 grams per · Men here h as died of mile of hydrocarbons for the 1977 model year , 9.0 Same reslrict1ons as resnilar Freedom Fare. sever e abdominal in· grams per mile of carbon mooox1de, and 1.5 grams ._ _____________________ _, •juries be received in a permileofoxidesofnitrogen. Ocvcland !':i277.00 ~6~.00 1 beating. -----------------C.olumhus. 0. 267.00 67.00 Authorities said Gary -----------------D () 25<J ()() 65 ()() ' Schultz of Chula Vi.st.a. ;iytort, · • · · serving a sentence for ['cnwr 139.00 35.00 armed robbery, died l>e~ ~1otnl'°:) 206.00 52.00 without identifying his I >l'tro1t 269.00 67.00 assailan.t.s. ~~ Eu~cne, Ore. 130.00 :~2.00 Bldz to Speak ~'' I-lint 269.00 67.00 LOS ANGELES <AP> Fort Waynl' 259.00 65.00 -Earl L. Buti plans to Grand Junction 117.00 29.00 &peak to a conv~nti~ 'M4AT'SSOS"CIALUOUTASP'ICIALotSTWICT c;rand Rapids 256.<X> 64.00 neresxti'gnMaonliodnayunddeesrp~~ ... Dear NeighbOr. '·r··t•11~tx1ro/l li0 h Pt11'nt/Winston· c ~•em 2°u.oo 72.00 u•c...., What's in a name? Our name--The Costa Mesa v ... ,, ~ .. JdJ 3 00 28 _ 00 secretary or agriculture, County Water Oistrict-iells you quite a bit about ua l lartford/Springfield 82.00 a spokeswoman for the But watch out you're not tooted by our name. 1 lunt~ville 246.00 62.00 National Association of The words "Costa Mesa" may IT'eke YoU think we're • • C 107 00 49 00 ~... f c l'um:;a~ lly ~ . . Concessionaires says. .....,... .ment o the lty-bot we're not. And the wOtd 2c. I .OO 65 {)(1 pub 11 c I 8 t Bets y "County" In our name mev make you ll'llnk we're an Knoxville o • . / Ber'"bemer sa'ad Butz agency of the County-Cut we're not We are a Wate< 1 -n"l.t"l 262.00 66.00 ., Olatrlcl-and there's the real answer to who we I.A " 1" ha 8 con f i r m e cf he are-we're a Special Oistf1ct. La~ WgCls 59.00 15.00 would appear at the COD· I 1 187 00 47 ()() cessionaire's kickorl WHAM so Sf'ICIALAIOVf. SPICIA1.DISTWICT1 .111Cll n . . meeting at the Dis· You 'll find Special Districts are a very understandable n e y 1 a n d H o t e 1 in kind of government. That's because we're so sil'T'ple. Anaheim. We're constituted under State law to provide only one kind of servioe, such as W11ter. We don't have to balance ~f orM Pro•be oivlng water against other serv1oes. Ilka building roads, offering police protection. Of running parks. That way. SACRAMENTO (AP) our prionlles are clear, aod we become pretty efflclent -Former state prisons m providing our one service. director Ray Procunier What's more. SPOOial Oistrids are run by Directors is promising quick re· YoU elect. They're usually neighbof"S of yours You forms in the turbulent control your Water Distna pretty directly by vour 'OIOte• The peoole In ttus 8"Ml voted to create the Costa 11tate Health Depart· Mesa County Water District. Aa e result, vou·re getting ment, where he will ~ad the servfce you voted for in this O.stric:I, at a reasonable the latest shakeup. once We think that's wtl8l local oove<nment 11 all The blunt-talking about veteran clvll servant Come down to our next meeting and talk to us You're known a.s "Pro." was always welcOme. ------e named cblef deputy ln ch arge of programs Tuesday by state Health Direct o r J erome Lackner. covering such buie operations u Med.I· Cal and nunina homes. ._ _______________ _ DesUnnllon City Medford Memphis Milwauket: Moline/Rock Island/Davenport Muskegon Ne\.\-'J>Ort News/ Hampton/ Williamsburg New York/Newark Norfolk/ H1rtsmourh/ Virginia Beach Omaha Pendleton Philadelphia Pittsburgh Portland Providence Raleigh/Durham Reno Richmond Rochester Saginaw/Midland/Bay City Salem.Ore. Salt Lake City Seattle/Tacoma South Bend Spokane Toledo Wa5hington. D.C. Young~lO\\ ll/Warren/Sharon Round· trip Your freedom fare Savings $1 l i.OO 226.00 245.00 224.00 253.00 315.00 323.00 31!>.00 19·1.00 1'19.00 3 !7.00 286.00 139.00 334.00 294.00 85.00 306.00 301.00 269.00 134.00 125.00 152.00 251.00 150.00 266.00 :m7.oo 286.00 :529.00 56.00 61.00 56.00 63.00 79.00 8 1.00 79.00 48.00 37.00 79.00 72.00 35.00 84.00 74.00 21.00 76.00 75.00 67.00 3-1.00 31.00 38.00 63.00 38.00 66.00 77.00 72.00 Night Coach to 7 Eastern cities. There ·s an even easier way to ~we 20%. It's United·::; Ni~ht C.Oach. If you fly after 10 p.m .. then~ arc: no restrictions at all. Available to Balt i1norc. &ston, Cleveland, New \ork. Philadelph1n. Pittsburgh, and \\ashrngtnn. D.C. SKI & SPOITS WllK, OCT. 1-13 e HEAD FA&HtON SHOW e 1<·2 RACING TEN.I e 81<1 RAMP SP!CTACYl.AR • OVMNASTICS eAf'T!A Sl<l fASHIQNI e EQUIPMENT e PAIZES Flythe endlyskies of United. 5outh Coast ?laza • UnlTED AIRLlnes . 'A6 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE City Re~cted Slowly i' Huntington Beach has a public nuisance on its •• hands and city olficials haven't distinguished ~= themselve~ by acting either very quickly or very l•: astutely. ti Noxious fumes from a construction site near ~ ·Bolsa Chica Street and Warner Avenue had plagued i• residents Cor lhree weeks before the city council got •! around lo officially declaring them a public nuisance. Hundreds of people complained, but excavation • work was allowed to continue at the site, apparenUy ,.:. without adequate concern for area homeowners. t: Work continued despite the fact that it had not ,: been established beyond all doubts that the fumes ~: were not potentially dangp-ous . t~ Officials now say the soil is being treated and the ~l smell has dissipated somewhat aJlhough no perma- ~ nent solution is in sight. ~! The city s hould develop adequate safeguards now :! for the future and should insist that soil tests indicate :; exactly what developers may be getting themselves • into. ~ . ~. Authorities s hould give a higher priority to the =: safety and welfare of the neighborhood ins tead of as· • -suming the developer's permit and investment give ~ him precedence. • > -: ~ ~ ~ ·~ !• Smooth N egotiation The Ocean View School Dis trict's recent settle· ment of a one-year teacher contract s hould be lauded for its fairness to both labor and management. ' •• Both sides in the dispute, which ended one day ., before a threatened strike, seemed pleased about the ~ accord even though bitter words were exchanged ~ { . .-. right up until the inal negotiation session. :· A tip of the hat 1~ aJso due lo mediator Doug • . ... .. .. :· .. Thompson who worked with both sldes as an advisor during the last 10 days or negotiations. Thompson was sent ln at the request of the teachers' representaUves by th~ s tate Educational Employment Relations Board. - When the du~t finally setUcd over the ~~ View contract dis pute. teachers appeared happy and ad· m.inistrators acted as i! a burden had been lifted. The summer· long negotiations produced laudabl~ results , results which might well be emulated by other school officials and teacher groups in such dis· trlcts as Huntington Beach city and Westminster elementary districts . Warning for All As many specialists would be quick to point out, most of the causes of fire accidents are not fully re- alized until they produce tragic results. Such was the case with the explosion and tire at Fountain Valley ffigh School Sept. 27 which critically injured a stude nt and severely burned his instructor . Although steps are now being taken to make stu- dents more aware of the danger involved in the use of nammable liquids. it too often takes a sad story like this to remind all of us of ever-needed safety precau- tions. A can of m ethyl alcohol. lit by a tiny flame from an alcohol burner in a harmless classroom experi- ment turned the end of the school day into a nightmare for Michael Kane. 14, who is s till listed in critical condition this week . Let this be a reminder to everyone that constant safety precautions must be taken into consideration when fire and flammable liquids are used in close proximity. H /F ~FordAide Neav Medicare Costs a Blow • .. ~ f Gets Pay Dear Gloomy Gus Malnutrition, Suicide Ahead? .. f From U.S. . . t ( EV ANS-NOV AK J .. W/\SllfNCTON Michael Duval. who b paid $38,000·plus a • year out of the • U.S. Treasury • to be special ! counsel lo the l President, is .. spending full ? time these ~ d a y s representing :: P r e s 1 d e n l •Ford 's in · .: terests 1n de· ... bale arrangement!> .a sign that • the Ford campaign 1s as con· -: temptuous as e''er of the new ·! election campaign law. '.: That act forbids additional con- tributions. including conlribu- • lions in kind. lo a presidential i nominee acccpl1ng the S2l.3 •• million fcd<'ral sub.1dy. Thus. :~ Duval might be expected to drop \: off the federal payroll, at least temporarily. 1f the teller of the law were followed. nut the Ford campaign has no intention of do- .... ing that. :! Whether the Fcdera.J Election ~ Commissl<)n will deal hetwcen ~ now and Nov. 2 with this aid re- .• ceived by candidate Ford is • doubtful But while probahly run- ' ning no risk of legal action. Mr • Ford ·s managers ha\ c been ~ cnlicized aJI year for violating :; thespintofthelaw. i• T h l' j u s l 1 ( I c a t i 0 l'I r 0 r .. ·~ Maybe Earl Butz would consent lo do his imitauon of Step •n Fetchit at the next Black Panther rally. C.U.Y. Gloomy Gu' commtnh •re-'ubmttttd bV rt•d~r·s •nd do not neceu•r•ly r•fll(t lht "'~"""~ of t"e nf'W\P•P•f' S•nd YCk.tr pet Pf~tt lo G1oomy Gu\, 0.f•l't PtlOC Duval is that he is a volunteer giving part-time campaign help that does not interfere with rus of· ficial duties . "Thal 's ridiculous." a Ford campaign insider told us. "Mike has been worklng on the debates Cull time. If he's doing anything else. I don 't know about it." In- deed, Duval was fully engaged in politics at Kansas City, as a Ford operative in the platform fight. NOR IS he alone. Much or the White House staff is concentrat- ing on lhe presidential cam- paign. a s is the President. Richard Cheney, Whlte House chief of staff on the federal payroll at S42.500 a year, has been considered by many the real campaign manager since Mr Ford'snomination. Ford campaign lawyers potnl lo th~ FEC dismissal of previous complaints about Rogers Morton working on the campaign from the White House. But the com- mission's ruling js not clear·cut. Moreover. a concurring opin- ion by commission member Neil Staebler indicated he would like to see the matter raised in a case such as the one posed by Duval. . ~ ~ ~ Who Can Take Life? •• ... •• • ... ~ . . I have a letter from an or- ganization calling itseU "fo'oun - dat1on for Life," in Toledo, Ohio. The letter com mends a recent piece of mine. in which I referred • to the human race as our "most :i.. endangered species.'' ~ "Foundation for Life" is an an-~ ti-abortion group. The poster ac- itf' companying the letter says. '"We ~ are dedicated to a very basic prin- •• ciple. That human life is sacred Period. No qualifications or ex· 1o• ceptions or conditions " The poster points out that "in lhe U.S. today, a woman has the legal right to take the lite of her ; unborn child. For any reason.·• : Then goes on to say; "Is there !' some magic line that makes the life of an unborn child any less •• important than the life or a day- • old child? Or a week-old child? : Orn year-old child?" ... • Suppose we agree. Then what i. about an 18-year-c>ld child ? But '-' tlle state has the legal right to • send an is.year-old boy to his t death in 1any war it cares to : declare, or even not to declare. • t IF HUMAN life Is sacred, • period, why do the anti-abortion people speak out 110 forcefully on the nght of the foetus, but remain mu~ when n lad who has been loved and cared lor and educated is shipped away to lace "Wl· natural death" on 1>ome forelgn btitlleflcld? What :ibout capital punist\• ment? Does the state possess the right to take human life any more than the mother does? IC human life is truly ••sacred." qten It should ,be left to God to de-- (SYDNEY HARRIS) cide who shall die, just as lie de· cides who Is to be born. The "Foundation for Life" says. quite correctly. "We believe we all ha ve a responsibility to oppose what we think is wrong." But how can you think that abortion is wrong If you condone capital punishment and the evil institution of war? If you permit the state to kill .. legally.'' why does not the mother have the same right? TIIE ABORTION issue is more complex and difficult to resolve than either its opponents or pro- ponents are willing lo admit. But. this apart, it bas always pu~:ile<l me that people can be so passionate against killing a baby in the womb. and so indifferent to murder by I.he state after the child reaches the threshold of maturity. Jf life is sacred, lhen the state has no moral authority lo take it. If there are ·'no quali/tcalions or eicccpUons or conditions,'' then the right-to·life organizations muAt speak out u forcefully again.at war and capital J)Wlisb· ~nl u they do against abort.Ion. Otherwlae. the concept or "sacredness" becomes a mockery at the •1e ol 18. We are not free to pick end choose among our modes ol morality. If w do, we become special pleadcr3, Md not true believers, To the Editor: The news m edia have an· nounced a vicious increase or 19 percent in Medicare costs. effec. tiveJan. l . 1977. Senior citizens and others ex- isting on fi xed and/or low income cannot presently compete with those who have sufficient in· come. This 19 percent increase 1s prohibitive . Thousands cannot afford lo be hospitalized and this latest increase will deprive thousands more of sorely needed medical care. The result of deprivation is malnutrition. death and sorrow. Our legislative process is in- consistent because it fails to pro- vide for the people who are en- titled to the necessities or ure. We are presently paying $30 a month (or Medicare and S.J. in· suran ce and cannot afford periodic increases unJess Social Security, etc. increases likewise This latest proposed increase will certainly produce more dis- respect for our Washington legis lators. Malnutrition and suicide will certainly increase unless immediate action is taken to relieve lhe needy senior citizens. We desperately need legisla- tion to exempt all senior citizens from this and the lru.t increases in Medicare costs. It has been said that we get so deep in the forest we cannot see the trees. I think this is the status of our Washington legislators and possibly others CM.GIBBENS Airport 'Blight~ To the Editor: My mother owns a small house in Huntington Beach. Her only pleasures are her TV and her garden. The airplanes spoil her TV and now s he is broken- hearted because the city chopped down her front tree because of airplanes so low overhead. She loved and cared for that tree. It hadn't cracked sidewalk or street. Her whole street was stripped naked and looks awful. That postage stamp airport is a costly blight on her town. B CARTER Se~ EducnOon To the Editor: Parents are the primary sex educators of their own children whether they do it well or poorly. Some parents think that the less their children know about sex, the less likely they are to engage in "promiscuous" irresponsible seicual behavior. Studies and \?irr f ,. , ,; l ·~ '" .. , ... ~ .. and I promise you s bltlanced budget If I have to spend every cent we hllve!' ( MAILBOX J everyday observations don't sup- port this generalization. The fear of "putting ideas into their heads" by being open and informative is W\founded. The ideas are already there. Young people get Lhem from books, newspapers, movies, and most frequently from friends. As a society we encourage the open pursuit of knowledge in most fields eicceplsexuality. UNFORTUNATELY, what young people don't know about sex and contraception can hurt them. Teenage pregnancy is a serious problem: one in four American teenagers has a child before she reaches the age of 20 Teenagers account for over half or aJl out-of-wedlock births and one-third of all abortions in the U.S. Teenage pregnancy is large· ly the result of non-use or sporadic use of contraception. How can we ask young people to assume responsibility tor their sexual behavior when we guarantee their ignor a nee? October 10-16 is National Fami- ly Sex Education Week, a time to start teaching young people what they want to know. Let's work at being "askable" parents, teachers, and friends; support open communication in the area of human sexuality. A.M. ROBINSON Brown l'•. Carter To the Editor: Governor Carter's speech st O'Neill Ranch called for more federal spending to save money. That could only be a truism in Alice's Wonderland. Other lands have not yet been able to succeed at th ts, even though they sometimes do appear up·side· down a~d backwards. But it would be interesting to know Governor Brown's reaction to Carter's blaming California's high property tax on the federal government when California is under Brown's control and the federal government is under Democratic control. which makes them responsible for the inflation he deplores. There does have to be relief for property tax. but his idea of col- lecting more tax for federal re- A Lebanon Primer I went as a war correspondent with Eisenhower forces into Lebanon in 1958. Those were the days when Americans imagined that we could remodel the world in our own image. Now Lebanon is engaged in another civil war. Americans are moving out, not in. That is significant. Figurative- ly, Lebanon is two countries divided by a green line. Christian on one side . Moslem on the other. For 16 months now Lebanese have been killing Lebanese in the name of religion. Actually, this nation, smaller than Connecticut. is home for 17 diverse Christian and Moslem sects. The volatility of the people or thls area hu preserved a "state of turbulence" for generations. PRESENTLY, the contention involves the Christian demand that Palestinian campe be re- located outside Lebanon -but when that issue has been re- solv~ there will be another. The 400 ,000 Palestinians living in Lebanon have gained much political power by allylng themselves with anybody, in- cludJng Communists. 'lbe Cbrtslians con.sider this a direct tbreat lo the Western- oriented capitalism which they .so pa1nstaklngly est.abli&hed and which, until this shootout. had pTOSpercd Lebanon beyond an,y other Mideast naUon. Ai is, In that war·torn coun- try. tbe aeveral lacUoo.\ control acat~ted fractions ol lht fto- araphy. The domincant Maronites hold ( PAUL HARVEY J the mountains north of the Damascus Road. Tripoli is controlled by Palesti· nians and assorted leftists. Presently the Christians' Syrian aJlies control the bread· basket area -lhe Bekaa Valley . THE BIG CITY, Beirut, in· eludes three big Palestinian camps, and when you travel from their area lo the Christian suburbs It's like going from East Germany into West Germany. The Palestinians manage to exist with almost no food or fuel, with huge piles or garbage, spawning cat -size rats and with civiUans carrying sidearms. Whereas in Christian Lebanon you can almost forget there is a war on -traffic and commerce are near normal with almost a resort atmosphere on beaches and streets. There is talk or building up the hotels along the beaches, luring back Western businessmen. Down the road ahead is a parti- Uon of Lebanon sim.ilar to the partition of Germany. Jt is almost inevitable. It may or may not be permanent. But what's mor6 important ii\ what Is NOT happening in Lebanon -overt American In· tervenlfon. AMERICAN Marines did not wade ashore as we did 18 ycus ago. On the contrary, Americans who wanted out were ever·so- carefully evacuated. Al least thl1 •oneratJon of Americans, and hopefully lUturo .ient:r1tiona, ha.s learned that be-U\J a truly ,-ood nel8'1bor impllet f'irsl or all -minding your own ,bwiness. ·:enue sharing runds, to be sent to Washington to be laundered and returned full of strings. doesn't seem a practical solution. It just shifts the taxes and adds to the administration costs. BUT CARTER ls right in say. ing the free enterprise system is "a good one." Does he intend to leave it free? His pronounce- ments have been to control and tax it heavier, which could weaken or even destroy il, de· pending on how far his rules go. And his plan to take up the job slack by creating government jobs isn't a very good solution either. President Ford's solution of letting free enterp°rise be freer, and to leave it more investment capilal so it can expand and create more jobs, is more prac- • tical. And if we give him a more practical Congress next year that understands saving as well as spending. he could probably cut down the federal budget enough to make 1t work. It sure seems worth a try. GOLDIE JOSEPH rrop. 14 Support To the Editor: Your Sept. 28 editorial oppos- ing Prop. 14 is based on the mis· taken premise that it is desirable that the Legislature be able to make i;hanges in the landmark farm labor law which was passed. as you point out. after "endless conferences" with Gov. Brown. The result of those conferences was a delicate compromise which all sides agreed to abide by. But after only a few months, the growers aRd their allies in the state Legislature reneged on that agreement and attempted to sabotage the Jaw. IT WAS only the fact that s ignatures were Quickly gathered for Prop. 14 that caused the Legislature to refu nd the Agricultural Labor Relations Board. The architect or tho farm labor law, Gov. Brown, says that Prop. 14 should be passed in order lo re- move the issue from politics and allow the ALR B to operate free of pressure from any side. Let us take his advice and vote Yes on 14. PAULC. EKLOF SHARONK EKLOF O~ANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Ro/lt'rf N lfud, Publ1~htr 1"lluma1 l\e1·nl. f:d1tor Hnrhorn Krrtbtr/1. f:d11onol Pogt• f.:111101 The cdtl•m:al pa11e or th..-Dn1ly Pilot i.e1:k~ 10 inform and c,llmull•I<' r('adcri. by prcsentrn~ on this p:tRe divl'rs~ commrntary on topics of lntl'rr~t by synd1cat· l'd columnists and ~urtoonist!I. hy providlnj.l u rorum for readers' ncwi. unll b,· presl!nling U\ls ne ... ~pnJl<'r's opinion!' and ideas on currcnl \opll'b. The ('(lt\oriril oµimons of'ltht' Dally Pilot al)~llr only in th<' editorial column nt the top ar thl' pui;c>. Optnlon~ l'X· pres'il'<l by the columnlsts nnd e:trt00f'l1<1t!I :ind letter wr\\{'rs :arl' their nv. n and no cndoHtmen\ of lhe\r VH''4J by the Oaily Pilot $hould tit' lnfl'rred. Wednesday, October 6, 1976 { I Net Bldbeg u,., ...... Eugenio Martinez. convicted Watergate burglar, says he's net trying to bide by using the name E. Rolando Martinez, the name he says he used in Cuba. Today he's a car salesman in Miami. He says those who recognize him don 't act negatively. Got a problem? Then wnte to Pat Dunn. Pat wiU cut red tape. getting the answers and action you need to solve i nequities in government and busl· ness. Mail your quest"1M to Pat Dunn At Your Service. Orange Coast Dcul.y Pilot. P .0 . Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Include your telephone number . The column appears daily except Saturdays. zei• Ce.t•rw....,.., L•e DEAR PAT: I have Cound it impossible to ar- range settlement of my claim against a person in- sured by 20tb Century Insurance Co. of Los Angeles. Their client struck and destroyed my van-camper, damaged my trailer and injured me during an acci- dent in Kansas on July 20. The Kansas HJgbway Patrol report indicates that the driver insured by 20th Century was totally at fault. I bave tried to con- tact the claims agent assJgned to lhls case for more than a month with no success. An itemized list o( my losses due to the accident was submitted Aug. 24. L.J .K., Costa Mesa A spokesman for Dale Hakb, claim• maaager, says that u adjutor now bu coa&acted yoa &o set. tie Ulla ,clabn with no furtlller delay. He noted that you abo were .. bard to reach" a.ad that call-back ---------pboae messages bad not been uswered by yoa. AYS prevlded your employment phone number' bec:aue the lnsaruce company appareDUy dJd not hve it a. Its files. Several other complaints bave been prevlotasly aabmJUed &o the column regarding dd.s lnsurallce company's claim se«Jemeat pro- cedure. Budget Hearings Faked 'l WASHINGTON (AP)) -The staf( director of a Senate Appropriations subcommittee has re- signed after disclosure that a series or hearings on which a $56-billion budget was based were oeverbeld. Aides said Tuesday the dir~ctor, Harley M . Dirks, submitted hls re- • slgnation in a letter to Sen. Warren Magnuson (0-Wash. ), chairman of the subcommittee on labor and health, educa- tion and welfare. COLUMNIST Jack An· derson disclosed several weeks ago that the print· ed record or a series of subcommittee hearings last winter on the pro- posed budgets !or the de- partments of Labor and Ptdtl11g Deg Old ol MUery DEAR PAT: We have the best little dog we've ever owned, but we're about ready to have her put to sleep just to put her out o( her misery. She bas an allergy, probably fleas, that forces her to scratch and chew herseli constantly until she now is raw with sores. She ·s also weak, generally run down and she smells to high heaven. Veterinarians haven't given us lhe a nswer. We've used shots and Vitamin B for her , plus flea collars, dust and soap. None have done lhe job. Perhaps one of your readers can give us an answer before we have to destroy our dog. B.G .. Costa Mesa A veterinarian AYS contacted advises an Jm- mediate follow-up call to your own veterinarian. Your dog probably is allergic to the saliva of &he neas that are bithlg her. This caa cause tbe symp&om• you have described.. "EnvinNtmental" nea CODtrol ls essential to belp yom dog. Yoa mast protect ber from fleas In the areu she frequents. Tb1s may Involve treatiDg yoar yard and home, plus keeping your pet nea-free witb frequent nea treat- ment badas and providing ber wftb clean bedding at all times. Aatlhbtimfne or corUsone sboU also may be recommended. AYS was told &hat tbls year is a "bad one for neas.'' The nea seuoo bas not yet pused In Orange Coanty, and YOCU' dog reqalres special attention. Be sure to contact your vderlnartan again and ask for spectflc envlroe- men&al treatment advice. Health, Education and -------------------Welfare were Caked - that the hearings were .. ---•-----------~,.. .. never held. (Anderson's -JIE- ' column appea rs regular- ly on the editorial pageot If your the Daily Pilot). As it turned out, the 4,500 pages of transcript f contained printed 1·gure testimony submitted by witnesses and written re- 1 marks by members ollhe subcommittee. isn't IN ADDITION, the tran sc rjpts were b • s prinkle d With OC · ecom1ng casional remarks in an apparent atte mpt to make it seem the bear-t · ings were held. 0 you At one point, for exam-• • • pie, the transcript has Magnuson gaveling a flo subcommittee s ession to Q order and we lcoming • • • • • • • several witnesses. should be DIRKS, IN a letter to subcommittee members , June 30, s aid that changes In the way a com1•ng • hearings testimony was handled had allowed printers to prepare a full t transcript of the budget O US hearings and make it • , available to ~mbers and their starrs in near· record time. The Magnuson sub- committee has jurisdlc· tion over the s econd largest a ppropriation bill in the Ceder al govem· ment. The $56.l ·billion 1' version Cor tbe 12 months " that began Oct. 1 was r enacted last week over President Ford's veto. Hearings were not legal- ly required. Dirks is reputed to be one of the most able, and most powerful, aides in the Senate. TBS PUIM""• HIAT .... All COMO. "'--___ , ,.,,,_,,,.,,,.,~ ~ISSIOff VIEJO '"21 Ce"""° C.-·~ ~~:'.t---. p •••• ~,.,I 495-0401 COSfAMESA t~H-'81¥d 642·1153 KJTCHIM I: IATH llMODlltM• NHISTIMAns '"°""°' ..... .,. .. Al'IAHffM•MAIN ~'ta! IWW U-n ""'IO<(•f •1 ... ' 772-3470 .,,,:,,! I M p E R I A L spa "the place for evary~y· C8ll 982-1388 18030 Magnolia Fountain Valley • Vout> memberahlp "'E• " you oan ttnd equal taiolltt ... ano ..,.•loe• tor ...... . ·. Wednesday. October 6. 197111 DAtl 'P•LCT /..1 BUY NOW AND SAVE!! SOME SIZES LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND!! Brand New! Not Blems! Not Retreads! The General JET-AIR m $ 95 Stze 6.~13 tubeteu bleckwall, plus $1.77 Federal Ea:c111 Tax A real value for today's economy! Th e Jet-Air m is built with rugged four-ply construction, Ouragen111 Tread Rubber, GENERAL JET Atlt II BL EMS 695-14 s 17's ILACIWAU. 695-14 WHR'EWAU. s19ts Plus 1 89 Fed. Elie. Tax. Each GENERAL JUMBO 780 FIBERGlASS BB. no BL EMS F-7S.14 ILACIWAU P\us 2 64 Fed. Exe. TIX Eacn and twin-tread design. Why pay more?=============== sm F.E.T. ILACKWAU.~ 650x13 1.93 $17.95 700x13 1.97 $21.95 F78x14 2.25 $24.95 G14 2.55 $27.95 H14 2.75 $29.95 H78x15 2.80 $29.95 WHITEWALLS 13 00 MORE Charge it at Gener8' • IMPORT RADIAL GENERAL SPRINT FIBERGLASS BELTED JET Sl.82 S28.95 12.05 13595 1212 134.95 12 27 13695 12.43 S3995 1260 141 95 S2.83 $44.95 GENERAL JUMBO 780 n. '°""""°"""""'"""'°"ff!() r...-... .-bro.oo ... -_..,.. ~ ....... "<l_tl __ b b'Q ..... ·--<&Gl:lOCl¥ b _ "°"'O _..,.,. _ _, ... ·- ttllOl(ltl ....... WHITEWAllS! A78xl3 s29's 3'1.A,._rJ ONLY =.-,=:. ~Ta sm f.E.T. WHITIWAll PRICE E78xl5 1240 S3995 F78x15 12 54 '4195 G781115 1265 $4295 H78xl 5 $287 14595 J78.ll1S S303 146 ll:i L7Bx15 1314 14895 STEEL RADIALS BELTED The General Dual-Steel Radial 5 27~~ s29~~ Sl14 Plus 1 95 Fed EJic Tax Each ALIGNMENT SPECIAL We a<11usr casrer caml>ef .. .. 1~1n arid roe-0u1 sen1ngs lO car manulacturer s spec1hcarions s12's COMPACT A~CAIS GIVE YOURSELF A BRAKE. .. BRAKE RELINE Now at ~ 1 Popular Prices! ~ GMer11f's Dual-Steer Radial IS deS1gned With radial ply construction tor tono mileage. a polyester cord body for sn-oolh nding comfort. and two steel belts 10< i!T1>8C1 res1stanoe. s399s ~ BA7&-11 tut>elest whllewall, l Sill ER78ll14 · FR78ll14 GR78x14 HfF 8x14 GR70x15 GR78x15 HR78x15 JR78x15 LA78x15 FfT 249 2.89 289 307 313 2.117 3 15 3 31 3.47 PRK! 151.95 155.95 le1.95 18895 184.95 164115 18U5 171115 t 7195 1 Install NEW heavy dUIY lin1no on 1114 wMeltl 2 Rebuild ttte cytinderS on all Wl'IMlll 3 Bleed bralles -install heavy duty brake fluid 4 lnSt>ed brake retum SClnnos 5 Turn and true all 4 brake orurns 6 Inspect fronr wheel beerinot 7 Adjust brakes ar1<2 checK enrgency linklQe 8 ROid test YoUr au10IT'Oblte 569~ Rain Check: Should our supply of some sizes or lines run short during this event, we wlll honor any ordeB placed now for 1 "•re delivery at the advertised price. ' Don Swedlund Inc. .............. - 2855 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa iiiii ,.._ 540.5710 646-SOll Sooner or later, you11 own Generals=== .. •• ,.\'1 Of.Ll' PILCJT Wednnday October 6, 1976 QUEENIE 8v Phil lnterland1 "Snoh'" Deatlu Elsewhere ... SEATTLE (AP) - Physicist Ulysses M. S&ffbler, 56, an official of the Atomic Energy Commission for 23 years, veteran of the Manhat- tan Project and more re- cenUy an executive with Exxon Nuclear Corp., diedSUnday. LA MESA (AP) Funeral services were pending for E. Hantaoa Ball, assistant dean of students at Contra Costa College unti.1 1969, who died ol an apparent heart De ath Notice• attack at home. Hall. 58, was vice president for s tudent personnel at Grossmont College. TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Harry E. Foley, 79, a policeman who helped capture the notorious John Dillinger and his gang here in 1934, died Sunday. MlAMI (AP) -Lars Onsager, 72, winner of the 1968 Nobel PrUe for chemistry, was found dead at bis home Tues- day. D eath Notice-. COX MYHltE Back Bay Wi ldlife BillOK'd Governor Brown bu si1ned Sen . Dennis Carpent('r's $1.l mllhoo blU for development of the Upper Newport Bay Wildlife Preserve. The bill will provide the money out of funds the state r eceived in damages u a result ot the 1969 Santa Barbara ou spill. The money goes Na..ed Ce P ..-. to the state Department Native Santa Anan ol Fish and Game which Manuel Gomez bas manages the preserve. bee 0 a p p o i n t e d PLANS FOB develop-assistant director d ment of the preserve call t b e O f f i c e o f for a ~490 ,00~ mars h Relations w ith rest.oration proJect near Sch ls d C ll the site or the old salt 00 ~ 0 eges works at the northern at UC lrvme. end of the bay and $50,000 to dredge the channel separating one of the island s from th e mainland. The largest portion ol the money -$560,000 - Disaster Class Se t will go into construction A Red c ross disaster of a nature center on the orientation class for east side of the bay and volunteers will be held the first part of a traiJ Saturday from 8:30 a.m. system which eventually t.o9p.m. atthe American will skirt the bay. Red Cross Orange Coun· Produetlon S lowe d I County Bus Shortage Looms BylimYCLANCY Ot • o.ity ..... Matt A ahorta1e ol new buses may affect the Orange County Tramlt ()lstrict's pJ an.s to buy 75 new buses tbll year, OCTD General Manager Ed Lorltz bas warned. Lorita blamed the pending shortage oo in- declalon by the federal Urtwl Mass Tranalt Ad· mlniatraUon (U.MTA) over a MW coach deslsn, planned to make bus travel more comfortable tor commuters and more ucctisslble for the ban· dicapped. AS A RESULT, BE said, some manufacturers are slowing produdioo, and he feared 11 OCTD did not hurry with its bus order. delivery of the coaches might be delayed a couple of years. UMT A's decislao affects tranlrit plans ~ause the federal agency will pay the $70,000 to $76,000 purchase price for each ol the 75 coaches. Loritz said later be probably will prepare two sets of bus specifications -ooe for the old design and one for the new design. AT BEST, HE SAID. OCTD would not be ready PUBLIC NOTJCE PUBUC NO'l1CE to 10 to bid for the bule:s before Janu..-y. ~ And then, he coaUnued, the order probably could not be filled by a manufacturer for uoUter nine months. OCTD currently bu 2S7 buses and plau to purchase 15 new small buses In addJUOP to tbe n coaches th.la year. LOlllTZ SAID PIAN8 are to build the neet to an eventual 600 bU5ee by addinl about 75 annually. He also told directors OCTI> otnclals coutantly w•tcb for used buses that mav become available. But beeause of tJMTA'a lndeclllon. be 1aid, mOlt systems are retalnin& their older bU8el lnalead ol se1li.ac them. mr.sn lt~rde . L1qunr BAKER AT HARBOR Yu. CHOICE OftZllMDS WILDLIFE manager ty C h apter Hea d - Roy Hines was en· quarters, 601 N. Golden thuslas lic about the Circle Drive in Santa passage of the bill and Ana. c• .... ,111'!1. E. I ·OWE D..... I 00 MM ... LO..a $3.17 said the Department of For pre-registration, ~ ~ .. ..,. .r..,.. Fish and Game will im-call the American Red POOTSPICIAUST fine win mediately begin survey. Cross, Orange County Announces the <>penfng of his office fC>f • es ing and the seeking ol Chapter at 1835·5381, ex-the Practice of Podlatric Medicine and Foot • pmiy planning permit approvals. tension 29 or for more in-Surgery. SubspeclaJtles: ~latncs The project must be formation call the Red (children's foot e>rob'ems). and Podiarric UftUOR CASE DISCOUNTS approved by the Coastal Cross, South County Scx>tta Medlolne. T Commission a nd tbe· Service Center, 31882 MAllNHS MBNCALft.AU ttteaa llerde um Army Corp of Engineers Camino Capistrano, San s.Hw 1os .. before actual construe-Juan Capistr a no at 1ss ,.._... • ._ ATMAl:IOa OOltOTHY l COX. resl<ltflt ol OSCAR M MYHRE. rHklenl o1 Hun- ,.._ a.ec11. C.t ~ .. Md -Oct. tlnQlon e.~11. c. P•t.Wd -.-,.0c1 s. 4. "7 .. SN 11 wrvfY\'d l>v ,,_, "'6bMO, 1'76. Som A-•' 19. tlt7 In Oslo ~•• M. Co•; lour clllldr'efl, Or . ...,,_Y 5'1Nlwd by 1111 Wiie Mary ~Devi\ CO• ol Loulsvtlle, Kefl. EH,,.l>el/IMyllre;onesonR°"ldMyllfe tucky, Mr Rtc,..n:t Davis CO•ol l>trl ol Otlo, H«w•y; cse119111er MB. Odver Rldfe.llllnoh:Mr.J•rne10.vhC.O•ol Kranu of Oslo, No rway; tllrte VllOOdlend Hiiis. Ce . enO Mrs Dofotrw orandclllldr•11; and two orut· O•vls lyll• of Gol•I•. Ce. Fin or•ndchlldren He llH tlvtd In gt9'1d<lllldrtn. SM ...... PUI f'09lnl of C..lltornl• tor 47 YH"; In Huntlnvton n.. Wiiiiam C.l>ell Ol•Pttr of !ht OAR Be.cl\ tor 30 yean. He was a ml'mbtr ol -• PHI otflcer or Tiie O•UQtll~ ol Thll HUfltlnqlon BHCll MeSO<llc L.odl)e 1111. Mlmlle• ol T1't TueSdtv Mor'nlnQ :lllO. was e lormer meml>er of~ Pa~ tioo can begin. "I would 496-fi611 between lOa.m. 171 .. , ......... ~, ....... ,, ..... L .. ,,,, L1·qunr COSTAtmA hope there would be -3 p.m., Monday through ... --·'' • ... .._ 549' ,.044 some construction by .Fri~·~d~a:Y~·~~~~~~__!~!!!!!!!!!~!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;~~~;;~ lm, .. Hines said. r Hines also said an in· ventory of archeological sites already is under way as a step toward preservin g Indian artifacts located in the CIYI> end Tu1tln Woltlel\'I Clul>. Verdt~ lodoe 3'9 ol LOl\O Beech; area. S.rvl<t1 We<lne'ldey Oct. •. 1'76 .tt memtier of T"" Seasl(le Ch<lpler H9 11:00 AM, Smllll Tutl!lll Lamt> o-i. Order of Ille EAslern Sier He was• F J • S-e Ana, Ce. Friends w11o "'4111 mllY Wor111y Pelrofl II\ 1949; member of'"'-0:.-11... om comrll>ufe to TM OAR or Ille cll.trltyol Sc.ottlsh Rlteol Lof10 Beach; director of '&.&& t~r Cflofct. Smith Tuthill L.tmbdlrK· HunllnolOll &eacll Clleml>er at eom. IOn -rt• from 19'0 to 19'2: serwcl °"" "- MATM•WS t.rm o vle•pre1ldenl and at50 owner c u • JOHN H. M.ATHEWS, rttlder!fol lOS ol Myhrt'\ Stationery Store In HIJfll· ancer mt ~Ire Avenue, •••-l•lend, c... lnoton Beach lrom 1947 to 1'76. JIHMd •-Y Oct.•. 1'76. SYnrlved l>y Mtmorla1service\1 00 PM Fr1dllv0c1. .,,. Grace L. Mttl\••'; '°" JOfl •.••Sn11t11'•Chape1 Prtvat•lnttrml'nt Four Newport Beach Ml!Nwt of Pasadena Ce ~r •I W~tm4Mter Memorlat,Partt. In u.., . d h b MnotLYle l.MdlOfS•~~.c..,i-o111~n.-.11onsm•y1>otmedtln111s· rest ents ave een tlll!tn, Mlf"9tlrtt Al>l>ott ol Pl--; l\Clme !0 The Amtrlcen C.ncerSocle(y, elected lo the board OJ CWOllM McNl«.e of LOI~ ca., Smith s~u ... ydirect~. directors of the Orange -~.~.S-wtL---.of MYll C U · f ..... rty Hlll1: -or-*"'lchft. LOUISE OOB8S NYE.~ ol ounty n it 0 the ~s'::::r~~~ ~~~ c.o.1• ~·. c. Pm..i •• .., Oct.'· American Cancer Socie-c.. •I 11 ,._ Bellr·lkr--on CotOM 1'71> 51111 Is wolved l>Y ""~ JoM ty (ACS ). ,.. H¥Old Nye. '°" ROQer Nye of Costa dltl ~r director• Mne, c.. , <Seuvllltr' LUCiiie SdW'ol>e<' VIKTOlt ot Sjml V•lley; 1>n>l"9•-.11UCllll Oobbsof FRANCES M VIKTOll. ~ oA SorlflQflelO, llllnot•· grandson llotien 0.... Point, Ce PasMd •••YSe91 19. Hye; orandd•uo;illter Stepru,.le 1m. Be-wife of .Alfred J Voklor Sclw'-... Mr\. Nye w.n • mrmbtr ol '°" K.,,,,.111 B Vlklor. <MUQhl,... M" I(-IC•-Gamma Sorority end Tr. VI ...... s Roy ., .... WrYIY\'d l>y ,_ 0.Ullflltrs of TM -'lnwrl<.in Rettol11- oran0c11lld•tfl· t-l>rother\, llW'e,, ""° lion Graveside \ervlces 11·00 AM ....._ Ro\ary Thur.clay Seol 30. 197• *' T""d•Y •I Pacil1c View MerM<lal 7 00 PM •I O'Connor leo;iuna Hiii• P-. Rtv Bruce.A. ICurrleolll<latir>g County Supervisor Thomas F . Riley, who served as h on orary chairman of the ACS's benefit ball in February and Dorothy Doan. who, with her husband, Dr. Thomas W. Doan, was general-co-chairman of the ball, were elected. ~a:::::~ ~r'i~'~!~~t P«lfk Vltw Mor1u•ry dlreclor1. t'74 at 10·00 .AM al St. Ec!Werd\' ELLWOOD Ot-le Otun:ll. Dene Point, C&. l,,ler· LEMOINE M. ELLWOOD, resldltn1 '"""AKen•lon Cemetery, El Toro, c.. o1 o.....,.. c.. P .. -.d away Oc1. 4, O'Cormor LaQuna Hiiis ~'*Ydlrte-· 197~ SurvlveO by dauollttr, Karen E. tort. Ga l>rlel o f S •nl• .Ana ; lwo Also e lected were Kivie Moldave, wbo is currently doing ACS- !unded research at UCI, and Rosemary Sietz, a recovered mastectomy patient who bas been ac- tive in r eal estate in Newport Beach for 16 years. New granOClllldren Funer•I servlc~ on VERA ACORD NEW, retiOent Of Friday at tO:OO AM at Braog I. San• ~· Hills. C• Passed ••• ,Oct. 2. O\apel, CoallllQ•. C•. Bell -·y ,,., ... Survl-..d by d•UOllltr Mo.. .A. Mortuary IOUI dl-torl. Balley Potter ot I.OS Olfvot, ca . tl'Vee gt-lllldren Mr\ Ar9yle Campl>ell OLANDER ol lrvfne. John Balley Potter ol MARION E. OLANOER, l'Mlct.ntol Ben:lley, ca . ROl>trt 8roou Poltrr of Saln1 Paul. MlnneMJla. P .. sed -•Y l.OI Olivos. Ca., \Isler M" Miiion S.111. ?'I, 1976. Survl""d l>y son, Or. OIHn or O~nvtr, Colorado: two Aoo.rtOl...0..-ofHewPorfBH<ll.Ca. brother•, Ouane Acord or Nortll dauQMer, Jean L. Olanci.t ol Union O· Holl""'°°"· Vel\ Acord of Lanca.ter. ty, C.. .• tour Qral\<kllll~. S....1ct Gt9Y\'\l<H Mrvl<u wlll De lltlCI IO·JO Wiii l>t B•IU·Beroeron COst• Mlrsa AM !.elurO.y Ocl. •, 1976 et Paclll< Chapel el 1·00 PM lntermtlll It vi-Mtrnorle• Par"· Ntwoo<1 Btkll, °*"'-C.!Nlterv '" Ml~ta.. BalU· C.. Pee Ille View Mor1u•ry Ol'fft.,,., 8tr9lron Otrtelor•. '" ri... ot flOwtrs tllt remlly ~" SEELEY p 11--D COfllrlllutlons be maOt 10 ,,,. V"'9ty T HORD SEELEY, rHlclel\I or OJA.II antt Oubol Lo\ .. flQeles, C.. Bat-, Ce. P•ssed .,.., Oct I, 1974 BAL TZ·BERGERON FUNERAL HOME O>rona del Mar 673-9450 Costa Mesa 646-2424 8ELL BROADWAY MORTUARY l 10 Broadway Costa M esa 6-42-9150 McCORMICK MORTUARY Laguna Beach 494-941 6 San Juan C3pistrano 495-1776 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3600 Pacific View Of1ve NewPort. California 844-2700 PEEK FAMILY COlONIAL FUNERAL. HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 693-3525 IMITHS' MORTUARY 827 Main St. Huntington Beach 536-e539 MUTH TUTHILL LAMI OUR W!:STCLIFF CHAPEL Mortuary•• 646-<4888 427 E. 17th St.. COsta Mesa Sunlvtd t>y belOved wile Rutt\ 5"1tv S S d Of 1"-l\omt. dllUt;!llltr COn\IM<f e t atur ay Ht911'11otllem of WHlllllOfon. 0 C.;.,,,. brother Or S.... S s.t.ley Of Sjt-Sc><· • 1no. Merv••""· one sister Mn. Met1er A Harvest Time Polka ::,°!1~,:;,,'i.:r :WU:~..! Dance will be held by the E11itc0pe1 Olurch Of Ne•-1 eeec11: Orange County Poli!h ,. ... active In,. ... , Hl•IW lor '"" IMt Club Saturday a t Ptum-~1r::.:!:~ i;::;~~oR•~:·p~"-= ber's Hall, 3904 w. ~ dave.,..n1no0c1.1.m6atT11eW*Slclitt St. Santa Ana. Ol•C>el ol Tiie Smflll Tufl\411 Lerno Th' th Mor1uerv. •21 e 11111 street, o..1a e dance, open to e ,,_.. ca. Gre•es•cs• ""'kt Frlc1ttv public, starts at 8:30 Oct. •· "" •' T11e "•rr>or Rt11 p m Refresbmen•ft will Cefnetttry et Harbor 11nd GI$~ Bl-. • • ~ Felhtr ........ Coykend•ll olflclMll\Q. include Polish sausage, ~'." Tutll!ll La1t11> Mortuery dlr.c· sauerkraut 8lld Polilb pastries. 1n1urence AUTOMOBILE AS LOW AS s 116°0 AHMWJ.Y •Mamed and 25 yn. old Celifomla Financial R8SC>OOSiblllty YACHTS SMALl.BOAT LARGE BOAT Dlsa>uNTS EXTENDED CRUISING TO MEXICAN WATERS COMMER.CW BOATS BOB ALEY & ASSOC., INC. NORTH O.c.-546-3205 SOUTH 0.~42-6500 You get all these services FREE in your own corner of Keystone Kountry • W~ you llve or~ In Keystone Kountry, a wealth of free MrYlces IJ always close at hand-Just down the road or around the comer, at your nearest Keystone office. Surt with some sertlces you'd pay plenty for other places: Like nowy or copying servl<le, Or money orden. Thetre aJI youn1 all absolutely free. at every Keystone offloa.. And what are you peytng now for tr.ivelen chedc.ll S:Ue deposit boxl Not. collect.Ion/ They all add up. But wtth a m1111mum account at Keystone, they don•t cost you a penny. On top of It all, K~ne pays you the absolute top tnw.ton all savlnp ac:counu. fbnitnr from a full S.25" on your rtgular s)usbook to a rn-ous 7.759' on cwttflcate xcounu. Only Keystone gives you so many free semc., so many ways to k.ep yow money rrowtn1-rtaht ~you are! So next time you•,.. out drtv1n1, drop In for a chat at your comer of ~ Koun~ Over ooffee (free. of COUrM). we'll tetl you all the~ why the best place to save Is rip tw. In Kayacone Kountryl 0 KEYSTONE SAVINGS . ....... _..... (11•> sg3.2 .. e1 Weatmlnater Office. 14011 Bea<:h Blvd • Airport Center Ottlce, 4301 MacArthur Blvd. • Anaheim Office. 1555 North Euclid ·Anaheim Hilla Office. 5741 E. Santa Ana Canyon Road· Mluk>n Vi9'o Omo.. 2A041 Marguorltt Partlway Aaaett ovtr $88 mllflon. .. ' -I • /. MR. COFFEE II OUR LOWEST PRICE EVER ,,,;·,~EG, 2977 . AUTOMATIC DRIP COFFEE BREWER t.er. Cotlff II model' delrfers deltCtOU$ col1ee - a cup every 30 UCOl'l<la. Mi ii.et 8 cu~ .. et.wer1Warrne1 sw11Cfl, s&lely 1noic;11or ngm 6 r1111rs. !19· 359 WESTCLOX ALARM CLOCK Don't be late! 4" high d1pend1bt1 ltey wind lllrm clock Savel •IOUAIT 139 SlUClfAI •J OVAil SAUCIPAI •I llCM Heh flYPAJI STAINLESS STEEL COOKWARE Slainless steel •S ll>e be5t buy in coo~ware because of •IS durab~•ty beauty & performance Value• IOI 1'' OF SO CHESRRFIELD MAJORETTES Coolts In 1.3 m nu~' Costa Mesa Santa Ana [!)Bl-LEVEL ETAGERE·SHELVING Super sa111ngs on a1ep- dowr1 etagere 63" H. 40" W 12 0 EeMty assemb!- ed ruggedly bu •I H1gn style storage• Low PftCe1 OfZ c PA<I '' nc:. 1.ll 21 96 REG. 31.96 EVEREADY BAmRIES Choose 1 bu laundry Basket, i p·ece 01sh Wash Set. Jumbo Hamper and Llh Top or Square Swinger Wasteba&ket Value! 9 ~O<t lllllSiStor. "' SIT w11tu noco u.m TRAY TABLE SETS Beautiful rray !able sers w11h k109 size serving ares tops & coordinated srorage rack Choice ot several hand· some decor11or design ttay tops wrth strong rubular steel legs & no·mar caps. N<i all dealpns at all stores. IEC. 3'' S.'9 VACUUM AnRACTIVE CLIAIEI IAGS PLANT STANDS Founfaln Valley El Toro Hunti~on Beach JU' 17tt.St. 140' w. ~ & lrbtol M .... ttT .... II T .. 9 .. clifltW '"' ..... at ll'o ...... CostaMHa Santa Ana FountalnV~ W estminst.er Hu=onltaeh uoo..-~_wa.. JJ25 lrilfof .. MocMW 16141 ......... ~ w ......... -....w .. t ts .c....,. .., I . . $1T llCU•S • TIA rs 6 STilllJ nouu nm S.au11ful new pnnts, ll'QUardt & ~IOI sol«.ts SUgttt lleM don i affect look& or WM•. big 22.1144" t, 2••••" Sil•. F~ bllrf • 11 " 12'' "~· 14'6 IS." 16." 12-32 CUP G.I. 2 SLICE PARTY PERK TOASTER Ad1ust toaSl dailiness. Hu~onleach 21111 ........... Hu~liach Sta w ... Wedne&day Oc1otw6. 1976 Tonight's 1V Highlights CBS 8 . NBC 8 & ABC 0 6 :30 - The Great Debate. The second Uve con- frontation between President Ford and Jimmy Carter focuses on foreign policy. K.HJ G 8: 00 -"The Caretakers," Polly Bergen gives a fine performance as a woman who s uffers a mental breakdown in this 1963 drama with Robert Stack. Joan Crawford, Janis Paige and Diane McBain. KTTV a> 12:00 -"Golden Boy." William Holden is the up and coming box- er in this 1939 movie drama with Barbara Stanwyck and Lee J . Cobb. TV DAILY LOG IWEDNESDAYj •V•NING ~ e:oo • a w ®l {fl) m cm 11e.-i II iaJ.J W (QtJ Wl m !ltws . D flt) Stu Tiet (I) Gomer Pyle Ill lill!ISll!Mt m hrtridtt r111111, ll)Adllll·ll m Eltctric Companr ~ Oiftah! m Litttt bsuts -6:30- Sl'ECIAL NOTICE All lltrte nehlo<ls w1l1 Urry llMi wctnd cltblll Mlwet" Pres1cltn1 '-rakl r Old and Oerno- u.tk --Jim111y Cmt1 II lhls IMlf A# su~ucnl P"Cflfllntilll IS Mltect 1o luf·lllfflUlt cNAll Witt!· out 111hce. JI AndJ Gnffrt h • 10 Mm Grrttm Sllow l'D ra111rty Affat1 ltll ,}_ Gul!SlllO•, tz!)lOMf l!i) Poo Goe! tflt t.iltoll"f 7:00 U lms CM1 fi 1 My Tllrw Soll' 8 To Tell tM T•ul~ 0 Concttllralio'I ID I low Lucy m The FBI ID l(Qrun Orama 13 '~J fm New1 r2t And', G1itfittl ID Mac Neill Lell11r lttpcH"I ( .211 1_e ) 8on1nu C) Oramttlc Series '5 Addlms F1111ily -7:30- 0 Bowlin& f« Do/lwl'$ tJJ TM Odd Couple CL ma,ooo Qwstitlt Ci1 n.. .ie.tr'a WIW r~ Price b RisM G)llJac1J8111d !ll 3J '9p '"s lht C.UftllJ 211 s.,, C.ltllnty S.,..Uh$ '2fl lfocu 's lltlllft tz!) Cllmtl 21 TOfti&ll1 39 SlS.000 P)r111114 w fWll Goidotl 8:00 0 11' • l le, Cood Til!ltS \~hen Theim~ s lavonte l~achtr v1s11s the £v~ns h~me ~he f11s1 falls tor I I s PJ1nl1n~s and lhen lor J J 1 Florida sta11s lo worry ove1 JJ ·s growing relationshrp when aller berng out all n1ghl he is caughl sneaktni 1n D W {j] 10 lf8C We,nesd1J lloorie: ..Cl {90) "How to 81t1k Up A HaPPJ Mmil1e" (tom! '76 Bai bara [d!n, Hal linden, Peter Bone11. Mama Rodd. Harold Goula, Bell• Bresle1 Uberly W1lhams Whe11 a young woman ~es hei e~ husband ~eeping company 111th a loverv bur l'mPtr heiaea girl she dte1aes 10 l1~h1 to win him 1>3Ck Ac11na on the .tdvrce ol her g11llr1tnd. she !>fains an all oul campaian to make her e' husband rulous II MOflt: ~ (Zltr) ~s..t11 1¥of1, del'$ of lht West" (nature itdven lure}-'12 (JJ Mowie: 1CJ (l~r) "lh1 & Puce" toRcl. (dra) ·~6 -Henrr fonoa Aud'l'y Hepburn 8 ( .ttJ li ) u l1onic Wo1111~ Jaune Somma~ poses as a bl1t,1ac' dealer to 111>1 .. aboard 1 lu•ur10us gamblin& ship '"'' could bf a llOll inc bomb • Molle: (ltl1) "Tiit Cmukt11" (susp) '63-Robell Slack. Polly Be11en. Joan C1aw101d, llnrs Paiae. IAane McBain Van W1ll11ms Cons lance ford A doctor '" 1 menial lloSIJrtal e0ts •e•r•sl !he wrshes o# a head nur~ and places 1 woman with Mm1c1dal lendencres 111 a 11oup lllefapy claS3 (],GJ Morie $ptdll: ftJ (lhr) "The Clndltuti llld" (dra) '65-Steve Mc Queen, Cclward G Robinson m LMM11 & Kenrittta Mldic Sl1tw m ""'..,_ 9 ltrtH Variety KMr S ....... IGttfralllik fD !Ion "Oealh ol A Disuse" Hovt shol'S how the spread of smalf Po1 MS "achtd lhe verce of 11h11Cll041 dut to recent effOl1s of lllt World Hullh Ote•nllall041 • Clla111•i•n1MJ Wmttlttt ....... lJllClllct "9(rMs -1:30-• cm m ro w ,_ .......... 9:00 8 <Ill CD llJ M Ill tflt f Mtifr Whitt celtblatr111 MMs 11twfou11d s11eceu. the St1Y1cs are slloc~td wlltfl they 111 lold that Atthre hes jOllltd the stal&Slrcs of the nal!041's Ulltlllploytd • (121 Cl)) a ..,..., "ltunwar Cowboy" Biretta has 111ned m de11ct to bnnt an utort10mst 10 ltial only lo discover the lemale 1lldae lrtin& lttt cast-a dear lrrtnd OI Barella s-rs ltle blm mailer's near vicltm m The Stll's Come Out 011 * Merv! .loitl Geraldo Rivera & Dr Hooll At 9 m Mt" 6riffil SM II) Tiit \'irpia11 fl) lloiean His1orial Ol1ma f.31 Fan of !ht h1les fll) '91ltial Otb1te Preview -9:30- 1!1 Olull! Guests include Neil Simon. Maur~en Shpleton le~ Granl, Sid Caesar. Marsha Mason un rn "' Goes "" eou"to m Mtial 0.bltt ~e11ae of lhe deNlt betll'ftn P1esidenl rO<d and Jimmy <:.irte• e> u Criada Bit• Criacla 10:00 11 llllltf SjlKe 1!1 Dltws ..1.e...iw 8 "'"""'8d S.N~S ., ,... Fumt 1j liltl"f Gritti11 fl) The lllSllleSS ol Hu"h l}) mw 26 tl l3 lilin~, ( it (},) 8-nu m 8'11ta de Pmn~~'~ (llJ °"'"'' -10:30- • Mltclt GIN G)ll)fI)Netfs fB lliahttilff 11:00 0 DID News D OIJ 'Ui 6 l 10 .:it News D 1" (D1 -L) love America~ Stylt C.V S.1 Hunt llJ Celellnty Rewue m Miry lets Herself Go • And Cathy Tries To bplain Her Condition G) 11111} Hut"''"· Mary Hartmu m Talts ol the 8iurre lD 1..1.l llie&IJllllY 11:30- 0 1t l L CBS ult llltwtt: Colvtllbt Double Shod o "1311~1 , m Jo11rw1y ea. 6 Tiit rn CIClll D (<21 (l ) 3~ Th Roe•ru / M,stery ol I/It Wttk m11ews 2ti Tiie 700 Club flt !lumber Our Days lynne 1111 mans rnhm~te por11a11 ol the do~ilt lew1sll 114'0ple of Venice. wM 12:00 0 Best of Glolidlo a Mowie: WShtllock llollllt$ ' the Plll'lllit to Al(itrs" (mys) 42-Bastl R.llhbone. Nigel Bruce m ~: "Gollltll 8oy" (dra)'39 Wilham Holden. Barbara S1an111c~ Lee J Cobb m Mowit CllUICS ·1 he Rackrn~ Horse Winner" m~a34 -12:30- 1!1 All·lliPI Show: "Sullinn's Trn els," lCJ "The Spanisll 6'1d41111," "M111dtl in the 8hlt lloonl" II) .._: "Cnmt 1~ Ille Stretts" (dra)-Sal Mineo James Wh1t11101e 1:00 D U1t&J .t_o_ T~tw m Tiit rn ciu11 2:00 l!I ""'11: "Walk A C!Mted Milt" (mvs) 48 Dennis O'lleele. lou15 Hav11ard 1!1y1110nd Bun U Dtu~fefuture Mowru : (CJ "Doctor at Sta" (com) ·~-l>in Bogarde, B11a111e 811dol, James Robert~ lus11ee ........ ol tlle TOWll" (wes) '43 -Clarre TrtWOI. Al bert Dfkker Barrt Sunwan CD AJl.lliJht Shtw: "Tiit Honor tf lllct ... tmlt," "M11 Mite" -3:45-u Mo.it: '1tHOf in ATtus ,_,. (1m) '58-St~rhng Ha~en. OCTOIO 7 .... '" ""' '°•"ni•ra. ,,. tllt .,., ...... I 0:t0 e CC,) "M"*'teers If tllt S.1" (adv) '60-Robert Alda """ 1.-tY CMirls" (di'•) '64-llettt Dl'frs, Horst 8o(hholz a "Tiit .,...., ,.,. .. 111r., 50-John Carl1eld 11:08 e lt.> "Tllil fdl Is Milt" (th) 'S9-Roc:l Hudson It•• "1'lt ~ ....... .... (dfa) '42-Joseph Cotten 1:00 (.CD "Ri4e the Ti1e1" (di•) '71-Gtcqe Monttomtry 1;1JO CJ CC) "A C-191 CM ..... (ICh) '10-Geortt "" Plfd. Ctowan111 Raitt J:IO (Cl "IHM•" (d11) ~Glenn Ford. 0oMa Rttd ):10. (t) "Wlll4tf ....... (adw) '14-Calhy let Cro$bv Ricardo M011l11ban KOCE Television (50) •• -,/'" ..1-'K. 'Broadway Bing' fH( CITY SHOf'PIN(i C£~TIU OUM4HU4-Hll ~CITY CENTRE CIHf:MA\ I .A. ""WY IMANCHHTU• Uc.I 0 .0 . "RWV ICITV DA. flC.l A '"TNlfHUT ~ SCOUT AM> ~THOclSI THWSO.U" .,... POM row ... LS. ,., A ·wuRDH IY DlAnt" V -ntl 11.ACHflD• INI S.-c..& Pr~ 12 JO to 2 00 p.m 1-..s-.1 Sl..H Open Doily 12:30 p.m. LOS ANGELES CAP) -Singer Blng Cro6by An THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY MANN'S SO. COAST PLAZA Coll lltu 1'tttrh1tr .-.1111 MAllM'S SO. COAST PLAZA tt111 • ... M•••.at ~1111 "LIFEGUARD .. ,, .. , ''"'' , ... ,, __ ll•1-19'H "IAD HEWS IEARS" CPGJ kU Uf/~1$.&ll rm'*"' •c4MElOT0 IPGJ , ... , ... ,, ___ ,_ .. HB.LOOOUY" t:M IAlfl__.., .... ,. JIU- MAMlt'S • ='~~"" sn COAST PLAZA "AllCI IN WOHOllLANO" law I I'S h•llo.., Sll ·la ,_..J·"" •.-~t uu II MTS l ... U-ll:U 1: ._. ,....,. INEES DAILY AT CINEMALANO MANN'S "UF£GUARD" IPGJ ClllEMAUllD t:lM-.. '-'·•• 141~!: .. ~:.'"' "IAD HEWS IEARS .. UHlfr J· U·6·1f. r e,ze lllUPAMlllC will brinl his regardi lo Broadway in person lb.Ls )'ear, 45 years since he last appeared there, "Binc .Crosby and Friend\." a mu&ical sbow reaturing singer Rosemary Clooney, will open a two.week run at the Uris Theater on Dec. 7. Crosby last appeared on Broadway in 1931, said a spokesman for the one-time star crooner. STARTS FRIDAY OCT. 8 Roborl Paterson, • London-baaed lmpre- s ario who recently spooaored Cros by's 50C.h anniversary shows ln Europe, is putting on the Broadway show. " The spokesman said Crosby's wif e. Kathryn, their children, Mary Frances. Harry and Nathaniel. and jazz pianist Joe Busbkio wW also appear in the sbow. GENEVIEVE BWOlD MANN'S CINEMALAllD UM St Nt•H• ....... UllMI "JAWS" l;lt-6:ilf. I O:lt "THE HIHDEMIURG" ALEX& TiiEGYPSY (R) rltl 'IMllll IN HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER • • MANN'S 111 :':'-~:a:':' =~r•11 EDWARDS HARBOR c~1:A 1 HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON ST. C~~E~~~~D .. ALICE IN WONDHLAND" ........ ..,~ .. ,,.. IUIMI t.JO.r- x COSTA MESA 646-0573 2 MILES SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY. SaveS2.00 atCarfs ( ,,t ,.,. .Hf ht.t I • tw1 µ• 11,.. tn~ I-+ t_., 1--------------1 I Save4s~on a Super Star CheCseburger and I I geta30<Sugar-Free7UpFREE. I ~:~;'~:,~ :~~-~~z:~~=~I~:~ ~al~·y~~:.:i:~~~;~~~e-I v. 11h J ~11ce of Amerrc.in cheese, lettuce. tomatoes Jnd I dr(•sstng . st:rvcd on J 'iC!"..ime St>eJ bun. You'll .ilso I gl't J JIX Sug.ir-Frh' 7 Up .ib:.olutely free. L1m11 one ullcr per coupon. Onl.' ~oupon per customer, please. I I Oller good through October 24, 1976 at all Carl's 1 Jr. locations. -----------------1 1 Save3SconaC~~~~!~eakandget I I ~.~?:!~:~~;,~o~!;:.1.. I I SteJI.. !),rndwrch. Juicy ctldrbroiler Steak. crisp, frc!".h I lettuce, tom.ito slic;c~ Jnd golden brown onion rin~s I .. served on a sourdough roll. You'll also get a 1 JOCt Sugar-FrE.'<' 7 Up absolutdy free. Limit one off er per coupon. One coupon per customer, I please. Ofter good through October 24, 1976 I at all Carls Ir. locations. .. _____________ ... I Save30<ooaCarl'sStarCheeseburger I I and get a 30C Sugar-Free 7 Up FREE. I Present this coupon and try our best-selling cheeseburger . I A man-sized patty of 100% beef. topped off with a slice I of Amcnran cheese. lettuce. tomatoes, and our special I C.ul's dressing. All served on a toasted sesaml' seed bun You'll .1lso get a JO¢ Sugar-Free 7 UP absolutely I free. Limit one oHer per coupon. One coupon per c-u~ •• I <omer. please. Offer good through October 24. 1976 at I all Carl's Jr. locJtions. ..... i. 1------------.. -1 17971 MecArtttur Bfvd., frvtne m E. 17tlt St.. Coeta MeM .2092 S. E. Brtatot, Santa An• 1550 Adame Btvd., CoetJ1 Meaa 18032 Culver Drive, Irvine 1720 £.Oyer Ao8d, S.nai Ana 3101 Newport Blvd., Newport BeM:h .. ...... ,,,_ 531·9SIO -.-·----'* O.N fll llVll wnMtN .... I'll ....... --. Cl'" OllllltON tNt ...,,. ""° 'lllllOI ~Of ntl MAWb•t ..... ·--· ........... 11MN Of 1W1 CAL18 MOISI l"I 'Wit MMlllOlf ' uetmOOT 1111 .. 1 .... -... _,, ...... _. _.,, .. ....... .......... DmL W""9N ... 1-i ...... ·--· cMa sJ'f.fuo I -n"".- JAWS"' ..... , .• °" NT Of tMl IOU'MIN "' -·-··--· .-n ~.-... ,.."' ....... ....... Ott~ 1. GUMIAU IAlllT 1N1 2. CAHMONUU '"' i . WMfTI UHi nwa '"' ----lllllllN Of Mii CAWD llCllll tNt ,...,.. ~,,~ ... Cl .. ._._ OllllltOH'"' __ ,_ lllADOW Of 1MI MAWI'"' ----.J < • Uftt 0t Al~ 11111' .\, • • .q ~ IOCIO' MOllOt '" tE",-Peen. IMOW 1•1 lllllJillLm!ii~~~~.: ::: llllAHTOM °' 'UAIMSI ,.,., _,...,_,.,,.., NOIMAH. IS ntAf YOU?"' ""'-·--Olm MAIT. cu.IT l.AllY"' --144-tmllll Of MAii CAlUD MOal1"t -· ntUNDIUOll & UOKTfOOf t•I ------_, AIUtn t toln, MO 'AHU ·-m ·llll THI flONT 1M1 IOll- TMI OlllSA flll 1N1 Cliff~ OISllSfON !NI "°'*"" -TUllOll SHADOW Of THI HAWIC1,.1 ---------~ llUln NT OfMWI' ........ , ...... ·-421-llll IOCllT lfOaOl '9CTUlf SllOW 111 l'lllt• '"ANTOM Of 'lWMll !NI lltUTU Of M~ ,_, JAWS"' -(.l<Of' DAT Of TMI OOl'"1N 1N1 ......,"'1m11 JAWS"' lllCllllC.KOTT OAT Of THI DOl"'IN Ml ., ... C.Ufl MUIOll IT DIATM 1tiet llOlllNIM MAC« ltlO INt WllC-ft) M "'"'911 1. la.AN'I IUN 1N1 1 LAST M\'llMAM Oii IMT'll 1"t '· CHOMN IUllVIVOIS !NI I I l i I I l I I I I I Wednesday, Octot>.r 6., 1978 DAIL V PILOT A 1 1 r~!ttfJ!~~~; Concert Season Opens . ... BEL-CONGO ~~ ; -~·--•ladownutllecwtsi111 ... up! ~ * * * * * * .,, * fZ i-Wl '!\ *'it Pbllarmocuc release issued by the Orange County •.If~~=~• c~ ....._. 6 ,.., • That b_appy ~ la stolen from the latnt r Society's Jean Tandowsky aod tbia writer la not co-in& to attempt to Improve upon it. "THE FRONT" IPGJ M&llOOU -SILENT MOVlr' ~nHIMGAIOUT Hr' Il l "'MOIMAM IS lHAT T~ ( "HAllY a WAI.Ta GO TO MIW YOU'" CP'GI "'FAMTASIA• C• CAITOC»I SHOl'T .. MAIL Pll.O'r •MUn• IY DEA'TH'" -a.AC'I Ar lNJ UTUM Of THI MAM CA11 • HOISi -rHUMDHIOLT Ne> u.HT'FOOr' "'THE 1"84ANr" '1..IPS11Clr' IRJ ~~ C.-..._•,,....01 w.u--<""'t..,•1•14"fltl , ....__..-=..__ _ __. Mu.lit writers and music lovers a.like are full of the Joys of fall this week as the OCPS launches our m&-77 music season with a corker of a concert at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in the Santa Ana High ScbooJ auditorium. BUT LET'S LOOK AT the happy before we become involved in those eagerly awaited concert ball offerings. Los Angeles Times music a nalyst lla.rUD Bernbeimer will take the stage •l S:30 p.m . I~ a discussion of the program that will later be offered HELD OVER ONE WEEK Opens Wednesday for one week only CINEMA CENTER HARi OR AT ADAMS. COSTA MESA MESA VERDE CENTER 979-414 1 .....n ..... ___ , OICl.T •IM nt1AT111----- Clfffl ...... ... . _ ........... ''OBSESSION" ... t COlOR THIATIE n--....... .............. ~ '111E RETURN Of AMAN CAI I ED HORSF' fNJCOlOI C.11 642-5678. Put • few words to work for ou. " THe FRONT' I S THE MOST 8U8STANT1AL AND CHEERING UGHT EN1'£RTAINMENT IN LIZAMlNNEW INGR.ID BERGMAN A LONG TIME" Charin CMtnl>lln ~ AngitlH Tllnes "THE FRONT' 9'TARTI WED. OCTOeERt 4UCJf'rONUll t2 ·mere-s a sexual revo1ut1on QOlrl9 on ... and all ttte leadet s are In mytamly~ lluMi ...W·lmgrid ....... .A .... c.....-OW\l[~ ((Ml\ al en..t, "A MAlTER OF TIME" ITARTI "'90A Y OCl<*lll AUDITORIUM W1 NEW-FUNNY FROM THE SMASH BROADWAY HIT! TOM BARLEY Music Box to m : Ralph Vaughan Williams' "Sinfonia" Ao· t.arctica," a Bacb Cant.ala and Beethoven's Choral Fantuy. To be ew-e, 8ernbeime!' la not everyone's cup of tea. And it will be intereslift8 lo see the tack be takes on the merita o(the Vaughan Willlam s work. F&OH TBB BOUFFANT TO lbe buffet via what we are auured will be a splendid pre-concert supper served oo the patio by the Bullock's people. They have always beea a most enjoyable and tuty opening concert offering and a filling prelude to lop rug.ht OCPS music seasons. And then the C<lnCert ltaelf; this writer must cW*14 to a Ungle ol anUclpation as be realizes that we &reWbout lo witness tbe teaminr of the Los Angeles Pbilarmonlc Orchestra under Sldney Huth with our own Irvine Master Chorale in lbe glorious "Antarctica." What a climax to such a splendidly and tasteful- ly planned evening. But there is no better lime in lhe music season lo roll out that red carpet. PUBLIC N011CE FICTI IOUS aUSINIU MAMI STllTUHlfT nw lotlo•l"9 perwn, •r• dolnQbutl- ~· TAYLOR CAllNl!1"S, 10l'I L...- -..:t, YQUN .. Kh, CAm51 tlobef1 Julius 8u"-91w , wio ™--,..,. Fount•11 Vel .. y, CA_,. Oele L,,,_ ICelwlll. "10 TI!blle """·· Fo..w11.+n v11 .. v. <.A tt1111 Tiii' bvth••n It ceftduclH '' • .. NftMnl\lp, Rollltf1 J. 8u"-Oler TillS mWnent .,., II ... wltll 11'9 <:ouM• OMl 04 Orenee Gouritv °"-. 2'. '"'" "6197 l'Ubf llMCI Orenge C:O.tt Olllty ........ $elll.1'.MlllOct. •. U, ZO, 1'1• «1»1' PUBLIC NO'ftCE 2001: ASpnc.Od,._. <GI P UBLIC N011CE PUaUCltOTICI II\ eccordeflce •"" c.111om1e 0¥11 Cl* »ft, --·· .,,_rty al H. C. o.m Sllell .,. .... , 1>11111 k Auct10111o •llsfy • ,._,,_., 11 ... '°' QllT>. .,... .. ,.., °' boerd .., or elter OC1- 1t, m .. coull4k-1lon. ,.,, ,_ .... ,..,...<ell M4-7tW. "'°''-OrenQt eo.sr Dal•• PllOI, Oc"*9< .... ,. 421).11 PUBUC NOTICE ~ICTl'10UlaUSINUS ...... STAT•MUIT l1w .__,.,. ---,, dolnia bus! _ .. : OllAMGE COUNT\' BONSAI SOCIETY. 10'2 CoAc.,d Sl, Cos .-... CA. .,,.,. Frenc:t. weurt, • ~11 cor p0r1111or1, ion (oftcotd St. casia CA~ llll' tMalM-ts 1' conduci.d by • 411ftK81 per1!1f<'sl\lp. Fr...O. Wetul ~ ,..,.._ ... -~ flled """' tlle Qunly ~ °' OrenQll CounCY Of\ Ot· .... 4.1'16. STARTS FRIDAY OCT. 8 ·Th ere's a sexual r Jvolutlon going on ... and c;J the leaders are In r"yfamlly~ I . -.... 11£TRO. --GOt..DWYN-·---MAYER~ A GEORGE SCHlA TIER FILM UDD nan ro11 amn ... 11 rurrovr ....,.... DENNIS DUGAN MICHAEL WARREN · TAMARA D06SON ·VERNE£ WATSON -.~JAYNE MEADOWS....,~ WAYL.»ID FLOWERS ~ b1 RON CLARK & SAM 808RICK wGEORGE SCHLA TIER 8-d on clw a-ooc1w>1 Ptar br fl.ON ClARK & SAM 808IUCK P•oGKod ""'°"9«ed t>., GEORGE SCHL.A ntR "'METBOCOLOR l®==_=~=--=.=~=.~=~=1=-MGM G. ~~ "Splendiferously Fanny.'' -~ Giiion. Tl!< Ha. V"'*tt The funnY seasal begins when YOO check in fa' a niglrt at 1be atz "Bowd~, nu~ eatertalllmeat." ----Wci«Cw-..- STARTS TODAY 51~,t'Q A RICHARD LESltR FlLM l"lHE R11z·I J1C1 IMSlOl·llTI •••·•n mu.cao-o...,. ...._ Bo-A4~cr-e~~ TERAErlCE Md'lALLY·(-loruwonP<OOOJQi~ADELA HOLZER s. .. ~~ TEAAfflCE MclA..lv ·AixMw ~ DEnlS ODELL °""''~obi RICHARD LESTER ~9C>1uo..N1~~ &oo.CA~(IYTWTV'CC'fO"f\C~elf.!.'1:1 EXCLUSIVE ORAN OE COUtr. / edwards BRISTOL CINEr.~A l l lSTOL AT MACARTM~I 540.7444 I • I , . ,4JJ DAILY PILOT Wednesday. October 45. 1976 Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. 13 mg: 'tar:· 0.8 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette. FTC Report Apr'.76 • .. Marlboro LIGHTS LOWERED TAR fi NICOTINE I ' Injury Threatens Jones' Fut;i;~~ DAILY PILOT LOS ANGELES (AP> - Sur1eey on the pitchine arm of ace left-bander Randy Jones of the Sao Diego Padres was moved up to tod-.y -a day earlier tban Hpected -so a band 1peclall11t could be present. • Tbe announcement was made by Dr. Robert Kerlan, who ls to asailt Dr. Frank Jobe, an or· tboped.lc surgeon. Jones, 26, was the National Leaeue's winningest pitcher during the put seascn. How a detached bicep tendon ln his pitchine arm will bode for the ruture remained a major ques· lion mark. "Ir we lose him, it will be an awful blow," said Padres manager John McNamara. The Brea High product was San Diego's first 20-game wln· ner ever Ill 1975 and in the season just ended, went22·14. He's in con· tention with Jerry Koosman and Don Sutton for the Cy Young Award. Last week ln a game against Cincinnati. Jones had reported "a tear ln my left forearm" and was taken out. Jobe bad ex· a.mlned the in.jury Sunday and reported Jones couldn't produce a muscle in bis clenched left fist. "lt is a definite threat to Ran· dy'a future capabilities. There is oo way to say bow complete his recovery wUJ be." said Kerlan. Physicians have ruled Jones' sUding pitch is eooe, althou&b be may yet retain his sinker. "Dr. Jobe tells me I should be able to throw the sinker without straining the arm but I'll have to Al'Wl .... '9 BREAKING THROUGH -The Washington Capitals, with Harvey Bennett (27) skat- ing through Atlanta's Rey Comeau (18 ) and Bill Bennett, opened the National Hockey League campaign with a 6·5 vie· tory Tuesday night. Pac-8 Race Wide Open Robinson Says Five Teams in Contention LOS ANGELES (AP) -The -University of Southern California already bas one Pacific-8 victory under its belt. but conference play belf.m in full swing this weekebd and Trojans coach Jobn Robinson seems excited about it all. "'lbere's no way anybody can sit back and say who's the best team in the Pac-8," the USC coach. in his first season, said Tuesday. "I think for the first time in a long while, it's really go- ing to be a race. It's sortot'likethe Big Eight usually is; who gets hurt, who has the big days will make the difference." Before the season began, the Trojans were generally regarded to have the in.side track at the Pac-8 crown and the accompany. ingtriptothe Rose Bowl. But UCLA, which tied Ohio State Saturday and is unbeaten. now is considered tbeteam to beat for the conference title. Robinson, however, said be doesn't see it as a t w<>-team race. "I think anybody will have trou- ble against W ashingtoo if they play them in Seattle," be com- mented. ·'And Stanford, when it gets untracked, can play with anybody. Of course Cal's going to be tough. and UCLA definitely ls." Kings Begin Action; Expos Tab Williams CLEVELAND -Coach Bob Pulford says bis Les Angeles Kings will be stronger this season than last and must be to again reach the N atiooal Hockey League's Stanley Cup playorrs. Openings on tbe road. the Kings must meet Cleveland tonight, then Atlanta, Pittsburgh, Pbiladelpbla and Toronto before returning home for an Oct. 16 date qainst Toronto. '"l'b.b is the nervous time or 1UI"." said Pulford. "But I think we should be better on defense and so should also be better on of. lease, because we'll have the puck more." The m.Jor trade brought toQgh Dave Schultz to the Kings from Philadelphia and be sh9u1d be the policeman they've wanted since Dan Maloney was traded. Toolgbt'a game will be a de- layed broadcast by atatioo KRLA UllO) belioninl at8o'clock. In Tuesday night NHL action, Washington defeated Atlanta, 6-S and Colorado, formerly Kansas City, toppled Toronto, 4-2. WUlfallU Picked MONTREAL-Dick Williams is back in baseball today follow· ing his selection as field manager ol Ute Montreal Expos. Williams was relieved or his duties as manager of the California Angels recently, replaced by Norm Sherry. Williams, a rormer play'er for Montreal when the Royals were a farm club in the Dodgers chain, formerly managed at Oakland and Boston, leading boCb teams to championship seasons. He signed a two-year pact wlthtbeExpos. Porferlabd The Trojans coach said he thought UCLA, which beat Ohio State in the Rose Bowl last January, t\fls been underrated in recent seasons. "I believe tbey'vehadoneofthe best teams in the country for the past rew years," Robinson re- marked, "going back to Kermit Johnson and James McAlister." Southern California, a S3-0 win· ner over Oregon last month ln the conference opener for both teams, apparently faces another of the conference's weate.r teams in Washington State this Satur· day. The 11th-ranked Trojans, 3-1, will go into the game in Seattle's Kingdome as a heavy favorite over a Cougar squad that bas won but one game in four tries. Still, Robinson indicated be was afraid of t h e Cougars' quarterback. junior Jack 1bompson. "Washington State has proven in every game it can score from anywhere on the field," Robinson said, "and it certainly appears Thompson is an outstanding quarterback. You never stop a great passer, you just slow him down." Thompson t hrew three touchdown passes and connect- ed on 19 of 25 passes in the Cougars' latest outing, a45-4> rout ofldabo. But the Trojans have looked awesome both offensively and de- fensively in their past three games, following an opening 46-25 loss to Missouri. In their last victory, a 55-0 mauling ot Iowa, USC's passing game was extremely effectlve, as starting quarterback Vince Evans completed eight ol bb 15 passes for 94 yards and '8 touchdown, while reserve Rob Hertel connected on 10of13 for urr yards and a acbool record-tying rour touchdowns. In the mean- time, taJlback Rlcty Bell was gaining 119 yards on 28 carries and Bell's backup, freshman Charles White, ran for 120 yards cm 15 c arrles. get rid of the slider. It wu the allder that did it," Janes •ald. He said if be ia able to 10 back to work, which he bu been told isn't a certainty, be plans to replace the slider with a cut fastball and is thinking about some other pitches as well. Jones said he expected to col· laborate with Roaer Craia. h1a pltchin1 coach, on making ' necessary adjustments. "If a telephone pole can't klll me, thls thlnl won't, either." said Jones. He wu talking about a recent traffic accident lo Of Medals, Contrasts, Bargains NUMBERS DEPT.-Tbe USC. Iowa football game Saturday night could have been a play on fives if 37 more people would bave passed through Coliseum turnstiles. As it was, 55,518 attended the game, which SC woo SS-0. FUTURE DEPT.-Wbat CGD.· truUag football flltafte may be la store for Coata Mesa and L•ia•• Beacb blglu. la sopllomore grid action Mesa wtdpped IAIUa, 554. And• tile fro•lt le Ye I It w a• Mesa H, Lapaat. And bow aboat University Rip's olfeue! la weeteDd d11els WHITE WASH Ol.l!!•O• WHIT£ at Yanity, s ophomore and frabman levels Um teams pro. daced a total of zero pobau In games wit.It Corona del Mu. CONTRAST DEPT.- University of Michigan football forces have chalked up 19'l points in four outings this year, an average of 48 per game. Huntington Beach High has tallied seven points in three con- tests and is raced with its first.- ever 0-9 varsity campaign. The 1970 Oilers were 1·8 and the pre- vious worst HB winless mark was0-5-1in1941. MAKING THE MOST DEPT .-Ualverslty Bl&b's varsity foo&ball ouUU ll H averaiect 011e polat a game for tllree dllell. Yet Uni llu come oat ol tholle claabes wttb a win, a tie ad a loss. Uni atpped Los Amigos, J..t. mt to Coro .. del Mar Z·O wblle tyta' TuUa .... MEDALS DEPT.-One to Golden West College's football team and its coach, Ray Shackleford for laytng claim to the No. l ranking for state com- munity colleges by knocking'off ex-No. 1, Fullerton, Saturday night at Anaheim. Another to Chuck Fairbanks and the New England Patriots for their third straight triumph against heavlly favored foes. And one to Dennis Haryung and the Laguna Beach Hieb Artists for their surprising 3--0 re- cord and lofty ranking ln CIF polls. MOVING UP DEPT.-Woody Treuter (es-Orange Coaa& College), Dowe Watien (es· Mater' Del BISb >. Du c.olUas <Estaaela of Costa Mesa pro- dad) and Mike Cmlnlegllam <form• BB Bigb > are members o1 Cal SC.&e's (Long Beac.ll) 19'11 foodWI oaUlt. BARGAIN DEPT.-T-bone steak for 89 cents a pound and porterhouse steak for 98 cents a pound. True story. Those prices prevailed at a market ln Escalon (Northern California) Sept. 1:1. At those prices you could afford to have those cuts ror breakfast. Hudspeth Selected PONTIAC, Mich. -Tommy Hudspeth. coordlnat« of penon- nel and scouting, was named ln· tertm bead coach ol the Dettoit Lioal Tuesday. ~ which bis car crashed head-on into a telephone pole and h~ came out with only cuts and bnaiaes. In the season Just ended, Jones accounted for 30 percent ol San Diego's victories ln help· lnC them to fifth place ln the Na· tional League West, a game behind San Francisco. The 6·0, 173-pounder led Na· Uonal League pitchers in innings pitched with 315, completed 25 or 40 starts, tossed five shutouts and had a 2.74 earned run average. RANDY JONES Rivers Sizzling No Green Ligh~ . For Ex-Angel NEW YORK CAP> -The first time Mickey Rivers reaches base in the American League playoffs against Kansas City, he'll be a threat to steal. That is, of course, ii New York Yankees manager Billy Martin wants him going. The only time Rivers runs is when Martin says so and the speedy center fielder is annoyed about the absence of a perm• nenl green light. "I thought I'd have that when I came here," be said Tuesday as the Yankees worked out before leaving for the playoffs which begin this weekend in Kansas Ci· ty. "They traded for me. They knew what they were getting.•· With California in 1975, Rivers, running on his own. swiped a league-leading 70 bases. With Ute Yankees this season. be bad 43 in 50a~pts. · When the Yankees traded slug· ger Bobby Bonds to the Angels for Rivers and pitcher Ed Figueroa, the team's emphasis was switched from a power club to one built on speed and defeme. But Martin made it clear early that nobody on the team, Rivers included, would be allowed to run on his own. "I'd have liked to," said Rivers. "I'm enough ol a veteran to know the pitchers and the situations and when to go." The numbers next to Rivers' name on the final Yankees statistics are imposing. They Jhow a .312 batting average, tops for the American League East champicms. 1bere are 31 doubles, eight triples and eight home runs among hilt 184 bits. He scored 95 nms and had 67 MICKEY RIVERS runs batted in, a remarkable number for a leadoffbatter. , 1bere are some people wllo believe the numbers add up to Moil Valuable Player. Rivers, however, is not one of them. "No, I'm not really happy wiPl the year I've bad," said Rivers. "I could have done more." ' Riven aald he set goals fc)r bimselt befpre the start of tbe season. ·"I wanted to score 100 runs, drive ln '10, get ~ bits, maybe 10 homers,'' be said. In all those areas. the Yankee center fielder approached bis goals. In ooe, boweVer, be dfd •not. "I wanted tO ste8170 bases," be said. "1 think .f<:ouJd have stolen 3.Jmoreb~" Not without the sign from the manager, however. $4 Million Man White Lone Academy Survivor KANSAS CITY <AP> -Prank White is t.be Kansas City Royals' $C million man. Estimates vary, but that's roughly bow much Royals owner Ewing Kauffman sank into bb Baseball Academy, a project be conceived shortly after the American League granted him a franchise in 1968. The academy opened in Sarasota, Fla., in WIO and closed its doors four years later. ~uf fman's tdea was revolutionary and simple: that young men with outstanding athletic ability but little or no baseball background can become major leaguers through intensive instructioo. "The greatest problem was finding qualified boys," Kauf· fman said ... There is not one in 1,SOO blgb school graduates who meets the qualifications for eyes, reaction time, speed and mental ability." Thousands of youngsters trooped through the Academy bopinJ to play big league baseball. Only one, Frank White, hasmadelt. The smooth-fielding second baseman-abort.stop, who grew up a short walk from Kansas City's old M\mlcllpal Stadium. played an important role in the Royals' drive to the Western Division championship this year. White, who never played high scbooJ ball, was pl8)'tac In the Casef Stengel League ln 1970 and working in a metel shop when a Royals scout urged bim to go to Sarasota. "I was married and bad one child then and I knew there was no chance of moving Up in ;,,bat I •u doing," White rec&Ua. ''I was living a day at a time. going to work, coming home. "After I got to the Acadetiiy, nobody there thought I was a~ spect either.'' But in 1972 be started c.Umbing through the minor league ranks, ftnally arriving in September, mi. After lots of playinc time in a utility role, this spring be pushed Cootie Roja~. the popular. aging secand baseman, to t.be beDCb. Rams Top Pro Ratings The Los Angeles Rama. with their impressive come- back at Miami in the boob, have earned the No. 1 spot in the Daily Pilot's first weekly poll ranking professional root~ ballteama. The Rams narrowly out.-. pointed Dallas and Illa· nesota 1n the only pro poll amon1 Southern C&lllomJa newspapers. Irvine Posts 9-6 Polo Win Pla>inl afinedelemiveleCClnd ball, the UC Irvine Anteate"S de- feated Cal State <Lona Beach), M. ln water polo adion Tuesday eTeninl at Newport Harbor Ulgh. LOS ANGELES -Ross Porter, who began his sports broadcasting career doing the play-by-play for a Dodgers farm club 23 years ago, bas joined the announcing team ol the Los Angeles Dodgers, club president Peter O'Malley annom>ced, Porter, 37, joins Vin Scully and Jerry Doggett OD the Dod&era' radio-TV broadcast team. Porter will resicn bis post with JCNBC news at the md d the year. The winner d DWDel"OQS broadcutiJlC awardll, Porter bad been wltb KNBC for 10 ,ean. Woody Has a Warm Side, Too Conspicuous ln its ahemce trom the first Top 10 pro poll ls Pittsburgh, the two-Ume Super Bowl champion. The Steelers have lost three ol four NFL starts. Now 8-1 on t.be aeaeon. tbe Ant· eaten allowed only ftve Long Beach sboU ln tbe Jut half to re- • ciordtbelrftfthstraigbtwin. All-American Gary FifUeroa led tbe UCI scoring with slx goals. llanfredo Lespier, George Newland and Jell Hasseu each scandOlle. Ftsueroa. who wu tbe leading •corer In last year's NCAA tournament wit.b 14 goals, now bu aaeuon total of 41. Bral'ft Fi•ed ATLANTA -The Atlanta Braves were fined $10,000 Tues· day and their first choice in the January Cree aeent draft was taken away by bueball com· miaaioner Bowte Klbl, Braves owner Ted Turner said. The decision came on a tem· pering charge made against the Braves by the San Francilco Giants. The Giants ICcused the Braves of talking ccmnct wttb ooe of their outfielders, Gary Mattbewa. COLUMBUS, Oblo (AP) - DaYe Pevlauky, a seriously W blih school football coach, bu felt tbe warm •Ide Of Woody Hayes, the 28-year Ohio State coach often painted • a YOlaUle man. Pavlanaty, who coaches Pol a nd High School near YOllQClltown, Oblo,f1cedsurcery for removal of a brain tumor. Hayes w as notified of Pavlamty's pll1ht by the Bia Ten Conference school 'a recndten In that area. The crus· t)' ObJo State mentor went ript to wort, even thCNS_b be wu In the mJdat of the Co1Je8e fOOlball cunpalgo. Hayes helped make arrange- menll f~ PavlanskY to undergo the sur1ery Sn Ohlo State University Hospital. Hayes was on huid to &re« the pr-.p mentor when be entered the boapttal ln Columbua. 'fie brought one of lia'books with a penooal auto1npb. Since the operatJon was a day away, Pavlanslty and bis Wife vi.sited an Ohio State workout 1n Oblo Stadium. Hayes s~ted tbe.m and interrupted practJce so they could meet the team. Hayes told hi• players or Pavlan1ty'1 pending surgery. They wished hlm good luck. ~ o«eNd •ilent prayers f« him. Tbat night Hayes' wife, Anne, dropped by tbe hospital to see Ute Pavlanskys. The next morniq, Hayes was back again to offer en· couragement before the opera.· Uon. Following a 22·21 loss to Mis· sow1, Hayes again visited the coach tor an hour. "I was over to see him the other night and he bas ~oped pblebit:ia lo bis leg. It's such a great family,·· said Hayes. Pavlansky would be the rmt to atieat that Woody Ha.yes is more tbao 1 man who pokes writers and pboto&r•pbets, tears up 1ldellne marten .and •kips Pottcame press conferences. New England, off its lam. basting of Oakland and Miami, ls a s trong tourtb· place choice behind lhe Rams, Cowboys and Vlklng.s. Pao aANKJNGS 1. Rama (3-0· l) 2.Cowboy~ (4·0) 3. Vftinea (341 > '· Patriots UH) s. Colts (3-1 > e. Bengals <3· 1 l 7. Raiders C3·D 8. Broncos (3.·I ) t. Olien <3-U 10. Doipldna <2·2> 47 45, 44 31 219 Z2 )'7 ll 8 1 ' .. ~"..; DAILY PILOT Wednaday.Oetot.e. 1978 CdM Tries to Beef Up Off enseKennedy Offeml..e conslatAIDc)' aome auifbment. and Opposing teams are the option really weU." stopped the rvn. And he Jlas G{)()(f ll what the Corona d8l we're trying to make onlJ 1veraain1 94 yan:ts Running from the ls also confident tn a Mar HJcb Se1 ~are corredlona. ·• per came ruablng and wt sh bone, the Tri tons secondary thal has "'° Bal bopln• to accomplish --··~ two foea-M arlna and Hke to power up the mid· corded eight lntercep-ance when they claab with the uuvu ee «~.; University-were shut dle, right at nose guard lions. four by Scott Sm1ClementeTrit.onsat9 the Sea •have~ out. Eric Ralf (S.10, 18$) and M~rry. who is also the The Kennedy Hilb Jl'riday nt.ibt lo a South scored ninelopo~~ but u--t· ftot>• .. es his de-tackle Mark Cardelucci quarterback. Fighting Irish of La . Coast Le11ue toot.ball, are 2·1. l-0 c t ~ , .. :.::~u.W 0•:; its stiffest t6-0. 20().). Offensively, Corona Palma have been show· tame. tioo. cb.ill .... oe F;ld• ... ,. 8ut Lbe Tritons only del Mar h led b y ing steady improve· "Our defense bu been ..._ -threw three ti mes Newport tt arbor ment each week, buL ''We"ve beea movtne from the 2IO to the 20, but we're not scoring inside tbe 20," says ·Dlck Moms. the Su Kings• bead football coach. "We've been misalng keeping us in the game," "Sin Clemente pro-agalost Mission Viejo transfer Mike Spraitz. their head football 1ays Morris. "We knew bably has the best becltl5 and Morrts says, "lf we who gained 106 yards coach, John Hangartner, all along th at our we've faced all year," be can get them to throw. against University. That doesn't know if they're llnebackera and de· says. "Pondo Vleisides fs we're in.business." was his first game as • ready to challenge Foun· fensive ends were good, big and Randy Adams ls If be gets them lo Sea King and be figures ta1n Valley, ranked No. l but the tblng I'm really quick. And Glenn Dill, throw. Morris figures his to be more familiar with ln the CIF 4-A poll. bappywithisourline." their quarterback, nma defens e will have theoftensef'riday. "I've been very pleased with our im· Says Barywag Every Came ..4 Dog Fight It will be a battle ol the unbeaten Friday nigbt when the Laguna Beach Artists tangle with the El Toro Chargers at Mission Viejo High in a South Coast League football outing. Both teams have surprising 3-0 records going iato the game that could determine a front.runner for the league cbampJooshlp. : "I feel 1ood that we are uodeleated," Haryung l says. "But every game is going to be a dog fight." ' What is the big difference in this year's Laguna 1 Beach team and the ooe tha1 fi.nisbed 2·1 a year ; a.co? . ' A • ud d • "'lbe kids believe they can wm. ttil e an · Went are the things that have improved.·· : Tbe Artists could be unscored upon according : to their coach. . : eo.ta Mesa scored the looe touchdown against the Artists this seasoo. "We gave them the ball on our six-yard line to • set up the score. They only gained 50 yards net all algbt .. Haryung feels the Artists will be forced to st.op quarterback Mike Sentak if they are to win. He started his first game ol the season last week and dlreeted the Chargers to a coovlnci.ng »7 'Victory over Dana lillls. . Sent.ak ran for 64 yarcb in 11 carries and hit six • of 13 passes for 139 yards. . . But defense is the st:nmg po10t of the Artists. 'Ibey have two shutout.a and have allowed only one touchdown in three games wttb the offense virtually giving that one up. ' Tbe Laguna offense ls sparked .hY a pair of quarterbacks with equal ability, according to Haryung. .. Both are very capable," be says of Bill Gompf and Dave Chapman. .. But you bad better bave depth at quarterback if you are going to run the veer offense like we do." Haryung declined to name a starter for the El Toro game, saying be wouldn't reach a decision un- til kickoff time friday Diehl :!For Area . . . . ' - GWCRival Corsairs Pose ~Solid Threat SANTA MONICA-Golden West and Santa Monica colleges usually lock up in a blgb scoring baUle when the two Southern California Conference rivals clash-and Saturday night's SoCa1 opener at Orange Coast shapes up that way again. provement. but 1 don't know if we are quite re- ady to meet the calibre of ~am we are playing this week," Hangartner says. "Fountain Valley la a very talented team that bas the ability to score from anywhere on the field. And at this point in time, I haven't round a real weakJJess on their team." Santa Monica, 3-1 for the seaaoo, probably la Golden West's No. l rival fOf' the SoCal crown. The Corsairs of coach Pat Young fell to Ray Shackleford 's Rustlers, 2A·23. in the final 45 seconds a year ago and most ol the '15 SMC squad returns. Thus rar Santa Monica bas defeated San ---------Bernardino, 14·7, Lo6 Medanos, 33·14 and Compton, RAY SHACKLEFORD GWC Coach Kennedy hasn't dt•· played too many weak- nesses either since losing lo El Modena of Or- ange, 13-2, in the opener. Since Lben. the Fighting Irish have defeated Orange, 10·0, and Monrovia, 25-14, and Hangartner ta looking for further improvement agaimt Fountain Valley in their batUe at 8 Friday night. Tars Foe Wmless, Scoreless REDLANDS-The Terriers of Redlands High School, long COD· sidered a blue chip team in the CIF Southern Sec· tion, are amidst an Wl- believlible predi.cament as they prepare for Friday's 8 p .m . non· lea&Ue football visit at Newport Harbor High. After three games the Terriers bave not just lost three games, they've failed to score a point.. "We feel like we're about ready to put a game together." says Redlands coach Paul Womack . "But we felt that way last week, too." 28-6, while losing to Glendale; 29-24. Among 19 lettermen. eight are starters. LDclud· ing All-conference wide receiver Mlller Johnso~ and virtually the entire offensive line, which Young believes will be the best SMC has had in 10 ye an. Offensively. the Cors81J'S bave the No. l passer in the conference in freshman Keith Lee. He's com· pleted 39 of 63 aerials this season (61.9 percent) for 5Z2 yards and three touchdowns. Lee is a 6·0, 180·pounder from Gardena High. In the backfield, Young will start sophomore Ray Cryer (5· 10, 180) and freshman Bob :SpaUino (5·10, 170) Crye!' has already. scored 'five TDs this season. carrymg the ball Si times for ;!£1yards. SpalliDo has 195 yards in 39 carries. Johnson a 6·2, l~poonder, has caught 11 passes for lsS yards, but·is not the leading receiver. That honor belongs to Bob De la Puente (6-0, 180), who bas 13 reception.s for 121 yards. De la Puente also is the second leading punter ln the circuit with a 39.8 average. Defensively the Corsain; are led by tackle Joe Willis a 6·5 235:pound sophomore and linebackers Mike Cole <S·2, 210 ) anJ Mike Arvanetis (6-4, 210). Both linebackers earned second team honors a year ago, Arvanetis a(Cypress College. Santa Monica has never beaten the Rustlers, losing 35-27 ln ·12. 31·2.8 in '73 and 23-0 in '74. "We improved greaUy cm offenu and defense last week." says Hangartner. "We met a team with super speed at the skilled positions and were able to contain them most of the game." Hangartner haa some decent players at the skilled posltlons, too. On offense, the big names are tailback Paul Cain, quarterback Kenn y Hammond and tight end Marlt Gobel. Cain gained 57 yards on 15 carries against Monrovia while Ham· mond, a 6·3, !SS.pound junior. completed seven ot 10 passes for 103 yards and two touchdowns Gobel is one or Ham· mond 's favorite r e · ceivers. DH Planning Changes Cuneny Slwffles Personnel WIN PRIZES WORTH $3,600 IN'76 Sponsored by * Rettben·s ~~1()():\R.\KER * Wffkty Pigskin Plck9"00 '76 wtnnera wm ehare prizes worth more th•n S330 by Mlectlng their cilOlces of the wt,.. nera of 30 weekend tootbllll contetta. The Dany Piiot reader best Pf9dlcllng the outcomes of ptpkln Ptckeroo 7e games will win a one-yHr memberahfp at the Nautilus Newpon phyelcat fltMH center, 4220 Von Karman Avenue, Newport Beach. Second place winners w'lll enjoy • di~ ner for two at the Moonraker Re1tautant in Irvine . Reuben's Newport Beach or Reuben's Costa Mesa. Third place winners will be awarded free car washes by Metro Car W••h Systems at Harbor near Baker Street In Costa Mesa and Beach at EtUs Avenu• In Huntington Beach. RULES Loara, Vi k es in Same Boat Golde n West Ranked No. I Things have been pret- ty much the same for the Loara Saxons and Marina Vikings football teams this season. But a change is in store for one when they meet at La Palma Park In Anaheim Saturday night (8Hn the fin a I non league encowiterorthe season. After losi ng their openers, each team came through with a vie· tory the second week t he n los t again las t weekend. "I think they (Marina) are in j ust about the same boat we are in nght now,·· couch Herb Hlll of Loara says "Their offensive output has been about the same as ours and 1t should make for an interesting game." Manna gave up 438 net yards ru~hing to Los AJamitos last week in 3 Z1·14 setback. Three ~ Al backs each gained more th.an 100 yards apiece. Loara has three polen· tially dangerous runners of its own in quarterback John Pecchia (S-10, 170) and running backs Mel Lewter (5·10, 170) at tailback nnd Ron Varley (6-J .185 ) at fullback. But Hill feels Manna also has a good set of ru n ni n c ba c k s in quarterback Ron Vallercamp and running backs Mike Spivey and Mike Fuentes. Fuentes ran for 127 against Los Alamitos. The passing game still concerns t h e Loara coach. "We have not re- ally established a strong passing game and will make some changes this week in our starting lineup." On the strength ol its 14 ·12 victo r y over Fullerton last Saturday, Golden Wes t College has jumped into the No. 1 spot in the Daily Pilot's Southland JC football poll. ~. c ....... 11..... "" I GolQooll Wwsl I J 01 10 1 Full••lo<I U II '4 l Cll•u• (l 11 J9 • l!l•l\H')fltlO t? I I JO ' \/tMur• (3 Ol 2• o S•n 01t90 Me•• U 01 U Tilt (J.Ol 1' Ml S.11 Antcw>lo " 0 II It t I.A lltll•y t> 01 13 10 Pt.-n• 12 I I 10 Olht•1. 11 $ar\fl Monie• 11 11 t 11 0.0\\monl().117. IJ P1trOl1·1 ii; " CW~I• 13 011. II C•rrll°' (1 II and ~ndalt lMl COSTA MESA Wednesday, October 8 1978 OAIL Y PILOT 8.1 Gauchos' Fo e Like s to Pass CHULA VISTA When the Saddleback College Gauchos return to fool ball warfare after a week off Saturday rught (7 :30) again st Southwestern College, here, they will be racing a team that has sput tered on offense and had its troubles on defense The Southwestern Apaches have one vie· tory in three games and have alternated between a passing and running game but haven 't been a ble to put the two together. This week's outing will FULLERTON mark the opening ol ~tis sion Conforence action for both teams. "We hope to baJanre things out against Sud· dlebat'k," firs t -year head coach Bob Mears says. Mear s has settled on returning starter Tim Walker <6·0, 200), who completed 18 of 38 passes for 226 yards and three touchdowns in the first three outings. The Apaches threw 35 passes in a 17 -15 loss to San Diego Mesa last week wilh alJ three quarterbacks participat· 1ng. Fre:shmen Joe Makepeace und Steve Slater are the other t\\o sig nal cal lt>rs and between them they com pJeted 18. What problt?rns dot.·~ Mears foresee jn facin~ Saddleback? "Thev a r e vf,!ry similar to· us and il looks like an even game." he says. "But they have had an extra week to prepare for this one. ·'Th eir d e fen se 1s similar to ours and thl'y have a quarterback who likes to run the ball as well as pass. "Our :scouting report~ indicate they have had some tough breaks and are a mu<.>h better team than their record would 1nd'icate." The Saddte back de fcnse could foce an acid test against a much h ·e a v I e t J I n ~ . Southwestern 's front nvc averages 240 pounds and includes Bob Collins C6·3, 25<)), Dale O'Brien (6-3. 248) and Sam Boggs (6·2, 230~. Boggs was a second team alJ-conference guard las t )'C ar . SANTAANA • WESTMINSTER SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY OUR NEWEST PEP BOYS STORE & SERVICE CENTER 2946 BRISTOL ST. 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: 547-7477 15221 BEACH BLVD. 4 PLY NYLON 15 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY· 600170 SERIES WIDE TRACK 99 RAISED WHITE LETTERS BIG WIDE-TUBELESS 4-PLY NYLON 30 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY * SALE PRICE! 70 SERIES t-----..----r-f[;,-11 1 .. , SALE PRICE! 60 SERIES FOREIGN CAR SPECIALS ~OTHER FOREIGN CARS 5.20 x )J FfT '1 40 $15'' TU BUESS 4 Pl Y BLACKWAU S NYLON 21 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY ' 6.00 )( 12 $1688 ..-~---.,,-=--'-r_r_s_1s~or======~~---. ~·~P ~ !,5 s17s9 [~·~? ~ !,4 s17 s9I [~·?? ~ !,5 s1ss9j H1-"uo~MANCE A78 15 s202s WIO l TRACK F F T ~1 PO __ __, NO All l'RICES Pl US fIDEIUl EXCISE TU SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 549-1533 AUTOMOTIVE TORQUE WRENCH Whit• o.,,,,, 1nd1col0f b<\r w1fh ~\ cOM>'ohQn\ ond huth m d•ll•ct0t-hp KEEP 1•• ONE IN YOUR CAR 8 SILICONE SPRAY LUBRICANT CD .2 AU-l'J}ll_POSE LI THUM GRIAll ~ ., "•"'"' mt e«u,. 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PHONE: 893·8544 PEPBOtS IS HEADQUARTE~S FOR upu • 1F-f Roye• PACE ~ CB RADIOS CHECK OUR LOW PRICES -S HARP REalVE TRAFFIC AND ROAD HAZARD - REPORTS • Mo•imum pedounonc• ond eo1y operotlort5 • Illuminated chonnel d1'f'loy • Vonol>I. squekh • Power. on 1nd1COIOI' • Pu>h· to· tolk m1croe"°"• • Dello tuning • Built '" ANl DELUXE DIGITAL MODEL -5 1iAf?P ENGINE CA E PRODUCTS ~ THE RACERS EDGE OIL TREATMENT ~MAKES ~YOUR CAR RUN SMOOTHER Increases ond maintains oil preu ure & film strength for maximum protection lSFLUID 88C OUNCE CAN ~ADD TO YOUR GAS GAS TREATMENT CARBURETOR ~ :~~~:~:: SPRAY CLEANER 13 OZ. SIZE • Sprays owoy 8 8 vorniJh & gum C • Eosy to Use! ... 84 DAILY PILOT WedntlS<lay. Octoe>er 6 1978 · Vanguards Tough PUBUC NO'l1CE PUBLIC N011CE Diahlos Seeking Breaks Eagles Offense Gets Big Test IHobies I ·Clll8h For Title "CTITIOUllUlltlllN ,,._,. NAMI STATIMI NT NOTJCI TO Clt•DITOltS l'i.IOlttw4nqper_,l~OOlllQ-• Ne.A ..... n · W ... ltlOlt CCMl•'rOl'TNI ' A,,.....f(a<\Chtrwrac1k 0ftlcft ltATI O• c:Al.tflO•MtA fll04I t 1.A1<• ........ 101ttol>' .. I<~ TillCOUMTYOl'OR,._. > Lellllrt World C11•-.rec1tc '" 111• Meller •f Ille ~tlete ot MWMC:.t1$etvlce 1LIUR M Mt MA\T(lt. AKA 4 kfdltlM<IC Cllfrollf'etttc '" 1LIU1t HOllSON MOM$Ta.-. AAA ltrmettof\andlt•'9rrett11-tL8UltMCMASTIER De<-. S ....._!NO Veltn Chl-~Uc HOTICI! 1i Hf'll8Y OIV•H to S...ller~ 111.-.eu. C.11e.ia .,tllth1 Ion havl"' ctel"'t '"1111•1 lhe....., °"'"'· m•• I.amber I SI • •S~ fl 1 IO flit \tlf <leh"' '" "'90fflot UJohn MurtobadJttus way, tbe Mlsaloo Viejo ffJgh Dtablos would like to start a football aame in the third quarter. Thus tar. the Diablos haven't scored tn lhe opening period and have tallied only one TD in the second quarter. "We have trouble get- ting started,•· says Murlo. "We need the breaks early so we can be the aggressor. So far. we are not getting any breaks and are giving up plenty. We only have one interception and one fumble recovery in three games.'' As a result. the Diablos are carrying an 0-3 re- cord into Saturday night's (8) South Coast League contest with University High of Irvine at Tustin High. "But I feel we are an awfully good 0-3 team," says Murio. "I thought we improved a great de- al against San Clemente. I think it is pretty ob- vious that, if the game had gone on, we would have run over them." San Clemente only out- scored Mission Viejo 8-7 in the second haJC when the Diablos drove to the San Clemente two without scoring. Jn the second ball, quarterback Mike Sweazy threw for U4yards. Saturday. Sweazy will be facing a defense that hasn't allowed a touchdown in three games. "University Is strong as always, especially on the line," says Murio. "They 're big and physical and nobody scores on them ." (The only two points scored on University came on a safety.) Offensively, the Tro- jans are averaging just one point per game but Murio says, "they've been making a lot or mis- takes. They have three good running backs who have some speed. They tl[_eally have some good ~ent." Soccer O.i-..W.11 "l ltll.ATr .. Ttdl GWC KorlnQ; Doraoo 4, ~·'· N<Juyen. Estancia High ol Costa Mesa has run into three tough defensive opponents already, but there ap- pears to be no letup this week with El Modena High 's Vanguards prov1ding the opposition. The two collide Saturday night at 7: 30 at El Modena HJgh School In Century League action and the Vanguards enter with a team that has allowed one touchdown to three opponents. Cypress High upset El Modena in non-league action, 10-9. while Kennedy of La Palma and TusUn reu, 13·2 and 18-0. "Estancia bas played some fine defensive foot· ball teams." says El Modena coach Bob Lester. ·"Ibey get a lot out ol what they have. ''We've had a good pass rush in our first three games and we 'U try to do some things regarding Estancia 's combination of quarterback Dave Jeranko and the light end, Mike Camp. "Potentially, Estancia is a good team. Foothill didn't gain 50 yards against them on the ground and frankly, we don 't have the passing attack Foothill h .. as. El Modena's offensive weapons include tailback Mike Merk (5-9, 160 sr. > and fullback Bob Verberg (5-9, 155 ). Merk bas run ror four touchdowns while ac- cumulating 269 y~ in S8 carries. Yerberg has averaged almost six yards per carry in El Modena 's tough rushing game. Bob T vey (5-11, 155 jr.) is up from the sophomore am and bas directed the running game. He has 't gone to the air that much. complet-ing 16 or 38 for yards. Defensively ls where Lester seems most pleased, with downllnemen Brian Wood (180), Dave JGngsland (185). Jim Matthews (180) and Kurt Buehler (200) the mainstays in the trench. "Offensively," says Lester, "we baven•t really clicked. We know it's there. but we haven't really jelled, yet." Griffins Possess Impressive Attack Bruce Heiser. an aJl. Sunset League wide re- ceiver a year ago, start- ed his first game ever at quarterback for the Los Alamitos Griffins last week against Marina. He will be io the open- ing lineup again Satur- day night (8) when the Griffins tangle with Hun- tington Beach High's Oilers at Western High School in non-league football action. Coach Jim Rodarte of Los Alamitos has been looking for a passing game to complement the running attack but had liWe opportunity to try the aerial game last week. Heiser ran for 147 yards and running backs Steve Fogel (176) and Sam Snyder {108) picked up 431 yards between them. "We thought we might throw a little more but our running game was going so well, we didn't have to," Rodarte says. "I don't r emember a quarterback and both running backs ever get- ting over 100 yards each in one game in the coun· ty before," the coach adds. "We feel they will pose a problem for any team and all three of them can break into the clear at any time." How does Rodarte as- sess the winless Oilers? "We feel they have been a bard-luck team so far. I've seen them a cou- ple of times and they have bad some tough luck, especially inside the 10-yard line. They were there twice against Cypr ess and didn't score. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY ''I feel they pass the ball well and their veer offense poses a lot of pro- blems. ll's just a matter of them getting ever- ything together under a new head coach. "We went through the same thing a few years back. Regardless of their cecord, we expect a tough game. Huntington Beach bas a tyflcal, mobile high schoo line, not too big and not too small. Most or them weigh between 18S and 200 pounds." 40,092 SQ. FT. NEW BUILDING PLUS RAIL SERVICE, DOCK· HIGH LOADING, EXPANSION LAND, PROTECTED ENVIRONMENT, EASY FBEEWJlY ACCESS& MORE. For mfocmat1on on this or olher bu11d1ng alternatives. call your brokei or Craig Lyon. Manager of Sales & Leasing. al (213) 628-4204, (714) 833-1010 The Los Alamitos de- fense relies on quickness rather than size. JC Polo T-. CA 92~ lht cltR of Ille ~Mid C-1 ot lo A nlne·mootb batUe 0r w ... -. Joft11 , • .,..1-. um 111 111em 10 '"' """"'.,...," '~ Cl'oek9f L.", I I To.-.. CAt2UO Ice ef l'ltAY l'lttCt WIU.tAMS & for the Hobie Cat neet ™• MIMU ,, tonMttO lw.,. 1 ... RUSH LL AtlOrf'ltY• ., uw ••O cbamplonsbip in the ....... , "10eu1yPlat• m1Eatt0c•.,.•1 ....... ~'l L k a11-:i. °" w. J ,....,.1ero 01, or LOfl9 e .. c11 '" u. Al'IOate• ..,. ver a es Cb ..,...e T'lllt 11attr1ten1 ••• 111ec1 ""'" '"' ,, wh•t" ittter q111ce i."" ot•• Serie& Wit) COme to a Coultfy 0•~~ of <K"n9'Ct\llllV Olt '9cl butl,.n of tftt un(lerilqned tn •ti Cum ... at the Mo' ave de-.......,,,_ ••1• "''' citriainlnQ io .. 10 .,._., 111t" -J NltM lelm• with the .._. •• ,.,.., -.mt"' sert resort Sunday when Pub41Mltd <K•not Coe•I !)ajly Pt toe, JI Ile flltcl or Pt ... llltG •• •'-Mill l he s. n ta M 0 n l c 8 . ""' 2'.•ndOcl.6. u . to •.. 1. •!Gt-1• lthtn tour mo"'"' Alf tr IN tint tMIOUOlt 01 lftk notl<t Marina del Rey 1''1eet 1------------•-:0e1t0St1Ktmbtr 10. ,.,. meets the San "'"eco PUBLIC NO'nCE wtLLIAMA w •LL•AMS ..,, l!•KulOf'Olllle•llt Fl~ for the cballeng-e 1·*'4 otwlddtceOtnl cu~ MOTICC!TOCRIOITORS ILl.•AM c. Pitt(& •h Nt.A .. 121 •AY. PlttCI. e two Hobie Cat "'"••tt01tcouuol'nf• tl.LtAMU•ussaLL neet.a Welthered a series STATIOl'C•Uf'OltNIA A........,....•u• ~ ell 0 tj l'OltTHC! "'-411Y"-U .. nuna on races OD TM•C:OVNTYOl'OltANOe ... 0c ... 11...-. the waters of the resort's 1 .. 111e M•ll•' of th• tua1• o• .. ecti. CA. N rth 'f _._ __ ... 8t81AHA M OAVIS. AKA MltS A M l'l*llMd 00ftel Coast o.l•Y ~IOI. 0 a..&Ae to reCllQJ the OAVIS,AKA811110AVIS oec .. -5epl 1S.n,. •llCIOcl &, ..,. ll93-7• finals. Nollet 1, "''*°" v•••n to,,..._,_ 1------------Alter topping the sum-havinqcl•lmu~fft\ttlltwtd--t mer.ton~ rouod -robtn 10 flt• ~Id c1a1"" '" 1"" ottict Of tM clef'tt of tht i11.,,..w1d <e>vn M toprtt~t COUlpeti On With a UJta1 !Mm to Ille u~rllq'°'" ellllt Offlee Of RI EO MAH , OALIESSt . of 389 points, the Santa OEUICMEJIAN, WOODS. & OYetll, .. Onie a Bay s a1" lors ATTORNEV5 AT L.AW ... WEST m OCEAN 8LV0 • SU IT E tOO. ill"" Olv moved into the cham· ., LOHO euc.4. ,., LOS ANOE.LES pion.ablp finals with a Cg(#>tw>.wfllclllatttrofflceltlhepl .. of ... mi-fimal vlctorv over DuM~' °' 1"' unoentQfltd '" •11 ""'· ""'" • 1 lt"l pertelnlnq lo w•CI n lAllt S..Cll the Lone Beach fieel. c1a1-w1111 '"' "'<Hwrv -.c,,.,, mutt 11e !lied or ,,....,.,.,.,., et 4lf0t'fftld wfthl11 fOIJr molttllt alter the flr1t SAN DIEGO, runner-t>U1111u11ono11111u..,.•c• uP in the overall stand· oatec1~·.'!:::'~'~·1t,:~ in11 with 382 points, E1tecu1r1ao1t11ew111of earned lta titJe shot With " 1 • :!:~~·110 A L 1 s , 1 • a seml·final win over Ox· IMlUICM•.llAN, WOODS. &OYH nard. Santa MonJc•'s At11n1eyuu.~w PUBLIC N011CE ,tCTITIOU5 •UllNl'U WAM• ITA T•MIENT Tht tol-lnQ--ere dolft9 IMI~ ltltU8\ S.F COMPANV • ..OMl~Tt .. tace, *-18tec;tl, CA m2S SlllrleV Scht-r. 4«I MenCIOD T-r-. New-1 Beach. CA"h2S ,..."'., "· "'••· ... ,_ Ulfle, Ne-1 Ila.ch. CA '16t0 fl'll1 buslnt" " conC111cleC1 by • Qefttf'•I c>artMrV\tp. Slltr .. v O. SCh!Mler Tiiis 11•-nt ••• llted with tr. County Gftrk ol Ofenot CounllY Oft S.0. -·•.1•1•. ••tt.&w.1 ... 1~. a...v1aLl•,1t11tt• ......,.,. .. acll, CA ta.ta H .... Publli.hecl Dr-ea.SI Oltlly PUol. Sept. 1S, 21, 2', end Del.•· t'1• 1'21-76 Fasf 01t Bis Feet Fleet 57 aJready boldl :._-:::0c-•1""· one victory over San ._. .. ett1.cA,..1 Dt • Fl t 1.._i.... Publl~ Oranoe C:0.11 o.i1v Pllof t------------eco s ee 4, w .... .._... s.pe :tt.•11e10cu.1>.10 ... ,. .,t)l.,. the earlier round·robln PUBLIC NO'nCE Matt Schweitzer of Pacific Palisades keeps his balance on the tricky Windsurfer to set a new s peed record of 14.04 knots for free sail systems during speed trials at Cabrino Beach. Schweitzer, the current Windsurfer world champion set the record in a new Starsurt'er using the standard Windsurf er rig on a 10-foot. IO-inch tunnel hull. regatta 129-110. Competition, u tt bas been throughout the challeqe series. will be in both Hobie-16 and Hobie-14 clasaes with overaJJ points detennin- inll the fleet champiOb and Winner Of the SilVel' Lakes Cup. Sea Lions Plague Boaters in Seattle San Dtogo's bid is ex- pected to be led by Bob Beauchamp, former na· Uonal champion, who bas been the top in- dividual scorer of the series. SEATTLE (AP) -Sea lions from Callfornia come h e r e to sun themselves on boats moored io Puget Sound, much to the delight of camera-clicking ferry passengers -and the chagrin of boat owners. Relief may be in sight. , Jeff Boone, wildlife agent for the Seattle area of the State Game Department, has invent- ed the sea lion platform. a piece of plywood lashed to a couple of styrene plastic logs. The problem is the cute rascals have a dis- tressing tendency to crush windshields , smash running lights and destroy gear as they clamber In and out ol the water. And once they declare a boat their ter- ritory they keep coming back. It's not easy to dis· courage a 300-pound sea lion. rew'days and when it's brought back the sea lion will Ignore lt, having set up housekeeping on the platform. He'll be g lad to build more platforms for boat owners, says Boone, who doesn't think it will become a full-lime job. "These are California sea lions, and fortunate- ly there are not many of them around here. 'They usually move on after a few months ." Minney Captures P-Cat Invitational Owen Minney of Newport Beach won t.be P-Cat Division of the HunUngton Lake second annual P- Cat Invitational, topping a Oeet of 17 of the speedy cats which showed up for the storm-tOlsed regatta The first race ol the High Slenu eve.nt was canceled last Friday when a hail storm pelted the sailors within Ii ve minutes after the start. But the storm bad subsided by Saturday morn- ing and skippers of both P-Cats and NACRA S.3 PUBLIC NO'llCE Boone ties his plaUorm to a boat until the critter discovers it's easier to get aboard the platfcrm than the boat. Then, the boat is moved away for a catamarans braved a chilly eight to 12-mile-an-suN•uo• counol'nte hour breeze at the starting signal. ~~~:~;~·=~=~~=-Sunday turned out to be ideal catamaran ..... .,... Weather WI' th 1 Gk not breezes blowing straight down HOTICS 01' HllAlllNOOI' PUtTIOM PUBLIC N011CE ,... l'O• l"ltO•ATI! 01' WILL .,_O l'Olt 1 __________ _ Bn.dge Poshed thelaJceunder clear skies. un••s o" AoM1N1n11At10N NOnceTocoNTllAc;T'OM Competitors came from as far north as San WITH·'tH•·WILL ANNUtlO ANO CALUNOl'OIUIOS l'Olt AUTHOlt lZATtON TO AO· . Francisco and as far aoutb as Oceanside. The regal· "',., 1sT 1 ,. u No 1 " ™ 1 scr.oot ots1rtct. HUNTINGTON SACRAMENTO (AP) ed b W p if. B ta tNDllll'tlNDeNT ADMINtST1tAT10M &EACH uH•o" H1GH SCHOOL -Gov. Edmund Brown ta was spon.sor Y estport ac ic oa • °" aTAns ACT CPROMTIE o:>0« Dl~~':-!.~w t :ooo·c100 P.M.otu. Jr h ... •l""'ed le..rl·lation builders oflhe P-Cats. 9"•Tuo1 1tacSayofOc1oti.• "" • ...,. ••• &&a lbl•t. of !'ANNI£ .. ARlllSOH. l'IKeof &Id Rec~IOI· HUNTINGTON Wed. aimed at speeding E • ' DKH-s. eeAcH UNION H•GN SCHOOL the conatruclion of Dum-mp1re s PUBLIC N011CE NOTICE IS N!!REllY GIVEN 111111 OtSTRtCT EOUCAT IOl\I CINTU, ~•• °"•"-barton Bridge across the !."...":t~!.e '°' ",:;.• ~;:;•~:.:, s101 eo1 ... A.,.nue. So111-.t c;o... Saodltllack l l • ' 0 0 ~II INTHISUPllttOltCOUltT IWJfllecllltrtln•Nllllontor ....,._.Of fer9ntt It_,, 404. Nllftlklgloft ~h, e1 c..m1no o t • • o o 1-u soutbem tip of San Fran-T S o" THI sT A Tl o" Witt end '°' ~,_, of Lener~°' M-u. ~ AVAILABLE SecldlM>eck t<orlnq .... .._. Mi>r· claco Bay. The $90 ea et CALtl'ORNtA l'OR l'l'llnldretloft wltll Ille wfll ..... ""IO PrOjecl ldlfltlfkatlorl N•-: ~ re.ta, Hlndlrektr • Murptiy l , O.Vort m i ) ) t' O Q b r l d g e • TH~ COUNTY 01' ORANGI the j19tllk>M< -tor auU"IOrl~lon lo View H'9h S<hOol. 81d No. )10-Stc:urt· IRVINE 4.M<DoUQlef .... u1n1 tdmllllsttl' lllt Estate undw the I,.. tvAt.-mSy11em kW••l 0.•rt•" authorized io 1972, bas Me m be rs 0 r the ~ ....... ca-Wiiy ~·· ~ Aclmlnlstr•llOll of EMa!ft Pt ace Pl•11• ... on Ille. Mal" INDUSIHI AIL s.noi.q,,~.. 1 0 1 o-s been the subject of Car1"sbrooke Castle 11'" 511911" N••"' Dlno1v"' "1 A<1 <Pro&ate cooe tt1 •1 91'<11.,.. ,_,,e,ooer.itom-eomcn1C1ton NOW AT " OreflOI CDHI 4 > 1 S-IJ tn'-•tf Ol-tan ferotftca to Wlllch ls meoe tor turtlltr <>&pt., Huntl"OfOll llaach Union H1Q11 1""'.QMPl£X occ \Corino· Crooett. Trovt 4 ' legJslative battles for chapter of the Daughters tn 1111 M~u., ot A·t APARTMENT owttcutan, anci '"-""-"m .. ne1p1tK.e Sc'-4 Dhtrtct, s201 &otMI Ave .. .-... ~ Eldtt, ICtlh"•'· Tlrrtrl, Wvett 4, t f th B Jll h E . SUPPLY, INC A corporet-'"tilt of'-rlnelMUMelwt•bffnwttorOc· lnotonBttch,CA.'2641 ~=====================~~~='----------:w~o~y=e=a=n~·------,o e r s mpue ~«~o1~~no~-~~~1on ~•m~a•'=~·~-~~ N~t~tlHERe~~~N~ -have Scheduled 8 Wine Upan rteellnQ Ille verified l'ltlltlon tourlt'OOf'll of Oepartmtnl No ) of Hid the aOOvtoflt""CI Scl'IOot DtstrlCI of and Cheese party ()ct. 16 m.tCle et1d flltd In Ille M,.,. ol A·I COllrt.al100ClvlcC.nt ... Drlww.tt,tn OrllnQe County, ca11torn1a, «linel bf INlne't first and only •thletlc club wlll open soon In the Rancho·San Joaquin Recreational C.nter at Michelson and Parkway Drive. Th• entire f1mlly c:1n en/oycl11b ftcllilies wfllcr1 wl/I lnc/11~: • A tuH sin gymn..aum for llnketbaU, Volleyball Gymna1Uc1 Badminton, EHrclM claqn • She recquetb1IVhandb11l courts •Swimming • Outdoor Jogging ind voHeybalt • A c°'"plete weight f1elltty • Men't 1nd wemen'• apae and retaHtlon are11 Tl'tt Clvb wlll bt loceted c11r1ct1y ecrott lhe sttMt from Amertc:en P,..Scl'tOOI• Chlld Care Cenltr whert you can lt1v• your chlldran to '"loy e fully au~rvlMO program white enloylno your C ub actlvltlea. .' l Ill >Ull l'Hf1N£ 551 -4 ·121 Low Price. and being treated like o member of the Johnson f.om1ly. wos worth goi09 out cl my woy for. Thar's why I recommend you drive to Johnson & Son. Their Golden Touch service Is the ONLY woy to buy. Give 'em o try. They moke you feel reol lmpoftant Ard. ro me. mot ts lmponont. Bill Skiles Sen JuMt ~h•IO ORAMIE CQMTY'S~ST l~ WLERSHP. 66 VWIS " FRIJO.Y fM.Y SEAVUt lit I ohnson&son 2t26 HARBOR BOO C08'TA MESA 040-5630 ._,,,,.,., ~ly, t11e., • C..lltornla llleCllyofSantaAna.C.lltornl• enCI thrOUQll lh Governt1111 tio.r<1, at a Newport Beach CorporetlOfl, by llt director\'°' .... 0.leCIOct-rt.1'16. "Hftlnefter .... ,,.Cl to •• ho Order lo Sllow Ceun Wiiy an order "DISTRICT" wlll rec1h1t U1> to, boll me. "'°utd nol De made declerlno MICI Ctr WILLlAM •. ll.IOffN. llOI lelff then lht •0011t•tte'-CI 1 .... Chapter regent Joyce porellon to De Clclly wound 111> -ells-County Ciera , .. ._, ~1 for '"" •-.erd ot a contr.i AndeTson s aid the event IOIVtd and QOOd (tlllt •C>Petrll!Q ADIUAN CUYP••. COUN·Y t'Orltlt"'°"'P"OfKl. tlltrefor, C:OUNNL 81ci. lf\ett be r~l"9d In 1M pt-wtll be held from 5 007:30 IT IS HEAt!8Y OROEltEDthet any ~~:AR.A TAM TNOMPtoN, ldtntlll"' ..,.,,.., elld tllett be..,._, P .m . at 1854 Port Pll''IOflCl•lm1no100.1nterfttedlntalCI '110 ...... ~Dl'I W.'1 -pubtlclyrtad•loudMW.. ....... <orporatle><1 tltMr IS sllertl>oldPf\, ~ ,,. fl.ttt0tl--p1ac1. Westbourne with tickets crtdltou or otlltrwl'lt, ~ 1n 1111, P.O • ._,,,. Eech l>ld muu conform end 1111 ·Ced t $2 SO P'OCffOff\O ti.fore tlllt Courtto conlftt --..-..,c..tltef'!lle91m fftll0Mf"9 totllt ctnt•act-lmtf'll1 P". ____ a __ ._. _____ 1w1c1""'111on•t•nrtl_bef.,,..!1-t • Ttl:l1MIDl-Mt Eedlbklt1W1t111t•"~llV"'9 plr•llon 01 1111r1., lJOI de-,. from the M•'•YO•r..,...kMflll•l4••-1e<urtty rmrTfld to In Ille COtltrect PUBUC N011CE ~-••CIOll of OVbllUllorl Of'"'' Ordtf, llllOlltlltd ~Miii C.0Ht OMIY l'llOI, dOC-\ •llCI II\' IN ''" of 9l'allOWO t---:-:-..:~~nrrD'l111W1rr---I., '\erelneller tPt<lllad, -111ow Otlio41ws.•. 11 ltl6 411).7& !4AK011tr1KIOf''- c-. If..,,,,,., lte\<t, wlly Ws c:-1 The DISTRICT r~ 1111ti""19 ..-. STATllllHN'T .-id not mellt •nci ent.,. en orOI< PUBLIC NOTICE rtltel aftY er •tt bldur to walw.,,., Ir· TM teoowlno pWIOft ts dalno bu\I· dt<larlnQ w ld corporallon IO be CIUly ,..,._,,t,..orl<lformatllle1ln-111c11 flftSH: ~ue>. llt llno..n enehcl1tlrlbut.O, •lfllMblddlnQ t L SYSTeMS, 10JO w, ~. ,.,,.1 ... or-"' ow ..... lht 88tlll w ..... otl CIOUltTOPTM• Tiie DISTRICT l\al ..,....._ """ 5MteMa,,..0.9o.11u.2,CA'21W -Cof!IOretloft l'r~ntM Tas LAw STATaOtrCAl.ll'OltNIAPDlt -••I twevalll~ tate of -~ LIKl\lt Ttltdy l.Atlt11r. toao W. peld, -Ill Ollltr ll-~ -ntUX>UNTYOl"ORAMH .-... kl !fie ~allly In Wlllctlttlls~ MKA11-.Apt.14,S-aAlle,CA""'1 llMl411Ue• .... oeld •• ,., es"' ~MU ........... •••11t-fOfmedfOrNC1!( ..... 0f't,Clt Ttllt ~IMU 11 COllduc111d llJ M lot-Wt!\11, .. tlllnQ the ecc:OU<m of tit NOTIQ OP N•A•tNQ 01' HTITIOM of_..,,....-"" to tlle<lllt ltlt ( .... ....... lllrtetort -Clh.ch••9'1111 '"direct"" l'Ott PROeAT• 011' WtL&. AltD l'Olt IHC:I Tlleta ,..,., .,. Oft flit .. llW LU(t ... T. l..elltvr tfOll'I ...... Olltle• •llCI 11114>1UCIM 10 '" LITTllll TllTAM•NTARY AND OlSTlllCT ofllct IO(atact •• S»1 e.tw Tiiis \IM-ftl wH Iliad"'"' ... <rtdllor1ort11•,..110ldtf\-Cl9(terl11Q AUTMOltllAT10M TO AOMINllT•R A ... , H...,tlnotOll lltac:h, CA. .,.., C»olflty O•rllel Oranot Collfll}lell ... UIO '°"*'•tlon lo IM <llHOl-.O, •nd UNC>a• nt• INDIP•NO•NT AO-COolet may IM -•Inell Ol'l .._.I. A Wl'llltrU, lt?.. ""'4<1119 WCll 04Mf -· -;ranllno NtlTltATIOMOfl•ITATftACT -OfthtttrattUNtle.-WdMh t..C:llatlltr re41t4 •• lllllColWl-yOe-Etlata 01 l"LOltlNCI! ll f!L IOO•llo. "'4!fl.,_ 0rtfl9t CO.II o.lly l'llet, -fllll4lt alld 1>"0P41r 11-the WIOll'ta ~TH. OKHted. Thi IOreOOlflO .ClleO\llt of llW dleM ~.Z2,2't,tnc10ct•r•.1a. Mblll!Wd. NOTICe IS Hllllll•v C>IVIH""" ........ ._.. llPOll •...,...,.,...,fl ~ ~16 IT IS llUllTNl!ll OltOEltlD llltl THOMAS L LOltD Ila, flltd ..... e etOllt lit -., 'flit ••ta fOf llOi'OeY 1111• ....,., be lff...cl '"' f1Ubllc4111onof • 111t1tt*I tor ...._. ... Of Wiii.,.,. 1or ... 8llCI -nlme WOf'll '""" tit • ...,. PUBUC NOO'IC£ 'oP' t11tr•of In 111e D•llv PllOt, • -•of u1Mrt T•tte.....,t«Y tt t11e tfmt _,_·llalf 1-_::_:_,~..,....:._.:...:::.:_:...:;,. __ f !-~~..,...,..~ Of ..,..,., <lrcut•tlon l11 ...._Ill-• end eutl\orlull .. 111 eo. n \hall tit ~!!Cletory u-lhe COH- l'ICTITIOUI eu1tNUI Orenoe Coultly, .,,..,.. Ille prlnc:IPll of. tl'lllllMar 111e .,,.._ -lllt l'*I*!-TltACTOR lo -m ,,,. cOltfrtn It ~ ll'ATIMINT flctQf teldCOf'potatlon l•foeftlcl.llf!CI AclmlillstrttlOll eot l\let., Ac1,.... ... "'9d. --•"Y ... ~.ectw Tiii fellewl I OOI """ • --for . Otrlod "' two C_UI,... to "'llllCll ,, m.tOI IOr ""'-' Ul'def 1111'11, IO NY not,.,, lhM lllt ... ,.0 •11 no l>ef\Ofl 1 no • ll'IOlltllt, ti. llrtt p11C1ll~•1lon tow on 1cu1_.,,11Mlfle1•11mt....,111ac. IM<llltd ••10 to •" -rkme11 $1MCINI AUOCIATll 1UI Auoutilt. lt7', ,_""°tlle.,._Ml,_wttorOC. '"'91cMU bY ttltfll Ill tllt •llllCVltot-Of 11 t.tlitlatr All•lltlm C..lltemf• ITtSllURTHE.-rntOl!RIOtlWlllM llt. 197t. ti IO!OO•.m. 11'1 thl --~r.ct. • ' ,.,.,lion on Ill• .,., t in IM, aM Ille._ eot Oepertme11t Ho. J of -No ,,.__ m.y wlth(lr-1111 Old fw • c Ore11t ll111klt1t t.tt~I Via '•"""•bt•tler-11tarlnoonNO~ Clllllf1,ttl'OOClvlcCt11terOl't,..W1tttt11 "'"9Clof'-'y.fl,.. CUI O.nlfttl'tN • •• IAt1111• Nltliti C.llfwlll• • ..,. et,,.. llovr of t .00 A.M. lft Ille .. OfyofSlinlaA#\e. ~lltorftiL ,,... ... lilrt"9...UllOOf bl06 ' Ullrtretlll Of 11111 Collrt, Ot-1rtWt1t 0..0t-..r I, t91•, A lltY'!le!ftt .... 9114 e 1111--. l'Jllt .,.,.,_ I• lltfllO ~"' ,.. at l'W Civic Ctnltf Ori.,. '#Ht...... Wit.I.JAM I . 14 JCNfN, ... wlH lie r._..lt'td llf'I..-tO•i.<lllllOll llldf¥ieutJ t•Ma.c.attt.,l\la, CDt<lltrO..-otltleceritrecl Tilt~Yl'lltntbeftd-1 C Gta111Slmlll11t 0.ttd AllOUtt 10, 1.-t• l..L.OaO .. Ill Ille form Ml 1W1111• '""CIO'ltr«t Tiii • fl O!ld Wtt!M • Sll\1111 .. \Aw --... '~ IH••ltlltlll ' .l\1C1910flM ,._•Y•~.s.ne1n ev1toMrtC.••1feot Cleft! ., °".,.. Cltuflt• • .....,_, S..C-rl6' '6wt Mflf\. CA. n.sa 04recw ~ww--. .. "1• l'UM "'-'1""4 ~ .. \.Hll.Dl11y l'l14t, ,..._ .. ,._~ 0ter91'-eMCeftUfVC1IOll ,_....,.. ~ Oletl DtllY ~ 1., U. •• s.... '· L ll, U 2', IM li'llllllffltd Oratl9t c:..11 Deitr "'"'· l'\llllltlltf 0r..,. c..sc o.ur ,,.., ~ •• , .... ll."1' CIU-1' U,tJ.•,tt~• UIHC s,t,t1,1tlt 4.._,. ~ .. ll.lt7• ·~ ... ' . ' I • ~ IOOMER f'XCtN l JUST 2tALl?tO -nJe JIG ~IJCI( IN VATIMo ~. A«.101..1> • ' DOOLEY'S WORLD TUMBL~WEEDS by Tom It Rycmt WMI~ YOU rv:scue ME FWJM QUICl<WJ~ r--~---~_,, o, 1liE PERFUME OFn-!f ""' IOCKAAOO, rt.L SIN6' MY J.~ RELE:ASe CAm.E FIU.S M'f NOSE, "" DR. SMOCK FUNKY WINKERBEAN TANK McNAMARA .NANCY I WON A PRIZE AT SC~OOL TODAY TODAY'S CIDSSWDBD PUZZLE UNITED Feature Syndicate 1 ueselay s Puulc Solved ACROSS 4 6 Bundles ot sticks. Var. I Ve111s 49 St M1n1119 Law1ence. 6 Spongelike toi one calle 50 Arnulfo ···· 10 Son of Noah Panana 14 .. Tugboat pies ·····" 51 Arrive 15Black Poet 52Kindof 16 Ethnic 1aincoal dance B11t 17 5'>111ted war 55 Re1ected as horse 1nte11or 2 18 "Ladies and words 581-ial ·•••• 20 For each Movie VIP 21 Mine tunnel 60 Fr proooun 23 Rantdly 6 t In the 24 Canal Zone orrecllon of J1ke 62 ••••• 26 Narrow percha academtes Rubbery 28 M1n'1 name substance 30 Prooelhng 63 Mrs Olek Influence Tracy 31 Loelhed 64 NOblem81"1 32 Time tables 65 Organic 36 Nice lrktnd compound 37 Eue11ar1s1tc plate 36 ProlesslO'lal man·s charge 39Reduce& •2 Remove viscous mailer 44 Fell into evil ways 450ellect DOWN I HandlOOf 2 Shield part 3 Vigorous 4 lnterjeclton of shock 5Quietened with drugs 6Commence I Aid ST.AMP CGGS SE RT OATER TART OLEO ST AT E ALAR AL1A lt AREMS I S PEAtcER S RIOT I HA VE NOT ALAMEDA S I MID SOL .AR I BARE O I SE T PLAN I DOFOR I VETO SAY I WARES I OICTA CAN I SELECTEO ST RANDS I SE N1 PRINT IN G I STORfS RATA EAR S lllf SH [YE O SKIS SINTO tSSA TlTE TAKER 8 -··ton Style 9 Ad1echve suffix 34 H1ndpart 35 Spanish painter 37 Piece 10 Aetronau\ Afan B 40 Gives pleasure to 41 Jagoed 4 2 01lhtt 111 t 1 Mede up ol opinion people 43 Woman In 12 The chosen Genas1s t3 EQUlne 45Gloomy features 46Cut~·s 19 Heavy 4 7 i~'-~~~. ?'l Biii collector Geoerally 25 "···Marla" 46 Fisting nets 26 Length units 49 Electrical 27 Parallel device part 28 Herrtng·hko 51 Clever fish 53 Greek 29 Docile 54 fi:~insula 30 Joined 56 Plunge closely 57 lndrvidval 32 E~amples 59 OOOf a1g11 33 Coose· quence ll J ANP 'JHE MUSIC OF 1HEIR 'MOO' .I I HEPJ'S MY~ RIGH19t£K10 YOO, 0 RUE"{ MAE:, M'( .1J t.rrn.r: SttKYAR'7 ROSE:! ...._."-......_.-">--<'.\ d ,,._,.._,Tl by Tom Batiuk CJ.£1D UKE 10 ~UE A ~ SET ASIDE R)R ~-SN'OKER5 J by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds 'PEANUTS by Emie Bushniller ... ~,.. •u•.,-·••~ WCU.. I THINK I'll 60 IN nlE HOUSE, WATC/1 TV FOR A UMllEAND TAKE A NA?..l'M 6lAD NH sam [,l;\l{S ARE OVE~ JUDGE PARKER GORDO MOON MULLINS by Charfes M. Schulz by Harold Le Doux fal:l::S!Jil:Pl2Z2li22iZ21.("7l1fiL6.V£ittiA~ ACCLIMATED TO WHAT ••• UFE MEANWHILE HEY, GAlh' ... GUE$5 WHO'S AT lliE COONTR'I' CLUB'? A eACI< DOWN AT THE TENNIS C.00~5. WEEK Of= OOING THIS AAD LOOKING r-OR A GANIE? MISS PEACH SHE'LL NEVER WANT ro WORK' INSIDE WOODY ALLEN ~c[p;wtat-~l/,!2!L= ~ ~;/ltmJ ~ £ SIW ~)II.(/.; IU<d, ,U,.Sr:r:C¢ ye110/IJ ~111set: I :1-~· ~- .... t ~'-" e& ON• ov r~• ~ LOCO MOTIVE INllNI~ ..•. by Mell [ by Joe Mca then ~~ r. Tllufl#C fiat 'It'(~ ~ ·' ~~· pctobtf •• 1971 by George Lemont l .. . . by Ferd Johnson ~_..,,. I ®TA ~l<&HT ! WHY DIDN'T YOO ~oP IT BEFORE I WASH@ IT ?? THE GIRLS DENNIS THE MENACE I J i • ... • ' I • • • • • ' • ' . I: .. " t. I CB D~IL y PILOT PUBUCNO'nCE HO'l'ICE TOCllEOl'fOltS SUP£1.io1t COUllTOl'ntl! STATE 01' CALI l'Oll"IA llOll THE COUNTY 01' ORANGE ............. E•t•le ot JEAOMe 0 GlllCH, DKNsed NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN tott. <t'l'dl~ Of tl>e aoov• ntmed deeledtnt th.It all ~rwn• l\avtnq cl•lms .tc)&lnst '"' .. Id Oec-nt ••• required "' 11i. them, wllt\ ll>e M<t'••rv VOUC!ltN. In ,,.. Ollie• Of u.e ci.r• ot ltW! ~..,.. titted <OUt'l. Otto Ot-nl 11\tm, wltMhe nKnury voucller\, tot,,.~ a• l1'e Office ot Ille euc .. tt1x'• lift°"""" Roy$ GlorO-, tOi}N ""'lnSl .. Sulte O . s.Ma AM, C.lllO<"nla, wNcll I•~ plec• ot bvsl""' Of ,,.. UOICIHs!Qrled In Ml lftllll•t"'I ... n.inlnq to '"' ~ ... Of ~ ot<-nt. wltllln '°"r mor<lt\\ .. ,"' "'*lint Pllbllc.,tlon of lllll llOCIU O.teclOtt~•. '"' FllANC!\1'\ GACH. Executnwot Ille Ett•te04 '"' e0o ... nio .... dd« .. _ ~S ~OllOAHO •-•"'Law tGU M IMIA Strwt Wtit• s-ta AM, CA tf 101 AnlfM f Mt & 11!KYll1 a l'uCJll~ 0.1t1>9t COl>H Otlly Piiot Oc10btr • ti, 10. 21 '"' •nl 76 PUBLIC N011CE s-A611 N01'1Cll Of' s-.Lll Of' ltllAL. PttOPlllTY &T PltlYATll SAU ....... 1 .. 111 the S-r IO< Court Of I,_ 51 .... of C911foml•, In Mid lar 1"9 Counly ot Or.,.: '" tll• M•tt•• ol tllt 'Ettatt 01 PUBLIC NO'ftCE PUBLIC N011CE R i3 k y P u rchase: Wi3e Mo ve Three Years Later, Crocker Bank Notes Advantages SAN DIEGO (AP> -Buy lng the scandal·riddeo United States National Bank. includ· lng 62 branches and UabilltJ es $220 mHllon above its assets. wua "a very wise move." says Crocker Bank alm<l't lhree years later. "No doubt about that,·· says Robert K . Wilmouth. president and chieC ad· ministrative officer ol the San Francisco-based buyer AT THE TIME. WiJmouth was executive vice president of First NatiooaJ Bank of Chicago. Crocker's bid of $89.S milUon was accepted in com- petition with Wells Fargo Bank and Union Bank. The mess Jert by the col- lapse of the San Dieg<>-based bank or financier c. Arnholt Smith -up to then lhe big· gest bank failure in U.S. his· t o r y -is s till b eing straightened out. THE PURCHASE price in· eluded U.S. National's 26- story downtown San Diego headquarters and branches. Assets that Crocker acquired included $125 million in cash and money due from other banks, $350 million in invest- ment securities, $300 million in loans, $40 million in bank promises and about $35 million in other assets. total· ing in all $850 million. So-called Ha bili ties totaled Sl.07 billion including ~ million in deposits. The red·ink difference of $220 million. minus the $89.S.million saJe price, was paid Crocker in casb by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. <FDIC). And, as the properties were reappraised later, the bank received another $86.8 million from the FDIC because the assets were worth loSIS than originally thought. CllOCKER AJ..80 returned to the FDIC $15 mUlion or the original $300 million in US. National loans bec1ause of I.he bank's belief they \lould re- main uopaJd. In 1974 and 1975, however. Crocker absorbed $20 million in bad loans that earlier looked good. Included was money lent to n hotel chain that went b1tnkrupt. Wilmouth believes the bank acquisition has ~ost about $110 million, in addition to tho expenses in bringing together the two organizations. Five branch banks were closed. "WllAT IT DID for us was make u~ truly a California bank," Wilmouth said In a re- cent interview. "Out.side of the Bank of Amenca. we have the best coverage of any bank in the state with branches In almost 200 communities,'' he said. The move eliminated lhe need to search out ~ntial branch locations. apply for permission and build the branches and ruture business. With a single fell swoop, said Wilmouth, the purchase "gave us an entree we never could have achieved with the same cost effectiveness" in any other way. Crocker Ba nk's reputation bas not been tarnished by its public connection with the in· solvent bank. observers say. A MAJORITY of Crocker's branches were in Northern Californ ia before the purchase. Its 358 branches now are about equally split in Northern and Southern Calllomia. A majority also of U.S. Na· tional's old employes stayed on, of\en in the same offices. Smith, now 77, is on oroba· lion ufll'r h1i. no·cont est plea$ to fnud and mlsup· plication or bank tunps and faces multJmUbon-dol.ar lax chll m~ as well as a state trial on similar charges growing out of bis operatioo oC U.S. NauonaJ. r Sl owdown? 4o/lJ Expectation Poor WASHINGTON <AP> -The government's r-eport later this month on economic growth is expected to show that the U.S. economy grew al a disappointing rate ol about 4 percent in the third quarter ot this year. This is the opin ion of economists bolh ln and out or government who arc puzzled about why the economy has bogged down alter such prom•slng growth earlier this year. IF THE OCT. 19 REPORT is dlsappoinUng, which now seems likely, it may give Democratic presiden- tial nominee Jimmy Carter new ammurution in his aUempt to use the economy as an issue in his cam- paign against President Ford. A 4 percent growth rate in lhe Cross National Product <GNP) is consid«!red Just enough to keep up with new entries into the labor force and does nothing to dent the nation's sUU·hlgh 7.9 percent un· employment rate. The report on the third·qullrter CNP will be re· leased by the Commerce Oepartmeot just two weeks before the election on Nov. 2. Tbe GNP measures lhe value ot goods and services produced in the economy and is the broadest measure of over- all economic performance. ALTHOUGH FORD CLAIMS credit for "turning the economy around" after the deep recession. Ford's advisers privately admit that recent economic statistics have taken much of the steam outoftheclaim . There could be more bad news for Ford if the Sep- tember employment report, to be released Friday, shows another rise in the jobless rate. That rate already has increased for three consecutive months. Ford administration officials say that although the economy still has a long way to go, it neverthe-less is on the right path. "We see no reason what.soever to alter our basic feelin~s that continued economic erowth is still there." says James T Lynn, director of the Office oC Management and Budget. Car Lease Firms Tell Over T he Countt·r Of Merge r Two California vehicle leasing associations, responsible for leasing more than 60,000 vehicles statewide and with lnventory value ex· ceediog $500 million, have merged lo form the California Vehicle Leas· ing Association (CVLA). based in Newport Beach. The new group com· blnes the Southern California Leasing & ( TAKING ) __ S_TO_C_K _ Rental Association and the Automotive Leasing Association. CVLA has 140 mem- bers. representing in- dependent leasing com· panies, auto dealers, and banks in auto leasing. Membership is expected to double by early 1977. according to BUI Schneider of San Bruno. president. ~toMeet William S. Hansen. president and chief ex- ecutive or Bulfum's stores, will be guest speaker al the Oct. 14 meeting of the Financial Execuli ves J nstilute. The meeting will be held al 6:00 p.m . at the Sad· dleback Inn in Santa Ana. lnformon Is available al 979-6900. Trad~ Baited Willie R . Barnes, Califora commissioner of corporations. has an- nounced the lssuance ol an order suspending over·the~ounter trading In Calilornia by broker· dealers and agent.a in the Class B common shares or Kimball International, Inc., an Indiana COfl>Ol'8· tion. The order wu is· sued with the consent ol Kimball International, Inc. because the shares do oot have full vot.i.Dg rights. Dfmdftad Told Citizens Bank oC Costa Mesa baa announced a 10 pereent stock dividend to be pald toshareboldenol record on Oct. lS. New sham will be m atled This dJvldend follows a two-Cor-one stock spUt ln 1174 and a 10 ~t dividend ln 19'75. NEW YORIC IAP) k ~"',;:c":::ni!',~' IMltl S«urllles O.e~ As\n , owr Ille <-IM B ... lt. l"1\1Jf'ance & Indus!· rial stacll~ AFA PrS 4.,, W> AIO Inc 1 '"' AVM Cp 1111 '"' Add!Y\ w i"' .... AtN RIK 2V. , .. Albt<1\ ..... 1\t. AllCO Int 10 .... 10 ... Ali.9"" n•"',. !~rui:,ec , .. .... ' , ... Am E•P ... ,. ... ,.,.,, Finl ..... '"' Am Fum 2·~ 211> Am °'"1 •v• .... A Mk ro 6V. ""' Am Ttlev 10 '°"' Am wtld 10 11 /lvflltr 0.. ,._ , .... -·'* S"' S4• ~8 ,. H ''1 Aid""-' 111> 1"-tvtl.WIG 1•tn is•1,. -..cc -.,..., 13'" Atl~LI 131 .. ••'· 8"1rd At 3'11 4''1 e.r.v Hy ""'ts'"" Bum Rll S'\O f>ll• lle\l"'I F 1111. 19 8ayll Mk • ..... llHllri. 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Te1~!M"':10 5,,::-:"t•lt -°1'1t PcL MUOllet' 13~ 14~ I Ott 316 :::~aa2 "" 8't. l\'.1SD,1fl Summar y , c1111.ca1 Science\ 21"' -~ Oft no 17 12"4 l Sup(>tOlr Str\ J'l'o ..., Oii IU ... I Lit> S~ S'IO 4 B10\Cl1\41rtc~ :l''l .,., OH 125 N SecA•t\ 4 ..... $ ~ller\onCP 6"' ~ Oii IU ,..,_ .. , llllo -4\Q NEW YOlllC tAPl-M! oktlY!' OVtf· 6 Amcomo , "• Ott II I NJNlti G 13 13\o lllf'.cou111er flacks suppfltd bY N4SO 7 Bi.\lu\ Ind 2 "• Oii II I Nlel\n A ,, l1'h NMl'llt Vo1..me Bid A\kecl OIQ I to;tnnlnq1on LIO • .... Oii lf I Nltl\n B ,, 111/) OISCll Ga s.ot, 100 6"o I • • w: • Fulllon?20 l'~ ... Oft 100 Nc>Car ~ II .. Ill!, ~o!~. . 1~~4;':/ ~~ ~\!" 10 watcl\lna•ll 21;. It. Off tOO NoEOI un 79'" 2'114 ' 16 11 McF•rl....S Enqy 2"• -v. OH 100 NOnrp 1(1 IS\<. 1611• HO<tn> I(, • 10~.JOO 1~ 16'. _..., ., S.14tmCot Mill~ ''" -v. Off tOO l'M NalG ,.,, 9~ PlltlOfl 8 9S.t00 I I,_ 16 + .... ,, v= Cr'•tts. 2'.. -v.. Off 10.0 l'M P\ISv ...... I"' Gov Emo • /1 400 S"• S'lf ,. A rfefl l '--~ OH ,4 N0..,1 ~ 14' ... IS Moor't Cp &11 • .ac> :13' • 3' -I IS tntMple•lfn 7'4 -'Ill Ott 9• ~v~,, 2S'h ,,.,,. O>mt> Ins • 66. JOO II" II 'lo • II> " Un•wrsty Pat•nl 1f'lt; -2'A Off ... """ ''"' Am E~P 61.300 38'• J'>lti -'• 17 PlfStll•nt Inc t'n -It. Off 9 I 0...-1 1'111 111> Tym.i>r . • U .300 I•"' "'" _.,., II TtMISl•,lltlOIQ~ 2Y> -"' OH 9 1 Oliff TP ~,, -...Cod ,,. 19 TutAQ ~ 1'"> -V. OH 91 ~NA .. ,,. 4'4 lO O..t•r tnc 2\o -'• Olf 93 Pltbst 8r tti. n OK titted 5M n 11<!1111trn81elr 1" -lie Olf 81 PIKG<I ~ H~ 1& IJn<llan<)td l,IOO n ~tro• lndVsl 2"--,,. ()If ll Pa'co ... I' Totel l\wes 1.l/19 73 8raou FUll•Oft 1'tt -"' g:: 78 PM'lli H JV. 3 Nt"' lli9M . 1• 14 AlldV•nLlne 8 f -14 11 Paultrr p 6 61'<1 -~. Cl 1S ~~~~,,~~· ) ) : :z &: ,, ~I MI 10'1> 1111> Total sales 6 667,100 >6 ,, MUT UAL FUNDS W edne&day's Alternoon Prices NYSE COMPOSfl'E TRANSACTIONS OueW-WIUdt ,,_..,.h ...._ .,...,,,Mldwefl. 1>.fl(lfle, "9W. ~. onr.Ml .,_. ·~----lll'Yl!Wlt.t ...... l -latloflof'9(.,o11 ... 0..len-I BofA Sued Over Pesos SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A Texas bank has filed an $11 million suit in federal court agaimt the Bank of America. alleging~ San Franctsro- bated bank backed om of an agree- ment to purchase Mexican pesa5. The National Bank ol Laredo, Tex., nid Bank of America, the world's laraest commercial bank, bad a.l'ttJd to purcbue 30 m{ffioo pesos'°" •bout 12~ cent.s each. The purchase was to have been completed by Sept. 'T, the auitsaJd. 'The Larodo asked COi' Sl.2 mtlllon In actual dama,u and S10 mlWon ln P'lftltive damqt1 ln the IUlt. wblcb was filed Monday. s 04'1L 'Y P'LC I Cl Puffcei° Ptish Low Tar Meam Big Bucb BJ Mil.TON MOSK.OWITZ lf you think you have been aeem1 • lot of ads toutln1 t'lgarettes wbicb are low in tar and rucotane. you're correc:t. But You haven't seen anything yet. Tbe omtoughl ls about to belfn. Money Tree L&st month's ~ fro-the American Cance?' Society that amekera cai> reduce their chances or let.tlnl cancer or beart d.i.luse by uslnc low·t&r·aod· nicotine cigarettes l& likely to touch off a heavy barrase ol promoUon for brands bt that category. Jndeed. t.be report may presage a change ln the cigarette market as fundamental as the ooe that e>«urred alter 191:>4 Wbeo t.be Amen can C&ncer Society releued lts first findin.p linking clgaret.te smoking with Jung cancer. THE EFFECT OF 11lAT &EPOR.T. buttressed by others in subsequent years. was to cbange the market from unfiltered to filtered cigarettes. In 1954. rUt.en accounted for less than 10 percent cl the totaJ cigarette market. By 1i67. they controlled '10 percent or the market. Today. they bave 90 percent. The reason for that massive shift was fear. not fashioo. Smokers simply assumed, without any h&rd evidence. that a filter claarette wouki be "safer ... So, CameJ, Lucky Strike and Chesterfield were dethroned. replaced by Marlboro, Wl.nston and Kool. Now the American cancer Society. lhe toremost oppo- nent of smoking, bas come forward to say. In effec:t: "You sbouldn 't smoke. But if you do, at least choose a brand that has a low level ohar and nicotine.·· TO SOME EXTENT. SMOKERS have already been d6- ing lhat. hence tbe mcreased sales registered by such brands as True, Carlton. Vantage. Merit. Now and tbe "light" versions of the established brands: Marlboro Ligbll, Winston Lights. Kool !dil<b, Kent Golden Li&hts. lt appears as if these are the brands that may well take over the market. just as the filters did during the past 20 years. Two brands have emerged as frontrunners in the low-tar· and-nicotine segmentolthe market. One is the R. J . Reynolds brand, Vantage. tbaU1asbeeninnationa1dlstribuliooforfive years. The Vantage ads in newspapers and magazines have not been subtle. They have pJayed dkectly on the beaJlb COO· cems of smokers, fe8turlng such headlines as: "How many timesbaveyoudecidedtogjveupsmoking?'' VANTAGE SALES WERE UP%8 percent last year to 10.4 billion units, enabling the brand to place l2t.b in the saJes stan- dings. The other early winner in lhe low·tar·and·nicoU.ae race Is the Philip Morris e.ntry. Merit. Althoogh it was introduced only last December, it bas been backed by wbat is probably the heaviest advertising budget ever put heh.ind a new cigarette: $40 million. And reports from the tobacco industry say Merit has already carved out a market share equivalent to that of Vantage, about l .7 percent of the tolal market. It's unp~edented for a new cigarette brand to gain so many users in so short a time. U smokers went strictly according to the tar and nicotine levels in choosing a braod, lhen they would be stampeding for the American Tobacco brand, Carlton, which bas the lowest levels of any brand oo the market. The R. J. Reynolds brand. Now. is also among the leaders in screening out tar and nicotine. BUT VANTAGE AND MEllJT bave outsold these brand.11 by promising the delivery ol taste as well as low tar and nicotine. Neither claims to be the lowest tar and nicot1lle cigarette, ''just the lowest one you'll e.njoy stooling.'' However, all of this may change now lb at the American Cancer Society bas given its support to low tar and nicotine cigarettes. Only three days after the release of the report True was in print with ads announcing that it bad slashed Its tar content by SO percent. Look Col' more of the same from our health-conscious cigarette producers. Once Rich, Ha Paves New Road SAN DIEGO CAP) -Ha·Vi-Thuan says he was a "former wea1t.by man with no vocation." when t\e arrived in this country as a Vietnamese refugee wilb only a five-pound suitcase of clothing oo July 4, 1975. "Could 1 pick oranges? I couldn't get a job in a factory ror I bad no skills, .. be said. THE COMMUNISTS OONFIBCATED bis propertlt?$ in which Ha-Vi·Tbuan, a millionaire in Saieoo, did a monthly business of $300.000 as a manufacturer's representative ror American, European and other Asian companies. Among his tenants was IT&T. lhe federaJ commun.ka- tions flnn. Among bis business accounts waa Sea·Land Co., a sub- sidiary of R.J. Reynolds, Jnc. A DA.UGHTER, ONE OF IDS six children. was auend-lng San Diego State University when Ha and bis wife escaped Saigon. In their new city, they are starting over with bis new name. Joseph Ha. Galaxy Tile, Ha's six-week-old business, consJsts of a desk and boxes of patterned tile for walls and noon. But it ls already making sales. A prominent Japanese lndustrlaHst. Yohiyasu Naltamichi, checked oo Ila's whereabouts while on a busi- nesa trip in New York City six months ago for his firm, Nak.amlcbi·Amerlca, Inc. N UAMJCBI n.EW ro SAN DIEGO wt lb an offer to help set up Ha ln business. Recalls Ha: ''I senred him din· ner in our very bumble apartment. He asked me three Umes if I planned lo go ,lnto business -.g&in." Tbe loan rrom Nakamlcbl was accepted as an alternative to applying for a loan from the U.S. Small Busl· ness Adminiiltratioo, and Ha expects to repay it wiUiin six IDODtha. Nakam1chi will al80 be Cfven a perceotqe ot profits with a mutual agreement to help each other's saJes u they can. RA, SS. TaU:D A JOIS IN ANOTllER man's compa,n.y alt.er arriving in lhe United Slates but was his own boss for too many yean. A abort cUstance trom bis modeel store In San Dtego's North Part area ls a amaJJ market operated by a man wbo al.so abandoned mllliom of dollars in property in Saigon. <>nee. tho two Weft business compelJt.on ln Vletnam. Today. they ar~ wmting friends. Sales Tally hnproves Golden West Moblle Homes, Inc., Santa Ana, has re-- ported Improved ftntquart.ersales and eam1n1s. For the first quarter ended Aue. 27, net Lncome ~a S"rceot to teel,000, cr 4S C'4!!0ta per aha.re, compared wttb '3M.t000 or 25 ce.ats, in I.be ~lnl period 1 year earuer. SaJ• tor lbe quan. lncreaaed 44 ~Dt to su.110.000 compared with sio.-.ooo lD the like period a yearqo .. '. .... . .. . DAILY PILOT • Concentrate 7 01 or 16 01. UQUID COUNT VASYA ~ VODKA Li .. EXTRA ~ DRY" ~ REG. 3.49 n FIFTH LJ b e 2.78 ~ :::x c -:x :c=::::::::.... ' c; •• 0 , ., Fr=-:::r c=:-:-r== il NO BUGS M'LADY Shelf & Drawer PAPER Assorted color', and designs. 13" l 25' 18" x 18' 60 SHEETS 2.29 PRINGLE'S NEWFANGlm POTATO CHIPS 4.5 oz. SIZE . Wednesda . October6. 1976 Wo.U.an Convieted ID IDtehhike Killing INDIO (AP> -A Superior· Court jury has found a 2'l·year- old Pomona woman guilty of "special circumstances" follow- ing her conviction on a murder charge in the slaying or a good samaritan who gave three hitchhikers a lift. Tbe second guilty verdict against Marie Elame Kozea.k is tantamount. to a recommeoda- tioO> or the death penalty. However, the probation depart- ment has been asked lo make its recommendation int.be case. T HE JUR \' FOUND Miss Kozeak guilty of first-degree murder in the December slaying of Ronald Lee Hunziker. 25, of Pomona. Later. the same jury ruled that the act WllS "willful, "SECREi ROLL-ON ANTl-PRESPIRANT Reg. & Unscented deliberate and premeditated,·· wblcb a.re special circumstances that carry with them the death penalty. Superior Court Judge Warren SJaughter will sentence the woman Tuesday. MISS KOZEAK, ALSO known as Marie Elaine MaUka. was convicted in the same case in which a co-defendant, Richard Taylor. 23, also of Pomooa, is to stand trial on murder charges . next week. A 15-year-old juvenile is in the custody of Riverside authorities on similar charges.· Aut.boritles said Rwuilter of- fered to give the t.l)o a ride to ·Oklahoma during ~ Christmas holidays las t. December. Authorities said HwWJcer was MR. CLEAN ' All PURPOSE CLEANER ~_....,,,..J BATH SIZE headed for Wisconsin, .llUN ZlltEll'S ESTUNGE D ·wife reportedly contacted authoriUe.s in March when she . could not locate her hu:sband. Hls' dismembered body was found in a shallow desert gl'ave neQ' · Blythe last April. Authorities later recovered bit car and a rifle in Ok:mulfee, Okla .. ASSORTED FLAVORS 2.5 0Z ggc SIZE EA. j 4i99c 28az SIZE 9 9 C 14V20Z CANS WITH MFP • 5 oz TUBE 6 6 C CORICIDIN "D" DECONGESTANT Fights pimple~ & clr.a11sr.'> oily. c.kin 2.Soz 1 49 : SIZE • ( ()11'(;1.il110 NI GHTTIME COLDS MEOI CINE tooz SIZE 1. 6 9 INSTANT KRAZY .. GLUE 25 TABLETS I ggc vicKs Formula 44 ~EfRCTIVIE STH:H~TH ~ ~ Cough Mixture ' 4A: -.,;.·,;,, 3oz SIZE 1. 0 9 BEN-GAY 3 Heo1 settinqs ... 1hetrrc:a1al <:011trols fOI' CIUfomollc safety. SINAREST TABLETS For relief ol scnu~ hr.ad.1che and congPs!1on ;;a~ ... --20 TABS "." ~ aac Sinarest JOHNSON'S DENT AL FLOSS GRANOtNETTI Crockery Cook Pot Healthy econom1car coo ki ng for v1l a m 1n co nscio us people. lV2 QT. "532 DEL HAVEN BATHROOM TISSUE ........... -... 4 ROLL PK 411.0LL 53c ~ l•~!!'~rr 2-Piece sns .h :~~~ FOR TOD DLERS & .;. · ... INFA NT S ... Long , .. -.,,,,_·.1 slf'PVP. wilh screen pnnt ;"':.rt !":" & br1y & girl design 11n , ... ~~l~\ • ril'd r.oJoi background. . ,. ' -~:~ • .. -' ' L.:,..·~· 'f ( INFANT SIZE :-.l r. . ~ r, TODDUR SIZE 7.4 / , ,.-_~(t 4.88 . ~~\1 "'-..· ~ '~ EA '(:."':~ · : 10'. ~;·~ . ·:·~ .. . .,( ., ' I • , I I -· y. ~ M&M's CANDIES PLAIN & PEANUT 1/2 lB. SIZE i; LADIES "Snug T reds" :j Ext ra soft. SIZE S·M·L r ' " A never bP.forP. rragra ncP I It t ;i r Is sol t ly . -. dev~lops beaul1 · ~·11· fully & never ~ IJ t ~e~m. s to ~nd. ~)~ -- SPRAY t.75oz 6.50 .:i Foamed cush-, 9 9 / :.' 1oned va mp > • H and insole. EA • • • rn MEWS "Sundowners" m f oam cushioned •'. vamp & insole. 2 gg ':. Machine washa-:;• .. ble. SIZE S·M·L • !;'. ·.::::~::::;:::.:::m::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::m:;::::::m:m::::::::!m::;; 13.88 '..:.~:~~~ .BY LI BBEY -Allracflve crysta l tulip-s hapPd glass holders for water and "whatever" •.• Can dle tha t flo ats included with each . BAND-AID BRAND PLASTIC STRIPS SWln PREMIUM VIENNA SAUSAGE e ra. 5ozSIZE ·3~1.00 On1! drop holds a ton no clamps -0099 &V2 INCH 7V2 INCH 81/z INCH SWIFT PREMIUM m1x1ng -no mess C .07 Ol (2C) 5" ROUND Planter or Rooter Mada of glas~ wtlh ~rsal rope For planls, lresh or drtcd flowers 2 g g 29" Lengtb • 1.29 . 1.43 1.59 CAPTAINS Chair Cushions Tufted Foam fill· ed in assor ted colors. 2 • 8 8 u. LISTEN EVERY DAY FOR THE SAV -ON DRUGS "RADIO-BARGAIN-OF-THE-DAY" . CORNED BEEF HASH 15'12oz SIZE HUNT, 8 1EACH-Ad•tn• a 8rookhur•t-$prlngdale & Edlnqer 'OUNTAIN VAUEY-M•gnolle &, Warner N(WPORT BUCH-fO:IOicvlnt. Wt1tclltf PlaH S.Ane~ :1911 South ltlatol It. !I Toro-24372 Rockfleld Road M.,_OUUUTI 'KWAY-Mlatlon Vlt lo· • I . • ( • I ! • • -' I J •, .. • . W inn i ng Cooks Reap Aplenty A peanut butter and dried fruit confection concocted by a Cost.a Mesa mother out or concern for her children's junk food cravines bas won Best of Show honors in the Daily Pllot 's secood annual Harvest Home Cooking Contest. Featured this year were a variety or earthy!textured, euy· to-prepare foods. 1be most popular ingredient seemed to be granola, which was used in almost all Space.Age Snacks and Whole-Grain Baked Goods. The energy.packed peanut butter candy recipe, which pro- duces a toffee·Uke bar coated in granola crumbs, is that of Mrs. Beth Harris, who says the candy keeps well in the refrigerator "if the kids don't find it right away." Runner.up in the Space-Age Snack division was a recipe for ·Walnut Oatmeal Cninch by Marylyn McGuinness of Irvine. The recipe uses unsweetened coconut and oats; the crunch can be en· joyed u a cookie, or, as Mrs. McGuinness suggests, as a crumbled topping for ice cream. Winner in the Whole Graln Bated Goods division was Holly .Irwin of Laguna Beach, who submitted her recipe for Carob Chip/Granola Cookies. Ms. Corinne Henniger of Irvine won honors in the Fruit Pies category for her Diet Boysenberry Pie, a sugarless dessert made with a no-roll wbole·Krain P.asl!f and frozen berries .. In the Vegetarian Mam Dish category, Francie Hansen of Newport Beach won honors for her Cottage Cheese-Zucchini Mung, a casserole combining fresh vegetables, cheese, wheat germ, bran and sesame seeds. All ra.aalhts received prizes from merchants in the Mesa Verde Shopping Center. Costa Mesa. Wbming recipes are reprinted below for your experimenta· tion. PEANUT BUTl'Ell 'N' FRUIT CANDY l ~ cups coconut granola 1 cup chunky peanut butter, old-fashioned type 1h cup honey · 1h cup wheat germ, plain or toasted 1h cup powdered milk 1 cup finely diced dates 1h cup raisins 1h cup currants or finely diced dried apricots Put granola in a blender and blend to make fine crumbs. But· ter a 9-inch square pan and pal ball of granol.a crumbs on bottom of pan. Stir together peanut butter, honey, wheat germ and dry milk. Stir in the fruits. Mixture will be very stiff. Pat out in even layer in pan. Cover with remainder of granola crumbs. Pat down firmly. Refrigerate overnight to blend flavors. WALNUl'OATMEALCBUNCB ~cup butter or margarine 1 cup old·fashiooed rolled oats 1 cup dessicated unsweetened coconut (available in health food stores) 'I• cup white sugar \4 cup brown sugar I/• cup finely chopped walnuts ~teaspoon vanilla Melt the butter in large saucepan. Stir in remaining ingre- .::ents. Mix well. Press into a layer to cover a lld-inch baking pan. Bake at 325 degrees for 10 to 12 miuutes or until golden brown. Carefully mark into squares while hot. Can be eaten as a cookie at i.9 delicious crumbled over ice cream. CAROB CIDP ·GRANOLA COOKIES 1 cup brown sugar 'hcuphoney 2 tablespoons molasses 1 cup butter ' lcupoil II Finalists in the second annual Daily Pilot Harvest Home Cooking Contest, presented with prizes and g ift certificates at the Irvine Harvest Festival last weekend, are (from left) Marylyn McGuinness, Holly Erwin, Beth Harris, Francie Hansen and Corinne Henniger. legg 1 ~aspoon vanilla 3cups nour 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon cream ollartar ~ teaspoon salt ~ cup wheat germ 1 '1'. tea.spoons cinnamon l leupoon nutmeg 1 '1'. cups Ric~ Krispies % cups Crunchy Graoola '1'I cup raisins 1 '1'. cu,ps carob chips 'h cup chopped nuts 'h cup sunfiower or sesame seeds · Cream together brown sugar, honey, molasses, butter and oil. Thoroughly mix in egg and vanilla. In a large bowl, combine the nour, baking soda, cream ol tartar, salt, wheat germ, and spices. Stir in the wet mixture. Stir in remaining ingredients. Spoon onto baking sheets and bate at 350 degrees for 10to15 minutes until brown. DIET BOYSENBERRY PIE 2 packages (lO-OU:Oces each) frozen boysenberries, thawed 2 packages Sweet-n-U>w 3 lablespoons cornstarch Drain boysenberries, reserving syrup. Add enough water to •7"1P to make one cup: · Blend Sweet·n·Low, cornstarch and syrup in saucepan. Add bo,seoberries and cook over low beat until thick. Pour into pie crust. NO-ROLL WHEAT CRUST 1 'h cups whole wheat pastry flour '1'.cupsoyoiJ \4 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons milk Stir ingredients with fork in 9-inch pie plate. Pat out with ftngers and crimp edges around rim of pie plate. Bake pie at '425 degrees for 10 minutes. Reduce heat to 3:iO degrees and bake 30 to 35 minutes longer. BEA ANDERSON, Editor BARBARA GIUS, Food Editor Wednesday, October 6, 1976 COTl'AGECHEF.SE·ZUCCmNI llUNG 2 large zucchini (10 inches) 2 tomatoes, chopped 1 cup cbopped mushrooms 3 large celery stalks, chopped 3scallions,cbopped 1 cup bean sprouts l Yz cups cottage cheese l can (8-0unces) water chestnuts 2 tablespoons margarine. divided Ct 2 cups processed American cheese, cut in Yl·incb chunks 1h cup sunflower seeds (shelled> 3 tablespoons toasted sesame seeds 1 tablespoon eacb bran and wheat germ Steam zucchini; set aside. In mixing bowl, put tom.toes. mushrooms, celery, scallions and sprouts. Fold together with tbe cottage cheese and watercbestnuts. Grease baking dish with 1 tablespoon of margagine. ~ zucchini, sliced lengthwise, in dish. Drizzle with remab:dng tablespoon or butter, melted. Salt if desired. • Divide the cottage cheese mixture between the~;:; cbini. Cover with cheese chunks and sprinkle witb s sesame seeds. Top with bran and wheat germ. ' Bake at 350 degrees unW cheese browns, about '5 minutes: .. Cheese: Zesty Food of Gods and Men . .•.. . . .. , .... ..... Italian cheeses like Ricotta and Mozarella combine to flavor stuffed p asta shells for elegant main dish; pungent Cheddar p erks up sesame bread lbaf, tasty as toast or in sandwiches. • 4 c ? s : ; ( ;u : s ; SQ a z Did you know that the famous Penlan pbllospber, l.oroaster, in the sl.xth or seventh century B.C. lived for 30 days in the wilder· ness on a diet of cheese and fruit alone? He emerged, in good health and spirits. 1be Greeks believed cheese to have a divine origin. It was their custom to oCfer the best cheeses to their Gods OD OlympUS. Queen Victoria is reported to have received one-ball too of Cheddar aa a wedding present. That me8.D5 the cheese started out as 10,000 pounds of milk. Theoretically, cheese may be made from the milk of any mam- mal, from the aardvark or the yak, even the dolphin. Most fr'equently used, of course, is the m.Uft ot cows, sheep Of' goats. 'lbe ; ; quantity of milk available for cheese becomes an important factor since it takes 10 pounds of milk to produce one pound of cheese. When used in oven dishes, natural cheeses melt into velvety smoothness. Just the aroma alone is reason enough to cook with cheese. There's notbine tricky about cooking with it. Just remember (as with other protein foods) to avoid long cooking and. overly high beat. You'll also find that it blends more easily with other foods and requires less cooking time when grated or cut into small pieces. Dried blts and pieces of cheese can always be grated or ground to be stored in covered glass Jars. Use them for sprinkling and enricblne soups, casseroles, vegetables, bot breads, rolls and muffins. Try these quick delicious soup and cheese combos: shredded Cheddar cheese on cream of tomato; shredded swiss on pea soup or ham and potato chowder; Monterey Jack or Provolone on chlli·beef soup; Brick cheese on bean soup; and Muenster on French onion soup with French bread. Two Italian cheeses , Moaarella and Ricotta, are the prime ingredients In the stuffed pasta shells featured here. Mozzarella (the pizza cheese> takes on a softer more blended texture when cooked with a soft moist cheese. . In the recipe for Sesame Cheese Loaves, sharp American Cheddar ls Uffd to navor the potato-based bread. Cheddar is one of the more versatile varieties of cheese -tangy, creamy-textured when cooked, 1t blend! well with most herbs and spices, dry white or aberry wines, and beer. Sesame Cheese Loaves are ex· eelleot for sandwiches. toast or Just served buttered bot from the oven. One recipe will make two loaves. Freese one or give lt to • friend. The bread relies on the coove-- nience of instant mashed potato granules for its texture, ellml.nat· ing the fuss of cooking and mashing fresh potatoes. • Potato breads keep fresh and moist longer tban ordinary yeast breads. CREESE IN PASTASllEIJB 2 cupe large macaroal shell.a Bolling salted water 1 cup ricotta cheese l~ cups grated mcmarell• ~ ~cup minced parsley 2~ -. al ~teupoons t ~ teupoon pepper lioii teaspoon roaemar1. crushed 1 (lSYl-ounce) jar spa.iiiffl sauce ·.-• Drop shells into boiling~ water. Rettim to boil. Boil gdly 12 minutes. Drain. Rinse 'with cold water. Mix ricotta. .&.. c:up mozzarella cheese, parsley. eggs, salt. pepper and roeemU7. Stuff shells witb filling. Heat spaghetti sauce. SpooD % sauce Into shallow l~ ~ ing dish or ovenproof platter. Place fllled shells in sauce. Spoon remaining sauce over top. Sprinkle with remaining 1,-!a ~up cheese. Bake uncovered in 406" oven 25 minutes or unW bot in center. Makes 4 servinp. 8ESAllECBEESELOAVD i'cupmilk 2 tablespoons sottened butter· 2 paclta1es active dry yeut 1~ cups warm water 2 tablespoons sugar 2 tableapoon1 prepared Dlllltard 1 'fl teaspoons salt \4 cup mashed potato sranules 2 cups shredded Cheddar cheese 6 to 7 cu pa nour l en. 1U1htly beat. Sesame aeeda Heat tocether mWt and badtt to scaldlDg; cool to J~ Diuolve yeut ln warm water in larce bowl. Add cooled milk. WI· ar, mustard, and salt. . SUr in potato 1ranules, cheese, aad enouab nour to make • aoft dough. Knead OD fioured surface (GI-8 to 10 minutes, until •moo&.b liDcl saUDy. Place in peaaect bOWI; cover and Jet riae in wvm plMe until U,ht and double lD ibe,, 4S to 80 minuta. Punch down. 4YWe lD half, and shape 2 loaves. Place ln well·treaedtxs.tndl loa! .e•na. Brush with •1a;· sprlDk.le with sesame Med.: (At rile aaain unW double in u.. •· to 45 minutes. Bake •SW lclr G to 50 mlDut.et, until deep ...._ brown. Makea 2 loave1. I '? ' ('% DAILY PILOT \-, -" • y, L J i: Funerals: Lively Issue r 'DEAR ANN LANDERS: Just OJ when you seem to have il all ~~::Jiou.::.r::~'1a~ (Ann Landers • wacty.· . - I refer to Ute 11-year-okl who bad an aversion to death, bUiOGSaodwouldUteto1etlnto fWlerals and w ates. You sug. a better-paying fleld. Leo ta lood ,&ested counaeUn1. A t.eenqer wttb motors and wants to be a \1bO !5 repelled by ~atb and dy-mechanic. But several of my fng 1s far healthier than the frieods and relatives have aicki~a who are aUracted lo warned me against "marrying morbid movies, reckless driving below my station." 'Ibey say I'll and suicide. • • be ashamed of him when my via- Funerals aren ~ for the dead. ion clears and the stars are no 'Ibey are for the living wbo want longer in my eyes. sympathy or an emotional binge. I am very much in love wlth When I wu 17 I told my parents I Lennie and be loves me. I've told would not attend t.hel.r funerals. everyone who is against Leno.le They were shocked, but I kept to go to bell. Those snobs ~not ~word. Maybe lt was P~· going to live my life. I'm de- tioo. but I wu on the other side of t.ennined to do wbal I tb.lnlt is the wo_rld when lbey died and I right for ME. What do you say? couldn t attend. -BROOKLYN Bread for the Uving is more lm-DEAa BROOK: 1 NY yoa eu port ant lhan ceremonies for the do wlaat yoa Ualnk ta rtgbi wtu.o.t dead. I hope m~ beloved and t.ellbag a.ayoae &o go &o WI. bereaved go to Dtsoeyland when Tlaete days a lot al mechanic. I_ die. I'd prefer that they bad a mue more money tlaaa PbDa.. little fun rather .than. tear Monover, 8JlY k1Dd ot boeelt themselves apart wtth gnef .. It labor ls respedable. Tbe world would make me much happier in needs medaaaJca. w.ea a ear the next dimension. -J .L. brew doW11 aa u&bnpoiocbt SEAGULL ' ""' DEAR J . L.: Do&eas al re-or a s-yebologlat laa i IDllCJt bdp. aden wrote &o express the same DEAR ANN LANDERS: Thi.a point of view. Parts al tbef.r let-is for the beautiful gal, 32, wbo I.a ~rs (and yours) made~. Bot reluctant to marry the man, 26. most authorities on death say the When I was 18 [ met the most iewn. older and uglier;· and my wile kees-getting pr«tler and more youthful-lookiq. It's iAcNdlble! Then too, atalisUcs ar:e on your side. You'll have rewer years &o be a wldow because most buabandl die nrat. lf, perchance, my wife goes before I do, I won't outlive her by very Iona. I wouldn't want to. So erab him, gal -or you'U both be sorry. -HAPPY IN TEXAS DEAR HAPPY: Mat a Joiou• le«er! Wlaat a plcker-apper! 11lub f~r ~rtJb&ealqW.pa1e. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Some time ago a woman wrote ln and said she and her husband were divorced and now be ls dying. She asked whether or not she should go to the funeral. He re- married but always kept close to their children. You said yes. she should go, but suggested she sit in the back pew and f?Ot with the family. funeral provides proof that the beautiful girl I bad ever seen. 1 d eceased Is gone. Many She was 32. The age difference mourners need this lo order to bothered her. too. But there was My situation is a little dif· ferent. When my husband and r were divorced he proved I was an unfit mother and took custody of our children. ln those days, I was young and foolish and didn't want the kids, so it didn't bother me. A few years later I got some sense and regretted my past ac- tions but by then it was too late. .. combat the denial mechanisms. a war on and we figured we'd Funerals also allow for releasing better gr ab what happiness we pent-up emotions. And last bot could. We were man1ed after a not least -they offer an op-whirlwind courtship. portunlty &o pay last respttts. Thirty-five years later, as I DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a 20-year-old college student who will have completed her senior year by June 1977. I also will be getting married to a young man, 23. He has a high-school educa- tion. Lennie works very hard (50-60 hours a week) as a floor clerk in a supermarket. He is very am- glance back at the struggles in our lives, I must say we've bad more than our share of happiness. Sitting across the breakfast table looking at the same girl for so many years bas beenajoy. Look at it like this, lady. When you are 100, he will be 94. The years have a way of evening up things. For example -l keep • Arts, Crafts On Calendar h·:~ I J Just learned my former husband has about three months to Uve. I don't think I should go to the funeral even if I sat in the back. Some people have the nerve lo do anything. but not me. What do you think? -MRS. REGRETS DEAR MRS.: If y0u would Uke to pay your last respects to lbe man who was once your husband -go. I see no reason for anyone &o feel offended. t: : ZAPOTEC WEAVING: Tapestry experts Bob and Barbara Mel.arty will lecture and show samples of Zapotec lndiao weaving at 4 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 13, at the Rusty Needle in Laguna Beach. The program is free and open to the public. i;·" l'i ~ f, n ~ t I I Reservations may be made by calling hostess Marian Sanders al497·1485. CHILDREN'S CENTER: The Robert Sills Gallery or North Hollywood will sponsor an art show and art auction Friday, Oct. 15, in the Orange Coast College Student Center. A preview of the free event will begin at 7 ;: p.m., with the auction scheduled for8p.m. ,. Proceeds will be used to purchase otttdoor .#: .. ~ w~ equipment ror the Cbildren's Center facility . PLUS ULTRA: The club·s bazaar will take place from 9 a.m . to5p.m . Friday, Oct.15, at the Rebekah Hall, Huntington Beach. Coffee, doughnuts and salad luncheon will be available . SAN FRANCISCO ALUMNI: The Orange County chapter of the University of San Fran- .• cisco alumni group will have a wine lasing party at 4 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 17, in the home of Mr. and · · Mrs. Nick Zanze in Villa Parlt. • Reservations may be made by calling Betty Fraclaco at 768-762.8. DOME ECONOMICS ~TION: Tritia Toyola, KNBC news reporter, will be the guest speaker at the Tuesday, Oct. 19. meeting of the group's Orange Dlstrict. Her topic will be E/fec. tive Use of Public Relations Cor tJ\e Home Economist. Dinner will be at6:30 p.m.m ollowe followed by the program at 8 p.m. at the Airporter Inn, Irvine. Members and guests may make re- servations with Ms. Rita Swoboda at 998-0475. The public can bear Ms. Toyota by donating $1 to the association's scholarship fund. DESIGNER: Costume designer Edith Head has contributed three patterns to the Vogue style book. They wlll be shown al noon Tuesday. Oct. 12, ln the Broadway, Hu.ntingtoo Beach. Mrs. Head, winner of elgbt Oscars, said her patterns for resort and holiday clothes concen- trate on improving tbe loot of every figure. "This ls an exciting new farsl for me," she said. "I have always designed foe~ 'perfect' figure. My yardstick wlll continue to be to creal49 a silhouette that will make a woman loot 10 years younger and 10 pounds thinner-just like in tbe movies.·· FW .t wt.at yow llllere1h an In Rocio or T.._.W.. FREE SEMINAR for Woe_Onty SA TUIDAY. OCTOl9t M f , II A.M. I, J, 5 P.M. MYITATIOMAL OKY-uMl'TID A"9eAMCI SAMDPIPER INN end TENNIS a.ca Of t':WPORT HACH CAU. AMD ,,. I lltnlaYATIOM 1114"1_.,.IJO CO..Cl'aW ..... -~ ..... ... -...now..._...,.._ ! \ t (h~~\ ~~ r ~ '(j) Two of three patterns by Edith Head being shown in Huntington Beach Oct. 12. • ' \ \ I f' Bernice McGeehan with Lawn ... ice Welk: Fan magazine interview changed her life. Magazines Fan Talent By JUDl'nt OLSON Of"-0..11~ ~lit Si.H 'Bernice McGeehan used to be one of those people who is always threatening &o write but never quite getting around to it. Actually, she had been writing J>ut never sending her work to a magazine or publisher. for fear of rejection. Now, as a successful co-author with enter· tainer Lawrence Welk, she looks back at her days of yearning and I aughs at how shy she was. She made lhe first plunge into free-lance writing 10 years ago when her last child was in school full time and she was free to pursue her own goals. Mrs. McGeehan, a former fash.ion model whose picture has appeared in Vogue maguine, sought the advice or Dick and Jane Williams, a newspaper editor and his wife, who were good friends. "Jane advised me to break in with fan maguines," Mrs. M~an recalled. "But I thought they were beneath me.'· She decided to give it a try anyway and sent five ideas in a query letter. ''Three of the first rive were accepted," she said. ''Alter the next ones were rejected I de· cided it was a fluke." 'SNOWED' MAGAZINES The Sherman Oaks resident, who was speak- ing to the Laguna Beach Branch of the National League or American Pen Women, said she de· cided next to "snow" the magazines wlth ideas, and she soon was being called for assignments. One of lbese interviews llterally changed her life. She was assigned to taik to Lawrence Welk about bis religious beliefs, which resulted in a friendship and collaboration that still is in pro-gress. Welk liked the first story and asked if she would like to write another. Soon, there was a book in progress < "Wunnerful. Wunnerful" ), and then another < .. Ah-One, Ah·Two") and a third has Juat been completed ("My America, Your America"). Mrs. McGeehan said it was ironic tnat sbe and Welk, both inexperienced at writing books, found themselves doing ooe together. She said the entertainer was ''the greatest audience in the world" and the experience of writing the book was like having a baby. ALFREPo's I ~(?~ Featuring the Sculptured "Natural" Natl With the uniql:.e white-tip method. To be worn with <Jr without polish Call Ginger for appointment Save SS.00 Now Tttru OCt. %Ottl with ad Ja.A Martne Ave ••Ibo• l•l•nd 87~70 Mrs . McGeehan emphasized that she Is not a "gbost writer.·· as her name appears on the title page with Welk's. CLOSE FRIENDS The co-authors now are working oa a fourth book, which necessitalet'I a dally collaboratJon. Mrs. McGeehan said. She has kept her family out of the relationship and she maintains a strict busi- ness arrangement with WelJt. though they are close friends. In writing all ol tbe books the pattern bas been the same. Mrs. McGfthan noted. Sbe meets with Welk lo dlscuas his life or his philOIOJ>bY. de· pending on what they are working on, which helps him crystallze what be wants to say. Mrs. McGeeban then writ.es rough chapters for bis approval. which are refined to fl.Dal form. Though she has been collaborating with Welk for nearly elgbl years. she still Is modest about her s uccess as a writ.er and seems almost as shy as she wu as a novice. For the Ian magUi.nes she Interviewed celebrities of all sorts. which she found traumatic at first. "High-powered people scared me ... she said ... Sometimes It took me a week to call to make the appointment. "But getting to people Is the name of the game.'' FINE STATIONERY r _,.. Wl:OOINC IN\ ITATIOl\lli \.J di It' .wt ANNOl'NCtl>I ENTS 1·s t i me to think nstmas Cards. Party Invitations. and Gtfl Stationery Let us aSSlsl m making YOUr holiday shopping Oleasant and le1svrely! un I CUSI ..... .,, ..... CHUA Ill IAI CllYllllll rAalM ©ct.7tbn•18 \uitfJ raronuurst n.c e' le .__...,. 67J.J444 ~n e to.st-., ~,,....., Smoked Nvs.Qe Hnln. MolCle In the Old-wofld trad•110n of Hcellence. Plump otr.d juicy. B\lf°ttong with rtoh, metitv llotYOr. Wh4thtf broiled or frlld, en1ov ~ touoh ol S.varla tonitf\t with HldlOfV F.,,,,, Btotwurst. AVAILABLE ONLY WHILE SUN>LYLASTS. ~·1Smut · A 0.INfHtyle-'1111111 With_._.., -'t. The ,_ ... ~I 10 °"' BIOIWl#tt. Sold •llclv• ~ 11t Hldlory F•""· ~bebb!' r@retue A.,_., ct.ddlr "-INdt wnh ;1111 • "'9 ol '-Otd-111 Mrltilit ~ to ~'°"· ~·, ttw tome 10 Pl*-• bn ol Blwrill mt lb bcl1. AVAILABLE ONLY WHILE StWPL Y LASTS. ~et ·1$ot :Mustarb From an old.O.""" recipe. Suptrbly 141K*S. Oellcat• ~ robun ... .,., 1 UftiqllC eo'Ct dlrttnct•,.. lla110r S...·Hot Mu1t•d ldd• • lotti. llP to yow ._., ~ftl~ktfi fflff'~ OF OHIO• \VE~lTCllFrt PlnZA 17 .. & IRVN-MIWPOIT llACH•PMOMI 642-0t7't M()M..flL "TH. t SAT. -nL 6 SUM. 'TlL S t.1AnlN!:R1S \'ILLAGE~~~ POINT PHOHE 496-26 70 '"· A s.t ..... \ ' ·Outlook Brightened . . • • ~ •• ~ • NEW YORK <AP) -A new program through which a va.rtetyolrecreatioaal, cultural, IOCiaJ and craft al"llvities is brought into the homes of the disabled has been launched lo help relieve the daily isolation ol the chronically ill and homebound. ''The Quality ot We" program was begun less than a year ago in the borough of Queens by the Jewtab Community Services of Long Island, a famlly counseling agency. The project evolved out or the agency's con- cern for tbe unmet needs or the chronically ill, according to George Rothman. executive direc- tor of JCSLI. "Medical treatment is not their problem, since the physical needs or these people are usually weU taken care of." be explained. "But the homebound existence imposed on them by the seriousness of their disability does create de- ep spiritual and emotional isolation. "Many of our clients have seen no one out- side of their immecliate families for years. In cues of prolonged illness, family relationships are frequently severely strained.·· At present there are 45 men and women in the program. Some take part in the weekly socialization hour made possible by a telephone conference call hookup; others are members of a chess club that also meets weekly through the conference call arrangement. Many are involved with painting and sculpture under the supervision of an art therapist assigned to the program. One woman is being taught conversational Spanish by a volunteer instructor who comes to her house regularly. "Our goal is to engage clients in any number of special activities that wiU enrich their daily lives so they are no longer spectators but are brought back into the mainstream of living," Rothman pointed out. Every person who applies to the program is interviewed by a JCSLl social worker lo evaluate interests and capabilities. A customized program of activities is then developed and brought inlothe home. Disabled men and women between the ages of 21 and 64 are eligible. Most of those now in the program are in their 40s and sos. suffering from such diseases as multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy, amyotropic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig's disease), Burgher's disease, meumatoid arthritis and strokes. "There are relatively young men and women who face a future severely limited by chronic ill- ness," Rothman said "At a prime time of life they are dealing with an unexpected disability. The emotional backlash is enormous. The elder!}' more or less resign themselves to illness as a natural conse- Quence of their aJ{e. Our clients are still struggl- ing to adjust." A barber and a beautician are available to the homebound, many of whom express•concern about their appearance. "Maintaining self-esteem is essential to morale," Rothman noted, "and so we consider beauty care not only a legitimate request, but one that is quite important." Cotmseling is offered in selected instances. Among the new activities being investigated for the chronically ill are the setting up of aquariums, plant growing and a lecture series to go out to clients via a telephone conference call. We ftMd eflttll/slastlc P"tll• WtlO -uld lllle te tum tMlr tlm. Into rMMy. As an A4'¥fllllant Auoc:late, Ylf4I will lntrectv<e ttlh ucltl"9 new •~n ,."'"' aystem fer.,. .. ,,,. plants at """' Plfff•• In'*'"' •lld Chlbl. A4'u•plaJl'f ,._,,,.. •re Hclft119, .nfrpble, and Nllutienal ft every Pltllt leYW. Alld Mty te Mt up. N• lnwstment. N• Mlll119 HI* llNK'e MHed. W• Pf't\'14-tlle pt'llducb Mf tfle trallllllf -)'W'ff ~ ttie tfttlwslaam. ,.,. pntttn prwt, call OeMBll. S...,11 HPlalfl tt all te Y9'1· It yeu're llltWfttM In an tt1lev•t11e, full -y .. ,,...,"'"""" Wlle .. "''"' "*"'' call 9"ey. TMfe ar. 4"!ty U AtMCltte Pftltlona avellew. St f!Vrryl Ctll Oeborall 71.lt/835-5897 INednetday. October6 1976 OAIL Y PILOT Q ~Photpgraphy Studio ~port raib/ ,,., .._,1>0rts/copaes Build your home gallery withan8x10 natural color •'· • portrait •. 99c " .. Rumbleseat View 4 Day Offer Engineered for energy-saving convenience, a strap-on papoose provides a perch for one-year-old Matti Jylha. While he swigs down his formula. mother Pam Jylba of Wllliamston, Mich. waits to register for fall classes at Lans- ing Community College. (~want ~oo to try us) Taurus Horoscope: Make Wise Concessions THURSDAY OCTOBER7 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21- April 19): Contracts, commitments, ability to suecessfully conclude a deal without tripping over legal clauses - these are emphasized. Key is to accept necessary changes. TAVRVS (April 20-May 20): Home front· can become a more harmonious place. Be kind, diplomatic, make wise concessions, re- member gift for special occasion. Stick to basic points, routine. GEMINI (May 21- June 20): What you thought was a necessity could be a triviality. Know it and respond ac· cordingly. Member of opposite sex does play key role. See beyond the surface. CANCER (June 21· July 22): Stress or- ganization, business, caree.r, commitment lo as seen in deadline, keeping pro- mises, elevating stand· ing in community. Ac· cept added responsibili- ty. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Finish rather than begin action. project. Emphasis on what's ahead. philosophy, abili- ty to perceive potential without distortion. Leave details for another time. Gain overall view. SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Uone who bas been "keeping your company" is un- reasonable, m ake some acijustments. Live your life as joy. creatively and not in petty manner. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): What seems a dead end may actually represent a temporary detour. Know it and start utilizing alternatives. Change, travel, variety could all be upcoming. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Relatives call, visit, impose their opinions, ask, request, assert. Key is to be diplomatic without los- ing independence. Hold off on trip -you don't have full story. PISCES <Feb. 19- March 20): Money is to be considered, but romantic illusions. ex- pectations cannot be ig- nored. Know it and respond accordingly. See as is, not through rose.- colored glasses. VIRGO (Aug. 23· Sept. 22): Money and love could, oddly enough. go together. Know it and don't create your own ob- stacles. Cooperate with partn{lr, mate. You get to heart of matters. -----------r========::::; LIBRA (Sept. 23· Oct. 22): You gain if you permit one who cares ... to teach you. Em- phasis is on seeing "other s ide" of argu. ment, proposition. Rise above petty jealousies. SCOR PIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Avoid direct confrontations. Take ring roads to destination. Be versatile -accept in- vitation to social affair. MONDAYS in the DAILY PILOT HEARING PROBLEM? I SPIC14UII 1H MHYE DEAFNESS CASIS MAJOR MAMUfACTWUS IB'USBCTID llMTlilS .. COtlOMA DIL. MAR tW. AfBISOfER tEARING AJDS 3409 E. CocM Hwy. C-dll"'--675-Jlll 'IM \\II \Or l\CI l llttt• No appointment needed. One offer per pcnon -two per family. Sl.OOchargeforcach added pcnon in groups. This photograph offer may not be combined wich any other advcrtiJcd offer. " OFFER ENDS SAT., OCT. 9 Photo0rapher's Hours Dally 10-6; Sat. 9:30-6; Sun. 10-6 ALHAMBRA -BUENA PARK SOUTH COAST PLAZA -TORRANCE In the DAILY PILOT bootif y America. tall leathers. 39.99 Quality! Super looks' Real booty in tan leathers. Stack-heel zip boot fits beautifully w ith gusseted top . :: ·. ·. :· :· ,, sereo/IJen® Stitched western pull -on has round Texas toe, walking heel. .. •• ... QUALICRAFT9 SHOE STORES Use your Master Charae FASHION ISLAND. Newport Seac:h: SOUTH COAST PLAZA. Costa Mesa: HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington BeKn; WESTMINSTEJ\MAU.. Weatmlnsl«; LAGUNA HllLS ~ I' .. C4 O~IL Y PILOT Wednesday. Oetotiete. tm Home Crops Grow There baa been a aU&bl but steady l"Owth in the number of bou&ebolds with fruit and vegeta· ble home eardens over the put three years. These findings are from a survey conducted by the National EconomJc Analysts Division of Economic Research Service and released by the Department of AgrtcuJture. Tbe survey found that 43 percent of the bouaeboldl planted a Carden in 197C, 46 percent in l97S aod '8 percent bad alnady planted or in· tended to plant a &arden in 1976. Tbll 1\llfetta tba tbe inta'ftt ln bome fruit and vetetable 1Al"Clerdhc seoerated ln the U. s. several yean •10 amid fut-rtaing food prices m.,-be an establlabed P.ttem. Tbree reuona foe the gardens predominated in the survey. Respondents said they preferred the tute of home-grown fnaita and vegetables, they desired to save money on their food budget or were Interested ln garden.lllg as a bobby. Eiaty·ftve percent ot the gardens were located lo the household yard. No locations were determined for the remaining 15 percent. There wu a diversity of foods grown in the 1975 household 1ardens. 1be tomato wa.s the most popular vesetable, grown by about 95 per. cent of the respondents. Next in popularity were beans 01maa, green, wax, pole, etc.), aud Ulen cucumbers, peppers, radishes and peen miooa. Strawberries and ap- ples were the most popular fruits. About 70 percent of the households froze fruits and vegetables from their gardens. Beans were the most popular to freeze followed by corn, peas and tomatoes. Only 34 percent of the households canned or preserved their fruits and vegetables. however. Again, tomatoes were the most popular. The most popular fruit to preserve was apples, followed by peaches, pears and strawberries. Harvest Omelet Book Offered One of the most rewarding joys, by far, of backyard farming is harvesting the bounty of vitamin -rich fruits and vegetables. One way to capture their garden-fresh flavor is to combine them in a Garden Omelet. seasoned delicately with pansley and Parmesan cheese. People who are trying to cut down on their meat intake will savor it as a filling main dish for any time of day. Cooks will ertjoy simple preparations that take Jess than baU an hour -from garden lo table. Serve some crispy whole-grain bread sticks and cheese or yogurt for dessert. GARDEN OM.ELET 2 tablespoons butter v, cup chopped onion 2 medium tomatoes, peeled and chopped 1 medium zucchini, sliced v, cup chopped green pepper 2 tablespoons snipped parsley t lh teaspoons seasoned salt 4egga \4 cup water lh teaspoon salt Dash pepper 2 tablespoons butter, divided 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese lo saucepan, cook onion in 2 tablespoona butter over medium beat until tender but not brown, about 4 to s minutes. Stir in re· maining vegetables, parsley and seasoned salt and simmer, un· covered, about 5 minutes or until thick. Meanwhile, mix eggs, water. salt and pepper with fork. Heat l tablespoon butler in omelet pan or 8-inch skUlet until Just enough to aiszle a drop of water. Pour ln approx. ~ cup egg mixture. Mlx· ture should set at edges at once. With pancake turner, carefully draw cooked portioos at edges toward center, so uncooked por· lions now to bottom, rut skillet u necessary so uncooked eggs can flow. Slide pan rapidly back and forth over heat to keep mix- ture in motion and sliding freely. While top is still moist and creamy-looking, spoon half the vegetable mixture over half of omelet. With pancake turner fold in hall or roll, turning out onto pJatter wJtb a quick nip of the wrist. Keep warm. Repeat with remaining egg mixture for a second omelet; fill wllb remain· ing vegetable mixture. Sl>rinkle top of omelets with Parmesan cheese. Makes 2 servings. Carrots Issue WASHINGTON (AP) -The Agriculture Department bas de· cided to bold a public bearing Election Day, Nov. 2, ln Los Angeles -on proposed new labeling and size requirements for carrots sold in the conUnental United States. Proposed new rules specifical- ly seek to make uoJ!orm the con· lainers and package markings for consumer-grade carrots and authorize research on the con- tainers. That would reduce bag. inventory costs and make pack· ing pJants more efficient. a USDA spokesman said. PUBLIC NO'l1CE PUBLIC N011CE PUBLIC N011CE ,.. .... SU,alUOlt COUltTO,n.a STATao .. CALI l'OltNIA .-Olt n.aCOUNTYO,OltANOtl ........... Home Canning of Fruits and Vegetables (45 cents> is one of more than 240 publications made available by the Consumer Information Center of the General Services Administration. For a copy, write the Consumer Information Center. Pueblo, Colorado 81009. Cook By TV A foods course ts bell18 offered over KOCE-1V, Channel 50 by Coastline Community College "Foods for the Modern Family" provides coJ. lege credit to residents ot coastal Orange County. 1be course consists ol 4 5 .half·hour seg- ments shown Monday, Wednesday and Fr-lday at both 9:30 a.m . and 6 p.m. Repeats of the week's lessons will be s hown Sundays from 4-5:30 p.m. The course will also be shown on Channels 7 and 28. Athough started Sept. ro. students can register as late as Nov. 12 and stilJ receive credit. Review tapes for those who re- gister late will be avalla· ble at the Orange Coast and Golden West coUege libraries and the Hwit· i.ngtoo Beach Library. ( L. M. BOYD ) INFORMS In the DAILY PILOT Start Sweet Give yo ursetr a breakfast treat on bot. s ultrl' mornln1s wUb Orange Butter toast Cream h {'UP buirer with \.'1 cup confectioners sugar Blend In l tables- poon each 1rated orance peel and oranse Ju.I~. This Is enough for spread· Ing 8 s llcc:s of freocb toast. WHOLI IODY FRYH 39c u. lllASl'S • • • • • . • • • • " u. 1.55 ............... 11· u. WtM•S ••• ~· •.•• • • • · 41• LI. WHOU RUT •• 'I.It U. WNOUTOP FRESH LEG 0 1 LAMB 5111.0tM •••••••• '1.24 u. USDA CMOtCE TOP . s Ill SlllOtM WHOLI 'I .It LI. WNOU SP'EMCElt •• '1.91 ,_. ___ LA.Ml CHOPS :--f .. ______ _.u. Fima SALE ~..-................ ... BARM HAM BARM BOLOGNA 99c ta. SIDE OF BEEF USDA PRIME 79¢ u . CUT&wa.APf'ID VEAL SALi YIAllOUND S1'IAlr ••••••••••• t .Jf LI. YIAll.OtM STIAIS ...••••• •t.tlU. YIAl CUT\.IT •• tz.4t U. YIAl.J.eoMI IOAST •••••••••• wu. I ___ ,,.... __ _.. CWlOUMD 1HF SAi.i UAHl.ST ............... Ir LI. AU MEAT RAMIS •••• W U SUI IACOM •••••• 11.09 U. IXTIA LIAM •••••••••• as· LI. LEAN GROUND •••••••• sr I.I. 8ANKAMERICAflD - mFl-Z<AIYE RIB ROAST ·:!139 rau. WlllU. ,_.,CIR BEEF BRISKEIS ·~99~ MA YOIHIAISI BEST FOODS ~ae~ WIW&COMt FOOOSTAMP SHOPnltS CLOSID SUNDAY -IMT.1"111.e ........... _ ......... II.Ill ... -PACX 11'1lU1• REE. •.........• , _.. __ _.._ I i ... lltAMI ma I =~.\-le ~ -.5* I ·~-~... I I ==::.:.:.::-...:.._.-:= I 1---·-· ...... .,. ·--.,.._I •••• •1..ac._.. •••• •··········-UlalT IAIDI I ...._........ I 1-MllllMEHSI :~\,l' ~ 39*1 •32c ~.... I ·.---·--.. ---· ::::.-=:. :--.:-.~~~ .. -::I ........ ~---· NJCIS lfMiiri-., en.tnnna..en.11. "'" .... ------~· ------ POI PIES __ ,,__,,_"::Jr .m.T.irii-u.. REE. JERliiiS ·~:' ..... ... _ ll!!!lOS --.,,, ... Wednesday October 6 1976 OAIL y PILOT C.(i ·Ground Beef Makes Grade with Flavor-iety • u.ten to the speeches. Read the latest populari· l)' polb. Lota of issues can be hotly debated - the ERA. tax reform, un· employment and welfare . Any two Americans are likely to have diverse opinions on OQe or more of these is- suet. cream cone. (Now if we ran a popularity contest among these three foods today. we might stir a rousing debate! > ing than ground beef, ls g:roond chock which con- tains 15-25% fat; gl'OCIDcl l"OQJld has about 11% fat. The most costly form of ground beef is groand slrlolll, which is decided· ly less yet in fat content. 1 egc, slightly beaten v. cup finely chopped onion t t,.; cups zucchini squash (about 2 small) 1 cup caTrots, thinly sliced diagonally To know what quality or ground beer you're buying, check the label: v. cup sliced water chestnuts &t, uk any American .to name his favorite meat. And, no matter what his political alfilla. tioo, you're not likely to have much or a contest. Beef, and m ost often hamburg e r , is the popular favorite, for its versatility, economy and convenience. · The hamburger and companion bun made their American debut at the St. Louis World's Fair (Louis iana Purchase Exposition) in 1903-0f, along with the hot dog a nd the ice The least expensive is us ually hamburger, which may contain up to 30% fat (additional fat may be added during the grinding). Ground beef may also contain no more than 30 % fat although usually the amount is between 20-25% (no additional fat may be added during grinding). Ground beef of this type is frequently featured in 3-pound or larger "economy or family packages" at less cost per pound than smaller amounts. Choose the type that's most economical and ac· ceptable to your family's palate. Look for ad· vertised ground meal specials: stock up and freeze the extra. Or, lf you have a food grinder, you might consider mak- ing your own ground beef -this also can orfer quite a savings. SUKIY AKl·STYLE MEATBALL STEW 3 slices bacon 1 can (15 ounces) Beef Gravy 1112 pounds ground beef 'I• teaspoon Italian seasoning, crushed In sk:lUet, cook bacon until crisp; remove and crumble. Pour off all but 2 tablespoons drippinp. Mix thoroughly V• cup gravy, beef, bread crumbs, egg, onion and bacon. Shape into 24 meatballa. Brown meat- balls in drippings; pour olffat. Add remaining ingre- dients. Cover; cook over low beat 20 minutes or until done. Stir oc· casionally. Makes about 6 cups, 6 servinga. Serve with rice. Often used for patties becau se of Jess shrinkage during cook- h cup rine dry bread crumbs A t Cooking Class The Maki ng of Gourmets BJ SANDRA M . HOFFMAN I was d e f initely looking forward to my fi rst Gourmet Cooking Class at Orange Coast College, as they are always fun and very hectic on the first night. This one was to prove to be no ex- ception .. As I arrived at the Home Economics lab, I saw five tables in the middle of the room, with a sprinkling of women sitting at lour of the tables, and at the last one was a man sitting alone and looting lost. So I went over to keep him company. Soon there were four men sitting at the table with me, all obviously glad they weren't the only men there. Soon the entire class was there -30 people, approximately 10 men. Mrs. Audrey Allen, our t~cher, started by passing out a small portion of what is to become a large cookbook, tatting roll and then explaining that on the flJ"lt evening we would only be cooking a half retipe oC Crepes Jubilee, with a couple of the kitchens also preparing a Con· tinental Coffee recipe. She instructed us to get into groups of rive and go to a kitchen aJ)d begin our r ecipes. The five of us decided to stay together and went to the kitchen that was also to prepare Viennese Coffee. My group, consisting of Michael, Vern, Mike and Gordon, all looked like they belonged out in the forest chopping down trees rather than confined to a small kitchenetle cooking delicate crepes. (Have you ever tried or- ganizing four men in a tiny kitchen? You feel like a dri 11 sergeant in charge of raw recruits.) I sent some to collect utensils and ingredients and two to sift flour -except they had never sifted flour before, so that had to be explained. Then one grated the lemon peel right through to the fruit so quickly that you think be has a bionic arm. Meanwhile the cherries are heating with the brandy, the fill ing of cream cheese and lemon are mingling, and the crepe bat· ter is ready with the crepe pan on the fire. We are now ready to begin. The four men turn to me and s ay, "Sandy, show us how it's done." So, or course. under such close scrutiny I ruin the first crepe, but the second one is successrut and I leave the men taking turns flip· ping crepes. Next Gordon volunteers to whip the cream for the Viennese Coffee, and I s tart to wash the dishes. But first I notice that someone has washed the nour sirter, so I explain why you shouldn't wash a sifter. In a couple or minutes I hear Gordon say. "What do I do now? I th.ink i · ve made butter! " Mrs. Allen gives us another container of whipping cream and Mike and I tackle the task. Suddenly I'm saying, "Stop, I think we've got butter again! • · Meanwhile the crepe assembly line has cooked and stuffed all the crepes and we are now ready lo n am e the brandy and cherries. This ls done succe3Sfully with Mrs. Allen's help. Meanwhile Mike has set the ta· ble with five cups of steaming Viennese coffee, garnished with a dollop of the whipped butter and a dash of nutmeg, and we all sit down with a sigh of relief to sample (it's delicious!). At this point I compliment my cooking partners: ''You fellows are a lot of fun to cook with!" To which Mike replies. "I'm glad this isn't a sex education class." 1 nearly choke with laughter on my crepes and have to remove my glasses as the room is getting very warm. Mi chael immediate- ly notes that l 'm as red as my cherry sauce. "Don't do this to me, fellows. I've got a tem· perature and I'm on antibiotics," I complain through my sore throat. Then Vern comes out ,with, "Oh, ypu've got that dis· ' ease too?" As our table dissolves into helpless laughter, people are beginning to look in our direction as if they sus pect we have secret· ly been nipping from the brandy bottle (it never left Ute teacher's hands all night). The next hapless victim of this wild group is a tall red-haired student who said he came to the class because his roommate said he would make someone a good wife. He is spotted alone in the kitchen. diligently washing the dishes. "You know, you would make someone a good wile," the group cheers. He replied, "How. would you like your plate of crepes in your face!" Save to~ .. on Hershey.s Hot Cocoa Mix -and get that chocolatey Hershey taste! Only Hershey's Hot Cocoa Mix gives you char chocolatey Hershey taste. Just add hot water and you've gor great cocoa that your family will love. Clip rhis coupon an<l save 10¢. ROlllAGE·STUFFED llEATBOLL t 'h lbs. extra lean ground beef 'h cup fine dry bread crumbs legg ~ teasp. garlic powder 1 teasp. salt 1 (8 ounce can) tomato sauce with onions 2 to 4 ounces blue cheese Combine beef, bread crumbs, egg, earllc, salt, and ~ can sauce in medium bowl; mix well. On waxed paper, shape meat mhl:lure in rec· tangle, t,.; inch (1 cm) thick. Crumble blue cheese over surface. Starting with short. end, roll up jelly-roll fa.sblon. Place in shallow baking dish. Bake at 350 degrees 35 to 40 minutes. Pour remaining sauce over m eat roll last S minutes of baking. Makes 6 to 8 servings. SOUTHWESTERN SUPPER 1 pound ground beef 1 onion, chopped 1 clove garlic. minced 1 (15 ounce) can tomato sauce with bits l (1 pound) can whole kerne l corn, drained 2 teaspoons s alt 2 to 3 teaspoons chili powder 1 (21h ounces) can sliced ripe olives ~cup cornmeal lcup milk 2 eggs, well beaten 1"'2 cups shredded \Vhen you're making a reaJ beef stroganoff, don't give it a fake taste. Use real sour cream. Those imitators have a dif f crcnt texture. And anificial additives. sharp Cheddar cheese Brown beef in skillet; add onion and garlic and cook until onion is soft. Drain fat. Add sauce, corn, 1 teaspoon s alt and chili powder. Cover; simmer 15 minutes. Pour into 71h· x 12· x 1 lh·inch (18x30.x4 c m ) baking pan. Top with sliced olives. You see, we have a free booklet with a stroganoff recipe and 16 others, and we don't want you to make ::i poor 1mito1ion. So when you pick up our booklet "Do more with sour cream than simply smother another hot potato:' pick up real sour cream. In small bowl, com· bine cornmeal, milk, eggs and remaining salt; pour over filling . SJJrinkle with cheese. Bake at 350 degrees 40 to .c.s minutes. Makes 6 lo 8 servings. At your grocer. l\fld save the taste. UC Now thcre·s a Secret Roll -On for al l occasions-rcgul:ir. scented Secret when you want that pretty. feminine fragrance. and new Unscented Secret Roll-On when all you want is protection. With new Unscented Secret Roll-On, nothing but whatc\'er scent you 're wearing comes through. So give us a try. It makes a lot of cents. Calij.1rnia Mil~· Arlt•iwry Board • Save 2()¢ on Secret Roll-On nlso good on any other sj7c: or form of Stucl. LIMIT ONE COUPON PER PUR CHASE ()I DAILY PILOT Wedn&9oay October6 19715 11 Egg Production, WASHINGTON {AP) -Agriculture Depart· ment economists who study the poultry and egg markets expect farmers to keep the pro- duction or eggs from their hens increasing slightly from now into um. .. Market Run Even But USDA economists who focus on consumer concerns and spending patterns do not expect Americans to buy any more egais tbjs year than the 278 consumed per person last year. Start. Slim Statistics show that eight out of every 10 peo- ple start their day with nutritionally inadequate breakfasts. This tidbit of informa· tion comes to us from Weight Watchers In· ternational, which de· vised the following early morning energy ideas. Even for slim-conscious eaters1 these breakfasts can oe con sidered "treats." HOT SPICED CEREAL WITH COLD MILK ~ cup plus 1 tables· pooowater dash salt 1 ounce rolled oats 14 t e a s poon cin· namon · dash nutmeg artificial sweetener to equal 2 teaspoons s ug· ar. or to taste 'h cup very cold skim milk In saucepan combine water and salt; bring to a boil. Slowly stir rolled oats into boiling water. Reduce heat; cook 2 minutes s tirring OC· casionally. Stir in cinnamon , nutmeg and artificial sweetener. Cook an addi· tional 4 minutes . Cover pan; remove Crom heat. Let stand 3 minutes. Serve hot with milk, top with fresh fruit if de- sired. RED BAKED EGGS 'h cup thic kened tomato juice (1 cup re· duced to 'h) 4 drops hot pepper sauce 2eggs 1~ teaspoon salt Combine thicke ned tomato juice and bot pep. per sauce. Pour 'h of mixture into each of two individual baking dishes or 3-ounce custard CU1J5. Break an egg into a saucer; gently slide egg into baking dish. Repeat with remaining egg. Sprinkle eggs with salt. Bake at 325 degrees F. (slow oven) 15 minutes or until egg white is opa. que and firm. Makes 2 servings. tlfEESEY TOAST 2 s lices e nriched white bread 4 ounces fa rmer cheese, or 1h cup cottage cheese ~ teaspoon 1mila· Uon butler flavoring v. cup evaporated skimmed milk Dash dry mustard Dash onion powder Gently pus h each bread slice into a 10· ounce custard cup. Bake al 400 degrees F. (hot oven) IO minutes or until bread is lightly toasted. lo s mall s aucepan combine farmer cheese, imitation butter navor-i q g , evaporated skimmed milk , dry mustard and onion powder. Cook over very low heat stirring frequently 5 minutes or until mixture iS well blended. Pour 'h of mixture into each tout cup. Bake at 400 degrees F. (hot oven) 5 minutes. Makes 2 serv. i.ngs. Tasty Pack-up It'• pack·a·sandwich time. For a tasty spread tbat can be prepared ahead, and refrigerated for at long as four days, trythia: Blend the contents ot one envelope or any Oevor ulad dressing mix wlth one pint mayonnaise or sour crum. Makes 2 cups ol apread, delicious with sUQed meats, fish and ~heese. I ~· ·~ z,,.,.t~.~.v~•~A-.,,,..==a~o~~~ deli BURRITOS ~~1 OSC'Allt ... f'(R .. 8"AU~'1)C'HW'(H'.;f ft ou SANDWICH SPREAD r.!'.f. t 05CAA MAYCA cono SALAMI !."L su.n•e•os • • v•• • Slteto . LUNCH MEATS ;~g' f0Mll\. • $.l~(O 80l0CHA OA FRANKS !:.~ HOHV WIENERS ~~~ OSCAl':MAYf" cono SALAMI ~~gr f.oii.sAulsAG'itiNKs ~!t •. s 12 • OSCARMAYER•SMOKlt l ... •SOR t • s129 I CHEESE SMOKIES ~!gl ~ tB s 119 fAUtH ROif N The result is that pro- duction and consumption rates will run about even, assuming that tbe population increases this year. Surveys for USDA's TURBOT FILLET • AESttf"OllM • ICllAHOIC PERCH FILLET WET ONES ,~T•~•~· ............ ! .... i0<T. 71c MACADAMIA NUTS ~:-~.H . . M)Z. s1.55 BABY RUTll NUGGETS ~~~.!L 56c ward trend. h.Jaber prices are otm;t. Uni those coats and pro- duction plans are fori more e,.s, at least unUl nexUprina, they say. muketbasket of aa u.s farm.produced foods, however. show that supermar ket prices for a dozen Grade A large eggs last month were 16.3 percent higher than in August 1975. Over-alt reta il food prices for 1976 are averaging only 2.5 lo 3 percent higher than last year, the sm allest g rowth rate in flve years. The number of beos was 2 percent larger on Sept. l than on Aug. 1, at 272.3 million, but the rate of lay, key to the produc· tion gains this year, was down 7 /10 of 1 percent. However, the Crop Reporting Board said, the number of eggs in in· cubalors was up 10 per, cent from a year before and hatchings were up 9 percent, so the higher production forecasts may still be on target. tributor and retailer was down 2.4 percent from a year before, 3.2 percent. from May, when the con· sumer paid an average of 75.2 cents a dozen, and 8.4 percent from July. The farmer's share ot the retail price, that re· port showed, has in· creued a net 25.6 per· cent in a year. The USDA poultry econ<>mlats say that farmers who sul· fered a cost·prlce squeeze during most of 1975 responded lhls year to good profits by in· creasing productJon. Consumption bas been stoadUy docUnlna foz more than a decade, with USDA figures showiof SS. egaa eaten • year per· , person ln 1960, or almoet five dozen more lbun Jast · year. A recent r eport, published after the dif. rerent sets of economists made their late.summer projections, showed the nation's hens producini 5.4 billion eg&s in August, s Jlgbtly below th.e month before and a break in the year's up- The marketbasket re- port last week showed a dozen eggs cost an average of 85. 7 cenu, with 72 percent or 61.8 ce nts going lo the fa.rmer. The share going to the ,gg.packer, dis· "Recent increases in feed prices especially soybean meal mean the cost of producing eggs is currently runrung above year·earlier levels," but '.l'be n e w quasi · governmental egg. promotion program next year ls beginning what It calls an "Incredible Edi· ble Egg" campaign to try to stop that trend, but officials say it will focus on health, nutrition and related aspects rather than prices . ; c RIB ROAST PORK SALE BEEF • SMALL END S1 .49 LB. LARGE END ••t"' • •OA• SIMUll SOAK UlOZCN • O<JROllCO • •OA• SPAlll•S ~ll LB. ftll5". ·~· • •<>•• 11 69c SAISAIE BClf • AV.tHO • 90N(..fN AUMPAOAST $1 07 BEH •llONHUS "19l8 s 107 eur•lOIN•"l•• l e ROUND STIAK :'~~ POATl•HOUSE Jft(SH • f XflllA llAH OAOUllD allf t• $1 °• cu••• sTIAK . l6 $1 •• :;~•10111 •T••K $129 8H < •CHUC•• POT 89C I H I• S•Ull CNO '' \•lH .e ARM ROAST 1e Ala STIAK }~ri'·' HH • 10.,l llSS STIWMIAT 8£fF•CHuC• ,. 95c ITlEo"p'0'"s''1'•l•L•·o80ININU\' LR 69c 7·•0NI ROAST " FAfSH • SUClD allf LIYIA CCNffA cur HAMSLICIS $1 •• 8H .. CHUC••80 Nll£S5 $139 8U,.AOVN0 •80Nlll&~ L8 SHOULD•• HAIT 1Q TIP STIAK HOn-v Wl alSOVl THI •IGHT TO UMIT O• ltlrUH $ALU TO (OMMHCIAL OtALH$ Olt WHOLUAUH $1 37 IHI . •011#0. BONtlC~S $14• •fl•. c .. uc~. 80Nll[$~ lB TIP ROAST 1s SHOULDIA •n•• PRICES lfFEC. 7 FULL DAYS OCT. 7 . OCT. 13 .• 69< $10' l8 ll s11• u 99c l• 79c 18 $1 •• IU $1 •s .• $1_19 18 $1 98 18 $1 59 oft $1 49 ......... ,.. ___ .. .... -- ) l 1 • l .l . ... -" . -· This week APPLE 20( SAUCE Springfield for value! No. 303 ·Margarine •••••• 43e J>arkay, from Kraft. ••• I lb pkJ.' Ho Ho Ramen •• 19c Oriental soup mix -4 flavors -3 07. Glorietta Pears 39c Delicious Bartlett halves -No. 30:1 , Dressinglow-CAL •••• 39e Kraft Italian. JOOO h.lund ~ oz ~~=~~s33< Glorietta -vine ripened! No. 303 Mushrooms •••• 43c Green Ciani Sliced, Button~' :l' oz Stuffing Mix • • • 59e Stove Top -choice of 3 flavors -6 01. Cocoa Mix • • • • • &ge Hershey's -10 one oz. envelopes Juicer.wmur .•.•••. 69e Six 6 ounce cans Springfidci PINEAPPLE 49< Mini-Pita Bread 29e International .. pocket hread" -10 oz Salad Oil • • • • • 59c Sp.riniffield for more lhan ~alad!>! 24 oz Picklesaoo JAii( • • • • &9e K<>11her, Polish, No Garlic! 24 01. Cranberry Sauce Ocean Spray-Whole, Strainerl! 16 ounce can Detergentroa.-s •• 49c Springfield Lemon or Pink! 32 n1. Reynolds Wrap. s 198 Aluminum Foil in :..•flt) ft roll Fireplace Log • • 69e Pine Mountain N11l. or Color! 6 lb Fantastic....... sgc Jo{ousehold cleaner -22 ot trigger pnck Shasta Mixers • 33e Club Soda, Ginger AIP, Lemon·L1nw, Q uinine Walt'r ••• :..13.8 (1Z l>tlc • • . plan your. menus around El Rancho's tender succulent ~ .. /JBA/11-FED MID-WEil FR£SH FROM T1l llART Of DDICA'S GUIN BRT! GUWMTllD ·TO SATISFY! Cubes of Pork ICNIUSS •••••••••• : s 18t Lean and tender! Just the thing for "Sweet 'n' SO\U' or Chop Suey Pork Loin Roast --:,• ........ s 11 t Feeding a h~ngry crew? They'll love the tender goodness of this roast Pork Loin · Roast CllRl(IT •••••••• s 141 The heart of the loin --Eastern pork--grain red and really fre~h' Pork Loin Roast *1lSS ••••••••• ~241 Eastern pork -fresh as it should be! And delicious when it's rotisseriPd! Park loin loa&LOINENO ... II! ~Fresh from the Corn Hell with the grain-ft·d tlurnr nnd tenrlt>rnc"~ yuu a pnr<'nllt<'' :1 to ·l lh. uvcrui:'-' Pork Sausage .. F..., .. ,~ ....... 99i \\'e, make it. ••• fresh, delicately seast>ned, for an old fashioned treat. Sausatie fTALWISTYU •••••••••••••••• s1 4i Made in our bg cher l>hop:., by an old w()rld recipe! Delightful! Sliced Bacon nuao·s •••••••••••• s1 Ot We call it "Ranch Style" -jut>l a little thicker, and lean and taF-ty! fresh Spare Ribs~~~:~.... II! Lom cut Eastern pork .•. lean, with hearty goodness they'll appreciate! Thet-t.' are finl(er-hckin" good' Pork Loin Chops snmD ••••••••• s1 2t Our fine pork, !>luffed with Oroweat Dressing, huller and fresh egl{l' Pork Loin Chops IUTTDFlY •••••••• s241 lioneles!!! Fresh gram-fed pork, of course, for a delightful dinner Park loin Chops CEHTERCUT. ••• 1l5l They'll be ~o dcliciou::. br•11lcd, because you i:ct tendcrnes:., flavor and sati:..lud1011 from our Ea~lcrn grain-fed pork! Super Fresh Produce 8artl1tt P1ars 4·'l .Swc1•t and juicv ••. 1rnrl large "•te to all .. rd more i.ati faction' Mellow California flavor! Banana Squash •...• ge, Thick 111ented to bake beaut1lull;: Bean Sprouts ...... 2sc. Cri!'.p, Lender. fresh! For your Chop Suey! Russett 19 Potatoes ~ U.S. No. J ••• Premium bakers! Romaine 29( Lettuce i.u ('rif>p! fresh! tl'nder! .Lar~e bunch . Jonathan . . 3 s 1 Apples u.s Extra Foney! Wa11hington State ~~~~.~ 69~ Hand Cut! Gr. "A" frying chicken! FIYIJ CllCllfl lMIS ... Ste • Chuck Steak • • • 79\ Center cut! U.S.D.A. Choice beef Beef Roast..ws. s1 5t Chuck cut Shoulder clod -rolled Ground Beef ••• s1°t Extra lean! Choose bulk or patties ~!~r~d!~it~!!~~f ~ o~e?~ Turkey Ham •••• s1 1t Fresh, from Rich! Avg. wt. 2 lbs. each CHATEAU c299 iRIAND= • Naturally aged beef t~ndertoin JUT ...... Sl.49. GENUINE MILK-FED VEAL S ea[ ood Specials! FRESH FlllflS! PACIFIC RED $169 SNAPPER ·~ Delicious broiled. baked or fried! Crab tees ••••• '14t· Meaty! From Afnskan crabs Mahi Mahi • ~ ••• s141 The 1eal thing. from Hawaii's waters Turbot Steaks •• $121 f''rom the icy watera off Greenland· FILLET s219 of SOLE • English sole -mild flavor a nd firm! Fro zen Food · ORANGE 49c JUICE Treesweet, (rom Florida! 12 oz . Chicken Pie • • • • 39c Van de K emp's ••• 7V! oz package CornOM111eo1 •••••• 75c Birdseye -pkg of ( ears VegetablesAIOlt.AU • 59c Birdseye -1111 varieties! 10 oz Bread •AKE 111 a IOx ••••• 33c Briditeford -all rendy for yo6! I lb Breakf astswMSOl'S •• 59c Heat itod iwrve! All varictil'R D elicatessen /'ri«f's i11 eff rcf Thur. f Jct. 7 Tltru Wed. ( kf. /,'J (Jfl~Tl dnilv 9 In H Sundo.v 10 /fl 7 Na ,<1a/c.'> to dealer11 Liquor D ep 't. Canned Ham nes .. s 5 89 Dubuque -Jean, tasty! Ready to i;erve or bake! Pear shape or sandwich t-tvlr Beef Tamales •• s 1°9 .XLNT ••• 6 in a packoge , Taco Shells. • • • 49c Alex'• ••• heat and eat! pkg or 12 DORMAN'S s 119 MUENSTER .. Wisconsin chee11e -. by the piece . . Bologna • • • • • • • • 59e Oscar M ayer 8 oz -Beef or Meat Rondele Cheese &9e Plain -son and 6nlOOth! 4 oz SHARP 99 CHEDDAR . e Lemke's from Wisconsin! 9 oz pkg El Rancho Raim SAvui.oo $ 41·9 I c~ Liithl or Dark. in EJ Rancho's own label and enjoy tho 11avin~! Quart Vodka or Gin •• s3 99 Er Ranchos' "Holiday Times'' -quart Gilbey Gin •••••• 5999 Now reduced 1.00 half.gallon PAUL $299 ' MASSON BurKUndy. Chablis, R~e or Rhint• ••• mai-tnum Ancient Age ••• s1011 Save $1.00 on ~trm((hl whiskey! • .i gl\l Seafram's · V.O. s&~9 The nt~is reduced 5te ~~~ov.~2 59 Oallo'11 great wine! Mngnum ARCADIA PASADENA SOUTH PASADENA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH EASTBLUFr IRVINE "' "''' trh' ••11ril1f\(4l•\I\ ..... vv Col11• .,,.l ~,,,,.~.., .. ,Pfll(')r'lt n"<1 •~unlinqton I/.,,,,.. ,I •11 l\1yp,,q11ni • '.I ~•'f\llllltf Rlvrt ,''.~" t-Asth11,•r r~, l'''''"'"''t .11'<1 '·"· "''' "1 • I '1"' ~,, ' .... , •• , ' ot (h,l"Q'llC..l'l'Vt: ~iu1h'"·''' <(lfP\t•r ..... 11.)(JU' r>11.111 ,,., fhf· r,.,n ,.,,~ f_j!• .• ')futl Viii,"'<)"' Pf•ff'f ''·•'' ._' ··~ 4"'''''" TOOTH PASTE ••••••••••••••••• 79c C'ol•ote 6 ounrr luht Ille tft .._., BABY SHAMPOO ••.••••••••.• $2.29 'Thnt llflnrd Jnhn"'n & .Jnhn..nn! Iii or SPAQITTI SAUCE •••••.••••• $1.15 Hn•u , •• d1oic'r of vuiel 1t11 -~:.! O\JJ\<'t' ~Mil ............. &le llctty C'"icktr lnakt~ it ~'' I 1' • '"' pktl Kia DIAPERS ............. $2J9 f)1~!)1-hlc-. • PAck•lt~ or 2• 011v11mt' SHOWER TO SHOWER ••.•.•• $1 .29 lied) J't,..,,d~r in II oun<'c p.1d11111 _.. VO S HAIR SPRAY ........... $1.29 Hard Iv 'If old or ~ulH'r I fold l • , ~ u, Satlll.INC'S VAJIU.A •.•••..••. 69c • n .... ,, v.oo'l bake uut ~ 2 llWl~ f VIENNA SAUSAGE •••... ,~ •.•••• 39c l.ihh) 'i;, fol I \llll(IW '"'t~: u 111.. SWEETHEART SOAP ••..•••••.•• 39c I '1ll'kni:<' 11J 1 "" hi11 h f.11e tmri. , I . . .. .. ,. I ~6::~s.im SHOP SAFEWAY FOR THE QUALln YOU EXPECT AT THE PRICES YOU'LL LIKE ·~ Stall, DlllclOUI, Extra Fancy lb. ,,... U.S. No. 1 From Our~ SW Assorted Plants Potting Soll '".!:' lldl 99o APG '::' 89° " t U.S.D.A. Choice .... Blade Cut lb. Manor House Frozen 10-221bs . Average lb. Whole Body Soutllern Under 3-lbs. FREE u:-1811 ' ,• r -- : .. n Featuring USDA Choice Beef exclusively ••• Midwestern pork, Choice lamb and o Grade A poultr.y, with satisfaction guaranteed "' .· . Gc:.d;nmp;:~:~ ... the q-uality you want at th: R-~g, >~t;P~c[?7 USDA ca.a .... ..._ !n Round Steak Tiit Consumer Line : 98 ~j by Julie Grayson ~ . ·.·. Since being appolnled RalPhs Price ; ': • ____ ) Controller seven weeks ago. I've beeo l _...-..:...:....-=.: <answering telephooe calls and talking IO hundreds of shoppers. And what an eJ;perience It's been! USDAChoke "gg he!Clloldl : Boneless I SWiss 511111 i:.• I · r.":"' o; I :..r.:T:l USDA Choice-Beef loilt loneless Top Sirloin Steak ~188~ lb. .-... ) ~-· ,umCM-"149 llMl llound . Boneless ,._. Rotisserte Roast '::. r-...u10tec1aA D..-tlc ... californla USDA ChOice-lecf llade Cut Chuck Roast ~S9 .~ .... - USD_. Cl>Ote~ ~ 79 BHl Chvc~ ~ 7-Bone Beef Roast per. lb. S"-11 '0<1lofl I I PeQIHI have caUed me about a wide range of subjects related 10 their super- market experiences. Not just about price$ alone. but about quality, service. aelectlon and dozens of other subjects. As a result, In addition to my respon- sibfAty on matters of pricing. I will also be ~r Consumer Representative at Alfi>hs. In this new fu~tion. I would like to report to you a ma,or event which Is taking pla~. A whole new "*'*' program is ur-.del '#fl'/ • Ralphs. Its goal is ll'oftS~ 99 ='s .. · ••• ,,_,_~ 98 Grown Fryer~ • lb. F..-,coobd 89 F.,...John Smoll8d :"' I ~l I. lb .• "a new.eandard of exoelence ~..:-:F.i.:.a~~ .• ~·Tc ""'"'! •• • · ''c• .. , ~'f.J_. _ _, -"'~· h \, for your table: That meens G .. i..1. .,,.___..,_ ,.._._ -•J Ralphs is Offering USOA Oirtzen ~ .... ""CllMMc• bMf Hctusfvety, also Mid-Duso• e~ ..... w 1• i ~ l 88 LA ~....,...Picnics.,.. -69 0 straiMd·fNltl Of v • .-... 12 western pOfk. Choice lamb and Grade Rib Stuk 111. • ~ Ftelh POftc Roast 11>. • Beech-Nut Bilbv Food 1 ... Pantrl Flllen ~~, ~ lestfoods . Mayonnaise ~.89 ~t:r•CMlon" 69 '•a-I .• car10ft ~~f7 ~Super Buy •·rr.'1•~ All Star Peanut Butter ·:.~.69 ~"o"a 55 : Tooth~te ' 5oz •• tut>. ' I c_., 16 1="°,.:;:· • \. .............. -~ T~••tly reduced pnc:e. Tiil• ptlC:e m.ty tnelucH manulacluta<I allowances and ~•I purchases. A poultry. Ralphs 1s calling thts new line 0 usoAe...,...,c._. .. ,,,.,. -79 ~ uaDA c1oo1ce ,... 99 LA ww.-•-D• .. •• ,;..,J. • 11 79 of meats Ralphs "Golden Pr!tmium.. BMf Short Ab 11>. • ~lamb Shoulder Roast 11>. • ~Italian Ont9aing titf· • '-------------------::--:------- quality-controlled meals. And from LA usoa ai11c1 .... a-t1 -99 LA wu-s~-1 .. ,..._ 1 29 O C~• 10•. oa. 18 H_,tlt a Beauty Ald8 FrMh Prod&H:A .-tial I've seen so tar, 11 is certainty ~().Bone Roast ... • ~Com King Bacon "· • ChickenNoocleSoup c4'10 • g01ng to live up to its name. · O USDA c.....,. IMf 1 88 LA u s. 0•..,., •·Holly,,,,_ ,... 89 0 ~ '?l'<?.'! s 11t. 65 I've toured Ratphs new plant where it is Beef Cube Steaks •· • ~ Best 0 Fryer ... • \iOICI Medal Flour .,.. • proces98d-IJlingthelllestendmost.S... D USOAC..... ,., 1.59 ~w .... n--12..z.P_, 1.09 o~~~~s-Slit. 57 vanmd ~ in meal pr~ • BOI BhH Stew Beef ._ ~Ralphs Bacon aa.. ,...._Flow llev • :::e.s:n:oolyGol==~ o ~~..... ':' 1.29 ~&~-CodFilets ~ 1.09 o_. u..:. ... 32 from nment inspedors bulfrom LA...._ ....... c.. 1.58 ~lodyAll..,.,.,. -119 o ~Pu.C_ .. .....,,,__c ... A5 Aalp~ qua.rity conirolle(s as well. ~Center Cut Pen Chops': ~Alaskan Crab Legs io. • cup-A-Soup Mixes ~~ They'v': told me _Ralphs G°'*1 Premium Dell Foods Pantry Fiiiers ~ ic7t{;~ '"'~°' F~-u •. oa. 45 is consiStently high quafity beef. I\ is my . ~ CMi • )Ob IO see Chat they liVe up toil 0 ~~·••'> •01. 89 0 l~alMd.fr\11'9 wV~ 14 c .............. ifi .. p< .. d 11'101. 83 a ....... _ .a .__. of R...__ .,.~...._ p 5llCeCI Ham ~• • Getbef Baby FOOd i.. • anned rostings c•" • .,,_,. -_,._ft re-[],...,...~'"-" n ..........ia ci.-' o ••--..Co!On 39 mlumM..esi.wttae,_attlnk.lfyoutry SfwPChedda ,.!'!d l.98 _ KndtDinnms 7~.25 · AuroraToiletTessue ·~:. 1tandyouhaveanycomments.callme LA .... +1-Chlcha 46 o o.-111111•c.re11 0 52 ~ZM·~Colo.. ,..· 49 atthis ~ fr'ee number t -800-262: 1600. ~ Bodclg'a Chip Meat !..°':: • Chemioa '..:-, ~Paper Napkins o1 '~. 111 take it rrom there. Together we II see LA a.-a..... . 1 45 0 ~. "C••• 13 68 0 Goldeft.C. ,._ s.,._., Whole,,..,... 11 27 that you get the quality meet you want ~Bob .. Dr-8'9 ,.~ • Rice Kri&pies ,:: • ~RalphaCainedCom C:,.L • at the Right Pricle. LA.,_..._., 1-. 113 LA,._,.,.__ SH. 43 O ~·--~ •oa. 61 Cal Jule Grayson: ~Gouda Ct.eee • ,_.. • ~My Popcom pll9. • Bl8Ck Pepper 011 • I 800.262·'600 0 o;:; .Mee ""r .89 Os;;;:~ers ':--:: .59 D c:=tion Milk '!!L .31 Colgale ~.69 ~~·~ -.19 Dental Cream ~c~•.nt ,. ct. 59 D '-" c.-or• ':..29 btt. • Pippin Applel ~aa s.,,. IOOct. 77 0 Crlep aL .19 B Aspirin bll • Cucumberl ~ .... ,~ ........ ~ MOL 99 ~ INW Crop i:.29 Nasal Spray . b11 • Velvety Red Yanw ~ Cold M~lclM hl 1 29 IJakefY Nyqwl bll. • b2l Jollnaotl't 117 0 llelpl\1-Hol Do;« Pllli!I pllf. 39 Baby Powder 1:.-: • Hamburger Buna ol •• . Frozen Fooda 0 S ee;;_. 2 :..:-.39 ~ T,_i Florida ~....,.... D.rlclove r 1 29 Orange Juice ~ .27 Pumpkin Piea .. • ~ .................................. 61 ff bold v ...... Eggo Walles 11 OL .... • OU981 ~ Qlflo' .. l.alt• SI!• 11 OL 98 ~ $M9f « N-58 Cheele Pmas ,...,. • Ralphs Panty Hoee ,,.., • ~hf• l.H·A. ... orl-.1 V.n.dn . 1.85 ~Glaa,lue·Relill JJoa. 59 lntemationaf Deaerts ,..,. Window Cleaner 1>11 • (Give once-And for.. J ·--· .. °"'-"""' °"'-'" "'' UNITED WAY CIMFM6I • W• ·--,.., • -« ...... -• -·· ...... « ........... Ill Clml ___ ,.,_ ,,_.~,·~.,.di~ w.t..,. -.toe• Glllttn Desserts ....... IDMlll ....... ,Jell-0 Apples 8 Ol. pkg. .29 . "··~~49 AnOttedAa•ort 45 Hawaiian Pln:h '8oz.. can ~""''·43 gldn . roll Everyday OldFMMoMd 89 ~~-. ctn. Chodlffl of IM Sea Ughta.D Tuna S11t1e tram 16% to 23% on full ca••• of these brand8 at Ralphs In Octollw* .... ,..,. ..... It• .. ..... ..... ........ Mee rrtce C-Pl'b Cutty Sarli Scotdl b .... 19.4• 17.• 17.11 1ft Selgram's 7 Crown Whiskey lwtlll-13.49 11.41 82.05 ~ GHbey'sGln , ..... 10.• t .99 SUI 18'9 t.W. H•per lcKrbon ~ ..... 14.• 12..• 70.15 21'9 Seagram's V.O. Clftldlan Whlsly 111111 7.50 l .H 7UI 16'9 Old Grand Did Bourbon -8.99 5 •• M.11 22'fe "The-~ N•mt-k IN cff __ ...._..........., ...... IMCIM ,nee .......... _.. el l"9 ,.,..,,.,,.,11, r!Od..ud price ,...,m.H i., IN ~........,..,. _.....,. c.e ~ ., r---·en,.·---, r---·f!ff,, ___ , I Witll •-n ·•-c-.., I I ....,~~-c-~ I I Liquid 89 I I ltownie 59 I I Detergent .:.. • I I Mix ~ ... • I I i.-.----~ ... -I I ~----~"""-I c:---, ....... -... -~--,..._-... -L RIGKT PRICE COUPON .. L RIGHT PRICE COUPOfll I ----------__________ .. where you get wl1at you want ••• at the Priaf . . 380 L 17th ST., COSTA MESA 24167 PASEO Df VAUNOA.. LAGUNA HlllS 12CM IRVINE, TUSTIN, NEWPORT & IRVINE Bl.VI>. · 17261 17th ST .. tustrM ·~ HARBOR & WILSON COSTA MESA 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH 401 N. LOARA, ANAHEIM 6942 WARNER, HUNTINGTON 8fAo. 15'71S.8RO<*IUtSf,WUTMINSTEif STORE HCUtS: t~JO Daly, 9-9 Sundcrf . • -.,, '· I ~ g, . :> i Ill ~ 0 i 00 -:S ca §? ;= -< "CJ ;:. ~ . :;_· Cl() DAil Y PILOT Wednesday. Oelobctt 8 1976 No-Fat Cooking Key ' ' Peppers Stuffed Not to Stuff You THE SLIM GOURMET pepper reserved from also be k d · I By BAIUSARA Che to...,, Spoon the fillino coo e tn a g ass GIBBONS ""' • c ass e r o 1 e i n a .. I :ind tops are browned. beef round, trimmed O( 4 tab I esp o on s mound some of the meat Stuffod peppers may fat s~asoned bread crumbs filling in each ol lhe pep. How do YOU stuff a into the pepper cases and mi c row ave oven . sprinkle with crumbs. Cons ll uf t • pepper ? W it h zoo u man ac urers t also be cook~d on the top 1 s ma 11 0 n io n , Slice bell peppers in pers. Pour the re11erved of lhe range in a covered chopped half lengthwise, remove tomato juice in the bot· calories? Four hundred Stand the stuffed pep-directions. Makes four Calories·? A thousand pen in a. small oven-servings. 189 calories Dutcb ovenove~lowheat 1 clove garlic, the seeds and mem· tom of the r oast er. about 20 to 2S minutes, or minced (optional) bran es . Drain the. Sprinkle the tops with proof casserole or Dutch h Calones'>. p eac . oven. our on tomato Depending on the re· juice. Cover and bake in , Slulfed peppers may until tender. 1 egg tomatoes and reserve Parmesan and bread 1 teaspoon salt (or the juice. Chop the crumbs. cipe you follow, that lov· a i>reheated 350-degree als~ be cooked standing PARMESAN PEPPER able sweet bell pepper -oven 20 to 25 minutes, un-up in a pressure cooker HALVES only 14 or 15 calories by UJ tender. Uncover and in about eigbt or 9 4 green bell peppers it.self -can turn into a continue to bake. basting minutes. Add one-half cut lengthwise ' veritable calorific hand manufacturers dlrec-cup of water to the 16 ·ounce ca 0 grenade, packed with lionscarefully. tomato juice. Follow tomatoes bidden calories ready to Stulfed peppers m ay frequently, until tender l pound raw ground explode into unwanted .------------------ poundage! The most popular "stuffed pepper" dishes are usually 'Seasoned combinations of ground meat and rice. Many UD· wary weight-watcher s think that s imply eliminating or minimiz· mg the rice is the right way to s lim down a stuffed pepper. In fact. the real key to stuffed pepper calories is the meat. If the ground meat is fatty, stuffed peppers will be fattening ... because all the fat stays trapped in the pep- per cases. SLIM GOURMET BASI C STUFFED PEPPERS 4 well-shaped green bell peppers !fl pound raw ground fat-trimmed beef round 2 tablespoons water or tomato juice l small onion, finely minced Small sta lk of celery, finely minced ~ cup plain cooked brown or white rice (or prepared instant rice) 2 eggs or 4 egg whites 1-l teaspoon salt or garlic sail I/ii teaspoon black pepper Pinch of red pepper Currx or c h ili powder (optional) Generous dash of Worcestershire or steak sauce (optional) Pinch of oregano, basil or other herbs 4teaspoonsseasoned breadcrumbs ~ cup -6-ounce can •• -tomato juice or tomato cocktail. Slice off the tops of the peppers. Clean the pep- per cases 0£ seeds and membranes. Trim and discard the stem ends from the tops ; mince any reserved pepper from the tops and set a side. Put the chopped beef : in a nonstick skillet with two tablespoons of water or tomato juice over high • heat. Cook undisturbed until undersi de is browned, then break up into chunks and continue to cook until meat is nicely browned. Drain and discard any fat. Stir together the browned meat, onion, celery. cooked rice, eggs, salt. pepper, red pepper. Worcestershire, herbs and minced green Menu Exotic Let cinnamon, gmger, garlic , yogurt and s easoning and broth change plain chicken in· to a mid-eastern delight. CHICKEN TANDOORI 3 pack ets chicken seasoning and broth ~ tables poon cin· namon !fl teaspoon ginger 1 clove garlic, minced 1 cup yogurt 1 bro\ler-fryer (21h pounds). Combine all ingre· dients except chicken. Place chicken in shallow baiting dish. Pour mix· ture over it. Marinate over night. Broll or grill s to 6 inches from broiler units or coals, 20 to 25 minutes for each alde. Brush with marinade while broiling. VEGETABLE T IMBALS 2 packages chlcken. seasoning and broth 2~ cups water lcuprlce 2beateneen ~ cup rroten vegetables, defrosted Add seasoning and broth to water. Boil mix· ture and add rice. Cover, cook for 20 minutes. Remove from heaL Al· Porterhouse Steak 111 CtOHOEO 8(H l00"' ............................... UI. Fresh Pork Spareribs gee g.,.>Ll !>l~E---.. ·---·-.. ·-·-·----·1.8. Boneless Cross Rib Roast 11 a -oecc• CHUCK ,, __ ., ...... ---··--"-LB. Small End Rib Roast 10 &QNO(Dllt~ ..... -..... ___ .... ____ le. garlic salt) tomatoes coarsely and Cover the pan with foil ~ teaspoon black mix with the pound and bake in a 350·degree pepper meal, onion, garlic. egg, oven 30 lo 40 minut~. Ya teaspoon red pep-salt., pepper and red pep· Uncover and bake an ad· per per. ditional 10 minutes. 4 t a b I es po on s Put the peppers in a Serves !our, 255 calories Parmesan cheese shallow roasting pan and each. . -. Large End Rib Roast BONDED BEEF .................... LB. 114 !2!J0~!~~ Staw~~~~e-~·'····--··· 13a Extra Lean Ground Beef gee llOHDfOtl~ ................ -.................... -... -.. -t.& • ce. : tow to &land until all ll· quid is absorbed. Mix ' wtlb beaten e71s. Place l .t•blespoon o deh'OL.'ted· ve1etables in buttered muffin cups. Add rice DISCOUNT SUPERMARKETS · ~ mlxluro to top. Bairo tor 20 minutes ln 3$0 .4tllff F . ov.-n. Unmold. ·- A n ow. LA l'Al.MA AYINUI 'IUINA l'AlllC tt)I LA ,Al.MA AYUNI HUNTINGTON llAC" 'COSTA ll!HA a1eo """10111 1Lvo. 'LAOUNA HILU 'ANAHLI 110 10. lfAT• COLUOI IL'ID. PVU.lllTON 1U MO.IUCLIO AYL llOSO ..-OOtCHVllllT STNU HJ?t CAIOT ltOAO AT LA 11.U 00lllANOI 2120 t . CHAl'MAfl INUI U tlllllllADA U MfltAOA O~l'INO CINTI" 'IA"'A ANA )UI 10. 111 .. TOL ITll•IT N 110 NO llAYOMOHO 'OAllDIN 0110'11 11111 MACllOLIA AYI, • ,i.llOtN 01101/l U07' EUCLID AVL "WUNTINOTON HACH tOSI ATLANTA A'IUIUf •eTANTOfll •TutTlN •HuNl'INOTON HACN IMOO I OLIA CHICA ~INUE 10SO ltATl~ A'lf. 1ll70 NIWf'OltT A'IOIUI ITO .. HOPIN OAtl. V t A.M, -WllTMfNIHlt 'WIOTMtNlflJI 'WHITTll" noo ... , tNl'fl'4 AYINUI 11071 ll'IUNOOALI STlllllT OOH I. MULHll"Y O"- :. ) f , Wt'dlle~day. October 6 1976 DAILY PILOT f:J J FrOzen Pizza Busin0ss Yields Lots of Dough By GALE TOU.IN 11_......,,_,....... 'MINNEAPOLIS <AP> -Before ahe wu a mllllooalre generous with money cJ,tts and Cbria- Jian t.estimony, ROM Totino was a child of pover· ty wbo bad one orange a year -on Christmas Eve. ·•rm happy I had a poor childhood," says . Totino, 61, who cooked up a fortune in piua. helped me have compassion for others. I w wbatit's like to share a bike wltb six sisters brothers." Tbe Uny, dark-eyed daughter or Italian im· \1Diiranu says she acquired the joy of giving from her mother. Before she was wealthy, Totino recalls ber mother could always afford to stir up a cake for a sick nei&bbor, or lake care or the children when a friend was in the hospital. l Mrs. Toljno dropped out of school in the loth f grade. She took her first job in 1931, doing housework for $2.SO a week. Her parents kept _cows. chickens and pigs in a barn at their l northeut Minneapolis home. l "Poor as we were, my mother always gave a loaf of bread or a half-dozen eggs to friends who'd come to visit," Mrs. Totino recalls. "If she bad nothing to 1ive, she'd apologi:ie and ask the { I I I I • I ' .·I I friend to come back tomorrow and she'd have something then.•' In 1975, Rose Totino and her husband, Jim, ·SOid their fro:ien food business to the Pillsbury CompaJ}.y for 258,091 shares of stock worth $22,190,000. Mrs. Totino became a corporate vice president, the first woman to bold such a post in Pillsbury's 106-yearhistory. "It's easier to sit down and write a check when you have the money," she says. "It's more ' ' • In a Hurry? Slow Down Are you among over eight million Americans who have purchased a slow cooker to escape pot watching? Here is a superb casserole that will go • from conventional preparation to an all-day sim· I mer with no hassle or worry. I Note: Don't peek in your slow cooking pot or • you'll have to add twenty to thirty minutes lo the r cooking time. GERMAN CHOPS 'N KRAUT 1 can (2 pounds) sauerkraut 2 medium apples, cored and thinly sliced 1 medium onion, sliced thin and separated into rings 4 shoulder, loin or rib pork chops (:Y.. inch thick) !,A.a pound krtockwurstcut i.n !,A.a-inch slices ~ cup dry white wine 1 teaspoon caraway seeds !,A.a teaspoon navor enhancer To prepare ID a slow cooking pot: In a larJe bowl, mix together sauerkraut, ap. pies and onion. Place a layer of sauerkraut mix· ture in the bottom o( a s low cooking pot. Top with a layer of pork chops and knockwurst. Repeal procedure until all ingredients are used, ending with sauerkraut mixture. In a bowl, mix together wtne, caraway seeds and flavor enhancer; pour over sauerkc.aut in pot. Cover pol and cook on high a to 8 hours. To prepare ID a microwave ovea: In a shallow glass casserole di,o;h, mix together sauerkraut, apples and onion. Arrange pork chops and knockwurst on top of sauerkraut mixture. In a bowl, mix together wine, caraway seeda and Ac'cent; pour over casserole. Cover ud bake 20 minutes. MAMHIMC91EIF 7-IOME •• C IOAST u. MAHHING IHf' U.S.0.A. TOP SIRLOIN HllferWW. · IOl•US MaHAMM $198 ·~·u .. $149 c..~ u. MAl..P. WHOlf MAMMO~lllF HINDQT I OF BEEF With Steaks Sec. AvWaoe Wt. 190 to 280lt MAM .... lllP U.s.D.A. IXTUl.IAM 95~ FILIT MICiMOM SnAKS or ROASTS 52'!. GROUND •• c CHUCK u. 61111.ol- AHKAMEAICAAO • MASTER CHARGE .RANDY'S t ~l/[~1_~°"~1;J2P . .,"" ...... ONN·MON. • IAT.i 1M ao.H...., 842-7191 ~-~-~ • t. difficult to take time to give help to a friend or nejgbbor.·· One day in 1965. Mrs. Totino, a lifelona Catholic, says abe "met the Lord" while drivina to work, worrying about being in debt and feeling "in the utter depths of despair." The car radio wu turned to a gospel station and she heard a minister saying personal salvation could be found through Chtist. "I pulled off the road, andl accepted Chrlat," she says. I'd made such a mess of things, and I asked Him to help me. I sajd, 'Lord, if you 'U help me out of this mess, I will spend the rest or my life servtna you'." When she got to work that morning, a man from the Small Business Administration was there to say a $50,000 loan had been approved for Totino's Finer Foods. Tbe Totinos bad seen hope an a frozen pjzza business but bad lacked the capital for such a plunge. The $50,000 built a plant but the SBA re· quired that neltber or them draw a salary until the Joan was repaid. The family's income came from the little restaurant which Totino still operates. The pina business flourished. In 1915, when it was purchased by Pillsbury, Totino'• Finer Foods bad annual sales of $40 million, employed 375 persons and was the na- tion 'a second largest producer of frozen p1zia. Mrs. Totino has her office in a s mall nook of "Rose's Kitchen," an honest-to-goodness work· ing kitchen of Italian design at the pizza plant in suburban Fridley. She bolds business m~tings at the kitchen table. Though she is frequenUy called on to address large meeUngs, s he says it's difficuJt for her. But she talks easily to individuals and small lltoups. On women ·s lib she has no hesitancy in ex· pressing her views: "J'm not a women's libber. Why s l'\ould women go from superiority to equali· ty? Women always have been exalted in this country; now they want to be equal. I'm not a feminist. I enjoy being a woman." On employe hirinJ[: "I look at a person's ethics and character. l look twice at a man's background. I reel if a man can't run a small i~· stitution Uke a famlly, be sure can't run a bu.s1· ness. l'U never hire a man who's havin& pro- blems at home." BOYS LOVE GIRLS Effective Thun., Oct. 7th thru Wed., Oct. 13th 1976 •• fNGUSH 90NELESS LUER'S FtoUt4 • fOllNO St. IOSCAJ MA'lfl $1 '' __ . _."JJ ~ ~~jj'!J. ~.!!.. .!~.~~. ~~!~ID BACON • TlllOS 11. ~ ~lllS ~:. • s1•• s159 s179 § $109 =!s.~:o 5ftt 1:;e. sl a SORRY, NO SALES TO DEALERS &a. • 11. lA. lllF LIVEI 7la. F.:' .. .-~CUit YOUNG TURKEY DRUMS or WINGS lA" 0c0HE'ESi 'SLICES"•" ,.,e TO JAC~"CHEESE'"'AL EDAMS :GOUDA c ~~-'99 ·c 99c ~;;.~a9c FROZEN OR PE FROSTED "H& QUIU TOPPI~ lSK OL 8 ( AHOSOI. CAN • ~ ... : 11~~ ·~ m m lAICE TO lAl(E WISCONSIN 98, ALouErrE ~ c.111Si s~iEA1 gnc IATUlll 6 oz. /.~~--~~~ 7 MUllSTEI CHEESE__ SPICED i ;. ~1 WEIGIS 6 oz. \; '.J 1t~Ofl.f 8 c ,.s,••U ALPS 6 oz a• cHEEsE ~ SPICll ~:'~ sucu SWISS CHEESE_ -~ Wlf~rtm•~OAALIC 4"°9Htl~ ClllS~li oz. s 14tft caMi~M'111t 01 ff-~~.~ $1 ~~~8 " 'fi' ataL1a1 ~TE .,.., 1111 CllHSI v ........... ~ ~ y .~ · SALAMI . I 51 .. ~ , .-.'; lMlllll.O(OW AO.L llC '"'° caan1 , oL .... ~ · · . cmsa "* .. IAIMISAI ClllSE SfllAI ~ LA FLEUR CHAMPAGNE .,,,.~ • WWM~ • '°"~ ~si?.?. lAOlfS' LONG MUUMUUS : ~:.-:o:.... s599 • Slnt •-11H·lll EA. CNA4Y BAI SOAP MR. CLEAll ~. s113 all~le GAL. 69 BATH ( SIZE ltUH'TNTOM llACH-ctOl.DIHWEST & MAHSIOH AYL $ • • ; •. . r • .~J,1 DAILY PILOT Wedn.sd•r. Oc1ober&. 1976 I I t Coffee Perks . . Up Pot Roast Most people think of coffee only as a bevera&e or deaaert ingredient. However, some adventurous chefs have found that· coffee enhances the flavorofmeatcookery. Although no coffee flavor results in Kenya Pot Rout, the end result ls both delicious and un- usual. (Kenya is known for the African coffee beana it grows.) The recipe is best prepared in a five-quart gJus·ceramic saucepot; il can be prepared and served in the same dish. KENYA POT ROAST S pounds cut of beef, top or bottom round 1 cup cider vinegar 2 large onions, sliced thin 2 cloves garlic, mJncecJ Oil 2 cups strong black coffee 2 cups water · Salt and pepper to taste 1h cup nour · 1h cup water or port wine 2 tablespoons sugar 1·2 tablespoons tomato paste Place the pot roast in a large bowl with vinegar, sliced onions and garlic. Cover and marinate for 24 to 48 hours, tuJlling the meat several times. Drain, pat dry and discard marinade. Heat oil in a Ii ve-quart saucepot; brown meat. Pour in the coffee and water. Simmer 2'h to 3 hours. Add salt and pepper to 1.aste. Thicken sauce by combining the flour, water or wine, sug- ar and tomato paste, then stirring in. Serves 6. * The following recipes are easy, out-of·the· cupboard and into-the-pan ways to dress up chuck roast. The first is an updated version of sauerbraten, but it doesn't require marinating for days to achieve its tangy gusto. That's achieved by simply doctoring up a packaged brown gravy mix with the flavors of beer, allspice and onion. Beef in Creamy Wine Sauce is a company dish you'll savor for its wine-spiked aroma and simple preparation. Again, the dish comes • together with the use of a dry gravy mix. GERMAN STYLE POT ROAST 2 to 3 pounds beef chuck roast 2 tablespoons oil or shorte.ning 114 cups beer 1 whole ooion, sliced in rings 1 can ( 1-lb.) sauerkraut, drained and rinsed 1 envelope beef Gravy Mix 14 teaspoon ground allspice, if desired Brown roast in oil in large skillet . Add onion, saute, and add water and sauerkraut; cover and simmer 1to2 hours, until tender. Stir contents of gravy mix envelope and allspice into liquid ·in pan; cook just until thickened. 5 to 6.servings; BEEF IN CREAMY WINE SAUCE 2 to 3 pounds beef chuck ro-.st 2 tablespoons oil or shortening 1 envelope Mushroom Gravy Mix lcupwater I/• cup dry Vermouth 'h cup dairy sour cream Parsley flakes Remove fat and bone from meat; cut meat into 1-inch cubes. Brown in oil in large skillet. Add contents of gravy mix envelope, water, and vermouth. Cover and simmer about 1 hour, or until tender. Stir in sour cream and sprinkle with parsley flakes just before serving. 4 to 6 serv- ings. Salad Combos ~ Cities Saluted The following salad re- cipes, developed by cooks at Heinz kitchens, were named in honor of Philadelphia, Chicago and St. Louis, respec· tively, in the company's Bicentennial Salad Tour booklet. UBERTY CITY SALAD %cupsaladoil ~ cup Heinz Wine Vinegar 1 table spoon chopped parsley 1 teaspoon thyme leaves, crushed v. teaspoon basil leaves 1,~ tea spoo n rosemary leaves v. teaspoon oregano leaves 'h teaspoon salt lril teaspoon pepper 6 cups torn salad greens, chilled 1 cup sliced fresh mushrooms ~ cup julienne salami . ~ cup julienne Provolone cheese 'h cup diagonally sliced celery 'h cup onion rings Combine first 9 in· gredients in jar. Cover; shake vigorously. Chill to blend flavors. Shake again before tossing with salad greens and remalninc in- eredients. Garnish with anchovies, if desired. Makes 8 servings. WINDY CITY SALAD % cup salad oil \.ii cup Heinz Wine Vintttar . l teupoon oregano lea\'el' 'r4.i teHpoon salt '>" teaspoon celery salt \4 teaspoon ceJerr seeds 2 cups sUced raw· cawl nower • \4 cup sliced green ~ 6 cups torn salad greens, chilled IA cup sliced pimien· to-stuffed olives Combine first 6 in· gredients in large j ar. Cover; shake vigorously. Add cauliflower and onions ; chill to blend flavors. Sbake again before tossing with salad greens and olives. Makes &servings. GATEWAY SALAD % cup salad oil 1t3 cup Heinz Wine Vinegar 3 tablespoons honey 2 teaspoons dry mint leaves 'h teaspoon salt 8 cups torn salad greens, chilled 1 'h cups cantaloupe balls 2 fresh pears, sliced l avocado, peeled, sliced 1 cup grated sharp cheese Combine first 5 in· gredients in jar. Cover; shake vigorously. Chill to blend flavors. . Shake again be(ore tossing with salad greeos and remaining in· gredients. Makes 8 serv· ings. Steam 'Em STEAM· RIED .EGGS In a 10-lnch skillet over low heat melt 2 tablespoons butter. Crack each of 4 eggs into 4 custard cups. When there are tiny bubbles in the melted butter, add the eggs; let the edges of the eggs set . Sprinkle with lY.a tablespoons bot. water. Cover Ughtb and con- tinue cooldnl over low heat until eggs are done as much as 7ou like. Slide onto mound ol potatoes, bash or top with 1t.cwed tomatoes. Store HOlirs: 9 to 9 Daily -Sunday 9 i·~ 8 McHlfttdl•• Thurs., O.ct. 1 tlru Wed., Oct. I J Plic .. ~ .. ,-11 .. ..-.. We Geocly Accept Food St-.. We Reaer•• TM 1.kJM ~o Ullllt ~•1tltleJ ARd Refvt• Sott To°"""" Aftd WW.Mien. FRESHER PRODUCE -LOWER PR CES LONG GREEN RED-ROUND CAUF. MEATY CUKES 19! MEAT PRICES TOP 9UALITY MEATS TRIMMED LEAN rtHOHAL sav1c1 ITS WHER1 YOUI DOLLAR HAS MORE C&n'S BEEF CHUCK BLADE c CHUCK SIEAKSFll RIB EYE SPENCER STEAK sr.! FRESH GROUND BEEF 49~. FARM FINEST SLICED BACON W1SCOMSIM FRSH cur $ CHEDDAR SPRINGFIELD GRADE il BUTTER IESTFOOD MAYONAISE 'i)UART JAR SPRINGFIELD PEACHES JOJ CAM SU CED OR HALVES 1~ FRESH PORK SPARERIBS MB>. SIZE 79~. GROUND . 99c BEEF~ u. CALIFORNIA GROWN FRYINI CHICKEN UCKY FA.RMS • FOSTO FARMS 43~ .. 9. C GOLDENGRAIM 10L 49c STIR AND SERVE PKG. ALL NOODLE DINNERS FUVORS ~IVM SID IOOZ.., • . . Wednesda October 6 1976 OAtLY PILOT ... Rtal E.tatt ...•...• 1000-2999 bntab . . . . . . . . . . :J()()(M699 lullntu, Investment & Rnancial •.••.•.... 50()()..5049 The Bluest Marketplace on the Ora111e Coast EmJ>'°ym•nt& DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS Prtporotlon •..... 7000-71?9 Merchondist •..... 8()00.8099 Boots & Manno Announctmenh, P1nonol1, lost & found ••.•.• SO.S0.5499 SerikH & Repairs 6000-6099 You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad [642-5678] One Call Service Fast Credit Approval Equipm•nt .....•.. 9000.9099 Automobiles & ot~r Transportation .... 9100.9999 CLASSIFIED INDEX ~c:'!:!!.~~~ ....... ,~!!!.~~ ....... ~~.'":>:.~ ........ ,~:::.~.~ ....... ~:::.':!~.5:'!: ........ 1~~.~.5:'!:. ....... ~~:::.~~-~ ....... 1~~:!:.~~.~ .. ~~t~• G...... I 002 G......a I 002 G......... I 002 ~.. I 002 GeMrol I 002 Geftffol I 002 GeMf'OI I 002 G~rol I qoz ....•.........................................•.••.••.••...••..............••••...•.................•.......•...................... , ................................................... . Te Pfau .Y11t Ad, Can 642-5678 HOUSES FH SALE Gfl!f'N . ,., .... 1im Sat-hlaAd • ICAJ(; llallloa P•njiuvla • loal Oot*tr-...... • . . , IOI& Got .. Mlllllat • 11123 Cool• Meu ....... • IOll -Dul r.111& .. • • • 10 ElTw9 .. .. . • ... acm r-.oa Vallt J • • llll4 ~-~ ~~~ .' .. . t:: a....-a11............ . ... IAC ... Htllt ••••••••• 1er.o ......_111,,..i .. ••• I~ 11a.iaioa v~ . .. . • ion ..._,llHd> ...... • JOit S. ci.-ol• . .. JIM S.O J11M C.pulrano. • 11171 Santa All • .. .. .. IOl!O s .. 1 .... 11 ............. 10.. Soutll U.-• .. .. . .. . . . .. 108' '4nt-.......... llMI .. _ Komn Sale • .. • 1100 IWESTATE AN OLD HACH SHACK. South of the Hwy. in old Corona del Mar, but now, it's an attractive duplex you'd love to occupy. 2 Bdrm. & den for you + modern, sunny 2 bdrm. apt. over the garage, to help make the payments. $129,500. Financing is very flexible; make offer! 673-4400 DMslOfl of Hcriaor lnnstn.nt Co. _.. .. •for Sate ... •• ... l:llOO =";=~·· · ... · ::: ~--------iGeMral ~.:;/{:CrypU-. .: .. :: 1002 Commomat :zmrty .. , ... J'40 £RRORS: Ac1Yertiser 1 __________ 1 =~111~~~.~·.:'.··:·> :~ sltouid ctt.c:k their a Unb .. li'•.,abl .. '. tlousftlOt..Mo•t<I .... , :. tlOO d II nd "" "" "" •.........•............ MEW COMD~IUM. $62,SOO Was one of the models so there's lots of s hutte r s, wallpapers, upgraded carpets and a covered patio. Sunny kitchen, 3 Bedrooms, 21h baths and all near the new golf course on the Back Bay. Think of it, ~.500! U~IC>UI: t1()Ml:S REAL TORS , 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del 1Jlar also m Mesa Verde, at 546 5990 Multiple Family Paradise Whether ifs the mother-in-law. son, or son-in-law, wouldn't it be great to have a BAY VI EW home for each branch of the family for less than $100,000? We have just listed a 2 bdrm., 2 bath home. fronting on one street, also a 1-bdrm., 2 baths · + hobby rm. home facing another s treet. Each unit has a s pectacular view with complete privacy & located on large, fee simple lot (not leasehold). Both houses to be sold together at only $198,500 H~ l::.uoil1ol.foMb -10 eliligciJ loK • • CORONA DEL MAR · 675-3000 ®herbert hawk ins REALTORS .:\.' '" \. OCEAN lllE:EZI SSS.500 4 Br, l~ bath borne with family roorn1 Swedish wood burning fireplace, new tile, paint. Palos Verdes stone patio with brick built-in BBQ . NEW IEACH 4 IB>ROOM $87,,,0 New 2 story P.U.D. Never occupied. 1 block to beach, 3 blocks to H.B. Pier. 21h baths, wet bar. AJl gas built-ins, balcony & patio fenced. Excellent in- vestment. Show & sell. OME OF A KIND $69,900 ::1~r;i::~1; : "'. :·~ a 'I a report er 4 Bedroom, 3 buth fomtly . ~l:'HS::.i'rir'ii;k, .. :. ·= rors i1NMdiately. Th hom.e. O nly S72.000. Get1eral IOOJ,GeMral 1002 G rol 'GHH'Of ~M.,..ota.OtHrt.llcM>rt . • .. 2~ DAILY PILOT ass1&me Spac1ouscxecut1vehomc ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• •••• eM 1002 1002 ~':.f~'r.;,., .. :. = llabUity for the f irst in with :.tcp down livmg • • ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Step into sharp 1800 sq. ft. 4 bedroom.~ bath home with family room, 2 fireplaces. lovely back yard with t!).tel privacy. Nice area in Costa Mesa. Won't last! ' 0utot1ot•l• Prop . • . 2'Qjl correct insertion only. room. \'auJt.ed cl'11tni;:s, ~.!:';.~·~":;:' · .. :: expans ive Mlil!>!> arca5, ~ I Ru1 ~. "'••1«1 . 2llllO jlmlll--------i family room. rormal din _ RDIULS in~ & 3 car )!ara!lt' Neal :=:;"..,r:=..s suio PubUsher's Hotic:e: location Call 540 ll51 lor Houw-s t'llraor t:or = All real ei.tile ad,·crliscd fuJJ de14Uls. =::::~ P!I" = m lh1:. ncw:.paper 1s sub ~HERITAGE T-rurA • :ooJ je<.1. to the Federal Fa• ~"'::':t~"' ~ HousinR Act o f 196 ~,.:,,.u•r =: which m akes 1t illegal t'1•---------i AllUll•l•rn aJO advertise "any pre ~~raor unr : ference. hmttatton. ort•--------•I R°""'" Board ~ discnmmal1on based o ff ~':1.·;=:1: :: race. color. re1i1nun. sex. arbor Hacienda s.. .. .,., R•nl•b <3N or national ons:m. or ii F' v II ,_ 'R~~!Oft.10R~.·,i... ~,1 rntent1on to make an.\ ountam a l'Y, neat "' --~-"" _, clean 2 bed rm. one and a Gar•enlorR•n• U'.11 such prefcrcnc<', llm1ta· hair yrs new Tenni!> ~f~:::~., !:f: lion. or d1sc:nmmat1on. •· courti.. PoOI & Jacuai 1Ad ... tn1I R-•I ._.,,_,, r I • ~~-c·,~ ..• ,.,~ ~ Th 11 ac1 1ltes .•• t any u1> ft~,..1 " _ __ 1s newspaper wa no d d r l ••• REALTORS THE "ILUFFS" -EHD UHIT Outstanding customized condominium in newest section of the "Bluffs." 2 Lge. BR., den with frpl., formal dining rm & 2'h baths. Expensive wallpapers. cptng & drapes. Beaut. greenbelt view! Lse $750 Mo. 2 I I I San Joacpt HiR1 Rood HEWJtORT CEHTIR, H.I . 644-4910 w~ ll•ftt•I• . .c.\11 knowmi:ly ;icc·ept anr ~ra c ca ures BUSINCSS,INYEST· advertisin g for real $46•750 Genff'OI 1002 General 1002 • MENT, FINANCE ~;~t~1~~ t~~~~~ is in "ola · -~1 'Pwport·taS:ail~l· •••• • • •• • •• • ••••••••••• •••••••• •••••• ••••••••• :::;i;:~,:.:; ~ ---040· 4 BDRM l~~:!::::~:~:,:.:/ ~ Houses for Sale $4S,OOO MEW LISTING "'~ 10 Loan ~ • •••••••• • •••• • • •• ••• • • ANYTIME Pemnsula duplex; upper ~:"/.:.!~}~: i::; etieral I 0021---------•IAl>solute ly immaculate 2 bdrm .. lower lgc. 1-br .. •NNOUNCEMENTS ••••••••••••••••••••••••· fam home w1manicured w1frplc .. encl. porch & 11 , lndscping & towcrang nice patio area Dbl. rcaSotfALS ' COSTA MESA shade trees. Xtra lrg lut garage with b ath & lOST l fOUHO Investor's CLASSIC for pnv~icy & Cam run. workroom. Extra 2 car A..._ .... ,...11 )too DeliCJht Costa Mt•sa's bl'i.t lnra Offorcd w 1-·11 A 01 \'A park ing Priced at C111Poo1 ~.!,~11 $48,900 rwn. lfui:c ,, ucdroom termi. U.;ttl•r hurry ' SlOS,000 Lout Sol•«• -&iG ~711 673·3663 833·0523 E \'CS 1.a1 •r..,nt1 ~ I\ sharp 3 bt.•drm home lanily home :\1 a5~1\ ~' ., ·~~;.,. ~~ "llh new paint in.,1dl' and Spanish lmd\ f1rc1>lacc - Traff!• • ~· out New carpC'ls and Extenst\'l' upgrad1n 11 SEIVICES drapes. Great local1onon through tout. F:ve r y ' Sent« Dm•dory , foCIOO large 110. tlC'l.'P lot Call woman ·s dream kitchen EMPlOfMENT & 546·5880 for full dNatls 565.500 full price As· __ · __ _ nErHATIOH s umabelc VA + + + fll''C S<-hool••ln•1,,..11on 1l1l6 1 h I e f 1nanc 1 n g Ca II ~HERITAGE DOVER SHORES One of :--ewporl Beach ·s JooV.•na<J • .v.. !Ht. 7171 "· ,. , " ., , finest homt>s! Unusually 41dp v. •1>1..s .,. " r 1100 MERCHANDISE ""'"' ..... AM»bl1'(0 • """'°" ::lcti':: M•t..-1ab. r.,,,.,,_, a £qu1p"""nt •oO.'I lllll• ~m ~ HU!$ •'00' ltOlS l\>l<I REALTORS [ I well design'--<! & full or LOWEST PRICE ~ lt~anrn r~~~t::~~~,~~~~~:ig0~~i IM dining rm., kitchen is a MEWPORT HEIGHTS 1--------•l 'gou r m e l ' s de Iii ht! associated BPOt<ERS REAL TORS 101', W Bolbro ti'' j66) MESA VtRDE V .A. Beautiful .\tcsa Verde "T " plan offered for Veterans. 3 hedroom1.. secluded master su1te. man) extras. lari1c tree accented rear Y<trd. Ex· tra sharp, see it now! Luxurious 4 BR. home. Family rm. & formal dining, with view toward Harbor Island. Boat·slip. $32.5,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy\1dt-D11vt· N B 6 75· 6161 GeMf"OI 1002 Getter-al 1002 •, OPPORTUNITY CAREER HIGHT Come as you are and get the details on your future in the lucrative real estat~ profession. Speak directly with our Fountain Valley Manager. Available Tues. and Thurs. evening 6 to 9 p.rn. or call for appt. Pl.AM TODAY ~ YOUR TOMORROW 18055 Magnolia St., Fountain Valley · 963-8311 :::··w~~;·~·;;~~~·~~· ······· ··· ············· GeMral 1002 G~ral 1 Q02 ---------............................................. . $1)5,000 An ACRE l o roam with 11 grent J lidrm home. Outstand 1nit location 111 V1:.ta ad Jaeenl to wtclc opl•n spaces. Tack rm. 5 ton h;iy barn. 2 p1Hldot·ks & fenced pastures t; real for kids . •Bl:: HTllA 11 l';N ll Y • HE/\LTOHS 4!12·4121 215 Del M;ir, San Clem MIMI HORSE RAM CH 3000 Sq. Ft. of LUXURY 3 Rcdrooms, could he 4. lort . pool room "ith C'ustom W<'l bar. Open kitrlwn, l>llns. w arm "'ll>d atmo,,phere, added patio, sun porch. ~1ust Sl'l' tu appreciate. [~MES] In Nwprt's Rack Bay 1555W.Baker,C.M. area. Ftxer upper on A I Nut to Market Basket LOned pan·l'I Even in· 549·8655 ALL THE WORK'S BEEN DOME FOR YOU Ever try h "' ru: 111 .vou r bank ur1.·ount '1 It•:. n:u tty quite comfy. This onl' has all kinds or thmi.:s i.:o· ing lor 11. 3 bt.•droums. a dining room & fum1ly room as w<•ll as Ca ltfornt a h uml•:. ~realest ktll'lwn. Your IO\'l'Slmcnl grows ::IS fo:.l as your flowers out m lr\'1ne !.o don't mis!I NEWPORT BEACH DUPLEX Better tha n nl'w. t,WO· l'>lory, a short walk fl"Om lhe beach. Both units•re 2 l>edroom, 2 bath luxbry umts on corner fee j.ot. J-u ll price s12s,ooo. CAW- 556·2660 C::SELECT · T'PROPERTI~ another day. 56R.500. Call._ ______ _.._ 613·8.'iSO Ol'IN Ill Q •II~ TlJ"' h1f.l N <1' LIDOS.ANOS • eludes a :,\\am PoOI' Only l•--------"6.~! 6'•'71l Pof;crJ:;:•s ['e 11111 ~ $59,900 Walk to best beireht • L:.ari.:l' 4 hdrm .• 2 ba., frplc . extra l;irge lot; C'ommun. pool. Seller mo!>l anxious. S79.500! --Sharp two story Newport SUPER SHARP CONDO Don't l!t\'l' up the shtp! "List · II tn <:IJ:.stftcd Ship lo shore rc:s uh5' 642·5678 Balboa lay Prop. Realtors * 640-5560 1r GeMraf 1002 Getteral 1002 ......••.•••••......... ~-····················· r~u. Doc• • >"t-tt In \'ov t'\trNhH't fiansc-S..1e ,,.,,..... .... 1 Expanded family room ~ and hui:c master suite ~ make lhts the most home ~111 for the least pnre 111 lhe ::;: bonk. Ouy 1t now ut -569.950 • Hurry · Call :::\ ~IG 2313 * V. A. TERMS * Lars.:~ 3 br. 2 ba home Gas bllns. OW. i''A heal. hrick fplc. Ownl.'r pamt· ing thruout. in~t alling new carpets. Ohle gar. Lge patio w, blln 13 BQ. Pools izelot. You own the land! By app't. $249,500 C. F. Colesworthv Call 546-2313 for V .1\. in· Only 2 • 2 years old in El formation. Toro. 2 Bedroom . 1 bath, Of11>1 1119.,rs11wro~"•"'' atr conditioned tot:Jlly [ ~-[~~i,·.;;!;~ ,',";,:,:; Rt\ 1cra 3 bedroom. Huge ma!>ler suite Family room overlooks huge covered garde n patio. Stone wood burning fireplace. Walk to tennis courts, pool. jacuizi. saunu elC'., etr .. Nr. J ust 10'; down. Call 962· 7788. ~COATS & WALLACE CE// REAL ESTATE, INC. t~d GOOd• J...-tlr)I Ll\H(Od: Mathl""r)' M l-'f~llMMOUt MIM"tllaf\toU> \\ 411,ttl MHIC:'.11 lft•lNtrWftlt. 011\ .. t;~rD .. l:;qulp, Pt'tl ~~~~~~.':. S!>ortlne G00<h !!lore.11 .. 1a11nn1,llar ~~l'..i.o.1tirt,S11..:0 . BOATS l MARINE EQUIPMENT a-.1 ... Roell !lh1ftt1Mr,ttt ffoaU.Maru"' t.qu1p &.1.,P,,wtt lloo1>,lttr1t Cllarltr ... tt>.S.lt -hShpa l>Mu ~.~•!oil• llotU.l>ion&• ~~ ('JP(•, 111. 1J~ H ~ fl1'1101f r11f'I • ~[~-Call day or night! 646-3928; eves546·8l°'1 -~~~I!!!!!!!!!! Mel Fuchs ::'.:2 "Pavilion R~altors" ::,:: A Whal~ of o Deal ForClass1ril'd J\d \lj))O 200 MAIN ST. BALBOA ACTlON : '°,"~ Call67S-8120 Calla ·;~ ---Uaily Pilot REALTORS 640-00fO PALATIAL M.V. This home is for exec. en· lC'rtainer . Elegant, spacious 4 bdrm. 4 ba, lrg kitchen, frml 'din, huj?c FR w/wet bar, 2 frplcs. 3 car ~aragl'.'. pool s ized yd. Near gotr course & new park . :>45-11-'91 - 1£1~:::·!~ PraplH'ti•• B• c "'-t t 752•1920 19 anyon ~ a e ••oo QUAii ST NIWl'OU alACH 4 BR, 4 BA, French ---- Wdton(&J.C ornr 1~t11\' ' .. " . ~ KE:Y '&'R€ALTORS X ___ .;...=_ .... ..=...= - Motovation ·Moto· \'at1on -.Motovation· Submit· Suhm1l·Submit, 4 hr. 4ba. 2.JOO ~q. rt Agt. 847·4151> Rei1ency, rust home on General I 002 Gtneral I 002 .,~airway . 5300 Sq ft .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• marble entry. gourmet kit.. oak paneling. beaut lorndscpg & m o r e . 5425.000. By appt only. ~xclust ve Agent 675·6900 TRANSPORTATION "'~ ~T ry a Dai l y Pi l ot AD-VISOR tno Classtrtcd Ad to buy. sell • 642·5&78 SELLI idle items with ::;: or rent sqmNh__,rn .. g_. ___ 1 __________ 1W_a_nl_a_d_s __ c_a_ll_64_2·_56_7_8 1 ' Daily Pilot Classified Ad macnab / Irvine realtg ~=c~1:'11·o1. :. ==-"~s-ten• MGlor Hm• S.le111•111 • Tr111on. Tt••tl i!s ~~::~:'! .......... ~~~~ :~~~!'! .......... !~~~ ~~~~~ .......... !~~~ ~~~ .......... !~~~ !::;.";::!'~·~ .,, • . •lllO 1'<00 lUTOMOBllE o-..... · . . ~10 AtK14-1c;1...... . .. .. . 9:1..~ llKry•llC>A \'•h"to '411l Soot\a lh tt1Koth. 9}.IO 4 WllNl llnvu, • lkl.\ll i~~k~ ·:·::::: :::::"'"': ml i\u10IA.••••c .............. ~l AutooWtnltd • .. ... - AUTOS, IMPORTED Gtnore1 .. .. . .. • .. .. .. .. • t70t Al/II Romeo .. • • '7"' Aucll.... • .... ,., ,011>'1 A ...... H .. Jey .... ... ..!1'11111 8.Mjf •• . • • ... • '1tZ Cap;\..... .. • ..... . t7t~ Q~ ................. tlll 0011 .:... . • •. .. '717 o.u ........................ '7:?0 t~mart ••...•••..•...•••...• tl'ftl l'lot ...... • .. • ••• •• '72S llO'ldt ..... • ... • ... .. 172'1 Ja~vu .... . .. , . fllQ J-..... .. ........ tnt Klr-1)1101>11 ............. tll> ~ ..................... .,,. Mucla ..................... fl.Ill M-•llt111 ........... 17.0 MG ......................... 1741 llOI ........................ an.-o,el ......................... fl .. PCUllt'ra .................. 970 ,...<Ol ................. ri• Ponc11c. ... .•••• • .. tr..e 118"'°11.. •.•••. SM Relit llO)'... • • •• • • • , • fFA "°'.., ................. ml lint>.... . •.... ,,. ~ ................. ni !lubo... • • • • • • • ria cae: llDBIB ILllRS ca. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE LINDA ISLE -Pia & SUI' 2 Story Contemporary Built by Roulon Hodges 5 Bedrooms, Fam Room , Wet Bar. 3 Fireplaces. Terrace Deck Overlooking Bay. $275,000 111 DOVD DRIVE 631-1800 S©ttoU~-L££~s· Tl.of /nf1i9uin9 Wort:f Game• wiflt o CltucHe -----14!!.4 •> C\Al' L P0UAN ----- 0'-·~ ....... ol .... '°"' .,..,,.btocf wordil i... low to ,.,, ... ·-.._ .. -ct. Toi<~• .IJ7e t~~:':!'iee . . ·. ~ r--B_E_G_D_I_R_-i Volvo .. 'Aires. Nclr .. . 1772 • I I I r I C--i' aufos,'ifS(i '"'"..., 1.--K ...,.I_R .... H_E..,_, it o-.i ...... ·· ...... •i 12 I I 11 AMC ......... ,.-•••• ~~.;:::· . ··::.. .. . ::: I ·F:.~:Z: . ·: .. :·::~·: ~ I c -1 " E E i t.'llfll•let. .. • . • . wm 1o I* I I I 8us1~ is eddlno • wliole O>.. • • . • .. • . ....... wn new dlrntnaion to educ.ilon ~ ..... ::::::·::::. : ,..._ .... __. • ._..__ -""·--Re•drno. -end 'rithl'P\tllc Ctlllltf .. .. • ............. w.lS 0 t 8 8 E A I ... . n:::t······............... tlll.'I ' f-niL..:·: . .: .. : .... · = I I I I r • ~:i"' .. .:-;,..~:"'!~ ~ •• • • ••••••• • IMS ._. -""·-"""· -""·-"""· --~· -· d ... loo •-ot~ No "-•~ llll•"'•t' • • • •• "" ·~ -· --Md'tllr). • .......... -='.:Li. .::.: .. ... . .. .. = l'MIM • • "'.:'.:.:: .. :'.:: .. = ..................... ... , •.... , ........ .,. ........................... 'ft't .... Mt . • p"t~S~~~w>unm IN 1· r r r r r 1 I ~~·~!ts~~E unm I I I I I I I SlOO • 1 ALL THE WORKS DONE Delightfully decorated with custom featur~s. This 4 bedroom beauty in Spyglass has the outstanding view. It 's as good as you can get tor $195,000. A C()LJ)WB.L IAMICll ~O. 644-176/, 2161 SANJOAOUINHILLSRO. IN NlWPORT CENTER INVESTMENT OPPORTUMITY Really super duplex ! l 'h Blocks to beach ! Wonde rful potential for weekly rental during season! A good buy at $130.000 -Fee land. Bob Owens 642·8235 CG61 > ELEGANT HEW OFFHING Quality decorated 3 bdrm., 2Ll2 bath view home. Large family rm. + sep. guest home with bdrm. & bath. $146,500. Open daily 1·5. 2207 Pt. Harwick, Harbor View Homes. 642-8235 901 Dover Drive 644-6200 Harbor View Center lrvlne at Campus V1lley Center 752-1414 SffK & ,f Nf1' GOVERtKNT SYMBOL C I l E 0 W 0 R 0 J 0 P A C S H P E 0 R R M A S E L C N U E B I L F 0 A H ~ U E 0 W L 1 0 R 0 E L f G T L M C S R 0 M C E R T Y C A L ~ A R 1 E W Y E 0 C 8 8 A U N C L A S U R E K U 0 T C V Y l S L M E P R H K F H A S D R R S l T E I S S I L B E Y C E A R R M l I B H S W E 0 T E I P V B F P B C E A E R G U L L Y f S U A R l E C 1 R D G R E A T S E A L D A E H l R A L 0 R S P V F L £ U R D 0 8 W R A R P P W U H E 0 A P R A T S 1 F A S D A W S N E 0 R R E A S E l A J W 0 R C £ T F.L AG S W AST LL U 8 NH 0 JS A P F T I U N C S E M 8 F A S E S A l MlNCt one: f --epp.11 OfW91<1. beck wwd, 1.10. OOM1 or dflO(Nlfy. ,lrld MCtl ...ci bo• It In. le Columbia Grttt Seal Pr1vy Seal ~ Crown John Bull Star ~ Fasces L1btrt,r Cap Swast1k• e F1tur-Pt·L1s l'llct Uncl e Sam T OlllON'OW : October • A LOCALLY OWNED COMPANY SERVING THE SOUT C AST REA SINCE 1963 BRAND NEW LAKE FOREST Never li ved-in, 4 bcdrm, family room & djning room. Great floot plan and elevation. lluy NOW and choose floor coverings, etc. before home js completed. Walk to Jake, tennis. etc. A steal at $77,950. CaU 546·4141. JUNIOR EST A TE 4 Bedroom, 3 bath estate with huge,· sunny, custom family r oom. Living room with dramati c Spanis h fireplace, sliding doors in mastpr bedroom lead lo private balcoi:qr. Separate maid or guest quarters with private bath, gourmet garden -view kitchen. All this plus mueb more for only $95,000. CALL546·4141 HARBOR HIGHLANDS Charming 3 bedroom home in pres tigiou s Newport Beach. Fantastic s wimming pool with separate dressing room. Excellent location n e ar s h opping a nd Mariners Park. Call 640.6161. WALK TO BAY/BEACH Truly outstanding home completely remodeled by owner/contractor. Unobstructed 360 degree view frorn private sundeck. One block to ocean or bay. Too m any upgrades to mention. $128.500. Call 640-6161. YORKTOWN VILLA 2 Bedroom. l 1h bath, super shaf'l) with earth tone decor. Close t.o beach, only $50,000. Call 962-4454 MINI OCEAN/ISLE VIEW . From large deck off master suite. This Buccola built home is only 4 years old $\Dd bru; 4 bedrooms & 3 baths. Lnrge f a mlly room with fireplace. Elegantll decorated & In move-in condition. HURRY $79,000. Call 962·4454. • ' Offic~\ locatr-d in Co5ta M~\c Hwttinqton fS~ach -Hc-wporl ~och l I • DAILY PILOT Wedn.sda . OC:tober 6. 19'78 HOllMt for S. Hoetu For $aM ~for $4" ~""""--..;;.::.:..;....:.::..:;...:_ ______ ...;..;.:;.;:.:.;==-='-;..;:.;;.;.:;.=~.;,;;,;.~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • •• • • • • IHoaa..t For w. H For We Hie. ... Fw Sa6e HonH Fol' 5* Ho.ff for Sc.a. -...~.Volley I 034 lrt&n. I 044 INN I 044 ~•~•~•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ~~•••••••••••••••• ~ • • ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1076 ••-..•••••••••••u••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• •·•• •• •••••••••••• •••• •• REDUCID"l MewpcN't S.och I 069 Mewport S.och I 069 San Cl..ncnte (9........ I 002 Cosio Mesa I 024 o W Ni:; R AN X I o US ·• •• •• •• •• •• • •• • •• • •• • •• • • •••••• •• • ••• •• • ••••• •• •• •• • •• •• • • • ••• • • •• ••• • ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sul&le itory 4 ·br 2 bii BRAHD HEW! Lush carpcUna in llvlna • • • 0 i:; Ac 11 c ET. ~.-..._.. ...... ..,,.....,....,.~"--' Yi HEW, NEW. MEW i f1am rm&tip11rkhn~ WJC4' Rmcho Smt Jottquln rm. It tam. rm. ,maku J:tJo J'4 £, AWAY . $31,900 P<"rfcct VIEW LOTS DU,Ll.X-W ohr ew 4 Bdrm home w tN'tr.W POOL Xlnl cond 0111 3 BR., 2 ba. end unit. this 4 bdrm . 2 -i ba. • cou:sie for 2nd. home or 2HUl.sktelot.11 In Newpo SISt,SOO crpts, mnsoleum, lcnc trt•ss 0 s alc-•1t S77,9SO Plus h t".rpeu. Near townro:e • .~~dcid~! ~ ttUremcnt Owor 111usl Heights w1lb panoram1 El'li>«aally large duplex ing & ll"i. 111 u prime FllA or \ \ tcrmi. Call pool Vtl'14' treat ruce w go 11nd wall help wlt..b Harbor views. ~" .. "'.S with a now "Cedar Mesa Verde loc9t1on ~~2-iAg.:nl HA.STINGS &CO. ll~>1mns; an c•ntry hull & TNTIMATE, PERSONAL, GEM OF A Clnancan&. ~ 1''11t·e" on u uutet cul·d -kitchen :idch lo ll1 de HOUSE I t"-' er lot or 0'"e of •lJL'RTHAHENRY• each. ~•I.' Spacious .. 4 !kd. :Iba S00,500. Eves. ~-1081 Realtors 640.5560 light. Ex tens eve brick oca cv on com .. REAl:TORS 492-4121 &3 llcd. 2ba unctii. Shown work In entry court & Lido Isle's uniquely open areas. 2 215 l>el Mar. San <.:lem. Lar~• ~aterrronl Int. by appt. Huntift9t0tt leach I 040 back patio lln1v. Park. Bdrms., 2 baths, frplc., 2 very private fee, m <.:ovl .. <. l'wr uni.I ••••••••••••••••••••••• IRVIME W /VIEW $1it,OOO patios, profess. decorated. $165,000 Son J"'°" slip. Arch11cct'11phrns1n -..... ....,..,rn0 UT Oecor.itor's dell&hl Caplatrano I 078 I ded I """'icn.rn ,,, S&S Resale Spec1,11l!ib 3. 'b hi T ti k c u or luritc home. HOMES 4 or 5 bdrm rnodeli> avoal. ~~~~Y c3 ~:m~.r2 t:":~ · • LONELY LOT desires company of ••••••••••••••••••• •••• $90~ BARRETT R~~~-~E SOMETHING i.omewii>oob.!168-400:.. ram rm. Lovely atnu 552·7000 custom house. Let's meet to discuss 1 ~Ji~~~l~r~l~SJ~:a SPECIAL Pennmston Properties w/vjew Too many ex· THE ..... _ our future together on beautiful Lido home. Many upicrudc~. -REALTY-4 Bedrooms, $53.950-tns to list. S-1*491 ls Je. Patao w/rock wutertull. 642·5200 .. _ .... _o Peninwla I 007 large recreation room, 2 Sunroom Special VILLAGE. . -LIDO 1~ ... LTY $72,500. -baths, bag ltv rm. family REALTORS ~ -~!11111------•I 7 UNITS· $295,000 kitchen. Overs1.wd dou hghtful 3 bedrrn, H. lluu1 * O,EN HOUSE • "'" -m; ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm. fireplace. CU1>lo1n 21' Added room + !J ti•·· 3177 Via Udo, H.I. 673-73 0 ~ ...... CHO···G~ Beach Cottage· S64.500 ble g11rage + rec re it· home. Eicc·ell 1 esadenllal Thun. thnl Sun. 1-4 tMYISYMENTS Quiet Haven fteduced ! 5 Br. 3 ba. nr t11mal veh1rles storage ne1ghborhoo<l one mile to Trtlrk, Broad moor Plan'· LOCJWlo Beach I 048 M.wport •ach I 069 t714t 96-7711 , bay & ocean. $164,SOO JUST LIST~O ' ! Hu1·ry the beach J\ haq~ain at Crm view lot. 4br, 2~be, 11 llMOH TREE ••••••••••••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 4 Bedrm. 2~ bath on a f BR, 3 ba. S137,000 on this Costa ;\I csa $tiS,OOO. alri um. SSS.OOO. By Univ. Pk. Tet r. 2 Bft • SPYG' "'SS HILL cul-de·aac.3Cargarugc 2UR&den$l29,500 bargain!!CAll540·115l 962•7771 ·•wnnr. Prine only. ram. rm .• w/courtyard '9A 5-taAna 1080 w/trailer access. walk to Marshall Riiy 67S-460C. • v .. entry. Plush cptg Many Xlnt Oppty-Superb View ...................... . Mile Square Park. Relax ~ '· ,"I• ~1 11334·81B9R3$· !4~:o~ILY amenities. Quiet street. EMERALD IA y 4 Br. 3 Bath & Den DOLL HOUSE m front of hrc in this OCEANFRONT nr.sbopping. $64,900 3 BR OCEANFRONT By owner 640-1751 or OHLY 549 SOO oversized master swte 3 b r + g u e ~ t apt . · "th 640-82'77 Iv message • Ever ything you 've S200,000.0wnr.67S·S069. For lease: drive by 21 homeontht!pointwi a CI. FHA terms.Charm· always wanted, 0111) C ... _, M Quiel cul·de-sac In Whitewood Way; end un· spectacular white water lng 3 bdrm, 2 ba home $80 7SO. orona ~ or I 022 T a· lrvme. Spanir.b arches il on greenbelt; Shllrp view. Just listed at w/huge FR on lrg lot. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• exas 1q entry. Large enclosed Hanover. J BR. alnum. S32S,OOO. Shown by appl. SPYGLASS HILL Sep laundry rm w/hobby H k , 3 BR DUPLEX 4 BR + Family 'lfm BEACH BARGA.IN frontyard patio. Smokey plush camel cpt. Univ Pk only. rm & sep bath. Xlnt buy. 0 Call Us,....about th1·s 3 Bdrm Great Camtly location' .. board decorator IJYing Centennial Real Estate custom homesites. on the 0 me m 3 e f S oi...1 ORCHID Big Siu-Mini Price 40• Pool•. ,,0, FR •. mirrors and redwood S46S Newport Beach's flnest 54S-lil9491 ream llas a huge Cam1ly room $63 SOO room -pjus Spanish EVELYNCOPELANO verytopo(SpyglassHill. 3 Bedrooms, 2 bath charmer w /lge_ Msl with hearth fireplace, 4 Br. scv 40' party rm brick fireplace. Handy 552·1776 552·M:W Willbulldtosuit.From . • • DQ k h Bdrm, sunny patio ani dining room area. l'OUll· w, mas~1vc brkk fpl(• & chef"s kitchen. 1-'amily THREE $135.000 ~/gas B m itc en. E·ZtorentHachelurApl. try kitchen Gleaming open bettm ceillnRS room.Queensiiemaster4Br,fomrrn.dlnmg rm. TIMES SpyglassH.lllSalesOfc cl;,:;:0 ~:~~~~1~rh~r~~s OnlyS105.000. hardwood f.loors. Cov· Giant 20x40 sparklir;!( suite plus 3more family Lge lot. $79,950. No AWIHHER 15BodegaBayDrive be.3utywill~otrtaghurry Co11644-7211 <!redveranda .casy-car~ pool. plu!lh land~pg & bedrooms. E·Z care agnts.~·9336 That's what you'll be NewportBcach othe-rR•alEstcrte foronly$59 500 ftm yards. Only S55.950, cant manicured lawn 21; Mr yard. Potting bench. Re· with these 3 RENTAL (714)644·1321 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · s last,BKR,callMO·l720. to ()(.'eun. Can"t be beat locating -take advan· Lease/OPTIOM UN ITS. Located right Mobile Homes II R b rt I • Hurry, Century 2\/Wa1k· tage! Call 752·1700 today. We will make a deal. Nd down In the CENTER OF For Sale I I 00 0 e s --i -TARlll.I. ~·8080. oP£NfflO•llSIUNf08(Nl((' a family to live in our THE VILLAGE. 1 Block BEST STREET ••••••••••••••••••••••• . !~=~c~~1vd . 2 sR&GAR.APT. "#1 lnCatlfomio" ~l~~~:L~L [~ IE&JH11 !~:,i,~;>";rt,~,~:·i~ il~f;~"~ %'~~fi "~RELSYTIVLIEUWFFS T~~1~7:~5ce~~~ ';"~ur. 1----------1 ,, Rd 111· b th ---·-····~ 640·0166, ARnt. Please t:A IY•ll•CIO• ••ado 2 Cov. patios, nicely ., c room. ., a s. rf ---------1 furn .• So of Hwy. Onl OPEN HOUSE carpets, und drup1·s Ilk~ RANCHOSANJ OAQUIN leavename&number. Rustic Olde Laguna Prime Wah ro..t Loguno'shstluy ~101 ''"" A t 67 .. 3222 new Good buy <al $55,950. 3 Br 2•,2 Ba, popular San OWlllJER architecture, wit h eic· TRINA EHD UNIT 2 BR, Cull balh, faro.rm, lr¥iM Racqu.t Clb • ,JVV. g · .,. 5 UNOAY Ph· 962 7751. · R M " terlor of all WOOD $143,000. Open S/S2·5 liv·rm w/pa.ss t.hru bar to ByOwner $73,0001~~~~~~~~~~ 1· S INT'l.fi E.Nl·:TWOHK ~~;Jes. ~re·w go~~ou~~ AYS S LL' c LA PB O A RD JOlAvenidaCemtos kitch, patio. Park SL2t> 38/~~~:~d;~~ ~~mull· llOBBY ROOM 297 LILAC LANE !-~~:i2~~15,000. S47·7M4 V~age 1 to~nho ~e. ~A~NZtD 0 C~NA:~ Morris RealtySJl-1969 mo incl utcl.494·M51 dining rm. P\l Yd {;all for Dad in huge 3 bedrm Endcmqe,..d Species Edinburg Mode I : 3 MATCHING WHITE HARBOR VIEW COSTA MESA· VACANT for appl-Or Open !louse home w 1th expansiv Almost extinct a trul> WE BDRM., 2\'J baths plus TRIM. The bldg. con· Open Sot/Sun lbr fumiss;:~lrg patio, _Su_n_l_·S_._P_h_5_59_·4_5_14 ___ 1 view of lush garden traditional 2 story home fam. rm. Large patio, taans; 2 BDRM. APT. $109,000 awmng, walk to stores & ~corated with love us in prestigious Easts1de. R.eal Estate HELP YOU SELL' well landscaped. Local· W I M A S 0 N R Y Phase 3. 180 degree no· bus. Inquire owner, DEAME GA.RDEM ing mirrors and brick. boasting fine homes and • ed on tree shaded green-FIREPLACE, l BDRM. glare VIEW, nice deck, Space 72, 2191 Harbor Mom will do great thing n e 1ghb0 r s! Th 1 5 4 by /tAC/AY and do not charge a pen· bell near pool. $74,SOO A PT W I MA SON RY upgraded 2br & den. Blvd. 548 _19LS. DEUGHT 1n dreamy kitchen OOdroom. 3 I.lath rant) ny! Call us for details. FIREPLACE. l SMALL Absentee owner/bkr. --------- Fantashc family home Pnced right £or presta~ has love Iv massiv e MO MORE EXCUSES Hed Carpel Realtors, STUDIO UNIT. Ori ve by 2244 Port BOLES AERO. 24', in Sr. l{uge36" fumily room. location. $139.900. Cal driCtwood & :-.tune Time le> mJke that 8333380 The scheduled mo. rent Carlisle.t'll4)32"7·3773. Citizen Park. Central Low maintenanc<' nowforpnvaleshowang' fireplace marblr hearth Costa Mesa. Coiy, clean grounds complete with ROY,\L PROPERTIES. PLUS Del Piso llled en change to a nc\\er more ---lS $645 P~R MO. The 1 LIDO 3Br, 2ba. Plans for home. 548.3663. Avail gas bar·b·q. 3 King si.t.ed 642-18301968·4405. try foyer & plush m;is ter plush home. MO<lern 4 OWNER bdrm. unit HAS JUST addition. Ne wly dee. now. be<l_rooms w/massive FORS ... LEBYOW""'ER swte. A "enu1ne hml bdr. LandmJrk wtfam WA......,.SOFFER' BEENREDECORATED $145000Bh675·6615 ---------' T A ..... I'> rm .• floor lo ce1hni,: m1r "' • & p A 1 N T E D • . . Business rro-rty 1400 ~aster suite. + + + wo . forselectiveowner u p k T> .--fireplaces. Wife snver Under market price new • ror:. in :-.tep down LR l.g n1v(•rs1ty r eane INCLUDING NEW W /W BRING YOUR CLUBS ••••••••••••••••••••••• kit r hen . Form 11 I 3 Br. 2 Ba, separate older Im· IQuad ~ rov'd pal•ll, lu~h y;;rd:., honw. 21lr, fam rm. Sub· CARPETING, ETC. Jn OFFICE BLDG t"nndlclighl dininii 2 unit, 20r. lBa. +IJach· Plac• . wallpaix•r. IJt:~'k) c.:rl:u·. mil all Owner has men 't513CA'4P05Dt:IP.Vll'IE all of La,gu~a we d~n·t While picket fencing On the Water, Newport Sq.ft.ofultirnate~uxury. elor a_pt. s,H9,50~ Prap•rti•a up.i:radl.'d fluoran>:' tall.v,mi\o~·EsslONi\LS OPENDAILY th1n~youllfmdanythmg frames this gracefully Beac h, adjacent Lido ~I for S93.000. Call to 640-1521> ;.irt t>PM Prin 752•1920 Collect W8·4l56 Bkr. Tl-IEI' SAM T06P.M. hkectforonty warm3 bedroom,2bath Villagc. Short leases, day. Open house Sol 1·5 only! 1•00 ouA1lst Nrwl'011T HACH 858,l,~<FT>wmEReiHid0URs-S,:~',500 CALJ..2_52'.!5~5 __ $79,950 Full Pric• home. only ste~ lo a 1tolf ideal ror headquarters 646·7171. ,.. LIVE IN IRVIME MISSION REALTY course! In prime loca· b I d g 1 n q u i r e "Oluy '" 9 ·" s ruN 10111 NICI' Costa Mesa I 024 MESA DEL MAR i\ dynamic !.Cltin~ in th" "MODEL HOME" 985 s. Coast, Laguna Uoa:i in a people-who-care ( 714 )862.8622 2234 E. t.! ~ ....................... By Owner, 3 Rn. 2 na, romant1t· parud1sc. A $49,50 0 You're r eady for im· Phone 4 9'4-073 1 neighborhood. See it ll i~hl and Ave. San : :,,!JUSjl!;t!I Hardwood & plaster. 3Br. frplc. hv rm. d111 Cam ~uperbly dcM~ncd I hdr Walnut sq plan B . J mediate ot'c.-upancy In __ now-$72,9SO. Bcrnordlno92404 . • " sume 7% In. 549·3139 S63.500. S46·8689 cathedral Cl'1hn~s. mar· purk Call us nllw lo :.-.ci• "Willowwood" former OCEAH VIEW! ID • UDI Convnerc1ol ·~ ~f:iiiji:I 2ba, corner. $59,900, as· rm. nr So <.:~t. Pl:it a. l'OOL hotnl' lkam:o., bdrm, l ba. <:om pool & this beaut.Cul Deane 1 IQ .1 ~ . r<ns Value pr1t·1•1I lh1~ well appointed model homc in Univcrsi-North Laguna Beach Plac. • Property 1600 won t lai.t' CJll cl)llcct home. 546 0022 ty Park Com1>lctcly UP· Condo Large 1 bed rm. Prapwti•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• BARGAIN 968 4156Bkr Iii ~raded thru oul with up-112 bath. fireplace. Ex-7S2·l920 BAYFROllo..IT 8411 loklothbay S76,!JOO jlraded carpels,. drapes, tensive sundeck with ran· i.oo OUAll n NlW..O.T l(ACH . " HUNTERS .\ Br. ram rm. pool . l1le and appliances tasticoceanview. Priced OCfice b~lldln g , spec· •2BRFlxerUpper,lge l:o>mplete with central unde r market. E:<· tacular vie~. luxurious A C0NvtNf£NT SHOf191NO A SEWINC CUIOE FOR THE R-2 lot. S54.950 fin'plarl'. 559•999 lO'f ---------• a1rcond1t1oning and (ully clusa\·e s.i-1.1210 ~xecuUveomces. An xlnt •Bread & Buller duplex down l>\\nt'r anxious landsca~d '' llh mature investment at $630,000. 564.950 Call642·38SOAgcnl. NO WEEPING trees. ~hrubs <and an "4~ s~ BILLGRUHDY . . CAL ON THE GO Seamed-To· Slim 9369 10Y1.18Y.t L,, 1lf~i-1Tfe...-rt .. l 1&hthurted scalloos tarvP 11ew yo~e 1nte1ut tor this SUMED· 10-SllM holtday sha1>- i11c; En1oy 111 the fesllv1t1n Sew t111s In vivid wools. blends Prihled Pattem 93691 Halt ~lt$ 10'12. 12111. 14!/;i. 16"1 1S''1."S11e 141·2 lbvsl 371 takes '279 yards 45-ill(h labnc. Sef\d S l 00 for etch pattem Md 35c 101 each pattem for first· class 1imt11I, hand line. .;S.nd to: Manan Martin Pett8fn Dept. 442 00ally Pilot '23?. West 18th SI New York. NY 100f I Print NAM!;. ADDRESS. ZIP ·S IZE and STYLE NUMBER. It n• know ltow t• 111 a ,.tterw fret? Stn• now fir ,.., "'" r111-wtnter ,11t1r11 Cltafof-dlp cou,.11 lnaldt for ~*' ,.tter• of 191r c~eltt. ~·~s~~i~k $1.lS ~ .._, CrlfU • 11.00 ,._.. rts111e11 .. ,, 1.00 fidlM Stwl"I hM 11.00 Newest Tunic +3 BR. ram1ly home SPARKLING POOL automatic sprinkle ~,._,,_dM. Realtor 675-6161 SSS.000. HERE' system. Located near r-·~r Prinr 1pal:; Only Shake roof. 3br. 2ba. shtl • pool and tennis courts. R£AlTORS 645-3474 mg gla~~ d11Qr to pat ro in lovdy Willows area. Swider anxious. Submit • .:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;~ Duplexes/ Onlts sole Super 1mmac yrd & 111 this nH'l'IY upgraded. 4 . call today. ••1~•1•-S6S 950 bedroom. 2 bath home LOCJWIO Hills 1050 = I '· : _. -· has hand!>Ome patio and •••••••• 0 •• •••• •• • • • ••• _ _ yard; c·1mtral air condi· •ROOM TO GROW• uon1ng too. Close to HARBOR VU HOMES Pop Palermo model on cul-de-sac st., lrg side yrd for boal, car, etc. Pool size lot. Open Sun, 1800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WATERFRONT DUPLEX PIER & DOCK JHOMES EASTSIDE FROM SSS,000 Luxury & privacy, roun· trv kitchen. fam. rm. + fr0plc. Xlnt f1nanc1nR. Veterans welcome Hurry. plc;isc c;ill Fountain Valley .•.•................... _________ 1 schools & shopping. A1•--------•1 Spacious 4 Bdrm. home true value at S64.500. w/2 •.2 baths, fam. rm., Buy now & select your own interior. Won"t last • Awlder. 675·1233 Irvine WHY POSTPONE HAPPINESS? ATTENTION By ownr. University Park sep. dining rm., huge Twnhse. Village I, Cam· master bdrm. suite & hrtdge mdl. J br. 2 ba, IJ~e Saddle back Mt. views. hv rm .. interior atrium. S98,900. Nr pools, tennis crts.. MORINS REAL TY chlldrens park. All elec * 494•8057 * kitch w/near new ap. pliances. S68,900. Eves ___ C_O_M_D_O __ _ only or wknds .• 5S2·0332. By ownr. Assumable 1·5. 1607 Porl Bllrmouth. --------- COSTA MESA Agt 673·7601 2 Units on lg lot. Need Besl buy in Newport work. Cood loc .• great Shores. 4 Br, 3 ba, corner potential. 645-7221 lot, dshwhr, Crpl c. pools. Century 2l '"Westcliff" tennis. beach, etc. Price 1 p _.... 2000 slashed to $78,500. Call nco,,,. ro,.... •• r Property House, 642·3850 •• •• •• •• • •• ••••••••••• • BY OWNER 8\.1r% loan, no qualifying. Twnhouse University 3 br, 2 ba, cent air .• new HIGH OH A Hill Pk. 3 Br2 Ba. new cpl.5 drps., gd cpt.. pool. lge NEWPORT'S FINEST Have up lo $800,000. cash lo invest i n un its & Comm"! NOW! 640-8300. paint. S65,000. 644·0588 patio & yard. Next to This lovely executive L Be h l 048 Leisure World. $49,900. home may be just what LARGE FAMILIES! ·~:··~!.......... ~~~o.d~~f roitp~~!ri ~n:.e 3s~~~~~n~ ~~-i, F.njoylotsoCelbowroom A marcificenl N.EW IUX· or all day Sat/Sun frml din. The lg irreg. 4-PlEX Recently constructed in San Clemente overlook· ing golC course. Large 11mt.s. Sl2S,OOO. firm. 6\2 Calle Campana owner, 496-5275 in this large Monterey ury ome overlook in 581·902i!. s h aped lot makes located in lhe prestigious Emerald Bay. ~ sq. beautiful setting for the ~ CAREFREE CONDO l ~ thcre ·~Os~!~c~.!g ror Prure ss lonally landscaped 4 bdrm Bcrkelry 1n Cnlll'gc Park. Beautl(ul hulll·m dcsk & shelve., an ~tudy wet b;.ir m fJm1ly rm Back 'ard 1!> l'nhonced by larl(c t'O\ en•1l palto. drtklnJ(. )!as UH~ & COO· \l'r::.at1nnal 11rc p11 Steps away from rrfrt>sh1n~ communit y pJrk~ & ··The Ranch" in Irvine. 6 fl .. ,spectacular ~iews ---------•I lovelypool.54S-949L Bedrooms. over sized lot, Don t miss this one . MUST SELL NQWI Iii warranteed for one year, • CHEVY CHASE plus more. 3000 Sq. rt. All the work has been B & B FOUR,LEX ~l.500. Call to see. done ror you in this near· . . ANAHEIM /"\JE\JJEL.\.. Associates 7283 rx1A6a s~ Team pace-setting tunic with pants. skor\s the yur ·round' STRIPlO SUCCESS' Knit tunic of synthetic worsted in 3 sha~s of a eolor Note solid yoke. turtlenec~. flare 5ltev!S All easy ~••tting P~ltern 7283. Sire~ 8 16 includtd S 1.00 for each pa Item. Add 35~ uch pattern for first-class airmail and llandhni. Send toi Ahcr Brooks Needlecrl)ll Dept. 105 evcryon~ 1n thi s beautifully upRradt•d 3 bedroom t·nd ur11t • Enjoy the famrl~• CLURllOL"S l•; w POOL & l'ARK just arrosi. lhc slrt•1•t or rt• lax 111 your own 21' tiled patio wdirf' nnR. Th1i; newly carp<:tNl l wo story condo Is ~1·arcd ror E·Z living at S59,000. 1£1~:::·!~ Prapwti•• 7S2·l920 ~ OVAil \T. ~l~OtlT ~ •TIBURON· BY OWNER New cpts, t1le. IM MAC. Bd, 2"2 ba. Xlnt location Days 846--8437 Evetwknd 003·3\13 pools. SC'ein1: 1s belie'· ..... .-:;;:;-;~:--;;::-;;;::;;';\ 1ng! Price hns been re· clun~d • !Jon ·c 1111,.,~ 11 ~ DONALD M. BIR D Ano<lore,, leollo1s LAGUNA HACH 4'4·Uf4 NEW & EXCITING hilltop home featuring C/\T/\LINA VIEWS. BDRM. 2 BATH, quality construction S87 .soo. Jay W. Yeats Realty 31709 Coast Hwy new. highly upgraded, 3 Four 2 bedroom. Spec. bedrm Pacesetter horne.1----------1 buy, only $12,9SO. Take J ust move in & start liv-VIEW over VA loan w/$8,950 Ing. Offcrod at only From the BluHs, 2311 down. OWNR/AGT. $'74,000. Cliff Dr., 3 Br formal dln 540--0SSS FULLER REALTY rm, lam rm, near new. ------ Owner anxious! Open San Clemente. 12 u~lla on 546-0814 Sat & Sun. Agent 642·4603 ~ bum res·com I Jot. ---------·1---::-:-::-::--:-:~:---1 $21,000 gross, nr bch. EXOUISITE! President Hom e . Turtlerock a rea. S hows So. Laguna 499-2237 LOCJUIMI HICJMI I 052 LIDO ISLE S210,ooo. Ph492·S078own. $144,500 RAHCH REAL TY like a model. Principals MYSTIC HILLS S 5 I ·2000 only. 833·0763 or 545·3031 3BR, 3BA. sauno. View, -----------t View, View. Great Ex· I 0 44 Irvine I 044 ~utlve home. Irvine .•..•.•••.••.•...•......•..........••.•.....•. 673-7601 AGT. ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------•I OWNER will ennslder Dlstntss ,roperty! lea~. 4 Bdrm. 3 baths, I can find ltror you. SWEEPING OCEA.MVIEW See the sunset Crom your beautiful spacious 3 bedroom 2 bath condo. tamll)' rm. wet bar. Beachareaspeclallst. south patio. UeauUCul Probates, foreclosures, open design, ideal for en· bankruptcies, divorce. tertainlng. Drive by 222 Investment pro~rtJea Via Palermo. then call below market price. (213) 79S·5824 days or ken Johnton. lrolutt----------1 Move·ln condition. AP· mecneb I Irvine realty FA.MIL Y DELIGHT High above Laguna; laree 3 bdrm .• 2 bath home: many extras. Dbl. ptianccs & plants in· duded. Owner leaving State. $82,500. (714 > 673·0541 eves & Call (71' )673-4545 wkntls for appt to ln·1~~~~~~~~~~ spect. L.B. Benedict 1--"--------1120 Unlts, pride of Oa1lyP11ot Box 163 Olct Chelsea Sta.. ii---------•I rtreplace, large dining Byowner.2block3lo rm., private brick patio: beach. 3br , den, 2ba. ownership, 7 )'ra old. Costa Mesa. 8 X gross, lS% down. Super loc. Prln. only. Brkr. 642·1603 New York NY 1001 1 P11nt Name Acfdress. Zrp, Paltern Number MORE th4n evtr before! 20C deall"S plus 3 free printed ill· side H(W 1976 NECOUCRAFl CATALOG' Has every1hina. 7Sc. Crochtl wllfl S11ua<u $1.00 Crvtlltt a Wardrolll _ $ 1.00 Nifty fifty Quflti $ 1.00 Ripp la Crochet . $1 .00 Sew ...r.. K11lt look s 1.25 Mudlepotnt look _ Sl.00 nowtr Croellet Book $1.00 Matrpl11 C1oc11et looll $ 1.00 lr11t1nt Crtcflet look _ $1.00 111st111t M1er1111e look $1,00 111at111t Money look . $1.00 Co111plett Gift look $1.00 Co111111ttt Afahau 114 SI .00 12 '''n Af1flans 112 __ soi: look el fl 01111ts fl _ 50' MYll911 Quilt 111\ 12 _50f 11 t•llts fer T•ur n '°' ""ef ,. Jiffy"... _.,, ~ ~ . :~:.::--~ AEGEAN HEIGHTS Upgraded llillvlew end unit featuring Fra n · clscan lite entry and atrium. 2 Bedrooms plus den, 2 bttths, man y beautiful amenities plus E ·Z llvlna of a townhouse. Crci:at view or Saddleback and nittht llahts Crom your private patio. $69,500 640-9900 .)~~ &"'1lt av- Valley Realty DON'T DltlA.M TOO LOMG! Swimming, night tennis, outdoor dining in custom built gazebo. Highly upgraded 3 bedroom Deane Home, professionally decorated & l a ndsca ped. Univei;sity Park's Onest ottering -$109,900. Laszlo Sharkany 752·1414 (062) WOODIRIDGI! Sought afler Madison model w/bay window. 3 Bedrooms -2Y.i baths - upgraded -air condition~ -super location. $99,500. Marilyn Bulkley 752· 1414 (063) Ml·n35 644-4200 tot Oowr Orf1119 HMbor' View C.nter I rvlne at C.mpus Valley cant.r 752-1414 large fenced yard with 496:7222 831 -0836 TennlHourt & pools. mature tree~. XI n ti_________ $12,SOO. 235 Lugonla. neighborhood. Priced to· 1 _________ , ____ 548_-6000 ___ _ day at $89,900 (3) FOURPLEXES, HB. GOLD REALTY Call 495-4653 IYOWMERll Sl19,500 Each 2150 Sq ft PACESET· TER. Family rm, 38r, ---------i 2ba, den. View of ocean & Biil Canyon·Nwpt Sch C&tm home. 48r, 4 ba, pool, bUll11rd rm. 'llew. $295.000 Courtesy to rltrs. Call 644·092'7 er 644·1621. 15) \Jnll, H.B. $127,500 Victorian House + ln· come units or beach & Lake Park ln downtown HB. $105,000. (2) New 5 Unit bldgs. v#Jlan REAL ESTAl E 'JOO c,1. ,,,,, .,, • -,, ·lV•l U.t1l \ d ilh PRIVACY Ocenn sidl' of hwv. 1 bdrm , 3 bath!!, laundry areo, hcoted pool, vu nmt ldC'l1l p:lUO for outtloot Uvln(. '148.500 hills. $94,900 •OPEN DAILY 1·5• 24342 Los Ser ranos NEWPORT SHORES. 3 •--------•• br, 2 ba, nr commun. Anaheim, $136,SOO. Century 21 /Sparow Investment 963·7866 ask for Jim Wilson poo!/~nnls. Wolk to bch. ---------By ownr. Prln only. B<lst 'EAST SIDE C.M. 1069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• b Y n bch Property 7 Units, 1·3Br, 6·2Br. HEWLISTIHGI u o ' f $66.000. &46 4288. 1210,000. 979·8533 a,i. N'pt. Shores: A· rame.1---------Pnnonly. 1-sty. 2 BR & den or 3 RR. WANTED -------- Bltns. 2 P9 tlos. Steps lo Gu•dalupe, 4br ln Rluffa Don't drop the balll Cet a ocean & pools $GS,OOO Prine only pltasc' Coll job witb a low-cost Dally CA.YWOOD REALTY collect, 213 931 8517 art Pilot Claaalrled Ad. * 541· 1290 * 6:30 pm. Phone 642-5678. .... . .......... . ' HoMM' Unfwwbhed Wednesda . October 6 1976 OAILYPILOT _...,_. ....................... •····•···············•• ....................... . ~~.~'!'.~!~!~ ...... !~!'.~«:'.~!~~ ...... ~!!!.~~~-·.~~ .... ~!'t::.!:.~~.?~~~ ~~ ............. ~~-4.~ ~':~~~.~~ ... !?~.~ ~!'::'.~~.~~ .. ~:'!:.~ .... ~.~...:~: ll~o"'-Pro.,.rty 2 0 00lncotM 'ropH'ty 2000 Costo MH o 322.. 2 ILKS TO SAND RENTALS LIDO ISLE Colfo M.so 3724 Co1ta Mu o 3124 Co1ta Mesa ~> •••• •• ••••••••••• •• ••• • •• •• •••••• ••••• ••••• • •• ••• •• •• •• ••• •• • •• • •• • • • Super 'harp lit c-lt•an. ~ S•nsll· F\tm1ty ltomr·s 2 f\drrn~ . :? b ..... on IJ:l_. •• •••• •• •• •• •• • •• • ••••• ••••• •••••••••• •• ••• •• • ••• •• •• ••• •• • •• ··~ • :~ : •• ORANGE COUNTY PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP UNITS • 3 Ne w Units, townhouse design incl 3 BR owners unit ' •4 Plex. 12 Yrs old, w/unbelievable 4Br, 2Ba, 1700 sqft o wners unit. • 4 Plex. Under construction. 38r, 134 Ba owners unit. Choose colors and options n ow. • 4 P lexes. 3 ln Oran,ge County SOLD -6 New T ownhouse Units, Costa Mesa •8 Units (2-4 Plexes) 2 Complexes to choose from. • 12 Units (3 yrs young. Costa M esa) •16 Units (4·4 Plexes) Breaking ~round now. • 12 Units, 2 years old • 18 Units, under construction •29Units, 7 Years old SOLD -48 Units, L aguna Niguel SOLD -64 Units, Anaheim SOLD •102 units. 3 Yrs old. under 7xGross Other complexes are listed and sold b efore advertisin g. As k for appointment with one of our s taff in advance . BU!LDERS·OWNERS ; Quail Place lists and sells $3-SS Million i n prope rty a m o nth, mos tly apartme nts; but homes, office buildings. condos & commercial as well. List where the action is. l~Qu~l ~•l!"Qu~I ~ liit •Plac• . liit IPlac• Prap•rti•• Prop•rti•• 752•1920 752•1920 1•00 a.JAi\ ST NIWPOCIT llACH 1400 QUAil ST. NI~ ltACH ~~~ ~~4!'. ~ !~!~ .... ·~~~!!! .~~~~!~~~ .... Income Property 2 00 General 32 02 ........................•...•...•.••.•••.•... l'\1!14 llOrl l\(•;Jl'h 111 plf'X on <·anal " boal d11d. :>lll.~4(1 i:rn ... ::. ~13:i,()lkl 4!12·3110, t'\'I'!- •RENTALS• Santa Ana llc111.hls 3 fllt. I Ht\ ...... ~51 m 3 Hrl. I BA ..... 5375 1n Lai:un:i l111ts ~ llll, ;Ju,\ . ' ~l.'"111,'m lnrnl' & JlH. 3 llA ...•. S.500 111 SZ,.IO 2 br. patio, yd, k1cl'I l.u-tte br'i.. new klll'l1cn 2 BH, 2 Ba s.tOO lot S7SO r..10.111.h .. t...ic furn boch\•lor apt ---cRANDOPENING fi«J<'ht·ombc1. fct: $15 w dw,hr new rptll Cullv J RR. 2 Ru .;;ix., SO • ( di Step JD• to the' 631 2011 en1•li. 'd yard 1-;ncli.d l(ar 3 TIR. 2 Ba $.:l'J5 5 Bdrms • 4'' bJ . din ~I I 1 e · mid '-' i!IW ~ J -14 /w3hr 1411 Ollv1• 3BK.2U,1 .$-125 rm , f m r m , i.tudy, ~o ~hlldrl'n or µell> !• COME HOME! Jlurr) 1h1-. "on't l.i~t :nrn.2 B;i $425 l~l' lot $\200 Mo ti45_~79or s.i8·08ll8 __ ._ gOod life · H:i,c-.areal homentFo~ $3951>etmo~t1Wl11.•::., 3BH.2H,,. ~ LAWSOHREA.LTY OCC specia l S9S. Uhl hollow V11lu~c. 621 W. 84811~>bui.. •llrn.2 na ....... ~:s\15 •6 7S.4S62 * pald.t-'ro W1l:rnn . <.:oi>la Mesa . -----·1 lrn.2•, BJ . . . .. ~\IO -------Main Rcntahi. 540-5310 Adull11, $3SO, mo 01>1.'ll 3Br. I ' Ila t•on<lo. 1''ret• Townchurne.s ~ Br Dupll•x. St•ushorc & ---Stroll 1h1• p.1th1.v.,ys of ll pint> fu1est. M\!tll'l<l•!l' pu:.l 4·ti<JOwt~kuay~. llG.:io laun<J 1y, pool P••rk 2 RR.2 ll<.1. . $;S25 45th St Yeudy kul>c.logunal•och 37"8 tuinl•lh1•1 w"t,•rfofl ,mdqul"1pool:..lt!<wn1o thl.! :;. w~kcruJs i\\'a1l.Nov. l , PrinH· loc ~65/m u. 2BR.2Ba ........ $<150 Call546·56tU. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ou11dnfbubbllngstrullm~.111d•irCMllngthl11g-;. • 1:n6. 642~991 008·0:H:J 2 BR. 2 Ha . . .. $525 ----Bach. Nr.ir bt'ach. lltll Your ,1dult •'fl.lr1men1home111 Pml'l.rl!ck Vlll.,gc l'lo "'•"''ST SID"' •. 2 Br, rlen, Ff\NTASTI<' 4 IHt, 2 Un. 3 BR, 2111 Bu · · --· ~ll!S 2 Ur. 2 ba t'ondo, pcxil, lcn pd. $l!IS ~25 mo: S6S wk n tol.ll Ntrertt. l l1tr1t you c.111 l'n1oy ur1usual flml<IQI ..... ,.. " 3 BH.2•,n11 ...... 8'150 lllS CUUllS. Nc\\J'IM\ 1135N.C:sl 494·2508 t>ool house. frplc, $335 frpll'. bltns, rnl·losed J llR :!Bu ..... :s5()0 Cre"l $<l50 mo A(!lts. ___ ------,,nului..ury, mo.893-5594AM. yard. Vat·;rnl. S3:15. <.'all :rnn:2 na:·: .•.• $500 6737194cv1·11 Oecan view $22.S. Uttl pd BEAMONGTHERRSTTOCHOOSEthebesl 4 BR. liv rm, rum rm, 2 _Donmi, !l62·2'IS8 3 llR, 211 11" ..•• ~ --Smgll'i.ok. Ft.>c loc,111on, till' hesl •"1«n<wm~nt, the colors you w..int. .... bu. frpk. Ideal hJc.1lio11. 2 Bdr, 4 blks beach. ~>x~ :l HR. 21' Ra ••.•..•. $Ii.SO . Very ~l)actOU!< it Br + M.tlll Ren tab:. s.iO-S~~ Don't w<1it li.VI> l\'nnis (OUrt!>. ~mmll~ pool -- <.:lean. S<ISO mo. 675·2082 No pets f\ \'B il. Oct. 25 4 BK, 2' \R! • ~ • • ~\95 De n. p ,11 k. bl.' ,1" h & Newport l •och 37 69 plus umC'IUI! V<)lll1*><1ll 1X>\'l ,f,1cuh'1. - -008 0652 aft S rm water vie" S600 vrl" ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sand voll~"'-'111.oor1 Mo11nt.i111 loclQQ clubhou~VJllh JUr. 2ba, fpk, fncd yd, 2 -------Ne" port l.lc•ach ~ ~ ")I'~ "ar o··r . w. !., rde . .,.,u-. Nnwer 3 br condo. Great ., 11 2 •. f ="'S leasl'. Lg 2br 11pl nr. heh. Besl tir~lacl!, co11Wn.t111<)11 p11, h1Jh,1rrb. gym, :.aun.i. ~ •u <N'7V ' " r, ua., um . .,.,... . Best Wrst fl11 vfronl arl!a. Wrntrr SJ2S·$.~. mo. Co upl e~ only lt1l' $350 A\dll. 11 11 •••• 1 ~'"I l d k 1 .1 •. 1 d Huny1o1hegoodlilc<1odlh\.'nrl!klx. &l2-SOIS. ti42 !m10 e' cs C:oron.i del Mar oc:i1100 w/>IV >0a IK' . Inc ut1 • .:ar °' aur! ry --J UH .• 2 baths~ Sl.250 yrly (furn or un C:ml 00:! OS05, 1115 W. FROM $265 TO $3SS ? Br house. w ti:.irage IMl.TOIEACH furn> HalboaUl. lndudlrlC;)llQat &Wa1er N0Lc<'l..cRequireJ .. S235. Cpls, y.ird. kids/ Vacant, IU\ cl) new 1 BR, Waterfront Homes oci:;AN ... RONT 3 hr . 2 ha. One lx-d11lOlll, One 8.'llh pets OK. 548·1867 2 Ua fo'rpk, U/W. ~50 'I 6 3 1-1400 '\cw 1.,c dl'luxc bltns. Two &-u1oom,Two 13.ith ~~ ~~. b -~·M JBron 1:.;.1cre.w/3othcr mo. ' /?, "11~ ..........---~frµ!(', washer /JryP r , lSOO/\<lorns/\w,ln'""""'w esa, umls. S31U ind ulll & S:!15. 3 br 1' H . Pool, ~'11..1. 'r Ll<.lohlr.2 hdrrn &ucn.Z :~'>·l,J1na1r;,r ·6?13p.~~~0. 5550 t1crossfromOr<11'19t?dC?<J!>tColl~ lnul') r ... c1l 6428611 kidi./pN::.ok. F~ f...r)' ha "i.'iSO :! Burm. 2 b,i , "':__~ -~-...... bciwcen l lartx>ran f·amnew. ., i-.:-side 3 BR.-;i u~.~et _MJrn Rl·nt.il:.~O 537~ 833·8600 b<1\ t ronl Cflnclo, $1000 Li:c 2 Br ne.tr bay & (714) 540 1300. NOW R£NTINEJ cul-de-sac. frpk, hltns. a Br 2 Ba. nr ~usha"I & Agl•11t&IS lSt>l bcac·h. Pool. Avail. now -------------------..- dblgar.S425 673·3600 lnd1anupol1:,. V:icanl. N~wport ll t~lbr . loJunC'30.6i511141 CoronadelMar J822CostoM•sa 382" -$365. 9G2·337 l lf513 C.otPOSD1:IRVlf(E S:l25 'mo b·I<! g2J3 or Hachelor. all ulll. Single •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Hr, 2 ba, hllns. frplc, .. , 1 IL 1 rl t -end. b;H'k }d. Nrl'C arl·a Huntin~Oft Ol'EN DAILY 6'75 tj789, l'''c:._____ ok. ~175 .. J:Je. achcomber, •~cw ac u wa e ron a.,.s -.,. -f Sl5 631 2011 m Mesa Verde. Beauliltll 2Sl9 F~~d!'",m IC:ollcgt< HarbOur-3242 HAM TO ti P.M. BIX .. 'FS I ll•vel 3 BH. 2 Cl' . --...:; londscaping. Exc~P· l'arl~_L_SJ'J;,. 548·441 1 __ •••••••••••• ••••••••• •• ------1>11 Lo' ely i:rl•cnht.'lt & R:J\'fronl luxury 2 br. 2 ba. (St lion ally rich interi()l'S, lie ·t deal S23U 3 br 3 Gr' 3 trn tnwnholl!.l' Ll':Jsc/Opl1on. ult r:rc· 3 pool $500 i\i;l 61 1·1133 pvt cl uh Ket'erences. '11,, l,~r,cs, 1&2 bdrms from $27~. . s . . •• , : ' Sparklini: new l'oncl . BH. 2 Ba home. Prrv. -J\,·,111 now thru Nov -~" -" V cl v ·11 ~ krrls~peb,''k. '-~l. . S<l 1 o <.:a 11 .. L ll u .. • yai;:d, n1r t•omrn. pool &. San Clemente 3276 3011\ 499·4147 . Mesa er c I as. 2~1:'R~ntals.5 I0 5.110_ l!-l6·13il orX1lu·S45ljcves tt•nn1s.:w1S5.rno 83:l·ll!21:1 •••••••••••••••••••••••. . COR6NADELMAR ~·~~al~t!~~~~.veMf $225. ;i br duple.'\, i,:urat.:l'. I • ------3-244 -3 8 New :1br <"r1ndo Pool, JaC, Jlt1lhoa llnv Club 2br, 21>11 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. 540-8871. , kids/pets ok. Fel· n ine L09U"a Beac:h 24 tennis, $500/mo l1•rT:rce upt. Avail. 10/\5. Pool. tennis, contmental Marn Rentals. 5-10 5:170 ••••••••••••;•••••••••: ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1 IOU. mo. UnJurn. ~75. brl•akfasl Some ocean & EASTSIDE adull 1&,? W. ------ -UN IVF.ltSI fV P A HK l Br, ;ell lllil. l\u.h;, µets l.ux 3br. wh1lew.iter t 2 I 3) !:>ti 3 · 7 6 8 1 Calahna \'1e\\s. t:lose to $200S225. Like new.~~ 2 Br 1 Ha, n~w c pls & 11rim13 t1recnbclt loc• .• nr S230. Bt>achcoml>cr , Ice \'IOW, b\'h ac<'el>lt condo, 1:!131335 :~;.11; :;hopping & fine ~ach. no pcl:l.117 to;. 2:!nd.·St:- drps, fncd yiml. gur , S250 pools, park, Sl'hflob. SIS. 631-2011 S.'IUO mo. Am·horaS:l' In - -644-2611 6-14 0878 · ": • + dcp. 615 8181, alt avall 1mmed 3 Br 2 Ba, --------\l.'~lmenti. ·l96-77ll lle:ichfmnt 1 br cipL Sl!IO 1----------1----------5/wknds form din~. $-160. 552 0730 Panoramic o<·can 'rl'W, ' No pct:.. Mature only GRAND OPENING , -------i or 5.52 0815 nt'w c•xc·c 3 hr, 21 2 bu. 2 San Juan 675·382>1 Costa M.sa 3824 T E y LE F 3 Br 2 Ba T wnhsc, dbl J:a frµlu. ~)(I .i99 2807. Caplstrafto 3278 ••••••••••••••••••••••• H BA A wiaulo opnr. Jnt llJl h), rurlll'IOCk 4 br. fam rm. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• SouthL 3786 2 B t•~ n T h·e bk 1 Bdrm S230 D'W, s:i.io. ~Jf.:1 . .a<l5ll elm rm. 2 b:i. nl'w crpl Bt•.ich hvu .. e. Vr ctnri.i h OCJ""O r -a wn !i r 2 Bdrm Water Pd 52$> ---Lea"~· Aa..'t ~11-5'132 2hr C'h:\rml'r \h·eJn Lux new 3!Sr, 212 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fpk, gar. h:e palto. ~dlL'I, Be;;rul1Cul, s pacious new EIToro 3232 ----\'ll'"' t11>k. ~1511 lse. Twnhse. "'~Ile toSublease2Br,2Ba.Jari:-c nopets.S215·2147 i:;lden apts.Pool,pvtpalios. ••••••••••••••••••••••• W1llnw llomes. 3 br. 2 ba, 4!1!1·21111 l'\•·~ Manna ~.c-c focthlles. Jpt AV<11I 1mmcd. $7()(; ~~c 979·1658: Ev:. Adull:l,nopels Su1wr3hr.2ho.fpl<',l>W, DW. f µk, rpb. drp... ---SUS/mo.4!!3·4290. mo.\9!12835 _64_0.._70Z1 _______ -t 329Avocado,C.M. c 1H s d r JI!>. S:l85 /mo S3!151 mo. 963·456!:> Agt l\o Home, ocean & canron 2hr condo Pool patio i\dult hvrng 111 !.pac .. new. 646-~ 963-4569A~l Nulf'c fel'. \U, pnvate Li.; :>•cl. tndr', drps, crp.ls. "ar', d •----------dt.'C'k , hutlt ·rn:.. :lllr .. , Xt .. A.._A---• ly r e cc. 3 br, 2 ba $150. 1 BR Dplx, matr. 130'0NTll .. ;Wi\Tt·:n1 l.1vl.!1nlrv1neV1llai:e We hurdwood lloor!-Call $240/m o. r.i nice ~ic••ns townb:.c w /p a t10 & cpl. No c hildren. Stv, 3 bu rm nt'W ho ml· on hJ\'C homes :.1V:i1lable tor ltOht'rt Mance. 752·titi11 _493·3406. _ Unfurnished garage. $300. No pets. rdrig, non-smokers on: L.1kl' fo'orp:-t w \ ll'W ol k<.1!.e m · or 494.3&17 w e,tminster-3 298 • •• ••• ••••••• • •• ••••••• l.-15-3381 or 837 ·9517 fy. Refs. req. 954 W. 17th, w.1tcr t:;~ Ml ft 2 ha Walnut Sq The Ranch ••••••••••••••••••••••• Getteral 3802 3{\r den 2 frplc hcam'd ~-0358 ,\ l' wN har, frpk. pat11 l)\•C"rf1cld Cul\ crdak I ~~8 ~l~~:~r:· 3 Br. fa m rm Nt'd r ··:h••••k••••r•e·~t·~r·r••e•la•n•e• ce'i I an ~s. S3S o m o. 3 B-r-.-lle-a_u_t._a_d_ul-l~c-O'ftl-. ~x~:bi f~::;;isc11~:.;'11~~;: Ca 11'~·~1j'1~i!'-' p~~~· Park J\gnt. 642 ~Sii schools Lrg rncd yd. S37U 1~ rid~ h~ ~ t \> 1 , 642-0974 or751-92~ plex. Pool, gas & .wJ!t.er 3 nr ,.<mr <·hoicc or (fl) l---H'll 32SO mo. <.:all 8J9·l5~ Sl~ws.n tooumscovu P,~.· "Tnh:, pd. Encl. garag~ ~. lkady now! 6<10 11300 , oquna 1 s Condo . • " ~ ... . ,;-!Br. cpts. drps. bltns, 642.5073 lrom 8~5 to S.'><Kl ••••••••••••••••••••••• m1n1ums pr{'st1g1ous community . palm. $205. E·s1dc. --------- V /\CANT ~ri.ut 3 llr. f p 4 Or your d1111ce of ctj) Btdt•c .1 br 2 In cpts Unfurnishe d 3425 St.<c our furnished mode l. 642·6213 2 Br. Beaut. adult".com- Nu <'pts. all hlt n!>, k11I'. IrumS-150toS575 t · t · 'r 1: uw' Ill'~······················· Sp;H'IOUS 11 00 sq . fl. -plex. l'ool.gas &'water E"\Cf:l,l.~;NT r c·111,rl honw Co~la M1•,.1 l'or lot :J HH. 2 II\. <lhl 1!·11 fpJ,. & xtn1 1•onli l1111111•d sa lt• ~SR.SOii l all 5-15 812·1 1\gt r;'t'li)~Ji;~·;.o~·~. SJ~~ RAMCN1H1FR1•Et·:.AL.TY '.1:-~'a"·s:J~~,;,o 003·45ti9 Mon l1e·c ll11 . :I hr , townho,use apts ric·sllcd B~crel,o~ n.~~ unfurn. pd. Encl. garage. $2SO. A N ~ f • · · cbhwi.hr . n('W 1Jt1inl. new 1n WI{ c 01w11 spaces nt a urt: .qur . 642_5073 FULLER REALTY 551;·7777. no fl'l' SS 1-2000 gt. ~_cc. ----cpls., no pets. SI~> tl cp. ~r~l·1wry. all 2 br. n~ ba Martinique Apts #2 -------- 546_0814 fountain Valley 3234 Laquno Ni9uel 3 2S2 Jsl & last. S.125. 548· 13tl2 w 11 h I g <' pr 1 v a I e. 215 K ISUl Sl. CM. East.side 2 br,. newly de- 6 Unih·LOltCJ Bea c:h ••••••••••••••••• •••••• 111 11nd llC\\ :1 hr. 212 ba. ••••• ••••••• •••• ••••• •• -cnclo:.cd patios. Newly 631-3003 coraled w/th1ck , plush Will more• tha11 rn;1k1• tlw Fireplal't' .1 hr 2 ha l'O\' xt ra:. ~~tif> No pets ... • ,. l\l ON AR c 11 d i\ y Beaut clct·orat ccl QU l\'l p.unlcd & every luxury . crptg. Nr schools, ~: payment... C.dl i.'1:!0~:1 Nt-:1-:0 i\RENTAL? p.itm. nl:": 1.11\:.. ur;,~ •"'-1mx.1;1nr11:1:l :!IU!l VILLA Vt!ry µlush, 3 adult co11d~1 . Tui.lln hrand ncw-<:pts •. drps, New & nice I br. Pool, mo.540·1877 ·• , . or f'41Mll60. Ai:nt. l'll·a~l' Wl' haH lhl•m, 1 4 Bdrm l>W '\o w,I'< tlrs. supci UR ;i• ~ 13/\ 111511 sq fl Walk lo :.hop~ t•nlr 3 br, ranges, :.11r cond1l1onmi;. adults, no pets. S230. E Id b ...., le-av{' n:iml' & n11mlu·1 h.itl,,. "l'b, l>lll•'lt.' ok Pa~oramlc '0 \'11' 111 • \ ;l'W 2 ba. AC. nr f14ys. I i;tory vinyl floor:,. 20 m inutes 548-4757; 646-3798 aft 6. $260. asls e 2 r. 1 .,.. 2200 Nt-:WElt\il't' '"'fiJl!-liJOU loc~5i mll\M.:J.l5t'9A~ •REMTALS • Le· ,s700 ' Walt-rmcl.$375.547·1450 from A nah e im on _ --balcony , near .ne.w~ Lots for Sa le t\o fol· 2 BR. 21 ~ h.i . --.. 5525 :BOND REAL TY • aft4pm Riverside f'rwy to Grand F.asts1de. 5 Brand ne"." de· Adults, no pets. 64~1~ •••••••••••••••••••••••1rnmal''l"'t'lu1l1lt·:.at:.c11mµlredcc· l hr 2h.1, 11:3R,clcn.2ba .. S.17 .,.,1,,.11 F liJl :!'.>l2 A ~ t Fu 'hd 11ffr:i m p . 285 South luxe 2BRUnF!L'.Quredt&Duplex 2 br'lba Clea.b'& NORCO AREA mncll'rn .1 Br:! Ba. AC. Ol.'\\ cri>b, drp ... ~ p;11nt 2 HH &.P1ll1! ~7 "''"'"' ·'c -p--.men s nus e V1ccnl111, apt 2. Corona. private. ,ast s 1 l'. . · • . · t" ·• u > I' I \ <'SOI .-,. • •••• •• • • • • • • • •• •• • • • •• • 0 )735.5144 Townhouse type w /J'l\'l. <1 u 1 et . S 2 6 S -i ~ $ 21/2 ACRES hllrh & ,,.,, Ilk,,., S4Hd l-'11k S..l HI m•1 'Hi:I 1.Jli!I 2 ""· an I ... Hl•nl U;e. 3 Br r JC('!Wt Balboa Island 3706 balCOOll'S & patios. i\lso Amen can Ave, 642-17 Jcleal for ,ub dl\·ultn~ 111 mn l'"' \\ knds 11:12 U>Sll 1\i,:l. ·o fel· 3 BR, 2 RJ ~15( tel $-l:lCI mo J:drd1•nl'f m .,., l on. h D 1 2 . I 1 I /I l --.f f 2 Bit. & Ut-n ~51 l·I : .. 5 0"'5-, 4"3·4.,·"' S ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,..nse .,.;aC . e uxe sing e eve w. ~e pa io. $175. l BR. Mature ad I'" <"n1tnlr~ ht,ofr ' lot 0 Balboa Peninsula 3 207 -''" "' " ''°' b oof J? rl oce· n D I xe Spa sh decor ... nrt"1c1r1•1r11"t1·1n111.i1"1 3 81'1·"1'""1 '"·I" • •\'L·,,Aftl.Y • r,r arenw a c u 111• ·onlynopets l47 11'1"""" • .. ~ ' ' '' •••••••••••••• •••• •••• • • 4 0 " "v '" . "" "· r " ICW ., . .,,c mo 1"0 '15 14th "'--om $310 64n""""' ' ' .,.. "'""° ()wrwr ... 111 hdp 1111.1111 l' Hunh nqton Beach 3 2 sun l.u1s lky Mission Viejo 326 7 2 13r apt w t nil S.125 mo ' ~ ""' .., · ..,..,.,.,., St 642-2628 ·, full pnt·c ~1:;,000 2 Bil, l fl:l. partly furn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 HU . r H . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• WILLIAM WINTON ~t. t;.$5-1000 or (I M!l3·6575 LRG 2 BR I n hops --· --------- A""'. 671-7601 yrlv P n•fcr ~P,I ';1'/l 2 Story. 4 br, 2 ha. fplc, 4 Bit -. l><li 3 BR. 2 H,\, on quiet i.l Rl'al l-:Sl:\ll.' 675·3331 e\Cll adlts/no ·= • Jt~I pd ' BEAUTIFUL brand new -'-'' 1•h1hl. nn JX'~~~7:3_ DW. l'Pb. drp:.. cle<rn An<l "c li.1ve others tor Huge ya rel. t'll•:.tn, pre --. · · bach apts. Fi rt!pl;icc. n. h I rt I c-•-5 'I"'' 156!n i\•t 1mmed1:1leol·cupancy •.ll•'" ar"n "hown by26RApl W1mer$290 l8S4Monrovia.54lMl:l.'l6 Rcfrr g. inc l. '°195. ,,.•nut. 1 1 cs<• •i.:. '.irw :Ilk. 2 h;ith Across from "'.'" mo · u<> "· i; • ·' ... ~ ~" "' WATERfRQlllllJT l >t n t I 111l Sic· No fee appt.S.125/mo. 28Rlwrdplx VrlySJ7S ...,. Adult2brlownhouse,I ~ 645-8256or979-3376 I • w I I l'I. ~ II " • ' lt1v he;wh LO\ rly \ l('W -__:._ 3BR s R r l u d I &1.19!i l lfi l.J.l!l M!IO)rl\ 1;7!'1 1:1111 ''ON. DO., Br, _,en 2, .. ",·t . l.eadersh1p lh•al Estate .iy rn pr P x 2 BDRM, bltns. range & bath.' patio. g arugc, 2 hr cpts drps Bltns. " ' " • u !W2-446fldyS.l'\e536·3181 Adltsonlynopcts o\'cn. refrig., frplc., di;hwhr,644-0878 S225'.Kidsok. • Real Estate C d IM 3222 wshr/dryr. nr Harbour. Vrly SH7!i wshr/drye.r . new .~rpt-"A""""°. E h 2800 orono e or $400 mo. No pets. Dys New Cordova 3Br ,2ba,h"' OONTVI F R &ASSOC d · & UNUSUAL2Br2Ba .,...,.,,"0 ICC: ange ••••. •. •••. •• • •• •• • •• •• • ,.., • • • • mg, lrg patio eek, pier ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-~21·2519, f.\'S ll462261 walled yd, i;:rcat \U. HEl\LTORS 675·40011 doC'k included for your twnhseapt,goodloc. Luxury 3 br. 2 ba. frpl'· llca11t duplx. 2Hr, l·'• b:i, - --P ntro:; cul-de-sac $2!)0 -$275 548 4971 .... MOBILE HOME PARK rrpl. + <'tra!-Se,. of hwy 4br Twnhse. Cpts, drps .. 'J'('rrace Townhomc, 2 br. Od. ~TIS/mo thereafter. Lillie cut1e! $165. Util pd. own boat, up lo 25 ·-. . pvt yard. gar. Quie l cul- ;o s pa<'<' lop ~all•cl a 11 $450 mo . 5 l~l-95U I. nu d c c o r. n r s hop!.. 2 bu, upgr~tdccl cpl. X Int Owner 7f>8-3487. Ikady now• Fee. $550/mo. Huge 2 br, coverod porch. de-sac ~·side. 548·9545 o.r a<lultpark.l.rg2hrhousi•. - -school & bdl. 2 11011b & Joe. S375. 833 841!8. MamRentals,540·5370 ulllpd.$245mo. _64_5_-_234_5 ______ _ tor owncr,ml!r l-J'·2 Ur. 11i Ra , d ouble reccntr.S350.%:!!17SM 833.1912 t-1 rtBe h 3269 ------3 BDRM. 2 ba. bltns, 642.6612 acre;, & pl'rm1l for 12 ~a r a ~c-. l ':i bl ks lQ -------ewpo oc: Bayfront-ycarlv. 3 nR . 2 near beach, S400/mo. 1 br, very lgc, partly furn. acid;! s pal'C:I $200.01111 lx·ach. new p:unt, cplS, ** IMMAC :i llr 2 Ba. all NEW lJru v Pk, l'etcri. •••••••••:••••••••••••• ba. Lower unri m prime WHY MOT7 Call after6 pm. l'ftUJlY 1-'or d<'l.t1ls tall drp::., 1\va1l Ol'l 15. No hltns & l'plc, S.'ltiO me> Twnhmc. J Ur 2''J Ht1, BLUf'FS~ondo Leases So . h ay front Io l'. 2 DORM & den plus Sunken Ji ving room 548-8638 ' • D1·uce D. Howey. SJ::Ct<.: p<'ts. $410 mo. t>-11 21 l!I Mow right 111 ! Tcrnf1c Plun (;. A vu1l. Oct. 15 Starting.at SSOO Ueautrlully furn. S675 Mo OCEAN VlEW. $325. Cathedral cr1ling 3 br. 2 ba, encl pat in. Cl \J - -conrl. MS ~)427 $52.'>. 5-t7 704-1or833·3215 • Ai:enl S4'H 133 • WILLIAM WI HT OH 2 bedrooms. l 1h baths garage. frplc .. no pet.-.. . 540 3200 So of llwy. 2 hr. 1 ba, --- -----R IF.! 675 3331 OCEANFRONT Attached garage l • frpk, l•Jtn,,. No Ind:-. noSPOTLl':SS new plu:-.h A\<1.tlable Oct JS. College EXECUTIVE ca state " Washer/dryerhook·UP S325· mo. Ca l a:rc i;. Re....a Estate pl'ls S325 673 31122 cpl. d::.hw~hr. d1 .. posal, P1k. 4 11r, 2~'2 ba, bonus RENTAL SERVICE Balboa PHlinsufo 3707 2 DORM, carpe ting & Pvt.yard with pal·10 ,_67_5_·35_7_7_. ------""" -l 3 B 3 11 1 h drapes. range oven . • Wont~d 2 900 HARBORVUHOME parn . r a"" m1: rm Sol!l!i mo/lse p ref. H OM E S, CONDOS,••••••••••••••••••••••• re!ng, d shwsbr, huge Adulls,$350.mo. LGECleanpaintadlllr. •••••••••••••••••••··--Encl 20-:20 honu!. rm (213)926 3518~ves. APTS. from $400. per BEACll. View, pier, 2 Br d k I FOXHOLLOW Cpts, pullman bat.ti. Pvt I 1'<11ermo4hr. :lba, frplc, $395mo.54S-:135!1 month S400 l 8 $.120 & $270 ec .S450fyry. ILL GE t SJ85645-421i6 Pnvale party wil 11.ey pool. t«JIJana. Si001mo. --TllRTLEROCK Prcsidcnl 6 73 7·60 I AGT · r1 .. 03 L' • JACOBS REALTY V A e_rr_a_c_e ______ _ ca~h foryour,•qllllY Ai..'1..673-7601. 2 Br house, l'bihln•n prest111.c home w pool 3 • . i\dlts, ut1 pn 3 r~. 67S·6670 621W Wilson.C.M. STUDIO Apt. pvt d~ell• __ Call~!>HO:Jl1 wl'IC'Omt' $2!15. mo Or. l'omm tennis. $625 OCEANFHONT Vl EW Edgewater. Cl)ll7l·2!!fi6 642·4991or642-4226 ing, ulll pd. Sngls·o.iily. Rental 1t~i;5~u~~x ~oBd~g;, 962·3S33orsJG.o32i ~644 4157 C~NDO. 2 + r~en. 2 car BALBOA IHH NEED A RENTAL, $180. 1 br, pool, 1 adult $175.Aft6PM 1·528~'1~ ••••••!•••••••••••••••• A.i:t,l>a\·~S.S.W·7211 3 Br, 2 Ra. crpl!'>, drps. 2 3br.2ba,Gre,ntrcc homc pnv~te bp~ldrksng,._Cull 1 hr incl ttl1I. 1-;quipped W h th IJ4Bd over 21. No pets. 32.'> J , LARGE2 BDRM. - - ---rar ear . S:l50. mo Grt noor plan, lrg lot. s~cunty w rn~ . ..,..·asc, kitc hen . other extras. ~ ave e~. rm 17thPlace,aft 1lam. d Ho&tses Fumished •OCEAN Vll':W 3 br, 2 ba, 675·51110or612-9608 $450. 833 2569 eves. SSOO. p/mo. Agt. 644·7211 Close lo bus. v1ll a~e ~Wt~~ii~ngl~~\oo EASTSlDE 1 Br, newly Q,, 'tt-~~~~ 111(}~~~~ ••··~··•••••••••••••••• 2 frplcs, i;or w/elec door, . st.ores. $190. mo. 675-874 S24-8640 X""" CopestranoB~oeh 3118 washer. dryer, refrig, 4 Br, pool, kid!!, pets ok. 2 Br, vacant, form uln, Roatshpava1lwlth betwn 9&fi Bolboolsland 3806 redec, yard, S23S. 546-, _____ """-----c""" (>n h l f 3 BR. 21": ha Tnwntinmc. 4253, 1-492 3710 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• po<ll, dN•k, patios. full """""' ..:ac com 1cr, cc fpl. 2 car 11.;ir. A sk ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Huntl~onhoch 3840 """"· 2br. 2l>a. "•jf"•'n. m··111t "'··,2~. 673 """c. $15. 6.11-201 1 0111.f\"t ~·I" 5880 559·025 .. " Near beach. I' hone Corona def Mor 3722 • ..,. """"' ,.. " u ~ " """" .. ""'" " o I A OF.LUXE 2 Br, sundcck, 2 Bedroom, lnr"e. lleam ••••••••••••••••••••••• fr11k, ch.'nnini,: S(•rv Nov -- ------ll:irry. S4 · 151 gt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,.. thru Ap rrU!l:i llllti OCE.AMVIEW ·l Br. 2 Ba, fplc, dhl gar. Univ. Pk. :\ Br, 2lh Ba.•-----• ----BR 2 ba oceanfront at prkg, step to bch & shop-ceilings, pool, available l Br. t bu. frplc, at tho & POOL S400 mo. First, Ja~t. & fam rm. frpk & s undcrk, Westchff. 3Br. 2Hn . frplc. C<iM M aii~ bch Garnl{e pinii. $325. 548-4.970 bcf now at S210 a month. bt'ach. Gar age. Gas & LOC)mto leach 3 148 cleaning. 9fi2.77fl8 2 stv tnhome. 552-1Tl:l6 or 2 car gar, enclosed yard, A .1 f r n $1' 50 8AM/afl 7l'M Mature adults. no pets. water pd. $225 mo. No !'harp, newly redrrrt'o, S.'il 9444 M 0 qwel area. $475. !Wl·7300. \'Ill · un u '. --Bob at 5484661 or Scoll pct~. 846-9088 or 900-2:125 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Rr. 2ba hm. Modern Vacant 4hr. 2-slO•'Y. frpl<', · r. unn Wntr .. $750 Yearly. lirll Botboo Pffllnsula 3807 7"" 1920 GU I ·Gu~ ... con ·GE us Grundy Rltr. "15·6161 -.· oSrt !ICC mgr apt 9, 4231 l -""" "" kitchen. hlrch cabinets, din rm, den, 5'125/mo wt *LEA.SES* PENln ULA P-T. " ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Bdrm. Oc·can View. elt·c hltns. Wood burning pd.894·32AA. (somcCor6 mos.) Exec. home, like new, CoitoM~•a 372 4 $375. Yr ly. 2 br, 2 ba. 2 NEAT & clean 2 Br upt,1--·-------,.__ f'ool, frplc. Moinlt•nnm·c frplc. lots of storage. 2 RR fomrm S.'l7S superb ~uulily. 3 Br. din ••••••••••••••••••••••• story, 2 car encl 1tar. S205 mo. Adults no PC!5· I & 2 Bdrm Beach/Pool & util included. 1450 mo. Enclosed patio in front. 3 BR. 2 BA. hltn11. nr · '· •. • • -~ rm, den. 2 frplc's. Long J wr.EK & UP Balcony. 642-1003 Nr. Shops & bus, 352 Vic· Apt.">. $190/up. Adults,· oo 494-2996 Ot•ck overlooks pool. beach. S375fmo. 34 BH. ram. rm ..••. Sil hl term lease. $3 .50 "" -loria, Mgr.112.'l. fl4f.·157fi pct.s. 2W 15th 'St. & 220 $625/mo. Agent 962-7711 2 BR, den. din rm .. $425 fAMIL y HOME •Studio & l RR ApL-i . 2 br. l \ol.i ba, studio. $335 & -----.-12th St. Onthe sand!4BR.,$1300 Ttt.R T I 38R,2ba ........... $425 •TV&Ma idServ Avoil ~. 2 br, l bu upperEASTSIDE J &2Br,hkc --------- Yrlyor $150 Wntr. on oy or Spacious for the big Cami· 3 BR, din rm ........ 5435 4 Br, fam rm, new crpt, •Phone Scrv, lltd pool ~. Yrly, mo·mo. No new. From $115. ~dulls EW 2 BR, 2 Ba, + de~ l\genl494-7S.51 Group. 6 73-76!!__ Jy. 48r. huge lrnishcd 3 BH, den, l''R ...... $4~ drps, paint in-out. Lon.: •Children Section pclc;. 979-6878. nopels.130 F.. 20th St-fplc, dshwshr, 2 car pr. 20x.22'gamerm.couldbe 3BR,dinrm ••••••• $450 termlea!'e,avail.S700. •l..owmonthly n itcs. 646-0SQS 2Jl7 llunlingt.oo St.. N•wportleac:h 3169 $.125. 2 br. frplc. singles dorm bdrm . n t 3BR.<lln.rm ....... $il75 DAVIDSON 2376Newport Blvd.CM Newer, Fr stding 2 br. 21----------1842•3513 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ok. Fee. shcls/Creew11y. $450. Call 3 BR. fstm rm.-··· •. $<100 REALTY i;7:1.90r,o 518.97ssor&t.'i·3007 ba. balconies. encl, 2 <"ar EAST SJ DB Fobulousi----------- Yrly, s:l75/mo, 1 l>lk to Main Rentals. 540-5370 Ruby. Agl. 968-0779. 3 RR. FR, DR ...... $535 I Id 1 1 1 1 b 2h gar. walk to ferry. Yrly huge 2 Br. balconies. e 2 br, 2 ba. Garage & bch, rurn, 2bt. frplc, lba n-a~h ~harmer $275 2 536-8091 3 BR FR DU $550 • 0 s e . .ove >' 4 r. a. SUS CA.SIT AS $JR 5. 6 4 0 . 4 4 2 4 beams, s tornl(c, like y ard. Brookhu r s t. & ..... 2911/968 2133 °"" ~ ~ · · ' ' • ..... home. Frple, all clec kil. Pves/wknds . 838·442~ new, $300. adults only no Hamilton are a. Avail .....,.. . . . br. ttar.sngls ok. Fee La Cuesta Racquet. Club ~ dbl gor Avail wnlrnr yr· Minutes lO NR. Bach & 1 J..kdys pets.646-0505 10/15. 846-9088or9G8·2'143 Lido ble. bayfront & san-Main Rentals, 540.mo 3Br. 2ba. lld tennis. t m1 552·70 ly. 673-1334 aner SPM. BR furn. Adull<I, no pets. --=~-------1----------1---------- dy beach. 3BH,2 ba. sngl 2 Br 1 Ba 5 blks from bch.$450/mo.960·3444nJt -2110NewportBlvd.CM. Nr. ocean; 2 BR $28S; 3 BR. Super sho.rp. New level home. Ftplc, wshr. beach prt yd & paUo 6 THE BbEAUT. ;o~do$G~f l>Cr TUNNING l Br garden BR. S400: l BR $250 carpet, drapea, p'1nl. ~~.~rc2~;frr4~!~1sto 6/1. $425.675·9513: 675-878.S . Beach Walk. 3Rr, .2bo. Vlll S:~~gent.r, . mo. apt. Pool. rec areo. $215. Marshall RJty 675-4600 ~:' ~~f~~%~r!rn~ --------'CostaM.sa 322" (B )Mrll. Sec urity. REALTORS .. 7tOW 18thSt.CM. $175. UUJpd.AvaiLNowl -~ar-S350mo.Call 646-SU$a1t. ----------1·•••••••••••••••••••••• $500/mo. 960·3444 oft Balboa Penin Pt. l~ Furn 2 Ir Fee. spm HEWPORT CREST GREAT 3 BR 2 Bl\ CON-Gpm, wkdys. 4 Bedroom. 2..., ba exec. Prof. decorated 2Br. 1 Adlts,no pets .. w/w. drps, Main Rentals, 540-5370 VIEW CONDO DO cpts, drps, rplc. walk 3 BR, 2 ba, very priv yard. home. 2 cove~ed pill ms. ba. $475/mo yrly l~e. ~ blllns, pool. $225. 645·3971 Corona chi M• 3822 195, ulil pd. 1 Br o)d.rr Beautifully decorated-In closets. e ncl patlo dbl $400/m o. 847•3293; Walt or glass in hving blk to O cean/ Bay·----'-------• ~11,,,., duplex, yard, near3 heh. completely furnished 3 gar. p00l. adlts. $350. 847-8420or9G3·Z42S ram rm. Extra lJie yd. 6'15-5475 ; Large 2 hr, clean, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pt"tn.. ~ No dogs. 536-85 9 or bedrm, 2V-a bntlt. "'2 Car 642.nssor64.S-2:l<tS Near shopping, schools, purified water, lnts or Dupleit, lower, 2 bednn, l UYES UP 213-396-5742 1arage. 2br condo. $390. Isl/ last/ comm. park &. poot. . lawn. Covered gaTBges, bath, ga rage, refrlg. TO ITS MA.ME AGENT648-3255 super condo. 3 Br, 2 ba. c leani ng . 675 -490 $475/me>. ~ ~~~!r:~1~:~C: ~n~ o ff &treet ·parkinl(. stove incld . Xlnt toe. _________ 1 frplc, pool, clbhse. Nr wkncts ; (213) 92$-4796 551·2000.ACJHt. qualified tenants. Call Adults, no pet s. 2020 ft65{t~2 I~· Barrell ~~;:~:~~t!~~l~~ Sfff .. acll 3 184 shops. $375. 645·7953; wkdys. BARBARA Fullert-0n Ave (1 hlk E. or _ea--'y'---·-----t 673-2332 CULVERO•'LESCHOOL : Newport Avc.1 blk So. ot .~. ON BEGONIA: ,·m-create a relaxlnit settlnR •• ••• •• ••••• ••• • •• • • • • • Lo el h 3 Bd 2 '" ·--_ .. ·-h .......... ,.. I v Y ome. rm , 3 Br z Ba \o\ blk to .... rk -r --ac "-•-· r Bay) 642-8690 1or your 11poclous new 1 llA.CHRlOMT For lease $&50 mo. Lovely ba. Good neighborhood pool $400 mo Broke 675-3000 · maculate. cbarmlng 2 or 2 bedroom apart· 3 Br, $500.1\vllll tn June. 3Br. 2ba. cul-de-uc Nr beach. fncd )'ard, n 67s.m3 • bedroom apartment. mcnts . F r om $230. plex, 3 BR, 2 Ba, wallt In rl05et, frplc, all blln~. close lo bch,. Gas ll·wlr- pd. $365. mo. 846·2116' ~or (213) S92·2l35, home. f'rplcl nic(' ylird. pets. $400/mo lease. t DIH\am $195 Corner lot. No pets or Furniture avall»blc. '30-ln66 CollMS-7240 or lnlo. 1168-61187 Greentree area. 3Bdrm, NEW 3 br tnbse. l ge Lolli or hllns. pool, w11lk chUdren. $3SO monthly. Small pets OK. Adults•--------...-....::.:.:...:.:;,,:,;;... ______ ,. ________ , _________ , baths, family rm. Pall rooms. Crplc, p00l. S550. toshopping, •.ca mJ ooach. COLE OF NEWPORT only. Of'fice open 9:00 to SouthLOCJlllHI llH 21 br1• fodrm1 hal dhln.rml.r' "!ntR I<><". b8eac2h area. 4 k tarae yord. F.1ttra Kldsok.61S.Ul66 931W.19thSt. REALTORS S:OO. 2300 Fairview Rd, ••••••••••••• ... •••••••• rp c., l' wt r. sc .. • I I;\ "· <'nr gar. cleen.$450mo.545-7117 5411.0491:2 675-5511 Cost a Mesa. Phone 2Br.2Bacondo nroc:Hn. clun range & oven. nt'Wly l~cpd&dec Nr WATERFRONT dph; 5'5-2300 --------- T e n a j , , p o o l , Mature couple prd'd. achl & a hops. Reas. Greentree Homes. Dtfl 3Br. rroe boat dock. Pr1· Atlnct z Br l Ba upper, PACIOUS GBl'den Apt, z 8h1cw&oon VUla.l $450 Oardenu tncl'd a\ $42$. pnced al l360 mo Pvt. 2br, country llWhn. rrpk. ly film. W/D $$00/yrl)'. l Br apt. SHO mo., uUl In open beam cellg nt'w Larae 3 Br, 2\AJ Ba, nr Br i Ba, pvt. i>aUo, rpc. 1110. Ownr 545·1~1 or 6)1·2444 Drs; H6·6Sl pty. 644-0ISGZ or 644· lnc!M'pd,nrpools,puk 1400 wntr per mo. cl. ~fSc-nlorClllttn.•. cpU It paint. $375 OCC. $29S. 988 VaJcncla wshr/dry hOokup •au 2U-f7f.S363 £n. ocfi73.1433h~ ~chl. $315/mo. 5$1 2776. T74-4384or675-61G9. 252A ljwpt 8Jvd Apl. • 24 '42 2811 t3. 546-5437, ~7 xtru. Muslsee! 981~ . . ... ' D 4 O~IL 'Y PILOT * Wednesday. October6 1978 Add IL.Build it ... Dl aper Jt...Hammer it ... Carpet it ... Cement It... Wire it ... Hoe lt. .• Clean it ... M ove it...Press it...Palnt it... Nall it ... Praste r it ... Fix it ... SERVICE DIRECTORY P l umb t ... ate 1l ... P1pe 1 emo e Roof it...Landscape it ... T11e 1t ••• Trim 1t ... Sew lt ... Haul It ... Add it ... Plant It ... Alter 1t...Learn it.. . ........ OOM '-"'"• Seniu ~k• °' ... ..., GardenlRg tto.1de ... 1 MmoM r PalinffnCJ/PCllPMi•CJ ReMOdtt & • .,. .............................................................................................. ······················· ......................................•.............................. ······················· Addltionll·remodels. ru11. Attomey',Overloadlit-rv mpoo & ~team clean· Rm Addlliona. new Cabellero & Sona. Expr KOUSECLJ;ANIN G I Freeest Slumpet.one,tilc. PaintYowC•ff• {.'Ullom Bldna. Addltaon. pz-.•clna. e uperlor E 1q1~r lc "al accys in.ct Color bnahteners; hom. u. r emod..-hng, aardener Fr eat., re Our 8ualn u . Call btockwalls. bnck. plan· Avr..:t-~xtrlStyUtS RemOdel•De.1llJ'l. l'rCC workmenabJp, avi . GO 714-1Q.-0219 wht carpts 10 m'n commer'I, i:. 1n up •1onable. 64S·4U• alt Janke'a Ruggedy Aruu ters. (.)uul.Jlf wor5 at re iSty S46.5tlnlrM5rm Est.&46-4311/~ d->' compl. Ile. 11317~ k bleach Cle.n Jiv rm, din R.snbl lM7-4MT 4Pm 6'7~ · ' ais pnt'e.S. Hob 7S0.93S4. l'nccs Intl mLr'lfhibor · uo 83SIJ Part time Book ceprng rm & ball sis Ava rm 960-3953 t ---------• eervlce1 done out or my $7.SO. rouch SlO, ch111r ~. c .... , d S..-.k~• JU$t housecleaning. No ~~~~~· ~L'!,,~0· t. Tel .. ktoe 1.,-. AppHmteeRtpafr home. Call Mury nft Ouarcl1m pel odor. Crpt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• contract hassles. Refs. •"'9 -1: 7UQo/or.,.,.. 134 •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gpm.675·2023. repair. 15 yN expr. Do crub & Waic Kitchen HANDYMAN Homes & Please .pbona My ra •••••••••••• .. •••••••:• •CUSTOM PAIN'rtNC• {;ANOPYTVSVCCO. APrUANCEREPl\IR CalNMIM""''-"-work lllYHIL Refs Floor Special. $19.95. Apts . Consclenllous 673-3810 MOVJNC• Let 2 Expc-d L .. L'llalkJboutyour lat RateServ1ce $10 -Servlce Call -...., 531--0101. Coll "Sparkle". 952-6011 craftsman. &45-&S&. ~~~~ mf'n movt' you. ltear., ne"ds. Bru•·I! .. ,6.0120 •t Jo'a1r Pnc~ 960 1533 <'714 > $49·2422 ••••• •• •• ••• •• • •• • • • •• • -...,...... Rers. 494-69• ~ ~ o1 •H &FHANOJWOkK• F'Urn&Cpt Cln'g IO yrs In H•ndyman: carpentry.••••••••••••••••••••••• l'V)>--------• lab11ittincJ Cst ca bi.. compll!tc harbor area Oct Specud· ••••••••••••••••••••••• paint 'g, landacaplna, Expr'd lands capers. Friendly Moving Co Em ._ Palntml( Papt>ring • Tree ~Ice ••••••••••••••••••••••• kltCh!I, bath \'nnit1es. savangs84().Zl3S Exprd Huw1111n gardener. mov~g. yd wort<, mecb'I Sprlnklers·lnat all & dent, rnendly aervlce. Interior & f~xterior ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vacauonmolherwdl cnre slorage, est cntr tops. Yd cleanuJ)b. trimming, rep&U".847-62M Repalr . Concrete ,& Lopossrat.es 847-0994? lnsuredtOuuronteed Lie Removal:1, lrlmmin¥. loryourhome&chlldren S38·164l or Ml ·3074 Controcfor prun1n,. Ll lhul'g 1.1.e..g.._ Bnck Work. 64.>7978 , r p-...a...11t---'-225398.C.'all M2·4558 prvnm~. free e:14t. Lie d wblle you vacotio n ••••••••••••••••••••••• •uc......... .._., t _.,_..,, • ...,.. .... ., hillyln:iured.642·2624 IC.I_.._..,. LEE M JARVIS ~· ••••~•••••••••••••••••• es ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plaster/Repolr -.-------~~.~ 7~ ~nt r e l ........................ Addsllons &Remodelin" ~-YrdMalt..t. Hauhna/movlng,cleanup Uolsdeeance Paint-Repair 35 )'r s an ....................... Lees TrM' ~e rvl ce . ---------1Remodehng Framing & 96Z-SS73 Lic317856 CallMIKE 548•2049 S7/up. Treework. Reas.••••••••••••••••••••••• are a. workm a ns hip PA'I'(;HPW\STERING Artistic lrlf!'mrng & r · Will Baby<;l l 1 or 2 Finish Commercial & rast.rreeest8"2-4S97 C&TPlumbing&Paint· guar.Takf'advunt.ofmy ••AL.LTYPES•• moval. Lied Z3 yrs in cJuldren, my home, Rei;td . Cont r acto r G_ERWlCK&SON . Shades of Green·Y.ard YOU HAVEJTREADY lng.Topqualltywork,24 exper SJ&.7056. Prec~t M0--0825 are11. Compl Sllcdenlng, \Vestsillc Co:ita Mesa . 962-IS3J4,24hrs Add1tions &Remodehng Cnre. Royal service. l 'LLHAULITAWAY hr.service Nojobtoobig Professional Painter. cleanups. lod scpa. 642·7958 MLNOR HOM E RF.PAIR u c 8121942 down to "Earth" prices! TIM 548-6306 or loo s~all We guar lnt.r/Exterior. VERY NEAT PATCll 6'7~_S7_50 ______ _ L-.._ C'.-ic:.. Carpentry, Plumbing & 549"2170 673-6041 640-948S Hou:Mct..-a.... satislact.loa.. 6'.s--0239 Freeestamates 646-5315 Fr~:1t & TEXT~-~439 TREES. shrubs trimmed, ;:=.·!.=: .. ::· ........ Cerom1c T11eM05560 ••ANDERSON&Assoc. Ron's completegardening ....... ::=:: ......... u 111,.., EXPERTP . ll 1 t & removed Clnups, free Cstm Brick & Stone service. Reas. ra tes •••••••••••••••••••••.. . am ng. n r Plumbln«J est MlkeS48-6524 Me n . Lori h as \h at Carpentry Framing & Work. Patio covers, Npt.C.M .• ll.B.548-49S7 -HOUSECLEANING• f'' 1 Pl te Exlr . Fr ee es t '••••••••••••••••••••••• personal touch for your Finish . Add1t1o ns , redwoodde<-ks. gazebos. 4..s pm. ByRellable Couple Lrep aces· an rs Workma nship guar MARV'S PLUMBING hair. Get aquainted oow Remodels. Commercial. 640-8l"4 Good references S36·Till Brick Concrete Patio 642--0295 • *646_9807* • You don't need a gun to Special orter .. Hegula Ph642·45S8 Wesllawn L'acnpe ser. Block Walls BBQ Pits "draw fast" when you $10 style for S7.00. with The fastest draw in the Ctn-up, hauling, r eg. Housecleaning Sor 6 hrs, Rel, Ests846-0464 PETERS PAINTING NO J OBTOOSMALL' place an ad ln tbe Daily trf. calJ Lori. Four Winds Fiod what you want '" West a Daily Pilot ma int Free est. of own tranap. 548-001 aft Expr'd reas. rates, free FUld what you want ltl Pilot Want Ads! Call now Ud. 962·8960 Daily Pilot Classifieds Classified Ad. 642-5678.. course 640-1880. Richard SPM Want ad result.a 1542-~ est. Call Gene 552"°'58 Daily Pilot Class1f1eds. _-_642_·567_8_. ----- A,ulwllhu.fw-IL .Apcllhwahu.fww. ...._ GcragesfcwR..t050R...tahWCMhd 4600Mot ....... Trwt P«10llCllh 51SOHelpWant•d 7 10 HefpW..t.d 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• o.idi 1031 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• llwllilocJton IHtdl 1140 HuttirtC)ton hoc:h 3840 S.tlt Lagmta 3886 Garage Cor rent. storag Wanted 1 BR apt .. ycurly, ....................... SALF.&ATIF.NTION Associate Rep ~per/Receptionist. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• or worksbop. Nwpt Be Newport Sch. xlnt refs. AMWAY -SHAKLEE l80ROVER Need sti;onitofcpersonnel OAK CREST FOUR PLEXES Small 2Br couples. area.548-4258 t21Jl746-624lorfl4S.3932 SPECIAL DIST ... 0 11!.vPER ~ w/occt g & EDP e.xper • • • • "" o;;A • """"'-Salary open acconhng to @ ls~-~ ~4 r:'0 · Office R.,_tal 4400 .. _, /I t/ LOW RA TES ~~:t'~;t_M~~1!:18t~ ~:l~ If you·-new to Orange exper level. 831·2.131. •••••••••••••••••••••• -..-.s n•es ou1c1< c .a.sH -··-An '"' BOO Apai fiiiCttf's Famished • Rnanc:e ""' ""' Fi'VUJ"" oor. co .. temporarily dis~on· KKEEPER/P·Time or Uwfurnished 3900 i2fl~l.+J!~S•1....................... T.D. LOA.HS Call 549·9000 lmulng your education, 16·24 hrs week. Must Hirry! o.1y A ~Left! OPEN DAILY srAUUHG NEW-OBUXE! 3 Bedroom. fireplace & 2 bath $375 Bltns, DW, UtU Rm. 2 car gar. Will consider 1or2 Children Apts are close to Central Park & recr eation, s hopping, schools , freeways, Bike to beach! Cross streets: Slater & Beach, H.B. · -West on Slater off Beach one block, right on Keelson tocu!-de-sac. Follow the signs! ! ....................... •<litiWI a.iftet~ El Dorado MortgageCo. THE GENTLE TOUCH recen tly discha rged ~ve exce~lent boolteep- THE EXCITING --··--•llli--·-·-Oppartlaity SOOS l21Jl 671>-3160collect OulcalJ Massage Crom the serv1c~. or for rng skills. Ca~l Commuru· PALM MESA APTS ;/,,.. c-..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• or (714) ~ 751.3931 any reason seeking tem-ty Presbyt.en~n Church, , · ,:=-....-R d k'I poraryor career employ. LagunaBeach.494·755.S MINUTESTONPT J--•SCHOOL-ea ing, s 11• Social Clubs 5400 ment, consider this unl-..,.iiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BCH -,, speed, etc. ICosta Mesa) y • Bach.1&iBR ~:'.,..i:,:-•SCHOOL-Pvt Jr/Sr Annoc.ltc:emenh/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• queoppor. oucitnearn BOYS & GIRLS rrom St95 " Secy --. Hi11:h <Anahejm) Pet"$CMMlb/ AREYOU IN A CLASS Adults, No Pets ./'.....,.......... *BOOKSTORE Lost & Fou.d BY YOURSELF" S 196 PER WI( Earn $2().$50 per week l561MesaDr •DRAPERYWKRM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Has your financial working aft.er school & <SBlks East of Newport •RUG/UPHLCleaner Lost & fowtd 5300 security made you a Rase_d on your produc·! on Saturdays. This la not. Blvd.) •FU RNlTURERefin •••••••••••••••••••••••target for socinl chm· t1v1ty. co mm. +·a pape r route . S46·9860 •lMOFREERENT• Contact AgntSamCrane LOST:lrisbSetter.fem,l bers " Al Videoview lncentives&ext.ra profit\Tral'ISPOrt atlon pro· ---------1 1·2·3 Rm. offices from (714)645-4170 54()..()ro! VP ~ward' Edwards & Diamond Club. you'll s haring bonus . The vided. Ct.111 536-9712 BEST BUY $125 p e r mo. Adj . ~.. · meet other singles who Women & Men we are•--------IMTOWM AirporterHotel.Noleasc HOBBIES! CRAFTS! Slater.ll B.MZ·~3 can afford the best llfc looking for maybellredi---------- req.833-3223T1lnoon Turn Key Oper ation! FOUND : W a t ch . has t o o ffe r . The: o(typing.Cokhngpapers, IUSIOY Singll?fi, l&2 Br. furn & Lovely shopping mall! Eastblutl Dr Call & Diamond Club Me m· warehouse Jobs & work· Apply in person. Mui· unfurn. The r e's Sl 60<PER<nFT Own ·11 tra"tn' '!deal • be hi .-.c.nn Olh r in°foralimttedincome. dooo's lr1·sh Pub, 20• m1lhon in recreation . .,,. er wt · identi£y. rs P is -..vu. t: .. ~ TENNIS {pro & pro· 1617WESTCLIFF-NB ror r etiree! OWN ER 644~238 Memberships from S125. Work w/young people. NewportCenterDr,N.B. AGT.541·5032 WILL FINANCE! Uni· SSS-7090 Rapid adva ncement shop> complimentary ---------que at $10,000. 17 14) LOST: Male Chihuahua Don'tsetUelorless when possible. If you're 18 or CABDRIVERS :@ IV!. IC~ RftftM"tl. ~@ lessons, s wimming, DB.UXEOFFICES 492·5300. Pacthc Shore Vic South H.B. Ocl. 1st youcaob.ave thebest. over&would beavail. t MenorWomen 7· """ ·~· -~·1 health clubs, parties, Comml & indstl spaces Realty. Old City Plau. Black/biege markings. start work 1mmed., c Must be25orover ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!8!!!48!!!-8!!!!!!3!!0!!0!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ =· ~ ~=~~d~r:1~~~ :i j; s~.s::i:N~!f& COFFEE SHOP Cash Reward!~ E:aEa111t:a1a::::-::~:"'t! betwn 9am & 3pm. A~l!~ ~·oo _ no pets. Month to month Mission Viejo a reas. GROSS$30.000. MO. LOST: Fem lnsh Set. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 539-1183 U2S1StalerAvenue Hllntington Beach 3840 Mewport leodt 3869 occupancy. Models open Handy to S. D. Frwy. f'ffi? standing, seats 125. yrs. Nr back bay, Irvine Schoots & ---------1 Fountain Valley ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• dailyl().7. Call831·1400 Ow n er movi n g t o Ave area . Re ward Instruction 1005;1•--------mJ---.:__ __ __,_.;, __ rA.tUC NEWPORT ---------· Aniona and must sell. S48-8645or 645·5707. ••••••••••••••••••••••• AYON Cafeteria H ..... BY THE SEA New 3 br deluxe lnhse. 20114\h St. 536·1718 APARTMENTS Oakwood GftrdenApls FOR LEASE Goodterms.Agt.837-4200 Los t pe a cock . V1c.1-------i S..bsfitttM lor2 Bedrooms and Newport Beach North 3 OFACE-S Rowen &Plaftts PI ac e nt i a. 19 th & IE A HGT• A Vert Short hrs . 3 Hra as Townhouses 880lrvine <at 16th) SI 55 MO EACH NE'TSS3,SOO. MO. Pomona Sts. CM. Call TRAVEL AGENT MMTY Christmas needed. Must have car. llOCKTOIEACH From$329.50 (714l64S-0550 FineCOSTAMESALoc San Francisco style in _64_2_·1_460______ AndMQMY $3.ll hr. C.M., N.B. & ! Br. encl garage, patio. Ope u Da ·1y 752 1700 T p For It CdM areas. Apply at 1Di 15th St. 536-8729 or n • """'"~~ • major shopping center. Sml Blk/White Cockapoo o ay Newport Mesa Unlrled -1118. A Spa·Pfools·TeFnnl-sh . lN700cwpo16trthStBe<aactbOo~•uetrh> •= Only shop or Its kind male. Collar only. Mesa MorniEn1t·J\!1ernoon Start Now-Sellin g School District. Food .,.,.,.. cross rom as ion • around. Xlnt terms. Agt. del Ma r area. Reward vening beautiful products. Call .. Del..-u_XJ_e_3_b_r-. -2-'h_b_a_a_p_ Lslaod at Jamboree on (714)642-8170 ~ 837""200 546-a301 CLASSESSTART 540-7041 or Zenith 7·1359 ~~~7 Placentia, w/Washer~er hoOkup. San J oaquin Hills Road. OOMS 4000 · ---------MONTHLY for information. l.«epaUo. 1375. mo. cau 1714)644-1900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'NVESDIENT DtVISJON REST/CKTLS Found. wht neut. male CAUFORHIA 146-1371 as'k for Ingrid or•---------1ROOMS $25. wk up wilh BAYFRONT Office Bldg. GROSS$51,000. MO Kitten. w/red collar, lov. PACIFtC BlONDES WANTED ~l3afterS ...,.,.1 ... su• .a.PT kitchen. S.37.50 wk u SpaceAvaU. Reas. Corlee Shop. Lounge, ing. Nds hm. Vic. Ed TRAVEL SCHOOL Babysitter needed im· 1 . 11 d 1'le 2 BR, 1"2 Ba. pat_io, (rplc, gar, pool. Quiet adult Townhouse. 1 MJ . to beach. $285. 898-2470 r-..,... " -O n· g Rm • --a•""' on Inger & Edwards H 8 mediately. Tues & Wed. Se ling nation a Y a • 2 BR, l ba unf SSO<>y~ly . ,pts.5@.9'75Sor64.S-l967 67S.-Sl4l ~ 1!ay to s:m";;o In 846-2974 ' . . 610 ES~~h tis\ Aoa 2 15to S:l5. Own transp. vertiscd HEAD START OCEANRlONT S2S per week, 1 blk f 444 Newport Blvd Ste D. amuent area. Civic & ---------• Reliable. N.B 642·64SS. vitamms for your hair. 38R,2 ba .. yrly.$?4S beach. HB. Call Mark a 456 Sq.ft. $l6S. mo. Util Fraternal meeting place. FOUND: set ?f keys on Accred!Esta~~:!i~TTS Ba bys i'tte r my h om e Set you r own pace ... EWPORTtiut1t.a.CE 960-2626orleave msg. pd.67~7 Agt.837-4200 brass nng. Vic. Dover & w/good profits. w/lhl• " ~~ .,,.. .. Tues 497 2695 Financial Aid Programs 2:30-llpm. Live 1n or out. top notch prod•"cl. On)v 3BR.2bacondoSSOO Sleeping rm for rent wui, • • 3Child.642·1460 ... , 3br. 2ba, ocean view, gar. SEA WIND COMDO Westcllff area. Pref. Cul IRVIN E·7 r oom oUice DB.ICATESSEH FOUND: S mall black ---------i---------1 one representaUve per $335. Avail J0/1. Family Ume student $80 mo a suite w/conference rm . NETS$400() MO f 1 . BANKJNGTRAlNEE school or organization al· ·.,, (' I c 0 m e . 2 BR. den 2 bo $450 . . Ideal for accc<>untants, Alt help run. no seating, Cockapoo ema e, VIC BE A BARTENDER lowed. Call Charlie Mann '~9088/536-4508. BAYFRONTHOME SPM.&42·6846 contract ors $7SO m o. everythlng lo go. Heavy lrvine/Turtlerock , CountOnThis! t714)894·2312 --------~ JBR.2ba.$2000Moyrly ear OCC . Kitchen m-3560 foot traffic loc. Well 833-0380 FullorPart·time To develop into bright•--------- 2 br, cpts .. pool, play yd.. S..-TO 1., .. CH prlvgs. Prkgapace. Pre!. established w/xlnt re· SCRAM-1.EJS Be ready to work as future for sharp client Canvassers no P ets . 2 2 O 8 A . · 1 ....-~ ~ male $125 mo <>Ar:""""' PRIME CclM prolessional bartender in oriented indiv. Call Pen· STUD.,.,_S 2 BR' 2 baths.~"" · · · ~ putatioo. Terms to right .....,. • Delaware. "6--0959. '"""' A ..t ....., A""" l week. Free job place-n~ Young. 833·2700. Den· Needed as phone & foot NNr Le*~ Parlr .aeetuxe 3 br, 21.t ba, alt. _dbl gar., paUo. frplc. 1709 """Alabama. 536-3485 or 5J6.-1718 3 BR.2 ba, winter S375 Room for rent OFACE SPACE party . ._ •. ...,,..._,., ANSWERS ment assistance. ms & Denms Pt'rsonnel solicitors. $3 per hr. Aft l·BR. l·ba. S2SO yearlY 17606 Van Buren 3500 sq rt-62" sq ft. Am· Secure ln~nhMnt American Bartenders Service of Irvine, 2082 schl hrs. West Coast Huntington8each pleparkiog,oceanview. D d f Bridge-Hiker-SchooJ MichelsonDr. Insulation. Call Jack associated BR O"-ERS ~JA TORS JO]', 'W P~tt .-: t.' I '"f' Priva•Aen•-•·bath.• •te Available for Immediate First Trust ee 0 Niece -Babied-l104E.17t.h S~SA 751-5411. ·"" ... , .,. ..... occupancy. Ideal for ac· $200,000, available for RIDING 834·1960 BANKJNG 1--------- ckg'g for quiet empl rem. counting, a rchitectural oceanfront property· 0 .... 1 .... ls adding a whole --------• NOTE TEI.UR CARPET LA YER Ref $l2S 64&-8502 Valued in excess or ~ I •-.-----iiiiliiillliill-----s-. ;__--·----:--.. __ , or engineering firms. ~.ooo. r-.~1 rate & new dlmens. ion to educa· ._.__ W__.__.. 707 Bank exper. Contact Bob Call 752·6108 2 BR, 1 Ba. new y decorat·•• -........ ~ ..a;-~ DING -U1mrUt c 1 ht I · N ed g age $200 mo Vocaffon ltetltals 4250 Call (714)67S-761l terms to be mutually Uon: Rea~. RI • ••••••••••••••••••••••• reg on. rvine a· sai~an. 6 P.m.. . •DRUXE-••••••••••••••••••••••• agreeable. Fordotails and •rtthmetlc. I want to be a bartender. ~~O.~. Bank, 833·3700. CAS~~~~i1~~:! Eastblull 3 br, 2 ba.MAUt,Hl\WAil.Luxful· $150Mo.tlt FOUND yng G e rma Wmtraln atmyex.pense. IEAUTICIAH ls lheorderw/branchO( Lease. Incl. spac. master t,v rum l Br Condo. In Sh b rd i 1 i Tom 493 5967 trrN 3844 s uite. din rm & dbl "The Wh a ler" on Newsmallofficesnear ep e n rv ne o ' . nat'l corp.seekingbright -·•••••••••••••••••••• gar age. Auto door Kaanapali Bch. Tennis. Brtstol&NewportBlvd MAY 0 CK Campus ~r. 'tr~ Ja:f HelpWanhcl 7100 HAIR CUTTERS "people Pleaser." Call Rancho San opener avail. Pool & SSS day, 1345 wk. 67S-236l Roy Mc~ co•POu,.,o,. beree Blv & v. r ••••••••••••••••••••••• lmmed. opening, can Julie Maloney, 848·1288. Joa.quitt Apts recreation area. Adults or (2U)899-'121.9. Reaitor 1110 Mewport l.t.GUNA 8EJCH 979-7490. •AAM POSITIONS earn $250.-$300. per 40 hr Dennis & Dennis PeMIOn· J • Renting from S200. ooly. No pets. Cotta MftCI 548·77%9 (7M)484-2Me LOST: Male Bia ct/Whit Acctng Clk/Ge.n Office wk. Vacations benefits. nel Service of Huntington arc A · W NB Luxurious lu.m. villu on Ti · ~..t t · R .,,__ rl Located In bu~y South Beach, 16168 Beach Blvd , Adult apl'\. Leasing pre· ......, m1gos ay, • .. DISTRIBUTOR SALES ger stn.,.... ca . v1 ecept/.A.._,reta es yjew now is a presllg Managed by Sayulita Beach near Y b 1 Baker/Adams, c .M MagCt.lrdlJOperators CoasH. tSPla1~a Mull. Regi.s _S_w_t_e_1_21_. _____ _ Jrvlne community' Granada Mgmt Co. Puerta VaJJarta. 4 br, 4 1501 Westclff Dr. our own us. on 1 566-4i677 Employers Pay All Fees air ty mg, :>40-8888. CASHIER TRAINEE Twenty Pergola, Culver ~...... Vi b ba. $500. wk. 731·377'1 Fin l lCtr $43.CIO. MulU Jevefll Mttg I Liz Reinders Agency Apply in person. &Sandburg 2 blocksso...,,.. ... ew. 2 r, gar.. to.,L._ .. 300 1~,..,...,,~L. plan .. Ground r op·Lost:2WksGrayPersa 4020Birch St.,St.el<M la'"-""'H Majorfinance co.ndeda S D ' bltns, new crpt. $275. ~ "" ---. ~ ...--partunity. Additional in· fem. cat. Gm eyes. 1 y N rt Be h 8J3.8l -..-,,.. sharp amiable tndlv. \o .P' an •ego Frwy. Adult.s.642-6889 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CaUonSite Manager focall old.Reward.640-8197. ~orAp:~/&tab '6S 11:30pm-7:30am s hift. assume up-front spot lll 559-llOO Femalo24+ losbaro3br, (714)M2·3Ulext2Ae 549-9000 •---------~ ----------• Mustbeover21. Leading small friendly ofc. Call Yearly 28r, JVJ baths. yrl,y. Ac.-oss from Deb. ' LOST woman's silvc Adv.Assl's NB Holel. Cn ll Chuck Ceclia Will, 848-1288. 'e ~ 2,8~1(-W::~s·~· ~18. Fireplace. 2 blks t.o bch. N.ll. $133. mo. incl'g uW. Corona Del Mar, newly BEAU'l'IFUL successful watch. Sunset Bch i WOMEN lB & UP 644-1700ext56S. EOE. Denni.& & Dennis Person· U/l/7: 7Si.1~1 • 1 Carport & laundry facil. ~3184. d~aled offices. Two abopinaHunt. Bcbsbop-Parking lo t o r n neJServlceotHunllngt.on · S32S mo.7S2-9031Bkr. AVOIDCNCOMPATIBLE with own bat.brm. easy p in g cente r doing Weguard station 12 Nat'l Co. has openings Bcach,16168Beach81vd. ~ hoc:h 3848 y 1 ,..._ . 2 b 1 ROOMMATES• ~de access. 182.$0 in· aculptured nails, skln Reward. 842-3742. 'or 10 new a•rls lo our BOAT CARPENTERS Swte 121. r y, v.:ean Y1ew, r, • clutil 67~5'44 care make up elc -•· .,... Ex .... r 'd High pay! Al-----------. ••h••••••••••••b•• ba dup. S3SO/mo. 644-6711> ~E·ObttsllM.&Mrrm · ~ to seti hUsband LOST CAT. Medlum public r e l at.ions & ... ~ · "' Ou let. c a rmtng 2 or 642·3639. CORONA D~ MAR translerM. No reasona· large Ugh1 brown. sho customerservlce depls. Day work week I Lo~ lol CASHIERS W:~ twnhse style llpt. l blk Takesth~G~esswor~ $150. Dix s uite, a mple b&eotf refused 545-1~ hair male. 494·1721 Ho ••perlenct w~:t~!i'1mc~~po~:tfoJ. casblers need our .,rom main bch. N lblk bch,lrg4br,2ba,nw· ou\otfandmglhat pq,A/C,6~. 963-~$0 · Reward llKnsmy-wetn:M. 275 McCormick, Costa :~l'f:f:::::.':~: •childre n S300 mo. lydcrtd,nopet.s,yrlylse, RIGKTROOMMATE or · SaJa.ty$Jl.5to$1•8wkly. d bl & 4lrf-3232. SS7S.642·3443. 83Z-41MSioce19'71 TC»&..OCATIOHS SHOP For sale. Penoaah For a'ntervle w c"ll Mesa a e neat b•P · Harbor • best. 100 -pearancc, muat ave t BR ~te"'" to bea""" _,. ils 2 b •-3 br Br bse. Beaut Laite area' Prime locatloo. $12, ••••••••••••••••••••••• between9AM·3PM. Calif. dr ivers Uc., ~ ~ "' "" ..... -. per un r "" Forest area. Clb priv. Tol ,OOOsq.ft.F'romS:SO +lnventor7. M8·0223, Drlnkingproblem? BOAT ftrst&last. duplex a pts . Newport tJtll $1 D REALONOMICS Corn CallAl ......... A'ff•' II .. 540.0925 ings in c .M. & .8 . (94·'7538 Shores, l~ blk from RefaS8l~~~eap fo'em Brokers 9-rMfcio 645-4325 Z4hra~°'d;;~a w:i't~~~~~E~nil Pl ea s e ca ll (213) ~Hiit 315 ° c e 11 n · Own~ r .. luuWGllhcl 5010 Ad ert1s ls Boat Manufac turer, _92.S_·043_l_. _____ _ •tie•••••••••••••••••••• (714)87()-9203 Ooe rm1Dat.e waoted t.oOk Rental in Irvine ln·••••••••••••••••••••••• MASSAC.I v logAas ts. n eeds: r o r e man .CASlllERPrrlME '9JZER SHARP C 'Br 2b N f I share our mellow bse. dustrial area. Phone llSTAUUNT inA.. UREMODaS NOW HIRING ""perv1SOrs, quality con· M .. --., S Br on· • a. r new, rp c, Waterviw. Sl.50/ mo. Lag answering aervlce avail. nwr .... A•v- o. Panoramic View Near beach . Bch. Ann or Jsson at Rent under SUS. mo. I can arrange • quick ~ircOITS GIRLS & M£N trot inspectors. Must be JO Key adder. Drive Ulru Pool S365 mo. $400/moyr!y.64$-7450 497-3805 ; or Nortns Rily, S*m4 ,a1eoryourre.taunnl. I ~ exper~ all phases of con-photo. Dependable. Able ~ves/wknd1; 834·35S u 76 494~ have the bQen. Let's OUTCALLOMLY strucuon. MlNIMU~ S lo be bonded. Hrs a.1 d18 u k for Mr Hom San Cleft'Aat1 -OFFICE SPACE talk. 631 3111 Ho bper. HK. yrs e11:per. Many fnnge Mon-Fri. E. Cos\& Mesa ' . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPEClALROOMMATE : Proleaaional ArtaBJdg. Olek~.Bkr fml.7M • 18Yn0r01der benefits. area.~ ;,!M.wport .._,. WhJtewater Vu. .tO yr old, .b.appf • fun. ex· .,._'7292 1..::..::::.:...:::.:.=..::=-....:..:.::...:.:::::::1---:P::RE::-:::G:-N-:-:-:ANT=::?-"-1 Opcnlng.s For : Send resume to: ...................... Lee 28r. Complekly re· ec .. wt.hes to abate his Mwf to Lo. 5025 I M keti Vt-t Box 1171M, Santa Ana, CGIWtr/S...dcrn •t.Brpartly(um.Newport. dee. Adults. S26S. 245 Br 2 Ba lwcury ............. 4450 ....................... Carinf conrtdent al :Pu~llcR~atI!sTrne Callf.92711 For drive thru pbolo • Between oc-ean & bay. W es t. M arqui t a . hume with• bcallh••••••-••••••••••••••• lst,z..dlrlrdT.D.'s ~=o~~:do~~~~S:"l •CUstomerServTrne _________ ,backup. Depeodabl• & 1 032. 6'7S.7876 «.a1t•S300 m1oded lady ag~ 25-35.lb· Cannery Village LOANS AVAILABLE ~""· Sa 5 MANlJBFOAACTT UREf• mature. s:JC>.aTa. t t.erest.e<t In joggmg, bike ~e Credilnotimport.ant .... lary ~11 ' , ~Br. adult", no pets, S200. s.ta..... 3880 riding, health food1. M&40lor67J.2918 m.-s Broker ARE '47·2583 ~ Now a cwpt.mg applka· Clerk. bookkeeping d ept ')121 E. let.h St. N. Hgt..••••••••••••••••••••••• L.el's get into & stay ant---------____ .;..._____ AIOllTIOH to $148 W ~ t.lonifor: 10 key adder bf touch. •·-..._, great shitpe together! ._... 4500 .......,w..ted SOJO ""--ln'.._.,_wee Cabtoet asaemblers Full ume. Apply, 1.54S ~·my &teps to bcb mod lArgeO.le*'OOM SUO+ \.!iutll.552·1222 ••-.................. ....................... CowlN.ling&Referral ~"' .._,,.., Milhnen Newport Blvd. C.M • .., uppC.. 2 br. beam ceti: Bulllin.s. lncludlna dls· anted wrk'g rem . t ISSlON VlEJO. R«ail, ae.p. pr~ 22 JT. ~~f;~P·~~S::= 54•.tlll Unecarptt)tcrs 842-3744 trpt, vac. ayitem. Gsr bwasber. S205 per moc>Ut. abare 388 bse, tra ynt, comm. or lnd. 18' per sq, old male ltud~t n~ J...:=~~~~~=:-t.~~~~~~~~I HeU are welde1'5 l.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii dr op erator. 026. ~~ .. ~nd last . Aaenl. Sm..chJWOK.5$7~ f\.54Mt520or581-6700. llnanciat help for a aolld •SPIRITUAL.READER S i Cabinetsnnders C&.a«nftST MZ-'81 .,...,._._. .,. n Acroa frotn '151000 venture. Please FullYl.l~Mld ntwerl na erv ce .EXPER.ONLY Ac:curatetY11ist,80wpm. ?-~~:.----:-:--~~~~~~~~~llAdy· 51, -nuts to share o.c.Ai~rt.2 ofes, J ba cal Tom673-lltl8. 3UN.ElCam1no RcaJ ~h~~~P~~:::r·J>~i,.D~ NEEDAPPLY Mature peraonall\y & BIDl.Ch~,oceanvu.4 br, S..L...-3116 ~~~~c ~c':~gedfor Balancewarebou.se 2 1g~ Ma119191a.. ,,_. SanCleme:ote.Forappt; Forest Ave, La1una MaWc,~~:~~~ts front. ott\ce •PPhnnce. • j~~·ber'b:•::·e~~P!~·0 ...................... care + 1mall 1eaia~;~ roll-up doors. sc9.1uo ~ SOJS a.-. "'2·9136 Beach. ERICSONYACHTS A~• to deal qulcltly & ., dedc 11 1 ... ~mo. 1T· e. quiet.. luxurious ex· Contact Mn Horn~ 1'tld Brodmclt -• .. ••••••••••••••••• KAREM•S Ul31 Deare Ave, ~eas.urtJyw/VWwtraf· _ ty. Eves, 87).5118. Days, ec. 2 br. 2 ba apt. 8M·2910betweeat-toam l.0009<1 ft 1539 Monrovia IJal~ S°' * * ~~~S: SantJI Ana ~~~.~· • c.4·'7321. ~vp':t:·~~~~,:'~: ...... fot .... 4350 No .• to. Npt 0 s200' LUNN /0 ~~AGE A a 5 t . M a r • STACO;';nCH.iMc • .~BLUP'Flcel Bt \t>• total sec. Perl.a lJv1na ..................... ,. Crptc1nrc.S43...Sl4S. AIMWTDL.o.w t----------1 .MAINTF;NANCE. Cou· 'MK' rastcat draw in l~ 11.39BakerCostaMeaa fp)c, refr11. c:pts, oc-wknd. retreat for the Dblgaraceroutoraat'on· l,ooo · ~Iran . secure. P'llrettTenntaln<"e~ DOTIC •IRLS ple, full lime. Salary WesL .. a Dally Pilot 549-1041 t:ns mo. MMi880 •d~lurous ndult. '515. lY 160 mo. '109 Wfflo. Stora1e or U1ht mfa. ,.._.....,.Co. eit....,.•Modelinl open. E1tper. oaly . Cl.aalfitd Ad. Phone Equ.al()ppol'Employer ~ mo. 1'f'ly.1M~ C.11. M-63S1 .AJo'T7Plll DIO/mooUl.14WS4.. 4 *!:~· ~1~4~M~·~·~·:1:~~~~g C()Qbr~~MZ~-111~m~g ..... ~2l51J~OC'~4$4~-·~268~==1~&a~..s&"78==· ====d~~~~~~~~ - -............ t -• H«!!p Wgat"9 1 i .... 1 ...... ,n. u:~d l IC.1 •.• ; \c'c.. .. .;d 7 J ~.. _ •• _..;_-·'_..;.·1_..;;;l_.;Cl;;..;b;;.;•._•..;;;0_1_,~._·.;;..13 ___ '* ____ 0_A_1L_'_P_:_L,_·,__,r--L-" .... ~. ....................... •••....••.•............ .•..••.•.........•••.•• ~. ~r....__..__ ..... .._.._-._.. _ _...~~ .. -..c~ 7IOQ HelpW..ted 7100 MATURF.Womanw1car,HelpWa.t.d 7I OOHelp W•~ 71 00 ~· '•ted 1eCO l .... ···••••••••••••••• ;:·~:·k·l:·;:;·c·k·:;~;::; JANITORIAL r lJ.:~ "b•b~~l~'~"I:, 1~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-··;~~;~;;;~···· • ~ I I t ~ERi TYPISTS Celebrity )ewt•lry No hra1days. oCCJli ever. P'RT·TIME llAL HTAT! ElC\>Cf'd la ff'lail Jewelr.· • w. rHh jnveat. SS1 4982, 640-9119 ft SALEmOPLE Ir " knowledif ol rhln11. i lmmodlate openanas for 848·308S. 847 2333 W ta.ii EXPElnll'm..JEUABLE MEDICAL WORKERS HIB>IED crysul. advct • wlndow . Clerk Typlste ArcutatCl E.mll&owk&upselhna allwu U"-FRONTOl-'t'lCE RcdlllllRultyiaaddlns dl11>lay Full tlwl' t I tTPani~wpm,10keyby J•U-....lal'• 11 Bool<kl~"''r,rc-crpt.lonlst C20M1!.n &Womeo) toll.SstafflnMl11\onVI•· m~ touch £1tt'ellent co Fuller IJ ~u.i.h l l ) fTilln ·-I -re• "' I Necdcdlmmediately' 0 A e commluion ~.... _714/SM·~l._._72·424_7 -P--w1me<11cal bll IOll exper. Eara ~ .. tra i pendin" J . n w b Kl..a.1 ~ ,. ...iii I ...__,.. -,.... • need1:d in 11.B. GOOd ,. l1 ., schPdulu ha' vunl'"""'"'""• 'S '.I C .. 644~ll89 ~ ForL-hhllStar.. aalary & cond\\lon~ Mr ~Yb)• wor,t Dll.,.MMoa cat.abllah~ wblch pro-WOMEN .~. 9AY 'tJI Noon Enc.~_._ -"T"' Dtwls C714> M4 2967 & ·rues nlahts rom .,p · vldu a areater op COllte,..c.i.-, ~ THll.vl .... ICO. ---_ .. -, ............ --)·3oAM in Latcuna portunlty for tlnand&I C~ " To the pr\!I. or It pn\•D\l' NI I 0 ... •~h l I ~Ntiw~rt CtrlJr club. Good skills Mui;t ...._.C .. ,44.1070W...,._,. Medlcal/Rec.,t gu~. ""'6 """ rn,n r ... wards. Oon"t let thlt w~al"flookln11 oranJI! PANDA NewPortlk'8ch bt'wcllgruomed. ..,.. .... 11¢"' Evtihours.txprnw Ing. t'haoct' for .t succeiurul aresalvcperso11w/\)'1:11r ..,.,.·u1tl Op•v.r Employer t•n,. raid ...,.,. Q11>tn Mesa 540-1707 Spct'lul ln~rvlewin& lutl.ll"f' Slip by YOU. ex•""r & lto<'kfiround In ~ ,... ...., ~ _ Thurs Oct 7th 10·3 ........... Hiii R....a... ""' \ti.,. ________ Irvin'' Personnel Agency SanC.:lemente ... ._., wemen's ~loth ng & 11r· ~ P,LUMBINIG 41!8E17th.Costa Mesa MGRTRHE S t0.200 Communlty~nter An elitabllshed <'Om~ny ceH. to mMlll(e & t11k.-I CLERK TYPIST Suite 22A 642 1470 ......_ W--"......... 7 100 Unique oppor fur college V serving Orun1e County f/chll uf our wnm~·n 11 lnterestin° & vsrie41 L• ....._W.,t.cf 7100·-.,. mnwu d k lOON.S<> Ille 'orth"posl lllyc•r;.. dept atourW"Glmln1>tt't" .. _ ~laO!:_CllJobs ~ :::?"••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• tr,•n c11 reer see er (J\tC>elMar) •' " ... k ~" 1 1 • INC. ~:r.:>'~1·b'~!~~/~~t~~r!.~~!'!~~~~-~~ GUYS & GALS KCTCHEH HELP ::;~~t~:6~~r~i)0~~ ~:.~ Call us For Dctnlls 28892 ~jrf.u;~~~11 · wy ~:!~ ~~~~ Call ror m· Im 8 I I 0 rt I c e . DEC. SECRETARY M111i.1on Viejo. t::I Toro Full t ime. some pert Llsn Kay ~ 1238. D\•u· ICELLY SERVICES Abee-M11rtin. Mttr THE LOOK Newport.IC M area Call n~·s slron.: :skills w /sh. urea, lo work 11 fow hours lime. E:tp ht:lpful, will nis & Dennlt-Personnel 83).1441 S4M500 I I ' Mr. Kane64S·216'!0 a qwck mind, n ex1b1Uty 11 d~y Fun Job. Earn~ lJ'ajn right person Apply Sen ice of flunllnJ:ton •' ~omp. Hsltpr 1~ c/-;;;, & a love of work & to ISO per week For an 2pm. lu1gulamoo':. Beach. 16168 Ueach lilvd, 1 ti RECB'TlOHIST /SECY._ _______ _ I I t '111' Plumbil1 I I & Hatill Care & 1 1Trutm111t Fair"~ I ·CALL: I I ' r esponsibility Call more mforma1111n phom• 2233Fa1rv1ew,CM . Suite 121 'ort me openm!(s now Exper'd front offlci SEAMSTRESS eoot. help elderly lady Cathy. Mon· fri. 8 5. l:IJO..Wl3. uvall In local faat grow-w/Polse. mature Joog'. ~11 I ~d M 6 73 fiZ67 , 640-4630. Equal Oponunily LANDSCAPING Mktng Rep Sl2K Ing busmess or¥•nln ment. pleasant phone S-l Emplo) c-r___ ~xper. required At Your S..-.lce tlon. Call 768-3064. eves voice & ability to m~-t & COOK 493-1904 or 493-!622 Leader 1n exciting travel Part lime bookkeeper 115• W<>rk wt bualness u FACTORY Hairdresser Renl i;pace . . 1ndui.try i.ech se lf sist. Lile \yp·ing. l"kev ecu\lves. Newporl Food service supervisor or percent age N e L\!gal Sect Y Trainee. t l fo <'h llengi g .,. ., ,._ C8ll '"" .,..u. f .• for active convalescent TRAINEES area 673.s911 or499 2731 Some exper pref'd. good s ar er r a 0 calculator Hrs fl exible. venter .,...,.....,..., o. hosp. Good sul & •Ass em b I er s. ---------•skills req'd. Newport f'Rspot Top Orange Co Fountain Valley. Call appt. benefit.Ii. Send resume Pockagers Center. 64C).800() Ive Xlnt benefits Cull Wed or TI1urs mom. !l-l2. ~~--------i Wlttl bperiencc NewPort Beach clothinit : swre hus opcnm11 for .i Part Time Searnstref>f> Please Contact Tailor Shop Manager 644°5070 to: Classified ad no. 764 •And Warehousemen .luhe Maloney, 8'8 1288 ~02 Receptiorust/Typ1st c/o Daily Pilot. PO liox Jobs avail. ror all 3 HELPI. ~nm:. & Dennis l'er:.on· ---·------• ~~ t~:S~.;:'~~&,5;;;~ . 1560 Co:.ta .Me:.a, Ca shifts Nofee. UdoConvalescent nelSen1ct•ofHunlington PBX AM SenOpr Sail Club 2475a Toledo SEAMSTRESS. exper in 92626 • Center Beach. 1611!8 Beach Blvd, Im m ed openlngs tor Wy , El 'Toro 92630. dressmaking & altera.· t£~ PEOPLE LVN P.M&N~ Swt.e12l mature people to work BeforeOrtl~. tlen -... P /T1me no w COOK 71'-:i"" ~itf'a NEB>E:DMOW! F/Time&Relld .MoldShopSupervisor vonedhrs&wknds. Paid F/ume later Send re. Mature person Goo1I 1JI1JrilI CaJIDirector ofNurses w /exp 10 fb rgl:. & training. Apply in RECEPTIONIST sume to PO. Box t06'I. benefits Adult resident ·Temporary Services -:;,~~l~or0;: t s~11:h~: 646-776-t ~up1:rvis 1on Apply In person, 155 Roch~ler St, Good typl.sl. Xlnt phone Newport Beach. 92660 care center &12·5861 . 4320Campus Sle 130 Perm. P/timc ----------person. 1932 E. Pomona, _C_M ________ , manner. Lile clerical Secretary COOK Needed for pre· sc:hool, p1t1me Mon -Fri 11·2. $2 50 hr start. M0-4751 Newport Beach MG-8071 ILUEJEAN JOBS Liquor Store Cieri& SA. PEOPLE PERSON ~utic:.. O.C. A!rport loca· SECY/RECEP'T. 1424 S. Grand Avl' (Newspapur Pockaglng Mature Experienced Exec needs p/time as-\Jon. Send bm1r resume . Santa Ana 558 9021 & Assembly 1 Bondable. Apply al !195 MOTEl MAID soc. In whsle supply. Ful· to p 0 Box c.19s25 Must be sharp &c w1lhn(I. •S.CrMariet W 19th, C.M. in person. Over 18, 9AM to3:30PM, ly capitalized. 673-2223. rrv1n~. CA 9271:1 ' ~e~~~~~te ~~/:~i)lt~.0~; T...J t Live '" housekeeper & Newport Channel Inn I l & • ,,.., ' ~ompanion for elder!' N.B. 642·3030 PerlK+ W•rt&lncJ Receptionist, law oH1iche. a grotwmt~ reo e1s a0te .1 THE I Coob PantryS~en DlshAttltidonh Day hrs, 5 day wk , no wknds. Newport B<'h are.a. Call FACTORY HELP Costa Mesa firm. ship. ping dept. trainee. Call for appt 8-Jlam, 545-0401. •Clerics ~ J H Bright perllOnable. I g t cons rue ion co. n ann lady in Placentia area MU Fr t. ER M EN ours accurate typin~. xlnt Point. Ask for Ed or Bol.i CaU 8 33· 1441 .Must have car. 673·6685 Installer & Workini.i 8·30-2:30or spelling & Hrs 8:30 to 493·5031 I ,BEAR 1 . Stouffer ManagelMftf Food SeNice 640·\SOO ext 1197 MELLY SERVICES ManaRer 645 3793 btw~ WorkS.;1~~-~-~eacnlng \ :30. Airport. area.,_ ________ _ l2 FAT WOMEN SPECIAL LOAN PROCESSOR ~~-6pm ask for Dick or S3·S9 per hr in pleasant _1133_·9980 __ . -----• SECRETARY WANTED JNTERVlEWS Downey Savings & Loan --s urroundings Deal $692·S84l Mo • to participate in revolu FOR YOU has an opening in Oranl(e NEEDLECRAFT • w/the pubhe in our R. E. SALES under Ge ner ;1 1 tionary m.•w we1~hl con MON&THURS Co. for individual ~x DESIGNER Santa Anal Irvine or<'. representing FT-ff 14 ..._ supervision perform~ a t.rolprogram. October4th&7lh per'dlnprocessingcon-Manufacturer . seeks Time Lire Boo~s _, wid e variety of _C_O_O_K_S_W_A_M_T_IED_-t •AttitudeGuidence San Clemente venlional loans. Savings quahried designer to as Dyno"!'1c personality Troieing~ secretarial & clerical 1 •Food Planning & nutn CommunityCenter & loan or mortgage sist 10 developing new most likely lo s~ceed. work or above avg dif Ma Barker's Restaurant. tional consultation. 100 N. SeVillc banking background prci· art needle work hoe. Interested housew1vea & •Personal 1nslruclion ficulty & does relallld 1 1 24 HOUR j 212 E. 17th St, C M •Physical conditioning At Del Mar f'd. Typing req 'd. Christ m 85 Des lgns stud~nts seeking perm. •Management oppony's work as req'd. , iCo--1u-nt_e_r_h-el-p-ru_l_l_t_1_m_e-1. •Proper Superv151on. I~~~~~~~~~~ Call Personnel C r c w e I w o r k o I positions call 833-809!>. •to~ Com minion Skills. Dictation 70 wpm. Job open for Conscien-For information call HOSTESS 17 141 5 49·0902 particular Interest. Call •On the Job training typing 5twpm. I Emergency ~ tioua person days. Some Choose F4~I. ;.~~~ell Inc h For Further lnformatkln Mrs. Weir, 546-42'70 •Many topoHlce loc's Apply in person al Foun· Restaurant cxper desira-____ ...,_ .... _____ 1 !:xper·d Ul dinner ouse Equal Opl)Or EmployeT" tam Volley Schoof Di•· ble. Apply in person or T work. Apply in person. NIGHT COOK PHONE SALES tr!ct. no I L1ghthous"' I S • <'all !>81-8290. Orange RGHTINFlA ION 1464 S Cout ltwy , ---------Dillman's Restaurant. Ln. <Comero<Talbert & 1 erv1ce Julius. La". Hills Mall. Add extra money to the Laguna Beach. Looking for a substitut"' 673-0225 ask for Roger. Phone Sales people. RED CARP!T Newland. F Vlyl ... family budf(et. Local -----------~randmother. 2 dys wk. male or female. 16 to 6S F\llng deadline Oct. 7tll. Counter person. Pa rt Amway distributor will HOSTESS from t ·30·5:30 Pref so NURSERYMAN years or age. Guaranteed REALTO~S 9'2-1O11 1976. We are an equal otl· I I ' Complete Repair ~ 1& Remodel' Service · 1 I I I I I I time. Apply Capl. !\tike's train. 673·4786. Mature hostess. part meone who likes chldrn, Exper'd, (/time. Mature wages or commissions. For details rail Linda "'·h f 1115 w l9th time. full time. Apply in & hves In CdM or cl06e male, over 21. 6 Days In-2!i0 East 17th Street. R. E SALES PERSON ·~po~r~e~m~µ~lo~y~e~r~~~~ CM ry, ' FOOD & BEVERAGE person 24031 El Toro by. call aft 4.30640·6395. eluding Sat /Sun. Work Suite o. Costa Mesa. L I c . m u i'I l b el· AUDITOR Rd .. Lag. llills. LVH·Ch~Hurse w/planls & treei; Oeliv between 5:00 & 8:30 p.m. knowledgeable ln hold·l•--------C~00EWtM1~~0AGER . Eorkn Uni.el ln The Irvine Area II 0 us E c L f:_A_N_l_N_G 11·7 sh·1rt L Charg", SJ llr & up. Overtime. 646-4223. . Ing open house & bnve 2 SECRET ARY • ... o .,.. o pf;'r wee Needs Food & 01.lvl.lr&l(e , • '" Ins. benefits. AdvaoCt!· Equal Opporturut1 yrs in local exp. Con · T &L-c..-ri t .... _ •. supervising u crew or Auditor 1 lpm-7om !>hiCL. womt n wanted. Must f liml'. 11·7 Shift LVN re· menl PQlcnl1al La,.;una Employljr ridential. 3l3S E. Coast o me"-.... n en_,.n junior s ubscription Exper'd only Reply to haveow~transportallon. hcfl'harge. 3·11 <.'hargl-! Hills Nursery, Inc, El Hwy,CdM S«Jl4toSl.lllMo salesmen You must Classified ad no. 766. c/o i'u,1.1 o,r I ~Time. S3 20 hr LVN Lido Conv. Center. Tnrn, 830-!i6!i3 Under general direction have a large station Daily Pilot, PO Box l!i60, lnmc area. !i!i9·0327 l~ Superior Ave, N.D. ---------1---------t ________ .... 11erve' as secretary to wagonorv~nandbcable Co6ta Mesa.C.a!l2626_ Housekeeper i Cook. ft.1G·7764 NURSES RESTAURANT the superintendent & to work with 10.15 year ----female for 1 lady. Live· RN'S-to $62 PIA.HIST/SINGER JACK IH Uoard of Trustees relit-v· olds. Phone !i36·97l2 for Foo<l prep J>l'rson w /ex· in No smoking Hefs ---------Fu II lime r or new THE IOX mg superintendent or ail· interview. per wanted for s m . .iOO-llS22. LV .... 'S $44 Newport nightclub. Read mm1slrallve & office ck!· quali ty r estaurant --------MACHINE l""I • music: accompany acts, FontllyRestaunmt tall: Performs highly •--------111 675·47.20 llousckccper/Companron OPERATOR Aldes--Ordertlu·S36 piny blwn sets. Salary complex & resPons1ble Data &!try Opr ----w i social secunty to live DAY SHll"T t•or8 llour Sh1Cl!t negotiable Call Bob Fis· Fvll & Part-Time clerical work: perform!. The J olly Roger, lnc. ts FRY COOKS in, cook ror elderly lady. Join a repulable, pro her7Sl-7867. A• Shifts public relatio n func· taking applicattofts for a Exper"d Only Top Pay S200mu 6751932. TRAINEES fess1onal nursmg :.erv1ce t1o ns, understand'> I • Garbage Disposals Water Heaters Faucets Data Entry Operator Xlnt benefits Appl)• 10 ---1 &w~rkthedays.houry;& PLASTICS Immediate openinJ[s pohcie~&admm1strat1vc i Min of l year ex per. v. Ii l)erson. Deon)·._ J r . 1600 Housekeeper. r 'time for T 0 hi ea r nl gene rbal hPosartp1 0 tarlfs 1 otf1myeour choice. MOLDl .... G M ... CHl .... IE available. Must be 18 or regulauon~ & does nlh<'r mo·sonl8M3741.Perm. S.C<lastHv.y,Lal(Bch new mother Due mrd me<' anica .usem Y " A " over Please a ,ply in related work 1ts rt-· I F /time. Days. Pay will -----No\• lhf' pleaH work BREHTWOOD OPERATORS person from 9:30 to ll quired . be based on expcr. level. GAS MAN/ 644·5891. CALL FOR NURSES Talung applications for AM and 2:30 to J .30 r M Skill: Dictauon lOOwpm. Apply in person. Sam Ant MCJ"T~ ---------1-1 APPOINTMENT 4500 campus Dr. Ste560 molding machineoprson at: typ1ng6!iwpm 5pm. Mon-Fri. 17012 Needed at local carHOUSEKEEPER. hven NewportBch S46·1SO!i allshlfts Modem.clean ApplylnPersonAt 1, Complete 1 Heating Dept Gillette Ave. Irvine :,;.11 , h . S 11 I + co m for 5 yr old twins. !i da~s 1213) 4~91 manuf. plant. Paid group 385 E. 17Ht St Fountain Valley Sch<xlt j\~~~~~~~~~~~~11s1ons paid dally per week· S 1 OO. S C"".......-ILIFT NURSES AIDES life & heallh ins Good Dist. No I Lighthou:;\: I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Water & Gas re piping our specialty Ho JOB TOO LARGE OR TOO SMALL 10% Discount With This Ad Thru Oct 15. G!1 DEC" HAuD -~-Lalo(una An·n 493 -2722 ~'" vacation plan. Costa Me1a Ln .. !Comer or Talbert & " " E R DIVISION SJS Apply in person Nl'"'land 1 founta lll Full time. must be l'x GENERAL OFFICE HOUSEKE PE BORG· WARNER CORP. Califontia Equal Opportunity Valley, ca ~ per .. well Rn>omed, col· National cducat1ondl in-Enl(. speak ·g, w /car 666 E. Ocean Bl. Sle605 Pnvatc duty :J.11 & 11·7. ln'-'lott Mokliaq Employer M/f Fllmg Deadline. legiatc. between 20·34 stitution has opening for Cleaning. laundry· start Long Beach, Ca 90802 Alsq, net.'<! Hospital Start 2&'8Mgga Ave, c .r.I. October 7th, 1976 yrs. Cd pay & benefits. shnrp ind1v. w/delail dinner , transport EqualOpporEmployer Relief. Come in 91\M· OBlockSo.OC Restaurant Weareanequal 1 Send resumc to ad 11781. ability. Will answer cor-cluldren. Mon thru Fri. 9PM 7 days :.i week Baker. off Redhill> GlANCARLO 'S op~rtunlt)' employer c/o The Dally llilol. P .O. resp. to home study !'ilu· 1-5 :30 pm. Rers. 11 must. 1.es co u I 1 e Nu r ~ t: s ---------TWO GUYS 1 Box t!i60. Costa Mc8LI, dents. R1..>q's 45+ wpm 14011 mo + car a I · ---------1 Rt!g1stry, 351 llo~pital PRESS OPR Ca. 92626 typing. Good co. lwndits IQWance. 6411'1655 an. 4 MACHINISTS Hd, NB FROM IT ALY d l,y pm Web now Klu~e. exp. die SECRETARY 1 Delivery, neat appl'ar ~ wor~n~ con " ~pp · Good general back -NURSES AIDES culling, printing, pre· UNDER NEW Good transp nee. l\lin S3 atio~ yslt·m~ orf). Housewares sales person. ground, 6etup & opt1ratt' ssurc sensit ive label 1 hr+ m1, f'or mtervw call 4J6l llircbSt. NU permanent part·t1mc in· variety of ma.chines. 111· nays, exper. pref'd . slock. Stable position MANAGEMENT BOOKKEEPER -&9'7·3720. HI 30pm General Offict! , eluding Sundays Crown eluding turret lathe, Mesa Verde Conv. H0tsp, w;exciling growth com· -RECEPTIOM9ST llordware. 3107 E Cst vert1cle & horuontal1-66_1_c_e_nte_r _St_._c_M ___ 1 pany. Many benefits. Accepting application.a Advertising DELT ... CO .... E.,,....S Work 111 lovcly ext!C. of _11_wy.CdM. _____ mills, pu11ch press~~. NURSES AIDES 1714 )979-SS44 days ur fOC" waiters. wa1tre111"5 • ,. " lliV · ,. es h o stess. c a\h1er1 Extremely compet!'ot fices. Type 50 t wpm Industrial S4.'am:1t ress small precision parts, F/time & Ptl1me. Day _"_v_. _______ busboys. f tCharge Bookkeeper COUNTER HELP Req's good groo~lni; & n1:eded. <''Pl'r Piece small shop, days only. shift. Eitper"d pref"d. i\p 1006" Garf'-"... ... lhrough trial bal & pn1f1t 0 .1y & Nit:hl po .. 1t1ons pleasant personality J\p work J515 W MacArthur Mu. .. thaveown tools. ply Park Superior, 1445 ~ .._ ,.., •• & loi.:; who is flex1hle uv.i1l.StartS2.5Uhr i\pp· ply National Sy~Lems Blvd <..: ~1. Su1lt! 17 STACOSWITCHIHC. S uperior ;\ve. NB PRODUCTION FV enough to also have top ~ ly, Del Tnco. 1720 Corp,43618rrchS~ 540..:1-1:!2 1139Baker,CostaMesa 6422410 at Brookhurst . I • :.erretar!al slolls needt!d Superior Ave . C M . -----549-3041 •---------1 WORKERS ~1cDona.ld Plaza. Appl)' Cor 1 girl office v.1lhm a l 631 1831 General Offic~ Equal Oppor Employer NURSING Mon· Fri 11 30/\ M to larger co. tr Y•u are well ---_ Ra pidly ~rowmi: com INSPECTION WARD CLERK MALE/FEMALE _J_:OO_P_M_. _____ ...., e r ganiH·tl. J:ood at ' ID E NT A L A SST . pany need~ gul 1-"rnlay to RECEIVING f'/Ume AM shirt Wknds RIGGER· n...r dept com· scheduling. type 75 +, ' k rt lJ th d l .... SP"'",.TOR MACHl,...E SHOP -'C. Convalescent ho•p. Immediate openin~s fur v 11 Cholrs1de, 4 handl'fl cll•n wor PJ me wi a " ~ " "' " · < •· 1 mis. Nl•W sa1l·ex11, rella· have min. 5 yrs general llslry 1n preventive den vance t o ful I t 1 me Of !'ma II J>rcc 1s 100 Small manuf. near 0 C. expcr prefd. Apply Park incentive piecewor.. ble Mariner Yachts, offl<'C exper., enjoy hard I t.llofc. in JIB. Benul sor· Personality ll mu:-.t ror rna<'hln<>t.I & mlllded Airport needs l mal<' to Superlor. 1445 Superior ~{-oducti~n worker\ 675 l.393 work & pressure & Of\.' r o undln gs . E11per tJuspos1tion.Gl·neral of· ports fo r electr o · perform machi n ing Ave,N.B 6422..ilO · mimum ycars recen ---------itook1ng for an xlnt nece~sary, good hr-;, f1c1." skill n<.'e<lrt1. 1ypin11 mecha nicul devi<'cs operations in our produc-____ __, factory expe rlence re· SALES-ATTENTION future. please call Mane s11laryof}l'n.Mll l~6 must be accurul(' Will Working knowledge of tionmachineshop.Somei---------c quired. Must be able to AMWAY -SHAKL£J: Hickman,5-19-4060. -be a!.sislin..: !rnl('11 (ll"rson irue position dimension· aen'I machine ahop ex-work any l!hift + over· DIST. •-------- De nt a I Asst. chrsd, nel with a variety fJf mit prcC'd. ProCicientuse per desirable, but not ~Q~ o ff ic e • t ime. Starting wages Slmllor Mkllt Plan Ne'llllJ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-. p1t1me. X-rays. Eves. d u ti es . Bo a t 1 n g of vrcclsion measuring nee. Should be at leut llj from S.l27 per hr. Pay Product. Easler to aell Some Sot!!, HB 846·3540. knowledge helpful. Con mstrumcnll> & 3_5 yrs ex-Yl'l'i old w/OWll trnn.1µ. 4-0 0 overload range can fi0 well over M ground noor. SECRETARIES D.,, ... T ... L ... SST. t&ct.Barbara960-2441 pcr.rcq'd. Hrswk.557-7283 per hr a ler learning CallS49·0000 &TYPISTS "'" "' " STA.COS WITCH, IMC 557·006 I perlod, dependin1t on ---------E m rc Io y ,. d or on . ••R e Kist c red '' Gen'IOfc Recept M MallClerk tntcrview llours employees production. Salet Corecr·atead ' emp oyed at prnscnl~ w /orthodontic ex per . FttOMT & CEKTER ll3U Saker, C03ta esa OH YOUR MARK 9om-3;30pm We also offer e:tcellcnl work. St75 wk-upt•start. Get out of your rut & in· t'/time.548·2291 Oppor. for sharp indiv 549-3041 Ge\ set to go w/entry 372381rchSt,N U. company paid benefits. FullerBrush!SS4-78)1 vostl11alc th e highly seeking a variety pos1 Equal Opl)Or Employer level Position w tmajor NOW lllRJNG Apply 9am·12 noon <llvcrslricd ll(e of ;1 tertl· DENTAL LAB-Opening in lion w/growth oriented ---------co. seeking career •Jr.Clffk• MondayThruSaturday poraryofflcchelper I I I I I PANDA ~ PLUMBING INC. ' Or\hodonuc lab In Costa co Call Bonnie Bell. Insurance Fee Paid builder. Call Bob James, •UA.....-& Pockl....,, Or FworhThoAosereUAnpapblllceants ••SALIS Mesa. Plaster carving & 833-2700 Dennis & Den 848-1288. Dennis & Den-.....,..,... ··'7 Established co. expand • lite lob work. No ex per nis Per~nnel Service ul Polley Ser•lce R•p nis Penonnel Service oJ •s.cnfariH To Apply During in g . HI g hut r om rHJSI~ necess. F/Ume. 751-4442. lrvine 2082 Michelson Super position whe_re H.unt.ington Beach, 16168 •Typi•h Regular Interview· mluion1 In spcc l11lty G&P1&~ Dr · your PR skUls can bwld Beach Blvd. Suite 121 •Sr. Clffkl Hours, Our Employment &ales. Complete trolnlng llllJJilf OetttalChndAsd 1----------i career wtbluechip co. Temporary omeeWill BeOpen program.C811MO·l.364 . Tcml)Oraey rvices Must hnve e.xper. Non Gen Otr Acctng t0 $650 Non sales spot. Also Fee MAJNTENANCE MAN Immediate Work SPM ·7PM 4320 Campus Ste l30 Smoker 644~5. Odober Ffltl•al Jobs. Call J Maloney, Required. Lagunu llills CALL TOD AV ! on Tues & Wed 1., .. , "'" Newport Beach S4!MI07l A beautiful time to step 848 1288. Dennis & Oen _:a::_re.::.a::.~830-~.::332:=.:I:.... :-:---~~~~~~~~~~! ~ 1 .... s· G d A Dietary Cook needed 1m· n's Pe-onnel "-rvice of J. H-4-rt ..,_ · · rnn v~ d E L 1nlo a key pos1lion ' '" "" .A. ~ F .. .-_.. San•• Ana a.ss 9021 me xper. aguna wigrowing firm seeking Huntington Beach, 16168 M•curbt OFFICE ~ Hal Jew.et.rs ~~-~~~~~,,~-~~ Beach Nursing Home . colorful personalily. Call1_Be_11c_h_B_l_v_d_.Su_1_le_l2_l_. -1 Forsculpturednallshop. J Hft'tteti Now lntcrvlc-wln~ Ol So.I· ' 1515 ~ W. Mllclrtl&ur~ c.t.Me.j 4M-807S. Marion Mann. 833 2700. JANITORS 963-975Q. 545-1408. Hai. J•wefs.n VOIT INC Coast Pina Location for Secretary to S9.000 ii--------•1 Dennis & Dennis Person MASSEUSE (l8-2S) legit. Now interviewing at S 3801 S~H..oor° quality sales oriented A •.ae VIP DO ft FOR oolServkeortrvme.~ P/Tlme evenings. San rull time position ln coast Plaza location for penonnel. Jewelry e11 In exec. suite of fomoua THEMOHlY Michelson Or. Clemente area. S doys a Massage. No exp. nee. F /time office help S..taAlla.Ca per. desirable but not 1-orp. Mu1t hevt' 1ul · 1----------1 week, Mon thru Friday. · c 1 ..,.... b nee. Please call S l~l.310 mlnlatratlve r•trt hand. WorkTHIPO"-GLAZER, exper'd . Apply Phancr4PM 50-5874 We tram. 3 1 S.0-.-... Pleue apply ctwn ir:-~ IOp l ~"'1379( NOWHJfllNG r 211 Los M.ollnos. San anytime. 2·5pm,lnpersononly. AnE:::1oyer..J~W'\>' er,_ ouppt. ~'iroo~ti~~nl• t'~e~'. •Jr. C....._ _a_e_m_e_n_te_._4!12_._·6_H_.l l ___ 1 K«iypunch MATURE W 0 MAN ORDER CLERK. for~~~~~~~~~I SALESLADY nls Personnel Service ol •W...&P~ GUARDS Dat EntryO p /tlme to welcome mensshtrta.Porttlme&P/tlme Sales SfO·S?O F/Umeposl\lon avall.ror Irvine. 2082 Mlchelaon s.u.tari a pr newcomers &: contact rull time. Cnll 631-1361 1·dl a resp. womon wt1lton1t Or. * ,, co.ta Mn a Th~ Jolly Huger, lnc. \I merchanls. F1cxible hf1. ror appl. Wk/up Men, 8 et. atu sales Ability. Exptr. nee. --------- •Typbh Permanent. F1.1ll&p:u1 .. takinaappl!cotlonsfor a Need car, Ute typing. dents. Eves / Sat Eveninga. SECRnAIUAL •Sr. Ca.b ume. Phone & tranap re· Dt1l• F.nlry Operuor. 547-3095. Orthodontic Aulstant. 5S4·7'Ml, 839:11196. Paao Doy M11temlty & OENERAL I 556-8807 1 I or I I 556-8808 1 I t $ervit11C AJI <>nn,e Count¥ C.Ulomla Stn\e Coovacton lJ~ laal'TJ.3 ' I • --- I I c'd. Retired W('komc. ~s°!n' .te~r~:r.rc~~6 ~:~,(~it ii~. L::~·:~ Real F..1t.ato 557-5734 OFFICE WORK ~o~ o ff i C e • c.i°!=4· ore hrs 10.2, F /limo. Dl\y11. Pay will HOW IS THI TIME Boa ch. 494·855S for In RI SAUSPIOPL! $alealady. expcir'd RctaU ~~u~~a~e::.!: ~:~ia~~ 0 ove rloadl=========I be baaed on exper. level for Job •eekus Lo cht'ck tervlew Must be career minded. clothln(I. Over U. No Mr Covert. 4'5-l980. Apply In ~rwn, Sam the Dally Pilot. Help exporlenced or lnu evta. 148·5381.. 1--------- S H ..OO" ForClassined Ad &p m Moa·Frl. 17042 Want<'4 classlfkatlon. It PARTTCMIGIR.L terlenced. Com~et.e SECRETARY for Real ln•ervicw bn 9.3.30 ACTION Gillette Ave, Irvine. th )ob >'°" want 111 not wtmAJor corpor11lioo, fil. alnln1 groarllP:i . ::r Pl k Sal~~e S300 Eatat.e Co. In Fa!'h1on 1723 Birch St, N.8. 0811 n th~ YOU ml1ht consider Ina. anawcr pbontt, ('t.c .. ~~ rrEd ana8c>b n\ c c ~1T644 M~ Island. Must bave .. ,rs Have eomf'\hlng to s~U~ Qusified 11da do it well. offonna your aervacea typlngbelplul, but not re-tv or or · · exper., t)'1>C ~10 wpm, Deily Pilot ~ Cuiat draw In the wtth an ad lo lhc Job quired. Could wort Into •503t. ~ves. '93·J>&Z r.tu led Ad• •ell bll 1h 80·90 wp 1. Arply AD·VISOR West .a Dally Piloc Wanted cat.e.aory. Phone (uU time poal\lon. Call tt.ema, 1m1tll lttml OI' 'nU, •San Ml1ue Dr, 6'2·5678 Clnr41fil'd Ad. M2·58Tt. M2-S818 M2-Dlllbtwn 8:30&r S. Ouatned Ada &42-feTI qy !Hm.6U·5e'TI. 1200, NB. Q9 DAILY PILOT * Wed~ar October8.1W6 ~ M11e.n..o. t080 TY, Rodlo. ••••••••••• •••• ••• •• ••• HJR. Stereo 8091 .... W..tH 7100~ 100 9'09tSale IOSSG.og.Sele 8055 Brown 9' ruuubyde ....................... Motcwcyc'"/ A<o~WCMted 9590 1-.1rtwd ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C"OUf.'h. xlnt rond. S200 or C<1lor ·rv~. •PPI• Ost Scoott'n 915 •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• .. ' •AUGE &-ATI SAU bit. Quad car tape deck, p r I c t' , T 11 Jl p ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• DGtut 9720 Secretary/Bkpr OA.KSQ~Ah~fTABLE 9d d 3mi . $.10, Blk It whte port TV W a r .-h ou1..-~•I•· '7)110NOAXL 2:>0 u~·~~~'fts & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~Sec w c · ~-rawer resser •. rrors,lanlique. IO"i.crn.S20,Womana u 633 9 ~4 i 1330 No 111wncr ~ • TRUCKS: ftiday p=~Y S1 646-333$ afterSPM R a r e p o r c e I a I n ( F r e n ~ h • 6 ski boob. Sl5. 1s1-8l78 Glaasetl. o run.:t-~&11 ~7/Q & 646-~11<1 com ... in or <' ,,11 DRIVE A Typun.s to Dining St-t . t utite. ~ Bav.arl an· En~llsh ), 1810 sewing af\$PM SUrER SONY St.·r .... w ., .. 11H11-.~. Nrw DnH·n FREE Appralsol LITTLE- lrvhwPersonnel Asiency chatTS.bulfet.$350 Anu ca.b1,neL. anl&qu~ ~uc koo clock. c ame tbl/4 chrt1, kna l:l lway!lpkr ... worth l~ 11111 1111. 72 lloncfa <: GrottiChe•rolet 488E11th Co5ta Mesa qued flnlBh 556 781s shap s clock. child s trunk, rare spread, matchlna tullt.-d w111 11d tror SIT~ on Wro I,:. Imm J t' n1 n d ltlZll ~ll{'h Blvd SAVE A LOT ~~ -~-~ ~bra~lropper £1 Oriental rug handwoven both side hdbrd, Ul!rlght piano. ut GPM :rnn t-•111rvll•w. IMnwt tool kit inl'I $( lluntin~ton lk.lch SHOP&COMPARE ·•-·•r __ _. extinguisher lamps desiin. rare Chinese ~olden peacock 673 3tiOO CM ~ ~~~(' rur tllrt bike 847..6087 • 549.3331 IARWICI DAT$UH --------~plant holders Rare t:n picture & antique 4 golden faced ;wvt N a ui . c hair, SanJuanCaplstr"no SECROARY 768-5576 carved Chinese cabinet. Magnificent wrought1ronpat1ochrs,loah&MoriM 7• ll vrida X ll7:'1 Xtnt TOr r>ot.t.AK 8lt-ll75493-ll7S Forfront orllceln smaUMahogony sideboard l th l d k "2 "fl h'ld' ~tlt<e,Bukc-r'icrack,um .,..,....... r1in1I UOO Cull l'V ... :-, P AIO upending .:lcctronlcs ornately ca rved , ea er op es · ... n e, c 1 8 brella tal)le, vent hood & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~11:io1 IM t.U<:OtATF.L.Y TOP IUYER company. We ure looklttg beveled m1rrort>, bevel bicycle & red wagon. Costume jewelry• ran. cook tops <g1&1> & loots. Marine ~. 11 NI nt ._.. L'.~ POH ALL See us fi rst & I wit: Top for a sell·stotter who can g '" 811 r r 0 11 t . s 4 2.. a.nti1que glassware, vases. chest. All elec ), tubll•• l<' cover &-.;&--a '030 '" .. ' t'OH~IGN CA RS dollar p111d i"or lmporta. u ., " •..-r-..... ,.. Jt11""l ·· ·o mt' 1 11 C'ALl.OR COM~IN T ES bundle n v"riety of as· 536·19'.!S. from ...,, to $4000. 41Z7 Apt C Hilan·a sle r c o a pk r s . 120 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'~ ·1 • "1 ru · l 'OSL'E U.L' COS AM A I ts I •· 411' l ...,,, N h Knnrl «vnd, SIOO; 3 hor:.-., c. " 1 gnmen accurate Y "' Way. Newport Beach (near Hoag ga vanlz.,... pa~. ot Int¢~ HP ~l(a OlJ, low huur!', Uri..:.:~ &i Stratton Taco, HEWrORT IMPORTS DATSUN ~U:r,e~g~~~nJ~1~ 0 ~~.~~~~~!id~'.~~!.~~· Hospital). 646-76.'ll9AM to6PM ovcr$20. SS2·0S04 ~';~~ ~~~ only, Ml 11oo<l cond. sr.o tl75 JllM 3100W Cst llwy, NU 2845 Harbor Blvd. transcription e xp de· cp. AnlJque oak Bufrct CarT$phoM flfl YAMAllA 180 Twn, 642·940S <.:osta Meaa ~10 slrable. Bill Petlock w1m1rror. 55 .. wade.FrfttoYo. 8045G~Sal• 8055 Motorola1972 mdlT·l436 S2 --- Orthod,Yl1e t:lectron1cs. 23"deep. Both pieces 1 ••••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••• •••••••• 152 162 Milz ll channel loah.. Pow..-9040 ss:; sli5i,¥ZUKI. sso. TOP · 7 2 24 O 7. 1 0 w n e r LS99 Supenor Ave . CM beautcond 640 2082 Fre.8unnltt ! capacity Duplex o r ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---DOL' ... R AM t FM A /C', new 646-1616 Coun 6469249 MOVING SALE! Simplex. lL Wl'be r .1s·LymM l18.l11f):ltruk1· ·7~, llONI>A C H550 Im -brake:-. shock1t &clutcb. _________ ., l.,..,,, tryPl aEc'!gn)tl•sa·h. Ac;nMti.qull (2) maln Cock-11 poo PU""', !I lo S 2015 Commodore 545-5.511 XJ91 hull. full rnv1•r~ & own nrnc ron<I SIJ001lk!st or PAID f\11 on i.:mal Xlnl cond. u,,, "' • ~ ,... Rd NB II h Id 'l i~ S3:bJ 6<10 820tl rc•r !l'7\I :)337 Arland !-'OH t:l..i':AN 13375. 75l 3133 SECRETARY rear) Mon·Fn beige, H wki. 1-'ree lo gd · uui. ... 0 1 e ms Game tbtc; bar stools . -------------4 0 II r 5 . Ty P i n g holllt' 545 8072. & potted ~lunts Sale I 3 mp s : b 0 ts t er s . vamuhu ,74 t;nduro 360 IMPORT CARS 'W Out.sun 510. 2 dr sedan. short.hand & gen'l offi .,,aCMCH 8010 endsOd IOt spreads: hsehld items * * 18' Nl·w IQP end. stnpped $795 or best ofr Call s kills necessary. ca11 •··~··•••••••••••••·~··Free to loving home 18 Oct 7.8 9 9 to ~ Mis 536-2087. •hrt m fing, Enduro liar~ 751·4754 C o m m u n I l y Freight Damage Hotpo1nt mo sml rem shl'P mix «Jllaneous items power p OWENS** ind S..'lOO 833-36.SH ~~ Pre-sbyler1an Chur ch. Sale.~ W. Warner. Shots, hsbrkn~67S 0209 mow"'r ?\;esc tabies 9381 Pedwr mower S035 wr C\..11 b t .. ---• La Bch 494 7""" ne" u bo S t A " ,, · ger $35. l OXl area rug ru y equip . a1 tan.. 1970H--..1-S17" guna . ~ .. r .. ar r , an a na ~dor able K1tlen1. h Greenlear lh. HB $3S CallS56-8042 12 rum p s I 6 Lift' Callah5-~t'26l .J Stty Extt Fee Paid ()'Keefe & Merrill bronze Siam~ llous<.>brOk('n. !162 2(173 . Jac k e l s. r Ir l' I.''( t IEACHL~ATIOH sst;ovetops45w1/bburntersff36" __ 675~ Hones 8060 ~!a~~~~~'"~ ~~c ~!~ ingu1sher. rod hohkrs. SUZUKI 380 HT Lo Makesthisexc1llng1J05i· 1ze. es u er . .._~U.-80so······················· eds r h newMannc baltcry,nl•W milc-.1ge $850 CJll Uo f · I C1 Pbone778-1076 ~ cover · 15 or l e two rucl tanks. Ahde wrii,:ht 673 ~27 2 PM t1119 l'M n w/top manc!a co ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALE OR LEASE 9684971 steering. Ne w mtr ·16 --- nght for PR oriented Range, drop·in electric. Morgan QuarteT Geld· . . . Evlnrude 115. U.-.s then Nifty '70 llonda 350, real i>ersonahty. Also r ee Hot Point. self-cleaning, **I BUY* * in1ot. must act immediate-Artist hquiduting. Many JS hrs, slill under fact thrifty SJso Jobs . Call C. Benton, near new $225 552-1733 Good used f'um1turc & ly• 645 7!118 art supplies & unusual warr G r eal ras h 1-;k 1 847 1436 MIH288. Dennis & Den· Appliances-OR I will items for sale All near ooat. Seats 7 easy Nin · F . •883'> BEACf• Bl VO tiUl\Jl 11\iG TON BE AC01 • BJ;> 7781 C,40 044J '76 280Z Family cnsb fot·ccs sale or ne w car. Auto, /\/C AM /FM/8 track. mag!I. aeat offer. 751·9490 WAMTED I '69 Da~un Wagon. 450,000 • nu. lug rack, t own. Xlnt JUNK AUTOS c.'Ond. S1100. Phs.52.aoTI AM eRICAN-r'OltEJGN 74 260Z, 2+2. auto, air, & I pay more cai,h than stereo. 16.000 ml. $$100. anyone. C714ll G35 71 645·7400&675-8638 or toll rree O·Z('n1th 77120 ---------nlsP_ersonnel ServiceofAMANA MICROWAVE sellorSELLforYou. Spirited Marc. Great for nl!w.4fl.drawing board. tandem lrlr All AOod o r s at«> 1 ~7 1 650 Huntington8each,t61680VEN. 6 mos o ld . MASnRSAUCTION Trail~ & Gy mkhana 2 T Squares. markl'rs. cond.$2500 Ncwmolor Yrcarmuha.M>OC>or l>e~t or Beach81vd,Sultel2l. Ttansre rrable wa rr. 646-8686 &833•9625 768-4537 orfl ~e ch~ir •. s too t. alone wa1>$22'.39.llave rc. IRUYJUNKCARS . $325. 751-6692. Raleigh folding bicycle & cclpt 493.0726 548 0011 USED AUTO PARTS i i Datsun 510 wgn, lac., tory air, looks & runa great 646-1957 Service station attendant . Tally Ho farms m u c h m 0 re 2 o t 9 · 540.51.25 847. experienced. Full or pa Will buy some refrig, ap-SAVE.! New & us~ run,t. Box stalls $90-$100. Pipe Anahe l m St . Cos t a 18" G Ie nco Beaut 1ful '72 Yamaha 25<k't' MX dirt '74 260Z, xlnt cond. lo ml.. l!me. Apply Arco Sta pliances working or not. ~~~I !~n m~~~k W~~~ ~ l'Orrnls $75. We reed & Mesa. . • cond. Olds. J t>l. V hull, bike Many e~t;as. new Radials. AM/FM, tlon. 17th & !rvlne. C.M. also scrap metal 675-5258 S g • 5 &' 8 W clean daily. English & .. full canvas pwr till !l.15·922 1 auto. $4900. 834-5"456 day• tores -;)4 14 Girl's 26 3-spd Schwinn · · . Service Station Allen Maytag Washer SJ(), Ken-19th, c .M. fi42 7930 & Western lessons & train-bike w/carrier seat S40 thrust ttlrtbrakci;, bail or493-5404 eves &wtnds., dant, exper'd. Day more Gas Dryer S35 , 548-3262. ing. 17262 Newhope AM /FM compo ne nt lank & ladder ~·1~h &MotorHomes. .73240z Red pd Eves.Full&p/time.Ap K.enmore washer S75, f'ountamValley,979.9475 ste r eo w /e nd table rast.968-8744 Sol~/Rem 9160 M M F .4S ·c ply, Shell Stallon. 17th Sig. Elec drye r S50. Q U E E N s 0 F A •~ .._. 8070 speake rs $150 Ma pie 22' C b C "113 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ags, A I M . air/ . N Guar 546-8672 SLEEPER Unu sed .-• ..... , • a in ru1ser , nent . 1\ ,, S4450. 673-6731. Irvine, 8 · Loose pillows . 554.4760 ••••••••••••••••••••••• hutch Sl45, chllds record l/Brd w/bail tank & a lot 216 G. fC I \ t ply £...-.-.t 9711~ \ Serv S d F 11 player $10, 1 swug lamp or accessories ~1700 Call 833·2616 or 642:4097 ~ ... Pa rl -l3T1 Amllee.n o' a Yu, HIDE-A·IED w ANTED 5!1. gold decorator tbl w /6 New fish finder w /pan .. r Ncwpor:_ Reach. Ca bf Autos, lmporle-d ••••••••••••••••••••••• d """ t .. ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• '64 330 GT 2+2. Bu,.../blk. NiU5, SaJary & Comm Unused Cost $390. Sell TOP CASH DOLLAR si es .,..v, moving mus S290. New 160 CJrl Ice Custom 22· N ~al 970 ... • 6n.3320 $170.&Dehver 554-4760 f~Jtn\.?~Aici~ ~\es~.hone aft 6pm. ;1~~t ;,~~~~g r~~1;;a~ ~~~b;:~·v~~~~:~~~J:~ •••••••••••••••••••••·' ~l~a~i~sg .3'~-WJ5~ SHIPjllECCURK Refrigerator freezer. ice Brand new beautiful solid ART OBJECTS. GOLD. O'Keefe & Merritt stove tackle. marine radio refni? <tOgalwtr, le\ect > '74/'7SLOTUS _642_-00M __ . _____ _ Needed for lighting fi x· maker . Make ocrer .Mahogany bookc ase S ILVER SERVIC E . w/gridle in cenler S40 CUll673·9088. SO gal gas. elect john ELITE Rot 9725 lure co. 2031 S.E. Mai 751.fl6'74 orM>2477 w/doors. Con_leml>frary F INE FURN & AN 12x15 green rug S20 15' 6" CABOT ski or r1s 673-91!C.». 4-6pm only See fully eqwpped.!)spd,lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• St. Irvine. 546-2901. rig Ida 1 re fros l free ~e~~u~ · 92~.~m J . ~ 9.. TIQUES. &IS-2200 Plan ls 2Sc·S2. 645·0377 hing boat, 75 11 p. xlnt at 4~ W. Cst Hwy, N B m 1 I ea i.t e . S I O. 7 5 o '72 1.28 SL. Top cond. X1nt SHOP MAN refrig. $200 or best offer deep. 4 pcs. $850/ofr. Call Eng~gemenl ring ~'2K ap-Wedgewood. 17 pcs. Lgc cond S2000 546 5777 14l3NJT I 752 52.21 8 . buy. Call 540-2933 daya. Needed r r h I fix 751-0817. 642~0739 pra1sed at $700 accept s ilver cruet. s ilve r Troilen,Tro•~I 9170 wkdys. or644-4.395eves. t Sohr Ilg tnl~I best orr.64.2·7958 . I SELLJNG TllE F14EET ••••••••••••••••••••••• AJfaROf'rH!O • . ure co. ee me a ex <2 >Matching pillo w p1 ec~s. c 01s onnc . 13· WHALER 40 !IP 73 124 Sport Sptder . per. heJpful .. but not nee. l lcycln 8020 couches. green flora l. Woman's ring, very ori-49'.!-5268 Sl.500. SYDNEY i;abnl: llx30 Trlr _w/tip-out. re ~··••••••••••••••••••• Yellow. new lop. $3200. 2031 S.E . Mam St. Irvine ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnt cond s175 ca • C1)6 ginal Gold w/5 gam els 127 5 . 111 · 0 I I':s t;1, modell.'<I int. $2400 333 67 i\lfa Romeo 4·dr sed S46·5486 \bus ). 4.9"1·371~ 546-290L NEW & USE. D BIKES.and Convert sora. herculon, Worth $.275. 493-5967 · <2M>aMpedle. Cboumnmk odbeesd.s$l~'. Classic. S4.SOO 675·6600 W llay, sp. 25 842-7935 1600 Super engme: 4'-w~ aft 4 rts C MX ,.._ "' pp disc. brakes. Michell u-___.-_-------Store mgr for Balbo pa · ruisers, 5• bro~n tones i75. ·~· Unstock 8075 chest, $45, Sentur1on 10 · · __ 13' Field & Stream vaca radials . Good rondition ,._ 9727 Island women's casua & IO Spds. Cycle & Co casiona l cha ir, beig ••••••••••••••••••••••• spdboysbike,27 ",stss,& 18· !ishinR boat. Ship to lio n tr.Ir. Propane, Sl7SOtorrcr.645·7542 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wear store. Reply to a 2488 Newport Blvd., C.M. w/rane $45. 557-3089. misc 751-1485 shore r"d10, fr.~h tank. Pressurized water. lgt-. Brand .... W '7& 65 D .1 p 1 p 0 642·791<l Reg. Morgan mare. broke · .. ·' 1 d •550 ........ 970 " ... 00·7 · ai y i ot, · Must sell sofa bed, $450. to ride & drive. blk deplh findl•r ,7511 P,$!JOO Vll'W w n o w " · -• CBox9.!.,~· Costa Mesa SCHWINN 26" girls bike, Sell $175. Mattresses. parade Morgan gelding. Miwsc~~ 8081 496-3103 7GH-J536 •••••••••••••••••••••• HONDA Cars a . ...,.... good cond •AO/bst f k. f II l . E W urn~ --. T ·1 Ut.llty 9180 '72 Aixlt lOOl.S 4·dr Auto OVER I 00 · . ..... or. mg, qu<.'i!n, u. win, ng, esl e rn <714) ,75 18 ... ClfEETAll" ln· ra1 en, 1 AM /t'M, nu brakes s Tu D ENT r 0 Ph: 64S-7857aft6pm. ortho. velvet sofa & love 338-1011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• hull . wa lk l hru. wh •••••••••••••••••••_•••• $2700. Pvtpty~.1327 ToChoowft-oa! ~P wp~e~· Ge~~ pa/rweak·WldiftgMat.riafs8025 ~L,3w~r~~ff~bt ~!:~MiKelaneous 8080 $$$CASH FOR ite/metal11c blu<'. 6 hrs Heavy duty. 20 inch UMIVERSl!l!V 644_5998 · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• lamps, dinette set w/ft ••••••••••••••••••••••• Good used fum/refrigs total lune, Volvo·l'l'nta wheels, needs work & 72 Audi JOOL.S, blue 4 d ~1: 'I ' CEDAR SHAKES chrs. r irl>t come firs WA.._.TED frus/stoves 546-0768 130 HP Ideal for sk11n1<. tire" $100 or offe r sedan Full serv record Oldsmobile : ' TELEPHONE SALES Dirt:ct fr Mill. C all served. Wed, Thur, Fri " WANTED.. r1shing. Trailer , 12 24 642-M3 must ,51'11 • whole sal Hondo Cars • GMC Retired or disabled me anytime. 503-47&-0121 Sat. 9.9. TOP CASH DOLLAR ORIENT AL RUGS volt trolling motor. com Auto Senic• & boolt. 493-3206 Trucks and wo men. Ex\ r CGMt'OS & 8JOOGarden Grove Blvd. PA 1 D F 0 R Y 0 UR Persian & Chinese also pass. cover . convert top Parts 9400 BMW 971 2850 Harbor Blvd. money for the holidays s;._.:_..,. SOlO G G 894·0160 JEWELRY. WATCHES, Tapestry, Pvt rty's only. 640-4100or640-4054 PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa 540-9640 ~ Morning or e ve ning .. ...,..,..._.... ART OBJECTS. GOLD """·70 4 • Ch C ·65 L·1 c · b k l Good earnings. Phon ··•••••••••••••••••••••• SEETOAPPRECIATF. S ILVER S ERVIC E "'"'" 1 26 1962 n s a bin "' amino uc e 'i2HondaCoupe 646-4223. Lenses Cannon 200mm. Drexel sohd oak antq Fl NE F U RN & AN -Wanted: Large Bible with Cruiser New eng. single seats~r~ed f to ~e re· Gd Cond. $1,000. Equal Opportun1 t 55mm 1.2 FD. S.S.C. Sparush9drwrdresser. TlQUES.64>2200 good print. Reas onable sc r e w , t o p c ond rover ·"'15 orl e two 673-1!)4lorf>73.8040 Employer lenses. $120 ea or S200 for 6 · Jg w I m 1 r r 0 r SJ6.8280 $1500/bsl. 543·0581 days _968_-4_97_1 _____ _ ---------t both. 646-61'\8 bef 6. matching Kng hdbrd LUGGAGE TAGS 13' Boston Whaler & Doi JCICJllClr 9730 TELLER TRAINEE Cats 8035 Elegant. Sac Also 5 pr rrom your business card. Nee~ed used fros lies~ ty 40 hp Johnson rbll. Autos fOf" S. BUY OR ••••••••••••••••••••••• CASH IH ••••••••••••••••••••••• Span: BR group, drcsse Send one card for e ach rerng. Prefer that you elec slu!l & elec start ••••:•••••••••••••••••• XKE 2+2 '69 In outstanding leamlni? , w/rrurror. chest, 2 nil tag plus one spare. We delt ver . Afte r 6pm Teak benche!>. $1200 Anti~/ LEASE .._.OW lownr.xtraclean oppor. w/friendly bank Sil ver Persians. Mother & stnds .. Misc furn. 20 return pe rmanently S92-14t9 67~2047 Classics 9520 " 64S-13S4. seeking happy s mile . daug hte r mu s t b e Legonia (upstrs) Nwp sealed attractive tag. & Wanted: 12 cu.Ct. Rerria 1o~ S 'I 9060 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Val Kelly, 848·1288. together. CFA reg, $SQ Shores. 642-3188 slrap, m eeting airline Good . d ,. "ii UT>, a1 •OVl.;R 70CARS• Oennis &Dennis Person bot.h.546-5357 JD · ts P runrung con · "3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IN INVENTORY ---------Quality bdrm t · reqwremen · re-S48-0159aftSpm nel Service of Huntingto Persian Kittens. 5 c · vent loss & theft! For a · Hobie 16. trlr, new trans & Beach. 16168 Beach Blvd Registered. $75. g<>~~ll'~e.r Al~ 0~ ;iacrt: personabzc.'<i lag enclose Silver coins wanted, 1964 more. $1 ,4.25. 646-8255 or ANTIQUES & CLASSICS Swtel21. 548-2933Debbieart8pm. 640-9000/&34·2l22.Roger . wallpaper. fa bric or &before.Willpay20cfor1_58_1_·_7505_. _______ 1 Rolls Royce. Bentley & "Day Glo" paper & we dimes, 50c for quarters, T·B1rds; From S500 to _________ .. Persian kittens, blue rine reproduc tion s will back & trim your $1 for halves. $2.25 for lO'Wildcal. I Sail $50.000cars. The Reuben cream, cameo females. Cherry & Mapl~ woods, tags. Or try \wo cards silver dollars 11935 & Racing rigged. BUY-SELL·TRADE Must sell, papers avail. king size bed complete. back to back. before>. 962·0709 5225· 53M~S8I EL% fARGO & CO E. Lee 962-~ dbldressers.chesl.$,scw-S2eaorr/~JCES: Musical Catalina 22. c lean & 830S.Main·SanlaAna 9040 ing machm<.'S, & lamps 1 ._____..._ 8083 loaded $4600 10 to6, Mon.-Sal. Now Taking Applications f'or: • ••••••••••••• ••••••••• 714-673·2681 4/S tags $1.60 ea. M~ ' 640· i84o Closed Sund:iys ----------1 6/9logs $1.SOea. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 547-9709 * lrishSelterPups. Queen sizebed.dresser,& JOormoreS1.40ea. Conn Min-0 -Mallc elec. ClllNESEJUNK AKC. shots. wormed. nitesland, xlnt cond. On-Sales Tax Included organ. excellent cond1 30' & Oe auliCu I, ne R~national 645·7473 ly$200.494·5681 NOCARD? tion,$600.P.P .532·1259 sail.s,&Dsl.1213>372395.J Vehlcln 9530 IUSIOYS& HOSTESSES OAYS &NIGllTS St o -rd p h · Draw yoor own or send . ••••••• •• ••• ••••••• •••• ...,ma ups, c amp MOVING ' Eve rything name, address, phone & G1~son L -6S Custom SaboH!las>. blood line. AKC, shots, g o e s. 5 room lo o f we'll make one rard per guitar w1ca se. Xlnt SlSO. Bubble-Top DOOge, I too. wormed, 5.57-3391 beautiful furn 836·417 tag Add 25' each. cond. $320.lofr. 644-2766 640-5823 24mos young, 20k mi., Apply In Pen.on Only 3PM ·SPM aft 3 PM. loaded, $6,000. 842 6252. AKC Golden Retrie ver Send check or money or-Clarinet, m int cond. Custom bwll Islander 24 151 E. Coast Hwy Newport leach pups, xlnt hunters. show Medlt. Sofa, loveseot , derto: s ·11 646 9529 d d 4 Whffl Dri•n 9550 d & ( I PILOT ,RIMTl .... G 1 .. ·-r 6P-m . very goo con , nc •••••••••• ••• ••••••• ••• ogs am1 Y pelS. tables, lamps, good cond. "' ~u: s ails, includes s lip Champ pedigree 493"6861 $175. 556-7815 P 0 Box 1560 499-3155 ft 5PM CHOICE OF TWO Costa ·Mesa. Ca 926216 OHie• .....,_.. & 8 __ EqualOppor Employer Male m ixed breed, St. Like new Drexel dm1ng EquipMttlt 8085 HOBIE CAT 16'. nc ~~~~~~~~~~ Bernard & Samoy, l rm. Pecan tbl, 60x45, 2 WOVEN WOOD ••••••••••••••••••••••• trampoline Like new -mos. old. $25. Call aft. extension leaves 18 ... 6 SHADES-To BO% Off Ck>slng operation. Desks, must sell. $1350. 675.S TYP~ST. SO wpm & d 6pm, wknds, anytime. <'ain ba c k c ha i r s, Call64S·S9SO chairs, typwriter. <Marki gen I or.rice work for 540-7982 w/arms. cus tom lbl credenza, dinette set,-------- !\mall omcc. Must be ac pad&, I.op & bottom tbl Used Simpson nomex etc. 54o.33S8. SABOT Fully equ1ppe curate. Hours arc Mon-Male Ger~. Shep. 6 yrs special. Cost Sl200. sell drivers suit. SCCA ap· with yard dolly. Sl50. Fri, 9·3. Call 631-1361 !o old. AK.c registered. S57S. cash. 003.2339 proved. Approx med Up to 5 Chr ome lob· 6'1:H703 -t1-"p..;.p_t. ________ 1 papers included. S50. size. $45. 548·1481 by /visitor chairs. gd•----------1 Call art. 6pm; wknd.Sever al Mahogan y cond.644-0733aft.6:30 loah,Sllps/ w•mESS on)'tlme.540-7982 vanities w /mirrors . Household Items for sale. Dock1 Exp. Dinner Hous e some matching pieces. Moving out of state. Doro 320 Ans we r i n g •••••••••••••••••••••• waitreu. Apply in For Sale Boston Terrier 0042 Garden Grove. I mi Washer-dryer, $100 pair, mach., cost $800, compl Slips·Sailboat.s2S'to27' person, 24~31 El Toro ~~1~e~l 6~~a p e r .s · westo<bch. Uving room set matching remote. $350. 546·7982 Elee/Wateron Dock Rd., Lag. Hills. 8 · tables Sl50, gold hldc·a· days. Free prk'g-everythlng 1974TOYOTA LANDCRUIS~RS Hardtop. EJectric wench & ull th e go odies! C366LRD>. ONLY $4597 Ml\RQOIS MOTORS ·.hlt(t"]MAR<-Uf RIH t'M.Vl/T \t1f1 Dt1 lflJ,tWy -flvt I \"I •ti Ml\>ION Vil J(I >I ll·)~KO 4'1)·1JIU • --• Karmann Ghia 9735 BMW TRADE-IN I •••••••• ··········-··· '72 2002-A ( l2l FTQ ). '69 Karmann Ghia '722002-4 Sf). 16505). orig ownr. $1750. '72 Bavaria-1488FOF> 645-9280days. '732002-A. 1533460 ). '73 Bavaria· 18t8JSI ). Mcnda 9731 '74 Bavaria· (348LFM ). ••••••••••••••••••••••• 155301·4 sp. (105NVH), '73 RX2 Coupe, lug rack. '75200'l ·A. (236MMN). mags, special lop, maa_1 '755301A·A. <705NIJ>. othcrxtras.~ SADDLEBACK 8MW '74 Mazda RX3 Coupe, 4 MISSION VIEJO spd. under wmty, very 831-2040 49S-4949 clean 837-3202 ORAHGECOUNTY'S Met'CedHleM. :9740 OLDEST •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• 6 1960 Mercedes 220. '4 spd, AM/FM radio, new in· Sales Service· Leasing Roy Carver, Inc. Rolls 'Royce BM 154{1Jamborec NewJ)Ort Beach 640..6444 CRE.VI ER $1U 6H(MDWAY SAHf A AHA 835·3171 Tiii V\.TIMATI Olll"1NO MAC .. t>lt •USED 8MW'1• '73rlavarla-198311NV) '743.0S -(024LJR) '752002 (629NBK> Closed On Sundays tenor & Ures. 25 ml per gal. Best offer or trade for pickup or panel. 675·0970 days or 673·9676 aft 6pm. l.eoH New-Used ova 100 MERCEDES ON DISPLAY HotlHofl~ AUTllORIZ l> MERCEDES DEALER 6862 Manchester, Buena Park 523.7250 On the Sant.a Ana Fwy. German Shorthair pup· 8' Avocado gm naug sofa, bed, good condition, $75, •~ & n--... 8090 lSt class. Best in Nwpt i3 Mer«des i~ SL. 640-1004. . WELDERS . 1 1 1 ,, aJ tufted back, xlnl cond. bikes: 1 woman 's 1 n-. -·~ 673·8711 Ull lOprn. T--ks 9560 i 2 3 O " Dr, silver, sun· Heh arch welder pies. ems e, "m es, 6"2-2793ah5pm. 11· 2 bo • c II n' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-r I h Stalnl & 1 . SlO 6wksold 842-645Sor gr a, y s. a a er . SIDETIESLIP 8, ••••••••••••••••••••••• roo . eat er. ster1:0 1----------ess aummum ~ · ed . 1 Gpm · wknds anytime Wurlitzer Organ, W11lnut · .uplol •••'7lD"tsunl'''••• sup1:rS6100.!)46773'J '76 MBZ300 Dsl.Famll7 Exponly · R ecoratinJ., will ae I 540-'19e2 ' · spinet. 2 fuJI manuals. $40mo. " u en.sis forces 8-le. FllU Manyfringebeneflla She.IUepups.AKCreg. c~tom ma e matching like n ew. $400. Ph 673-8145eves wit~ shell, AM /FM Capri 971 f1Quipmeot.onlJ8800mL Nophooecalls $15 h 8 Sofa. Love!leat, Cha.Ir. AIR HOCKEY HURRI-846-3033aftS. . , 673•27578ft6PM •••••••••••••••••••••• 8alolrer75t.ed0 ERICSON YACHTS ~ 2 Ottomans, red & white CANE by Ideal Used 3 Side Ue for 20 boat. Bnl '68 Ford 14 mpg VB big i4(;apri 2000 CC AM/FM ---------um Deare Ave linen toile, s hepherd times sold new for $S0 Player Piano. English. Penin. E. of Pavilion bed. J(d ~hape a~ide from radio. ralley whts. stee '76 Mercedes 2400, Ute SantaAna Studservice,AKC.golden casters.~. Cost $1800 twi.Ut4ire ~ f'reeatand: Works ok ... George 67:Hi700 npped &eat&dcnUnbed. he lled radials. $2600. Ivory. auto, AM /FM. retriever. l'ttahog. Coerce Tbl. $65. Ing. Ph: 778-i076. Sleek". Light Mahog. loah. c.~ & S7SO£ &443 6 41ib rs 493-ssos sunroof, 8000 ml ... War· WB.DERS 545-.5402 Baby Crand Piano. 49"1·3811 ~u ~.. 9080 irm. ' 1 e · ranty Is tranaferablf. Combination welder!fll·r-..-toy 493-5922 IRVlN E COUNTRY • . ~ 1974CAPRI $11,!500.675'°663. ter. 2 Yrs exper. $150 hr~ ote 8045 Ion hid bed CLUB MEMBERSHIP. Earighrty 1900 1 s ~nghshedup-••••••••••••••••••••••• Va1t1 9570 V6, 4 speed, AM t rM & MB ,7c 4 .. ,..,L All 1 to start. B radfietd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ercu e·a· .Sl6S $500644·5124 tpeno. "estor & GreatSkl Roat ••••••••••••••••••••••• lowmlle"'ue 1 ..... 4KLDJ ... .,.,.., . oya, S Friend! IT 1 Sofa & love seat, $350. • · tuned, S375. SJe.1925. 17' lnbrd. 283 Chevy en111 "" ~ · t'osaette . Yellow /tan. Manuf., 1682 upertor y am e rrer P.P.839-5808 Dishwasher never used,'"---V"" Sklaccess &llke nulrlr '74 Ford 200. P/8. P IS. OHLY$2999 17U $1 5 ,500 PP, 1 Ave, C.M. ~2541. mix, mole, 6 mos. Tappen, $350. Solid oak "."""u i» organ. up-$2000/flrm. SS6·6lH orig owner. S3.900/be1il 1714)831•9970 bU$, (714) Call536·759l. FURHrTURE SALE hutch, never used, S400. ngbl piano. All In xlnt offer. 494-2382, eves 497 2.82l res. "Gentle Ben". Mixed Ger Potter Transfer. 921 W Call962-S211. · cond.S250.ea.S44·T448 1974 Dodge Va n 300 •---------...................... Shep. & come.• yrs. l8t.h CM Oct6 7 8 rmttpariaffOft s 11 i3280-C,pvt.lowner.M- ...... 100 Needs a loving home. ' · ' ' · Rattan lounge chr wtot ••••••••••••••••••••••• portgman, 8 xtras, ly equip .. xlnt ~ond. •••••••••••••••••••••• New condo living loo con· anl.llstic SS" octagon t.a-lom an. tan naug, $75. R.-fiaillwd UpricJht ~Sale/ good conct. Blwn 5 & 32.000 ml. AM/FM stereo flNF.ST ENO LISH AN fin!ng, TLC. Ph. 64G-47Sl ble. 4 captain's cb9irs, BJun lfotpolnt dshwshr, S6SO 644-1836 R.;.t 9120 WM. 493-4l6S cassette, $8200. or make T I QUE S AV A 1 L aft.er Spm hanging lamp, 2 end tbls. Avocado SSC>. 640·7022 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'i2 Ford. v .8, auto-trans. offer 831-17!)4 ask for Mr. ABLE IN FURNfTURE 536-8701 Budweiser waler skis, P.,,,1;Jk~a~o~ xfn~ ·c~nod'. 'x12W Cat>over Camper. cpt, paneled, rurtains. , GoeU CLOTUlNG. PORCE Adorable Husky /Aust. fa 8• Herculon. xlnt slnale & double, near Paid $3000, take Sl400. + w/boot & jacks. for long Shelby mags, dual ex-73 Capr\, V~. xlnt cond. 1 1~~-------9-7-4-J- t. A JN , S ILVER Shep.J>Upples.freetogd cond. $ISO. Recliner new.~.~ 200rolls.S43-1721 bedP.U.fl00.548·8587 h aus t -Super clean. ~:r~~~~\f.~r···••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~";li~INTlNOS hm.548-4633 t'halr. browtt naugabyde lllce1 9140 SSl·338Safler6 pm ar · · ' 1960 MOA Convert ----------1Flne youn .. fem, spayed $50.968·3900 Oenulne Sheepskin throw 5pcwt"'9Goods 1094 ...................... ,......._.W__._.,, 9590 ... ~ 9720 Cla•slc wir• ....... ,. ,. rup. approic a sq It, ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.v. _..._ -" · "' uv.. • n-.ncb antique dbl bed dog, rtvr/shep mlxl lack naugh. 10Ca•bed. many colon to c:hooee Forsaleacuba equip $375 *FA.LL SALE* ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• new tonneau sor1. lop, bead,11delcfootb0ards shota. he'd , gentle:. Good cond. $85. Call from, $20 84.2·2976 aR com"",,. .. or...,lorr,-•·-----~· .$350 WEPAYTOPDOLl.t\R Soles&L.-sl-AM /FM alereo tape 1100. 875-6710 492.3425 .,....._ -__, -r FOR TOP USEO CARS .• ., ~k, aood nabber. x.lnt 9:»5pm. ~ &PM. akis. IC'1-413S. ~.. orb ""'REIGN, DOMESTIC TOP Dollar Ptud ruMlng cond .. P.1lot & Couch. z arm c:holn. c:a ro &ood home. German IOSS &" v Oo ALL Trade Ins .. .... 11 1 Sbeptu rd ea S9t Christ mu 11 Coming TV, laclo. II tww-rt ll•d. or CLASSICS • chrome Uke dew. This ::mj:,.~~A~::r~ &4Uz3t aft~~~:. 11 Comp train loyout. Over MIR.~ 1091 eo.e. wn4rs4'..5783 lf your car Is extra clean NEWPORT DATSUN car iJ a OM ol ·• llod! ----------'---i----------1\lngabe bed .et, refr1fC , 40 HO It 14 N ga1ue ••••••••••••••••••••••• l!C(IUSfil"!t. 888Do•tStNet 213-596-8171.Seal~h. 2 QuMn ADM Oak dlnln FREE PUPPIES. color TV. dinette: at\, tra.ina. 0o hlO' board. Pioneer' PLn llll"ftt.abte, rnau.I Mo~. 4 mos old. IAU!lt IUICIC Near MuArth11r rm d\rs, suo. 493--'J MaJa. lrllx~ breed. dealt, chcsl, dreu er. Towne, lunneta, etc new taoo, ull suo. l.100 m.L $300 flrm. Call 292SH•rbor Blvd. &J•mbor~ Roada '74 MG Mldaet. Xblt CIOGd. an)'Ume. MZ-020hft.6 751'"74;or!H5-M71. Comp,PUO.PP.17Mae8. C3M5'74 S31'rl925. CoataMesa m .2500 llJ-1300 ~mileage.. MMOll •utot, Uted Autoa, Uted •..tot. UHd w.-d111>sd.1v Oc1Ubo1 6. 19ib DAtL Y PILO r D7 _________ ......,.. ___.__ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . . . ..................... . Aadot. t•ported Alltos. l•ported Autos, Used Chevrolet 9920 Continental 9930 Contlntntal 9930 Autos, Uted AMto1, Used A.wtot, U1ed ···~·~················· ••••.••..••.••....••..•..•.•..•...•.•..•.•.... ··•···•··•········••·•• .••••••.•••..••.•.•.••....•••.•..•............ ··········•············••···•··•······•······· ·············••·•······ ~~~••••••••••!?.~~ ~!'!~!:~~•"•••••••!?!.~ ~~•••••••••••••!!.~~ :l6~i.!4~V+Yl '73 MARK IV. wh1te on '73 MARK IV ~•••••••••••••!!.~ ~~••••••••••!!.~~ ~'!!~~••••••••••!!.~~ , "hite, low m1lraao. i.un WITH SU....,ROOF • v 1 v d 67 9U ,Ta rea. F'antast1c ·w M1IX, J<JO ena. 4 61')(1, Autumallc. radio, roor.soooo 9637409 " •F<>ROWAGONS• 71Cup1l~l tlcng u '\ ·~ 'lu:1l 28U cry S mt!ch I coo d., $64SO •VOLKSWAGENS• clc11 n , good cond healer, special whccli.-Full P0 \1.\-r includtnl( 11\l, .!UlO tr.in•-. t.1111100£ rontl t:ull for detulls. 673--6317. OISJ3.258-lor640·9018 can'tbetoldCt"omNEW' '75 MARKIV AM FM stH<:O. till 1972 TORJ!\0 ~ Or 3 r_.1ct,ur Xl11tmed1contl $1000firm ~-6306 wheel. cr uu.c l'Onlt ol. ··-u ~ l UH - -1968 Bug ll 1lUNS'·74 2 -dr Matador t980LWAl $8786 J~alhl'r 1n1erlor, 111r seat~. roof rack. ai .....,.. '6-JMu ... tantt Ne\l.Ures& ·ruu. Red & blk. Map, 5·spd, super cond. 644-0850 o r 642 0054. (9021>'6) Brougham. PS, AC, AM ONLY S299 I rood Lie 064PUS. cond • 11wr ~leenng & . 7 I \1 on l l' ~ o M ~ bra kl':. Cu II 5Sl 3980 ONLY $777 FM 8·lrk. 28,000 m 1 Loaded with all the $5988 brskcs . wood i!ra•n Hmw.:h.om. J>OWlf. ult bt.·twt-cnS 30&10 001>m '63Super90. Wht & blk, lllnt cond .Ca 11 644·0850 or 642-0054 1967 Bu.: A ru~tom1zcd $2500 b:.t ofr. 540·6852 goodies, like AM i l"\1 :.tdl•S lmmal'ulu.ll:' loaclt>tl" \Ir " -.ti hlld • I .... C1' :.lereo. crwsel'Untrol 1111 \•l2llUTU 1 r •cli.·il.•, lo· ... 'tv··· 13."'~I 1.t, 2ll~. ·•\tlo. f' :S, •1R. u.:auty! ( IZ.I P ). days, 5~·0173 eves " ·• " " '"" I ti $1477 --"heel. air cv11rl1t1m11n~ HOW ONLY $2495 nu lki.l otkr. ~.1:1 :no1 10~1·'·:·,•1'·' 1·,.,,new res, 8··'-k aa 1 o and more. BeaullCul c.1r k 1 .1 ~1 .. • • • .. 1910 House Car-On ur-.,., " n<s anyl11lll', wilv<l)':. .•• '15 Porsche 911 S. h I ' (60SRNA) ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must s ee to apprec1atl• 1975 LTUUndt•r 21.000 ufl ·I l\lu::-.t M'll 1!1706 cyl, w ce l>. 53597 '71 Bwck Convertible, C4JI (SY89A823036). mill's & in 1mm~culalc --- -:J..,pd mu11u,1I. SllS-0. M!1s2t'soooell/.b9685t ~2flr:"". 1971 St l L " ~wppcd. S3400. Pvt. ply. cond1llon' t861N h.Ll. '7J Murquis, loulleds}"9ru:r 67:1_1_4_41_. __ _ __ _. .. _____ J_.,_1 .o ionwui::on· ar.,e 962-2422 (!lam ·4:30pm ----HOWOHLY $4997 cleun. lo'"'· :., :,o f<:_ 5 mCA1Xly). i.pec i al . Mon·Fri) Don'tSnUsFirst 1 • 1 .. Oodc)e 9935 ~~18ufl5. __ Pinto 9957 '70 · 911.l' Targa, reblt eni: & lral}S, ''S" inst .. nt·w tires II whls, AM/FM, mustsell. 67J.4818 O"I B ts u L t! •••• •••• •••••• ••••••••• • •••••••• $2677 Cadillac 9915 u ee s as ·· ·74 Dart. custom 1 Dr, v II, Mustanq 9952 •••••··~7·•r••l :;.ro S "If You Don't ••••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • •• • • 4 ,, 1973 tut1onwagon·••••••••••••••••••••••• a1r.P 1S.vinyllop,rud10, XLNT.COND. Automatic-w/a1r cond. BuyFrom •70M"'RKlll steel n1d i al::-., orig. $2,100 545-4664 '68 912 T arga. AMll"M, lac air, Koni's, llkf\ffcy mags, xlnt cond . ~. 963·2312 '7S Carrera. Blac:k o n black. All possible ex tras. Must sell. S<I0-0224 Looks new! W45NllMI. (! '· ~ . llWner. S:.!!ISO 836·8024 . •MUSTANG ll's• $3997 11'~ CONNELL, Full power •.ncluding t11t 673 5215 Plymouth 9960 1~ You'rePaying "heel, cruise control, ------1974 . Spotless 2+2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• J. vinyl roof, stereo, air ·71 Coronet 500 "i.:n. hke (175M PU l ATLAS " .... ~ ........... --· ~.-: .. .,.,.,.,/.-.·~ TooMuch!" cond.Lic.143A1'E. new.l'S,2'.lOOOm1,S2200 '70FordTorino.2dr,A1r NOWONLYS2997 -.::::.... ...;-__: CONNELL $2886 968·43-19 w nd. PS/ PB. 1 owner Chrysler /PtyMOUth .69 Chaq:wr 3113 l'nlt A C. <'Ur, lo m1tcai:e. 675·9-136 1975 • H:mltop. A htllc Open Uaily & Sun. 'Ul 10 N '!:lllbelfS CHEVROLET A!\t FM btcrco radio. 4 ·70 Ford van "~ ton. 2 gas red beauty! <ATV021 1. PM GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd . Huntington Beach ~ 2X28 llarbor Hhcl :.pkri., ne w haller) lanks,stereo8trk. mags. HOy.' ONLY Sl297 2929 11arbor Blvd .• Cadillac COSTA !\I t-:S/\ SlOOO Ph (2 13>S~il·2iifi 1ct.> bo,. Gd mech cond. Costa Mesa or 963-2456. '70 Porsche 791 lT, superb ~-_ co!ld, new tires, new ·73 vw Bus. Xlnt cond.1.o paint, AC. 499-1394 ml., $3875. 645·5859 after '68 911 Cpe. '69 cng. _5_:_30_. _______ 1 AIC. Asking SS.SOO. Unique '68 \'W. '71 rebll 5S4·5481 afte r5pm. engine SIOOO Xlnl conll •74 f()J'sche 911 Cpe. 646 6072, S-18·4193 __ Ch e rry! Aar, mags, '70VWSqrbk. Nucng, nu AM/FM stereo., clec win-paint, SI ,600. dows, 28,000 mi. Sll,850. Call S52 71Gll 838-2796 ---~· ·68 VW Sqbck. C:lc:an. runs RollsRoyctt 975 gootl s1000 or offer ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548·3'7G5 #lOEALERINU.S.A. - -----c.==~=-o:=::-...;.;.~ '74 VW, Gold, Super Sun JR R Y Beetle. air cond. xlnt R CARVER cond, lo mi. sunroof curd ROLLS· ROYCE uphl. S279\l !HO·iO:!<i __ l5'0Jamboree '75 VW Convert AM/FM \~--..... =-= a .. cll stereo cassette, xln l CLOSED SUNDAYS cond. 640·7762, 630-7733. Qualiry and Price Guaran1eed L( .h 1ni: Spcc1Jli\ls P1 r ILrrcd R.i ll'S I lci.:c~t Scire lion ot f\~w <\; Used (" Jd1l1.1C\ "' o .. 1ni;1: County Open Sund.1y Cadill.ic MJ<itcr Dealer '.'!1111(1 I l.11 h111 lil\ d Cu~l.; ~k,,1 :i ~Q.91 00 Nabers Cadillac • Clas!itC '5 1 VW, gold S4 Bentley R Typ<', whl. \elour int. ginger exl. 076 SON. LOADED. LO gray Ult., sun roof, auto. Hun~ .:d. S260iJ 548·1273 :\1 1 . BI. u i-: w 11 T xlnf cond.881-1994 ;---. 546-5075 AFT '1PM. PVT Saab 9760 71 VW Limper, w1pop PT\' lop, !>lpi. '1. $2tiUO -------••••••••••••••••••••••• 49tl·2522 '76 Cad CdV, loaded, '71 Sonelt. New eng, ----UM m1. ht S9.100lakes. trans, c lutch & brks. 068 VW Squarcback. supe Call 642·4959. Fact m ags. special ex· clean, new eng, clutch. ---- haust. S45.2SOl. brakes, shocks, mags. '11 CdV, fully equipped, T t 9765 radials, llur~t shifter. new t1rei., $2.500. oyo o S1900 Firm G IG·8080 201 Perf cond. 673 264 2. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Anaheim St., Cui.ta --- SOUTHERN Mesa , EH•!. '69 Cad. CclV. J\/C, all ORANGE COUNTY'S power, vin)-1 top, radial VOLUME tires. Xlnl rnntl. Super TOYOTA DEALER Volvo 9772 dean! 491.11J2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Cpe DeVille. Clean, all EXAMPLE: Brand new 1976 Toyota. 2 Dr. & fully equipped. 1158527 ). ONLY $2997 Ml\RQUIS MOTORS ~ijMO/ MllllloVI 11111 PO<WY -,,,., o .•. ,,o J,.,.,>' ·A.1•,_. t••' M 1\\ION V llJO SOUTHERN xtras. 1 ownr. Lo m1 ORANGE COUMTY.'S S2S95. M_·l·_t5_6_1. __ _ VOLUME Comaro 9917 VOL VO DEALER ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 Camaro EXAMPLE : Brand new 14m mi .. loaded. 1976 Volvo 242S. Full) SH95. 673·7220 equipped. (090011.il -ONLY 56596 '73 CAMARO. 350cc, 4 spd. PS. PB. AC, $3,000 4\19-1394 546 1200 JIB. S2495. 548-1487 546· 1934 ---842-8844 '67 l~IPAl~A. PS1Pll. nu tin"•· auto, rent tune up. run' i:rt.>ul $700 557 6386 ----- 1973 CHEVY NOVA LIFTBACK VS. automatic·, pwr. stci:r1ni::·unu:.ually clean! (S0702tlJ. ONLY S2897 Ml\RQUIS MOTORS 28801 MAllGUllllll P~WY \un Du.•c10 f, wy • A1o1,., 'f l a1t M l\SION VII JO 8Jl·78KO 49S • 1110 '76 Cordorba Loaded Lo ·s.c Plymoulh. Good bat· •74 MARK IV milage Sth er i:ra~ Lincoln tcry, tires , radiator, $6500. PP l:!.15 9221 •••• •• ••• • •• • •• ••• ••• •• run', n""d' work. M akc F\.tll power induding lilt ---'"' .. ~ whet.>I. A!\I FM stereo. Ford 9940 '71 LINCOLH offer~_'._2990 __ . ---- leather i nterior, air ••••••••••••••••••••••• Loaded with A!\t /FM -----Pontiac 9965 cond . mu~l 3 t'e to ap-·75 Stiver GranadJ Ght,1 !>lereo, vinyl roof, tilt 'fi6 Mustang, xtnt mech .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pn .. oe1ale. Ltl' fiOILEM . Very cll'an. loaded. Low wheel. air cond. and new brake!', lunc·up, red ~ . SJ S $7286 mi 's S4800 55!1·5505. more. Come drwe this wlblk uphol., reur ~pkrs, '70 Grand 1 nx · peecl GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 842-8844 ----one Lie 248HCO gdures Sl585 631·0655 pkg, leat her seats. '75 LTD Landau Tudor. . .$2389. . . AM/F M, new tires & htrl wht on whl, fully •1966MUSTANG• brakes.$1<1()0. Ph644·055J _!qwp~P S4800. 557«1799 Hardtop with lots of Veqa 9974 char acter . Restor ed!••••••••••••••••••••••• '6!) Ford Hanch Wgn. Good Mcch'ly. Nct.>d!> '74 Vega. Xlnt cond. ·73 c l. 1 1 2.,-T--body work. SG50. 642·9611 on men a u r own or 675.8508. GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 842-8844 One of a kind-must sec! (SLU669). $AVE HOW! Sl.800/bcst offer. 83'7·7913 aft6pm. Cpe. Exec car. lmmac ----------1========= Thinkin~ of Lc>asing? ~oncl., lo mi., all leather 63 Ford Calax1(', outo, Vil, Maverick -inter. Luxury pwr;equip., PS. PB, u1r, 5-1,<JOO mi. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A 1\1 I F 1\1 s l e r e o . Former elderly Leisure '7-l Maverick, 4 dr, a uto thermostatic heal & air. World owner. $775. tr ans, A/C, xlnt cond. '72 Vega GT. Super clean, mags, good tires, R/11, AIC. run5 g r eat. Economy car. S1400/ofr. 540-1905 Call Paul Recd 546 1200 or 675·9626 P\1. Ply. $-HOO. S-IU·7800 497·2891 S2500. 559.0737 8·5 wkdys ask for Bud or si.l·2157 wknds. Brand New 1977 OLDS CUTLASS ~~ "SUPREME"·=. • ¥~ COU,E ORDER TODAY! 9100 Allto1,Mew Alltos.Mew Brand New 1977· OLDS Brand New 1977 GMC Omega --u~ , Y2 TON "' ~~f (3527C76100572) -PICKUP 9100 .. 11 .'lwiln Q~ -1710 I · '7SCbinook·M;~i Camper. .. Ml\RQUIS MOTORS '75 Camaro LT hard top Xlnl cond. lo m1., fully eqpd. 968·5928. 5 4687 ~~~~.~-,,~~~ s·3MW977 P.P. Call Bob, 557-1773. • VollcswQCJen -······················· '74412 Wagon. AM/F:0.1, 33,000 mi, xlnt conll. $2,950 646·9631 ·59 VW, rolled. No motor sso. 675 7085 2ll~OJ Mllll<~Uf ll1U Pt<W Y ~"'" 0 1c."flO f t W ) ·A.-t•' ~ f.<11t M t\\ION VII JO ~.11·18110 49~·1210 ORANGE COUNTY VOLVO EXCLUSlVEl.Y VOLVO Largest Volvo Dealer in Orange County! BUY or LEASE DIRECT •• • • . -~ ... ,• .. * * * * * •• * •• ft " ,.. .. . 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •CHEV. '76 New• :\lonza To"n Coupe, S speed cconom). (5368) Only 83798. HOW ARD Chevrolet Dove & Quail Sts. NEWPORT BEACH 833-0555 PLUS TAX & LICENSE Brand New 197 6 HONDA "HATCHBACK'' AM radio. (SGC2057139) t')t<1'1t Ct••ee 1'iJitl6 97 '"'Cf !"It IC. lil1 tol't•"C8 C"'-'Q«S ANNUAL P(!ACFNfArt.~ ~AlE t4 t~ '73 DATSUN 240 z • .. l"ftlll'rl .)+' ,.,,.,.1 flnnlnr) ,.,,It., ,,11., ... wheeh 1M1ulllul CflOIH!HI. Brand New 1976 HONDA ''WAGON'' (WBA2026e01) PLUS TAX & LICENSE U4DYFOl IMMfOIATI DtuvtlY $377DOWM .5 9~NTH . . ,,; 4-cvllnder 4-c;peed A\1 f-M rc1d10 & heater. Sena! No 35065 $1695 '71VOLKSWAGEM "BUG" SEDAM 4-cvltnder. 4-speed. radio & hearer. License No 084-CZN. $1295 anyone '76CHRYSLER CORDOBA COUPf V-8. automatic trans. factory air cond1t1onrn9. power steenng. brakes & windows. AM/FM radio. heater. w-s-w tires & vinyl root. Lie. No 225-NIN. $5595 '73 RA~:.OERo PICIC·UP V-8. automatic trans . factory air cond11tonm9 power steering & brakes. AM rao10. heater. w·s-w 11res & ma~s. Senal No 26760N. '75 FORD LA MD AU 2·DR. V 8 auto . am-Im stereo. heater p windows p seats vinyl top. 1111 wheel. air cond11ton1ng deluxe 1ntenor. w-s-w ttres lie No 439-NOI $4395 '69 PLYMOUTH BARRACUDA V-8. au1omat1t~transmiss1on. radio. heater. console & bucket seats lie. No YSR-487. $1195 '76PLYMOUTH FURY COUPE V-8. automatic. radio. heater. air cond11t0n1ng. vinyl top. oower steenng & brakes. Lie No. 254-NOW. $4195 .... COMPLETE "HEAVY DUTY" SERVICE AVAIWLE FOR YOUR R. V. OHE OF THE RHEST SERVICE FACILITIES IH ORANGE COUNTY. OPEN SATURDAYS 8:00 AM TO 5:00 PM. OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 7:30 AM TO 5:30 PM. : ~ Huntington Beaeh , Fountain V!,~0~y Afternoon N.~. toek ) VOL. 69, tfO. 280, S SEC!J9NS, 52 PAGES TEN CENTS Carter, Ford Confrontation Tonight B1 WALTEa a . llEA.&S A~l.-ci.t0M1t .. 1 •1 l From a distance, Gerald Ford aad Jimmy Carter have wqed a m arp, sometimes bitter dlapute about American defense and foreign policies. So there is plenty to argue about 1n San Francisco tooigbt if tbe Republican President and tbe DemocraUc nominee want to get tau8b in their second campaign debate. (6:30p.m . PM') Debate ground rules and cautious television consultants may take the edge cd wbeo the two get together, RM. among tbe items for confrontation are these: -Ford's usertim that Carter doesn't know wbat be la talking ·about in suggesting a $S bi.llloo to $7 billion defense-spending cut. -Carter's charge that Ford (NEWS ANALYSIS J bu abdicated foreign policy leadership and control to Secretary of State Beary A. Kiss· lnger. Carter contends that Kiss· tncer bu no reeard for morality in U.S. policy abroad, and that he la a "Lone Ranter ... nmni.ng a secret, one-man show. Indeed. lf tbe White House r ivals simply repeat what they've been saying about each nther trom afar, tbe Great Debate 0 wlll befarmorebeated than tnelr first n1Uooally televised match two weeks aio. An Associated Press poll rated that one a virtual draw in the eyes of the voters, with a slight gain in support for Ford. · So far, foreign policy and d~ tense have not been topics ot the campalp -even t;boqb they are paramount respcnaibillties of -.y" president. Carter bas campaigned hardest on the issues of tbe economy, taxes and jobs, categories that were covered in tbe first debate without either candidate breatina new ground. On tbe road, Carter talks about Inn • m Default? HB Hotel Hauled into Court Glendale Federal Savings and Loan baa filed a lawsuit in federal bankruptcy court in San· ta Ana to have a receiver ap- pointed to collect rents and pro- fits at the Huntington Beach Sheraton Inn. Glendale, the holder or the mortgage for the 144-room hotel, also initiated foreclosure pro- ceedings against the bolder ol the lease for the operation ol tbe botel. A bearin& is scheduled on the Downtown 118 Project To Be Aire d Pros and cons for a Huntington Beach downtown redevelopment plan will be discussed Saturday from 10 a.m. to 12 noon at city council chambers. Six speakers will address the is- sues in a panel discussion sponsored by the Huntington Beac~·Seal Beach League of Women Voters. Huntington Beach City At· 1orney Don Bonfa will discuss the legal aspects of redevelopment. Lance Jacot, a resident of the proposed redevelopment area, will discuss disadvantages of re- development while attorney Jerry Shea wilt talk on the advan- t.ges. Joseph Milkovich, a member or tbe Redevelopment Commission, will discuss what is contained in the redevelopment proposal that will come before the city council for a public hearing on Oct.11. Also speaking wlll be Dr. Gordon Sh anks, a member of a Seal Beach taxpayers group op- posing redevelopment in his area and Fountain Valley Mayor Al llollinden who will discuss re- development planning inbis cily. 1bere will be a question and answer period. PhyllbSariego. programdirec· tor, said a $1 donation will be re- qu ested to cover costs of reproductionofamapforthearea and a synopsis or redevelopment eftortatodate. Jtmkets Banned SACRAMENTO (AP) -The new anti-junket guidelines by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. have s poiled plans for two state manacement tr alning sessions in the Lake Tahoe area, say California officials. Coast We a t h e r Early fog and low clouds to give wa.y to a fair after· noon Thursday. Beach high in mid 70s, low to a> expected. INSIDE TOD~ 't' T1w dauflhtn of.a~ ~ IW• dcod m Utt ~ Oltlf"• onacc, bta w cra11t - . CMd,,., pamU•' hopa for,,.. ,.,,.,.., -bow ,,..,. tn-ra. .~omiroct.o/~. (Sft P.oo-AS) ...... suit Thursday at 9:30 a.m. in federal bankru_ptcy court in San· ta Ana. A notice or default bad been filed previously by the city against the hotel leaseholder, Huntington Limited Partnership. City officials said the partnership failed to post a performance bond witb the city ol $50,000 and was delinquent in county taxes. Deputy City Attorney William Amsbary said today that Glen· Oil Price Hike Dire? MANILA, The PhUlp· pines <AP> -Finance ministers of the Organiza- tion of Petroleum Export- ing Countries (OPEC) may announce today a price in· crease of $1.50 per barrel effective Jan. 1, urn. in· dustry sources said. Th.ese sources said while the OPEC oil ministers announce any price changes, their finance ministers have as much 1ay on the changes. The current price fl oil is $11.50 per barrel. Family Sues City, Police Over Death The wife and parents of a young man who was shot to death by Huntington Beach police when tbey responded to reports of a family disturbance-at his home sued the city, its police chief and two officers Monday. Victor E . and Diana K. Di.Stefano, the parents ol tbe late Nicholas DiStefano, 22, and the dead man's widow, Cynthia, name tbe city, Police Chief Earl Robttaille and Officers Leland Camp and Philip Oliver as defen- dants in the Or'ange County Superior Court lawsuit. 'Ibey allege in tbe ac:tlon seek· ing damages that negligence led to Camp firing a shotgun and in· flicting fatal wounds on DiStefano last Jan. 7 as the two officers approached the family home at 18196 Goldenwest St. Subsequent investigation re- vealed that the family sum- moned police because of the behavior of Nicholas' older brother, Arthur, 35, who pep- pered the home of the mushroom erowtng family wltb sbotl during a quarrel. Police said they felled the younger brother witb shotgun blasts in the belief that be was \be gunman. They said be held what appeared to be a weapon in bis band and ignored their com· mands to halt. Biker, Cyclist Collide in RB Bunttniton Beacb poll~ J are lnvestigatln& a crash in which a ·tJicycliat and motueycllat col· llded Monday nlghl Officers said Edward Ellen· vein, 42, of 21772 Banff Lane Huntington Beach. suffered mulltple injuries when bis bicy· cJe wu struck by a motorcycle operated by John Crochette, 18, of 9891 Clearbrook. Drive, BUiit· lnctoo Beach. 'lbe accident, wbich occurred "al Hamllton Avenue md St. .lo!m Lane, led to the bospit.alisa.Uon ol Ellenveln at Paclfica llolpltal, where he is repmted ftl8t1nl com· lortabty today. • - dale bas acted to cure defaults by posting the $50,000 perf onnance bond and paylng rent owed to the city for three months. Amsbary said Glendale also paid off more than $200,000 owed totbecounty in possessorytaxes. The city assigns the lease and collects rent on the property which includes the 144-room hotel, a nine-bole golf course and the Driftwood Mobile Home Park. FUIDes Fill Age nda at 118 Confab City and county officials met Tuesday in Huntington Beach to discuss ways to combat pro- blems caused by noxious fumes emanating from a comtruction site in the city. City AdminlJtrator Bud Belsito said an agreement was reached for developer Frank Buccella to proceed slowly and cautiously in any future excavation wort. It will be permitted only after ap- proval from tbe city. Belsito said representatives or the Air Pollution Control District indicated that the strong pungent odors don't pose a serious health huar<l. . •'It seems to be more of a case of mental anguish tban anything else," be said today. He added that the smell only becomes ob- noxious durlnJt excavation work. Prke of ·Protest· ............ Belsito said-that otherwise the material t bat causes the odor, methyl mercaptan sulfur, ox- idizes when it percolates natural· ly from under the surface 8Dd odors are neutralized. Blood streaming from bis ·face, a leftist student wounded and captured by police m· Bangkok is helped to an ambulance by a Thai trooper and a girl. Defense minister Sangad Cbala,wyu seized power today after noting broke out over the return of former Thai milit ary dictator Tbanom Kit- ti.kachorn. <See story, Page A4 > He added .that officials have not yet come up with answers to the long-range ramifications or the problem. He said the that wort still to be done on the 4.5-acre construction site near Bolsa Chica Street and Warner Avenue includesinstalla· tion of water mains in large de- posits or tbe affected soil Work will be done slowly and a little at a time when weather COD· ditions are best and when breezes are minimal, be said. 1be material Is expected to be treated with sodium bypocblorite wben it Is disturbed to hold down the odor, be said. Belsito said letters will be sent to .reaidents notifying them fl the schedule of work to be performed after approval bas been received from city officials. SuupMeet Aids HB Units A swap meet will be held at the Joseph R. Perry School grounds from 9 a.m.·S p.m. Saturday with the proceeds going to two school groups. Proceeds will help support the scbool 's Parent Teachers Organhation and Early Childhood Education Program advisory committee. Selling places at the school, 19231 Harding Lane, HunUngtoo Beacb, can be reserved fw $5.by calling Katb.y Groat at ~ 1be event la open to the pubUc and will include food. games and prizes. 'Throat' Cut Pomo Patroru Complain MIAMI CAP> -Trutb·ln·pactag:tng has hit the pornography business. A Miami theater showing the X-rated films "Deep Throat" and "'lbe Devil in Miss Jones" 'was fmed for not telling the public portions of the movies bad been deleted. Asst. State's Atty. Kurt Marmar said some patrons complained to police they weren't gettiq their money's worth at the theater. Mum.ar said the Pussycat Theater cut the filma after Circuit Judge Thomas Testa ruled in 1973 tliat certain scenes were obscene. , Marmar said an agreement with the tbeater•s operators, Gayety 'lb.eaters, Inc., called for removal ~ the objectionable material and a notice ln ad· vertisementa that the movie bad been revised. When the court got reports the theater did not lo· elude the warnina In advertisi.n&, Testa found the compan7 and its presi~ Leroy C. Griffith, in COG• tempt of court and fined t.bem $3.000. Trustees Appr~ve Fringe Adjust._.ent " Huntington Beach City (elementary> School District trustees voted 3·2 Tuesday to ad- juat an interim friQge benefit package for school employes to allow for increases in last year's hospitalisation rates. Tb e acti'on c ame after employes were &old tbe interim l(reement &heir npt'tMntativea si,ned .ta.st aronth witJt the dia- tttct negotiator · would I*>' last year's rates. . Some board members, ad· mlnl.ltr1tors and employes said tbey were under the lmpretslon the interim a1reemeot called for the maintenance ot "current benefits." Employe represen- tatives said they thought their in- surance coveraee for hospital rates would increase from f11 to $100 per day and Crom $177.fO to $250for intensive care. The board's action Tuesday in· creases the $101,344 paid this year in benefits by $37,375, tic· cordinl to Charles Palmer, depu. ty superinteodent. . Last year's fringe benefit paekare expired Oct. 1. Teacher representaUve Lort Anderson told the board of trustees, "Although we spent more tban four houra di.acuaahlg your resolution to eonttnue cur- r ent benefits on a month·to- month basis, we were ne•er satiafied with it, but we siped it to protect what lltUe we ba•••" Mrs. Anderson and Trustee <See FUNGE, Pa1e AZ> BB Boy, 10, Hit by Auto POUY WANTED, •A l O·Jtar-oJd . Bubtl.ntton Beach boy la reported resting comfortab&J today aft.el' be WU .ttuclt by a car TlleadQ' ennlnl. HQD\lnitoft Beach oolice are the boy, Randy lrtlllick. of 221 DeVolt A••· tuffered I MVtre bead l1cer•tlon . when be wu ~ by a CU' driW8 by Leo J .. Crilt, n. ot no a.acaao A.e., ~ Beacb. Crllt wu not d tld. Offtcet'I said tbe boy ~ 11 dalled hlto u.. .. _. tbe • ~ of A.I..,.,. SU... llDd Peca A•eaa Tbe cblkl wu taken t.o Paciftca lbpttal. . COl'~DRO. "We received a tftmendoua respobse. We 're so taappy to ban fOllDd a 1ood bome for our pet.'"" Tbat•a the advertl.slnC tuc?eeta ezpertenced by a Corona del ... woman wbo placed thia clusUWtl ad: •. l Tame Halfmoon Parrot Incl 2 cage~. food, etc. $3S. )U(XAX>CX)( " So, lf you b1ve a pet, iJr &DJtblD' else t o aefl, call 8G-M18. t'a easy to make a few 11ror1'1 work for yoa ln tlle ~pie'• manetpl9Ce -tire Dally Pilot cluslftedl. Al DAILYPILOT H/F Wedneeday. Oelobef &, 191& t.On Taking Gifts Never Again, Carter Says • ATLANTA (AP) -Altbougb Jimmy Carter says be toot tree rides on corporate jets and speat several weekends vacationing at corporate retreats while be was goveroor of Georgia, be bas always " malnt.aiDed that sacb hospitality did notinlluence his actioM as gov· ernor. 1be DemocraUc presidential candidate. who advocates ba.nni.QI gU'ta of value to public officials, says be would not aeeept aucb offers agai.n. llOTB THE LOaalBED Allle&AFT Corp. and the Coca-O>la .. C«npuy provided transportation for Carter to several flllldJons while be was governor from 1971 tbrougb 1974, company spokesmen say. During a three-week swing through Latin America in April t.m. Carter Oew aboard a Lockheed Jet.star. Be used a Coca-Cola Co. • aircraft to attend several National and Southern Governors Coo· , . renmces. The state provides aircraft and a travel allowance for its gov-ernor. Both companies have m~ installations in ~a. ASKED ABOUT '111E USE al the Lockheed Jetstar, Carter told a reporter last April that the trip was a routine trade mission in which be promoted Georgia products, including Lockheed aittratt. ''There was no secrecy about it," be said. "It was reported and it oqbt to be ... The visit to five Latin American countries included Carter bis wife, Rosalynn, two security gu~. the state's chief ind~try hunter and several Lock.heed officials. A Cc;a.Cola Co. vice president, Ovid Davis, said bis company is me of &everal that provides products or services for the National and Southern Governors Conferences. He said it rues a corporate aircraft to both events. DAVIS SAID THE COMPANY bas offered tree flights to Georgia governors ror 40 years. Campaign spokesmen said the free rides bad no effect on Carter's declsions as governor. "He never did a favor fOI' either company,• said press secretuy Jody Powell. •'I'm sure be felt no obligation to these companies." Powell added that usinC corporate jets might have "sn~ the taxpayers money" by reducing the cost of the governor's transportation. ALSO DURING IDS ADMINISl'llATION. Carter spent two weekends at a rustic forest lodge owned by Brunswick Pulp and , Paper Co. in southeast Georgia. and a weekend at a lodge owned by Unian Camp Co. in western South C8.rolina. • Members of bis family, his staff and their wives, and a Mure daughter·in·law accompanied Carter oo one trip to Cabin Bluff, a S0,000-acre "producing pine plantation" owned by Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. near Woodbine, Ga. Carter told reporters last weet "it would have bee.a better not to" bave accepted the hospitality, and said be would not do it qain. * * * * * * Poll Shows ,,,.... Page AJ lArter Vote Cm Sharply SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Jlmmy Carter bas plummeted in the California PoU to the point where be baa only a six-point lead over President Ford com· pared to a 20-point lead one IOOGthago. lfervin Field, direct« ol the California Poll, said today that interviews conducted Sept. 18-25 also indicated Eugene McCarthy might bave •'strong write.in vote potential," in Callfamia. In August, Carter, tbe Democratic challenger in the Nov. 2 election, bad a 53-33 per. cent lead over the incumbent Republican president, but that slipped to 41·35 in the tally re- leased today on 1,044 interviews. 1-00king at the poll, Field said one thing wa s cl e ar : "California's important bloc of 45 electoral voles is now in the doubtful category where not too many weeks ago it was solidly in the Carter column." Weiser Lock Project Due Groundbreaking ceremonies will be held Friday .t 11 a.m. foe the $'25 million Weiser Lock Com· pany in the Huntington Beach In· duatrlal Park. i Olamber of Q:nnmefte Direc· l tcr Ralph Kiser said the plant , will cover 54 acres and will : employ 1,500-3,000 worbrs when I it is completed. He said it 11 the : lar1eat new buaineu to enter the : cley aince the McDormell Dou.g)as : Corp. located bare. Of'ANOI COAIT ,.,, DAILY PILOT DEBATE ••• general terms. He reminds au- diences that under the GOP ad· ministration, the natioo is at peace. He promises to keep it that way, and says the way to do it is With increaaod spending for defense, not with such cuts as Carter bas advocated. Tonight's debate puts Ford on ground be chose; be regards de- fense and foreign policy u his SCOR& DEBATE YOURSELF Pllg9 A3 strong points and bad wanted the first debate to be on those issues. Yet bis advisers already are bedging tbe wager a bit, with White House press secretanr Roo Nesaen remarting that the Presi- dent will be subject to restraints that will not affect Carter,• because Ford's wonb ''will be in- terpreted by foreign leaders as reflecting American policy." There does, indeed, appear to be a problem for Ford, and pro- bably for Carter, too, in any de- bate questions about Kissinger's efforts to promote peaceful transition to bJact majority rule in southern Africa. It la unset· tled, it ls explosive, and either man could compound the pro- blem with an ill-considered phrase. For Carter's words, like Ford's, will be read. anal~ed and wei ghed i n forei gn rn.lniatriea around the world. Girl, 16, Dies As Car Rams Power Pole A lf.yeu-old lhi WM killed •U'1Y today when the ear lo wbicb abe wu rldinl struck a power pole on Trabueo CanJon Road, California Hi1bway Patrolmen reported. Her identity bad not yet been determined by mid-morning, patrolmen said. Sbe was a pauenpr in a car drl•en by Brandy Phillip Townsend. 18, of Buena Park, patrolmen said. He was taken to Saddleback Community Hospital for treatment of modlru ln· June.. officers •aid. Tbey reported Townsend's car was traveling nortbeut on Trat.o CaAJOD Bold. wbla lt nn olf the road near Un Ou CaD10Q Road It 5:1!5 LID. and muck a uUUb' pole. 1'bl clrl WU p~ dud Ill the acene. tbe CRP l8Ad. Spray Delay Aaked EURBKA. CAP> -The Rum· boldt County Board of a.pentlOl'I bu aat..s tbe U.S. Forest Semce to del_, until tbe ed ol deer Huoa a berMcide llll'Qlu p!'Ojeet ~ ~ llC!l-.I o£ Umber land In o.r Nolte a Humboldt counti•. Trio Rob Market In Mesa BJ 8TSYB Jll'IUIBI J. Of .. Olllty .......... Three men armed witb a aawect. off shotgun and several pJstob stormed Into a Costa Meu market Tuesday n.lgbt, scooped up money from several cash re- gia ters. look wallets from customers and fied iDto the d.arlt· ness. Store managers at Ralph's Market, 2300 Harbor Blvd., were asaessin& losses today, but no dollar amount bas yet been de- termined in the 9: 45 p.m. heist. The trio, all of Latin descent. walked into the market, display. ing a l2·1auee sbo~ and two re- volvers to clerks and a half-dozen customers. 'Ibey scopped $22fromonecasb drawer before moving down the line to another register, where clerk John Glesceti, apparently unaware a robbery was under way, ignored demands foe money from the shotgun-wielding leader. The clerk was bit on the shoulder with the barrel of the shotgun by the angry gunman before banding the cash register drawer to bis accomplice. After cleaning out several re- gisters, the gunmen announced, "Okay, Jet's see some wallets.'' and began taking wallets and pursesfromtbreemarketpatrons and two clerks. Police today said the trio made off with at least $66 from customers. Store officials are checking to see bow much money was taken from registers and a safeinthestore. 'Ibey believe the g\DllDell may have made orr with food stamps and several rolls of quarters and change amounting to$200. That figure could go much higher, one police spokesman said today. Description of tbe three gunmen, seen by at least seven other store patron.s in addition to victims lo the robbery, coofinnM that the trio were of Latin descent. One suspect was described as being six feet tall, weighing between 160 and 200 pounds, and wearing long black hair, combed straight back. A second gunman was described as being five feet, seven inches tall, with a stocky build with slicked down black hair. The third Suspect is about five feet, ftve inches tall, weighing 130 to l.SOpounds, also with slicked down hair. Police are questioning wit· nesaes to the robbery for a more complete description of the gwunen. F,....PageAJ FRINGE ••• Brian Garland criticized diatrict ne1otiator Dr. John Miller, ol Julian and Associates d San Juan Capistrano, for no& being "in eloae harmony" with the board and school emp)oyes on the matter. "We asked that the specifics be put in writing but John Miller re- fused,'' Mrs. Anderson said. Board President Jack CJapp and Trustee Dale Bush admitted they were not sure what the aareemeot actually meant. Both board members wanted to dis- cuaa the matter further ln ex- ecutive session. Upon returning from the closed session, Garland, Clapp and Bush voted in favor d the fringe benefit package adjustment. Trustees Norma Vandel' Holen and Stephen Holden voted against the action. Teacher representatives and Truatee Garland criticized the district for using__ an outside negotiator in penc:t1Jl8 contract talks. "He doesn't have to live with the decisions be makes," Garland said. Dlltrict officlala aDD"IDCed a Nov. 1 public bearing on unfair labor pracUce cbaraes ftled by dlltrtct teachers in Ju11. The state Educational Employment Relations Board .W CODdud the beartna ln Loa Anaeles. Tbe cbargea stem from what teacben call a unilateral salary freeu for all employes. District officials hue justified the salary freeae by sa,tng no pay lncreuea ol any type can be given unW contractl arrived at tmder colJective bargaining are signed. Amigos,LWV Plan Meeting A Jolat meettq al the AmJ#ll de Bois• Chica and tbe Le.,ue of Women Voten of Huotlutoa Beldl.S.al Beach wW be 6eld Thunda1 at a p.m. •t 11oc1 Courtnty Lane, Hu.nttaaton .Be..:b .. nae Pl'ODOMd annaMicJa ~the Bolaa Cbtca Qlarabllllds to the ct- ~:f tmitoG Beacb will bl. A 1poke1maa 1aJd ,.UtJou will be dlstrlbutad ealliftl f01t de- nial ol th• UDaatiClft by u. Local Aaaey l"ormadaa Oom· mluioa uatll .detailed matlr pltlllldq al ... ..... .. com. plated. Dan's Their /tlan Wllliam Pells of American Cancer Society and Lorraine Humphrey, president of society's Fountain Valley b~ancb, congratulate Dan Cboroser, 14, after malting ~m honorary member of the cancer-fi,bting organiza. tion. Dan. of 10201 Swallow Ave., Fountain Valley, raises fu~ds for the cancer s ociety by publis hing a neighborhood newspaper. He writes most of the material for bis paper and sells it door to door even though a muscle disease confines him to a wheelchair. New Storm Speeds Toward Acapulco MEXICO CITY, Mexico CAP> -Tropical Storm Madeleine. pcking up speed in the Pacific and beaded toward the Mexican resort of Acapulco. could turn in· to a hurricane by tonight, the Mexican weather service re· ported. A spoke.sman for the weather sel'Vice said there was no cause for alarm and no warning bad been iss ued to residents of Acapulco or other communities in~ state or Guerrero. The atonn, located 275 miles south-southeast of Aeapulco, was moving toward Guerrero state this morning at a speed of about ei ght miles an hour, the Talks May Reopen NEW YORK CAP) -Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Israeli Foreign Minister Yigal· Allon met today to explore the re· opening of Middle East peace ef· forts. spokesman said. Winds in the center of the storm were recorded at about 45 miles an hour. "We've taken no steps to pre- pare peopJe on the mainland for the storm, becausewedonot want to cause a false alarm.1bere i.sno way of knowing which directioo the storm ultimately will take," the spokesman said. He said Madeleine was moving in a northwesterly direction wiLb a tendency toward a route which would lead it to the state of Guer· rero. Acapulco is the state capital. . He said the winds were grow. mg stronger and the storm was expected to be classified as a bur· ricane. Acapulco is approximately 840 miles southeast of La Paz on the Baja California peninsula, where Hurricane Liza struck Thursday leaving 4.23 dead by official count and some 40,000 homeless. Some officials expect the final death count to reach 1,000. Riley Defends Architect llyTOll 8AIU.£Y o. .. ~ .......... Orange County Supemsor 'lbomas Riley appeared todelend San Clemente architect Leon H,nen late Tuesday lbortl1 after be was called to the at.and u the proeecution's aeeood witneu in the Superior Court bribery trial. "J am sure be was unaware be was committing a crime by mat- ing those comments," be told de- fense attorney MUte Flanagan while beine ques tioned on telephone calls madetobisoftlce by the defendant. Riley tesWied that be contacted the district attorney's oftlce In Mav. 1976 after a aeries d further telephone conversaUona be· tween bis aide, Peter ~ andffyseo. I 'Ib.e confidenUaJ memorandum sent to District Attorney Cecil HJcks resulted in Hyzen, 88, of 2100 BS. Ola Vista, being indicted by the grand jury on three feloQy counts of offering a bribe. It is alleged that llylea offered a $1,000 campaign cootrtbutloa to Riley through Herman In return rorthe supervisor's pledge that be would be considered when the time came to build a branch library in San Clemente. Riley told Hicks in the memorandum: "It is the im- pression of my aide that Mr. Hyzen probably was unaware that be was committting a crime \ by mating these comments but t thought it wise to bring the matter toyourattention." Flanagan pointed out in bis cross examination d Riley that the memorandum was seat to 1 HJcks Just one month before an election in wbicb Riley was re- turned to bia Fifth Di.strict seat. Riley also confirmed for Flanaaan that be received more funds in campaign cmtributions than any other candidate and that builders and developers were among the major cootributors. Riley told Flanagan and Depg. ty District Attorney John Conley that there were no plans for a branch library in San CleDM1Dte at t.he time Hyzen allegedly offered the bribe and that there are none today. The trial ran toto a delay today when Ju4ge H. Walter Steiner decided to question prospective witness Brian Patrick Lane out· sidethepresenceofthejuey. Lane, who la an att«ney and mayor of San Clemente, bas pointed out to Judge Steiner u be earlier pointed out to tbe gand Jury that bis attorney-dieat rela- tionship with Hyiea must be clarified before be tesdftee. BB Bouse Burgled Guns, Jewelry, mtiques am other valuables worth nearly $3,000 were reported ltols from a Huntington Beach man's apart. ment when be returned bome aft.er a two-hour absence Tues· day. Rod CuJpepper, of 7201 Warner Ave., told pol.ice the in· truder pried open a sliding gJus door to gain entry. ---------"-~------. ---. . Lynn Hort HART'S John Hort SPORTING GOODS ' 538 CENTER ST. • COST A MESA • 646-1919 WlfllHf Slits 131s.241s.291s.3915 Cotton Slat Saits-810 Hooded·Zippered Sweats11irts-8so Lonr Slene-V-neck Acrylc Sweaters-695 Uni & Slllrt Sleeve Colored T-S~frts-395 & 41s 1J111 Dorts & Trldl ;.u 225 to 4so Nylen w.,,,_.. Jaets J95 & 895 SW1atsa-12s to 300 Ope1 9 ta & Cllsed S.aday Soccer Ba11s-&•s to 2s•s Soccer s11oes-11s to 24•s Basketballs-695 to 32'5 Footballs-J's to 2ps Volleybal~9s ta 23'' Racquetballs-tn Tennis Balls Can of 3-1•• 1ea.22s.2so Handballs & Glens R~aetllall laqaets Tennis Racbts Tennis Dresses Tennis Shirts & Sborts Tennis Shoes RICbt Strintml 531 Center M&.1919 I . . 1, . \· . Irvine EDITION Todn,-·'s Closing N.Y.St~ks 1 VOL. 69, NO. 280, SSECTfONS, S2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1976 TEN CENTS l Bugged by Insects? Hope for . i Heatl By HILARY KAYE 0t•OellY ..... IWI Plies, gnats and other flying in· teeta are tormeottns Irvine and El Toro residenta more than mu.al this fall due to unseasonal· . lywetandda.mpweatber. : ~GU Cballtt, manager ol the Oranae County Vector Cootrol District, says not much can be done about the pesky insects until tbe weather warms up and the Priee of Prote st pw.nd dries out. Cballet'a staff bu been receiv· lnc an aver ace of 15 calla per day from residents compJain1ng about imeds in their homes. But Cballet says erroneously most of them believe the insects to be mosquitoes. • ''l'bey tty around the houses and look like mosquitoes, but they're actually UtUe fungus gnats and they don't bite " ex· pla1Da the district manager. CbaJlet says that someone from his staff goes out each time a complaint ls made. The homeowner receives an explana- tion of the different types cl in- sects and a pamphlet. Althouah there are many dil· ferat kinds of fiyi.ng insects oc- cupying Irvine and El Toro homes. ChaJlet says that In Irvine. moat of the problem is Blood streaming from his face, a leftist Sangad Chalawyu seized power today after rioting broke out over the .return of forme~ Thai military dictator Tbanom Kit· tikacborn. (See story, Page A4) • student wounded and captured by police in Bangkok is helped to an ambulance by a 'lbai trooper and a girl. Defense minister Marine's Family Sues R ecruit's 'Wrongµd Death' Asserted BJ WILUAM SCRaEIBEll OfetleDallyl"llll ..... Attorneys representlne the family of a Marine Corps recn.iit fatally injured during a band-t.o- band combat drill last year to- da,y filed a $14 million lawsuit qalnst the federal government and 12 individuals, including 'President Ford. Coast Weath e r Early log and low clouds to live way to a fair after· noon Thursday. Beach biab in mid 70s, low to 60 expected. I NSIDE TOD~ Y n. dauglat4" o/ o ~ ~ '"' Mod In ,,.. oor-...... O/ftCe, Old INrr omit - Glllll Jwr porml•' ~/or the " ~ -MN befft /rOeffl, ~a mfrocle oJ ~ (Sn Page A5) •••ex -~~ A7 ......,,.,_ e1 ...... ......... ,. .. II' ~ At ...... All E o ........ ,... .. .............. ,.. ., =o.ty Al I .,._....._. M Ct·• ....... ,... ... --. .., J I ..... Id,\ ..... ~ ........ , I ,._ ~ ·-Alt l ,_. " C.-'1 ~ A1•tt ......... ti~ ... ........... Cl ...... .._ At ...._ M ... The suit presented in U.S. Dis· trlct Court in San Diego cites the "wrongful death" of 20-year~ld Pvt. Lynn McClure due to in· Juries sustained du.ring training at the San Diego Marine Recruit Depot. He was knocked out in a succession of pugil stick bouts. WUUam Y acoboui, whose law firm bas offices in Orange Coun· ty and Oceanside, said the fami· ly bad filed a claim qa.inlt the Navy in April and today's suit was the "next step." Tbe lawyer said tbe sull names the United State• of America, the President, the secretary of Defense, secretary ~the Navy, commandant of the Marine Corps, commandant of tbe recruit depot, four training depot personnel and 500 "John Does" to be filled iD as needed. Yacobonl said the McClure family,~ Lufkin, Tex., is aaklq $S.5 mlWon fol' wroacful death, $3.5 mil.lion for the recruit's l\lf- fering between the time o1. in- jury last December and his d~ ath in March an.cl $7 million in punlUve damages. He never re- tained C0.118CiOUSDelS. 'lbe suit contends McClure's rtptl under four dJDstitutional AJMDdmeots were vialat.ed. "II tbe taae is decided in the famllJ't fa.or, lt wW set a pre- cedent in the bandlln1 of milituJ caaa,•• Yeroboal said. "Evft at&orneJs few the IOYtm-ment acr-withtbU. ,, Tbe attorne1 old be wm ....... that McClure WM lnvalld· 11 recruited br the Marines ti.caUM be was not really c..,.. J ble of passing a battery of men· tal and physical qualification tests. Yacobozzi said if the conten· Uon that the young man was not recruited properly is upheld, he would be considered a civilian rather than military personnel. The family 's suit claims McClure was seized unlawfully by \be Marines, subjected to in· voluntary servitude, subjected to cruel and unusual punishment and fmally bad his life ta.ken without due process~ law. "Some of these are very tricky legal points to argue but we feel we have a strong case,'' Yacobcmi said. Now that the suit bas been filed the federal government <See MAUNE. Pace AZ) POUY WANTED, GUI' G<HJD HOME "We received a tremendous response. We're so happy to have found a good home ror our pet ... That's the advertJsinc success experienced by a Corona del Mar woman wbo placed this C'lassllled ad: Tame Halfmoon Parroc Incl 2 caoes, food, etc. $.35. X)(JMUOUC So, lf you have a pet. or aoytbln1 else to •'11, call &U-5171. It's easy to mate a few wok'da •ork for you to tbe ~pie .. marketplace -the Daily PIJot cluallledl. coming from the f~ gnats. "In my opinion, the gnats are coming from the Oran1e groves," says Cballet, who lives in an Irvine housing development across from an oranae 1rove. ·'They breed on decaying or1anic matter." . "Whenever there is a rain, and there is housing near an oranae grove, there are bound to be fungus gnats.'' says CbalJet. He said he's lived in Irvine for slx years, but that be 's Mver seen the gnat and fly population so high. ln addition to the gnats. there are other types of rues annoying Irvine residents. One ls the metallic-green Oy that is bred in trash cans. another is the common house fly wbicb can come from either trash containers or may be com· ~ inl from the rottiq tomatoes ~ some ol the Irvine tieJcb not y plowed under and a third is frui rues, expJaJned Cballet. In El Toro. there is an even worse problem. according te Challet. although steps are ~ being taken to ease the situation~.' An extremely larte number rues are concentrated in D T due to several ideal breed1n8 (See BUGS. Pace AZ) Issues Aplenty Deba t e Could Become Heated By WALTER R . MEARS Al' StM<IAI c;e,,.._ From a distance, ~aJd Ford and Jimmy Carter have waged a sharp. sometimes bitter dispute about American defense and foreign policies. So there is plenty to argue about in San Francisco tonight Lf the Republican President and the Democratic nominee want to get tough in their second campaign debate. (6:30 p.m. PDT> Debate ground rules and cautious television consultants may take the edge off when the two get together, but among the items for confrontation are these: UC Irvine Eyes Joi n t Prograr;n ' Engineering faculty members at UC Irvine may begin job bunt· ing lf the UCI ad.ministration goes ahead with a proposed merger of the School of Engineering and the Physical Sciences School. Administrators are consider· ing the merger because growth at UCI bas tapered off from original expectations and because the englneenng school has one of the smallest faculties on campus. But Allen Stubberud. assoclate dean or the engineering school, claimed that •'more than one faculty member would be in the market ror jobs elsewhere lf the merger goes through. "As for myself, as soon as l could find a better job t:lsewbere I'd leave," added Stubberud. Engineering faculty members have until Oct. lS to convince the administration that a merger would weaken the professional engineering school. Stubberud said meetings are now being held arnoag faculty members and academic commit· tees and that by Oct. 15 vice Chancellor James McGaugh will make a recommendation to Chancellor Daniel AJdrtch on the merger proposal. Stubberud said McGaugh now appears to believe the merger is necessary to "protect" the small engineering school, bu\ that he could possibly be dissuaded from that position if the engineering faculty could convince him otherwise. The usociate dean said bis col· leagues have not yet taken a formal position on the proposed merger but said be believes the majority are against such a move. They will meet later this week and vote on a reaolution. Nearly every other UC campus bas a separate, professional engineering school and Stub- berud said be feared the inteO'ity ~ the UCI scbool would suffer il it is made part of the pbyslul sciences school. AlU.OU,b the engineerlq stu- dent enrollment dipped to a low of m puplll four years ago, due to tbe aerospace lnduetry decline, enrollment is now at a peat of about 600 for both under· graduates and 1raduate stu· dents, Stubberud said. "We're 1tron1er than ever and there Is no reason to merae the schools.·• he maintalnecL There are sll1ht11 more pilyslcal aclence ltUdenta than enlineering students bot the number of faculty memben dif. fera 1reat.1y. Tbe full-time eqlneerln1 staff numbers 15, ""1Je tltere are 75 tulJ.dz&e f~. ty mem,bera In th• pb11lcal ICi~•~booJ. ' ( J Indeed. if the White House ~EWS A ~ALYS/S r ivaJs s tmpty repeat what , ., , ., they've been saying about each other from afar, the Great Debate n wlll be far more heated -Ford's assertion that Carter lban tne1r first nationally doesn't know what be is talking televised match two weeks ago. about in suggesting a $5 billion to An Associated Press poll rated $7 billion defense-spending cut. that one a virtual draw in the -Carter's charge that F<'rd eyes of the voters, with a slight has abdicated foreign policy gain in support for Ford. 1,adership and control t o So far. foreign policy and de-- Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss-fense have not been topics of the inger. Carter contends that Kiss· campaign -even though they inger bas no regard for morality are paramount responsibilities of in U.S. policy abroad, and that he any president. is a "Lone Ranger," running 3 Carte :-h as campaigned secret, one-man show. <See DEBATE, Page.\%) * * * * * * Wouldn't Aeeepf. A gai n Carter's Freebies "Had No Influence' ATLANTA (AP> -Although Jimmy Carter says be took free rtdet on corporate jets and spent severaJ weekends vacationing at corporate retreats while be wu governor of Georgia, be bas always maintained that such hospitality did not influence his actions as gov. emor. Tbe Democratic presidential candidate, who advocates banning gift.a of value to public officials, says he would not accept such offers again. BOTH THE LOCKHEED AlllCRAFT Corp. and the Coca-Co1a Company provided transportation for Carter to several functions while be was governor from 1971 through 1974, company spokesmen say. During a three-week swing through Laun America ln April 1972, Carter flew aboard a Lockheed Jetstar. He used a Coca·CoJa Co. aircraft to attend several National and Southern Governors Con· ference.s. The state provides aircraft and a travel allowance for its gov- ernor. Both companies have major installations in Georgia. ASKED ABOUT111E USE of the Lockheed Jetstar, Carter toJd a reporter last April that the trip was a routine trade misaion in whieh be promoted Georgia products, including Lockheed alttraft. "There was no secrecy about it," be said. "It was reported and It ought to be." Tbe visit to five Latin American countries included Carter, his wife, Rosalynn, two security guards, the state's chief industry hunter, and several Lockheed officials. A Coca-Cola Co. vice president. Ovid Davis. said bis company is one of several that provides products or services for the National and Southern Governors Conferences. He said it rues a corporate aircraft to both events. DA VIS SAID THE COMPANY has offered free nights to Georgia governors for 40 years. Campaign spokesmen said the free rides had no effect on Carter's decisions as governor. "He never did a favor for either company.·· said press secretary Jody Powell. ·•t 'm sure he fell no obligation to these companies." Powell added that using corporate jets might have "saved the taxpayers money" by reducing the cost of the governor's transportation. ALSO DURING IDS ADMINISTRATION, Carter spent two ' weekends at a rustic forest lodge owned by Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. in southeast Georgia, and a weekeod at a lodge owned by UruonCampCo. in western South Carolina. Members of his family, his staff and their wives, and a future , daughter·in-law accompanied Carter on one trip to Cabin Bluff, a S0,000-acre "producing pine plantation" owned by Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. near Woodbine, Ga. Carter told repon.ers last week "it would have been better not to'' have accepted the bospit.ality, and said be would not do it a1ain. I Deerfield Opinion Sought for Park I ' I Deerfield residents interested ln how Deerfield Community Park will be developed can tmd out at tonicht's meetlnc ol tbe Irvine Community Services Commtuion. The orilinal master plan calla for two softball fields, a baseball field, soccer .field, four tennis courts <two lighted>. a multi-use recreaUonaJ buildin&. a tot lot, :rl· free play area and Comntlnlonera wW meet at T:IO at city ball. Comments f'rom Detdleld "'9ideata wUl be beard wbea comml11lonen ccwtder ftether tbe7 tbould 4MYeloo Deerfield Commumt)' Part'~ -~ . the orlginal plan or modify tJ>;9 ~ plans. -:l Accordln1 to Assistant Cit)' Man.,er Paul Brady, Deerfleld; Community Park ta one of llxl parb to be developed wtth funds from the $18 mlllloa ~bond ts· :r,.puaed by lrvtne wtert~ln. The park ii scheduled to be ~late UU1 yur and city of Odm are now bectnnin1 the plmnln• procat. The pan eonatats o112.e aera of d'1 land. plus ln1nl ICbOol dlltdct .... • Tbe llte Uta nut to DeerfWd I Elementary and Vnlldo ID· . t.n:aediate Scboola. • 1: '~ ~AIL Y p1•_r.;...H;..._ ______ w-'~-"'-,_~ ..... ay..._0c_1_ot>_n_r_6_t-.9_T6 Secret Jobs For Hinshaw? A woman who worked as a clerical supervisor in the as· se1sor's office when Congressman Andrew Hlnshaw was Orange County's assessor in Jg72 testified late Tuesday that a cloak of secrecy was thrown over the alleged involvement of several empJoyes in Hinshaw's campaign. Prosecution witness June Lake testified in Superior Court that sbe could get no response from her supervisors when she re- peatedly asked why certain employes were absent f'rom the jobe on county time without a stated reason. Mrs. Lake said she fmally was ~d that the informatioo oo those employes would only be given out to those who "really needed to know" their whereabouts. She told Deputy District At· torney William Evans that she took the explanation as a clear indication that she was to mind her own business and stop asking questions. Mrs. Lake testified that she was one of a number ot employes wbo were ordered to complete vacation slips covering the time that certain employes had been absent. Republlcan was convicted or bribery charges lO an earlier SUperior Court trial and ta free on appeal after being sentenced to oae to 14 years in state prisoo. fi'ro..PageAJ DEBATE ••• hardest on the issues of the economy, taxes and jobs, categories that were covered in the first debate without either candidate breaking new BJ"OUQd. On the TOlld, Carter talb about foreign policy and defense when asked, or in prepared addresses to audiences concerned with those issues. He bas said that polla show him that when people are asked to list their concerns, they list at least a dozen topics before they get to foreign affairs. Ford, in a more limited road campaign, bas made more of those topics, but only in the most SCORE DEBATE YOURSELF-Page A3 Library Bribe Case Riley ·Def ends SC Architect By TOM BARLEY OflMO.llfPilllls..tl Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley appearedtodefend San Clemente architect Leon Hyun late Tuesday shortly after he was called to the staod u the prosecution's second witness in theSUperiorCourtbriberytrial. ''l am sure be was unaware he was committing a crime by mak· ing those comments." be told de· fense attorney Mike F1anagan while being questioned on telephone calls made to his office by the defendant. Riley testified-that be contacted the district attornef's office in Mav.1976 after a senesolfurtber telephone conversations be· tween bis aide, Peter Herman, and Hyzen. The confidential memorandum sent to District Attorney Cecil Hieb resulted In F{yzen, 66, ol 2100 BS. Ola Vista, beitU? indicted by the grand jury on three felony counts of offering a bribe. amoni the maJw contrtbutcn. RUey told Flana1an and DePtt- ty Dlstrtct AttorMy Jobn Conley that there were DO plana for a branch UbraJ')' ln Su Clemente at the time Rysen allecedb' o«ered the bribe and that there are none today. The trtat ran toto a delay today when Judie H. Walter Steiner decided to quntioo P"JSpedlve witness Brian Patrick Lane out· side the presence oltbejury. Lane, wbo Is an attorney and mayor of San Clemente, bas pointed out to Judge Steiner u he earlier pointed out to the grand jury that his attorney-diem rela- tionship with Hyaen mmt be clarified before be tesWles. GOP Irked Over Report She testlfied that she protested, but was assured that there was nothing illegal about the ar· rangement and the time would be made up to the affected employes in some "off the record" man· ner. general terms. He reminds au· diences that under the GOP ad· ministration, the naUon is at peace. He promises to keep it that way, and says the way to do it is with increased spending for defense, not with such cut.s as Carter bas advocated. O.lty ...... itatt ..,._. SCOTT BURCH, 9, TRIES ON FIRE GEAR In lrvlne Saturday, an Ounce of Prevention It is alleged that Hyieo offered a $1,000 campaign contribution to Riley through Herman in return for the supervisor's pledge that he would be considered when the time came to build a branch library in San Clemente. Riley told Hicks In the memorandum: "It ls the Im· pression of my aide that Mr. Hyzen probably was unaware th.at be was committting a crime by making these comments but I thought it wise to bring the matter to your attention." WASHINGTON (AP) Republicans are complainlng about the timing and cootent ot a congreuional report that criticizes tbe bandll.ag of the Mayaguez incident. Hinshaw, 51, is being tried on charges of grand tbert, con- spiracy, embezzlement and violation of state codes that gov- ern the conduct of public or. ficials. It is alleged that be Ol'dered as· sessor's employes to participate in his successful congressional campaign prior to the June primary in 1972. The Newport Beach fi',....PageAl MARINE •.. , presumably will seek a sum· mary judgment on the claim that .McClure was invalidly recruited. Yacobozzi said if the suit is upheld on that point the defen. dant would be the United States government and the other prin· cipals named in the action would be discarded. "We included the names in the event we are not able to pursue our action against the United States under the federal Claims' Act," Yacobozzi said. In the event the summary judgment goes against the fami· ly, the attorney said action against the individuals would proceed. "But we reel we have our' strongest case against the Unit- ed States,'' Yacobozzi said. 'lbree Marine drill instructors and thre e officers who supervised the unit to which McClure was assigned were court·martialed or reprimanded because or bis death. Oil Price Hike~? MANILA, The Phllip. pines (AP> -Finance ministers or the Organiza· tioo of Petroleum Export· ingCountries <OPEC> may announce today a price in· crease or $1.50 per barrel effective Jan. I, 19'n, in· dwstry sources said. These sources said while the OPEC oil ministers announce any price changes, their finance • miniaters have as much say oo the changes. The current price ol oil is $ll.~ per barrel. ~ ~ OflANGI COAST DAILY PILOT =~~:::r.:,i:.:::=~= eo...P11t111.i.1 ... ~y ~ ... ..,11-.... ==~"t~l:7.!'1~l.~,~· '•'" Y•U•v. fr•lM. S•ddf.O.C.11. V•Uty •Nt ._ .... ~fSov•~Coe" """Git-•..,. '""' " -1"*1 s.1,.,.,.,.., ...., -.,, y,. ~:c~:;~111~~'.'!.r,~~ lJO .. ,, e,,y ........ _ --·"""--Jackll c-w, VIC.•"'"'-"'•"" 0.-...111 --.._, "_ ,., .. . ,.._ ... ...... -""91 ....... ... 0-::\l".i~IN-l~i:. ""'\. Oftk:e• c.i.Mt .. now. .. e..si...i =:e.ac11·11 .. _"""'"' ":..Z:C~~ .• ~"t':==.::o ··""' 01.,. ,,,,_.., ' T~ne(Tt4)~ CIMalfled Advett191ftg ~ ~i.Nf• VfllO -()ffl('e Sl1-t.110 ,._._Cl_ ·~ °""'"""' ••16 °'-c..tl _1.,..,.. CllM-.... , .... -•torle• 11 ... ..--_ ... ,... ... , ., •"'•flf, ... ,., .. "'9Alft .... , .. ... ~-· ...... ~ ... , _ .... _ ...... '-" .. ~-.. e.e-CltH 9"1 ... •141 .. 0..C. MIM (.tUfot111I• \\i•ud•llM •• C•tf'i•• fi1.M ::.:'J...•:a.:~ly,. -Ml; ..... ,frf Tonight's debate puts Ford on ground be chose; be regards de- rense and foreign policy as his strong points and had wanted the flrst debate to be on those issues. Yet his advisers already are hedging the wager a bit, with White House press secretary Ron Nessen remarking that the Presi- dent will be subjed to restraints that will not affect Carter, because Ford's words "will be in· terpreted by foreign leaders as reflecting American policy." There does, indeed, appear to be a problem for Ford, and pro- bably for Carter, too, in any de- bate questions about Kissinger's efforts to promote peaceful transition to black majority rule in southern Africa. It is unset· tied, it is explosive, and either man could compound the pro- blem with an ill-considered phrase. For Carter's words , like Ford's, will be read, analyzed and w eighed in f oreign ministries around the world. * * * Poll Shows Carter Vote Cut Sharply SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Jimmy Carter bas plummeted in the California Poll to the point where be has only a six-point lead over President Ford com- pared to a 20-point lead one month ago. Mervin Field, director of the California Poll, said today that interviews conducted Sept. 18·25 also Indicated Eugene McCarthy might have "strong write-in vote potential." in California. In Augu st, Carter, the Democratic challenger in the Nov. 2 election, bad a 5J...33 per· cent lead over the incumbent Republican president. but that slipped to 41 ·35 in the tally re- leased today on 1,044 interviews. FireDien Open Doors To Public The University Fire Station in Irvine will open its doors from 9 a.m. to4 p.m. Saturday as part of this year's Fire Prevention Week. Firemen will offer displays on fire prevention techniques and equipment. Visitors to the station, located on Zee Street off Campus Drive, will receive pamphlets on fire safety. Films offering prevention tips wll be shown all day. Smokey the Bear will greet youngsters throughout the day. For the pas t few weeks, children i.n Irvine schools have been drawillg posters for fl.Te pre· vention week , competing for awards from lbe Junior Ebell Club. Winners will be announced at 2 p.m. Saturday at the station. All of the entries will be on display. Chief's Ban On Gun OK'd Costa Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth 's ruling that local bail bondsman Robert Glazier can not carry a gun has been upheld in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Walter Smith rejected the writ demanded by Glazier, 130 E. 17th St., on the grounds that the bondsman needed a weapon for his protect.ion. Gluier argued that he regular- ly carries large sums of money and possession of a weapon might discourage attacks like the one that nearly cost him bis life last March 30. He was shot in lbe stomach outside his offices on that occasion by an assailant who bas escaped police detection. Bob Till, Shoppers Armed Trio Stonn Market in Mesa By STEVE MITalEIL OUlleO.llrPl ... sc..tf Three men armed with a sawed. otf shotgun and several pistols stormed into a Costa Mesa market Tuesday niaht, scooped up money from several cash re· gisters, toot wallets from cust.Omers and fled into the dark· ness. Store managers at Ralph's Market, 2300 Harbor Blvd., were assessing losses today, but no dollar amount bas yet been de- termined in the 9: 45 p. m. heist. The trio, an or Latin descent, walked into the market, display. ing a 12-gauge shotgun and two re- volvers to clerks and a hall-doien customers. They scopped $22 from ooe cash drawer belore moving down the line to another register, where clerk John Glesceki, apparently unaware a robbery was under way, lgnored demands for money from the shotgun·wioldln1 leader. The clerk was hlt on the shoulder with the barrel ot lhe shotgun by tbe angry gunman before banding the cash ~ drawer to his accomplice . After cleai.ol out several .,. .t.t.n. the 1unmen al>IMMIDCed. :TC>tl,. let'• aee tome wallets." ad belaD ta.kin& wallt&a and purses from three market patrons andtwoclerks. Police today said the trio made off with at least $66 from customers. Store officials are checking to see how much money was taken rrom registers and a sale In the store. They believe the gunmen may have made off with food stamps and several rolls of quarters and change amounting to$200. That figure could go much higher, one police spokesman said today. Description of the three gunmen, seen by at least seven other store patrons in addition to vtctims in the robbery, conftnned tbat the trio were of Latin descent. One sUAped was described as being six feet tall, weighing between 160 and 200 pounds, and weartn1 long black hair, combed straight back. A second gunman was d~crlbed u being ftvefeet.. seven inches tall, wtth a stocky build With slicked down black hair. The thJrd suspect 11 about five feet, nve lncbet tall, wcighlns 130 to 150 pounds, also with all eked down hair. Police are questJontna wit- nesses to the robbery for a more complete deac'ripUon of t.be l\(DIDttl. fi'ro. Page Al BUGS ••• grounds, including the large number of poultry ranches, fertilizer companies, garbage dumpsters at the marine base, and clippings dumped after homeowners mow their lawns, according to ChalleL Those situations are always present in El Toro, but Cballet said the wet weather caused the population to explode this,year. He said unhappy homeowners in either city could spray the rues, but that "it's really a waste of time and money." "The only real cure Is to attack the problem with sanitation re- medies, such as cleaning up possible breeding grounds," said Cb all et. He added that trash containers should be checked to make sure rues aren't breeding there and that any poss ible breeding ground in the back yard, such as lawn clippings, or dog droppings, should be cleaned up regularly. "But all that really won't help unless the weather changes," he added. Pound Slips Again LONDON (AP> -The British p0und plunged more than 2Y.a cents tooay to $1.6390, near its all-time low. The fall marked a drop in stock exchange values, sending the Financial Time5 in· dex or leading industrial shares plunging 10. 7 points to hit 308.6, a new low for the year. • Flanagan pointed out in his cross examination ot Riley that the memorandum was sent to Hicks just one month before an election in which Riley was re- turned to his Fifth Districtseat. Riley also confirmed ror F1anagan that be received more funds in campaign contributions than any other candidate and that builders and developers were The General A~ Office said 1n a report that Marines were ordered to invade a Cambo- dian island and rescue crewmen from the captured car.,, lhlp, despite reports that the crewmen were no longer on the bland. The report also said in- telligence information iDcon'ect- ly indicated the island would be defended by about 20 Cambodian soldiers, but the Marines landing oo the island were met bJ' tire from about 150 heavily armed men. Marine and Alr FOtte de- aths totaled 41. 'Throat' ~•t Pomo Patrom Complain MIAMI CAP> -Truth-in-packaging has hit the pornography business. A Miami theater showing the X-rated films "Deep Throat" and '"Ibe Devil in Miss Jones" waa fined for not telling the public portions of the movies bad been deleted. Asst. State's Atty. Kurt Mannar said some patrons complained to police they weren't getting their money's worth at the theater. Marmar said the Pussycat Theater cut the m.ma after Circuit Judge Thomas Testa ruled in 1973 that certain scenes were obscene. Marmar said an agreement with the theater's operators, Gayety Theaters, Inc., called for removal of the objectionable material and a notice in ad- vertisements that the movie bad been revised. When the court got reports the theater did not in- clude the warning in advertising, Testa found the company and its president, Leroy C. Griffith, in con- tempt of court and fined them $3,000. Lynn Hart HART'S J0hn Hart SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST. • COST A MESA • 646-1919 . Wa"°"" Slits 139s.249s.29ss.399s Cotton Sweat Suits-890 Hooded-Zippered Sweatshirts--1so Long Sleeve-V-neck Acry6c Sweat~95 Long & Short Sleeve Colored T-Shi~5 & 495 Cym Shorts & Track Pants 22s to 4so Nylon WamHIP Jackets J95 & 895 SweatsoJ-125 to 300 Open 9 to 6 Cllsed Sanday Soccer Balls-6's to 2695 Soccer Shoes-795 to 2495 Basketbalfs--595 to 3zts Footballs-795 to 2895 VolJeybafls--i95 to 2315 Racquetbaffs-1 25 Tennis Balls can of 3-1 11 1ss.22s.2so Handballs & Gloves Racqaetball RaelllltS Tennis Rackets Tennis Dresses Tennis S~!rts & Sllorts T enrris Slloes Racket Strlnlitl ~Center t:zm 64&-1s1s . r • i ' ( I W edneeday's Closing Prices NYSE COMPOSffE TRANSACTIONS Wednesday. ~tot>er 8. 1m 1/N DAIL V PILOT •7 Puffei° Pmh. Low Tar Means Big Buck& By lllLTON KOSKOWITZ U you think you bave ~ seeJ.ne a lot of ada tout.ln1 ciCu-eltes wbkb are low tn tar and nicotlne, you're correct. But you haven't teen uyt.tuna yel. Tbe onslaU&hl la aboul t.o begin. Money Tree t..ut mootb 's report from the American Caocer Society that s mokers can reduce tbe1r chances of gettina caacer or heart disea1«1 bf u61n& low·lar·&Dd· nicotine cigarettes la likely to touch off. beavy ban' age ol promo\Jon ror braoda ln that category. Indeed, tbc report ma.y pres.re a cbange ln the cl1arette market as fundamental as the one tbat occurnd after 1954 when tbe Amerlean Cancer Soclet.Y reJeued its tlrsUl~a llnJdna ctaare&.te smoll:ing with 1"1\1 cancer. TUE EPPEcr OP TRAT aEPOllT. butt.resa«l by others In subsequent years, wu to cbanie the 'b:larket from unfiltered to filtered clearettes. In 1954. fillers accounted tor less than 10 percent ol the lotaJ cigarette market. By 1967, they controlled 70 percent or the market. Today. they bave 90 percenL Tbe reason for thal massive $hi.ft was rear. not fashion. Smokers simply assumed. without any bard evidence, that a filter cigarette would be "uler." So. Camel. Lucky Strite and Chesterfield were dethrooed, replaced by Marlboro. Wlnston and Kool. Now the American Cancer Society. the ronimost oppo- nent of smoking, bu come forward to say. in effect: ''You shouldn't smoke. But if you do. at least choose a brand that bas a low level or tar and nicotine .•• TO SOME EXTENT, SMOKERS have already been do- ing that, hence the increased saJes registered by such brands as True. Carlton, Vant.age. Merit. Now and the "lighl" versions of the established brands: Marlboro Lights, Winston Lights, Kool Milds. Kent Golden Lights. It appears as if these are the brands that may well take over the market, just as the Olters did during the put 2.0 years. Two brands have emerged as frontrunners in the low·lar· and·nicotine segment oft.be market. One ls tbe R. J . Reynolds brand, Vantage, that has been ln national distribution for five years. The Vantage ads ln newspapers and magazines have oot been subtle. They have played <llndly oo the health COO· cems or smokers. featuring sucb headlines as: "How many tlmeshaveyoudecidedtogiveupsmoking?" VANTA~ESJU..mWEllEUPZSpercentlastyeartolO.• billion units, enabling the brand to place l2lb in lbesalesstan dings. The other early winner in the low·lar·and·nicotine race If the Philip Morris entry, Merit. Although it was introduce<. only last December, it baa been backed by what is probabl) the heaviest advertislng budget ever put behind a ne-. cigarette: $40 million. And report! lrom the tobacco Industry say Mertt has already carved out a market s hare equiva1en1 to that of Vantage. about 1. 7 percent of the totaJ mark et. It': unprecedented for a new cigarette brand lo gain so man) users in so short a time. U smokers went strictly according to the tar and nicotine levels in choosing a brand, then they would be stampeding for the American Tobacco brand, Carlton, which has the lowes: levels of any brand on tbe matket. The R. J . Reynolds brand. Now. is also among tbe leaden in screening out tar ane nicotine. BUTVANTAGEANDllEB.rl'baveout.aoldthesebrand: by promising the delivery of taste as well as low tar AIM nicotine. Neither claims to be the lowest tar and nicoti.ot cigarette. "jUAt the lowest one you'll eQjoy smokine." However . all of this may change now that the Americar Cancer"Society b as given ila support to low tar and nicotine cigarettes. Only three days aft.er the release of the repor: True was in print with ads announcing that it had slashed it: tar content by SO percent Look for more of the same from ow beaJth·conscious cigarette producers. Dow Sustains Loss For Sixth Session NEW YORK (APl -Another wa\fe of selling drovf stock prtces down for the seventh straJgbt session today continuing the market's biggest sustained drop of the year. Trading was moderately ective. Brokers said the market continued to be plagued by un easiness over an accumuJaUon of evidence of sluggisboes: in the economy. Cbart·watching observers said the market's problem: were aggravated t.odQ when the Dow Jones industria average fell through the 960 level, which bad been coo sidered a point of psychological support ror the market. J, closed at959.69otr7.07points. -Vo'1t(API Flrwll Oo•·---STOCICS Ope" Hlqh Low 0-O'CI JO IN'.I '62.Sl t6I J3 '4• a .,. ..,_ 1 Oi lO Tr11 212 oo 211 10 lOf n 2!0.»-111 IS Ull '1 M '9 SI '1 41 '1 t7 t 0 07 &S Stk :llXl.tr :JO~ .a >oo 10 102.U-1 " lndllt t. tU.2QO TrM\ Jlol,tOO Ull" .. .. . • •• ... .. . m ,too U Stir J. ttl.000 StOf!la In TM SpotlJghf HEW '1'0111( ("'Pl· S.IM , 4 p rn. pric.t ..., nt1 • ...._ of .... "''"" ,.,..,,, «· 11 ........ VM" SIOO Eac'*'OI 1.-1>::'3' Ml~.11~. '7l,'llO ..._ 1 ~UI • • • '2',_, ''"'• '• Clllc:Orll • .. 1n.100 ._. + • lOKO Ill( • Jf>),100 11"' ·• lntTelTel 144.000 1'1"'° .• ---------------! 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Ell.-, .. .. .. • 1 .. ,aOO S4Vt-I Pot~ ... . 1:1),IOO 41'19+ I ~lt<AI Ed I S.100 11olll + I ~to • . . 111.100 .. ..,._ 1 ~~~.... :u:= =: ~ """" 't'orlc Sale• Due to late transmission today's tlstlno wlll not appear fn the Daily Piiot. lt'iaf Sf Of!lu Did NEW vo.-IC IAPI WMAT AMEii. 01D Ml!W "°""-(AP) s,, .... ,. I . \ .. DAILY PILOT Wednesday, Octobef II. 1'76_ • c~ i rr==ll l i-1 ~~i WoO.aa Coafl.eted lit Ditehhike Killiag Concentrate 1 oz or 16 oz. LIQUID COUNT VASYA n INDIO (AP) -A Superior· Court jury has found a 22·year· old Pomona woman gllilly or "special circumstances" follow- ing her conviction on a murder charae In the slaying of a good s amaritan who gave three hitchb.lkers a llf\. The second guilty verdict against Marie Elaine Kozealc. is tantamount to a recommenda- . tion of the death penalty. However, the probation depart.. meot has been asked lo malc.e its recommendation In the case. THE IVKY FOUND Miss Kozeak euilty or first-decree murder in the December slaying or Ronald Lee Hunziker, 25, of Pomona. Later, the same jury ruled that tbe act was "willlul, "SECREr Roll-ON ANTI-PRESPIRANT •,I Reg. & Unscented 2.SOZ ggc SIZE EA.j "COLGATE" DENTAL CREAM WITH MFP deliberate and pr~medital.ed," which are special clttumstances that carry with them the death penalty. Superior Court Judge Warren Slaughter will sentence the woman Tuesd ay. MISS KOZEAK, ALSO known as Marie Elaine MatzJca, was convicted in the same case in which a co-defendant, Richard ·Taylor, 23, also of Pomona, ls to stand trial on murder charges next week. A 15-year-old luvenlle is in the custody of Riverside authorities on similar charges. Authonties said Htul.liker of- fered to give the trio a ride to Oklahoma during the Christmas h olidays las t December. Authorities said Hunsiker was MR. CLEAN All PURPOSE CLEAN.ER .-- 2801 SIZE 9 gc DEL HAVEN BATHROOM TISSUE beaded for Wisconsin. HUNZIKE• •s ESTRANGED 'wife reporte dly contacted authorities in March when she. could not locate her husband. His ' dis membered body was found ln a shallow desert grave near · Blythe last April. Authorities later recove..00 his car and a rifle in Okmullee. Okla. ASSORTED FLAVORS 141/2 OZ CANS M&M' s CANDIES PLAIN & PfANUT VODKA Li "EXTRA n ....... -..... ORY" U n REG. 3.49 FIFTH u CORICIDIN "D" DECONGESTANT 25 TABLHS Shelf & Drawer PAPER 17 pc. Y4" Drive in metal 6 95· lC»ui11D ! 99c As'iorled colors and designs. case. 170822 • v1cKs Formula 44-0 13" x 25' 18" x 18' 14 pc. 3/a" Metric II pc. 3/a" Drive ~· COUGH ~ ~· I MIXTURE ~ ~ ..._;_~i_::_•::_4_K_~_9_5 __ :~_::_::_•l_8_._9_5_ s ......... , ~~~! "·~ :~- ,, 13-7353 ijfHi:.:11:1!E:: •. ~ •. .• .~ ... :,.;:~::. . ":ii~ .. ..· ~i "SOUNDESIGN'' .:; i;! Stereo Phonograph with ,. m AM/FM RADIO jf1 -~ Play~ 13. '15. and "BOUNCE" 78 rpm records 11. . with s·· w•de t•: I range w..aker<;. 1;1 . :79.88 ~j ~ ii; FABRIC SOFTENER ~,,.,,, ·.7 lf1• . JC.II ..-:>....._./ 60 SHEETS 2.29 "PROTEIN 21" HAIR SPRAY ~ Holds with body a for ~oiler ha11. ~~ 13oz 1.19 "BARE FACE" ACNE SKIN MEDI ONE f1p,hls pimple~ & cleanses oily skin · 2.8oz 1 49 : SIZE • NIGHTIIME COLDS MEDICINE 1001 SIZE 1. 6 9 INSTANT KRAZY GLUE 4 ROLL PK v1(J(s Formula 44 SINAREST TABLETS ~cm1 STHMGTH fo1 relrPf ol smu .. hPt1dache ~ ,~.j Cough Mixture and conges!1on '1 44 9i3oz s11l 09 . ... '! .. ~---20 TABS "t" ~ aac --- PLASTIC STRIPS · Floating Candle ---LIGHTS BY LIBBEY Allract1ve crystal tulip shapPd glass holders for wate1 and "whatever" .. Cand le tha t t I oats 1ncludrd with P.ach. PRINGLE'S NfWFANGUD One drop holds a ton .. no clamps-nogg 61/2 INCH 1'12 INCH 81/:z lflCM POIATO CHIPS m1~1og -no mess. c .07 oz (2&} 5" ROUND Planter or Rooter Made of .l!tass with s1~al rope· for plants. 2 fresh or dried flowers. 9 9 2r Len&lh • 1.29 . 1.43· 1.59 AO PllCES PREVAIL WED .. OCT 6 THRU SAT~ OCT 9 CAPTAINS Chair Cushions Tu fled foam Fill ed 1n ass orted color~. 2 .i8 8 a LISTEN EVERY DAY FOR THE SAV -ON DRUGS "RADIO -BARGAIN-OF-THE-DAY" SWIFT PREMIUM VIENNA SAUSAGE cara. 5oz SIZE 3~1.00 SWFr PREMIUM . CORNED BEEF HASH 151/201 SIZE :;~NT .• 8EACH-~dam1 a 8rookhur1t-Sprlngd;1, & Edlrg•r FQUNTAIH VAL~-¥1gnolla &1W1tner N WPORT llEA~,.._1020 lrvl~, Wt1tcl!'.f ..,IH S.Ana-~t11 South lt11to,I It. El !oto-1431'2 Rockffeld Road MARQUlfUT~ P~WAY':'14!.1tlol' Vlelo· .... ... .. J { . . • • Laguna/South Coast /lfternoo11 N.Y. Stoeks I , VOL. 69, NO. 280, S SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESOAY,OCTOBER6, 1976 TEN CENT' Laguna Teen Raped at Knif epoint i aboulde.r length bait and a full of th• rapist matched t.bj beard. He appeared to be oven IP other rapes. A friay-baired fat man raped a 18-year-old Laguna Beach girl "he fli~:1~d up while stie was bite g in front ~ Laguna Beach High School Tuesday m,bt. She also suffered a broken wrist. Police believe the assailant to be the same man who accosted a U.year-old girl w a1lring her dog in the south part of town earlier in the evening. The man fied when the girl ordered her dog lo attack him. The young woman was raped at tnifepoint behind bushes along Donna Drive, a rutted dirt road meeting Park Avenue just below Hidden Valley Drive. The girl attempted to flee when taken from the man's red· orange VW beeUe and but sbe either fell or was tackled by the man, and broke a wrist. Sbe was then forced at knifepoint to walk up Donna Drive to the secluded area where sbe was sexually at· tacked. nie girl had been picked up as she hitchhiked in front of ~Hyzen Defended Riley Backs SC Architect By TOM BARLEY OltMOellYPllMSQft Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley appearedtodefend San Clemente architect Leon Hyzen Jate Tuesday shortly after be was called to the stand as tbe prosecution's second witness in the Superior Court bribery trial. .. I am sure be was unaware be was committing a crime by malt- ing those comments," be told de- fense attorney Mike Flanagan while being questioned on telephone calls made to bis office bythedefendant. Riley testified that be contacted the district attorney's office in llav. 1976 after a series of further telephone convers ations be· Oil Price Hike Due? MANILA, The Philip- pines (AP) -Finance miDisten of the Organiza. tioo of Petroleum Export- ing Countries <OPEC) may aDDOUDCe today a price in· crease of $1.50 per barrel effective Jan. l, 1!117, in· dustry sources said These sources said while the OPEC oil ministers announce any price changes, their finance ministers have as much aay on the changes. The current price of oil is $1l.50 per barrel. tween his aide, Peter Herman, andHyzen. The confidential memorandwn sent lo District Attorney Cecil Hicks resulted in Hyun, 66, of 2100 BS. Ola Vista, being indicted by tbe grand jury on three felony counts of offering a bribe. It is alleged that Hyun offered a $1,000 campaign contribution lo Riley through Herman in return for the supervisor's pledge that he would be considered when the time came to build a branch library in San Clemente. Riley told Hicks in the memorandum: "It is the im· pression of my aide that Mr. Hyzen probably was unaware that t)e was committti.ng a crime by making these commettts but I thought it wise to bring tbe matter to your attention.·· Flanagan pointed out in his cross examination ol. Riley that the memorandum was sent lo Hicks ·just one month before an election in which Riley was re- turned to his Fifth District seat. Riley also confirmed for F1anagan that be received more funds in campaign con1ributioos than any other candidate and that builders and developers were among the major contributors. Riley told Flanagan and Depu· ty District Attorney John Conley that there were no plans for a branch library in San Clemente at <See BRIBERY, Page AZ) Rodents Role? Sqmrrels Undennine Offices A small squirrel population is undermining San Juan Capistrano city offices and may pose a health and safety threat to employes or visit.ors to tbe pre- mises, according to an Orange County eovernment report.. In a letter to the city, Roy Eastwood, county vector en- tomologist, recommended .that poison bait be placed in unused water met.er boxes to control the squirrels, whose extensive tun· neling system is undermining ci· ty ball. Trapping and removing the squirrels to a new location would be undesirable, be said. The primary danger lo humans is plague transmission by neas carried by the squirrels, Eastwood said, although a squir· rel trapped in the building could become excited and dangerous. Gil Cballet, district er for tbe county vector con~ lrict, said there have been no cases of plague reported in Orange County in recent years. He said there have been several plague cases reported in northern California. Denny Davis, San Juan Superintendent of public works, said be bas referred the matter to City Manager James Mocalls. Davis said no action bas been taken yet against the animals. Skateboarding Law Viewed by Council $14Million Suit Filed in Marine Death Tbe Laguna Beach City Coun- dl will review laws available to police ll>r control m skateboard· 1111 In lbe city when it meets ~nniq at 7: 30 tooight at city No recommendatioo (Of' action ii made in a report by Police Cblef Jon Sparks, however, the dllef is understood to believe eome additional regulation is needed to deal with the increas- inl -sometimes buardous -uae of skateboards on city ltreets. The city does have a law pro- blbltlng use of the skateboards oo aldewalb, however, regulation ~their uae on streets ls solely de- pendent on state vehicle code aectlons de signed for Coast Weather .Early fog and low clouds .to give wa,y to a fair after· noon Thursday. Beach bith in mid 70s. low to 60 upeded. INSIDE TODAW 2"Pw datlollUr of. a ~ . ca.pie Uu dead in Uw C«· °"""' "~· Old ""' brain -Giid lwr parntl' hopa for tM • ,.,,.,,.. -ba1'C bHft tn-n. ~amirac~of~. ( ... P.ageAl) •••ex .. .,_..,.,. .. , .......,,_ ., :::,._ :: :-.. 11 "'~~r a.MM OM,_..,~ .. C..C. .............. ._. M ~ •• O...,.c-ot• ... .._ ....... u,...... C1.J ............ M..... •t.J ...,.., F Ill A,.U ...... ,.... -.1 ...... ...,~ ... .._ ~' Ult 1"""'" Al•tt ....... Cl_._ M .... ~ a-... .... M -M .•. pedestrians. Under state law, skateboarders are considered pedesbiana. Additional council business will include: -Establishing a truck weight limit of 8,000 pounds for Summit Drive. -An environmental impact report for the Marcroft ptoperty where developers propose COO· structlon of a low-cost senior citizen.a project. -ProPOSed sites for constNc· tico of a fileguard headquarters. -A public bearing oo cable television service. Niguel Woman Badly Hurt In Car Cr88h A 26 year old Laguna Niguel woman was seriously injured to- day when her am all foreign sedan bit the rear of a parked sports car on South Cout Highway near Rockledge Terrace in Laguna Beach. Unclsay A. Robertsan. 23957 Hillburat, was reported in guarded condJtioo at South Coast Community Hospital. Police Sgt. Terry Temple said the woman re- ceived deep lacerations on her face and body and may have sus- tained nect and back injuries lD tbel2:'5a.m . mishap . The accident occurred almost at the exact spot Where one man died and another was seriously In· jured Sept. 1 when tbelr car bit a parked vehicle and then careened over a l~foot embankment land· ing upside down on lta convertible top. In today's early momlng acci· dent, tbe woman's Oerman·made sedan remained on the roacs.tenl comill1 to a stop beeide the parked car just above the em· bantment. By WILLIAM SCllREIBEB OI ._Deily l'tlll 1W1 Attorneys representing the family of a Karine Corps recruit fatally injured during a band-to- hand combat drill last year to- day filed a $14 million lawsuit aaainst the federal government and 12 individuals, locludine President Ford. The suit presented in U.S. Dis· trict Court lo San Diego cites tbe. "wrongful death .. m »year-old Pvt. Lynn McClure due to in· juries sustained during training at the San Diego Marine Recruit Depot. He was knocked out in a succession of pugil stick bouta. William Yacobozzi, whose law firm bas offices in Orange Coun· ty and Oceanside, said the faml· ly bad filed a claim aaainst the Navy in April and today's sult waa tbe "next step.'' The lawyer said the suit names the United States of America, the President, tbe secretary or Defense, secretary ol tbe Navy, commandant ol. the Marine Corps, commandant ~ tbe recruit depot, four traloing depot personnel and :iOO "John Does" to be filled lo as needed. Yacobozd said the McClure family, of Lu.fkln, Tex., ls asking $3.S million for wnmgful death. $3.5 mlllioo for tbe recruit's suf-fertna between tbe time ol in- jury Jut December end bis de- ath in March and S'1 miWoo ln punitive damages. He never r. gained consciouanem. <See MAUNE, Pace "2) r "" SEE DEB.4TE AT UBIURY Tbe Laguna ••ch Ooun· ty Branch llbrary wlll allow the prelidential do- batel Oil ttior telArrilion at a:aotool-~ ~ Laguna •ach Kish School at about 10 p.m . After tbe rape, sbe was driven to an area across from Thurston Intermediate School and relused. Sbe walked to her home and police were summoned. Del. Gene Brooks said the girl described her attacker as a heavy set man with friny between 2S and 30 yean ol. age and wore blue jeans, a T-shirt '!be attack is the second and tennis shoes. He used a Laeuna Beach since the mi tbree-locbbladedpocketknife. May arrest of Gary-~~ Det. Brooks said be would be Jackman, an El Toro M .. uw checking today with law en· staff sergeant sought !Or II forcement agencies throughout rapes ~~mm1tted by &he °po(lte the area lo see if the description rapist. i Price of Protest Blood streaming from bis face, a leftist student wounded and captured by police in Bangkok is helped to an ambulance by a Thai trooper and a girl. Defense minister Sangad Chalawyu seized power today after• rioting broke out over the return of former' Thai military dictator. Tbanom Kit .. tikachorn .. (See st.ory, Page A4) Carter, Ford to Argue: .l Tonight's Debate Raises Bitter Policy Issues ~ By WALTER a. MEAJtS Af'-.C.IMCtt;; ' From a distance, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter bave waged a sharp, sometimes bitter dispute about American def eme and foreign policies. LBTro&tee Calls College Class Ripoff Lquna Beach schools Trustee Nonnan Browne critlcbed the cost ol. a class offered for b1tb achieving Laguna Beach IBgb School atudenu as a "ripoff" 1'1esday. •'Our studenu are being.dpped off by the CaJ State .,nem," Browne said. Coat ol the coune, "Weatern Clvlllsation," ls $51.15 per semelter. Tbere•a a SID ctileount for students enn>lled ill tbe ~ trtct'• 1tate·alded llfted pro-srana. .• . C.t ol a full carrtc;uhun lold ol four or more three-amt daaes for HIQlarly enrolled ltUdeatl ill the state coll••• 111tem ii $15, $17.25 ·more &bu tbe tasun• atu-denu PQ for tbe llQale three- uallcoune. 1be coune bu been ottered u an opUooal cbolc. clu1 tor 1;:.f::• Beacb lllab Sebool J ad ...... wWl Ir* point averqee a.s or abowe. Tb• 1tate coll•1• 111&.m chars• reautar ~ • <Bee arrorr, PqeAI> So there is plenty to argue about lo San Francisco toclight if tbe Republican President and the Democratic nominee want to get tough lD their second campaign debate. (6:30p.m. PDT> Debate ground rules and cautioua television coosultants may take the edge ~f when the two get toe ether. but UDCllll the items for confrontation are these: -Ford's assertion that Carter doesn•t know what be ls taltln« about lo auggeati.Dg a $5 bW1on to S7 billion defenae·spendin& cut. -Carter's charge tbat Ford baa abd[cated forefgn policy leadersblp and control to SecrelarJ ol State Beary A. ltils· tneer. Carter conteods that Kiu- inCer bu no regard for morality lD U.S. Polley abl'Olld, and that be ii a .. Lone Raqer," l'\IDDlQI a secret, one-man show. Indeed, tf the White House rivals •imply repeat what thef'•e ~ Hyi.na ~ eKb other from afar, tbe Great Chamber to Honor Retiring Presley Tbe San Clemente Cllamber ~ Oomn:ierce will honor lona·time OWDel' ~ t.be San Clemente 1nD.. Patal Presle1, at a no-boat cocktal1 party at 8 p.m. Oct. 11 at tbebota. Prelley, wbo aumblrs amans Illa frtenda former Pr .. .ldent .Richard Nls:on, ls lellilll the lDn to-retlN to Illa nathe Otlaboma. Tbe party la IChe4ale4 for a • 11 p.m. ~ .~ • NEWS ANALYSIS ' I • .Debate D will be rar mcire heated than tneir first nationaU1 tdevised m•tch two weeb qi). AD A.nociated Press poll rated that one a virtual draw ill the eyes ol the voters. ~th a aJiabt 1aln lo support for Fri So far, foretrn p(aticy and -. lease have not been topics °'! campalp -even tboQgb are paramount ~PGIDlibWU any president. i Carter bas campaigned hardest on the Issues of U.e economy, taxes and · Jo • • eatetorles that were covered the ftnt debate wltboat el candidate breding new · ... J..-Cll.. <See-DEBATE. Page.U> POUY WANTED, G0r. GOOD HO ·•we reeeived a trem respoaae. We're so Mps>y to b fouDd a 1ood bom.e for our pet.' 1bat'1 the advertilfnl sue experienced by a CClrona del woman wbo placed tbla clMS ad; Tame Halfmoon Perrot Incl 2 QCJes, fOOd, etc. $.15. XXX•JUOOC So. If you bave a pet, anrtblna el•• to sell, 4SGa71. It's eu1 to make a wor41 work for 7ou In • =t~r:!ce -·~ • • I ---A I DAIL y PIL0T I /SC -Ota Tgking '~¥fis Never .AgaiD, ' Carter Says ATLANTA (AP) -Alt.bough Jimmy Cartel' HYI be tool£ tree rides on corporate jets and spent several weekends vacaUoning at corporate retreats while be was governor ol GeoraJa, be bu always malntained tbat s uch bo$pitality did not latluenee bit 1cttoaa as gov· ernor. • The Democratic pn!ISdeotial candidate, wbo advocates banning gifts of value to public oUlciala, says be would bOt ae«pt aucb otters acain. llOTB THE LOCUIEED AIRC&AFI' Corp. and the Coca.COia Company provided transpoctat.ion ror Carter to several funetloos _.bile he wu governor from 1m lbrouab llJ74, compaAy spokesmen gay. During a three-week .swing through LaUn America in Aprtl um, Carter Oew aboard a Lockheed Jetstar. He used a Coca-COla Co. aircraft to attend several National and Southern Governors Con· fenn.ces. The state provides aircraft and a travel allowance for it.a gov· emor. Both companies have major lnstallation.s in Georgia. ASKED ABOtJT111E USE of the Lockheed Jetatar, Carter told a reporter last April that the trip was a routine trade mission in which be promoted Georgia producta, including Lockheed aittraft. "There was no secrecy about it," be said. "It was reported and it ought to be ... The visit to five Latin American countries included Carter, bis wife, Roealynn, two security guards, the state's chief industry bunter, and several Lockheed officials. A Coca-Cola Co. vice president, Ovid Davis, said bis company is one ol several that provides products or services for the National and Southern Governors Conferences. He said it flies a corporate aircraft to both e\'ents. DA VIS SAID THE COMPANY bas ottered tree fllpta to Georgia governors fcr-40 ye.an. Campaign spokesmen uld the free rides bad no effect oo Carter's decisions as governor. "Be never did a favor few either company," said press secretary Jody Powell. "I'm sure he felt no obligation to these companies." Powell added that using corporate jets might bave "saved the taxpayers money" by reducing the cost of the governor's transportation. AUiO DUSING BIS ADMINISTBATION, Carter spent two weekends at a rustic rarest lodge owned by Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. ID southeast Georgia, and a weekend at a lodge owned by UnlonCampCo.inwesternSouthCarolina. Members ol bis family, bis stall and their wives, and a future daugbter·in·law accompanied Carter on one trip to Cabin Bluff, a S0,000-acre ''producing pine plantation" owned by Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. near lVoodbine, Ga. Carter told reporten last week "it would have been better not to" have accepted the bol9pitality. aruhaid be would not do it again. * * * * * * Poll Shows F.-..rageAJ Carter Vote Cul Sharply SAN FRANCISCO (AP) .llmmy Carter bas plummeted in the California Poll to the point wbeft be bas only ·a six-point lead over President Ford com· pared to a 20-polnt lead one mmthago. Mervin Field, director ot the California Poll, said today that interviews conducted Sept. 18-25 ,also lnd.icated Eugene McCarthy might have ".strong write-in rote potential,•• in California. In August, Carter, the Democratic challenger in the Noor. Z election, had a 58-33 per- cent lead over tbe incumbent Republican president, but that slipped to 41·35 in the tally re- leased today on 1,044 interviews. Looking at the poll, Field said one thing wa s clear : ••California's important bloc of 4.5 electoral votes is now in the doubtful category where not too many weeks ago it was solidly in the Carter" column." Board Finds Radar Gaps ' WASHINGTON (AP) -The near-colltsion of two large puaengu planes near Spokane International Airport last April 1 was caused by inadequate local air traffic control procedures, accordin& to a federal accident invem,ating agency. The Incident otcurrect when a Hugbes A.invest DC9 wu execut· ing a mined approach to an airport runway while a Northwest Airlines DClO was cum~ out after takeotf from tbe same runway. DAILY PILOT DEBATE ••• On the road, Carter talb about foreign policy and defense when asked, or ,ln prepared addresses to audiences concerned with tboee issues. He has said that polla show him that when people are asked to list their coocerns. they list at least a dozen topics before they get to for'E:ign affairs. Ford, in a more limited road campaign, bas made more ol those topics, but only in the most. SCORE DEBATE YOURSELF Page A3 geoer81 terms. He N!iiiilidS au- diences tbat under the GOP ad- ministration, the nation is at peace. He promises to keep it that way. and says the way to do It is with increased spending for defense, not with such cuts as Carter bas advocated. Tonight's debate puts Ford oo ground he chose; be regards de· feose and foreign policy as bis strong points and bad wanted tbe first debate to be on those issues. Yet hill advisers already are hedging 'the wager a bit. with White Howse press secretary Ron Nessen remarking that the Presi· dent will be subject to restraints tbat will not artect Carter. because Ford's worm ''will be in· terpreted by foreign leaders as reflecting American policy." There does, indeed, appear to be a problem for F<ri. and pro. bably for Carter, too, in any de· bate questions about Kissinaer's efforts to prom9te _peaceful transition to black m.jority rule lo southern Africa. It ls unset· tled. it i.a explosive, and either man could compound the pro- blem with an Ul·consldered pbrue. For Carter's words, like Ford's, will be read. analyzed and weighed in foreign ministries around the world. p,...pageAJ BRIBERY • • the time Hyzen allegedly ~ered tbe brtbe and that there are none today. Tbetrtal ran loto adel~ when Judce ff. Walter decided to question pro8J)eCtlve witness Brian Patrick Lane out· lddetbepraenceoltbejury. Lane. who ls an att.cJnliey and m.,or of San Clemt!nte, bas pointed out to Judae Steiber u be earlier pointed out to the grand jury tbat blJ att.omeJ-d.ient rel•· Lloublp wlth lb'MO must be c.Wtfled before be cestifles. Food Talks Resume LOS ANGELES <AP) - B e preaenlat..lvea of the Teamsters unJoa and lbe Food Employers Council were to re- sume contract negott.diom today Ma federal medJatar ~t to avert • strike aplDlt grocery cbalna and aupermarketa tbl"oQlbout Southena Cllifarnla mu..-v~ ... ·h'l.1aroat' Cat Pomo Patrom Complain JllAJU <AP> -Truth·in·packagina bu bit the porabcr~b.Y businea. A Mtamr theater abo"'1na the X-rated films "Deep Throat" and '"'l'be Devil ln Miu Jones" was fined for not telli:ng the public portions of the movies had been deleted. Asst. State's Atty. Kurt Marmar said some patrons complained to police they wereo 't getting their money's woct.h at the theater. Marmar said the Pussycat Theater cut tbe ralms after Circuit Judge 'Ibomas Testa ruled in 1973 that certain scenes were obscene. Marmar said an agreement with the theater's operators, Gayety '!beaters. lnc .• called for removal d the objectionable material and a notice in ad· vertisements that the movie bad been revised. When the court got reports the theater did not in· elude the warning in advertising, Testa found the company and its president, Leroy C. Griffrtb, in con· tempt of court and fined them $3,000. New San .Joan A.reas Council Eyes 'Doubk Tax' Double taxaUon 'WW be an l&· sue again toni1bt when San Juan Capistrano city councilmen con· . sider detachmen• or variowi city properties from three county service districts. The meeting ls scheduled for 1 p.m. ln council chambers, 32400 Pa.sec> Adelanto. Cily Manager James Moc.Us said be expects completion of de- tachment proceed.inp on the rour properties before the council tonight will end double tuation situations throughout the city. Certain areas which wett &n· nexed to San Juan have never been detac hed frotn county Hf"Vice areu. resultinl In oro- perty owners pa,yloa both~ caty and the county for auutary. recreation or Ugbtingsemces. Mocalls bas aaid double t.ua· Uoo resulted from "toadvert~at neglect .. on the part of tbe c1ty . He blamed the ovemaht on the city's rapid arowth, which he ' said bas at limes overburdened city staff. Board to End Dispute. The clty took responslblliQi for aupervt.slng tu reimbursementa to Mis sion Bell Ranch bomeowoen. who were er· roneously taxed by the C-s>istrano Beach Sanitary Dis· trtct and the Capistrano Bay Parks and Recreation District. Jay Wilcox, a partner 1n the Capistrano Airpo.rt, ooe of the double-taxed properties to be considered at tonight's meeting, has said be will asi for tu relJD. bursement. based on the MiAioo Bell precedent. Orange County supervisors agreed Tuesday to cough up as much as $337 ,385 to settle a land disputeintheDanaliillsarea. The board accepted without further discussion therecommeo· datioo contained lo a report from County Counsel Adrian Kuyper. The dispute involved the route ot the now.defunct Pacific Coast Freeway, which would have passed through tbe450-acre'l'bun· derbird Capistrano pJanned com· munity north of Stooebill Drive and west of Golden Lantern Street. The freeway route would have taken 80 acres of that land, Kuyper said , and would have cut off another 100 acres in the planned community. The route bad been zoned by supervisors for open space and freeway use in anticipation olthe proposed freeway. And they kept the zoning for a possible future highway even after freeway plans were dropped four years ago. But developers ot the lr8rt Meeker Development Company, F,.._PageAJ MARINE ••• The suit contends McClure's rights under four coostitutional amendments were violated. "Jl the case is decided in the family's favor, it will set a pre- cedent in the handling or military cases," Y acoboz.zi said. "Even attorneys for the govern· ment agree with that." The attorney said he will argue that McClure was invalid· ly recruited by the Marines because be was not really capa- ble of passing a battery of men· tal and physical q'Ualification tests. Yacoboui said if the conten· tion that the young man was not recruited properly is upheld, be would be considered a civilian rather than military penonoel. The family's suit claims McClure was seized unlawfully by the Marines, subjected to in· voluntary servitude, subjected to cruel and unusual punishment and finally bad bis life taken without due process ot Jaw. ''Some of these are very tricky legal points to argue but we feel we have a strone case.•• Yacobow said. Now that the suit has been filed the federal government presumably will seek a sum· mary judgment on the claitn that McClure was invalidly recruited. Yacobozzi said it the suit is upheld on that point the defen· dant would be the United States government and the other prin· cipaJs named in the action would be discarded. "We lncluded the names in the event we are not able to pursue our action against the United States under the federal Claims Act.•• Yacobozzi said. hid filed suit against the county and state, contending the zoning resulted in inverse condemnation FromPageAJ RIPOFF ••• eots $74 in fees for a course load ol up to 3.9 units. It is Cal State policy to charge part-time students a b1gber pro- rate share or enrolJmmt fees, UO· der the theory that they use as much administrative time and energy as do full·time students. But. Brown chafed, "You're getting one course for the price of five or six. My concern is, that in a 'free' system of educatioo, a student is being cbareed $S7 for one course." Tbe school board nevertheless approved the scheduling ol the second semester of "Western Civilization." A first semester. was approved last month by un- animous vote. Browne again reluctantly went along with the majority, be said, only because the course is op- tional. Robert Sancbis, schools superintendent, pointed out that at other colleges and un· iversities, it costs still more to take classes. Browne asked S~. ''How much does it cost per unit at Sad· dleback Junior College?" "Five dollars," the superinten- dent replied. "I rest my case," said Browne. Trustee Harry Bitbell cast the single "no" vote on the class ad· dition. "I'm not especially con· fortable about asking students to reach into their pockets to take a class," be explained. Brown agreed. "I'm going to support this," be said, "because it's optional, but l don't feel we're offering the best deal to the high school students.'· When Bithell complained that parents might feel pressured to dole out the money because their children want the course, Board President Michael Sagar responded, ''Well, there's a lot of things the kids want, that quite frequently the parents have to say 'no' to." • and caused them to l06e up to $2 million, Kuyper said. Kuyper noted the developers had lowered their out-of-court. settlement amount from $800,000 to the $337 ,386. And the settlement would avoid a lengthy and costly trial. which t.be county might not win, the ~ port said . County planning officials said about ball the 450 acres bas been developed, and plans for moat ot the •remai.nder are be.in& pro- cessed by county planners. Other properties included in 1 the proposed detacbmeot resolu· tion include the Capistrano Mobile Home Parle property and the Pryor-Homestead property. In a separate resolution. the council will consider detachment of the C. Micbael·Iwata property (Mariner Village and Mission Bell Ranch) from the Orange County UgbUng diatrtct. New Storm Speeds Toward Acapulco MEXICO CITY. Mexico (AP> -Tropical Storm Madeline. picking up speed in the Paclfic and beaded toward the Mexican resort of Acapulco. could tum In- to a hurricane by tonight, the Mexican weather service re- ported. A spokesman for the weather service said there was no cause tor alarm and no warning had been issued to residents of Acapulco or other communities in the stale or Guerrero. The storm, located 275 miles south-southeast of Acapulco, was moving toward Guerrero state this morning at a speed ot about eight miles an hour. the spokesman said. Winds in the center of the storm were recorded at about 45 miles an hour. "We've ta.ten no steps to pre- pare people on the mainland for the storm, becausewedonot want to cause a false alarm. Tbereis no way of knowing which direction the storm ultimately will take," Talks May Reopen NEW YORK CAP)-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Israeli Foreign Minister Yigal Allon met today to explore the re- opening of Middle East peace ef. forts. the spokesman said. He said Madeline was moving in a northwesterly direct.ion with a tendency toward a route which would lead it to the state ot Guer· rero. Acapulco ls the state capital. He said the winds were grow- ing stronger and the storm was expected to be classified as a bur· ricane. Acapulco is approximately 8tO miles southeast of La Pu on the Baja California peninsula. where Hurricane Uza struck Thursday, leaving 423 dead by official count and some 40,000 bomelesa. Some officials expect the linal death count to reach 1,000. Democrats Slate San Joan Meeting Democratic party members from San Juan Capistrano and Capistrano Valley will meet tonight at 8:30 at T\ny Naylor's restaurant in Sao Juan Capistrano. Ron Cordova, 7& As&embly District. and Vivian Hall, 40tb CongresstonaJ District, will be on hand to discuss the upcoming election. Richard O'Neill will preside over the meeting. For more lnfonnaUon contact Mrs. Groslti at 496-0666: • Lynn Hort HART'S John Hort SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST.·• COST A MESA • 646-1919 Jn the event the summary Judgment goes agaimt the fazni. ly. the attorney said action against the individuals would proceed. . WarllHf Slits 13ts.24es.299s.399s Soccer Balls-695 to 2ses Soccer Sboes-795 to 24as "But we feel we have our ltJUllest case against t.be Unit· ed States,'' Yacoboai said, Three Marine drill instructors and three officers who supervised the unit to which McClure was assigned were courl·martialed or NpltmaDded because of bia death. Medic Panel Recruiting The San Clemente Qty Council ls eeektn1 volunteers interested iD 1111 appointment to tbe Orange Comity Emer1enc1 Medical Care Committee. The Ora.ore County dlNloa o1. tbe lAUQe of Calltorala Cities wW maie two aPldntmmta to tbe COllllDJttee, wblch in*• re- commendations CODC'8l"Dllll alJ types of health ean for the coonty. Appointees must be able to at· tend luncbeo11 meetlnp the third Frtday of each month, and piart.ldpate ln at least one 1u~ comm1ttee of the iroup. Interest. ed people 1bould comaet the San Oemeota eJt.J cJm'• omce « IAquetleadquarun. Cotton Swat SUits--890 tlolded-Zippered Sweatsbirts--150 Long Sleeve-V-nect Acrylic Swatars-S9s long & Sbort Siem Colored T-S~l~5 & 495 GJlft S~orti & Track Pints 225 ta 450 Myton ~ Jackets J95 & 895 SweatsOl-12iS to 300 Ope1 9 ti & Closed Sanday Basketballs-i'5 to 329s Footballs-795 to 2896 Volleyba1~1s tt 231s Racquetballs-125 Tennis Balls can of 3-1 H 1aa_22s.2so ffandbals & Gines lacqaetlllll balnts Temis bcU1s Tennis Dresses Tennis Sllirts & SlllrtS Temis Sims Racket StrinP11 S• Center 646-1919 .. --- .., •fl·~ 0* LY r I r i /! ,"; Parents Freeze Hopes Ce1netery W o rker Dies in Crypt • • Slain D aughter's Brain Hehl, for Future SAN DIEGO lAP ) -A cemf!tery worker who went to the aid of a man who collapsed in a crypt 25 t~t deep was himself overcome by lack of oxygeo. and later died. BERKELEY (AP) -Tbe brain or a U.year-old \ Betktley firl viclousJy be~ to death bu been froseo and preserved ln anticipation ot a Ume ln the ty.'' Robert Wllsoo, rather of Patricia Wll$00,, u.ld 'J'Uetday. • M ure when medical ac:ience can create a body fOf' I it. "WE TBOl1GH 111AT IF we could make a con· trl bution to science something good could corne ou~ ofthia tragedy, .. be added. The two men were preparing the crypt ror a tour by delegates or the NaUooal Catholic Cemetery Conference. Elghl hours after firemen rescued them. Jesus Berumen died in Paradlae Valley Ho5plta1. . "We reel it is a lone shot, but it's our way or ex· Pl"e8•lnc our belief m lile and our rejection of the cuual acceptance d m\ll"det' and death ln our socie-- The young woman was beaten to death SUnd~ at a Berkeley clot.bJ.ne st.ore where s be worked u a clerk. police said. Robbery appears to bave been the motive. Keepers Find Baby Gorilla Wllaon said be and bis wife contacled Arthur Quaife, presldentofTtans-Timelnc. Quaife said the parents signed a release with the Alameda County coroner permitting the coroner to lurn the brain over to Trans-Time. wblcb specializes ln preserving bodies until such Ume as a cure is found for the disease that killed them. Berumen. 34, earlier bad cllrobed Into the con· crete.Jlned. multilevel crypt at Holy Cross Cemetery to help revive Fausto Palafox. 52. Firemen worked almost 30 minutes lo bring up Palafox and Berumen. Palafox was revived quJcltJy with "a shot of air." a fireman said, but Berumen never regained consciousness. SAN PASQUAL (AP) -A newborn Jowlal>d gorilla was found Tuesday at the San Die10 Wild Animal Parle -its third ever. all October babies. "WE DECIDED TBAT the best thing to do WM to preserve her brain and its memories boplng that al some future date science will find a way to re- constitute a person essentially the same as Patricia WUson, • • said Quaife. Spb~k Speaks Out The parents are OUa and Trib, a 400· POUOd male whose other mate Dolly gave He predicted such a feat is "al lea.st 50 years away.'' The brain will be kept al 320 de&reM below zero. Dr. Benjamin Spock talks with fellow picket in front of Los Angeles offices of League of Women Voters. He was protesting limitation of debates to Ford and Carter . • birth to Jlm in October 1973 and to a female named Blnli in October 1974. Jt is too early to lell lhe weight and sex of Ule newest addition, a park spokeswoman said. Quaife said there would be a $400 initial cost and an annual storage fee of $100. A special memorial as been started to raise the money. 'Viking 2 ails in Dig Try PASADENA (AP) The Viking 2 r obot has failed to lift a Martian boulder , but w i II try again on a smaller rock. scientists say. Vildng team members found that the robot just waso 't strong enough to move the boulder and search underneath it in a 'last-ditch effort to find organic compounds oo Mars. ( ) . Scientists theorized that if there are organics -structural compounds that are the basics of life as we know it -on Mars, they may be found un· dem eath a rock, away from ultraviolet Martian fUD).igbt. Olldae Hook LOS ANGELES CAP> -A Municipal Court judge has dis missed charges against 14 persons who received traffic tickets while pro- testing the Santa Monica Freeway Diamond Lane project. , Judge WUbur Dettmar dismissed the charges against the protesters just before the start of Uleir trial, saying the is- sue was moot because the Diamond Lane no lOD1er exists. 111..ateS laln CHTNO CAP ) -A 27· year-old inmate of the CallrorniBp Institute for Men here has died of severe abdominal in· juries be received in a FAST, LOW-COST, QUALITY OFFSET PRINTING Studio Sets '-Mines' Adrift Free Ice Ban Eyed 10 to 10,000 Copies SAN DIEGO (AP> -Universal Studios is r ed in the race over two phony Japanese World War 11 mines th~t somehow were set adrift in the Pacific. And the Coast Guard hasn't been getting many laughs out or the situation either. Shipping has been advised to be on the lookout for the mines and the Coast Guard said it bas spent a lot or time and manpower attempting to find them. Trucks Too "JT IS A BIG embarrassment for us," said Art Seidel or Universal. "Anyone wbo finds them is welcome lo keep them. We ju.st want to get them out of the water." The mines, which are about three feel in diameter, are made ol plastic and are tethered to weights. They were among six lost from motion pic- ture filming on location at Catalina Island on Sept. 24. The prop mines have been drifting south and lour have been recovered. "We really blew it," said Seidel. SACRAMENTO CAP ) -'Ibe bead of the state Alcoholic Beverage Con· trol Department is to de- cide soon whether bars and liquor stores may continue giving away free ice cubes, a lradi· lion dating about 30 years. -·-"' ____ ,_..., -"'....., ...... ..,., ....... '°" ~ Pflolocoplea Avalfeble NEWPORT BEACH 240 Newport Center Or. Design Plai:a. Suite 120 (714) 64~9053 OVER 300 PIPa NATIONWIDE Smog Rule Widened FRESNO (AP) -Stricter anti-smog regula· lions are on the road for California's heavy duty trucks and buses. The California Air Resources Board adopted the regulations Tuesday after lesUmooy from representatives of most of the country's heavy duty vehicle makers. Nobod! saves you 20% to more cities than United. The regulations are to cover both gasoline and diesel engines or vehicles over 6,000 pounds gross ,---------------------------------------------, weight, except certain limousines. THE MAXIMUM AU.OWABLE hydrocarbon Freedom Fare to 79 cities. standard for the 197'9 model year was set at 1.5 1--------------- grams per brake horsepower hour, dropping pro-Destlnntlon gressively toO.S gram in the 1983 model year. City The maximum of hydrocarbons and oltides of Akron/Canton nitrogen combined was set at s grams per brake Allentown/I3elhlehcm/Easton horsepower hour fer 1979 models, dropping to 4.5 J>-1t1·1110rc grams for 1983 models. Also adopted were test pro-~ cedures similar to those oC the U.S. Environmental Birmingham Protection Agency. Boi5e HEAVY DUTY VEIDCL~ have bffo under Boston anti·smog r egulations since 1969, but the board said Buffalo/;\iJgara Falls standards haven't grown so progressively stringent Cedar Rapids/lowa City as those for passenger cars. OiarleSton. W. Va. By the 1977 model year, trucks and buses will be Olarlntte, N.C. 1 to 14 times dirtier than cars, said Mary Nichols, U1rittanooga vice chairman. The staff of the board said if the standards lnit:aj;to Round trip l our rreedom f'are Savings $277.00 ~15.00 307.00 246.00 126.00 138.00 294.00 21 8.00 275.00 282.00 258.00 245.00 $69.00 79.00 77.00 62.00 3~.00 84 .00 74.00 54.00 69.00 70.00 64.00 61.00 hadn't been adopted, by 1990 California's trucks and 1-----------------------1 bu.sea would have been emitting 276 tons per day or Chicago $110.00 $86.00 oxides of nitrogen and 8> tons or hydrocarbons. Our fronomv Freedom Fare to Chicago offers even GENE CONE, BOARD spokesman, said the grl'Jll'r ~v111~:-.. measurement in grams per brake horsepower hour You Sc1Ve 28~,, ,ff n·~lar mund·trip Coach fare. makes it dHlicull to compare the standards with Cl Id I h 55ftf those for passenger cars, which are 0.41 grams per 11 ren travt' in~ \\1l you s;tve ,o. mile of hydrocarbons for the 1977 model year. 9.0 Same restrictions JS regular Freedom Fare. grams per mile of carbon monoxide, and 1.5 grams ..,_----------------------c per mile or oxides of nitrogen. Oeveland $277 .00 $69.00 Destination City Mcdf ord Memphis Milwaukee Moline/Rock bland/Davenport Muskegon Newport News/ Ilampton/ Williamsbur14 New York/Newark Norfolk/ Portsmouth/ Virginia Beach Omaha Pendleton Philadelphia Pittsbur_gh Portland Providence Raleigh/Ourhan 1 Reno Richmond Round·trlp Your freedom fare Savings $117.00 $29.00 £26.00 56.00 245.00 61.00 224.00 56.00 253.00 63.00 31:>.oo 19.00 323.00 81.00 315.00 79.00 194.00 48.00 149.00 37.00 :n1.oo 79.00 286.00 72.00 139.00 35.00 ~34.00 84.00 294.00 74.00 85.00 21.00 306.00 76.00 beating. ------- Authorities said Gary -----------------""' C.olumbus. 0 . 267.00 67.00 Rochester 301.00 75.00 Schultz of Chula Vista, serving a sentence for •armed robbery , died without identifying his assallan,ta. Bm: t o S p eak LOS ANGELES (AP) -Earl L. Butz plans to speak to a convention next Monday despite his resignation under fire as ' secretary or agriculture. a spokeswoman for the NaUonal Association or Concessionaires says. Publi cist Bet sy Berkhemer said Butz ha s confirmed" h e would appear at the con· cessionalre's kickoff meeting at the Dis· ney l and H o te l in Anaheim. Refor111 Pro•be . SACRAMENTO (AP) 1 -Former state prisoos director Ray Procunier is promising quick re- forms in the turbulent citate Health Depart· ment, where he will bead tbe latest shakeup. WHAM SO SrtCIA&. .AtoUf A Sf'9ClAL DtS'nlCT Dear Ne1ghb0r. What's In a name? Our name-The Costa Mesa County Water Olslrtct.....,.ells YoU Quite a b11 ebOut us But watch out you 're not fooled by our !'lame The w()(ds "Costa Mesa"' may rreke you think we're a depar1ment or the C1ty-00t we·re not. And the word .. County .. 1n our name may make you lh1n1< we're en agency ol lhe County-t>ul we·re no1 We are a Water Ocstrlct-and lhere·s the real answer l o who we 8'9-We're a Special 01str1ct WHAT'S SO SPICIA&.AIOUT A WICIALDISTltCn Vou"ll find Soeclal Districts are e very understandable kind or government. Tllat's bec:ause we·re so sirl"pte. We"re conslttuled under Slate law lo pro111de only one kind ol service, such es water. We don"t have lo balance giving warer against other services. like building roads. olferi119 Police protection. or running parks That way. OU< priorities are ctear. end we become pretty efficient at prov1d1ng our one service. What's more. Special Districts are run by Oirectona you elect. They're uswilly neighbors of yours. You control your Water Oistrid pretty directly by your ...otea. The people In this area voted to create the Costa Mesa County Water District As a result. YoU're getting lhe setV!ce You voted for In this District. al a reasonable pnce. We think that's What local government la all about. Come down to our next meeting and talk to us You're always welcome. The blunl·la1king vet eran civil servant lt:nown as "Pro." was ,named cbler deputy in charge of programs Tuesday by state HeaJUl Director Jerome Lackner, covering such huge operations as Medi· Cal and nursing homes. ._ ________________ _ I SKI I SPORTS WllK, OCT. 8-13 5outh Coast 'Plaza l >ayton. 0 . 259.00 65.00 Denvt>r 139.00 35.00 Des Moine~ 206.00 52.00 l>t·t101l 269.00 67.00 Eugene. Ore. 130.00 32.00 Flrnt 269.00 67.00 h >rt Wayne 259.00 65.00 (;ra11dJunction 117.00 W.00 (;rand Rapids 256.00 &t.00 Crel'n~boro/High Point/Winston·Salem ~88.00 72.00 l lartford/Spnngfield 328.00 82.00 I luntw 1llc 246.00 62.00 I'an~a-. City 197.00 49.00 Knox ville 26 t.00 6.5.00 L11bmg 262.00 66.00 La!> \'1.:gas 59.00 15.00 Lincoln 187.00 47.00 Saginaw/Midland/Bay City 269.00 67.00 Salem, Ore. 134.00 34.00 Salt Lake City 125.00 3 1.00 Seattle/Tacom.1 152.00 38.00 South Bend 25 1.00 63.00 ~pokanc 150.00 38.00 Toledo 266.00 66.00 Wa::.hingtnn. D.C. :m1.oo 77.00 \"nung::.town/Warren/Sharon 28n.oo 72.00 Night Coach to 7 Eastern cities. There's an even easier wny to save 20~11. ll's Unitrd·':i Night Coach. lf you fly after IO p.m., there are no rcblrictions al <•II. Avail able to Baltimore. Boston. Oeveland, New York, Philadelph1a, Pittsburgh, and Washington. D.C. United's Freedom Fare knocks 203 off the regular round-trip C.oach fare . And it's available to 79 cities from Los Angeles. 'That's more cities than any other airline. What's more, children under 12 traveling withJou save a whopping 50%~ There are no mileage restrictions. No weeken or holiday restrictions. Freedom Fare does not apply to flights outside the rontinental U.S. or to travel within the same state. Just reserve your seat at least 14 days ahead. Pay for your round-trip ticket within 10 days of your reservation date, but at least 14 days before departure. And stay 7 to 30 days. --- . ~n't leave home without the American Exoress UOU'-A card~ Use it for your United tickets, hotels, meals &• ~~ and rental cars. If you don't have an American the I.. ......... , ~-""~ _ ll•. Express card, call (800) 528-8000 for an UUDll. ~~~~~=~~ application. For rese{Vations, call your Travel ~ent. Or call United at 537-7521. Partners in Thtvel with Western International Hotels. Flythe endlyskiesofUnited. • unlTED AIRLlnes \ ~-A 6 ~ ILY PILOT E DIT ORIAL P AGE · Caution and Co11rage The City of San Juan Capistrano has shown oresight -and some courage -in taking steps to .. control growth. Nearly everybody sees some sense in phased :'..growth, if only to avotd overcrowded schools aod ..::JUghways. But San Juan bas special reason to prohibit ')runaway development. t•. San Juan, unUke some surrounding communities, ·:has not sprung up anew from empty fields in the past ~uple of decades. It is a city with a 200-year history, t;:S:and has a stake in preserving its unique heritage. l.:C The stated goals of the San Juan city staff and ~:council to preserve the city's traditions, maintain ~ economic stability and avoid overloading schools and )public services are not likely to ruffle many feathers . Specific implementation, however, can be expect- "ed to raise quite a squawk among builders and large andowners. The city a lready has met resistance from de- velopers who cite lheir heavy investment in San Juan. ey protest -with some justification -th at the city acted arbitrarily last . month, imposing a building permit quota without notice to affected builders. Though the city µas embarked on a generally ·commendable coul'se, there will be problems and flak • aplenty. San Juan officials will have to be very · careful to insure consistency and fairnes& in im- plementing the goals. Why the Secrecy ruling which would decide the matter. But he refu~ to tell lhe angry crowd, which had waited lwo hours to bear it, the outcome . Instead, the mayor called for a closed-door sesston to let the rest of the council know the ruling went in favor or the cable company . Council members Bill Walker and Donna Wilkinson felt the ruling should have been discussed in public. It bad been made in a public courtroom. They were right. The incident was just another in a long series of "secret" me~Ungs the council call!\ at the least excuse. Regardless of who was right in the dispute, it was a cavalier counctl majority_:Lane, Anthony Di Giovanni and Thomas O'Keefe-that treated its con- stituents, who represented 14,700 persons affected by the blackout, as though they hadn't the biggest stake in the fracas. It was not right to make a private squabble of the public's business. Before It H a ppe n s. • • It makes sense to stop a crime before it is com· milted. That's the premise behind a special burglary prevention task force nqw working in South Orange County. The task force includes county territory from El Toro south and the cities of Laguna Beach, San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano. Four police of- ficers and sheriff's deputies are involved in the $100,000 federally funded project. _; A final comment needs to be made on the San They'll try to persuade residents· to 'ighten up :"Clemente cable television dispute which left two-homes with adequate locks and other security !:thirds of t>·e city without service for 4-0 hours. measures. ~ After the blackout, nearly 200 people jammed city Most burglars are not professionals. Statistics ::council chambers demanding a resolution of the con-show the largest percentage to be 14to17 years old ~flict. Residents may avail themselves of the service by ' ( Mayor B. Patrick Lane got first word of a court telephoning 495-4710. use t·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_.....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---:. i~FordAide • t: nGets Pay ~ i;From U.S. It ... ~(--E-V_A_N_S ___ N_O_V_A_K_J WASHINGTON -Michael t .. Duval, who is paid $38,000-plus a : year out of the ' U.S. Treasury : to be special , counsel to the ~ President. is spending full • time these r d a y s :·representing •Pre si den t ! Ford's in - .-terest.s in de- .. bate arrangementi; -a sign that ; the Ford campaign is as con- • temptuous as ever of the new :. election campaign law. ;: Thal act forbids additional con-! lributions, including contri bu- ;.. tions in kind, to a presidential ~nominee accepting the $21.3 ~ million federal subsidy. Thus. :,· Duval might be expected to drop ~ orr the federal payroll, at least temporarily' if the letter or the !• law were followed. But the Ford • campaign has no intention or do· .. in~ that. ;. Whether the FederaJ Election t Commission will deaJ between now and Nov. 2 with this aid re- '"' ceived by candidate Ford is '" doubtful. But while probably run- j;. ning no risk of legaJ action, Mr ..... Ford's managers have been ,. criticized all year for violating c Uie spiritoflhe law The ju s tif1 cal 1on f o r Dear Gloom y Gus Maybe Earl Butz would consent to do his imitation of Step ·n Fetchit at the next Black Panther rally. C.U.Y. Gloomy Gv• comment•••• s~bmltltCI b'r ruden and do not nt<tu•rlly rellec1111e •••"'• ol I~• nt"'IP•Pt• St"" your ~t "t •t 10 Gloomy Gus, O•llr Piiot Duv~l is that he is a volunteer giving parl·time campaign help that does not interfere with his of· ficial duties. "That's ridiculous," a Ford campaign insider told us. ''Mike has been working on the debates fuU time. If he's doing anything else, I don't know about it.'' In- deed, Duval was fuUy engaged in politics at Kansas City, as a Ford operative in the platform fight. NOR IS he alone. Much of the White House sta(f is concentrat- mg on the presidential cam- paign, as is the President. Richard Cheney, White House chief or staff on the federal payroll at S42,SOO a year, has been considered by many the reaJ campaign manager since Mr. Ford's nomination. Ford campaign lawyers point to the FEC dismissal 0£ previous complaints about Rogers Morton working on the campaign from the White House. But the com- mission's ruling is not clear-cut. Moreover. a concurring opin- ion by commission member Neil Staebler indicated he would like lo see the matter raised in a case such as the one posed by Duval Who Can Take Life? • l have a letter from an or· ;: ganazation calling itself "Foun- :• dation for Life," in Toledo. Ohio. •:The letter commends a recent :! piece of mine, in wh.ich I referred : lo the human r ace as our "most t: endangered species." :~ "Foundation for Life" is an an· ., ti·abortion group. The poster ac- t~ companying the letter says: "We !1 are dedicated to a verybasicprin· ;: ciple. That human life is sacred. p Period. No quallClcations or ex- .~ cepUons or conditions." ~ The poster points out Uiat ·'in ti the U.S. today, a woman has the • legal right to take Uie life of her • unborn child. For any reason." Then goes on to say; "Is there some magic line that makes the f• life of an unborn child any less • important than tbe life of a day- • old child? Or a week-old chUd? Or a year-old child?" Suppose we agree. Then what about an 18·year-old child? But f' the &tale l\as the legal right to •end an 18-year-old boy to his : death in MY war It. cares to 4 declare, or even not to declare. IF B UMAN ltlc is sacred, period, why do lbe anti-abortion people speak out so forcefully on. : the rtght of the foetus, but rernain ! mute when a lad who has been loved and car~ for and educated ls shipped 1w1y to face .. un- natural death'' on some foreign battlefield! Wbat about capital punish· • ment? D~ the st.le pcmcss the rtthl to take human nte 1ny (DOre than the mother doe$? It bum in Ute ls truly "sacred." then lt •hould be left to God lo de- ~ ( SYDNEY HARRIS J cide who shall die. just as He de- cides who is to be born. The "Foundation for Life" says, quite correctly, "We believe we all have a responsibility to oppose what we think is wrong." But how can you think that abortion is wrong if you condone capital punishment and the evil institution of war? (( you permit the state to kill "legally,'' why does not the mother have the same right? THE ABORTION issue is more complex and ditricult lo resolve than either its opponents or pro- ponents are wllling to admit. But, Uiis apart, it has always puzzled me that people can be so passionate against killing a baby in the womb, and so lndlfferent to murder by the s tale a!leT the child reaches the Ulresbold of maturity. U life is sacred. then the st.ate has no moral authority to take it. JI t~re are "no qualiDcations or exceptions or conditions," then tbo right-to-life o-rganjutions must a~ak out. u forcefully against war and c1pltal punish- ment u they do against abortJon. Otherwise, the "'concept or •'sacredness'' occomes a mockery at the aae d 18. We a.re not free to pie~ and choose among our modes of moralJty. tr wo do, we become apeclal pleaders, and not. true bellevcni. New Medicare Costs a Blow Malnutrition, Suicide Ahead? To the Editor. The news m edia have an· nounced a v1cwus incr<'ase of 19 percent in Medicare costs, effec· tive Jan.1.1977. Senior citizens and others e:<· isling on fixed and/or low income cannot presently compete with those who have sufficient in· come. This 19 percent increase 1s prohibitive. Thousands cannot afford to be hospitalized and this lates t increase will deprive thousands more of sorely needed medical care. The result of deprivation l~ m alnutrition, death and sorrow. Our legislative process is in- consistent because it falls to pro. vide ror the people who are en- titled to the necessities of hfe We are presently paying S30 a month for Medicare and S.I. in- s urance and cannot afford periodic increases unless Social Security, etc. increases likewise This latest proposed increase will certainly produce more dis- res pecl for our Was hington legislators . M alnutntion and suicide will certainly increase unless immediate action is taken to relieve the needy senior citizens. We desperate ly need legisla- tion to exempt all senior citizens . from this and the last increases in Medicare costs lt has been said that we get so deep in the forest we cannot see the trees. I think this is the status of our Washington legislators and possi bly others. C M GIBBENS Sex Ed nc!a tlon To the Editor Parents are the primary sex educators of th~ir own children whether they do it well or poorly. Some parents think that the less their children know about sex, the less likely they are to engage in "promiscuous '' irresponsible sexual behavior. Studies and everyday observations don't sup- port this generalization. The fear of • 'putting ideas into their heads'· by being open and informative is unfounded. The Ideas are already there. Young people get them from books, newspapers, movies, and most frequently from friends. As a society we encourage the open pursuit of knowledge in most fields except sexuality. UNFORTUNATELY, what young people don't know about sex and contraception can hurt them. Teenage pregnancy is a serious problem: one in four American teenagers haa a chlld before she reaches th&!Qge of 20. Wicks ~1fr t"-\ : .. snd I promiss you 11 balanced budgst If I have to sp11nd av11ry cent we have/' ( MA ILBOX J Teenagers account for over hair of aJI out-of-wedlock births and one-third of all abortions in the U.S. Teenage pregnancy is large· ly the result of non· use or sporadic use of contraception. How can we ask young people to assume responsibility for their sexual behavior when we guarantee Uieir ignorance? October 10-16 is National Fami- ly Sex Education Week, a time to start teaching young people what they want to know. Let's work at being ·•askable" par ents, leachers, and friends; support open com munication in the area of human sexuality. A M. ROBINSON Brown \'6. Ca n er To the Editor. Governor Carter's speech at O'Neill Ranch called for more federal spending to save money. That could only be a truism in Alice's Wonderland Other lands have not yet been able to succeed at this, even though they somelimes do appear up·side- down and backwards. But il would be interesting to know Governor Brown's reaction to Carter's blaming California's high property tax on the federaJ government when California is under Brown's control and the federal government is under Democratic control, which makes them responsible for the inflation he deplores. There does have to be relief for property tax, but his idea of col- lecting more tax for federal re- venue sharing funds, to be sent to Washington to be laundered and returned full of strings. doesn't seem a practical solution. It just shifts the taxes and adds to the administration costs. BVT CARTER is nght in say- ing the free enterprise system is "a good one." Does he intend to leave it free? His pronounce· ments have been to control and tax 1t heavier. which could weaken or even destroy it, de· pending on how far his rules go. And his plan to take up the job slack by creating government jobs is n't a very good solution either . President Ford's solution of A Lebanon Primer r went as a war correspondent with Eisenhower forces into Lebanon in 1958. Those were the days when Americans imagined that we could remodel the world in our own image. Now Lebanon is engaged in another civil war Americans are moving out, not in. That is significant. Figurative- ly, Lebanon is two countries divided by a green line. Christian on o o e s'i de. Mos lem on the other. f'or 16 months now Lebanese have been killing Lebanese in the name of religion. Actually, this nation, s maller Uian Connecticut, is home for 17 diverse Christian and Moslem sects. The volatility of Uie people of this area has preserved a "state ol turbulence" ror generaUons PllESENTL \', lbe contention lnvolvcs the Christian demand that Palestinian camps be re· located outalde Lebanon -but wbeti that issue bas been re- solved there will be another. The 400,000 Palestinians living in Lebanon have gained much polltical power by allylng themselves with &Qybody, in- dudlng Communists. The Christians consider this a direct threat to the Western· orleuted capllali&m which they so painsukln1ly tttablisbed and which. unUJ tbls lhoatout, bad prospered Lebanon beyond any other Mideast naUoo. As l&, lo that wt.Norn coun- try, the several factions control sutteN!ld fractions of the gco- IP'•PhY. The dominant Marooites hold ( PAU L H ARVEY) the mountains north of the Damascus Road. Tripoli is controlled by Palesli· nians and assorted lefti sts. Presently the Christians' Syrian allies control the bread· basket area -the Bekaa Valley. THE BIG CITY, Beirut, in· eludes three big Palestinian camps, and when you travel from their area to the Christian suburbs it's like going from East Germany into WestGermlllly. The Palestinians manage to exist with almost no food or fuel. with huge piles or garbage, spawning cat·size rats and with civilians carrying sidearms. Whereas in Christian Lebanon you can almost forget there is a war on -tramc and commerce are near normal with almost a resort atmosphere on beaches and streets. There is talk of building up the hotels along the beaches, lurinR back Western businessmen. Down the road ahead is a part.I· Uon of Lebanon similar to the partition of Germany. (t is almost inevitable. It may or may not be permanent. But what's more important is what la NOT happening ln Lebanon -. overt American in- tervention. AMERICAN Marines did not wade ashore as we did 18 years ago. On the contrary, Americans wbo wanU!d out were ever-so- carelully evacuated. At Ju1t this generation of Amerkana. and hopefully future generaUona, haa learned lhll be· lng • truly aood nei$bbor lnu>Jles first or all -minding your own buslncss. letting free enterprise be freer, and to leave it more investment capital so it can expand and create more jobs, is more prac- tical. And if we give him a more practicaJ Congress next year that understands saving as well as spending. he could probably cut down the federal budget enough to make it work. It sure seems worth a try. GO LOI E JOSEPH Prop. 14 Support To the Editor: Your Sept. 28 editorial oppos- ing Prop. 14 is based on the mis- taken premise that it is desirable that the Legislature be able to make changes in the landmark farm labor law which was passed, as you point out, after "endless conferences" with Gov. Brown. The result of those conferences was a delicate compromise which all 'sides agreed to abide by But after only a few months, the growers and their aJlies in the slate Legislature reneged on that agreement and attempted to sabotage the law. IT WAS only the fact that signatures were quickly gathered for Prop. 14 that caused the Legislature to refund the Agricultural Labor Relations Board. The architect of the farm labor law, Gov. Brown, says that Prop. 14 should be passed in order to re- move the issue from politics and allow the A LRB to operate free of pressure from any side. Let us take his advice and vote Yes on 1-4 PAULC.EKLOF SHARON K. EKLOF Quotes "I think the important thing is that the American people have the chance to evaluate us.'' - Democratic pres idential candidate Jimmy Carter, after the format for his debates with President Ford wasagreed upon. "I would rather be a fast finisher than a fast starter.•• President Ford on his election race against Jimmy Carter. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Hahfort N. Wtl'rd. Puhll.~ht•f' Tl111mos Xl't'lltl. ~;d1/1>r /l(lrhnro l<rethte/1. F:d1tor1al Pa11r F.rlltpr rht' ed1tor1nl page of the Dally Pilot '>t'Cks to i nform and 'lJmul:1te readers by p1 t'SCnlmJl on th1" 1>agc d1\·erse commentary on topics or 1nteresl by syndical - ed columnists and cartoonists, b)' provid111~ a forum for readers' vit-w11: and by prt>!>Cntlnit lhls 11ew'IP01wr's opinions anu idrn!S on cur rent topici1. The «Jitonal op1mon'I of the Dally Pilot apJ)<'ar onl~· 1n lhl' l'rlitolial column nt the top of the P•1:<'. Opinion!> rx prt"'"rd b\ lht• eolumnlsu nnd NlrtOfml~I" and ltll t•r "ril('r'I U1 e their own anti no endor..emrnt or their 'vlcY. s by th<' Ually 1'11111 should bl' lnfrrrt•d. Wcd.n~day, October 6, 1976 ---.---· '· I Orange Coast EDITION VOL 69, NO. 280, 6 SECTIONS, 64 PAGES -... ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO~NIA Today"s Closing N.Y. Stoeks J WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1976 c TEN CENT6 ' ·C .. Top Mesa Executives Get Salary Ilik~ Salary increaae.s for Costa Mesa'• top executive penoonel, · rar&lhll from 2.S percent to 6.2S percent, were approved this week by Costa Mesa councilmen. Tbe increases for executive personnel, as well as other 1 municipal employes, became ef. fect.lve Sept. 26 and will run tbrouab October of 1.9T7. accord- illl to City Manager F'red Sonabal. Salary ranges for executive penonnel range from $1,802 to $2,C1163 a month. Only two top city ofticlals are not listed as bavln& received salary increases this year. Sonabal. wbo said be does not accept an annual pay' Increase, earns about $38,000 a year. City Attorney Roy June, wbo worts oo a contract IMsis and is allowed to conduct a minlmum private attorney's practice, earns $30,000 a year, accordinl to city rues. Otber executive employes, their current salary and former pay, include: Seven executive employes now earn $1,802 a month, compared with $1, 716 last year. Tbey in· elude the city's purchasing agent, a planner, the recreation superintendent, and the street, park, golf course and the fadlities and equipment superin· tendent.s. Public Services Direct.or and City Engineer James Eldrid1e will receive $2,663. a $157 in· crease over bis former salary of $2,506. Police Chief Roger Neth will also receive a $2,663 monthly salary. Director of Finance Bob Oman wiU now make $2,S37. He former· ly earned $2,388. Fire Chief John Marshall earns $2,S06 as opposed to $2,387 and Planning Director Charles Roberts will make $2,387, a $140-a -montb raise over bis former salary of$2,247. William O,unn. assistant city manager and director of com· munity development. will earn $2.358 from $2,246 and Assistant City Manager Bob Duggan wiU make $2,358, up Crom $2.246. Assistanl City AU«Dey 9. Campaena and Leisure Servi Director Keith Vao Holt . make $2.302. Campagna, who~ ceived Ii 6.2S percent mere~. formerly earned $2.167. Van H§lt ~eived it S percent inc~ from $2.182. ~ Other city executive employ' and their salaries include: City clerk. $1,870 Crom $1,~ <SeeSM.A&Y. Pa&eAZ) ; 3 Gunmen Storm Mesa Market Policies ·To Set Debate By WALTER IL llEAJtS A .. S.-lelClloas 1 Prom a distance, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter ~ve waged a sharp, sometimes bitter dispute aboul American defense and foreign policies. So there is plenty to argue about ln San Francisco tonight if tbe Republican President and the Democratic nominee want to get tough ln their second campaign debate. (8:30 p.m. PDT) Debate ground rules and cautious television coosultants may take the edge off when the two get together, but among the Items for confrontation are these: -Ford'a asaertion that Carter doesn't know what be is talldng about ln SUICestina a $S billion to f1 biWoo defense.spending cut. -Carter's charte that Ford bu abdicated foreip policy leadership and control to Secretary ol State Henry A. Kiss- inger. C&rter cooteads that Kiss- iDger has no regard for morality ln U.S. policy abroad, and that he is a "Lone Ranger." nmning a secret, one-man show. Indeed, if the White House rivals simply repeat what they've been saying about each other from afar, the Great Debate II will be rar more heated than tneir fiut nationally televiaed match two weeks ago. An Associated Press poll rated ( NEWSAIVALYSIS J that one a virtual draw in tbe eyes ol lbe voters, with a slight lain in support for Ford. So far, forelgn policy and de- fense bave not been topics of the campaign -even though they are paramount responsibillties of any president. Carter has campaigned hardest on the issues of the economy, taxes and jobs, cateaories that were covered ln the llnt debate wit.bout either candidate breaking new ground. On the road, Carter talks about ::1ef.' policy and defense when , or ln prepared addresses to audiences concerned with thole Lssues. He has said that polls abow him that when people are asked to list lbeir coocems, they list at least a doleo topics before they get to foreip affairs. Fe.rd, in a more limited road campaign, bas made more of thole topics, but only in the most aeoerat terms .. He reminds BU· dieoces that under the GOP ad· mimatratio11, the nation is at peace. He promises to teep it that way, and says the way to do <See DEBATE, Paie AZ) Oil Price Hike Due? . .. MANILA, The Philip- pines <AP> -Finance miniatera of the Organi.Ja- tSoa ol Petroleum Export· iDC Countries (OPEC) may announce today a price in· crease of $1.50 per barrel eftective Jan. l, tm, in· dultr)' sources said. . • J \ Tbese sources said wblle the OPEC oll mlnlsten announce any prlce cbantH. their flnaace • mlAlsten have as mucb .., on the cbaJlle•. n.. eurnnt priced GO la 11.UO.,. barrel. -... ,.._ .•· ... Shoppers, Till Hit By Trio By STEVE MITCHEU.. Oft!MO.lly ...... ~ Three men armed with a sawed· off shotgun and several pistols stormed into a Costa Mesa market Tuesday night, scooped up money from several cash re· gislers, took wallets from customers and fled into the dark· ness. Store managers at Ralph's Market, 2300 Harbor Blvd., were assessing losses today, but no dollar amount has yet been de· termlned in the9: 45p.m . heist. The trio, all of Latin descent, walked into the market, displ~· i.ng a 12-gauie shotgun and two re- volvers to clerks and a half-dozen customers. A Father's.Grief ., ......... They scooped S22 Crom one cash drawer before moving down the ~ to another r$ter, where clerk John Glesceki, apparently unaware a robbery was under way, tgno~ demands for money from the shotgun-wielding leader. The clerk was bit on the shoulder with the barrel of the shotgun by the angry gunman before banding the cash register drawer to his accomplice. Overcome with grief, Francisco Sanz cries by the grave where the body of his son, Luis, is about to be buried. The son was a police officer slain in the assassination of an adviser to King Juan Carlos in San Sebastian, Spain. After cleaning out. several re- gisters, the gunmen announced, "Okay, let's see some wallets," and began taking wallets and purses from three market patrons and two clerks. New Storm Speeds Toward Acapulco Police today said the trio made off with at least $66 from cu.stomers. Store officials are checking to see how much money was ta.ken from registers and a safe in the store. MEXICO CITY, Mexico <AP) -Tropical Storm Madeline, picking up speed ln the Pacific aM beaded toward tbe Mexican resort of Acapulco, could tum in· to a hurricane by tonight, Ute Mexican weather service re· ported. A spokesman for the weather service said there was no cause f« alarm and no warning bad been tuued to residents of Acapulco or other communities lD the state of Guerrero. The storm, located 275 miles south-southeast of Acapulco, was moving toward Guerrero slate th1.s morning at a speed of about eight miles an hour, the spokesman said. Winds lo the center of the " Poll Shows Carter Vote Cut Sharply SAN FRANCISCO CAP) Jimmy Carter bu plummeted lo the California Poll to the point where be baa only a six-point lead over President Ford com· pared lo a 20·polnl lead one mmthago. Mervin Field, dltector ol the California Poll, said today that interviews coaducted Sept. 18-25 .i.o lndlcated Euaene McCarthy mlgbt have "stron1 wrtte-ln vote potential." ln Calllornla. In Au1u1t , Carter, the DemoeraUc challenger in the Nov. 2 electtoo, bad a 51-33 per· cent lead over tbe 1ncwnbent Republican president. but that slipped to 41.JS ln the t.a1.ly re- leued toda1 oo 1,C* iJ:IW'vl...,.. Loakinl at the poll, '1eld aaJd one thine was clear : "CallfornJa's Important bloc ol ~ electoral votes ll now IA tbe cbabttu.l cau1ory WW. not too m87 ween ato It WM IOUdly lD tbe can. column." storm were recorded at about 45 miles an hour. "We've taken no st.epg to pre- pare people on the mainland for thestorm, becau.sewedonotwanl to c au.se a false al arm. 'There is no way of knowing which direct.Ion the storm ultimately will take," the spokesman said. He said Madeline was moving in a northwesterly direction with a tendency toward a route which would lead it to the state of Guer· rero. AcapukQ is the state capital. He said the winds were grow- ing stronger and the slorm was expected to be classified as a bur· ricane. Acapulco is approximately 840 miles southeast of La Paz on the Baja California pen!mula, where Hurricane Liza struck Thursday, leaving 423 dead by official count and some .C0,000 homeless. Some officials expect the final death count to reach l,000. (See ROBBERY. Pace AZ) Chief's Ban On Gun OK'd Costa Mesa Police Chief' Roge. Neth's ruling that local bail bondsman Robert Glazier can not carry a gun bas been upheld in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Walter Smith rejected the writ demanded by Glazier, 1.30 E. 17th St., OD the grounds that the bondsman needed a weapon ror his protection. Glazier argued that he regular- ly carries large sums of money and possession of a weapon might discourage attacks like the one that nearly cost him his life last March 30. He was shot ln the stomach outside bis offices on that oecaalon l>y an assailant who baa esc'Pecf police detection. ''11hroat' Cut Pomo Patroru Complain MIAMI (AP) -Truth·in·packaging bas hit the pomogr•pby business. A Miami theater showing the X-rated films "Deep Throat" and "The Devil in Miss Jones" was fined for not telling the public portions of the movies had been deleted. Asst. State's Atty. Kurt Marmar said some patrons complained to police they weren't getting their money's worth at tbe theater. Marmar said the Pussycat Theater cut the films after Circuit Judge Thomas Testa ruled in 1973 that certa1n scenes were obscene. Marmar said an asreement with the theater's operators, Gayety Theaten, Inc., called for removal d the objectionable material and a notice 1n a'd· vertisements that the movie had been revised. When the court aot reports the theater did not in· elude the wamina in ..SvertilJq, Te1ta found tbe company and lts president, Leroy c. Griffith, m coo· tempt ol court and fined them $3,000. ..... ,.,.,.. Bloody Protest A leftist student wounded during demonstrations at Thammasat University in Bankok, is helped to an am- bulance by a Thai trooper and a girl. Authorities quelled. a bloody riot at the university as students protested t.!le return of former Thailand dictator Thanom Kit· ti.kachorn. (See story, A4. > Marine's Parents Sue After Death By WILLIAM SCRREIBER Of UM O.lly f'llllt IUff Attorneys r epresenting the family of a Marine Corps recruit fatally injurt!d during a band-~ hand combat drill last year to- day filed a $14 million lawswt against the federal government and 12 individuals, including President Ford. The suit presented in U S. Dis- trict Court in San Diego cites the "wrongful death" of 20-year-old Pvt. Lynn McClure due to in· juries sustained during training at the San Diego Marine Recruit Depot. He was knocked out in a succession of pugil stick bouts. William Yacobou:i, whose law firm bas offices in Orange Coun- ty and Oceanside, said the Cami- ly bad filed a claim against the Navy In April and today's swl was the "next step.·· The lawye r s a id the suit names lhl' United St ates of America, the President. the secretary of Defense, secretary d the Navy, commandant of the Marine Corps, commandant of the recruit depot, four training depot personnel and SOO ··John Does" to be filled in as needed. Yacobonl said the McClure 'Vegas Night,' Set in Mesa Tl: .. downtown Co!ta Mesa Boys Club building will become a Lu Vegas-like casloo Oct. 9 for about 400 senior clt.beu. Tbe city's Senior Citizen's Club, unde r au1pices of tbe Department of Lflsure Servtca. wt1l bolt tbe second annual "Lu Vesu Nilbt." from ti to 10:30 p.m.. featurtn1 Laa Vecaa·lJ'pe •ames, a buffet J\IC)pel' and en· tenainment. For tlcbt lD!ormllllon. eootact Linda Putnam at 558-5381. family, of Lufkin. Tex., is asking $3.S million for wrongful death. $3.S million for the recruit's suf· fering between the lime of in· jury la.st December and bis de- ath in March and f1 mll11on ln punitive damages. He never re- gained consciousness. The swt contends McClure'• rights under four constit.utionll amendment.a were violated. "'H the case is decided tn the family'~ favor, it will set a pre- cedent in the handling of military cases.·· Yacobo.tu aaJd. "Even attorneys for the govero- ment a1ree with thaL ·• The attorney s"id be wU) argue that McClure was invalid· ly recruited by the MarinH <See MARINE, Pate AZ) co .. 1 · Weather Early fog and low clouda to give way to a fair after. noon Thursday. Beach • high in mld 709. low to eo , expected. ' ' INSIDE TOD'°' Y ~ T1w~of.a~ coupi. ~· Mod m t1w eor· ~'. orwr'• Ofttce, °"' Mr ""* - and lwr parfl'd•' hopa /or u.. tvtwe -ha~ ,,_..,. frown, aaooUmg a mfrocZ. of ..._,._ (SHPag~AS) llHle• M T-lentt• AJ ,..,._.., T'9e a .._.,.._ 94 ,._ Al•tf ClllfwMt ,., ~--AU ~ 0 ................ ~ ClllMk• ., ............. ii :::::c.. :: =c-tl Ctt =::a~~.,..~ ~....... ~ ,._,. -.,, ;;.;:;;; A ...... . c.t-11 .,... ,. .. , --..... Cl....., --~ Cl ....... M ........... ' \ On Ta ing Gilts Never Again, Carter Says· • ATLANTA CAP) -Alt.bough Jimmy Carter says be took free ridea on corporate jets aod spent ~everal weekencb vacationing at corporate retreat.a ~e he was governor of Georgia, be bas always maintained tbat such hospitality did oot influence hi8 ac:Uons u gov-eroor. The Democratic presidential candidate, wbo advocates banning gifta of value to public officials, says he would not accept such otters again. BOTH THE LOCKHEED AIRCllAFI' Corp. and the Coca-Cola Company provided transportation for Carter to several functions while be was governor from 1971 through 1974, company spokesmen say. During a three-week swing through Latin America in April 1!'72, Carter flew aboard a Lockheed Jetst.ar. He used a Coca-Cola Co. aircraft to attend several National and Southern Governors Con· ferences. The state provides aircraft and a travel allowance for its gov· ernor. Both companies have major installations in Georgia. ASKED ABOUT'111E USE of the Lockheed Jetslar, Carter told a report~r last April that the trip was a routine trade mission in which be promoted Georgia products, including Lockheed aircraft. "There was no secrecy about Jt," he said. "It was reported and it ougbtto be." Tbe visit to five Latin American countries included Carter, bis wife, Rosalynn, two security guards, the state's cruef industry bunter, and sever a1 Lockheed officials. A Coca-Cola Co. vice president, Ovid Davis, said his company is ooe of several that provides products or services ror the National and Southern Governors Conferences. He said it flies a corporate aircraft to both events. DA VIS SAID THE COMPANY has offered free flights to Georaia governors for 40 years. Campaign spokesmen said the free rides bad no effect on Carter's decisions as governor. "He never did a favor for either company," said press secretary Jody Powell. "I'm sure be felt no obligation to these companies." Powell added that using corporate jets might have "saved the taxpayers money" by reducing the cost of the governor's transportation. AI.SO DUllJNG IDS ADMINISTRATION, Carter spent two weekends at a rustic forest lodge owned by Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. in southeast G«>rgia, and a weekend at a lodge owned by Unioa Camp Co. in west.em South carol.in a. Members of bis family, bis staff and their wives, and a future daughter-in-law accompanied Carter on one trip lO Cabin Bluff, a 50,000-acre ''producing pl.De plantation" owned by Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. near Woodbine, Ga. Carter told reporters last week "it would bave been better.not Lo" have accepted the hospitality, and said be would not do it .,a.1.n. * * * Ero.a Page Al E'ro.. Pflfle Al DEBATE ••• it ia with increased spending for de{eme, not with such cuts as Carter has advocated. Tonight's debate puts Ford on ground be chose; be regards de-fense and foreign policy as bis SCORE DEBATE YOURSELF hge A3 strong points and bad wanted the first debate lo be on those issues. Yet his advisers already are hedging the wager a bit, with White House press secretary Ron Nessen remarking that the Presi· dent will be subject to restraints that will not affect Carter, because Ford's worm "will be in· terpreted by foreign leaders as reflecting American policy." There does, indeed, appear to be a problem for Ford, and pro- bably for Carter, too, in any de- bate questions about Kissinger's efforts to promote peacerul transition lo black majority rule in southern Africa. It is unset· Ued, it is explosive, and either man could compound the pro- blem with an ill-considered phrase. MARINE ••• because be was not really capa· ble of passing a battery ol men· tal and physical qualification tests. Yacoboid said U the conten· tion that the young man was not recruited properly u upheld. he would be considered a civilian rather than military personnel. The f.amily's suit claims McClure was seized unlawfully by the .Marines, subjected to in· voluntary servitudep.:,~:tected to cruel and unusual ment ·and finally had bis life taken without due process of law. "Some of these are very tricky legal points to argue but we feel we have a strong case," Yacobozzi said. . Now that the sUit has been filed the federal government presumably will seek a sum- mary judgment on the claim that McClure was invalidly recruited. Yacoboui said if the suit il> upheld on that point the defen· dant would be the United Slates government and the other prin· cipals named in the act.ion would be discarded. ,. Explosion Simulates A-blast . ........... Fallout Targets Map shows areas of the Eastern Seaboard where low amounts of radioactive fallout have sprinkled as the re- sult of a Sept. 26 nuclear bomb test in China. However. public health officials say the fallout is not a threat to public health in the United Stalt:S -although they urge citizens to wash home-grown frwt and vegetables before eating them. Newport's Seeley Final Rites Set Services will be held Friday fOI" longtime Newport Beach reai· dent T. Hord Seeley, 75, who died Tuesday Mr. Seeley, 1307 East Balboa Blvd .. was a Newport Beach resi- dent since 1944 when be became chief civil engineer for the Long Beach Naval Ammunition Depot. He is survived by his widow. Ruth : daughter. Mrs. Stanley Heginbotham of Washington, O.C.; brother. Dr. Sam F. Seeley of Washington. O.C.: sister, .Mabel Evans of Cypress, and grandaon, Arlen. Visitation is scheduled from 6· lo 9 p .m . Thursday at the Westcliff Chapel of the Smith Tuthill Lamb Mortuary, 4Z1 E. 17th St .• Costa Mesa. Graveside services begin at U a.m. Friday at Harbor Rest Cemetery in Costa Mesa. During bis business career be worked for contracting and real estate firms in Newport Beach. He was an active member ol St. James Eplacopal Church in Newport Beach where be served as bead usher. Mr. Seeley was also a founding member of the Newport Beacb EUts Club. WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE. N .M . <AP) -An a-..ome cray cloud rose bl&b above the San Andreu Moun- talna today from what the mllitary termed the larf88t con- veutlonal nonnuclear eJCl)los1oo lnhlatory. A fireball 1pread nearly 1,000 fed alter GOO tons ol ammonium nitrate and fuel oil were lgnit.ed by the Defense Nuclear Agency to simulate shock efrec:U of a one- kilotoo nuclear blast. The ezploslon was less ttian three miles from Trin1ty Site. wbero tbe first atomic bomb was detonated July us. lMS. Today's explosion was de· si1Ded to simulate the etfect ot a nuclear shock wave oo military weapons. vehicles, communica· tions equipment, shelters and aircraft. Project officials were analyzing the results. To observers three miles from ground zero, the blast began silently with the instantaneous red fireball. A guy halo rose up- ward more than 2.000 feet. A dark gray cloud, shaped like the familiar atomic mushroom, then rose from the desert noor. lt took more than l!i seconds for the sound and shock wave to reach the observation point. The shock wave gently rocked the estimated 500 military, dvilian and media observers. As the cloud of dust and smoke rose to about 3,000 feet. a thin layer of dust spread over the ground thousands of feet in all directions from the blast site. Maj. William Knapp, of the sponsoring Defense Nuclear Agency, said the ~loeioo was "the largest ever (nonnuclear blast) in the world that we know of." It climaxed a aeries of ex· ploslves tests ln PrQject Dice Throw. Todav's exololicm was dubbed the "main event." Knapp said it cost about $18 mlllib11. He said the six Allied na- tions that partlclpated reim· bursed the agency $6 million. 'lbe explosives were stacked in a cylindrical pile nearly 40 feet high and 34 feet in diameter. TONIGRI' BALLET FOLKLORJCO MEXICANO -OCC Auditorium, Sp m. Admission $3.50. OCC LECTURE -"Aviat.loa Safety for Pilots," Flno Art.a Bldl. 119. 7:30 p.m. "THE RULING CLASS" - South Cout Repertory TheatcT. Tuesday-Sunday through Oct. 30, 8p.m. TBUllSDAY,OCT. 7 LIBRARY STORY HOUR - Costa Mesa Llbrary.10:30a.m. OCC LECTURE -"CorPorate Taxation," Richard A Brown Jr. lecturer. Fine Arts Bldg. 1.19, 7:30p.m. Health Exam Scheduled in CM Schools Parent-Teacher Associations at Harper. Monte VLSta, Pomona and Victoria schools are sponsor- i o g a health screen program for all first grade stu· dents who haven't yet bad their state-required physical exam. A 40-foot trailer will visit each school, where a physician will do a general assessment of each child's bearing, visioo, blood pressure and any aJJPVeDt den- tal or other physical defects. The cost is $22.50 for any child not eligible for Medi-Cal or Callfonua Heat th Department funds. Dates and Um es for the screen- ings are: Pomona: Oct. 21. from 2 to 8 p.m. and Oct. 22 from2to6p.m. Victoria: Oct. 26, from 2 to 8 p.m. Moote Via la: Oct. Z1, from 2 to 8p.m. Harper: Oct. 28, from 2 to 8 p.m. EllgibWty forms are available in Engllab and Spanish and a bll· ingu.al staff member will assist in the screening. For more In- formation contact Dee Douville, bead nune, at 556-328.S. POLLY WANTED, GOl' GOOD HOME "We received a tremendous response. We're so happy to have found a good home for our pet." Riley Defends Architect That's the advertising guccess experienced by a Corona del Mar woman who placed this classified ad: Tame Halfmoon Parrot Incl 2 cages, food, etc. SJS. XXX·XXXX So, if you have a pet, or anything else lo sell. call 64.2-5678. It's easy to make Ii rew words work for you in the people's marketplace -the Daily Pilot classifi~. Curfew Enforced HEBRON, Occupied West Bank (AP) -Israel enforced a tough curfew here Tuesday following the desecration of a synagogue by Moslems and pre- pared a formal funeral for the destroyed holy scrolls. Fresh riots broke out elsewhere in the West Bank ill sympathy with the Arabs of Hebron. By TOM BA.JILEY OlaleO.llyPl ... tuff Oranee County Supervisor Thomas Riley appearedtodefeod San Clemente architect Leon Hyzen late Tuesday shortly aflet' he was called to the stand as the prosecution's second witness ln the Superior Court bribery trial: "I am sure be was unaware he was committing a crime by malt· ing those comments," be told de- fense attorney Mike Flanagan while being questioned on te1epbooe calls madetobiso!fice by the defendant. Riley testified that be contacted the district attorney's office in Mav. 1976 all~r a series c:l further telephone conversations be· tween bis aide, Peter Herman, and Hyun. The conftdentlal memorandum sent to District Attorney Cecil mets resulted tn Hyien, 96. of 2100 BS. Ola Vista, being Indicted by the grand jury on three felony counts of offering a bribe. It is alleged that Hyun offered a Sl,000 campaign contribution to Riley through Herman in return for the supervisor's pledgetbat he would be considered when the time came to build a branch library in San Clemente. Riley told Hicks in the memorandum: ·'It is the im· pression of my aide that Mr. Hyzen probably was unaware that be was committting a crime by mating tbese comments but I thought It wise to bring the ll)atter to your attention.•• F1anaean pointed out in bis cross examination of Riley that the memorandum was sent to Hieb just one month before an election in which Riley wu r&- turned to b.15 Fifth District seat. Riley also confirmed for F1anagan that he r~ved more funds in campaign contributloos than any other candidate and that builders and developers were among the major contributors. Riley told Flanagan and 0epu. ty District Attorney John Cooley that there were no plans for a branch library in San Clement.eat the time Hyzen allegedly offered the bribe and that there are nooe today. -~ ----== Board to End Dispute Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS Orange County supervisors agreed Tuesday to cough up as much as $337 ,386 to settle a land dispute in the Dana Hills area. The board accepted without further discussion therecomtnen· dation contained in a report from County Counsel Adrian Kuyper. The dispute Involved the route of the now-defunct Pacific Coast Freeway, which would have · passed through tbe'5D-acre'lbun· derblrd Capistrano planned com· munity north of Stooehill Drive ORANOE COAST t DAILY PILOT ·-... -... ""'"'°""'_.....,,_ #('" c-VIC•"'""""' •""Oe_OI,._ ~··-...... ,_, .. __.. Mf"-0"'9 l:Clllor °"'""·\Ht "-" -""'1\1 ... 1 M11""91ftQ Edi~ Coeta ..... Office JIOWt>l llay\1"'"1 w m ... A-. .. p 0 ... IN • .,.~ Ottic.• 1-... .C~ 11 .. 0 ............. M-1 """''"Ol!>ft-~· 17ll\-~-.1•••r~ ~"""'<' V•l .. Y' 11701 \.• Ptt -•• ,...o, ... ,._.., and west or Colden Lantern Street. The freeway rout.e would have taken 80 acres or that 'and, Kuyper said, and would bave cul off another 100 acres io tbe planned community. The route had been zoned by supervisors for open space and treew ay use in anticipation of the proposed freeway. And they kept the ionint for a possible future bitbway e· '"en alter freeway plans weredrop1 ed four years ago. But developers of the tract. Meeker Development Company, had filed sult against the county and state, contending lhe zoning resulted in inverse condemnation arid caused them to lose up to $2 million, KQyper said. Kuyper noted the developers had lowered their out-or-court. l',...PGflt!Al SALARY ..• data procesftlng manager, $1,915 It-om $1,868 ; revenue superviaor. $1 ,717 from $1,615; asalstant finance director, $2,062 from $1,964; personnel services direc· tor, $2,139 from$2,0l!S; seniorclvll qineer and the dly'a trafflc audneer, $1,987 from $1,89'l. Also, ualstanl clty eniineer, $2,192 from $.2,088; assistant bulldlnl safety director, $1,834 from $1.~56; bulldini safely director, $2,218 from S2,1Jl, police captain, S.2,218 from $2, ll2; battalion chief and fire rnanbal, $1.98'1 rroll)$1.892; com· ll)un1Cation.I dll'9ctor, $2,112 from $2,0U. settlement amount from $800,000 tolhe$337,386. And the settlement would avoid a lengthy and cosUy trial, which the county might not win, the re· port said. County planning officials said about half the 450 acres bas been developed, and plans for moet of the remainder are being pro- cessed by county planners. From Page Al ROBBERY .• They believe the gunmen may have made off with food stamps and several rolls of quarters and change amounting l.0$200. That figure could go ~uch higher. one police s~esman saldtoday. Description of lbe three gunmen, seen by at least seven other store patrons ln 9ddlUoa to victims ln the robbery, coaftrmed lbatthe trio were of Latindesea. One suspect was described as being slx feet tall, weighiAg between 160 and 200 pounds, and wearing long black hair, combed straight back. A second gunman was described as bein1 nve feet., seven inches taU, with a stocky build with slicked down bi.ct halr. The third suspect la about five feet. five inches tall, welchlnc 130 to J.50poundl, alsowlthaUckeddown hair. Police are quesUonln1 wtt· neua to the robbery foe a more complet• deacrlpUoa of t.be gunmen. 538 CENTER ST. • COST A MESA • 646-1919 Wa~ Slits 1315.241s.299s.391s Cotten Swat SUits--890 Hooded-Zippered Sweatshirts~so Long Sleeve-Y-neck AcryBc Sweaters--t;ts Long & ~ Sleeve Colored T-Sblrts--395 l 495 Gym S~erts & Tract Pants 2zs to 450 Mylan W.,..... Jackets 71& & a•s Sweatsax-1 25 to 3°0 Open 9 ta & Clesed SnllJ Soccer Bafts-$95 to 26's Soccer Sboes-795 to 24's Basketballs--t's to 329s f ootballs-795 to 28'5 Yolleyballs--695 to 2395 Racquetballs-1 25 Tennis Balls can of 3-169 1aa.22s.2so Handllllls & Gloves R1e111etlalll Racquets Tenlis Racbts T emis Dresses Tennis Slirts & Sltorts 1 erllis Sllees Racket Strinlilf 5JI Ceater mm ~1919 AILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE Not a -Bad Influence Newport-Mesa school trustees think it makes onomic sense to close up the contmuation high . cbool operation at McNally School at NewpOrt and ~9th. sell the property and move the 2SO students to a ·.central Costa Mesa elementary school. Thus one of the under-populated schools-~arper, Monte Vista, Woodland, Lindbergh, Bay ~\1Jew or Kaiser-would send its students elsewhere to *1>ake room for the continuation school students. In seeking public opinion from residents near the ·.~chools involved~ district officials have run int..o two revailing objections: · 1. Understandable concern that the long-held con- ept of neighborhood schools will be lost for their sec- tion of Costa Mesa. · 2. A less rational fear that a continuation school is :!a bad influence on the neighborhood. f The first objection is a tough one. Parents of ~ f-Ourse want their elementary-age children attending '!lChool close to home. But the school board has an ob· tJigation to save as much money as it can in view of .:.dwindling enrollment and this switch is an excellent ,;opportunity to do just that. ti': ~ The second objection is based on a misconception e:.of just what a continuation high school is and how it ~fects those who live or work nearby. A continuation school is simply a high school th al adjusts itself to students who, for a variety of reasons, .. do not fit into the normal curriculum. Because they're kdisenchanted, lost in the shu!Oe of a big school, want •:to work part-time, or need individual attention, a stu- dent can elect to switch to continuation school. And McNa11y Principal Jack Coleman says the atio of students who want this kind of alternative high school program is increaslni. That may bo good or bad from the long view ol today's education. but it u; a place to rescue what could be a loat student. So tar as their conduct is concerned-i-ead what one McNally School neighbor bas to say in today's Mailbox column. While central corridor residents have every rea· son lo $peak up for the concept. of preserving neighborhood elementary schools, they should not be hostile it their elementary school becomes a continu a· Uon high school. Good News at School Despite a nationwide downward trend, Scholastic Aptitude Test <SAT) scores among Newport-Mesa District high school students have risen in the past year. The statistics :released by Supt. John Nicoll are an encouraging sign that our local education system, already highly rated, is improving rather than declin- ing. Parents especially should take pride in the fact that while combined verbal and match scores in California dropped an average of eight points, district scores jumped six points. Nationwide. the combined average score is 451 on a scale of 200-800. In California, the average is 450 . The overall average in our district is an impressive 488. The district is now gathering data for a five-year study of district, state and national scores starting with the 1971-72 school year. We hope ~his study will reveal a long-term local uptrend. c ~Ford Aide New Medicare Costs o Blow ti f:Gets Pay .,, f:From U.S. r ~(--E-V_A_N_S-.. N-O_V_A_K_) WASHINGTON -Michael Duval, who is paid $38,000·plus a : year out of the U.S. Treasury ~to be special ~·counsel to the ~President. is :,.spending full t t ime these f d a y s .. representing t Preside nl .. Ford 's in - l'terests in de· ~ bate arrangements -a sign that t the Ford campaign is as con- ?" temptuous as ever of the new • election campaign law. That act forbids additional con· !tributions. including contribu- tions in kind, to a presidential :=:nominee accepting the $21.3 .. milLion federal suooidy. Thus, ~Duval might be expected lo drop ·:off the federal payroll, at least • temporarily. if the letter of the • Jaw were followed. But the Ford : campaign has no intention of do· ~ 1ng that. 1 Whether the Federal Election ~Commission will deal between now and Nov. 2 with this aid re- • ceived by candidate Ford is .. doubtful. But while probably run· "n1ng no risk of legal action, Mr. 7 Ford's managers have been criticized all year for violating • thespiritorthe law. The justification Cor • . Dear Gloomy Gus Maybe Earl Butz would consent to do his imitation of Step •n Fetchit at the next Black Panther rally C.U.Y. Gtoomy Gin comm~"u •r• \v~tttd bY r••cltr' •nd do not necen•r•ty retie< I 11\t vltW\ ot 1hf ntwip.aper. Send your Of\ -••to Gloomy Gus, D•lly Piiot. Duval 1s that he is a volunteer giving part.time campaign help lhat does not interfere with his of- ficial duties. "That's ridiculous," a Ford campaign insider told us. "Mike has been working on the debates full lime. If he's doing anything else, I don't know about it." In- deed, Duval was fully engaged in politics at Kansas City, as a Ford operative in the platform fight. NOR tS he alone. Much of the White House staff is concentrat- ing on the presidential cam· paign. as is the President. Richard Cheney, White House chief of staff on the federal payroll at $42,500 a year, has been considered by many the real campaign manager since Mr. Ford's nomination. Ford campaign lawyers point to the FEC dismissal of previous complaints about Rogers Mort.on working on the campaign from the White House. But the com· mission's ruling is not clear-cut. Moreover. a concurring opin· ion by commission member Neil Staebler indicated be would like to see the matter raised in a case such as the one posed by Duval i.Who Can Take Life? I have a letter from an or· • ganization calling Itself "Foun· dation for Life," in Toledo, Ohio. The letter commends a recent : piece of mine, in which I referred •: to the human race as our "most ' endangered species." .. Foundation for Life" is an an· ·• ti-abortion group. The poster ac· ·~ companying the Jetter says: ''We • are dedicated to a very basic prln· ~ ciple. That human life is sacred. ,. Period. No qualifications or ex- ' ceptions or conditions." • The poster points out that ·'in :"' tbe U.S. today. a woman has the , •ij legal right to take the life of her I .unborn child. FQr any reason ... Then goes on to say: "ls there some magic line that makes the • life of an unborn child any less · important than the life of a day- old child? Or a week·old child? 1 • Or a year-old child?" Suppose we agree. Then what $' about an 18-year-old child? But the state hat the legal right to • send an 18-year-old boy to his • death in any war it earcs to •. declare, or even not to declare. i IF llUMAN life Is sacred. period. why do' the antl·abortion people speak out so forcetuUy Oll the rtcht of the foetus, but remain mute when a lad who ba.t been loved and cared ror and educated ls shipped away to face "un· • natural death" on ~me foreign bettltfleld "! Wbat about capital punish· ment? Docs th state possess the ~ht to take human llfc any more than the mothe does? If • burnan Ure ls truly "sacred,·· then it should be left to God to de· .. ( SYDNEY HARRIS) cide who shall die, just as He de- cides who is to be bom. The "Foundation for Life'" says, quite correctly, "We believe we all h ave a responsibility to oppose wbat we think is wrong." But how can you think that abortion is wrong if you condone capital punishment and the evil institution ot war? Jf you · permit the st ate to kill "legally." why docs not the molherbave the same right7 THE ABORTION issue is more complex and difficult to resolve than either its opponents or pro· ponenta are willing to admit. But1 this apart, it bas a1ways puuleo me that people can be so passionate against killing a baby in the womb, and so indifferent to murder by the state alter the child reaches the threshold of maturity. Il UJe is sacred, then the stale bas no moral authority to take It. II there are ·•no qualifications or exceptions or condltioos," then the right-to·llre oraanlaatlons must speak out as forcefully .,ainlt war and capita) punlah· ment 11 they do against abortion. Otherwise. the concept of "aacredness .. becomes a mockery at the aie ot 1L We arc not free to plck and choo e amona our modes or morality. If we do. we be1:omt special pleaders, and not troe believers . Malnutrition, Suicide Ahead? To the Editor The news m edia have an- nounced a vicious increase or 19 percent in Medicare costs. effec live Jan l, 1977. Senior citizens and others ex isling on fixed and/or low income cannot presently compete with those who have sufficient in· come. This 19 percent increase is prohibitive Thousands cannot afford to be hospitalized and this latest increase will deprive thousands more of sorely needed medical care. The result of deprivation is malnutrltion, death and sorrow. Our legislative process is in- consistent because it fails to pro- vide for the people who are en- titled to the necessities or ure. We are presently paying $30 a month for Medicare and S.I. in· surance and cannot afford periodic increases unless Social Security, etc. increases likewise. This latest proposed increase will certainly produce more dis- respect for our Was hington legislators . Malnutrition and suicide will certainly increase unless immediate action is taken to relieve the needy senior citizens. We desperately need legisla- tion to exempt all senior citizens from this and the last increases in Medicare costs. lt has been said that we get so deep in the forest we cannot see the trees. I think this is the status of our Washington legislators and possibly others C. M. GIBBENS Se% Ed~ation TotheEditor: Parents are the primary sex educators of their own children whether they do it well or poorly. Some parents think that the less lheirchildren know about sex, the less likely they are to engage in "promiscuous" irresponsible sexual behavior. Studies and everyday observations don't sup· port this gener alization. The rear of "pulling ideas intolheirhead.s'. by being open and informative is unfounded. The ideas are already there. Young people get them from books, newspapers, movies , and most rrequently from friends. As a society we encourage the open pursuit of knowledge in most fields except sexuality. UNFORTUNATELY, what young people don •t know about sex and contraception can hurl them. Teenage pregnancy is a serious problem: one In four American teenagers has a child before she reaches the age ol !(). Teenagers account for over half of all out-of-wedlock blrtbs and one-third of &II abortions in the • ... •nd I promise you a balanced budget if I have to spt1nd every cent we have/' ( ] ed that "We don't want a bunch MAILBOX ~e~~~ ":.ho start trouble in our . . I am associated with a busi· venue sharing funds, to be sent to Washington to be laundered and returned full of strings, doesn't seem a practical solution. It just shifts the taxes and adds to the administration costs. Letters /rom readers ore welcome The nght ro condense letters to /11 space or el1mmate libel is re1eroed Letters of 300 words OT less wtll be gwen preference All letters muat 1n· elude ngnature and m<lthng addresa but names may be withheld on re. quest 1/ su/J1c1ent reason i~apparent Poetry will not be published. U.S. Teenage pregnancy is large- ly the result of non-useor sporadic use of contraception. How can we ask young people to assume responsibility for their sexual behavior when we guarantee their ignorance? October 10·16 is National Fami· ly Sex Education Week, a time to st art teaching young people what they want to know. Let's work at being ·•askable .. parents. teachers. aod friends; support open communication in the area of human sexuality . A.M. ROBINSON For Mr•. Bo..,ln. .. To the Editor: Newport Elementary School is wearing a black band of mourn· ing a round her old structure - you can't see it with your eyes but you feel it through the words of children and parents. Delores Bowles bas been transferred to Costa Mesa! She was a beloved fixture at Newport Elementary -a woman who knew every child by nam e. She also knew which knee had the cut, the names of your br others and sisters, your main interest, and how many or your teeth she had pulled. She gave up her time before, during, and after school to listen to the children's words -not to hear. but t.o listen. and they knew the difference. I WATCHED her through many classes and was amazed at her feeling for each child. She used to say, "Th ere never was a bad child," and she believed It. She taught according to th at belief and was acclaimed not on· Jy by many fellow teachers and grateful parents, but was select· ed by the government to represent this country abroad. S he spent many summers teaching in foreign countries and bringing her new knowledge back to her students. All schools need a Mrs. Bowles -someone to make the children feel wanted and loved in a school. Someone who makes tbem strive to perform through warmth and carlna, someone they know 1s always there. "They" have taken our Mrs. Bowles -treat her gently Costa Mesa and ap· pndate ber -she may be gone from our halls but Will not be forgotten. SHJRLEYSHEPPARD fi'••tlNeiphrs To the Editor: Thfs Inter ls in re:sponM to an article appeartn' lo the Dally Pilot regarding the relocation of the continuatlon high school. The article states that com· plainta ransed from .. . . fe.ars ol lncreased crime ln the area to •decline in property value." The article quotes a woman who st.tl· ness that, until very recently, was located immediately adja- cent to the McNally continuation scbool. Our facility was within a few feet of the classrooms and lhe open area where the students congregated for lunch, outdoor assemb lies, grad uation ceremonies, etc. During the five years we were neighbors we found the students to be quiet and courteous. We never bad a single incident or theft or vandalism. and even found the students to be heJpruJ by removing discarded cartons and packaging material that they used in various school projects in woodworking and art. BECAUSE the continuation students s pend less time al sch ool , due to t heir in · dividualized schedules, we round that there was less activity and noise than would be found at a re- gular high school. The students did not arrive or depart simultaneously, they did not have the outdoor sports activity and attendant noise, they did not wander around the streets near the school the way students at a regular high school do, and there were no school buses coming and going. In summary, after spending 40 to 50 hours per week for five years within a few feet or the con- tinuation school I round it more desirable than being close to a re- gular school (1 live close to Newport High and used to live across the street from Ensign). The onJy problem we ever en· countered was parking -and found the s tudents and ad· ministrators to be helpful in solv· ing that problem quickly. ' DUDLEY W. JOHNSON Airport 'Bll91at• BUT CARTER is right in say- ing the free enterprise system is "a good one." Does he intend to leave it free? His pronounce- ments h ave bee n to control and tax it heavier , which could weaken or even destcoy it, de- pending on bow far his rules go. And his plan to take up the job slack by creating government jobs isn't a very good solution either. President Ford's solution or letting free enterprise be freer • and to leave it more investment capital so it can expand . and create more jobs, is more prac- tical. And if we give him a more practical Congress next year that understands saving as well as spending, he could probably cut down the federal budget enough to make it work. Jt sure seems worth a try. GOLDIE JOSEPK Prop. 14 S11pport To the Editor: Your Sept. 28 editorial oppos· ing Prop. 14 is based on the mis · taken premise that it is desirable that the Legislature be able to make changes in the landmark farm labor law wbicli was passed, as you point out. after .. endless conferences" with Gov. Brown. The result of those conferences was a delicate compromise which all sides agreed to abide by. But after only a few months, the growers and their allies in the state Legislatur e reneged on that agreement and attempted to sabotage the law. IT WAS only the fact that signatures were quickly gathered for Prop. 14 that caused To the Editor: the Legislature to refund the MY mother owns a small house Agricultural Labor Relations in Huntington Beach. Her only Board. pleasures ar e her TV and her The architect of the farm labor garden. The airplanes spoil her law. Gov. Brown, says that Prop. TV and now she is broken· 14shouldbepassedinorder tore~ hearted ~cause the city chopped move the issue from politics and d?wn her front tree because of~ allow the ALRB to operate free of 8ll'J)lanes so low overhead. · pressure from any side. Let us She loved and cared for that · take his advice and vote Yes on tree. It hadn't cracked sidewalk 14. or street. lier whole street was stripped naked and looks awful That postage stamp airport is a costly blight on her town. B.CARTER Braum"•· Canft" To the Editor: Governor Carter 's speech al O'Neill Ranch called for more federal spending to save money. That could only be a tnlism i.n .Alice's Wonderland. Other lands have not yet been able to succeed at this, even thou1h they sometimes do a\')peat up-side. down and backwar4'. But tt wouJd be interesting to 1<now Governor Brown's ruction to Carter's blaming California's high p?Operty tax on lhe federal government when Calllornia is under Brown's control and tbt federal covernment is under Oernocratlc control , wblch tnakes tbom respom1ble for the lnl1aUon tie deplores. Tber-e does have to~ telief for property tu. but his idea of col· lectlnc more tu for fedel'al re. PAULC. EKLOF SA ARON K.. EKLOF ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT J<obut N. Wct'd. l'ubli&flcrr Thn!Tl41 Kttull, Edtlor Barbaro Krtibkh, /.:dltonol Pogt f:d1tor The editorial poge of the Daily Pilot seeks tn inform ond i.timulate readers by prt<icnting on this page dlverst> comm('nlary on topks or Interest by syndlut- ed rolumn\sls and cartoonists. by prov1dini a forum for ~•ders' vtews and by presenting thia newspaper's opinion~ and ldeu on curT'<'nt topics. The Mitnr1al opinion" or the D•ily Pilot apfl('ar only In thl' tdltor1al culumn al th top of thf' P31lt OpinaOM e>l• p~)>Ni hy the-t'Qlumnrsu and cortoon1!lt5 ond letter" rtlcr~ urc U1rar nl.\ n :and no cndnn.«'mcnl Of their \'ll'" b~ the flail) Pilot o;hould be.-•nforrt'd Wednesday. October6. 1976 J • Parents Freeze Hopes Slain Daughter'• Brain Hel,d for Future BEUEl.EY <AP> -The brain of a U-year~ Berkeley ,Ul vidousl;J beaten to death bu been lioseo aDd pruerved ln anticipatioo of a time In the tuture wba medical ldeoce can crea\.e a body foe it. ty." Robert Wllloo. father ol Patricia Wilson, said Tuesday. •t'• e. 1978 Cemetery Worker Dies in Crypt SAN DIEGO CAP> -A cemetery worker who went to the aid of AJman wbo collapsed ln a crypt 2S feet deep was bhnldt overcome by lack of oxygen. and later died. , "We feel lt la a 1.0QI ahot, but It's our way of ex-! PAUlDI our belief ln llfe and our r~ectlon of the tawal accepta.n_ce d murder and death ln our aocie- .. WE THOUGH 'IUAT IF we could make a con· tribuUon to science something good could come out. d this tragedy," be added. The young woman was beaten lo death Sunday at a Berkeley clot.hlni store where sbe worked as a clerk, police said. Robbery appears to have been the motive. The two men were preparing Ute crypt for a tour by delo1ate1 ottbe National Calhollc Cemetery Conference. Eiebt hours after firemen rescued them, Jesus Berumesa died ln Paradise Valley Holpltal. Berumen. 34, earUer bad climbed lnlo Uio con· crele·llned, multilevel crypt at Holy Cross Cemetery to help revive Fausto Palafox. S2. Keepers Find Baby Gorilla WUaon said be and bis wile contacted Arthur Quaife, president of Trans-Time lnc. Quaile said the parents signed a release with the Alameda County coroner permitlina the coroner to turn the brain over to Trans-Time, which speclallles ln preserving bodies until such time as a cure ta found for the disease that killed them . Firemen worked almost 30 minutes to brtn1 up Palafox and Berumen. Palafox was revived quickly with "a shot of air," a tl.reman arild, but Berumen dAN PASQUAL <AP) -A newborn lowland gorilla waa found Tuesday at the San Dleco Wlld Animal Park-its third ever, all October babies. The parents are Olla and Trtb, a -400· pound male whose other mate Dolly gave birth to Jim ln October 1973 and to a female named Blnti in October 19'74. It is-too early to tell the weight and sex of the newest addition, a park spokeswoman said. .. WE DECIDED 111AT the best thing to do wu to preserve her brain and its memories hoping that al some future d-_te science will find a way to re- consUtute a person essentially the same as Patricia Wllsoo,' · said Quaile. He predicted such a feat is "al least 50 years away." The braiJl will be kept at 320 degrea below zero. Quaile said there would be a $400 initial cost and an annual storage fee of $100. A special memorial as been started to raise the aponey. Spock Speaks Out Dr. Benjamin Spock talks with fellow picket in front of Los Angeles omces of League of Women Voters. He was protesting limitation of debates to Ford and Carter. never regained consciousness. ~Viking 2 ~Fails in Dig Try Studio Sets '-Mines' Adrift Free Ice Ban Eyed FAST. LOW·COST, QUALITY OFFSET PAINTING 10 to 10,000 Copies SAN DIEGO (AP) -Uni venal Studios is red in the face over two pb.OQy Japanese World War II mines lhat somehow were set adrift in the Pacific. "IT IS A BIG embarrassment for us," said Art Seidel of Universal. "Anyone who finds them Is welcome to keep them. We just want to get them out of the water.'' ...... _ .................. ,._ ... ... prObWIJ M ...., ....... '°" ,...,._ pip And the Coast Guard hasn't been getting many laughs out of the situation either. Pttotocoplff Avallabt. NEWPORT BEACH 240 Newport Center Or. Design Plaza. Suite 120 (714) 640-9053 PASADENA (AP) The Viking 2 robot has failed to li(l a Martian boulder, but will try again on a smaller rock, scientists say. Shipping bas been advised to be on the lookout for the mines and lhe Coast Guard said it has spent a lot of time and manpower attempting to find lhem. The mines, which are about tbree feet in diameter, are made of plasUc and are tethered lo weights. They were among six lost from motion pie· lure filming on locatioo at Catalina Island on Sept. 24. SACRAMENTO (AP) -The bead of the state Alcoholic Beverage Con· lrol Department is to de- cide soon whether bars and liquor stores may continue glvJng away free ice cubes, a lradl· Uon dating a bout 30 years. OVER 300 PIP• NATIONWIDE POSTAL f 1t1Jonl PRESS TrueksToo The prop mines have been drifting south and four have been recovered. "We r eally blew it," said Seidel. Vlting team members found that the robot just waan 'l strong enough to move the boulder and search underneath it in a last-ditch effort to fmd organic compounds on Mars. (..___SF-_:4TE_____..) Scientists theorized that ii there are organics -structural compounds that are the basics of life as we know lt -on Mars, they may be found UD· demeatb a rock, away from ultraviolet Martian Smog RWe Widened FRESNO <AP) -stricter anti-smog regula· tions are on the road for California's heavy duty trucb and buses. ' The California Air Resources Board adopted the regulations Tuesday after testimony from representatives of most of the country's heavy duty vehicle makers. NobodY. saves you 20% to more cities thin United. The regulations are to cover both gasoline and diesel engines of vehicles over 6,000 pounds gross ;._--------------------------------------------, weight, except certain limousines. Freedom Fare to 79 cities. 3unllght. Oii the Book LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Municipal Court judge bas d ismissed cbar1es aealnst 14 persons who received traffic tickets while pro- testing the Santa Monica Freeway Diamond Lane project. Judie Wilbur Dettmar dismissed the charges against the protesters just before the start of lbelr trial, saying the ls· sue was moot because the Diamond Lane no loo&er exists. l• ... teSlain CIUNO (AP) -A Z1· year-old inmate of lhe California lnstllute for ' Men here has died of ' severe abdominal in· ;. juries be received ln a 1. beating. Authorities said Gary ' Schultz of Chula Vista, ' serving a sentence for armed robbery, died without ldentltying bis assailaQts. But:r to Sp~alc LOS ANGELES CAP> -Earl L. Butz plans to THE MAXIMUM AU.OWABLE hydrocarbon standard for the 19'79 model year was set at 1.5 1--------------- grams per brake bcrsepower hour, dropping pro-Destination greasively to 0.5 gram ln the 1983 model year. City The maximum of hydrocarbons and oxides of Akron/Canton nitrogen combined was set at 5 grams per brake Nlentown/BethJehem/F..aston ·horsepower hour for 1979 models, dropping to 4.5 11 .. 1t 1 •11'l0re grams for 1983 models. Also adopted were test pro-u.u cedures similar to those of the U.S. Environmental 11i m1ingham Protection Agency. Bot~ BEA VY DUTY VEHICLES have been under Boston anti-smoe regulations since 1989, but the board saJd Buffalo/Niagara Falls standards haven't grown so progressively stringent Cedar Rapids/lowa City as those for passenger can. Charlc~ton. W. V.1. By the 1977 model year, trucb and buses will be Oiarlnlte, N.C. 7 to 14 times dirtier than cars. saJd Mary Nichols, r i... tt vicecbairmao. u1a annoga The staff of the board said if the standards Chiaigo Round trip Tour freedom Fare Savln1ts $277.00 315.00 307.00 246.00 126.00 338.00 294.00 218.00 275.00 282.00 258.00 2~S.OO $69.00 79.00 77.00 62.00 32.CX) 84.00 74.00 54.00 69.00 70.00 64.00 61.00 hadn't been adopted, by 1990CaJjfomia's trucks and 1------------------------t buses would have been emitting 276 tons per day of Chicago $110.00 $86.00 oxides of nitrogen and 8> tons of hydrocarbons. Our Economy F1 ctdom Fare to Chicago offers even GENE CONE, BOARD spokesman, said the h'Tmll'r s..1vings. measurement ln grams per brake horsepower hour 'ti>u ~1v1: 28°~ 4 ,ff ri.?gula.r round-trip Co.1ch fa.re. makes it difficult to compare the standards with • · I 55~ tbose for passenger cars, which are 0.41 grams per Children traveling \\1( l you ~ave , ... mile or hydrocarbons for the 1977 model year, 9.0 Same restrictions as regular Freedom Fare. grams per mlle of carbon monoxide, and 1.5 grams 1-----------------------c per ~lle of oxides of nitrogen. Oeveland $277 .00 $69.00 -------Columbus,O. 267.00 67.00 OClyton, 0. 259.00 65.00 Denver 139.00 35.00 Des Moines 206.00 52.00 Det roit 269.00 67.00 Eugene. Ore. 130.00 :32.00 Flmt 269.00 67.00 Fort \\.:1yne 259.00 65.00 speak to a convention WHAT'S so SPICIAL AIOVr A SP'ICt.U DtSTllC:T c;rnnd Junction 117.00 29.00 Crand R.1picls 256.00 64.00 next Monday despite bis Dear Neighbor. resignation under fire as What's In a name? Our name-The Cos1a Meaa secretary of agriculture, County Water Dlstrict-teus you quite a bit aboot us a spokeswoman for the But watch out you're not fooled by our name National Asaoclalioo of The words "Costa Mesa" may make YoU think we're a Concessionaires says. department or the City-Out we're not. And the word pub l l c I st Bet 11 y "County" In our name mev rneke YoU think we're sn B "'b ld B t 8g9flCV or the County-0\Jt we're not. We ere a Water er ... emer sa u 1 D11trlc1-and there·s the real answer to who we b a a c on f i r m e d b e ..-we're a Special District. would appear at the COO· ceasionaire's kickoff WHAT'S so SPICIALAIOUT 4 snctlt.1Dtsntcn meeting al the Dis· You11 llnd Special Dlstrtcc• are a very understandable Crccn~boro/High Point/Winston-Salem 288.00 72.00 I lartford/Springfield ~28.00 82.00 I Juntsville 246.00 62.00 Kansas City 197.00 49.00 Knoxville 261.00 65.00 I .M~lllg 262.00 66.00 La s Vega~ 59.00 15.00 Lincnln 187.00 47.00 Destination City Med.ford Memphis Milwaukee Moline/Rock Island/Davenport. Muskegon Newport News/ Hampton/ Williamsburg New York/Newark Norfolk/ Portsmouth/ Virginia Beach Omaha Pendleton Philadelphia Pittsburgh Portland Providence Raleigh/Durham Reno Rjchmond Rochester Saginaw/Midland/Bay Oty Salem.Ore. Salt Lake Gty Seattle/Tacoma South Bend ~pokane Toledo Wa~hington. D.C. )oung:;tov.11/Warren/Sharon Round trip Your Freedom rare Savings $117.00 226.00 245.00 224.00 253.00 31!).00 323.00 $29.00 56.00 61.00 56.00 63.00 79.00 8 1.00 315.00 79.00 194.00 48.00 149.00 37.00 317.00 79.00 286.00 72.00 139.00 35.00 334.00 84.00 294.00 74.00 85.00 21.00 306.oo-· '°"16.00 301.00 75.00 269.00 67.00 134.00 34.00 125.00 31.00 152.00 38.00 251.00 63.00 150.00 38.00 266.00 66.00 :307.00 Ti.00 286.00 72.00 Night Coach to 7 Eastern cities. There's an even easier wrty to s.1Ve 20%. It's Unil<'cfs Ni~hl C.0.1ch. If you ny after JO p.m., there are no reslTictions at all. Available to Baltimore. Boston. Oeveland. New York. Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Washington. D.C. n e y l and Hotel i o kind of government. That"s because we·re ao simple. Anaheim. We"re constituted under State law to provide only one United's Freedom Fare knocks 203 off the regular round-trip C:OOch fare. And it's available kind of aervlce, 1uch as water. We don't have to balance 79 · · ~ Los An 1 Tua ' · · than th · } " •torwa Pro•be giving water against other seMC9S. like building roads. to a ties ll om ge es. ts more a ties any 0 er arr me. SACRAMENTO <AP> ~en~~!C:,~'~=~~ru~:!it;~~~;:~i What's more, children under 12 traveling with you save a whopping 503! -Former state prisons st providing our one seMce. There are no mileage restrictions. No weekend or holiday restnctions. Freedom Fare does :=~1::~ :~:n!.: :i:~~~ev~~~t':~~ru~b~~;~~v~ not apply to flights outside the amtinental U.S. or to travel Wlthin the same state. forms in lhe turbulent ~~ ~~;z~~·rt~~~ ~i~cZ~rn;:; c:,:~ Just reserve your seat at least 14 days ahead. Pay for your round-trip atate Health Depart· Me9a County Water Oistr1d. As a result. vau·re getting ticket within 10 cfa~ Of your reservation date, but at least 14 days thmene lat~~blearbe.~eeuwpw. bclld ,tfle setv1c. you voted tor in this District. at a reasonable \......&ore departure. d stad; 7 to 30 days. ..--· ,.... -prtce. we think that'• What local government 11 all l.Jt:ll Yi The blunt·talktn1 about. l):)n't leave home wi OUt the American~ess .,,,; ou~' ~ veteran civil aervant Come down to our next meeting and talk to ua You're • £ 'ted known .. ''Pro,·· was ~weloome. card.' Use tt 1or ffour Um tickets, hotels, s ~t..~boBI. ~b:::e c~:f P~~~~m~ Sine , . .. ... ;. . . and rental cars. you don't have an American :um Tuesday by atate Health .. .& .& Ycu lmd-:f'Y0wKtcn , \~~·· Express card, call (8()()) 528-800() for an D tr e ct or J er om e _ • ~ o 9erQeron ~~~~~~~=~~::::::~~.,, application. :,;::n~r:~~:':: .. ~~ ------~ !..mr~Booth~Lcr:;: For reservations, call your Travel ~ent. Or call United at 537-7521. Cal and ounln1 homos. .______________ Partners in Ttavel with Western International Hotels. SKI I IPOITI WllK, OCT. 1-13 e HEAD FASHION 8HOW e K·2 AACINO TEAM t Sl<J RAW &nCTACULAA e OYMHAST1C8 eAFTEA 51<1 'ASHIOHS • EQUIPMlNT • PAIZD 5outh Coast '1111 Flythe endly skies of United. • unlTED AIRLlnes I Or ange Coast EDITION Today's Clo Ing ~ N.Y. tocks < ~ •* * * ' VOL. 69, NO. 280, 6 SECTIONS, 64 PAG-ES I .. . . N TEN CENTS Carter, Ford Confrontation Tonight B7WALTERR.MEARS ... S.-Ci.t Cef ........ From a diltance, Gerald Ford tDd Jimmy Carter have waged a lharp. sometimes bitter dispute about American defense and foreian policies. So there is plenty to argue about in Sao Fraoclsco tooigbt iJ t.be Republican President and the Democratic nominee want to get tough in their second campaign debate. (6:30p.m. PJn') Debate sround rules and cautious television eaosultanta may take the edae elf wbeD the two get together, bul amoni t.be items for confrontation are these: -Ford's assertion that Carter doesn't know what be is t.a.lkinc about lo suggesting a $S billloo to $7 billion deCeose-spending cut. -Carter's charge that Ford ( NEWSAl'UU'SIS J bu abdicated foreign policy leadenbip and control to Secretary ol Slate Henry A. KJas- ia&er. Carter cont~ that Kba- inler baa no regard for morafity in U.& policy abroad. and that be ia a "Lone Ranier," running a MCl'et, one-man abow. Indeed. lf the White House rlvata simply repeat what tbey've been saying about each other Crom afar, the Great Debate ll will be far more heated than tneir flrat nationally televised match two weeks ago. AD Associated Pres.5 poll rated that one a virtual draw in the eyes ol the voters, with a slight gain in support for P'ord. So far. foreign policy and de- fense have not been toplct ot tbe campai1n -even t.boucb they are paramount responsiblUUesot any president. Carter has campaiglecf hardest on tile issues of the economy. taxes and Jobs. categories that were covered in the first debate without either candidate breakiqg new ground. On the road Carter talks aboot . forelp policy and defense when asked. OC' ln prepared addn!nea to audiences concerned wi those iJSues. He bas said tha polls show him that when peop1 are asked to list their concerns they list at least a doaen topic before they get to COl'eign affairs. f'ord. m a more limited . catDpaien. bu made more thoee topics. but only in the moe (See DEBATE, Pase AZ> Nine Seek Seat 5 More Vie for Council Vacancy Nine people bad applied by noon today for appointment to the Newport Beach City Council seat left vacant bv the death or Howard Rogers. A spokesman for the city clerk said five· more applications had been taken out but had not been retmned. The deadline for filing was 5 o'clock today. As of noon, the list of candidates included: Peg Forglt, wife of former councilman Al Forgit and the woman who lost to Rogers by UCI Move May Cost Sonie Jobs Engineering faculty members at UC Irvine may begin job bunt- ing if the UCI admin.ist.ration goes ahead with a proposed merger of the School of Engineering and ~e .Physical Sciences School. Administrators are consider· ing the merger because growth at UCI has tapered off from original expectations and because the engintering school bas one of the smallest faculties en campus. But Allen Stubberud, associate dean of the engineering school, claimed that "more than one flCulty member would be in the market for Jobs elsewhere if the merger goes through. "As for myself, as soon as I could find a better job elsewhere I'd leave," added Stubberud. Engineering faculty members have until Oct. 15 to coovince t.be administration that a merger would weaken the professional engineering school. Stubberud said meetings are now being held amcng faculty members and academic commit- tees and that by Oct. 15 vice Chancellor James McGaugh will make a rec om mend a lion lo Chancellor Daniel Aldrich on the merser proposal. Stubberud said McGaugh now appears to believe the merger Is necessary to "protect" the small encmeering school, but that be could possibly be dissuaded from that position if the engineering faculty could convince him otbel"Wise. The associate dean said bis col- leaiues have not yet taken a Connal position on the proposed merger but said he believes the majority are against such a move. They will meet later this week and vote on a resolution. Nearly every other UC campus bas a separate, professional engineering school and Stub· berud said he feared the integrity of the UCI school would suffer if It is made part of the physical l<llences school. Although the engineering stu- dent enrollment dipped to a low cf 225 pupils four years ago, due to the aerospace industry decline, enrollment Is now al a (See MERGER, PageA%) POUY WANTED, COi' GOOD HOME about 1,000 votes in the 1974 elec- tion. Kae Ewlag, 1740 E. OCi?an Front. a stockbroker. Dona l d Straan, 101 Via Venezia, a former member of the Newport-Mesa Unified School DUstrict Board of Trustees. Tnd.I Jlo«en~ 429 Seville Ave .. the widow of the late mayor. J. Doaalaa Lynn, 1.585 E. Ocean Blvd., Balboa, an office equip- ment supplier. George Bluell, 108 VLa Havre, Oil Price Hike Due? MANILA, The Philip· pines <AP> -Finipace ministers of the Organiza- tion of Petroleum Export- ing Countries (OPEC> may announce today a price in- crease of $1.SO per barrel effective Jan. l, 1.977, in- dustry sources said. These sources said while tbe OPEC oil mlniaten announce any price changes, their finance ministers have u mueb say on the chan1ea. The current price of oil is $ll.50 per barrel. Tropic Storm Headed For Acapulco MEXICO CITY, Mexico (AP> -Tropical Storm Madeline, picking up speed in the Pacific and beaded toward tbe Mexican resort of Acapulco, could turn in· to a hurricane by tooight. the Mexican weather service re- ported. A spokesman for the weather service said there was no cause for alarm and no warning had been issued to residents of Acapulco or other communities in the state of Guerrero. The storm. located 275 miles south·southeast of Acapulco, was moving toward Guerrero state this morning at a speed of about eight miles an hour, the spokesman said. Winds lo the center or the storm were recorded at about 45 miles an hour. "We've taken no steps lo pre- pare people on the mainland for the storm, becausewedoootwant to cause a false alarm. There is no way oC knowing which direction the storm ultimately will take," the spokesman said. He said Madeline was moving in a northwesterly direction with a tendency toward a route which would lead it to the state of Guer· rero. Acapulco ls the state capital. He said the winds were grow- ing stronger and the storm was expected to be classlfied as a hur- ricane. Udo lale, an architect. Elalae Lbtltoff, 1780 E . Ocean Blvd., Balboa, a substitute teacher who is a member of the city's Community Development Citizen's Advisory Committee. Waller ZlC)ar, 342 Buena Vista Blvd.. president of a ceramics firm. Paal Bela.Us, 1129 E. Balboa Blvd .. a real estate broker who is one of the recent appointees to the city's planning commiss.ion. 3 Bandits Rob Store, Custoiners By STEVE MrreREU Of .. 0.11, ...... ...,, Three men arme<t with asawed- df shotgun and several pistols stor med into a Cost a Mesa market Tuesd•Y niabl. scooped up money from several cash re- gis ters, took wallets from customers and necS llltothe dark· ness. Store managers at Ralph's Market, 2300 Harbor Blvd., were asaesstnc loeaes today, but oo dollar amount bas yet been d&- tennined io the9: 45p.m. heist. The trio, all of Latin descent, walked into the market, display- ing a J.2.gauge shotgun and two re. volvers to clerks and a half.Oozen customers. They acopped $22 from one cash drawer before moving down the line to another register, where clerk John Glescekl, apparently unaware a robbery was under way, ignored demands for money from the shotgun-wiel ding leader. The clerk was bit on the shoulder with the barrel of the shotlUn by the angry gunman before banding the caab register drawertohls accomplice. Alter cleaning out several re- gistens. the 1unmen announced. "Okay, let's see some walleu," and be1an taking wallets and purses from three market patrons and two clerks. Police today said the trio made off wtt b at least $66 Crom customers. Store officials are checking to see bow much moaey <S. ROBBER Y, Pqe A%) Film Se t Tonight A docum entary film on the wbalint indu•try will be present· ed by the Newport Beach Public Ubrary at 7:30 p.m. today. The film, "And So Ends," will be shown io the multi-purpose room adjacent to Mariners Library, 2005 Dover Drive. Bunae d Out Boat Firemen douse embers after explosion and fire wrecked 21-foot fiberglass boat Tuesday night at Newport Dunes marina in Upper Newport Bay. Owner John Mor· rell of Santa Ana and a companion escaped injury when gasoline erupted as one of the men tried to start the boat's engine, firemen said. Boat was declflt'ed a total loss. Supervisor Riley Defends Architect ByTOM BARLEY OI UM Dellr '1lit Staff Orange County Supervisor 'lbomas Riley appeared lodefeod San Clemente architect Leon }lyun late Tuesday shortly after he was called to the stand as the prosecution's second witness in the Superior Court bribery trial. "1 am sure he was unaware he was commiWng a crime by mak- ing those comments," he told de- fense attorney Mike Fiaoagan while being questioned oo telephone calls made to bis office by the defendant. Riley testified that be contacted the district attorney's office io1 Mav. 1976 alter a series of further telephone conversations be- tween bis aide, Peter Herman. andHyzen. The confidential memorandum sent to District Attorney Cecil Hick& resulted in Hyzen, 66, of 2100 BS. Ola Vista, being indicted by the grand jury on three felony count.sofoffering a bribe. It is alleged that Hyzen offered a $1,000 campaign contribution to Riley through Herman in return for the supervisor's pledge that he would be considered when the lime came to build a branch library in San Clemente. Riley told Hicks in the memorandum: "It is the im· 1>_resaion of my aide that Mr. Hyzen probably was unaware that be was commltttlng a crime by making these comments but I thought it wise to bring the matter to your attention. · · Flanagan pointed out In his ~ examination of Riley that the memorandum was sent to Hicks just one month before ao election lo which Riley w~ re- turned to bis Fifth District seat. Riley als o confirmed for F1anagan that be received more funds in campaign contributions than any other candidate and that builders and developers were among the major contributors. Riley told Flanagan and Depu· ty District Attorney John Conley that there were no plans for a branch library in San Clemente at the time Hyzen allegedly offered the bribe and that there are none today. <See BRIBERY, Page AZ> Hinshaw Joh Said Cloaked In Secrecy A woman who worked as a clerical supervisor in the as· sessor 's offic e wbeo Congressman Andrew Hinshaw was Orange County's assessor in um tesWled late Tuesday that a cloak of secrecy was thrown over the alleged involvement of several empJoyes in Hin.shaw 's campaign. Poll Slwwtl Carter Vote Cut Sharply SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Jimmy Carter bas plummeted in the California Poll to t.be point where be bas only a six·point lead over President Ford com· pared to a 20-point lead one month ago. Mervin Field, director of the California Poll, said today that interviews conducted Sept. lS.25 also indicated Eugene McCarthy might have "strong write-in vote potential." in California. In Augu s t. Carter. the Democratic challenger in the Nov. 2 election, had a 53-33 per- cent lead over the incumbent Republican president. but that slipped to .Cl-35 in the tally re- leased today on 1.044 interviews. Looking at the polJ, Field said one thin g was clear : "Calilomla·s important bloc of 45 electoral votes is now m the doubtful category where not too many weeks ago it was solidly in· the Carter column ... Talks May Reopen NEW YORK CAP)-Secretary or State Henry Kissinger and lsraeU Foreign Miru.ster Yigal Allon met today to explore the re- opening of Middle East peace er- forts. Co ast 'Throat' Cut Pomo PatrOm Complain Prosecution witness June Lake t.esutied ln Superior Court tbat she could get no response from her supervisors when she re· peatedly asked why certain employes were absent from the Jobs on county time without a stated reason. Weat her Early fog and low clouds to give way to a (air afler. noon Thursday. Beach high In mid 70s, low to 60 expected. MIAMI (AP) -Truth·in·packaging has bit the pornography business. Mrs. Lake said she finally was told that the information oa those employes would only be given out to those who "really needed to know" their whereabouts. I NSIDE TODA"' 1 "We received a tremendous response. We're sobappytobave found a good home for our pet.•• 'l1lat•1 the advertising success experienced by a Corona del Mar woman who placed this classified Sailing Class Still Open Openiqs are still available ln the offshore sailing cluaes of. fered by the Parka, Beaches &: A Miami theater showing the X-rated films "Deep Throat" and "The Devil in Miss Jones" was fined for not telling the public portions of the movies bad been deleted. Asst. State's Atty. Kurt Marmar said some patrons complained to police they weren't getting their money's worth at the theater. She told Deputy Dilltrict At· t.omey William Evans that she took the explanation aa a clear indication that she was to mind her own busineu and stop asking questions. TM dmlg1ttn of.a &rkelq coupi. U-u dead m Uw e«· oner·s O/fl". ~Mr cn.dn-· and Mr par.,.,., hopn tor Uw fulutt -how been froetn, oudting. a mifOCk o/ ~. ~ <Sa POQt AjJ • .t: Ta~ Halfmoon Parrot incl 2 cages, foOd, etc. $35. IOtX·UXX So, lr you ha,,.e a pet, or anything else to sell, call MZ-5S78. 1t 's easy to make a few words wort for you ln the ~~ple'• marketplace -the DUJ7 Pilot clusifl~. •A• Recreation Department of Newport Beacb. Each class ls one weekmd Jong, meeting fl'Om 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. both Saturday and Sunday. The cluaes are held each wffkmd throu&b Dec. 12 and cost $51.50. Tboae Interested sbouJd re- gister at the Parks, Beacbel It RecruUon office, 3'00 Newport Boulevard. Enrollment ta Umlted. .... Marmar said the Pussycat Theater cut the films after Orcutt Judge Thomas Testa ruled ln 1973 that certain scenes were obscene. Mannar ~aid an agreement wttb the theater's operators, Gayety '!beaters, Inc., called for removal <°' the objectionable material and a notice in ad· vertlsementa that the movie bad been revised. When the court IOt reporta the theater did not ln· elude the wamlna ln advertlslnf, Test.a found the compan,y and lta IJl'elddent, Leroy C. Griffith, in COD· temptof court and ftned them $3,000. Mrs. Lake testified that she was one Of a number d employea who were ordered to complete vacation 1llpe covering the tlme that certaln employes bad been absent. SIM testtfled tllat sbe protested. but wu assured that there was notb1n1 llle1aJ about the ar· (8eelDNSRAW. P1&eA2) la•ex MY--W'Yl<e A7 __.,n.e g ....... .. Mtvtft .. ,., OlltefW• AJ .... ... .,, ~ 0, ....... ,.. C.-C. al....._......,.. M ~ .. o.-..c.-y ........ ........ C\4 IMWlat ~... M """' 8 ,4 .......,._ .... ,.." ,... ... ,_., ... , ,._ ... , ,..,,...... .,. ~ C4-lt ,......,. ••• ......... Ci......, M ~ f! ---.. • \ 42 DAIL y PILOT N Wednnd•r· October&. 1978 .·o,. Tak•ag 6'lts Never Aga~n, Carter Sa}rs ATLANTA (AP) -Although Jimmy Carter says be took f~ rides oa corporate jda and spent several weekends vacationing at corporate retre ats whlle be was governor ol Georgia, he baa always malntal.Ded that sucb bolpltalU,y did not lnfluence bis actlona u aov· emor. 'lbe Democratic presidential candidate, who advocates b8DDlng gilts of value to public officials, says be would not accept such offers a,aln. 80l'll THE LO<JDIEED AUlCUFI' Col'J>. and the Coca-Cola Company provided transportation for Carter to several hmcUons wbUe be wu governor from urn tb.rouah 1974, company spokesmen Hy. During a three-week swing through Latin America ln April um. Carter new aboard a Loek:beed Jet.star. He used a Coca-Cola Co. ' alttraft to attend several National and Southern Governon Con- ferences. The state provides aircraft and a travel allowance for ita gov- ernor. Both companies have major in.stallationa in Georgia. ASKED ABOUTTDE USE of tbe Lockheed Jetstar, Carter told , a report.er lut April that the trip was a routine trade mlasion in which be promoted Georgia product.s, lncludinc Lockheed aircraft. "There was no eecrecy about it," be said. .. It wu reported and it ouaht to be." The vblt to five Latin American countries included Carter, bis wl.fe, Roealya.o, two security suards. the state's chief lndustry bunter, and aeveral I.ockbeedo!ficiala. A Coe a-Cola Co. vice presjdent, Ovid Davls, said bis company 15 one of several that provides products or services for the Natiooal and Southern Governors Coofereaces. He said it rues a corporate aircraft to both events. DAVIS SAID TOE COMPANY bas offered free flight.I to Georgia governors for 40 years. Campaign spokesmen said the free rides bad no effect oo Carter's decisions as governor. "He never dld a favor forelther company," said l>?'eU secretary Jody Powell. •'I'm au.re be felt no obligation to these companies." Powell added that using corporate jets might have "saved the taxpayers money" by reducing the cost of the governor's transportation. ALSO DU&ING BJ8 ADMINIS'l'BATION, Carter spent two weekends at a rustic forest lodge owned by Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. in southeast Georgia, and a weekend at a lodge owned by Union Camp Co. in western South Carolina. Members of bis family, hiB staff and their wives, and a future daa&bter-in-law accompanied Carter on one trip to Cabin Bluff, a 50,000-acre ''productq pine plantation" owned by Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. near Woodblne, Ga. Carter told reporters last week "it would have been better oot to" have accepted the hospitality, and said be would not dolt again. Mesa Executives Win Salary Hikes Salary increases for Costa Mesa's top executive personnel, ranging from 2.5 percent to 8.25 percent, were approved this week by Costa Mesa coun~. The increases for executive personnel, as well as other municipal employes, became ef. fective Sept. 26, aod will nm through October of tm, accord- ing to City Manager Fred Sorsabal. Salary ranges fer eucutive personnel range from Sl,802 to $2,663 a month. Only two top city officials are not listed as having received salary increases this year. Sorsabal, who said be does not accept an annual pay Increase, earns about $88,000 a year. City Attorney RoY June, who works on a contract basis and is allowed to conduct a minimum private attorney's practice, earns $30,000 a year, according to city files. Other executive employes, their current salary and former pay, include: Seven executive employes now earn $1,802 a month, compared with $1,716 last year. They in- clude the city's purchasing aaent, a planner, the recreation superintendent, amd the street, park, eolf course and the racillties and equipment superin- tendents . Public ServicfJS Director and City Engineer James Eldridge will receive $2,663, a $157 in· crease over his former salary or $2,506. Police Chief Roger Neth will also receive a $2,663 monthly aalary. Director of Finance Bob Oman will now make $2,537. He former- ly earned $2,388. Ftre Chief John Marshall earns $2,506 as opposed ORANGE COAST ~ DAILY PILOT ._ .. _ Pr•\lditnt •""4 Pwf:lt1_., , .. __ cw..., Vt<t ,.,_1 __ .. IN_ ~ .. lt-Eellor ,_ .............. --··-o..-.. ~ _ ...... •• ., ..... '*""""° ll:dhoro Teleptlon• (714)~ Cl.....,ed Actwettlllng 142-5171 to $2,387 and Planning Director Charles Roberts will make $2,387, a $140 a month raise over bis former salary of$2,247. William Dunn, A.ssislant City Manager and Director of Com- munity Development will eam $2,358 from $2,246 and Assistant City Manager Bob Duggan will make $2,358, up from $2,246. Assistant City Attorney Bob Campagna and Leisure Services Director Keith Van Holt will make $2,302. Campagna. who re- ceived a 6.25 percent increase, formerly earned $2,167. Van Holt received a five percent increase from $2,192. Other city executive employes and their salaries include: City clerk, $1,870 rrom $1,781; data processing manager, $1,915 rrom $1,868; revenue supervisor. $1,717 rrom $1,635; assistant finance director, $2,062 from $1,964; personnel services direc· tor, $2,139from $2,013; senior civil engineer 1 and the city's traffic engineer, $1,987 from$1,89'l. Also, assistant city engineer. $2,192 from $2,088; assistant building s afely director, $1,634 from $1,556; building safety director, $2,218 from $2,112 ; police captain, $2,218 from $2,112; battalion chief and ftre marshal, $1.987 from Sl,892 ; com- munications director, $2,112 from $2,0ll. Utility Fights Crash Probe CARLSBAD (AP)-San Diego Gu and Electric Company ls go- 1 ng to court to block the California Industrial Safety Divlsion from interviewing wit- nesses to Saturday's crane col- lapse that killed six workmen. Gm-don Pearce, a vice presi·. dent or the utility. said Tuesday It will seek a temporary restrain- ing order and preliminacy in- junction. "The company's position Is based on the possibility that the company or its employes could be criminally held liable for the accident," Pearce said. "We want company counsel to be pre- sent when the state lnvestlgators talk to our empJoyes." ,,,....p-JIJ BRIBERY • • 'lbe trlal ran i{lto a delay today when Judge H. Walter Steiner decided to question prospective witness Briao Patrick Lane out- sidethepresenceoflhejury. Lane, who is an attorney and mayor of San Clemente, bu potnted out to JudgeSte:lner u be• earlier p0inted out to the IJ'and jury that bll attorney-client relJ- tion.ablp with Hyz.en must be clarlfted before he testlftes. Explosion Simulates w-;-A-blast WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE. N .tt. (AP) -An awesome gray cloud rose blah above the San Andreu Moun- ta Ins today from what tbe mWtary termed the largest can· vmtlonal nonnuclear ex~oo ln history. , A fireball spread nearly 1,000 reel after CIOO tons d ammonium nitrate and fuel oil were !piled by the Defense Nuclear Acene.y I ulate shock effect. d a on. otoo nuclear blast. explosion was Jee,., than miles from Trtnlty Site, the flnt atom.le bomb was detonated July 18, 1.MS. Nearing Cmttpletion Today's explosion wa1 de· slcned to simulate the effect d • nuclear shock wave m mW~ weapons, vehicles, communica- tions equipment, shelters and a.ittraft. Project offldala were analyzing the resulta. Workman labors on portion of $6,000 re- pair job at Corona del Mar High School swimming pool. School officials say the job bas dragged on for more than a month because of September's wet weather .. Pool was drained Aug. 23 for routine main· tenance work school officials said should have taken about a week. They said pool will be refilled Mooday: School's water polo players and swimmers have been • working out at Newport Harbor High across town. To observen three miles from ground i ero. the blut began silenUy with the illltaDtaDeoua red fireball. A gray halo rose up- ward more than 2,000feet . A dark gray cloud. shaped like the familiar atomic mushroom, Report Slated On Planners Dick Hogan, Newport Beach director of community develop- ment, will give a report to the Planning Commlssim Thursday on a meeUng between represeo- tati ves of lbe Friends ol the Irvine Coast and aides ol Sen. John Tunney (D·Calif. ). The meeting opened dis· cussion.s on the possibility ol a federal government survey to de- tennlne ii funds are available for government purchase ol close to 10,000 acres of open space along the coast between Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. The Irvine Coast group hopes Tunney will lnltiate this action. Hogan will file bis report on the meeting at the Planning Com- miulon 's Study Session Thurs· day at 2 p.m. at City Hall. The meeting is open to the public. F,....PageAl ROBBERY •. was taken from registers and a safe in the store. They believe the gunmen may have made off with food stamps and several rolls of quarters aod change amounting to$200. That figure could go much higher, one police spokesman said today. Description of the three gunmen, seen by at least seven other store patrons ln addition to victims In the robbery, confirmed lhatthetriowereofLatindescent. One suspect was described as being six feet tall, weighing between 160 and 200 pounds, and wearing long black hair, combed straight back. A second gunman was described as belng five feet, seven lnches tall, with a stocky build with slicked down black hair. 'lbe third suspect ls about five feet, five inches tall, weighing 130 to lSOpounds, also with slicked down hair. Police are questioning wit- nesses to the robbery for a more complete des cription of the eunmen. Girl, 15, Thrown From Horse, Dies SAN DIEGO <AP) -Tanya Gallan, 15, of San Diego, baa died of injuries received Saturday when she was thrown from a hone at a ridin1 stable, police said. Officers said tbe girl, daughter o! Mrs. Gladys Galian died at Grossmont Hospital on Tuesday. She bad been ln a coma since the accident. Carter Diga Rock Music LONDON <AP) -Jlm- my Cart.er says be lites rock 'n' roll and thlnb popular mu.sic has had a "profound influence" on Amerlcan ll!e. In an Interview sbotm '1\lesday night on the BBC· TV rock program "The Old Gray WbisUe Test." the U.S. Democratic presiden· tial nominee said be bas cloee personal friendships wilb membert of many rock groups and that several of them have helped his campaign. Asked to single out bis favorite rock stars, Cart.er said Bob Dylan had the "mott Impact" and he en· joJed tbe Allman Brothen and the Bachman 1'umer' Band. FromPageAJ DEBATE ••• general tenns. He reminds au-dieneee that under the GOP ad- ministration, the nation ls at peace. He promises to keep it that way, and says the way to do it ls with lncreased spencHng for defense, not with such cuts as Carter bas advocated. t 'a debate put.a Ford on be chose; be regards de- eme and foreign polley as his SCORE DEBATE YOURSELF Pege A3 strong points and bad wanted the first debate to be on tho6e issues. Yet bis advisers already are hedging the wager a bit. with White House press secretary Ron Nessen remarking that the Presi- dent will be subject to restraints that will not affect Carter, because Ford's words "will be in· terpreted by foreign leaders as reflecting American polJcy." From Page Al MERGER ••• peak of about eoo tor both under- graduates and graduate stu- dent., Stubberud said. "We're stronger than ever and there b no reuon to me.rge the scboola," be maintained. There are slightly more physical science students than engineering students but the number of faculty members di!- f ers greatly. The full-time engineering sla!f numbers 15, while there are 75 full-time facul- ty members lo the physical sciences school. • Rites Friday For Longtime Newport Man Services will be held Friday for longtime Newport Beach resi· dent T. Hord Seeley, 75, who died Tuesday. Mr. Seeley. 1307 East Balboa Blvd., was a Newport Beach resi- dent since 1944 when he became chief civil engineer for the Long Beach Naval Ammunition Depot. During his business career he worked for contracting and real estate ftrms in Newport Beach. He was an active member of St. James Episcopal Church in Newport Beach where he served as bead usher. Mr. Seeley was also a founding member d the Newport Beach Elka Club. He ls survived by bis widow, Ruth; daughter, Mrs. Stanley Heginbotbam of Washington, D.C.; brother, Dr. Sam F. Seeley of Wasbiniton, O.C.; sister1 Mabel Evans of Cypress, ana grandson, Arlen. Visitation is scheduled from S to 9 p .m . Thursday at the Westcll!f Chapel of the Smith Tuthill Lamb Mortuary, 427 E . 17th St., Costa Mesa. Graveside services begin at 11 a.m. Friday at Harbor Rest Cemetery in Costa Mesa. Smog Reports Bid LOS ANGELES <AP> -The county Board of Supervisors has called for monthly reports on the success of a crackdown on smog violations at the Kaiser Steel plant in Fontana. then rose from the desert noor. It took more than 1S seconds fot the sound and shock wave to reach the observation point. The shock wave gently rocked the estimated 500 military, civilian and media observers. As the cloud of dust and smote rose to about 3.000 feet. a thin layer of dust spread over the ground thousands ol feet In all directions from the blast site. Maj. Wllllam Knapp, ol the sponsorina Defense Nuclear Agency. said the~ was "the lareest ever lur blast) In the world that we know of." It climaxed a series of ex- plosives tests in Project Dice Throw. Today's explosion was dubbed the •'Main Event.•· Knapp said it cost about $18 million. He said the six Allied na- Uons that participated reim- bursed the agency $6 milllon. The explosives were stacked ln a cylindrical pile nearly 40 feet high and 34 feet in diameter. Fro..PageAJ IDNSHAW rangement and the time would be made up to the affected empioJea in some "off the reeord" man- ner. Hinshaw, 51, is beiftl tried oa charges of arand theft, COD· spiracy, embezzlement and violation of state codes that IOT· em the conduct d public ol· fictal.s. It is alleged that beorc:lered u- sessor's employes to participate in bis successful eoogresaiooal campaign prior to the June primary in 1972. The Newport Beach Republjcan was convicted of bribery charges In an earlier Superior Court trial and ls free on appeal after being sentenced to one to 14 years in state prison. ,_ ------~== ------ ' • 0 Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 Wat'llHf Slits 131s.241s.291s.3995 Cotton Swat SUits-990 Hooded-Zippered Sweatshirts-850 Loag SIHYl-V-neck Acryfic Swalll's--'95 L•I & Slat Siem Colored T-S~irts-3'5 & 49s Gym S~erts & Track Pants 225 to 4so Nylon ~ Jackets J15 & 895 Sweatsa-1 25 ·to 3°0 Opl1 9 to & Closed Sandly Soccer Balls-695 to 2695 Soccer Shoes-795 to 2495 Basketballs--fi95 to 329s Footballs-795 to 2895 Volleyball$-fi95 to 231s Racquetballs-125 Tennis Balls can of 3-1" 1aa.22s.2so Handballs & Glaves Racquetball Racquets Tennis Rackets Tennis Dresses Tennis Shirts & Shorts Tennis Shoes Racket Stringing 538 Center =m 646.1919 ioi., ... • DAILY PILOT E DITORIAL P AGE How Large a Center? Last week, as the Newport Bench city council ap. proved an applicatlon for another federal grant to finance the city's proposed senior citizens center. some of the people involved with the projett raised some questions about it. Three members of the 14·member Community Development Citizens Advisory Committee filed what consututes a minority report. They disputed some findings in a survey the committee is using to Ju.stlfy lheneedfOTthecenler. Basically, they question whether the need for a center of the size proposed really exists or whether the statistics have l>een stretched to magni(y a need. All agree that some sort of senior citizen facilities are needed on the east side of the bay. The question is whether a center as large and expensive as the one anticipated is wanted or needed. The disagreement is difficult to ignore. The three committee members have raised some questions that have not been fully answered. And answers ought to be pursued before the city commits itself to the on- going expense of the large center that is now planned. Better Late Than .•. There was a time in Newport Beach when the Irvine Company owned nearly 6,000 acres of un- developed land inside the city limits. Today that figure is down to 900 acres. With the last of the company's development in Newport Beach in prospect, company officials are trying to improve communications between themselves and city officials. It's a proposal they first tried with the planning or the coastal area. Apparently the success of that idea has led the company to apply it to Newport Beach. IL 's a good Idea so Jong as those llnes ot com· munication lhut are belnai: opened are being opened publlcally. Eurlier this s ummer. city councllmen wisely re· Jected a plan to hold dlscU!isions about proposed de· vcl0pmcnts in spedal committee meetings. lt appears that the intentions or both lhe land company and city people are good. They plan lo usc city council study sessions, held joinUy wlth the plan· ning commission. to discuss not only specific pro- posals, but related broad issues that affect the city. Both parties can look back and wish this idea's time had come severest years ago. Good News at School Despite a nationwide downwe1rd trend. Scholastic Aptitude Test <SAT> scores among Newport.Mesa District high school students have risen m the past year. The statistics released by Supt. John Nicoll are an encouraging sign that our local education system. ~eady highly rated. is improving rather than declin· mg. Parents especially should take pride in the tact that while combined verbal and match scores in California dropped an average of eight points, district scores jumped six points. Nationwide, the combined average score is 451 on a scale or 200·800. In California, the average is 450. The overall average in our district is an impressive 488. The district is now gathering data tor a fi ve-year study of district, state and national scores starting with the 1971-72 school year. We hope this study will reveal a long-term local uptrend. N New Medicare Costs a BIOm I ) Ford Aide Gets Pay From U.S. Dear Gloomy Gus Malnutrition, Suicide Ahead? ( EV ANS-NOV AK J WASHINGTON -Michael Duval, who is paid $38,000-plus a year out of the U.S. Treasury to be special counsel to the President, is spending full time these d a -y s representing President Ford 's in · terests in de- bate arrangements -a sign that the Ford campaign is as con- temptuous as ever of the new election campaign law. That act forbids additional con· tributions. including contribu· lions in kind, lo a presidential nominee a ccepting the $21.3 million federal su~idy. Thus. Duval might be expected to drop off the federal payroll, at least temporarily. if the letter of the law were followed-But the Ford campaign has no intention of do· ing that. Whether the Federal Election Commission will deal between now and Nov. 2 with this aid re· ceived by candidate Ford is doubtful. But while probably run- ning no risk of legal action, Mr. Ford's managers have been criticized all year for violating the spirit of the law. The jus tifi c ation for Maybe Earl Butz wouJd consent to do his imitation of Step ·n Fetchit at the next Black Panther rally. C.U.Y •1oomy Ou' cofOlmefth •rt 11<11m11t..i Oy ••-" e11d do"°' "e<eu .. rlly ,.11ec11M 'ltewt of tn• IMtW1P•Plr ~ YOW' pift -~•to Gloomy c .... O•lly Puoc Duval is that he is a volunt~r giving part-time campaign help that does not interfere with his of- ficial duties. "That's ridiculous." a Ford campaign insider told us. "Mike has been working on the debates full time. If he's doing anything else, I don't know about it." In· deed, Duval was fully engaged in politics at Kansas City, as a Ford operative in the platform fight. NOR IS he alone. Much of the White House staff is concentrat- ing on the presidential cam· paign, as is the President. Richard Cheney. White House chief of staff on the federal payroll at $42 ,500 a year, has been considered by many the real campaign manager since Mr. Ford's nomination. Ford campaign lawyers point to the FEC dismissal of previous complaints about Rogers Morton working on the campaign rrom the White House. But the com· mission's ruling is not clear·cut. Moreover. a concurring opin· ion by commission member Neil Staebler indicated be would Like to see the matter raised in a case such as the one posed by Duval. Who Can Take Llfe? t have a letter from an or- ganization calling Itself "Foun- dation for Life,'' in Toledo, Ohio. The letter commends a recent piece of mine, in which I referred to the human race as our "most endangered species.·· "Foundation for Life .. is an an- ti·abortion group. The poster ac- companying the letter says: "We are dedicated to a very basic prin· ciple. That human life is sacred. Period. No qualifications or ex· ceptions or conditions." The poster points out that "in the U .S. today, a woman has the legal right to take the life of her unborn chHd . For any reason." Then goes on to say: "la there some magic line that makes the life of an unborn child any less important than the life of a day· old child? Or a week·old child? Or a year-old child?" Suppose we agree. Then what about an 18-year-old child? But the state has the legal ri1ht to send an 18·year-old boy to his death in any war it cares to dedare, or even not to declare. IF HtJMAN life Is sacred, . perlod, why do the IDtl·abortion people speak out so forcefully oo the right of the foetus, but remain mute when a lad wbo bas been loved and cared for and educatOO l5 shipped away to race "u.n· natural death" on aome foreicn battlefield? What about capital punish· mtot? Does the state pOSSeSS the ri~ht to take human life any more than the mother does? tr human llfe ls truly "sacred," then ll should be left to Ood to de- ( SYDNEY HARRIS) cide who shall die. just as He de· cldes who is lo be born. The "Foundation for Life .. says, quite correctly, "We believe w e al l bave a responsibility to oppose what we think is wrong." But how can you think that abortion Iii wrong if you condone capital punishment and the evil instituUoo of war? U you perm it the state to kill "legally," why does not the mother have the same right? THE ABORTION issue is more complex and diJflcult to resolve than either its opponents or pro- ponents are willing lo admit. But1 this apart, it has always puuleo me that people can be so pa.saionate against killing a baby in the womb, and soiodilterent to murder by the state aft.er the child reaches the threshold of maturity. U life is sacred, then the state bas no moral authority to lake it. 11 there are "no qualifications or exceptions Ol" condiUoos, '' then the rigbt·lO·llfe org1niiaUons must 'peat out as forcefully lfalnsl war and capltal punish· mem as &bey do *f ain.'lt abortion. Olberwlse, the concept of ''sacredness'' becomes a mockery at the ace ot 18. We a.re not tree t.o plclt and choose among our modes of mo-raUty. 11 we do, we become &pedal ple•der1. and not true bcUenn. To the Editor· The news media have an- nounced a vicious increase of 19 percent in Medicare costs, effec- tive Jan 1, 1977. Senior citizens and others ex· isling on fixed and/or tow income cannot presently compete with those who have s u1f1cienl in· come. This 19 percent increase 1s prohibitive. Thousands cannot afford to be hospitalized and this latest increase will deprive thousands more of sorely needed medical care. The result of deprivation is malnutrition, death and sorrow. Our legislative process is In· consistent because it fails to pro- vide for the people who are en- titled to the necessities or life. We are presently paying $30 a month for Medicare and S.I. in· surance a nd cannot afford periodic increases unless Social Security. etc. increases likewise. This latest proposed increase will certainly produce more dis· respect for our Washington legislators. Malnutrition a nd s uicide will certainly increase unless immediate action is taken to relieve the needy senior citizens. We desperately need Jegisla · tion to exempt all seruor c1ti>:ens from this and the last increases m Medicare costs. It has been said that we get i.o deep in the forest we cannot i.ee Ule trees. 1 think this ts the statu:. of our Washington legislator~ and possibly others C M GIBBENS S~z Eduratfon To the Editor · Parents are the pnmary :.ex educators o( their own children whether they do it well or poorly. Some parents think that the less their children know about sex, the less likely tbey are to engage in "promiscuous" irresponsible sexual behavior. Studies and everyday observations don't sup- port this generalization. The fear of ''putting ideas into their heads·· by being open and informative is unfounded. The ideas are already there. Young people get them from books, newspapers, movies, and most frequently from friends. As a society we encourage the open pursuit or knowledge ln most fields except sexuality. UNFORTUNATELY, what young people don't know about sex and contraception can hurt them. Teenage pregnancy ls a serious problem : one in four American teenagers has a chHd before she reaches the age o( 20. Teenagers account ror over half of all out-of·wedl<><:k births and one-third of all abortions in the : .. and I pf't)m l$t1 YOll a balanced budget if I have to spend ~ cent we,,..,.,. ( MAILBOX J Letters from readers are welcome The nght to condense letters to /1t .!J)aee or eliminate libel 1$ reserved. Letters of 300 words or ~ss will be given preference. ALL tetten ml.I.ft rn· elude Stgnature and mailing address but names may be withheld on re· quest if su/licient reason is opparent. Poetry unll not be publashed. U.S. Teenage pregnancy is large- ly the result of non·US4!orsporadic use or contraceptlon. How can we ask young people to assume responsibility for their sexual behavior when we guarantee their ignorance? October 10-16 is National Fami· ly Sex Education Week, a time to start teaching young people what they want to know. Let's work at being "askable" parents, teachers. and friends; support open communication in the area of human sexuality. A.M ROBINSON For lflrs. Boteles. •. To the Editor: Newport Elementary School is wearing a black band of mourn. mg around her old structure - you can't see it with your eyes but you feel it through the words of children and parents. Delores Bowles has been transferred to Costa Mesa ! She was a beloved fixture at Newport Elementary -a woman who knew every child by name. She also knew which knee had the cut, the names of your brothers and sisters, your main interest, and bow many of your teeth she had pulled. She gave up her time before, during, and after s chool to listen to the children's words -not to hear, but to listen, and they knew the difference. I WATCHED her through many classes and was amazed at her feeling for each child. She used to say, "There never was a bad child,·· and she believed lt. She taught according to that belie( and was acclai.med not on· 1y by many fellow teachers and grateful parents. but was select- ed by the government to represent this country abroad. She spent many summers teaching in foreign countries and bringing her new knowledge back to her students. All schools need a Mrs. Bowles -someone lo make the chlldren feel wanted and loved in a school Someone who makes them strive to perform through warmth and caring, someone they know is always there. ''1'hey" have taken our Mrs. Bowles -treat her gently Costa Mesa and ap· predate her -she may be gone from our balls but will not be f oreotten. SIDRL~Y SHEPPARD s..d Nel .. lion Toth.e Editor: Thi• letter ls in response to an artJcle appearing i:n the Daily Pilot resudlng the relocaUon ot the conUnuatJon high school. The artJcle .lJtates that com· plaint.a ranged from ". . . fean of increued crime ln the area to a deellne lD property val\MI." Tbe anicle qU()(cs a woman who ital· ed that "We don't want a bunch of kids who start trouble in our area ... ·· I am associated with a busi- ness that, until very recently. was located immediately adja. eent to the McNally continuation school. Our facility was within a few f~t of the classrooms and the open area where the studen~ congregated for lunch. outdoor assemblies. graduation ceremonies. elc. During the five years we were neighbors we found the students to be quiet and courteous. We never had a single incident of theft or vandalism, and even round the students to be helpful by removing discarded cart.on.a flld packaging material that they used ln various school projects in woodworking and art. BECAUSE the continuation students spend less time at sc hool, due to their i n · dividualized schedules, we round that there was Jess activity and noise than would be found at a re- gular high school. The students did not arrive or depart simultaneously. they did not have the outdoor sports activity and attendant. noise, they did not wander around the streets near the school the way students at a regular high school do, and U>ere were no school buses coming and going. In summary. after spending 40 to 50 hours per week for five years within a few feet of the con- tinuation school I found it more desirable than being close to a re· gular school <I live close to Newport High and used to live across the street from Ensign). The only problem we ever en· countered was parking -and found the s tudents and ad- ministrators to be helpful in solv- ing that problem quickly. DUDLEY W. JOHNSON Airport 'Bllgltt' To the Editor: My mother owns a small house in Huntington Beach. Her only pleasures are her TV and her garden. The airplanes spoil her TV and now s he is broken- hearted because the city chopped down her front tree because or airplanes so low overhead. She loved and cared for that tree. It hadn't cracked sidewalk or street. Her whole st.reel was stripped naked and looks aWful. That postage st amp airport is 3 costly blight on her town. B.CARTER BrOtell ¥•. Career To the Editor: Governor Carter·~ speech at O'Neill Ranch called for more federal spending to save money. That could only be a truism in Alice's Wonderland. Other lands have not yet been able lo succeed at this, even though they sometimes do appear up.side- down and backwards . But lt would be interesting to know Govemor Brown's react.iOQ lo Carttt's blaming California's high property tax on the federal govttnment when Callfornia is tmder Brown's ~ontroJ and lhe federal government ts under Democratic control. which makes them respons1bJc for the l.nflatiaa be deplol'ef. There dote bave to be relJef fot property tax. but bis idu ol col- lecting more lax ror federal re- venue sharing funds, to be sent to Washington to be laundered and returned full of st.rings, doesn't seem a practical solution. It just shifts the taxes and adds lo the administration costs. BUT CARTER is right in say- ing the free enterprise system is "a good one." Does be int.end to leave it free? His pronounce- ments have been to control and tax It heavier. which could weaken or even destroy it. de- pending on how far his rules go. And his plan to take up the Job slack by creating government jobs isn't a very good solution either. President Ford's solution ot Jetting free enterprise be freer. and to leave lt more investment capital so it can expand and create more jobs. is more prac· tical. And if we gave him a more practical Congress next year that understands saving as well as spending, he could probably cut down the Cederal budget enough lo make it work. It sure seems worth a try. • GOLDIE JOSEPH Prop. J4 S•ppert To the Editor. Your Sept. 28 editorial oppos.- ing Prop. 14 is ba$ed on the mis- taken premise that it is desirable that the Legislature be able lo make changes in tbe landmark farm labor law which was passed, as you point out, after "endless con(erences" with Gov. Brown. The result of those conferences was a delicate compromise wlucb all sidea agreed lo abide by. But after only a few months. the growers and their allies in the state Legislature reneged on thal agreement and attempted t.o sabot.age the law. IT WAS only the fact that signatures w e r e quickly gathered for Prop. 14 that caused the Legislature to refund the Agricultural Labor Relations Board. The architect of the farm labor law, Gov. Brown. says that Prop. 14 should be passed in order lo re- move the issue rrom pollUcs and allow the ALRB to operate free of ptt5sure Crom any side. Let us take his advice and vote Yes oo 14. PAULC. EKLOP' SHARON K. EKLOF ORANG I COAST DAILY PILOT Robtn N. Wt>t'd. Publulttr Thoma• Keev11. ~dttor tJorbaro Krir1t!tch. £dltonal l'oQe Editor The edltonar paiie t){ the Onlly Piiot i1ecks t o inform Ufld stimulate readen by pres~Ung on this page diverse commentary on topics of Interest by syndical· ed column111ts and cartoon15ts. by providing a forum for reade~· views and by pruenting this newipapen opinions and ldt'u on current topic~ The editorial apin1ons of lhc Dally Pilot appe11r only m the editorial column 1l lhe lop of 1he paift. Opinions """· ~llt'd by tht columnists and cartoon1,.ts and 1euer wrtlef"ll ire !heir own •nd no endomment ut their views by the Dlilly Piiot should be Inferred. Wednesday, October 6. 19'T6 Y..:dnD!o • October 6 1976 DAILY PILOT Parents Freeze Hopes Ce01etery Worke r Dies in Crypt Slain Daughter'a Brain Held/or Future SAN DIEGO (AP) -A cemetery worker wbo went to the &id ot a man who collapsed In a crypt 2S I~ deep was himself overcome by lack of oxy1en. aod later died. BERKELEY (A.P)-Tbe bnln ol a 15-year~ld 8-bley ~ltl vtcloual.Y beaten to death bas been trc.m and pre1uved tn &Dtldp&Uoo ol a time ln the futun wbeD med.teal Kime. can create a body ror · IL ty," Robert Wilson, fat.bar oC Patricia Wilson, aald Tuesday. "WE TROUGH 111AT IF we could mat. a coo· tributioo to sdeoce somethina good could come out ol Ulil traaecty, • • he added. The two men were prepartq the crypt tor a tour by dele1ate1 ~ tM National CatboUc Cemetery Conference. Eight hours after nremen rescued them, Jesus Berumea died in Parad.111 Valley HOlpltal. "We feel lt la a loq shot. but it's our way of ex· sir-a1nl our beUef In Uf e and our reJect.too ol tM cuual acceptance cl murder and death ln our soci• Tbe young woman was beaten to death Sunday At a Berkeley clothing store where she worked u a clerk, police aaid. Robbery appears to have been the motive. Berumen, :W, earlier had climbed into the con· crete-Uned, multilevel crypt It Holy Cross Cemetery to help revive Fausto Palafox.~. K eepers Find Baby Gorilla Wllaon said be and bis wife CQDUlcted Arthur Quaife, president of Trans-Time Inc. Quaife said the parents signed a release with the Alameda County coroner permlttlng the coroner to tum the brain over to Trana-Ttme, which speclallies in preserving bodies unW aucb time aa a cure ia found for the disease that killed them. Firemen worked almost 30 minute• to brin1 up Palafox and Berumen. Palafox was revived quietly With "a shot of air," a fireman said, but Berumen never regained consclousnes~. SAN PASQUAL (AP) -A newborn lowland 80rilla WU found Tuesday at the San Dle'° Wild Animal Park -lll third ever, all October babies. "WE D ECIDED THAT the best thing to do wu to preaerve her brain and its memories hoping that at some future date science will find a way to re· constitute a person essentially the same as Patricia Wilsoo," said Quaife. Sp~k Speaks Out Tbe parents are Olla and Trib, a 400· pound male whose other mate Dolly gave bl11b to Jim In October 1m and to a female nai:ned Binti In October m4. It ls too early to tell the wel1bt and sex ot the neweat addition, a park spokeswoman sald. He predicted such a reat is "al least SO years away." The brain will be kept al 32X> degl'ees below zero. Quaile said there would be a $WO initial cost and an annual storage fee or $100. A special memorial as been started to raise the money. Dr. Benjamin Spock talks with fellow picket in front of Los Angeles offices of ~eague ot Women Voters. He was protesting limitation of debates to Ford and Carter. Y iking2 Fails in l Dig Try PASADENA lAP> - The Viking 2 robot has failed to lift a M artlan boulder, but will try again on a smaller rock, scientists say. Viking team members found that the robot just wasn't strong enough to move the boulder and search underneath it in a last-ditch effort to find organic compounds on Mars. ( Sl'ATE J Scientists theorhed that if there are organics -structural compounds that are the bas ics ot life as we know it -on Mars, they may be found UD· derneath a rock, away ffOm ultraviolet Martian JUD111bt. 011 llae Hook LOS ANGELES CAP) -A Municipal Court judge has dis missed charges against 14 persons who received traffic tickets while pro- testing the Santa Monica l'reeway Diamond Lane ~ect. Judge Wilbur Dettmar dlamlsaed the charges against the protesters ju.at before the start ot their trial, saying the is· sue was moot because the Diamond Lane no longer edst.s. 1 ... aie S lain Studio Sets '-Mines' Adrift SAN DIEGO (AP) -Universal Studios is red in the face over two phony Japanese World War II mines that somehow were set adrift in the Pacific. And the Coast Guard hasn't been getting many laughs out of the situation either. Shipping bas been advised to be on the lookout for the mines and the Coast Guard said it has spent a lot or time and manpower attempting to find them. Trucks Too "IT IS A BIG embalTassment for us," saJd Art Seidel of Universal. "Anyone who finds them Is welcome to keep them. We just want to get them out of the water." The mines, which are about three feet lo diameter, are made or plastic and are tethered to weights. They were among six lost Crom motion pie· lure filming on location at Catalina Island o~ Sept. 24. The prop mines have been drifting south and four have been recovered. "We really blew it," said Seidel. Free Ice Ban E yed SACRAMENTO (AP) -The bead of the slate Alcoholic Beverage Con- trol Department is to de- cide soon whether bats and liquor stores may continue giving away free ice cubes. a tradi- tion dating about 30 years FAST. LOW·COST, QUALITY OFFSET PAINTING 10 to 10,000 Copies -·---.......... ,_ .... -,......, .. ....,, .. , .. , .. - Photocopl .. AYllleble NEWPORT B!ACH 240 NewPort Center Or Design Plaza. Suite 120 (714) 640-9053 OVER 300 PIP• NATIONWIDI! Smog Rule Widened FRESNO <AP) -Stricter anti·smog regula- tiona are on the road for California's heavy duty trucks and buses. The California Air Resources Board adopted the regulations Tuesday after testimony from representatives of most of the country's heavy duty vehicle makers. NobodY. saves you 20% to more cities than United.· The regulations are to cover both gasoline and diesel engines of vehicles over 6,000 pounds gross ,----------------------------------------------; weight, except certain limousines. Freedom Fare to 79 cities. mE MAXIMUM AUA>WABLE hydrocarbon standard for the 1979 model year was set at 1.5 1--------------- grams per brake bonepower hour, dropping pro-Desllnatton Round trip Tour gressively to 0.5 gram in the 1983 model year. t---C_ll_Y___________ _ Freedom ~·arc Savings The maximum of hydrocarbons and oxides of Akron/C1nton nitrogen combined was set at 5 grams per brake AllenlO\\l1/Bethlehem/F.astun horsepower hour for 1979 models, dropping to 4.5 J>·t.Jtt.lll<ii·e grams for 1983 models. Also adopted were test pro->< cedures similar t-0 those ot the U.S. Environmental Bimlingham Protection Agency. &1~ BEA VY DUTY VEHICLES have been under I3oston anti-smog regulations since 1969, but the board said Buffolo/l\iagara Falls standards haven't grown so progressively strtneent Cedar Rapids/Jowa City aathoseforpuaengercars. Olarleston. W. Va. By the 1977 model year, trucks aod buses will be Olarlotte, KC. T lo 14 times dirtier than cars, said Mary Nichols, Olalk1JlCX>K<t vice chairman. The staff of the board said t! the standards l.nicago 8277.00 315.00 307.00 l46.00 126.00 338.00 294.00 218.00 275.00 282.00 258.00 l 45.00 $69.00 79.00 77.00 62.00 ~32.00 84.00 74.00 54.00 69.00 70.00 64.00 61.00 hadn't been adopted, by 1990 California's trucks and 1-------------------------4 bmes would have been emitting Z76 tons per day or Chicago $110.00 $86.00 oxJdes of nitrogen and~ tons of hydrocarbons. Our Economy Freedom Fare to Chicago off crs even GENE CONE, BOARD spokesman, said the s.,~ealL'r ~1\'ings. measurement in grams per brake horsepower hour Yuu :::.avi: 28" .. off regular round·tnp Co ach fare. makes it difficult to compare the standards with Childi en traveling ,, ith you save 553 . those for passenger cars, which are 0.41 grams per mile of hydrocarbons for the 1977 model year, 9.0 Same restrictions as re"RUlar Freedom Fare. grams per mile of carbon monoxide, and 1.5 grams 1--------------------------1 . ·- Destination Round· trip Your City Freedom Fare Savings -- Medford $117.00 $29.00 Memphis 226.00 56.00 Milwaukee 245.00 61.00 Moline/Rock Island/Davenport 224.00 56.00 Muskegon 25:3.00 63.00 Newport News/ Hampton/ Williamsburg 315.00 79.00 New York/Newark 323.00 81.00 Norfolk/ Fbrtsmoulh/ Vi rginia Beach 315.00 79.00 Omaha 194.00 48.00 Pendleton 1'19.00 37.00 Philadelphia 317.00 79.00 Pittsburgh 286.00 72.00 Portland 139.00 35.00 Providence 334.00 84.00 Raleigh/Durham 294.00 74.00 Reno 85.00 21.00 CfllNO CAP) -A Z'l· year~ld inmate ot the California Institute for 1-fen here has died ot severe abdominal In· Juries be received in a J>eating. ~~~~~~~~-permileofoxldesofnitrogen O evcland S277.00 $69.00 C.Otumbu~. 0. 267.00 67.00 Richmond 306.00 76.00 Rochester 301.00 75.00 Aut.horlUes said Gary Scbulti of Chula Vista. serving a sentence for armed robbery, died without Identifying hls assailants. Buiz to Sp e ali LOS ANGELES (AP) -Earl L. Butz plans lo speak to a convention next Monday desptte bis resignation under fire as secretary of agriculture, a spokeswoman for the National Association of Concessionaires says. Publicis t Bets y Berkbemer s aid Buti h as confirm e d" he would appear at the con- c easl on a I re's kickofC meeting at the Dis· neyland Hotel In Anaheim. Refo,...Pro•be SACRAMENTO (AP) -Former state prisons director Ray Procunier ls promising quick re- forms in the turbulent atate Health Depart· ment, where he will head the latest shakeup. The blunt-talking veteran civil servant known as "Pro,.. was named chief deputy Ln b ~~\\\ WHAn SO S'lCIA.LA.IOUT A SfltCIAL OISTlllCT Dear Neighbor, What's In a name? Our name-The Costa Mesa County Water 01stric1-tells YoU Quite a bit about us But watch out vou·re not fOOled by our name The words .. Costa Mesa~ may make vou think we're a department of the Cl~t we're not And the word ·eountv .. in our name may make vou think we re an 8QeOCY of the Count~! we're not We are a Water Olltrict-and there·s the real answer lo who we ~e·re a Special Olstnct WHAT S SO SPECIAL AIOVT A lf'!CIAL DISTRICT? You'll find Special Districts are a very understandable kind of government. That'a because we re so slrrole We're constituted under State law to provide only one kind of service. such as water. We don·t have to b1l1nce glvln~ water against other services. llke building roads, offenng Police protection. or running parks. That way. our pr1or1tlea are clear. and we become pretty etrlclent at providing our one service What's more. Special Olstncta at11 run by Directors you elect. They're uaually netghborl of vours.. You control vour Water District l)(etty directly by your .. ote1 The people 1n this area voted to create the Costa Mesa County Wa ter D1stnct As a result. you re getting the 88r\'1Ce you voted for in this Otstrid . 1t a reasonable pnce We think that'• wtlat loc:el government I• all about Come down to our next meeting and talk to us You're always welcome charge of programs $;,..cer~. Tuesday by state Health Ye» 8oad of Oirectcn Direc t or Jerome Euqir..0 8.'Q9'~ Lackner, coveting such w~ E. Boot+! Ma.a°"°"'• bqe operations as Medi· N.irt L ~ Nott.on L R«dit Cll and nUJ11lng homes. ------------------ SKI & SPORTS WEIK, OCT. 1-13 e HtAO F~IOH SHOW • 1<·2 AACINO T!AM e SKI fW'P SPECTACUl.AA e QYMNASTIC8 eArnR SKI FASHIONS • EQUIPM!HT e PAIZl!S South Coast ?tua Saginaw/Midland/Bay City 269.00 67.00 Salem.Ore. 134.00 34.00 IJayton, 0. 259.00 65.00 O\:nver 139.00 35.00 f>c~ Moine!> 206.00 !12.00 Salt Lake City 125.00 31.00 lktrnil 269.00 n7.00 Seattle/Tacoma 152.00 38.00 Eugene, Ore. 130.00 :32.00 South Rend 251.00 63.00 l·lmt 269.00 67.00 Spokane 150.00 38.00 Fort Wayne 259.00 65.00 Toledo l66.00 66.00 Wa~hington. D.C. :m1.oo 77.00 Youngsto" n/Warren/Sharon 286.00 n.oo Grand Junction 11 7.00 29.00 Gmnd Rapids 256.00 64.00 Grecn~horo/High Point/Winstnn·Salem 288.00 72.00 Hartford/Springfield 328.00 82.00 Night Coach to 7 Eastern cities. l lunt~vtll<.: 246.00 62.00 Kans.1~ Ci1y 197.00 49.00 Kncr-.;villt• 261.00 65.00 There·s an even easier way to save 201)~. Ifs L'111tcd\ Night Coach. U you fl y after 10 p.m., there are no L.1nsmg 262.00 66.00 Las Vega~ 59.00 15.00 Lincoln 187.00 47.00 1 c!>trict1ons al all. Available to Baltimore. Boston, Clcrcland. New York, P hilndelphta, Pittsburgh, and 'vYashington. D.C. .I,, United's Freedom Fare knocks 203 off the regular round-trip Coach fare. And it's available to 79 cities from Los Angeles. That's more cities than any other airline. What's more, children under 12 traveling withJou save a whopping 503 ! There are no mil~e restrictions. No weeken or holiday restnctions. Freedom Fare does not apply to flights outside the rontinental U.S. or to travel wtthin the same state. '"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iliiiiii' Just reserve your seat at least 14 days ahead. Pay for your round·trip J • ticket within 10 days of your reservation date, but at least 14 days before departure. And stay 7 to 30 days. - D:>n't leave home without the American Exoress uou~ card.' Use it for your United tickets, hotels, meaf s A• I I. e and rental cars. If you don't have an American the ~&A l' 1 ~~~~~· ~ .... ~-,~~ Express card, call (800) 528-8000 for an ~ !\.: application. For reservations, call your 'fravel ~ent. Or call United at 537. 7521. Partners in Travel with Western lntemaoonal Hotels. Flythe endJy skies of United. • unlTED AIRLlnes I 7 Saddlehaek EDITION )... VOL. 69, NO. 280, S SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ~Parents Sue ' 81 WILUAll SCllllEIBE& Ot-o.u,,.. ... ,... Attorneys representing the family of a Marine Corps recruit fatally lnjured during a hand·to- band combat drill last year to- day flied a $14 mlllioo lawsuit against the federal government and 12 individuals, including President Ford. The suit presented in U.S. Dis· trict C9W"t in San Diego cites t.be "wroagful death" ol 2»-year-old Pvt. Lynn McClure due to in- juries sustained during training at the San Diego Marine Recruit Depot. He was knocked out in a succession or pugil stick bouts. William Yacoboz:zi, whose law firm bas offices in Orange C.OUO· ty and Oceanside, said the fanii· ly bad filed a claim against the Navy in April and today's suit was the "next step." The lawyer said the su.it names the United States of . - Over America, the President, the secretary o! Defense, seeretary ol the Navy, commandant ol the Marine Corps, commandant ol the recruit depot, four training depot personnel and 500 "John Does" to be filled in as needed. Yacoboni said the McClUJ"e family, of Lufkin, Tex .. is asking '3.5 mijlion for wroogful death, $3.5 million for the recruit's auf· fering between the time of in· jury last December and his de- Issues Aplenty Debate Could Become Heated B1WALTER R.MEABS • APS..Clatc.tvc••••t From a dist.ance, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter have waged a sharp, -sometimes bitter dispute about American defense and foreign policies. So there is plenty to argue about in San Francisco tonight if the Republican President and the Democratic nominee want to get tough in their second campaign debate. (6:30 p.m . PDT> Debate ground rules and cautious television consultants may take the edge off when the two get together, but among the Items for confrontation are these: ( /VEWSANALYSIS J -Ford's assertioo that Carter doesn't know what be is t.alking about in suggesting a $S billion to $7 billion defense-spending cut. -Carter's charge that Ford bas abdicated foreign policy leadership and control to Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss- inger. Carter contends that Kiss· inger has no regard for .morality in U.S. policy abroad, and that be is a "Lone Ranger," numing a secret. one-man show. * * * * * * Indeed, if the White House rivals simply repeat what they've been saying about each other from afar, the Great Debate II will be far more heated than tneir first nationally televised match two weeks ago. An Associated Press poll rated that one a virtual draw in the eyes of the voters, with a slight gain in support for Ford. So far, foreign policy and de- fense have not been topics ol the campaign -even though they are paramount responsibilities ot any president. Carter bas campaigned <See DEBATE, P~e A%) Wouldn't Accept A gain MAC E yes Carte r 's Freebies Cal Neve '"Had No Influence' Vacancy ATLANTA <AP) -Alt.bough Jimmy Carter says be toot free rides on corporate jets and spent several weekends vacationing at corporate retreats while he was governor or Georgia, be has always maintained that such hospitality did not inftuence his actions as 1ov- ernor. Tbe Democratic presidential candidate, who advocates banning gifts of value to public officials, says be would not accept such olfers again. BOTH THE LOCKHEED AIRCRAFT Corp. and the Coca-Cola Company provided transportation for Carter to several functions while be was governor Crom 1m through 1974, company spokesmen say. During a three-week swine through Latin America in April 1972, Carter fiew aboard a Lockheed Jetstar. He used a Coca-Cola Co. aircraft to attend several National and Southern Governors Con- ferences. The state provides aircraft and a travel allowance for its gov- ernor. Both companies have major installations in Georgia. ASKED ABOUT'DIE USE of the Lockheed Jet.star, Carter told a reporter last April that the trip was a routine trade mission in which be promoted Georgia products, including Lockheed aircraft. ''There was no secrecy about it," he said. "It was reported and it ought to be." The visit to five Latin American countries included Carter, his wife, Rosalynn, two security guards, the state's chief industry bunter, and several Lockheed officials. A Coca-Cola Co. vice president, Ovid Davis, said bis company is me of several that provides products or services for the National and Southern Governors Conferences. He said lt files a corporate aircraft to both events. DA VIS SAID 11IE COMPANY has offered free flights to Georata governors for 40 yean. Campaign spokesmen said the free rides had no effect on Carter's decisions as governor. .. He never did a favor for either company," said press secretary Jody Powell. • '1 'm sure be felt no obligation to these companies." Powell added that using corporate jets might have "saved the taxpayers money" by reducing the cost of the governor's transportation. ALSO DURING IDS ADMINISTRATION, Carter spent two weekends at a rustic forest lodge owned by Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. in southeast Georgia, and a weekend at a lodge owned by Union Camp Co. in western South Carolina. Members of hi.s family, his stall and their wives, and a future daughter-in-law accompanied Carter on one trip to Cabin Bluff, a 50,000-acre "producing pi.ne plantation" owned by Brunswick Pulp and Paper Co. near Woodbine, Ga. Carter told reporters last week "lt would have been better not to'• have accepted the hospitality. and said be would not do it qain. Drg Beat Ateaited Mission Viejo Municipal Ad· visory Council members are ex· peeled to accept the resignation of Councilman Cal Neve Monday and begin discussing their op- tions in filling the vacant seat. Neve quit last mmth, citing personal reasons. He was one or the original members of the MAC when it was first created in 1974. In his resignation letter, Neve, a deputy Orange County Sheriff. recommended appointment of another deputy, Vito Ferlauto. Under stale laws governing agencies such as the MAC, the remaining four members are permitted to choose a fifth member by majority vote in tbe event of a vacancy. 1bougb the item on the coun- cil 'a Monday agenda calls for "appointment of new council member," it appears likely there will be some discussion of the procedure before a selection is made. Besides filling the Neve seat. the council is expected to con· sider changing its regular mon- tbly meeting from the second Monday to the second Tuesd~ because of ongoing contllcts with other community meetings, in· eluding the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council <SACC) and Saddle back College trustees. Also on the agenda is re- consideration of a proposal by the Santa Margarita Water Dis- trict to build a miWon-galloo-per- day wastewater reclamation plant near the end ol La Paz Read, along Oso Creek. The project was outlined to council members last mooth but no action was taken pending further study. The water agency baa delayed application to state and federal aeencies for permits and possible grant funding in an effort to obtain MAC endorse- ment. Insects Bug El Toro mes, gnats and other fl)'iDI in· 1 secta are tormenUna Irvine and 1 El Toro residents more than ~ usual this fall due to wiseasoaal· • ly wet and damp weather. But Gil Cballet, manager ol the Orange County Vectol' Control District, says not much can be done about the peaky i.mecta \UlW the weather warms up and the IJ'O'IDd dries out. Cballet'a staff bas been receiv· -an averace of~ calls per day from realdents complaininc about tmeeta in their homes. But CbaJJet aaya erroneously moft, ol them believe the Insects ._!~.· .. ' ' • to be mosquitoes. •'They fly around the houses and k>c>k like mosquitoes, but they're actually little fungus gnats and they don't bite," ex-· plains the district manager. Cballet saya that someone from his staff 1oes out each time a complaint is made. The homeowner receives an explana- tioa of the different types ol in· sects and a pamphlet. AltbouCb there are many dif. Cerent kinda of fiytnc lmects oc. cupylns lrvlne and El Toro homes, Cballet says that ln IniDe, mOlt of the problem ls comlns from the funcus pau. "ID my oplnlon, the oats are I coming from the ·orange groves," says Chall.et, who lives in an Irvine housing development acrou from an orange grove. "They breed on decaying organic matter." "Whenever there is a rain, and there ls bousing near an orange theTe are bound to be gnats," says Olallet. He s e's lived ln lrviDe for m years, but that he's never seen the pat and fly popalation so high. In addition to the pats, there are other types of flies annoytnc Irvine residents. One is the metallic-ll'"O fly CS.. BUGS, Pa.Ce "2) Afternoon N.Y. Stoek!ii ..... ( .J TEN CENTS, Death of Marin ath in March and $7 million in punitive damages. Be never re- gained consciousness. The suit contends McClure's rights under four constitutiooal amendments were violated. .. U the case is decided in the family's favor, it will set a Pft'- cedent in the handling of rnilit.ary cases," Yacobozzi.said. "Even attorneys for the govern-ment agree with that." The attorney said be wlll areue that McClure was invalid· ly recruited by the Marines because be was not really capa· ble of puslng a battery ol men- tal and physical qualiticatlon tests. Yacobozii said if the coolen· tion that the YOUlll man was not recruited properly ls upheld, he would be considered a dvilian rather than military personnel. Tbe family's suit claims McClure was seized unlawfully Pri~e al Prot e si by tbe Marines. su~ect4'd to In·· voluntary servitude. subjected to cruel and unusual pmisbment and ftnaUy bad bis Ufe taken wtt.boqt due process d law. "Some of these are very tricky lecal points to ariue but we feel we bave a stronc case," Yacoboui said. Now that the suit bas been filed t}le federal covernmeot presumably will seek a sum· <See MAalNE, Pace,\%) Blood streaming from his face, a leftist student wounded and captured by police in Bangkok is helped to an ambulance by a Thai trooper and a girl. Defense minister Sangad Cbalawyu seized power today after rioting broke out over the return of former Thai military dictator Thanom Kit· tikachorn. (See story. Page A4) Riley Defends Architect By TOM BARLEY ClftlM0.11,f'IMltsc.ft • Oranee County Supervis.or Thomas Riley appearedtodefeDd San Clemente architect Leon Hyzen late Tuesday shortly after he was called to the stand as the pr01ecution 's second witness in the SUperior Court bribery trial. "I am sure be was unaware be was committing a crime by mak· ing those comments," be told de- fense attorney Mike Flanagan while being questioned on telephone calls made to bia omce bythedefendant. Riley teaWled tbalbecontacted the district attorney's omce in Mav. 1976 alter a series ol further telephone conversations be· tween bis aide, Peter Herman, andHyHn. The confidential memorandum sent to District Attorney CecU POUY WANTED, GOT GOOD HOME "We received a tremendous response. We're so happy to have found a good home for our pet." Tbat'a the advertisine success experienced by a Corona del Kar woman who placed this clauU.ied ad: Tame H•lfmoon Parrot Incl 2 eaoes, food, etc. $35. XJOMOCXX So, 1f you have a pet. or anything else to aell, call 8G5678. It's euy to make a few words wort for you IA tbe .people's marketplace -the Dail.Y Pilot cla~lfleda. Hicks re8ulted in Hyien, 66, ol 2100 BS. Ola Vista, being indicted by the grand jury on three felony counts of offering a bribe. It is alleged that llyzen otrered a $1,000 campaign contribution to Riley through Herman in return forthesupervisor'spJedgethalbe would be considered when the time came to build a branch library in San Clemente. Riley told Hicks in the memorandum: "It ls tbe lrn· pression of my aide that Mr. Teachers OK SVUSD Pact; 89ard Next? The Saddleback Valley Unified School District 'a noo-teac:hln1 employes bue· appro¥ed a con- tract covertne salaries, benefits and working conditions. Trustees will cOmider ratity- lnl the c90tract during their re- plar meeting tonight. Proviaions fQr "JDalntenance ol memben"1p" andacoum>.itU!e to study a merit pay system are the only cWferenees between tbis contract and the one which wu rejeeted twice by the employes latelaat month. Under the maintenance at membenhlp clause. a em)Jloye ,mo ls a member ot the Sad· dlebact Vall&y cluipter of the Califonaia School 1".:lllployee J... IOdaUon (CSEA) on Oct. 'I wt11 not be allcnw~ to drol> out of the <See PAY PACI', Pa&e"2> Hyzen prob~bly was unaware that be was committting a crim~ by making these comments but I thought it wise to bring the matter to your attention." Flanagan pointed out in bis CTOSs examination of Riley that the memorandum was sent to mets just one month before an eleotion in wble!b Riley was re- turned to bis Fifth District seat. <See BRIBERY, Page "2) Coast Weath er Early fog Jnd low clouds .to give way to a fair after- noon Thursday. Beach high ln Qlld 'IOs, low to 80 expected. INSIDE TODA~ 1"' daMQPam o/. a Bmiett, ~ lie• dfGd In Uw OOt'- <IWr'• otft", OU IWr °"* -. and Mr,...,., •. ,..,,.. /of' u. """"' -1aow """ "'*' ~G miroc'-oJ .a.-, '• f&:.~AS) la•ex MY-~ /41 __,1'w ·~ .... ......... ,.. ~ AJ ...... "' a.... ., .............. ... ~ ........... ...... ~ :1 =CIMMY ~, .. ~ ... P9't .. ..... • ... .... ... _. ""'" ~-"'*" ..., "-ca ..., ,......... •• ,_. · c.u ,,_.,. a-.u =. a=-.... :: ....... "' .. Al DAILY PILOT se Acapulco In Path Of ·Storm llEXICO CITY, Mexico CAP) -Tropical Storm Madeline. llleklng up speed in the Pactnc and beaded towud the Mexican resort of Acapulco, could tum ln· to a hurricuo by tonight. the Mexican weather aervlce r e· ported. A apokesmao tor the weather service said there was no cause for alarm and DO warning had been llaued to residents of Acapulco OT other coaamUDJUes in tbe at.ate ot Guerrero. Tbe storm, located 275 miles soutb·aoatbeut or Acapilco, was mcmng tow aid Guerrero state this morning at a speed d about eight miles an hour, the gpoktsmb said. W-ands In the center of the storm were recorded at about 45 miles an boor. "We've taken no steps to pre- pare people on the mainland for tbest.orm, becaun wedooot want tocauseafalsealarm. Tbereisoo way ot bowing wbicb on tbe stonn ultimately · take,'' tbespotesman said. Re said Madeline w in a northwesterly a tendency toward a would lead lt to tbe rero. Acapulco is capital. ife said tbe winds were grow. ing gtronger and the storm was expected to be clasalfted u a hur- ricane. Acapulco is approximately 840 miles aout.beut of La Pa on the 8-ja California penlnsula. where Hurricane Liu a truck Thursday. leaving m dead by oftlcial count and some 40,000 homeless. Some ofticials expect the final death count to reach 1,000. Sooth County Crime Trends ~ To Be Studied South Orange County crime trends will be diacusaed at the second session of a special Sad· dleback Colleae crime sym- posium Tuesday at 7 p.m. lo room 139oftbelibrary. Laguna Beach Pollce Chief Jon Sparb, Tustin Chief Joseph J . Kelly and Lt. Jack Devereaux. eommmder of the aoutb county sheriff's 1ubstatioo lo Laguna Nliuel will make presentations on t.be problem and answer ques- tions. The first sessl<lll this week reatured a talk on national crime problems by a federal Dlll"COtics agent and a representative of the Callfomia attorney general's of. ftce. Plans for the third symposium session on Oct. 19 loclude talks by a Superior Court Judie, a representative of the county dl&- trtct attorney's office and county Sheriff Bradley Gates. They will speak on the causes d crime. And on Oct. 26, there will be a debate on the issue of gun con· lrol. Toro Delays Swim Activity Recreational swlmmlnc. planned to be&in th1a week in the new pool at El Toro High School, bas been postponed unW the poo1 opens. The Saddleback ~alley Unified School District's Recreation Department bas scheduled open swimming on Wecl.nesQy, Satur- day and Sunday. The pool, however, la not due to ()pell for about two weeks. Swimmlnc leas<llllS scbeduled lo the El Toro facWty have been transferred to the Ml.uion Vi* High School pool unW fw1her notice. ORAMQI! COAST SB DAILY PILOT n.0r-c...1 Oe4rw =:.:~ •·~ "'_"'" ..... ~.. O.IO!tOt-~-·:::...,~ ....... -.,. pWll-•. ,,...,. ... Ootto ..... ..._, .. __ ~_,_ le•n V•l .. f t lf•IM . s..t..-.0 V•llt'Y ,...., ~:..~=:::ra"..:';:. ~ ..................... llO_n., ---e.11......i.-. ._. ... _ _.,..,_._ '-'• cw..., Y l(t Prtl\lclo"l -0.-41~ ~··-.. ,., .-..... _...,. ......... &-. 0.....M.~ -p-"' ..... _......,..._, ....... °' v .... OMcie natl u .... -·-°"""-.. °"'°" -==ii~~.=.=-~IMlft: llMO--.lllwt TMepMM (714)~ Cl• ...... Adw9f1WI• MNf1I ,......."-1 ......... 0IN. 111.a10 ,._ ... °""""" ....... a.-.. .... -0.-c.w """' ....... c-. -... --'-'· '"--.... .. -llor .. •6.,.rll•-tt ~·--!My '9 ....-cef •I~ •MClol .... Ml•-.ltfl t4 ~·-· ~ ··-_,_ ..i. .. Clot• -c.111.,.~•• •-c•l•ll.,_ " u .... , ~ M =r.;...·~~::. _ ... ,. '''" ,..., .. F,....P.,,eAJ Ex-aide A V0"'11 BUGS ••• that la br•d in lraM cUI, aooHJilr la tM COllllDOO bome Qy w~ can eom• f~ either tr8111 emt•IMn Cll' mcJ'l:le Clllllll· lal from tb• roulq ~on , eom. cl jbe 1"tne &ildl aot Jet l>lowed ..... and • twrd ll rni&l ru-.~abaedCb.u.t. ~111J!Qat' Cut P6nW Patroru Complain llIAMI (AP> -Truth-in-packa&ing bu hil the ""POl..,,DOll',_,rapby business. A MJaml theater showtna the X·rat.ed films 1'Deep 'lbroat" and '*'lbe Devil In Miu Jones" was fined f oc DOt tellina the pobllc portiOl)I of the movies had been deleted. Secret Jobs For Hinshaw? ta 1:1 Toro. tMn II Ill ..,. wone problem, aecordinl to Cballet, although steps are now bei.q taken to ease the situation. An extremely large number of rues are conceotnted in El Toro doe to several Ideal breedina ,-rounds, including the large number of poult ry ranches, fertiliser companies. garbaae dumpsters at the marine hue.. and clippings dumped after homeowners mow their lawns, according to Cballel. Those situations are always snseot in El Toro, bul Cballet aaad tbe wet wealber caused the population to explode this year. He taid unhappy bomeownen in either city could spray the flies, but that "it ' a really a waate ~time and money." ''Tbe only real cure is to attack the problem with sanitation re· medies, such as cleaning up possible breeding grounds,'' said Cballet. He added that trash containers should be checked to make sure rues aren't breedine there and that any possible breeding ground in the back yard, such aa lawn clippings, o.r dog droppings, should be cleaned up regularly. "But all that really woo 't help unless tbe weather ebanges.'' he added. F,....P.,,eAJ DEBATE ••• bardest OD the issues or the economy, taxes and jobs, categories that were covered lo the first debate without either candidate breaking new ground. On tbe road, Carter talks about fOftign policy and defense when asked. or in prepared addresses to a udience• concerned with those issues. He bas said that polls show him tbat when people are asked to list their concerns, they list at least a dozen topics before they get to f~ affairs. Ford. in a more limited road campaign, bu made more of those topics, but only lo the most SCORE DEBATE YOURSELF ~ A3 general terms. He reminds au· diences that under the GOP ad· miniatration, the natico ls at peace. He promiaes to keep it tiaat way, IJld says tbe way to do lt la with increased spmdtng for defmse., not witb such cuts as Carter bas advocated. Toolght's debate puts Ford oo ground he chose; be regards de- fense ud foreign policy as bis strollg points and bad wanted the ftrst debate to be on those issues. Yet bis advisers already are hedging the wager a bit, wilb White House presa secretary Ron Nessen remarking that the Presi- dent will be subject to restraints that will not affect Carter, because Ford's words ''will be in- terpreted by foreign leaders as reflecting American policy.•• There does, indeed, appear to be a problem for Ford. and pr<>- bably for Carter, too, in any de- bate questions about Kissinger's efforts to promote peaceful transition to black m.;ority rule in southern Africa. It is ttnset- Ued, it is explosive, and either man could compound the pro- blem with an ill·consideresf phrase. For Carter's words, like Ford's, will be read, analyzed and weighed in foreign mlni5tries around lheworld. * * * PollShmm Caner Vote Cut Sharply SAN FRANCISCO <AP) Jimmy Carter has plummeted in the CalllomJa Poll to the point wbere be bas only o alx·point lead over President Ford com- pared to a 20-point lead one montbqo. Mervin Field, director o( tbe California Poll, s aid today tbat inteniewa conducted Sept. 18-~ abo lndicated Eueene McCa.rtJut might have "strong write-in vote PQ&mtial." in California. In Augus t , Carter, tbe Democratic challeaaer in the Nov. 2 election, bad a 53-33 per· cmt lead over the l.Dcu.mbenl Republican president, but that slipped to •1·3.5 in the tally re- leaed today oo l ,°"lnterviews. Looking at the poll. Field 1ald one thing was clear : "Calllomla'1 Important bloc of '5 electoral votes ts now tn the doubtful category when not too man,Y weeks ago it wu aolldly in the Carter column." Two Teens Charged LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two teen.apn bave been arrest4ld lo eamectlon with the murdet d a lfnSee at.atlon att.eodult Friday d\ldAa a but&lary lnwol\flu as. Asst. State's Atty. Kurt Marmar said some patrons complained to police they weren't getting their money 's worth at the theater. A woman who wcrked u a clerical supervisor in the U · s es so r 's o ff ice when Congressman Andrew Hinshaw was Orange County'g usessor In 1972 t.esWied late Tuesday that a cloak ol 1«recy was thrown over the alle•ed involvement of several employes in Hinsbaw's campaisn. employ es would onty be pven oat to those •bo "reAUJ needed to know" their whereabout.a. She told Deputy Distrid At· lO~y William Evans thll IM toot the explanatioa a a ~ lDdicaUon that she .,... to m.llld her own buaines1 ud stop aUtnc questions. Marmar said the Pussycat Theater cut tbe films after Cfrcult Judge Thomas Testa ruled in 1973 that certain scenes were obscene. Marmar said an agreement with the theater's operators, Gayety Theaters, lnc., called for removal of the objectionable material and a notice in ad· vertisements that the movie had been revised. Proseeutlon wltness June Lake testified ln Superior Court tbat lbe could get no response crom her supervisors when sbe re- peated ly asked why certain employes wett absent from the job,, on county time without a stated reason. Mn. Lake testUled that lbe was one of a numberoternpl~ who were oNlered to complete vacation aUps coverinl the time tbat certain emplo,ea bad been lbeent. When the court f-ot reports the theater did not ln· elude the warning m advertising, Testa round the COJDpany and Its president, Leroy C. Griffith, ln con- tempt or court and fined them $3,000. She testit'led that ahe~ed. but WU ISIW"fld th& ther. WU nothing llle1al about the ar· rangemeot and the Umewa.ald be made up to tho aUectedemp&o,es in some "off the reeord" ma-ner. fi',.._PageAJ BRIBERY • • Riley a lso conlirmed for P1anacan that be received more funds in campaign cootrlbutions than any otber candidate and that builders and developers were &mOQI the m.Jor contribulon. Riley told Flanagan and DeP\1- ty District Attorney John Conley that there were no plans for a branch library in San Clemente at the time Hyzen allegedly offered the bribe and that there are none today. The trial ran loto a delu today when Judce ff. Walter Steiner decided to question ~ve witness Brian Patri Lane out· sidethepresenceoftbeJury. Lane, who ls an attcmey and mayor of San Clemente, bu pointed out to Judge Steiner u be earlier pointed out to the grand jury that b.l8 attorney-client rela- tiODSbip with Hyxen must be clarified before be testifies. From Page AJ MARINE ••• mary judgment oo tbe claim that McClure was invalidly recruited. Yacobozzi said if the suit is upheld OD that point the defen- dant would be the United States government and tbe other prin· cipab named in the actioo would be di.lcarded. "We included tbe names in the event we are not able to pursue our action agaiost the United States under lbe federal Claims Act," Y acoboui said. lo the event the summary Judgment goes against the fami· ly, tbe attorney s aid action against the individuals would proceed. "But we reel we have our stroqest cue against the Unit· ed States," Yacoboui said. Three Marine drill instructors and three officers who supervised the unit to which McClure was assigned were court-mutialed or reprimanded because of bis death. Classes Set For Parents At Saddlehack Two "how-to" type parenting classes are beginning this week under the sponsorship oC the Sad· dleback Valley Unified School Distrtcl Adult Educatioo Depart- ment. Child Management for Jlaaaled Parents begins tonight at 7 in Room K·l on the Serrano In· termediat.e School campus. · Steps to successful Parenthood will begin Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Room 4 at Gates Elementary Scbool. The courses are desiped to provide practical and workable ideas on disciplloe, building poeiUve self-concepts, ~lt.lve reinforcement and punlllllment and logical consequences. Dr. Terry Arcut and Bllt Yates are instruct.on tor the coune. Further intonnadoo may be obtained by contact.Loa the adult educatioo olflce at 837-«nO. GOP Irked Over Report WASHINGTON CAP) Republicans are complainlq about the timing and content of a concressional report that crltJcl1es tbe handling ol the Mayaguez incldenL The General AcC?OUDtlne Office said lo a report that llartne8 were ordered to Invade a Cambo- dlan bland and reseue crewmen from the captur«t carao ship, despite report.II that the crewmen were no tonier on the ialand. The report also sald in· tellicence Information lncorrect· ly indicated the island would be def ended by about 2IO Ceibodian IOidltr1, but tbe Marines laDdlnl oo the bland were met by f\ro &om about 150 beavil7 umed mea. Marine and Air Force de- al.hi totaled•l. Boats, Marine Gear Stolen At Dana Point Two moored boats md marine equipment stored en two other vessela have been stolen by in- truders at Dana Point Harbor, Orange County sheriffs officers reported. Boat owner Stan Miller. 2!5082 Del Prado, Dana Point, reported the theft of a nine-foot gtass rowboal valued al $000. A dinghy valued by owner Oliver E. Clark of Vernon. Calif. at $:iOO was taken from Its moor· 1ng:s while be was absent. de- puties said. Officers are also seetinl flS· bing equipment and personal ef. fects valued at $590 which were stolen from a boat owned by Duane Ray, 35, of 32971 Calle del Tesoro, San Juan Capistrano. Retiree Robert Clement Ut- letlteld, 74, of 636 Avenida Sevilla. Laguna Hills, reported the theft of an outboard motor and a gas tank witb a total value d $750 from bis moored vessel. Girl, 16, Dies As Car Rams Power Pole A 16-year-old girl was killed early today when the car in which she was riding struck a power pole on Trabuco Canyon Road, California Highway Patrolmen reported. Her identity bad not yet been determined by mid-morning. patrolmen said. She was a passenger in a car driven by Brandy Phillip Townsend, 18, of Buena Parlt, patrolmen said. He was taken to Saddleback Commmlity Hospital for treatment or moderate ln- juries, officers said. They reported Townsend's car was traveling northeast on Trabuco Canyon Road, when It ran off the road near Uve Oak Canyon Road at 5:15 a.m. and struck a uUlity pole. The girl was pronounced dead at the scene, the CHP said. Mn. Lake said she ftnally •u told lbat the information~ thole E',....P~AJ PAY PACT .• orsanizatioa. CSEA is required to represent all o( the district's 8>0-plus main· tenance. clerical, food service. lran.aporlation and recreation employes. The employes, however, are not required to be members of the organization. The new provision "kind ol as- sures the chapter will be around next year," said Paul Brauer, CSEA president. He said the in- clusion of this provision prompt· ed the employes ~approval. Brauer said the CSEA state o(. ficial who opposed the district'• past offer also recommended a~ proval or this coo tract. The establishment of a com· mittee to sludy merit pay was sought by the district. This year. administrative and ccmfidential employes are being giTeD from zero to six percent rai.sea oo the basis of their individual meriL John Cooper, assistant to the superintendent. said tbe distrtct would like to seriously comider a merit system for other employes next year. He said the committee of CSEA and district represen· tatives will report oo their study by March 1. The e mployes voted 239 to 16 to approve the package which in- cludes the district's previous of- fer ot a four percent cost-of-living salary raise, lifting of the salary freeze and inflationary increases in the cost of insurance benefits. Brauer said be is "very b~ py" negotiations have been set· tied. Soon, be said , be will begin preparing for next year's negotiation.s which begin on J an. 15. ''Hopefully, we're going to get a tw<>-year contract oexl year," be said. Bos Action Held LOS ANGELES (AP) -'Jbe county Board of Supervisors bas postponed action for two weeks on a top-level report recommend- ing that Los Angeles use its fmancia1 resources to develop improved bus service rather than a fixed guideway rapid transit system. Hinshaw, 51. ls belna tried co charges of grand theft, COD· spiracy, embeule ment and violation of state codes that gov- ern tbe conduct cl public ol· ftciala. It ls alleged that be ordered as-sessor's employes to participate in his successful coagresslooal campaign prior to the June primary in 1972. Th e Newport Beach Republican was convicted ol bribery charges in an earlJer Superior Court trial and ii tree oo appeal after belna aeateoced to one to 1• years lo Ible pdaoQ. Civic Center Aremiecture Pact Okayed A cootractor to desiin tbe pro. posec1 South Oranae ~ r.-liooal civic center wu aeleded Tuesday by cou.ot.J aupenisan. The board appointed the firm of Peckham and Coleman of Irvine to do engineering and architecture for what may e..- tually include a sherlff"s aulJsta. lion and 18 municipal courtrooms. Stan Krause, an asslatant director of the count)' General Services Agency, said tbe chic center would be located at Crown Valley and Alicia Pll'tways in Lagana Niguel, the cmnnt site of the South Orange County Kllnicipal Court.house and a county fire station. He said conatructlon of tbe pn- posed center probably woald Ml begin unW about lB. Krauae said tbe a1ati8" fadti- tv cootains four courtrooms, ..t tbe building may need to be a - panded as additional judges are appointed to eaae calendar crowding. In additioa, be uld. another plan is being developed fer a new sheriff's substation there. The design study will iDdalle space needs for tbe eourtrooma. support services and partina, along with a determination d the size facility the sloping Sacre site can bold. --~~-------·---- Lynn Hort HART'S .John Hort SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 ·~Stits 131s.24es.299s.39ss Cotton Sweat Suits--190 Headed-Zippered Sweatshirts-aso long Sleeve-V-neck Acryfic Sweat~95 LOii & 9111 Slene Colered T·Shirts-395 & 495 Gym S.1rts & Track Pants 225 ti 4so Nylen Wntp Jackets 715 &815 SweatsoJ-125 to 300 Open 9 to 6 cmed Sandly Soccer Balls-695 to 2695 Soccer Sboes-795 ta 2415 Basketballs-i's to 32'5 Footbal1$-l•s to 2a•s Velleybals-l's to 231s laqmtballs-1 25 Tennis Balls Can of 3-169 1a1.22s.250 Handballs & Sims lacquetlllll Rlalllts Tennis Rackets Tenris Dresses Tennis Sllits & Slaorts T enis Slllls lacbt Strin1in1 • S. C•tlr --&46-1919 1 C 'Ober 6. 1979 O.&ILVPllOT Parents Freeze H opes Ce1netery Worker 1 Dies in Crypt Slain Dmighler's Brain Held for Future SAN DIEGO <AP) -A cemetery worker who went to the aid of a man wbo collapsed lo a crypt 25 feet deep was himself overcome by lack of 0X)'1en, and later died. BERKELEY (AP}-Tbebraln of a 1.S-yeu--old Befteley 11.rl vlclouaty ~ to death bu been , , froun and preaerved bl amiclpatioo ol a Ume ln th fUture wbeu med.teal adeoe. can create• body ror -It. ty," Robert Wllaon, father ol Patricia Wilsoo. said Tuesday. "WE TROUGH 111AT IF we could make a con· tribuUoo to eclooce sometbi.Dg good could come ouL ol th.ii tragedy," be added. 'lbe two men were preparing the crypt for a tour by delegate• ol lbe NaUooal Catholic Cemetery Conference. ElgM bouts after firemen rescued them, Jesus Berumen died in Paradise Valley Hospital. "We feel it t. a kxll abol. but Lt ·s our way of ex· preN!.n1 our belief ln 111e ad OW" rejection of tbe cuual acceptance ol murder~ death bl our socie- 'lbe youn.t woman was beaten to death Sunday at a Berkeley clot.hlna store where she worked as a clerk, police said. Robbery appears to have been the motive. Berumen, 34, earlier had climbed into the coo· crete·llned. multilevel crypt at Holy Cross Cemetery to help revive Fausto Palafox. !5.2. Keepers Find Baby Gorilla WUson said be and his wile contacted Arthur Quaife, president of Trans-Time Inc. Quaile said the parents signed a release with the ~meda County coroner permitting the coroner to turn the brain over to Trans·Time. which specializes in preserving bodies until such time as a cure is found tor the disease that killed them. Firemen worked almost 30 minutes to brine up Palafox and Berumen. Palafox was revived quickly with "a shot of air." a ft.reman said, but Berumen never regained consciousness. SAN PASQUAL (AP) -A newborn lowtand 1orilla wu found Tuesday at the San Dteto Wild Animal Park -lt.s third ever. all October babies. "WE DECIDED THAT the best thing lo do was lo preserve her brain and it.a memories hoping that at some future date science will find a way to re- constitute a person essentially the same as Patricia •-.. 0 Wilson, .. said Quaile. Spoc k Spealfti,3 ut 'lbe parents are Olla and Trlb, a .00. pound male whose other mate Dolly gave birth to Jim in October um and to a female named BinU in October 1974. It is too early lo tell the weight and sex or the newest addition, a part spokeswoman said. He predicted such a feat is "at least 50 years away." The brain will be kept at 320 degrees below Dr. Benjamin Spock talks with fellow picket iero. in front of Los Angeles offices of League of Quaife said there would be a $400 initial Women Voter s. He was protes ting limitation cost and an annual storage fee of $100. A special of debates to Ford and Carter. memorial as been started lo raise the money. ------------------ :Viking 2 #.;Fails in Dig Try PASADENA (AP) The Viking 2 robot bas failed to lift a Martian boulder, but will try again on a smaller rock, scientists say. VUdng team members found that the robot just wam 'l strong enough lo move the boulder and search underneath it in a last-ditch effort lo find organic compounds on Mars. ( STATE ) Scientists theorized that if there are organics -structural compounds that are the basics of life as we lcnow it -on Mars, they may be found un- derneath a rock, away from ultraviolet Martian ~ght. Ott the Book LOS ANGELES CAP) -A Municipal Court j udge bas dis missed c harges against 14 persons w bo received traffic tickets while pro- testing the Santa Monica Freeway Diamond Lane project. Judge Wilbur Dettmar dismissed the charges against the protesters • just before the start of their trial, saying the is· sue wu moot because the Diamond Lane oo lq er exlsts. 111 ... te Slaln CHINO (AP) -A 27· year-old inmate or the California Institute for Men her e b as died of severe abdominal In- juries he received in a beating. Authorities said 081')' Schultz of Chula Vista. aervtn1 a sentence for armed r obbery, died without identifying hi& assailal\ta. Blitz t o S p t!alc LOS ANGELES (AP) -Earl L. But.z plans lo speak to a convention next Monday despite bis resignation under fire as secretary of agriculture, a spokeswoman for the National Asaociatioo of Concessionaires says. Publici s t Betsy Berkhemer said Butz baa confirmed' he would appear al the con· cesalonalre's kickoff meeting at the Dls- n e y 1 and Hotel in Anaheim. llefora Pro•be SACRAMENTO (AP) -Former state prlsom director Ray Procunier is promising quick re- forms in the turbulent :state Health Depart- ' ment, where he will head the latest shakeup. FAST. LOW-COST, QUALITY OFFSET PAINTING Studio S e ts •Mines' Adrift Free Ice Ban Eyed 10 to 10,000 Copies SAN DIEGO CAP) -Universal Studios is red in the face over two phony Japanese World War II mines that somehow were set adrift in the Pacific. And the Coast Guard hasn't been getting many laughs out of the situation either. Shipping has been advised to be on the lookout for the mines and the Coast Guard said it has spent a lot of time and manpower attempting to find them. Trucks Too "IT IS A BIG embarrassment for us," said Art Seidel of Universal. "Anyone who finds them Is welcome to keep them. We just want to get them out SACRAMENTO CAP) of the w ater." . -The bead of the state The mines, which are about three feet In Alcoholic Beverage Con- diameter. are made of plastic and are tethered to trol Department is lo de- weights. They were amoog six lost from motion pie· clde soon whether bars lure filming on location at Catalina Island on Sept. and liquor stores may 24. continue giving away The prop mines have been drifting south and free ice cubes, a trad.i- four have been recovered. "We really blew il," said lion dating about 30 Seidel. years. "-" • -"' "'°"" °" .,. -,_ IM will .,,.....,. ... ..., .... _ ,.., ljftloft Photocopies Av•llable NEWPORT BEACH 2-40 Newport Center Dr. Design Plaza. Suite 120 (7141 640-9053 ova. 300 PIPt NATIONWIDE Smog Rule Widened FRESNO (AP) -Stricter anti-smog regula· lions are on the road for California's heavy duty trucb and buses. 'lbe California Air Resources Board adopted the regulations Tuesday after testimony from represeotatives of most~ the country's heavy duty vehicle makers. Nobod! saves you 20% to more cities than United. The regulations are to cover both gasoline and diesel engines of vehicles over 6,000 pounds gross r----------------------------------------------., Freedom Fare to 79 cities. weight, except certain limousines. THE MAXIMUM AU.OWABLE hydrocarbon standard fo r the 1979 model year was set at l.S •---------------- grams per brake horsepower hour, dropping pro, DeRtrn:i11on gressively lo O.S gram in the 1983 model year. City The m aximum of hydrocarbons and oxides of Ahron/Cantun nitrogen combined was set at 5 gTams per brake J\llentov.11/Bethlehem/Ea~ton horsepower hour fer 1979 models, dropping to 4.S Paltimorc grams for 1983 models. Also adopted were test pro->< cedures similar to those of the U.S. Environmental B1munftham Protection Agency. I ~Ol&e BEA VY DUTY VEIUCL~ have been under Bo$!Oll anti·smog regulations since 1969, but the board said Buffalo 1~i:igara Falls standards haven't grown so progressively stringent Ct-dar Rapid~/lowa City as those for passenger cars. C.-1'1J.J leslon. \\'. \'a. By the 1m model year, trucks and buses will be lnai lotll'. ~.C. 7 to 14 times dirtier than cars, said Mary Nichols, Ol:llt:UlcK>~<t vice chairman. The staff of the board said if the standards C..nicago Round trip Tour Freedom fare Sa vings 8277.00 :~1 5.00 :w1.oo 246.00 126.00 338.00 294.00 218.00 275.00 282.00 258.00 2<l5.00 569.00 79.00 77.00 62.00 32.00 84.00 74.(X) 54.00 69.00 70.00 64.00 61.00 hadn't been adopted. by 1990 California 's trucks and ~----------------------1 buses would have been emitting 276 tons per day of Chicago $ll0.00 $86.00 oxides of nitrogen and~ tons of hydrocarbons. Ch Our Economy Frrl'dom Fare to icago offers even GENE CONE, BOARD spokesman, srud the h'1l':tkr ""1i.111gs. measurement in grams per brake horsepower hour )i1u sa ve 28n;, uff re~lar round-trip C.oach fare. malces it difricult lo compare the standards with Clulc.ln:n lr:weling \\ilh you s.1ve 55°Ii. lhose for passenger cars, which are 0.41 grams per mile of hydrocarbons for the 1977 model year, 9.0 S<imc rcstnct1nns as regular Freedom Fare. grams per mile of carbon monoxide, and 1.5 grams ~----------------------1 per ~le of oxides of nitrogen. OcvelamJ $277.00 869.00 --------C.:olumhu~. 0. 267.00 67.00 WH•T"S SO Sf'ICl/lol AIOU'T A SNCl.Al DISTllCT Dear Neighbor. What's in a name? Our name-The Costa Mesa County Water Dlstnd-<ells you Quite a bit abOul us Bui watch out you're not fooled by our name The words "Costa Mesa" may rreke you think we're 11 department of the City.4)ut we're not. And the word "County" in our name may make You think we're an agency ol 1he Coun~t we·re not We are a Water District-and there's the real answer to who we .,.._e·re a Speclal Dlstnct l>;.1yto11, 0. 259.00 65.00 l>cnver 139.00 35.00 r >E's Mc 1111e.... 206.00 52.00 I >l'lroit 269.00 67.00 Eugl'm\ Orl·. 130.00 :~2.00 Fl1111 269.00 67.00 Fort \\:1yne 259.00 65.00 Grand Junction 117.00 29.00 Cr:111cl l~.1pid.., 2!"'6.00 64 .00 < ;rl.'t·nsbtirot I !Jgh PoinVWinston-5.11em 288.00 72.00 I Ian ford/Spnngfield 328.00 82.00 I lunh\ 1llc 246.00 62.00 l\:11has City 197.00 49.00 Knox\illc 261.00 65.00 1.ansmg 262.00 66.00 l..;1.., \'q~ns 59.00 15.00 I i11rol11 187.00 47.00 Destina II on Round·trlp Your City freedom N1re Savlngii Medford SI 17.00 $29.00 Memphis 226.00 56.00 Milwaukee 245.00 6 1.00 Moline/Rock Island/Davenport 224.00 56.00 Muskegon 253.00 63.00 Newport News/ Hampton/ William.sburg 315.00 79.00 t\ew York/Newark 323.00 8 1.00 Norfolk/ Portsmouth/ Virginia Beach 315.00 79.00 Omaha 194.00 48.00 Pendleton 1'19.00 37.00 Philadelphia 317.00 79.00 Pittsburgh 286.00 72.00 Portland 139.00 35.00 Providence 334.00 84.00 Haleigh/Durham 294.00 74.00 He no 85.00 21.00 Richmond 306.00 76.00 Hochester 301.00 75.00 Saginaw/Midland/Bay City 269.00 67.00 Salem.Ore. 134.00 34.00 Salt Lake City 125.00 31.00 Seattle/Tamma 152.00 38.00 South Bend 25 J.00 63.00 Spokane 150.00 38.00 Toledo 266.00 66.00 Wa!>hmgton. D.C. JO'i.00 77.00 'oungstown/Warren/Sharon 286.00 72.00 Night Coach to 7 Eastern cities. There's an even easier way to save 20°~. It's lJnitcd·s Night Coach. If you fl y after JO p.m .• there are no restrictions at all. Available to Baltimore. Boston. Cleveland, New York. Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Washmgton . D.C. WHA,..S SO SrtCIAl AIOU'T /lo sr!CIAL DISTltlCT1 You'll find Special Districts are a very understandable kind of government. That's because we're so s1rrple. We're constituted under State law to provide only one kind or service, such as water. We don't have to balance giving water against other &el'Vloes, like building roads. offering Police protection. 0( running parks. That way, our priorities are clear. and we become pretty elOcient United's Freedom Fare knocks 203 off the regular round-trip Coach fare. And ifs avail able to 79 cities from Los Angeles. That's more cities than any other airline. Whafs more, children under 12 traveling with you save a whopping 503 ! • providing our one setV\ce. What's more. Special Oistr1ds are run by Directors )'OU elect. They're usually neighbors or Yours You oontrol your Water District Pf'etty directly by Your "01es The peoole in this area voted to create the Costa Mesa County Water Oistnct As a result. you're getting the S«Vtce you voled for In this O•strict. at a reasonable price. We 1hink 1hat's what local oovernment 11 all llbotlt. Come down to our next meeting and talk to us. You're ~welcome. There are no mileage restrictions. No weekend or holiday restrictions. Freedom Fare does not apply to flights outside the continental U.S. or to travel wtthin the same state. Just reserve your seat at least 14 days ahead. Pay for your round-trip ticket within 10 days of your reservation date, but at least 14 days before de~. And stay 7 to 30 days. ~ l))n t leave home without the American Express ,( uou~ card: Use it for your United tickets. hotels, meafs theK• botB~I. g \ and rental cars. If you don't have an American )\ 1 ~~~~~·=.,-=,_,,:..~~~ ... ·~··!.-Express card, call (800) 528-8000 for an '" 'C application. Tbe blunt·lalltlog veteran civil servant lcnown as "Pro," wu named cb!ef deputy ln cb•r1e of pro1rams Tue.day by state Health Di r ector Jerome Lackner, coveriol such hule operaUons as Medi· calaodounin1homes. ._ ______________________________ __.. For reservations, call your Travel ~ent. Or call United at 537· 7521 Partners in Travel with Western International Hotels. SKI & SPORTS WllK, OCT. 1-13 eHEAD FASHION 9"0W e K-2 AACJNO T!AM e SKI RAMP SPETACUl.AA e GYMNASTICS eAfT£R SKI FASHIONS e EOUIPMEHT e PRIZES 5outk (oast ?lua· Flythe endJyskies of United. • unlTED AIRLlnes .A8 IDAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Finding More Energy Two Miss ion Viejo tract homes, identical from all ~lward &ppcaranoos to their neighbors but !or the .:array or solar panels on the roof, will be working ~models in an unusual experiment with energy con- ervation. t;. It is an unusual project because of the alliance of t~orces conducting the test -a private builder (Mis· .::;ion Vi ejo Compa ny), a major public utillty (Southern :•California Gas Company), and the federal govern· e;Dent through its Energy Research and Development •;Administration. : The houses have been built-with every technique "rand device now available for conserving consumable ~nergy resources s uch as gas and e lectricit y. ; Though the ultimate practical application may ~;not include all the methods being tested, this experi· ~!ment should go Car in proving or disproving theories .. •that, until now, have been only conceptual or !:laboratory prototypes. :.. The earth's available power sources are becom- i4i ng increas ingly expensive for the average t thomeowner to tap, and are dwindling in supply or are !;being attacked by environmentalists. That is an indication of how vital such projects can be for the very near future. The results of this ex· riment, for better or worse, must be reported fully as they become available. A great deal may be at ..,stake. Wait a While, Kids The city of Irvine has built a skateboard run lhat ~romises to challenge even the most skillful kateboarder. Hundreds of young skateboarders have already ;:tried its curves and banks and agree it ·s among the ..,best around. Problem is, the course is located in Univers!ty .• •• ~ Community Park, which is still bclng developed and ls not yet open lo U1e public . Landscaping is not compl@led, but the contractor cannot wind up his chores because ot the almost daily onslaught of skateboarders on the concrete run. Th e city Cir!il tried d iscouraging tho skateboarders by plllng dirt onto the run . But it was soon s hoveled off. Last week, the city ordered chain link rcnce to be bolted onto the run to stop the skateboarding activity. They say they'll remove the fencing by Nov. 1, when the park is expected to be completed. 'fhe park opening may be delayed and the cost may be higher than expected if the skateboarding continues. Parents should encourage their chlldren to stay away until next month so the new skateboard run and the rest of the park can be opened on schedule for everyone's enjoyment. Before It Happens. • • It makes sense lo stop a crime before it is com- mitted. That's the prerruse behind a special burglary prevention task force now working in South Orange County. The task force includes county territor y from El Toro south and the cities or Laguna Beach, San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano. Four poli ce of· ficers and sheriff's deputies are involved in the $100,000 Cederally funded project. They'll try to persuade residents to tighten up homes wit h adequate locks and other security meas ures. Most burglars are not professionals. Statistics show the largest percentage to be 14to17 years old . Residents may avail themselves of the service by telephoning 495-4710. SB UlordAide New Medicare Costs a Blow l :-[~Gets Pay ~· Dear Gloon1y GU8 Malnutrition, Suicide Ahead? ~Wrorn U.S. :--:.,,-----------------------.... • ~: EV ANS-NOV AK ~------------------------" ,. -•• ~: WASHI NGTON Michael tjt>uval, who is paid $31:1.000·plus a ::Year out of the· !}J.S. Treasury :•to be s pecial :-counsel to the ~:President, 1s :fipending full ~ ime the se •.-! a y s ~.)'epresentin g :-;i> r e s i d e n t :Ford 's in ~:terests in de· ::t>ate arrangements .a sign that :~the Jo'ord campaign is as con· ~=lemptuous as ever of the new ~.election campaign law. :• That act forbids additionaJ con· :-tribulions. including contnbu· .... lions in kind. to a presidential :•.nominee accepting the $21 3 ::.million federal sutliidy. Thus, : Duval might be expected to drop t~otf the federal payroll, at least ~temporarily, if the letter of the : law were followed. But the Ford :,campaign has no intention of do· ::.mg that. :; Whether the Federal Election ·~Commission will deaJ between ~~ow and Nov . 2 with t.his aid re-~cei ved by candidate Ford is ·:"doubtful. nut while probably run· :.:rung no risk of legal action. Mr. :.Ford's managers have been ~_rilicized all year for violating 4\U1e spirit of the law. : Th e JU St if1cat1on f o r ' .. •, Maybe Earl Butz would consent to do his imitation of Step •n Fetchi1 at the next Bl ack Panther rally. C.U.Y. c;1eom1 Gii~ c ommenh ••t tlll><l'il"d by rtaOl'r,. .and do not nectn•rtty rtft«.1 •he v1tW\ ot thr ntw\P.JOtr. Send your pel PH•• lo Gloomy Gu>, D•ily Pilot Duval is that he is a volunteer giving part-lime campaign help that does not interfere wjth his of. ficial duties. "That's ridiculous," a Ford campaign insider told us. "Mike has been working on the debates full time. If he's doing anything else, I don't know about it ·• ln· deed. Duval was fully engaged in politics at Kansas City, as a Ford operative in the platform fight. NOR IS he alone. Much of the White House stafr is concentral· ing on the presidential cam· paign. as is the Pres ident. Richard Cheney. White House chief of s taff on the federal payroll at $42,500 a year, has been considered by many the reaJ campaign manager since .Mr. Fortts nomination. Ford campaign lawyers point to the FEC dismissal of previous complaints about Rogers Morton working on the campaign from the White House. But the com· mission's ruling is not clear-cut. Moreover, a concurring opln· ion by commission member Neil Staebler indicated he would like to see the matter raised in a case such as the one posed by Duval. i·Who Can Take Life? . .. • I have a letter from an or· ~gamzation calhn~ 1tsetr "F'oun· •dation for Life," m Toledo. Ohio. r The letter commends a recent piece of mine. in which l referred ·:to the human race as our "most "!endangered species ... :; "Foundation ror Life" is an an· ~ti-abortion group. The poster ac· :?companying the letter says : "We ~-are dedicated to a very basic prin· ~iple . That human life is sacred. :!Period. No qualifications or ex· :~eptions or conditions.'' ~• The poster points out that "in the U.S. today. a woman bas the ... egal right to take ~ life or her ::unborn child. For any reason." ·~Then goes on to say: "ls there ;;some magic line that makes the :i:me or an unborn child any less ~:important than the life of a day· .•old child? Or a week-old child? ~Or a year-old child?" !• Suppose we agree. Theo what about an 18·year-old child? But : the stale bas the legal right lo ::aend an 18-year-old boy to his ~death in any war It cores to ~.declare, or even not lo declare. IF H\JMAN Ure ls sacred, period, why do the anti-abortion people speak out so forcefully on e right of the foetus, but remain mut.e when a lad who hos been loved and cored for and educated is shipped away to face "un· utural do a th·• on some foreign .t>.ttlenetd? t • What about capital punish· • ment? Does lhe state posse!& the • rf.abt to take human Ille any more lhan the mot.her does? JC ~man life 11 truly .. sacred.'' then it should be icn to God lo de---- ( SYDNEY HARRIS) cide who shall die, just as He de· cides who is to be born. The "Foundation for Life" says. quite correctly, ·•we believe we all have a responsibility to oppose what we think is wrong." But how can you think that abortion is wrong if you condone capital punishment and the evil institution of war? lf you permit the state to kill "legally." why does nol the mother have the same right? TRE ABORTION issue is more complex and difficult to resolve than either its opponents or pro- ponentsare willing lo admit. Butz this apart, it bas always puulea me that people can be so passionate against killing a baby in the womb, and so indifferent to murder by the state after the child reaches the threshold or maturity. Ir life is sacred, then the state has no moral authority to take it. Jf there are "no qualifications or exceptionR or conditions," then the right·lo·life organizations must speak out as forcefully a1atn1t war and caq>1tal punish· ment .s they do against abortion. Otherwise, the concept of "sacredness " becomes a mocktt)' at the age ol 18.. We are not tree lo pick and choose among our modes of morality. U we do, we become !J*fal pleaders. and .not true bd.levea. To the Editor. The news media have an. nounced a vicious increase of 19 percent in Medicare costs, effec· tiveJan. l , 1977 . Senior citizens and others ex· isling on fixed and/or low income cannot presently compete with those who have sufficient in· come. This 19 percent increase is prohibitive. T housands cannot afford to be hospitalized and this latest increase will deprive thousands more of sorely needed medical care. The result of deprivation is maJnutrition, death and sorrow Our legislative process is in· consistent because it fails to pro- vide for the people who are en· titled to the necessities of life. We are presently paying $30 a month for Medicare and S.I. in· s ura nce and cannot afford periodic increases unless Social Security, etc. increases likewise. This latest proposed increase will certainty produce more dis· respect for our Washington legislators. Malnutrition and suicide will certainly increase unless immediate action is taken to relieve the needy senior citizens. We desperately need legisla- tion to exempt all senior citizens from this and the last increases in Medicare costs. Il bas been said that we get so deep in the forest we cannot see the trees. I think this is the status of our Washington legislators and possibly others. C. M . GIBBENS Se% Education Totbe Editor: Parents are the primary sex educators of their own children whether they do it well or poorly. Some parents think that the less their children know about sex, the less likely they are to engage in "promiscuous" irresponsible sexual behavior. Studies and everyday observations don't sup· port. this generalization. The fear or "putting Ideas into their heads" by being open and informative is unfounded. The ideas are already there. Young people get them from books, newspapers, movies. and most frequently from friends. As a society we encourage the open pursul t or knowledge ln most fields except sexuality. UNFORTUNATELY, what young people don't know about sex and contraception can hurt them . Teenage pregnancy is a serious problem : one in four American teenagers bas a child before she reaches the age or 20. • : .. end I promise you a balanced budget If I have to sp6nd evtJry cent w• hllv61' ( MAILBOX ] Teenagers account for over half or all out-of-wedlock births and one-third or all abortions in the U.S. Teenage pregnancy is large· ly the result of non-use or sporadic use of contraception. How can we ask young people to assume r esponsibility for their sexual behavior when we guarantee their ignorance? October 10.16 is National Fami· ly Sex Education WeeJc, a lime to start teaching young people what they want to know. Let's work al being .. askable" parents, ~acbers, and friends; support open communication in the area of human sexuality. A.M. ROBINSON Brown V•. Cartn- To the Editor: Governor Carter's speech at. O'Neill Ranch called for more rederal spending lo save money. That could only be a truism in Alice's Wonderland. Other lands have not yet been able to succeed at this, even t hough they sometimes do appear up-side· down and backwards. But it would be interesting to know Governor Brown's reaction to Carter 's blaming California's high property tax on the federal government when California is under Brown's control and the federa l government is under Democratic con trol. which makes them responsible for the inflation he deplores. There does have to be relief for property tax, but his idea of col· lecting more tax for federaJ re· venue sharing funds. to be sent to Washington to be laundered and returned full or strings, doesn't seem a practical solution. It just shifts the taxes and adds to the administration costs- BUT CARTER is right in say. ing the free enterprise system is "a good one." Does he intend to leave it free? His pronounce· ments have been to control and tax it heavier , which could weaken or even destroy it, de· pending on how far his rules go. And his plan to take up the job slack by -creating government. jobs isn't a very good solution either. President Ford's solution of A Lebanon Primer 1 went as a war correspondent with Eisenhower forces into Lebanon in 1958. Those were the days when Americans imagined that we could remodel the world in our own image. Now Lebanon is engaged in another civil war. Americans are moving out, not in. That is significant. Figurative- ly, Lebanon is two countries divided by a green line. Christian on one side, Moslem on the other. For 16 months now Lebanese have been killing Lebanese in the oame of religion. Actually, this nation, smaller than Connecticut, is home for 17 diverse Christian and Moslem sects. The volatility or the people of tbis area has preserved a "state of turbulence" for generations. P•ESENTLV, the contention Involves the Christian demand that Palestinian camps be re- located outside Lebanoel -but when that issue hu bffn re- solved there will be another. 'lbe 400,000 Palestinians living ln Lebanon have gained much political power by allying themsel'le'I with anybody, in· eluding Communists. Tbe Christians conslder lhJs a di.reel tbteat to the Western· oriented capitalism which they so palnJlakinsly atab&hed and which, a.ntll thi.I •hocXoat. bad pr'OIJ>ered Lebanon beyond any other Mideast nation. As is, in that war·torn coun· try, tho several r1c:tloal coatroa ICattered fracUons d the 1eo-traphy. The dominant Maronilas bold ( PAUL HARVEY J the mountains north or the Damascus Road. Tripoli is controlled by Palesti- nians and assorted leftists. Presently the Christians' Syrian allies control the bread· basket area -the Bekaa VaJley. THE BIG CITY, Beirut, in· eludes three big Palestinian camps, and when you travel from their area to the Christlan suburbs it's like going Crom East Germany into West Germany. The Palestinians manage to exist with almost no food or fuel, with huge piles or garbage, spawning cat-size rats and with civiliam carrying sidearms. Whereas in Christian Lebanon you can almost forget there ls a war on -traffic and commerce are near normal with almost a resort atmosphere on beaches and streets. There is talk of building up the hotels along the beaches, luring back Western businessmen. Down the road ahead is a parti· Uon of Lebanon similar to the partition of Germany. It ls almost inevitable. It may or may not be permanent. But what's more Important Is what ls NOT bappenin1 in Lebanon -overt American ln· terventton. AllEBICAN Marines did not wade u boro as we did 18 years · ago. . On the contrary, Americans who wanted out were ever·SO- cardully cvacua.~ . At least lbls geoenUon of Ameri~na. and hopetull,y future' JeMrations, has learned that be· lnt a truly coot nellbbor Implies nnt. of aJl -mlndiol your own busines..1. letting free enterprise be freer. and lo leave iL more investment capital so it can expand and create more jobs, is more prac· tical. And if we give him a mo..re practical Congress next year that understands saving as well as spending, he could probably cut down the federal budget enough to make it work. It s ure seems worth a try. GOLDIE JOSEPH Prop. 14 Support To the Editor: Your Sept. 28 edit.oriaJ oppos-- ing Prop. 14 is based on the mis· taken premise that it is desirable that the Legislature be able to make changes in the landmark farm l abor law which was passed, as you point out, after "endless conferences" with Gov. Brown. The result of those conferences was a d elicate compromise which all sides agreed to abide by. But after only a few months, the growers and their allies in the state Legislature reneged on that agr eement and attempted to sabotage the law. ·1T WAS only thetacttbat signatures w ere quickly gathered for Prop. l4 that caused the Legislature to refund the Agricultural Labor Relations Board. • The architect of the farm labor law, Gov. Brown, says that Prop. 14 should be passed in order to re- move the issue from politics and allow the ALRB to operate free or pressure from any side. Let us take his advice and vote Yes on 14. PAULC. EKLOF SHA RONK. EKLOF Quotes •·r think the important thing is that the American people have the chance to evaluate us." - Democratic presidential candidate Jimmy Carter, after the format for his debates with President Ford was agreed upon. "I would rather be a fast finisher than a fast starter." President Ford on his election race against Jimmy Carter. ORANGE COA.ST DAILY PILOT Rnhnt N. Wttd. Publl$hcr Thomoa KtfVI/, Editor Oorboro Krt1frlch. Ed1ton4/ P4gl' EdUor Thr td1tori11I pa•c or the Dally Piiot seeks to i nform ond ~limuh1te readers by presenting on this page dlve~e commentary oo topics or Interest by &yndlcat.· \.'d columnists and cartoontata. by provldlnjt :1 forum for read~' views and by presenting lh1• newspnper's opinions and Ideas on current topics. The editorial opinions of thl' Dally Pllot aprwar only in thl' editorial column at the top or the pagf'. Opinions ex- pressed by the colutnl\i$1J and cartl'l()ni~ts and Jetter writers ate their ov. n and no f'lldorscment ol their viev.1 by the Dl!ly Pilot should bt inferred. Wednesday, October6, 1976